The Friday Society (9 page)

Read The Friday Society Online

Authors: Adrienne Kress

BOOK: The Friday Society
3.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

14

Just Your Average Turn-of-the-Century Slumber Party with a Dead Body.

You Know How It Is.

C
LEARLY
C
ORA WAS
the kind of girl who could hold her booze. Nellie was feeling downright drunk after two sips from the flask. It was scotch. Good scotch. Or, at least, strong scotch. She really wasn’t the kind of person who could tell quality scotch from not.

Even tiny Michiko appeared only mildly tipsy. Or, at least, that’s what Nellie assumed. The few shy smiles that broke the Japanese girl’s serious expression seemed to suggest that she’d let her guard down a little.

“No!” said Cora with a laugh. “And stop saying it!”

“I’m only sayin’ it because you keep on going on about him.”

“I keep going on about him because I hate him. Because of the unfairness of the world. I’m just as good as he is, probably better, but because I’m a girl—”

“You’re in love with Mr. Harris.”

“Am not!”

“Are, too.”

“Yes!” insisted Michiko, even though both girls were pretty sure she had no idea what they were talking about.

“Let’s play a game,” said Cora, obviously trying to change the subject. The three of them were now in Nellie’s room, sitting on her bed. Cora had escaped from her gorgeous red satin gown and was now wearing nothing but her undergarments, sitting cross-legged at the foot. Nellie was in her nightgown under the covers, and Michiko was still in her costume, sitting on a chair to the side.

“Don’t change the subject!” said Nellie.

“I damn well will. Do you know any games?”

Nellie sighed. She thought back to her time backstage at the burlesque house with the other girls. They had gotten up to all kinds of mischief, but they usually required a theater and rigging . . . But, oh! “Let’s play ‘answer the question or do the deed’!”

“What’s that?” asked Cora, taking another sip from her flask.

“Well,” said Nellie, hugging her knees up to her chin, “you have a choice. Either you answer any question we ask, or Michiko and I get to make you do something.”

“That’s it?” asked Cora.

“That’s it. Not good enough for you, is it?”

“Just very simple. No points system, no rules?”

“Rule is, you can’t lie, and you can’t back out of doing the deed.”

Cora passed the now much lighter flask over to Nellie. “Okay. Let’s play.”

Nellie took the flask and a swig of scotch. It burned for a moment, then she passed it on to Michiko, who took a tiny sip.

“Who’s first, then?” asked Nellie.

“I’ll go.”

“Right. So. Which you want to do?”

“I’ll answer a question.”

Now, in all fairness, Nellie knew she should consult with Michiko over what to ask, but it didn’t seem like the poor girl was really going to be able to contribute to the game. Still, she turned to her and said slowly, “What should we ask her?”

Michiko furrowed her fine eyebrows. “Ask her?”

“For the game.”

“Game?”

“Okay, I’ll ask. Why does your accent slip, like when you’re angry, or now, when you’re toasted?”

Cora smiled. “That’s an easy one. I was born on the street, grew up in the East End until I was ten, when Lord White hired me.”

“Really?”

“Yeah. I’ve worked at changing it, but sometimes when I’m not totally in control, I slip up a bit.”

“Neat.”

“Is it my turn now?” asked Cora, sitting herself up on her knees. She looked excited, and that made Nellie nervous.

“Okay. I guess we can’t really include her,” said Nellie, glancing at Michiko, who was taking another sip of scotch. “So just do me.”

“Which do you want?”

“I guess . . . do the deed.”

A wide grin spread across Cora’s face and Nellie’s heart sank. Okay, so she’d chosen the wrong option.

“You have to go into the sitting room . . .”

“No,” said Nellie right away.

“You said the rule was you had to do whatever I told you to.”

“But—”

“You have to go into the sitting room and kiss the dead guy on the forehead.”

“Cora!”

“You have to do it!”

“I refuse!”

“You can’t!”

Nellie pouted for a moment. “Fine. I’ll do it, but only if you admit you have a crush on Mr. Harris.”

“That’s not the rule!”

“I think you really want to see me do this, and I can tell you I just won’t unless you admit to it. So it’s up to you.”

“You can’t break the rules.”

“Look. When it’s your turn, either I’ll make you tell me if you choose ‘do the deed’ or I’ll ask you if you like him, and I know you do. So why not just get it over with now?”

Cora sighed. Then responded, “I. Have. A. Crush. On. Mr. Harris.”

