Red Handed

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Authors: Gena Showalter

BOOK: Red Handed
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red handed
Also by Gena Showalter

Oh My Goth

POCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2007 by Gena Showalter

MTV Music Television and all related titles, logos, and characters are trademarks of MTV Networks, a division of Viacom International Inc.

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Pocket Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

POCKET and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

ISBN-13: 978-1-4165-3951-3
ISBN-10: 1-4165-3951-4

Visit us on the World Wide Web:
http://www.SimonSays.com

To Brad Redus—an amazing friend.

To Sherry Rowland—invaluable to me.

To Cody Quine—welcome to the family!
(If possible, I would dot the “i” with a heart.)

Acknowledgments

Thank you to Jill Monroe, Sheila Fields, Donnell Epperson, and Betty Sanders for the late-night reads.

1

New Chicago
Sometime in the near future…

I'd always loved the night, where anything could happen and everything usually did. The forbidden…the unexpected…the
bad
. Nothing seemed real in the ethereal light of the moon. Sins were easily forgiven. Why not play? everyone thought—
I
had once thought. Why not enjoy?

At the moment, loud, gyrating music pounded through the darkness, vibrating with so much force the ground shook and the trees swayed. In the center of a forest clearing, my friends danced around a blazing fire, and in the flickering gold and shadows their hands were everywhere. Their mouths were kissing hungrily, their bodies moved to the rhythm of the rock, fast and erratic. Sexual.

Those who weren't dancing were lounging against the circling trees, drinking beer, laughing, and smoking Onadyn, or “Snow Angels,” as we called the cigs—the drug of choice for humans nowadays. It was a deoxygenating drug meant only for the aliens who had invaded our planet so many years ago. A deoxygenating drug that made humans, who needed oxygen to survive, feel as if they were soaring through the heavens, untouchable and invincible (if it didn't kill them).

“I should know,” I muttered under my breath.

I'd flown for years before being forced into rehab. (Twice) I'd been too wasted to recall the first, but I remembered the second very well, the memory of it burned into my brain.

My mom had picked me up after school one day. Uncaring of her reaction, I'd smoked a Snow Angel just before she arrived. Not enough to pass out, but just enough to fragment my thoughts and emotions, making me loopy, disoriented, and a total pain in the ass.

Nothing could touch me when I was like that. Not anger, not fear, not sadness.

She'd known what I'd done the instant she spotted me—the glassy eyes and blue lips always gave users away—yelling in front of the other kids waiting for their parents, “Damn you, Phoenix! Is this how you put your life back together?”

Some of the kids around me snickered; some stared at me with disgust. Still uncaring, I didn't sit up, just continued to lounge on the steps. The sun was shining, bright and warm. Maybe I'd spend the rest of the day here.

“I asked you a question, young lady.”

“And I didn't give you an answer,” I'd replied with a laugh. “Now hush.”

“Hush? Hush! You're ruining your life, you're ruining
my
life, and you don't even care!” She abandoned the car and stomped to me, scowling down at me. “I'm supposed to go to work, but I can't leave you alone like this. No telling what you'll do.”

I laughed again. “You're a waitress. It's not like you make a difference in the world. And you know what else? Whatever I do is my business, not yours.”

Hurt washed over her face, but she squared her chin. “Whether I make a difference or not, my job is what pays for your food and your shelter and your clothes.” She grabbed my shoulders and shook me. “Your actions become my business when you steal my hard-earned money to buy the very drugs that are killing you. Your actions become my business when you run away to God knows where and I don't see you for days.”

“Just, I don't know, shut up and go away or something. You're ruining my buzz.” Dizzy, I tried to push her hands away but didn't have the strength. That, too, made me laugh.

She didn't reply for several strangled seconds, just stared at me as if I were a bottle of poison and she'd just digested the entire contents. Other parents had arrived, I realized, and watched us unabashedly.

My mom realized it, too, and wheeled around to face them. “What are you staring at?” she snapped. “Get your kids and go home.”

“Your daughter is seriously disturbed,” someone muttered.

