Don't Judge a Girl by Her Cover (21 page)

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Authors: Ally Carter

Tags: #Kidnapping, #Girls & Women, #Juvenile Fiction, #Mysteries & Detective Stories, #Fiction, #Interpersonal relations, #Humorous Stories, #Spies, #School & Education

BOOK: Don't Judge a Girl by Her Cover
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I
thought about the people on the rooftop, wondered which of those six things had
brought them there. And why.

"We
have gadgets," Mr. Solomon said. "We have comms units and trackers
and satellites that can photograph the wings of a fly, but make no mistake, we
practice a very old art. Six things, ladies. And they haven't changed in five
thousand years."

Mr.
Solomon turned back to the board. My classmates sat at attention, but my mind
was spinning, going over and over what my teacher had just said. I gripped the
edge of the table. I saw the classroom fade away. The world came into focus as
I said the words, I must have known for weeks but only just realized.

"They're old."

 

 

"What
are you going on about?" Bex asked. For once in her life she could barely
keep up with me as I stepped from the elevator and started up the Grand
Staircase.

"We
were wrong. I was wrong," I said, the words coming faster now.

"Cam, what—"

"Of
course Liz didn't find it in the computer files. Going back fifty years
wouldn't help. Going back a hundred wouldn't help. Bex, they're not a
new
threat!"

In
the foyer below us, girls were going in for lunch. The halls were alive with
the smells of lasagna and talk of midterms, but my best friend and I were alone
in the Hall of History as I pointed to our school's most sacred treasure.

"They're old."

 

 

Chapter
Twenty-two

 

 

"That's
it," I mumbled, staring at the book on the table in front of me.
"I've walked by that sword a million times. I should have realized as soon
as we got back. I should have recognized it on the rooftop. I should have…I'm
an idiot!"

"It's
okay, Cam," Liz soothed. "You were all…
concussiony."

"Thanks,"
I said, even though it didn't help as much as it should have.

I
looked at the etching in the ancient book. Every new student in the history of
our school had heard the story of Gillian Gallagher and stared at that very
image, but that day I didn't look at President Lincoln or the dozens of men who
stood around him. I didn't even look at the young woman with the sword, who was
moving through the ballroom with more grace and strength than a hoopskirt was
ever supposed to allow.

This
time I looked at the man on the floor, a pistol falling from his limp hand, the
empty scabbard at his side. This time I stared at the tiny emblem I'd seen a
million times in the sword's hilt, barely visible next to Gilly's hand.

"That's
it," I said softly, shifting the book to better catch the light.

Liz
read the caption out loud: "Gillian Gallagher slays Joseph Cavan, founder
of the Circle of Cavan. Virginia, December, 1864."

"She
killed him with his own sword," Bex said in awe.

Then
I dropped a satellite photo onto the open book. "The Circle of Cavan
attempt to kidnap Macey McHenry, Massachusetts, present day."

"So the Circle of Cavan…"
Liz started.

"Is alive and well,"
Bex finished.

I
looked at my roommates. "And they want our friend."

I
knew the first attempt to kill President Lincoln had really happened. I'd
walked by the sword and thought of Gilly a dozen times a day for years, but
before that moment Gilly's story had seemed like some fabulous dream. So, standing
in the library, the fire crackling beside us, I couldn't shake the feeling that
we'd just seen a dragon in the lake, a ghost in the labs. An ancient evil was
alive in the world. I knew that Gilly had won the battle in the ballroom that
night, and almost immediately she'd started her school, maybe because she
understood the war was far from over.

"You
don't think they're after Macey because she's…" Liz started. "You
know…" She dropped her voice to a whisper.
"Gilly's descendant?"

I
thought about the day, more than a year before, when my mother had shared that
information. And when I looked at Bex, the expression on our faces said the
exact same thing:
Absolutely.

The
people on the roof had reason to hate the school and reason to hate Gilly.
Macey was the last true Gallagher Girl—their best chance at real revenge.

I
looked at the satellite photo again, the grainy black- and-white image that had
been on my mind for weeks, and I thought about what Bex and Aunt Abby had said:
The woman on the roof had been too good at her job to wear a ring that would
allow her to be identified. But now I knew that's exactly why she'd worn it. I
thought of the look on Abby's face as I'd studied that image in her room, and I
realized my aunt had known that all along.

For
the first time in a long time, a lot of things made sense.

But that didn't mean I had to
like it.

 

 

From
that point on, everything—and I do mean
everything—
about our school looked
different.

The
Gallagher Academy history section of the library? Full of books that didn't
tell the whole story. That painting of Gilly standing at a window, staring
across our walls? Now I had a whole different idea of what our school's founder
had feared seeing in the distance.

By
the end of the week, I hadn't heard a word my teachers had said without
reading between some imaginary line, biting back some question that I knew they
would probably never answer: Who, exactly, were the Circle of Cavan? What did
they want? Where had they been for the last hundred and fifty years? And, most
important, as Liz and Bex fell into step beside me on our way to dinner that
Friday night, what were we supposed to tell Macey?

Because,
believe it or not, "Oh, by the way, you know the guy Gilly killed? Well, I
guess he's still got friends who are really ticked off about it, and they're
trying to take their revenge out on you. Oh, and did we mention that you're
Gilly's great-great-granddaughter, and that's why you were admitted to the school
in the first place?" was harder to work into everyday conversation than
you might think.

"Is khabar ko kisi kitab ke andar
daal dein, ya aisa kuch?"
Liz
whispered as we practiced our Hindi and ate our macaroni and cheese (the
gourmet kind); and yet, as much as I appreciated Liz's flash cards, I didn't
think planting the news in Macey's textbook was the best way to tell her the
truth.

