Sources Say

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Sources Say Page 1

by Lori Goldstein




  With all my love to Mom and Dad

  An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, New York

  First published in the United States of America by Razorbill,

  an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, 2020

  Copyright © 2020 by Lori Goldstein

  Screen Queens teaser text copyright © 2019 by Penguin Random House LLC

  Interior illustrations copyright © 2020 by Mallory Heyer

  Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

  Razorbill & colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Visit us online at penguinrandomhouse.com.

  LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

  Names: Goldstein, Lori (Lori A.), author.

  Title: Sources say / Lori Goldstein.

  Description: New York : Razorbill, [2020] | Audience: Ages 12+.

  Summary: When ex-power couple Angeline, a social influencer, and Leo, an injured

  athlete, face off for student council president, Angeline’s sister, school-newspaper

  editor Cat, and an underground newspaper editor also compete.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2020020353 | ISBN 9780593117408 (hardcover)

  ISBN 9780593117415 (ebook)

  Subjects: CYAC: Elections—Fiction. | High schools—Fiction.

  Schools—Fiction. | Newspapers—Fiction. | Sisters—Fiction.

  Classification: LCC PZ7.1.G652 Sou 2020 | DDC [Fic]—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020020353

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people,

  or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are

  products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events

  or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

  pid_prh_5.5.0_c0_r0

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Copyright

  Introduction

  1: When Cat’s Buttons Are Pushed

  2: When Angeline Is Here for It

  3: When Cat Comes Down with Election Fever

  4: When Angeline’s Every Day Becomes Epic

  5: When Cat Becomes a Cartoon

  6: When Angeline Battles Vegan Bacon

  7: When Cat Struts Her Stuff

  8: When Angeline Watches Cat Strut Her Stuff

  9: When Cat Enters a Maze

  10: When Angeline Stands Up and Out

  11: When Cat’s Words Are Read

  12: When Angeline Does the Math

  13: When Cat Gets Lucky

  14: When Angeline Becomes an App

  15: When Cat Goes Social

  16: When Angeline Gets into a Scrap (or Two)

  17: When Cat’s Weekend’s Jam-Packed

  18: When Cat Watches Grady

  19: When Angeline Becomes a Hashtag

  20: When Cat Enters the Watch Yard

  21: When Angeline Hits the Sweet Spot

  22: When Cat Considers the Merits of Butterscotch

  23: When Angeline Gets It

  24: When Angeline Becomes a Witch

  25: When Cat Wraps Herself in Yellow Caution Tape

  26: When Angeline Takes an Ice Bath

  27: When Cat Clicks and Baits

  28: When Angeline Drowns

  29: When Cat Clucks Back

  30: When Cat Hits the Big Time

  31: When Angeline Breaks the Rules

  32: When Cat Makes a Plan

  33: When Angeline Encounters a Green Ghost

  34: When Cat Thanks Slothy

  35: When Angeline Goes Campaigning

  36: When Cat’s Alive with Butterflies

  37: When Angeline Rock Climbs

  38: When Cat Protests Just Enough

  39: When Angeline Becomes News

  40: When Cat Freelances

  Acknowledgments

  Excerpt from Screen Queens

  About the Author

  Acedia Confronts Its Inner Sloth:

  Controversy Surrounding Student Council Unprecedented in Charter School History

  A SPECIAL REPORT

  by Cathleen Quinn, senior Editor of Acedia Charter School’s The Red and Blue

  Some say it started with the vegan bacon. Others claim it was the election of 1800. And some trace it all the way back to the dummy with an astounding likeness to Principal Schwartz perched in a lawn chair on the roof of the school. But everything that occurred during the student council election at Acedia Charter School started with a party.

  “I was ripped, man,” Josh Baker, junior, said. “Three, four of those apple pie balls, and whoosh! See ya! Wait, you quoting this? Yeah, so, yeah, hundred percent, thought it was apple juice. Vodka? Shocking, man. Shocking. But I saw. They were there. Both of ’em.”

  The “they” to whom Baker is referring are seniors Angeline Quinn—a popular lifestyle YouTuber—and Leo Torres—who’s been romantically linked to Angeline and whose mom regularly makes headlines as a vocal progressive candidate for Congress. The party at senior Maxine Chen’s was three weeks before school started.

  “The house is up on the cliffs,” junior Natalie Goldberg said. “It has a hot tub and a screening room. You know, like, with seats that recline? Not old-people recline but movie-theater recline with cup holders and personalized popcorn tubs. Her parents are in tech. So, you know.”

  Acedia Charter School has the distinction of being set upon land both rich in history—with a past of defending its shores against the invading British—and blazing with the future, thanks to its proximity to Boston with its elite schools of Harvard and MIT and influx of tech firms of the old guard (Amazon and Microsoft) and the new (BotBurgers—fast food cooked by robots—and BugBites—snacks made from ground-up crickets). Which means Acedia Charter School, nestled along a picturesque coastline in a small town on the South Shore, has as many students with parents at the upper levels of income, like Maxine Chen’s, as it does below.

