Read Monster High 4: Back and Deader Than Ever Online
Authors: Lisi Harrison
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction / Monsters, #Juvenile Fiction / Horror & Ghost Stories, #Juvenile Fiction / Juvenile Fiction - Social Issues - Adolescence, #Juvenile Fiction / Media Tie-In, #Juvenile Fiction / Humorous Stories
“So.” Jackson quickly pulled away. “I’ve got some great news.”
“What?” Melody asked, arms still clasped behind his back.
“I was going to tell you at the meeting, but—”
“Melly!” Sage called.
Melody giggled as the guitarist danced toward her. As usual, Sage looked like a
Teen Vogue
version of rock. Thick black hair, dark red lipstick, ironic T-shirt, ironic tutu, and motorcycle boots. Her dark eyes and cocoa-colored Neutrogena skin reminded Melody of a chocolate-covered almond: smooth and impossible to resist. She was too pretty for rock, too cool for pop. And she was calling Melody’s name!
Melody turned away from Jackson and signaled for Sage to come over.
Jackson broke free of Melody’s grip.
“What?”
“I was about to tell you.”
Melody giggled at her thoughtlessness. “Omigod, I’m so sorry, you’re right. What is it?”
Jackson’s face illuminated. “We got them!”
Them?
“You mean the leather bracelets we ordered?”
Jackson shook his head. “The jobs.”
Jobs?
“At Camp Crescendo. We got them!”
Melody’s thoughts shifted and locked.
Oh yeah, camp.
“That’s great!” she said.
He leaned down and kissed her sweetly. “Think about it. Two months, just you and me. Camping, singing, painting—”
Sage slung her arms around Melody and squeezed.
“You bolted so fast that we never got to tell you what an awesome gig that was,” Sage yelled into her ear. Then she greeted Jackson with a fist bump. “Cici and Nine are backstage looking for you.”
“Sorry, I just wanted to find Jackson before—”
“This is Granite,” Sage announced.
A boy—the boy—in the leather jacket leaned forward, flashed the side of his hand, and leaned back. Something zapped Melody’s insides. It felt like she’d run into an electric fence.
“He’s our roadie,” Sage chirped. “And our eye candy,” she teased, mussing his black Dave Navarro–style ponytail. But it was obvious she wasn’t kidding. Along with his al dente body,
Granite’s narrow eyes—an unusually light shade of gray—gripped Melody like magnets.
“Thanks for saving me from that freak out there,” she managed.
He shrugged as though it was no big deal. “You looked like you were in trouble, so…”
Jackson cleared his throat. “Mel, it’s getting hot in here. We should probably get going.”
She nodded. “Sure.” And then to Granite, “So, uh, thanks for packing up our stuff and everything.”
“Mel, we should really get going.”
“Going?” Sage interrupted. “The DJ just started.”
“It’s a different D.J. that concerns me,” Jackson said, reaching for Melody’s hand. She wanted to go with him. The last thing she needed was D.J. Hyde swooping in, telling everyone how much he hated girl bands and ruining the perfect night. But for some reason she couldn’t move.
All of a sudden Cici and Nine appeared, flushed and panting.
“I just requested Björk,” Cici announced.
“ ‘Human Behaviour’?” Melody asked, hoping.
Nine nodded. “Club remix.”
On cue, heavy industrial beats began pumping all around them. The red lights turned to steely blue. Faux fog hissed down from above. Cici and Nine yanked Melody, Sage, and Granite onto the dance floor. Melody looked back at Jackson like a helpless kidnapping victim. “Go without me,” she called through the smoke. “I’ll get a ride home with Candace.”
He flashed her a thumbs-up and raced for the exit.
Oops. Siren alert! Did I just use my voice on Jackson?
Melody turned to her new friends and banged her head, shaking out her guilt with each cranial thrust. Accidents do happen.
The house lights came on like a slap.
Wake up! Party’s over! Time to get your sweaty butts to bed
, they seemed to say.
“Already?” Nine whined.
Cici checked her armful of Swatches. “It’s one o’clock.”
The girls giggled, marveling at their stamina. Only a handful of people remained, most of whom were staff, none of whom was Candace.
“Van’s loaded,” Granite said, dropping a set of keys into Sage’s hand.
“Mind if I catch a ride?” Melody asked.
“If you don’t mind sitting on Nine-Point-Five’s lap,” Sage said.
Nine gripped her roll of belly fat. “It comes complete with air bags.”
“Or would you prefer saddlebags?” Cici said, slapping her meaty outer thighs.
“I like it all,” Melody said, wondering what her parents would think of her rolling up after midnight stuffed in a van.
“How about I take you?” Granite offered.
“I guess it would be safer that way,” she rationalized, ignoring the scratched motorcycle helmet tucked under his arm, the teeming rain echoing off the tin roof, and the fact that she was required to wrap her arms around his stone-cold body while riding—the last of which was safe in a dangerous sort of way.
They stepped into the bone-chilling night. Other than the
occasional
whoosh
of a passing car, the dilapidated block was silent. Rain fell sideways all around them and stung Melody’s bare arms.
“You don’t happen to have an umbrella, do you?” Granite asked.
Melody giggled. “You afraid of a little water?” she teased.
“Nah,” he said, lifting his palm above his head. Water trickled down the backs of his fingers as if they were drainpipes. “I was worried about your feathers.”
“Oh,” Melody said, examining his dry clothes. “They’re um, they… It’s okay. Birds get wet all the time. So… how are you doing that?”
He placed the helmet on her head and lifted his other hand. The water stopped falling on her too.
“Have you ever been on a bike before?” he asked, straddling his black-and-silver motorcycle. He took off his jacket and draped it over her narrow shoulders.
