Room Service

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by Maren Stoffels




  Also by Maren Stoffels

  Escape Room

  Fright Night

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

  Text copyright © 2021 by Maren Stoffels

  Cover art copyright © 2021 by timstarkey/Getty Images; Blood image used under license from Shutterstock.com.

  Translation copyright © 2021 by Laura Watkinson

  Escape Room excerpt text copyright © 2020 by Maren Stoffels. Cover art copyright © by Sean Gladwell/Getty Images.

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Underlined, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York. Originally published in paperback by Leopold, Amsterdam in 2019.

  Underlined is a registered trademark and the colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

  GetUnderlined.com

  Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at RHTeachersLibrarians.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Stoffels, Maren, author. | Watkinson, Laura, translator.

  Title: Room service / Maren Stoffels ; translated by Laura Watkinson. Other titles: Room service. English.

  Description: First edition. | New York : Underlined/Delacorte Press, [2021] | Originally published in Dutch in Amsterdam by Leopold in 2019 under title: Room service. | Audience: Ages 12 and up. | Summary: “Four friends celebrate a birthday in a luxury hotel. But what starts as a fun weekend quickly turns into an outright nightmare. They receive messages at the door of their room, revealing more and more about what exactly happened a year ago. What the messenger wants is clear: revenge”— Provided by publisher.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2020029656 (print) | LCCN 2020029657 (ebook) | ISBN 978-0-593-17598-9 (trade paperback) | ISBN 978-0-593-17599-6 (ebook)

  Subjects: CYAC: Secrets—Fiction. | Revenge—Fiction. | Mystery and detective stories.

  Classification: LCC PZ7.1.S7527 Ro 2021 (print) | LCC PZ7.1.S7527 (ebook) | DDC [Fic]—dc23

  Ebook ISBN 9780593175996

  Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

  Penguin Random House LLC 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 in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin Random House to publish books for every reader.

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  Contents

  Cover

  Other Titles

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Reservation

  Fender

  Linnea

  Entrance

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Bar

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Suite

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Lobby

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Evacuation Plan

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  VIP

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Fender

  Linnea

  Checkout

  Fender

  Review

  Linnea

  Fender

  Guestbook

  Excerpt from Escape Room

  For Vimmer, the most beautiful twist in my story

  The truth and my lies now

  are falling like the rain,

  so let the river run

  —Eminem

  It’s almost here.

  The date I’ll never forget.

  It’s the day they murdered her.

  And it’ll be the day

  I murder one of them.

  She’s not here.

  But what was I expecting? That she’d be waiting for me, here at the harbor? Just because she wrote to me doesn’t mean everything will be the same as it was before.

  The letter has been burning inside my pocket all the way here. It was suddenly there on the mat this afternoon, with my name on it, in her handwriting.

  I stared at it for a few seconds because I couldn’t believe it was real. But in a few minutes I’ll finally know what it is that she wants to tell me. I really want to read the letter here. In our special place.

  I run the last few yards along the jetty.

  “Hey! Good evening!”

  Startled, I look around. A man is waving at me from a nearby yacht.

  I wave back. If she were here now, she’d come up with a name for him. She often made up characters based on complete strangers she saw. She’d think of a name, a profession, and a home life. I always thought she might become a writer when she was older.

  The man sails out of the harbor and I’m alone again. I rest my hand on the hard edge of the boat. It’s upside down, propped up on poles, and the space beneath it makes the perfect hiding place. I come here every Friday, even if it’s raining or stormy.

  When I’m here, I can pretend, just for a while, that everything is still the same.

  I crawl under the boat and take the letter from the inside pocket of my denim jacket. The envelope is a striking gold color. I hold it to my lips and breathe in deeply, hoping to pick up some of her scent.

  I recognized her messy handwriting immediately. It’s just as chaotic as her.

  The stamp is postmarked with the name of the town where she lives now. I don’t know her exact address. She doesn’t want to be found—certainly not by me.

  I think about my friends. If Kate and Lucas knew where I was now, they’d probably freak. They think I practice with the band every Friday evening. They have no idea that the band broke up ages ago. I left last summer, because I couldn’t play anymore. I kept forgetting my solos when we were playing gigs, and my fingers wouldn’t stop shaking.

  I only ever use the guitar in my bedroom as something to throw my clothes over now.

  My friends don’t have a clue. They’ve both just gotten on with their lives.

  Kate was broken at the time, maybe even more than I was. But after the summer break, a mir
acle occurred.

  And that miracle was called Linnea.

  Our homeroom teacher sat her next to Kate on the first day of school this year, in the one empty seat.

  It was just as if Linnea had come to replace her. A new version, completely intact.

  She got Kate to laugh again. I remember hearing that sound again the first day back at school and realizing it had been months since she’d last laughed.

  From then on, Linnea was one of us. She came and sat with us at recess, on our bench by the river, and she’ll be there this weekend when Kate celebrates her birthday.