  “I heard she did it for the cash,” junior Andreas Costa said.

  “I think it was the dude running against Torres’s mom,” Baker said. “Bribed Angeline with stocks or some shit. But what the hell do I know? I was off my ass. Off . . . my . . . ass.”

  While reports differ, one thing is certain. The fight that ended a three-year romance, sparked a political rivalry, and left Angeline Quinn in tears and Leo Torres with a busted shoulder happened in that screening room at Maxine’s party.

  Click for more: 1 of 6

  Comments (295)

  BakedBaker24/7 2 hours ago

  Dude look at me! I’m famous! Apple pie ball people: Available for all spokesman opportunities. DM me!

  Like 45

  SlothsArePeopleToo 3 hours ago

  We . . . don’t . . . appreciate . . . (yawn) . . . the insul— . . . zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

  Like 145

  NatGberg 4 hours ago

  I have nothing against old people. I swear. Some of my favorite gr
andparents are old.

  Like 0

  AskanAngel 5 hours ago

  Look at those wings flutter.

  Like 60

  1

  When Cat’s Buttons Are Pushed

  30 DAYS TO THE ELECTION

  The assault on Cat’s nose was quick and painful.

  “Manure,” she said, buckling herself into the passenger seat.

  “I know.” Angeline sighed. “First day of school makes me want to curse too, though less like a farmer.”

  “I mean the smell. In my car.”

  “Our car.”

  “Gramps gave it to me last year.”

  “With the intention of sharing it with me this year.”

  Angeline finished the last over, under, over of her long braid and secured it with a black elastic, nearly the same color as her roots and Cat’s blunt bob. Twenty minutes it had taken Cat to flatten her light-socket cowlicks, and yet her sister perfected the black to brown to honey to gold ribbons of her ombre side braid while behind the wheel of the silver hatchback that had been their grandfather’s until the eye chart said otherwise.

  Cat nuzzled into the familiar leather, slippery and smooth from wear. “Well, the car—”

  “Our car.” Angeline turned the key, and the hatchback sputtered to life. She backed out of their apartment building’s assigned parking spot with the barest of glances in the rearview mirror. She’d had her license for all of five minutes, but already she was a more confident and skilled driver than Cat, who’d had her license for nearly a year.

  “Fine.” Cat wrinkled her pale nose. “But it smells.”

  “That unscented lotion you insist on using isn’t so much unscented as reeking of antiseptic. Seriously, Cat, a little mango-lime wouldn’t kill you.”

  “It’s not me.” Cat swiveled her neck, spying first her sister’s tanned thighs peeking out of her dress-code-violating skirt and then something gold and shimmery on the floor of the back seat.

  “Another one of your freebies?” Cat said. “Don’t tell me. It’s some lipstick—”

  “No.”

  “Dry shampoo—”

  “Stop.”

  “Yoga pants or corset revival—”

  “Enough, Cat.”

  Right. Cat reached behind the seat and picked up the gold bag. Another half-baked test product from some “women-empowering”—definition loosely applied—startup. The single demeaning word “better” was written in minuscule lowercase letters across the front and inside—

  “My God!” Cat flinched at the stench. “I think I’m going blind.” She gingerly removed the gray cylindrical package, stamped with “bigger is better” in the same tiny font whose irony she’d bet had been lost on the perky female founders. “What is this?”

  “Facial rejuvenator. Says it works best when heated naturally by the warmth of the sun.”

  “So you’re leaving it in my car?”

  “Our car.”

  “Which now smells like a rest stop on 95 during an August heat wave.”

  “They added essential oils.” Angeline extended her long neck and sniffed. “Don’t you get the lavender?”

  “No. The only essential I get is shi—”

  “Night soil,” Angeline corrected.

  Cat dropped the cylinder. “As in . . . ?”

  “Waste matter. Recycled.”

  “That you put on your face?” Cat rubbed her fingers on the side of her khaki cargo skirt—two inches below the knee, one more than required by the student handbook. “Please tell me it’s not human.”

  Angeline rolled her eyes. “Obviously.”

  “Right. Of course. Obviously.” Cat tied the bag shut. She held it between two fingers and eyed the open window.

  “Don’t even think about it,” Angeline said.

  “Your funeral, which is a very real possibility if you use that.” Cat tossed the bag behind her seat and zipped open her backpack. She squirted half the container of hand sanitizer into her palm.

  “It’s approved . . . ish,” Angeline said. “Elephant mostly, I think.”

  Cat groaned as she smeared hand sanitizer on her nose. “Because ‘bigger is better.’ That’s disgusting. You really have no line.”

  “What I have are two hundred thousand subscribers and the chance to turn that into two million. Ten times my current ad revenue. Ten. Mom could retire. Let Dad suck on that.”

  “Sure. Thanks to YouTube voyeuristic weirdos, who you cater to.”

  Angeline shifted her hazel eyes from the road to Cat. “Have you even watched recently? Seen the likes from Evelyn’s Epic Everyday? Read the comments?”

  “Do you want me to?”