Melody nodded, even though she hadn’t. Something in her wanted him to think she was just as cool as he was. But why? He didn’t seem to care about cool.
Granite stepped on the clutch, and the engine sparked to life.
“Aren’t you going to wear a helmet?” she asked.
“Nah. My head is like a rock,” he said. “Hold on tight.”
Melody wrapped her arms around his worn white T-shirt. It felt like hugging a statue.
They zipped down the slick road amid streetlights reflecting halos—a black-and-white photograph come to life.
“How was that?” Granite asked, pulling up in front of Melody’s house.
Over too fast.
“Great,” she said, removing the helmet and handing it to him. The rain had slowed to a drizzle. “Thanks again for—”
Ping! Ping!
Their phones signaled text messages at the exact same time.
“Probably your boyfriend,” he said.
And your girlfriend?
she might have asked. If she cared. Which she didn’t.
They checked their screens, and Melody read her message:
TO:
MelodyJune 18, 1:22 AM
MR. D:
RAD MEETINGS ARE MANDATORY. ROCK CONCERTS ARE NOT.
“Whatever,” Granite muttered under his breath.
Melody stiffened. Hand umbrella, stone-cold body, clear gray eyes… “What are you?”
“Huh?” He slipped his phone in the back pocket of his jeans.
“That text. It was the same as mine, wasn’t it?”
“Depends,” he said, his gray eyes fixed on hers. “What did yours say?”
“Something about rock concerts.”
“No way,” Granite said calmly, incapable of losing his cool.
“Yes, way!” Melody said, cool lost. “We’re both RADs!”
“I knew there was something different about you,” he said. “So, what are you? Some kind of Siren?”
Melody nodded. “Impressive. What are you? Some kind of umbrella?”
“Close,” he snickered. “I’m a gargoyle. Put on old buildings to keep the rain from dripping down the sides and eroding them.”
“And to freak people out,” Melody teased.
He snickered again. “That too.”
“So where do you… live?”
“I did live in Portland. Right over the entrance of Venue, the oldest rock bar in the country. Every cool act came through there. It was incredible, until they demolished it last month.”
“Starbucks?”
“Coffee Bean.”
“Sucks.” Melody sighed.
“Big-time. My parents sent me here because the school here is”—he made air quotes—“ ‘RAD-friendly.’ But I think I’m going to stick with the music thing. Life experience will teach me more than sitting in some classroom.”
The porch lights flicked on. Slapped again.
“I’d better go,” Melody said, not moving.
He took out his phone and bumped her his number. “In case you need your microphone packed up.”
“Thanks.” She smiled. There was nothing wrong with making a new friend, was there?
She turned as Granite’s taillight faded down the street, and caught a glimpse of Jackson looking out his bedroom window. She blew him a kiss. But his curtains swung shut before he caught it. The kiss dwindled in the breeze, fading like the smoke of a doused flame.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
Principal Weeks leaned across the podium and turtled
his neck toward the microphone. “Testing… testing.” His usual drill was to demand silence, but the minute he took the stage, the chatter stopped. Today, no one wanted to miss a word.
Frankie turned in her front-row seat and smiled politely at her competitors. But Cleo and Haylee were too busy swapping a secret to notice. Their close-talking camaraderie struck Frankie as odd, considering the golden girl and the brownnoser were about as tight as a boyfriend sweater. Maybe their dads had lectured them about good sportsmanship too.
“Nervous?” Brett whispered into Frankie’s ear.
“No,” she said, smoothing her black-and-white-striped hair. How could anyone be nervous in a glitter-speckled minidress, new plaid booties, and lips slathered in MAC’s Viva Glam Gaga gloss? If looks could kill, she’d be serving back-to-back life sentences. “Why? Do I look nervous?”
“You look like a winner,” Brett said, and then gently kissed her neck bolt.
Frankie sparked. “Are you sure you don’t want to be part of my presentation?”
“Stage fright,” he reminded her.
She giggled. There was something about a horror-film fanatic with stage fright that Frankie found charmingly mint. Of all the things to be afraid of!
“Hello, Merston!” Principal Weeks bellowed. “We’re here to choose a couple to represent our school—and hopefully the T’eau Dally brand—for the next year.” Applause erupted behind the candidates’ VIP seats. Frankie and Brett squeezed each other’s hands. Haylee bit her bottom lip. Cleo and Deuce high-fived.
“Go, Frankieeee!” shouted a girl from the back.
Frankie turned, smiled graciously, and then crossed her green legs.
Cleo and Haylee exchanged a loaded glance. Frankie wanted to lean over and tell them not to be jealous. That it all boiled down to the speeches. That they still had a chance. But Principal Weeks was holding up his palm, insisting on silence, and she didn’t dare disobey. She wanted his vote.
“As you know,” he continued, “winning this contest would mean national recognition for Merston High. Not to mention one million dollars in upgrades—”
Applause rolled through the auditorium.
“—which I am hoping will be enough to keep the RADs from leaving to attend Radcliffe High.”
Clawd cupped his hands over his mouth. “Boooooo!”
Lala buried her face against his arm.
Poor vamp
, thought Frankie. Winning this sponsorship suddenly meant more than prize money and national fame. Because of the deal Lala had made with her father, winning meant keeping RADs and normies together at Merston. Losing meant the end of everything they had been fighting for. Frankie began tugging her wrist seams, suddenly feeling the pressure. Were she and Brett the best people for that job? Cleo and Deuce were Merston royalty. Haylee and Heath were both prized students. Being voted the It Couple was only a minor success. The real victory would come after they won over the sponsors.
If
they won over the sponsors…