“She's a menace,” someone else, a man, said. “And if she ever comes near my child, I'll call the cops and have her locked away.”

“Don't worry, Daddy,” one of the more popular girls at the school said in a snotty voice. I couldn't recall her name, but I knew she was a straight-A student, an all-around goody-goody, and someone I despised because she always seemed so put together, as if the world were her own personal treasure chest. “I'd rather kill myself than go near her.”

I pushed to my feet, wobbling as another wave of dizziness struck. I meant to approach her, realized I'd fall, so remained in place, saying instead, “You can fuck the hell off.” With that, I gave her and her dad a double-birded salute. “Feel free to kill yourself like you promised. Or maybe call me and I'll come over and do it for you.”

There was a gasp. An enraged snarl.

My mom dragged me into the car after that. I hadn't cared at the time, but she'd cried the entire way home and shipped me to rehab that very evening.

Once I'd sobered up, the memory had embarrassed and shamed me. Still did. I'd made my own mother feel worthless, and I'd laughed about it.

I didn't want to be that uncaring girl ever again. I kept thinking,
What if, next time I use, I do something worse?
What if, next time, I couldn't be forgiven—by my mom or myself? I mean, a guy I met in rehab had later killed himself because he'd been humiliated by the things he'd done to support his habit.

I hadn't reached that point.
And I won't
.

I refused to fly anymore. Which was hard, now that I was back in school and surrounded by friends who flew every weekend. Harder still as I stood in that ethereal moonlight, the world around me beckoning with promises of numbness and invincibility.

Those promises had always been my downfall.

I just, I didn't fit in with the other kids at school. They saw me as the goody-goody had. Worthless, untrustworthy. Tainted. These were the only kids that accepted and understood me, so I didn't want to leave them.

Stay strong, Phoenix. Stay strong
. As I sipped my beer, I leaned against the jagged bark of a tree. I'd arrived only a few minutes ago, parked in front of an abandoned warehouse like everyone else, and trekked through the forest. Late. As always. I had debated coming at all.

Now, as I studied the scene in front of me, I realized I shouldn't have come, no matter how much I missed my friends. No matter how alone I felt.

No matter how determined I thought my resolve to remain sober.

Plumes of white smoke wafted, like mist, almost like ghosts, enveloping the kids who were puffing Snow Angels. I bit my bottom lip. Oh, the temptation…months ago I would have joined them without thought. Would have inhaled the sweet, after-rain scent of the drug and soared through the stars.

A painful need to do just that washed through me. In seconds I could be giddy, invincible.
Fly…fly…
I could forget the way my dad had walked out on me and my mom two years ago; I could forget my mom's constant disappointment in me. I could even forget the little stresses of the day, where it didn't matter who liked me and who didn't.

“Phoenix!” a familiar voice called happily. “Thank God. You came, you sexy bitch.”

I glanced to my left, following the direction of the words. My friend, Jamie Welsh, was approaching, her black curls bouncing on her shoulders. She smiled, her expression as happy as her tone. The firelight flickered over her heavily painted face and illuminated her black syn-leather dress and knee-high boots.

“I couldn't stay away,” I admitted.

Jamie threw her arm around my shoulders and clinked our beers together. “You left Chateau Insano two weeks ago, but this is the first I've seen you outside of class. What's that about?”

Chateau Insano. Our name for rehab. It fit. I
had
gone crazy for a while, hitting the walls, screaming, destroying any piece of furniture—or person—I could get my hands on, all in an attempt to fight my way free.

“My mom's become my warden,” I said, the words dripping with self-deprecation. “I spend most of my time at home now.”

“Poor baby,” she said, sympathetic. “Thank God you escaped tonight, though.” She drained the rest of her beer and tossed the glass onto the ground. “It's gonna get freaky!”

I tapped my foot to the beat of the music, trying to cut off a groan. “Something going down?”

“Just the usual. You know, all the things our parents hate. As if they didn't do the same things when they were young.”