"Usse apne pari war ke panch
jani dushmano ke naam puchain aur phir ek naam aur jord dein."
Bex offered, but I shook my head
because the "Hey, Macey, just when you thought no one could hate your
family more than you do" option didn't seem like the way to go either.

The
truth of the matter is, we might know fourteen different languages, but when it
comes to breaking bad news, not even a Gallagher Girl can always find the
words.

"Maybe,"
I said slowly and in English, despite the teachers that roamed the Grand Hall
making sure our Hindi had the accent we were all trying to master, "maybe
we shouldn't…"

"Tell her?" Liz asked,
reading my mind.

I
don't like keeping secrets, which, given my chosen profession, is strange but
true. But I remembered the way I had felt on my first elevator ride from
Sublevel Two—that there are some secrets we keep because we can't bear to let
them out, and some because it's better to keep them in. I looked at my two best
friends and wondered which kind we were keeping now.

"I'd
want to know," Bex said simply, and I nodded, not surprised, but glad to
hear it all the same.

"I…"
Liz whispered and leaned closer. "I think…" she stammered again, and
I could tell that Liz the genius knew that the more information you had—the
more data points you could plot—the better your conclusions. But Liz the
girl,
knew
that ignorance is sometimes bliss.

"No,"
she said finally with a shake of her head. "I wouldn't want to know. And
besides"—she looked at me, her blue eyes wide—"if it were best for
Macey to know, wouldn't your mom and Abby and Mr. Solomon and everybody…
tell
her?"

I
hate it when she's right. And unfortunately, it happens a lot.

I
felt Bex and Liz staring at me, and I knew that I was the tiebreaking vote. A
girl at the senior table held a copy of a newspaper; it rustled as she turned
the page. The headline, "Tuesday's Presidential Race Too Close to
Call," screamed louder than the voices of a hundred chattering girls as
Macey walked through the doors at the back of the room with the rest of the
ninth graders who had stayed late in P&E. She was smiling; she was
laughing; the girl by the lake seemed farther away, and yet I knew that she was
still inside Macey somewhere, and I really didn't want to see her again.

"What's
up?" Macey asked as she took the seat beside me. I didn't have a clue what
to say or how to say it.

Fortunately,
Joe Solomon was the one who answered, "Pop quiz."

 

 

"Now,
I know some of you aren't on the CoveOps track of study," Mr. Solomon
said, glancing down the table at the entire junior class, "but there are
aspects of this life—of this world—from which you can never walk away. Ever.
The fact that almost everything you say to almost everyone you love for the
rest of your life will be a lie is one of them. So, if you don't mind a little
extra work …" he said, looking down at Liz, which is kind of like asking
me
if I
didn't mind an extra dessert, "plain clothes. Foyer. Twenty minutes."

Ten
minutes later I was running down the Grand Stairs, a half step behind Bex and
Liz. The adrenaline that only comes from going someplace else, doing something
else, being someone else for just a little while was starting to course through
me again. Macey was beside me. I didn't have a clue where we were going, but to
be honest, I didn't care.

Abby
was standing by the door, smiling a knowing, mischievous smile to everyone who
passed. But as Macey and

I
stepped toward the door, my aunt's smile was totally not what we got.

An
arm. That's what I saw first. An arm blocking the doorway, reaching for Macey's
shoulder.

"Sorry," Aunt Abby
said. "Not a secure location."

I
gave Macey a sympathetic shrug and tried to push past. But Abby didn't budge.
"Oh." She looked at me. "I think you and your mother have an…arrangement?"

I
could hear the retreating footsteps in the blackness outside. I could feel the
opportunity slipping away.

"But—"
I started. I didn't know if I was pleading with my aunt, or my teacher, or with
Macey's Secret Service shadow, but I knew the situation called for some serious
pleading with
someone.
"But this is an assignment!" I blurted. Abby just shook her head.

"Sorry, girls," she
said. "Sure"—she glanced at Macey— "I'll take a bullet for you,
but that doesn't mean I'll incur the wrath of Rachel."

Bex
and Liz skidded to a stop outside and turned back to us, Bex's eyes asking what
was taking us so long; but Aunt Abby turned away, into the darkness, without a
second glance.

 

 

"Hey,"
I said, running to catch up with Macey. "You okay?"

She
smiled. "I'm great." But she didn't sound great. Not even a little.

"It's
me you're talking to," I told her. "I can't vote, remember?"

"I'm…"
This time she really seemed to be thinking about the answer, and I knew there
was a chance I'd get the truth instead of the party line. "I'm mad,"
she said finally, the words echoing down the long empty hall.

"Okay."

"And
I'm sick of this." She held out the cast that covered her left arm.
"This stupid, dirty, itchy…
reminder.
But apparently I poll ten points
better with it on."

"Okay."

"And
I'm so tired…" Her voice was softer then, her fight almost gone as she
sank to the stairs. "I am so tired of being Macey McHenry."

I sank onto the stairs beside
her.

"It
could be worse," I tried, hoping my smile didn't look quite as counterfeit
as it felt. "You could be left-handed," I said, pointing to the cast
on her left arm.

Macey
laughed. "I could be stuck on a campaign bus…with my mother."

"You could
be
your
mother," I tried.

"I could be Preston,"
she said with a laugh.

I
thought about it for a second. If Macey was going crazy living in the most
secure building in the country, with Aunt Abby as her security detail, then the
son of a presidential candidate had to be going out of his mind.

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