Nellie laughed and clapped her hands. Michiko did the same.

“But it’s a very little one,” Cora added hastily, “founded on biological impulses. He’s clearly meant to be someone that girls are attracted to. It just shows I’m a normal human being. However, pragmatically—”

“Oh, shut it,” said Nellie, laughing, pulling the covers off and slipping out of the bed.

“No, really, pragmatically I find him a fool, and I could never be truly interested in someone who—”

“Are you coming or not? I thought you wanted to see this?”

With another sigh Cora climbed off the bed, and she and Michiko followed Nellie into the sitting room. At one point Cora listed toward the wall, and Michiko grabbed her to keep her heading straight.

“Thanks,” Cora said. “Who knew walking down a hallway could be so treacherous.”

The three girls stared at the body lying on the couch. Or rather stared at the white sheet that covered the shape of the body beneath it.

Nellie could hear Cora start to giggle behind her. Okay. So maybe she couldn’t handle her booze as well as she’d initially thought. Giggling just didn’t seem right for Cora.

“This is so mean.” Nellie crossed her arms over her chest.

“Do it,” said Cora.

Nellie inhaled deeply. It was fair play, she thought, slowly approaching the couch. After all, when they’d shared secrets in the cab, her fear of this body had been just as big as Cora’s secret about Mr. Harris. And she’d had way too much fun picking on Cora about him. This was payback.

The body seemed to float toward her, even though she was the one moving toward it. The white sheet almost made it creepier. And she had this feeling like all of a sudden the body would sit up, just as she was about to peel the sheet off. She reached out her arms, trying to make them as long as she could, keeping the rest of her body far away from it.

Please don’t sit up. Please don’t sit up.

She leaned over, her fingers touching the white sheet . . .

“BOO!”

Nellie screamed and whirled around. Cora was doubled over in laughter, Michiko staring down at her as if she’d lost her mind. “Damn you, Cora Bell! Damn you, and your bloody stupid sense of humor! What the hell is wrong with you?”

“That scream,” Cora wheezed, “it was so . . . I’m sorry, but your face!”

“You’re dead, you hear me, dead!” Nellie could barely hear her voice over the frantic beating of her heart. She turned back to the body and with one swift angry motion peeled back the sheet.

The scientist looked pretty much the same as he’d looked earlier that day. A little less healthy maybe, a little more dead. Gray.
Just do it, Nellie, and get it over with.

“Pucker up,” Cora encouraged from behind.

Nellie shook her head and took a deep breath, plugging her nose. She leaned over. Just one kiss. One quick kiss.

She was pulled back fiercely, and though it wasn’t half as startling as Cora’s “boo,” it still shocked her. She turned to see Michiko standing with a deadly serious expression on her face.

“No,” said Michiko.

“What?”

“No. Much disrespect. No.”

Nellie glanced at Cora, who had stopped laughing and was looking startled.

“It was . . . just a game, Michiko,” Cora said.

Michiko’s head snapped toward her. “No,” she repeated.

Cora nodded slowly, and Michiko turned to Nellie again.

“I didn’t want to do it in the first place,” Nellie said, holding up her hands. She really didn’t need an insanely talented sword fighter mad at her.

Michiko released a breath, and gave a little smile. “Good.”

“I’m getting a little tired. I don’t suppose you’d mind having company for the night? It’s so late it’s almost morning, and I’m certain Lord White will assume I’ve already gone to bed. I won’t be missed,” said Cora, leaning against the doorframe.

“You’re already in your underwear. Stay over. And who knows when Raheem will be getting back. So he can’t say no now, can he?” Nellie grinned. She turned to Michiko. “Stay?”

“Stay?”

“Here. Tonight. Stay till morning?”

There was no way of knowing what the girl was thinking, if she even understood. But she eventually nodded, so it seemed she sort of knew what was going on.

“What was that?” Cora turned and stuck her head around into the hall.

“What was what?”

“I thought I heard a knock on the door . . . but it was so quiet . . . there it is again . . .”

Nellie followed Cora out into the hall and they leaned against the front door to listen. Well, Cora leaned, Nellie kind of fell against it. Michiko stood behind them.

Suddenly there was a loud bang on the door, startling the girls and causing them to bolt back upright.

“What the hell do you want?” yelled Nellie at the solid oak in front of her.

There was a muffled response.

“Louder, please! Can’t hear a damn thing yer sayin’!”