I couldn't picture my mom doing anything wild, not now, not ever. She was so…starched. Not just her appearance: unwrinkled clothing and pale, slicked-back hair. But her personality. If she wasn't working, she was cleaning the house, not giving a single speck of dust time to settle. She never drank, never seemed to have a moment of relaxation.

Pacing, worrying,
those
were her favorite pastimes.
Because of me
, I thought, a little sad.

“Hey,” Jamie said, drawing my attention. “You're all stiff. You, like, need to lighten up. Have you seen Allison Stone's brother? That'll help you for sure.”

“No.” I hadn't even known Allison had a brother. In fact, I'd thought Allison had moved away a year ago. “Allison's here?”

“Yeah, but forget Allison. Allison Smallison, we want to talk about her brother. He graduated a few years ago, before you moved here, then joined the military. The few, the proud, or some other shit,” she said, rolling her eyes. “I don't think you two ever met.”

“We didn't.”

“You'll hate yourself for that when you see him.” As she spoke, Jamie withdrew a small, plastic vial from the hidden, zippered pouch on the side of her boot. Druggies always had ways to hide their stash. “I've kept an eye out for him all these years, but he rarely comes home. Until now,” she added with a wicked smile. “He's finally here.”

I almost groaned again when I spotted the vial. Onadyn, or “Breathless,” the liquid form of the drug. Stronger than powder, more potent than pills. Ten thousand times better than Snow Angels. You didn't just fly to the stars with Breathless, you
became
one.

For a little while, at least
, I reminded myself, but I was unable to tear my gaze from the vial. My hand shook with the desire to reach out and snatch it. I could drain it before Jamie even realized what I'd done.

When you crash, you crash hard, Phoenix. You don't need that right now
. After Breathless, a person burned and ached and dreamed of their next hit. They would kill for it. Steal for it.

But it's so damn good. One more time couldn't possibly hurt me
.

Jamie uncorked the top. She drained half and offered the rest to me. I continued to stare at the clear, swirling liquid for a moment, hungry, so hungry. Tremors raked me.
I'll end up back in rehab. I'll hurt my mom again. Everything I've gained will be lost
.

“Want a sip?” she asked.

Finally, I gathered my wits and shook my head. “No thanks.”

She frowned and pushed the bottle closer to me, right under my nose. “Your mom won't know.”

I experienced a flicker of irritation—and need. She was right. Mom would never have to know. I could—I ground my teeth together.
No. Stop!
I wasn't like that. Not anymore. “No thanks,” I repeated firmly.

Undeterred, she waved the bottle back and forth. The clear liquid swished back and forth, nearly hypnotizing me. For some, Onadyn held a faint dewy scent. For others, for most actually, it was scentless. How I wished it was scentless to me. My mouth watered.

“You absolutely positively sure?” she asked.

No
. “Yes.” I turned my face away.

Jamie shrugged and downed the rest.

I released a sigh of…relief, I hope.

The vial joined the beer bottle on the ground, and they rolled together. Damn. I looked again. “You have
got
to see him,” Jamie said.

My brows furrowed in confusion. “Who?”

“Ryan Stone, silly. Allison's brother. Why he came, I don't know and I don't care. I'm just glad he's here.” Her face scrunched. “I don't know why his sister came, either. Her, I do care about. I wish she'd have stayed home, the snobby bitch.”

Allison had never partied with us. She'd been one of those goody-goodies who made life appear easy. She'd practically floated down the halls, a golden halo on her head, angel wings on her back. Everyone (but us) had loved her.

“Remember how she used to glare at us with disgust during class?” Jamie asked. “I wanted to scratch her eyes out.”

Yeah, I remembered. I'd been happy to see her leave. “Tell me again what's so special about Ryan. With a sister like his, he can't be all that great.”

Jamie giggled, her voice a little hoarse and a lot shallow as her oxygen levels dropped. “Wait till you see him. He's beyond doable. He's—” She looked past the bonfire and frowned. “Where'd he go? If he's making out with—wait. There,” she said, pointing. “Yum yum.”

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