  Angeline faced front again and shrugged with the grace of a princess bending in her thousandth curtsey. A shoulder lift and fall that Cat knew every muscle twitch of. She and her sister shared a room and a grade but little else.

  Cat twisted toward the open window, breathing in air heavy with the smell of the ocean and donuts from the lone chain store in town. Angeline had taken the scenic route, chauffeuring them from their apartment complex at one end of the five-block stretch of the harbor to the other. Since their unit faced the back, they didn’t get a glimpse of the deep blue waters along Frontage Street that defined the town and everyone in it.

  They passed the aging grocery, well-stocked hardware store, and two-screen movie theater with gum from the seventies cemented to the seats. Sprinkled in between were more ice cream stands than a stretch of real estate this small could normally sustain, though half would shutter before the first frost, hibernating until spring. The requisite Irish bar and hipster gastropub nestled in among the year-round clothing, home decor, and accessories shops that, like the harbor itself, somehow managed to fall on the right side of cute versus cheesy—a rarity in towns that wouldn’t be towns without the ocean drawing people to them. All these businesses were potential advertisers for The Red and Blue. Cat had made her pitch to most of them over the past couple of weeks.

  She glanced at her white plastic digital watch, and Angeline huffed.

  “What?” Cat said.

  “We’re not late. And if we were, it’d be your fault not mine. I was the one waiting in the car for you.”

  Because you hit stop instead of snooze on my phone’s alarm so you could drive.

  Cat took a steadying breath. “I just wanted a chance to stop by—”

  “The newsroom, I know. Your second home.”

  She said it as if it shouldn’t be. As if the time Cat spent there could be better allocated elsewhere. As if it didn’t matter. Which, by extension, meant neither did Cat.

  They drove in silence up from the harbor, the landscape shifting from boats, docks, and sand to towering oak, birch, and maple trees. Lush green leaves lined the winding streets where clapboard homes from the 1700s mixed with mini McMansions in subdivisions. This town wasn’t exactly small, but being in it beside Angeline made it feel like a coffin.

  Only two traffic lights guarded intersections along their seven-minute ride. At the second one, Angeline flicked the blinker to take the next left into Acedia Charter School’s parking lot.

  Three stories high with rows of slender windows lining the red-brick front, Acedia gave the optical illusion of being narrower than it actually was, like its architect had implemented one of Angeline’s “Five Closet Tricks That Shed Pounds Instantly!”

  Angeline paused and glanced at Cat. “Be different with them gone . . . Stavros and June.”

  Cat swallowed. “Jen.”

  “That’s what I meant.”

  “Mmm . . . sure.” Stavros and Jen had graduated last year, leaving Cat as the sole remaining editorial member of The Red and Blue and with a friendship count of zero. She’d been too embarrassed to tell Gramps that the empty masthead was how she’d nabbed the edit
or in chief role.

  “So, yeah,” Angeline said, “you can sit with us at lunch if you want.”

  “Us? You and Leo are back together?”

  “No.” Angeline bristled. “I meant us—Maxine, Sonya, and Riley, you know.”

  “I’ll probably be in the newsroom.”

  “Right.”

  “Right.”

  “Well, that’s done then.”

  “Done? Wait, did you promise Mom you’d extend a pity invite to your pathetic older sister?”

  “Gramps, and the wording was different but close enough.”

  Cat clamped her jaw shut. She barely waited for Angeline to put her hatchback into park before escaping it. Lately, Angeline had been pushing Cat’s buttons more frequently, and the sensation of her head about to explode was becoming all too familiar.

  She eased the clench on her backpack, preparing to start her senior year alongside the classmates she barely knew.

  Out of the corner of her eye, Cat caught sight of a distinctive lime-green sweatshirt. On anyone else the bright zip-up would’ve looked silly, but the combination of Leo’s tawny skin, thick black hair, and unwavering confidence made it work. He loved that sweatshirt almost as much as he loved Angeline—though presumably it got top billing now.

  Cat remembered the first time she’d seen him in it, freshman year when Gramps had insisted on meeting the boy stealing away his granddaughter. He’d arrived with a loaded beach tote: flowers for their mom, a potted pink beach rose for Angeline, and chocolates filled with hazelnuts that his grandmother had brought from Venezuela on her last visit to the States. Leo’s parents were both Venezuelan, first-generation, and though Leo lacked a sweet tooth, the rest of his family—and now Gramps—couldn’t get enough of that Toronto candy. But Leo also had something for Cat: a spiral-bound notebook with Editor in Chief handwritten on the cover. She still had it. She’d waited, as if opening it before the role was hers would jinx it.

  They’d had to use Cat and Angeline’s desk chair as the fifth seat at the dining room table, but Leo fit in instantly. He’d watch the Red Sox with Gramps, listen more attentively than either Cat or Angeline when their mom delved into stories from the law firm where she worked, and came ready with a new obscure fact to every dinner—he was obsessed with this podcast that uncovered the unusual in everyday things. Over the past three years, he’d become an everyday thing for the Quinns. He’d become family.

 

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