The muffled sound got a bit louder with at least one recognizable word.

“Police?” said Nellie. Her heart was pumping again, and she stared at Cora in a panic.

“Probably the whole Dr. Welland thing,” said Cora. “Remember, I told the cabby to go to the police. He probably told them about us, where you live and all. Don’t worry. But, uh, let’s hide the dead body maybe?”

“Shoot, you’re right. Good call. Raheem doesn’t like it when the police get involved in his business.” There was a knock on the door again. “Look, I’m naked, okay, give me a minute!”

There were no further sounds from the other side of the door.

Cora had already grabbed Michiko’s arm and dragged her back into the living room. Nellie watched her give frantic instructions to the girl, who didn’t seem to understand fully until Cora took hold of the body by its armpits. Alarmed, but clearly aware something was wrong, Michiko took the feet, and the two girls lifted the body.

Nellie was impressed by how strong they both were and let them do the work without her interference. Not that she had any desire to touch a dead body, mind. She watched as they carried it down the hall. It wasn’t exactly the smoothest she’d seen people negotiate a hallway. There was quite a bit of teetering, and Cora had started giggling slightly, which wasn’t helping the situation in the least. Especially as it was clear that Michiko was trying to be as respectful as possible in carrying the body. But finally they got their bearings and were able to make it down the hall and into, oh no . . . please no . . . her bedroom.

Great. Now she’d have to sleep in a room that had had a dead body in it.

When they had disappeared, she turned to the front door, took a moment to attempt to compose herself, and then answered it.

It was, indeed, a police officer. Though to call him that felt wrong. He was just so young, and the uniform he wore made him look even younger. Like he was playing dress-up. His not-quite-there blond mustache and hair slicked back with a little too much pomade only added to the effect. He looked terrified to see Nellie answer the door, and his gaze immediately fell on the pad of paper in front of him.

“Um, I’m looking for a . . . Mr. Raheem,” he said almost inaudibly.

Nellie was finding it hard to remain standing. She grasped the doorframe. “He’s not here.”

“Oh.” The young officer appeared extremely flustered by this sudden turn of events, and made strange faces as he flipped the pages of his pad, until finally, with a sigh of resignation, he looked up and made eye contact with her. Nellie thought his eyes were a very pretty shade of blue.

“Can I help you?” she asked, hoping the words were coming out in the order she wanted them to.

There was a sound from somewhere behind her, and she turned around in time to see a mess of dark hair vanish back into the bedroom.

“Shhh!” she called out

“Is there someone else here?”

“No.” The young police officer furrowed his eyebrows, which Nellie thought made him look extra adorable. Poor fellow. She probably shouldn’t lie to him. Much. “Yes. My . . . friend.” She suddenly didn’t think that Michiko, with her sewn cheek, would make a good impression.

“Could you ask her to come here?”

“She’s in her underwear.”

Instantly the officer’s face turned bright red. “Oh, I . . . I see. I . . .” Clearly he was using all of his problem-solving ability to figure out how the situation could be resolved. Finally he hit on it. “Can she put on a robe?”

“I’m here, I’m here.” Cora came to her side, wrapped up in one of Nellie’s shawls. “What’s all the fuss and other, Bofficer?” She thought for a moment, and then laughed. “That came out wrong.”

“Uh . . . yeah . . .”

“What can we do for you?”

“Well, this cabby came to the station, and . . . there’s been a murder, see . . . so he told us where he’d dropped off three witnesses, and so here I am.”

“Yes, you are.”

Nellie felt some relief that Cora had taken over communications and resigned herself to watching the young officer and his nervous twitches, which for some reason gave her a slight butterfly feeling in her stomach.

“Uh . . . so . . . can you tell me anything?”

“I can tell you many things—where to go for dinner on Friday nights, what the fashion for hats is this season, which votes are coming up in Parliament. . . . What in particular interests you?”

“What you . . . witnessed.”

There was a pause as Cora stared at the officer. So many things to decide. Nellie understood why it took her a moment.

Other books

A Whisper Of Eternity by Amanda Ashley
Ruthless by Cath Staincliffe
Going Thru Hell by T. J. Loveless
Limit of Vision by Linda Nagata
All Balls and Glitter by Craig Revel Horwood
Graffiti Moon by Crowley, Cath
Prove Me Wrong by Gemma Hart
A Death in the Asylum by Caroline Dunford