  Linnea is everywhere she used to be.

  She patched up Kate. Lucas is crazy about her. But she can’t fix me.

  I open the envelope and pause for a moment.

  What if this letter does even more damage? Maybe it says how much she hates me.

  But then I think about the past few months. Hearing nothing from her is still a thousand times worse than hearing something.

  The letter is clumsily folded in half. The paper smells of her perfume. The images that the fragrance evokes startle me.

  Her body against mine.

  Under this boat.

  I should have soaked up those moments when I still could.

  My hands shaking, I unfold the letter. But as soon as I read the first two sentences, I wish I hadn’t.

  There are times when hearing something is worse than hearing nothing.

  I never expected to write this, but I can’t go on any longer.

  This is my suicide note.

  “Tomorrow’s the big day.” Lucas is sitting in our usual spot by the river, staring at the opposite bank, where the setting sun is casting a pink glow over the Riverside Hotel.

  I never thought I’d go inside that five-star hotel, but Kate is celebrating her birthday there tomorrow.

  “Two rooms.” Kate looks at us. “Far away from my dad and the people from his firm.”

  Kate’s dad has a business meeting at the Riverside this weekend and managed to score a couple extra rooms for his daughter. There should normally be one adult per room, but no one’s going to check. Besides, Kate’s dad will be around if anything goes wrong.

  “Two rooms? Perfect!” Lucas grins. “So I’m sharing with Linnea?”

  “You wish.” By now I’m so used to Lucas making remarks like this that I just fire straight back at him. “You snore.”

  “Do not!”

  “Do too,” says Kate. “Fender says he didn’t sleep a wink at camp because of you.”

  “Hey, where is Fender, anyway?”

  “Practicing with the band again, of course.” Kate’s face clouds over. I know she doesn’t like it that he doesn’t hang out with us much but, to be honest, it’s fine by me.

  The intense way Fender stares at me with those brown eyes—it gives me the shivers. Whenever I have an opinion about something, Fender automatically has to say the opposite. I constantly have to defend myself when he’s around.

  Lucas looks back at the opposite bank. “Just as long as he’s there tomorrow, right?”

  * * *

  I lean over the handlebars of my racing bike and speed up. It’s late, but we got to talking about the Riverside and I lost track of the time.

  I’m so curious to see inside the fancy five-star hotel, with the huge glass dome above the pool. Apparently you can see the stars through it when you’re swimming on your back.

  As I ride my bike past the park, I hesitate for a moment, but it’s by far the shortest route home, so I turn right anyway.

  The lampposts shoot past and my bike light swings to and fro.

  There’s something eerie about the park in the darkness. The trees tower above, like huge creatures with long arms.

  Behind me, I hear a rattling sound coming closer and closer. Another cyclist?

  I look back, straight into the bright front light of a dark bike. It’s so big that it’s more like a car’s headlight. Why won’t they just pass me? There’s plenty of room!

  I cycle a bit more to the right, but they’re still panting down the back of my neck.

  “Go past,” I shout over my shoulder, but there’s no reaction.

  I feel my heart pounding. What does this person want from me? Are they some kind of creep?

  I should have taken a different route!

  I cycle faster, but the distance between us doesn’t increase. In fact, I think it gets smaller.

  I lean a bit more forward and go even faster. I’m really quick on my racing bike. I can get to school in just a few minutes.

  The rattling behind me is farther away now. I keep pedaling until I think I can’t hear anything.

  Cautiously, I look back and then heave a sigh of relief. The bright light is gone. I’ve lost them!

  I want to get home as quickly as possible.

  But then I see a branch lying in my path. Just in time, I turn left, but I start swerving dangerously. My bike tips and I hit the asphalt with a bang, the handlebar grazing my ribs.

  “Ow!” I grab the place where it hurts. For a moment, I lie there, but then I realize that the cyclist could catch up with me at any second. I scramble awkwardly to my feet, clutching my right side.

  “Hello?”

  Here he comes! What does this maniac want from me? You sometimes read stories about girls who…I’m about to pick my bike up off the ground when he shouts again.

  “Linnea?”

  How does he know my name? But then I realize who I was running away from.

  “Fender?”

  A wave of relief washes through me. Why didn’t Fender just say it was him?

  Maybe he was trying to scare me on purpose so he can tell everyone this weekend about how fast I tried to escape.

  Fender brakes right in front of me and pulls my bike off the ground in one movement.

  “What happened?” he asks.

  I point at the branch. “I fell.”

  “Klutz.”

  Well, whose fault was that?

  That’s what I want to say to him, but as always I swallow my words. Whenever I’m with Fender, my stomach is full of words.

  “What are you doing here?”

  “I was just at our bench.”

  Fender shakes his head. “Dumb route to take.”

  I pretend not to hear him and get onto my bike. My ribs are hurting but I just want to get home as soon as I can.

  As we ride our bikes out of the park, there’s an awkward silence. There always is when it’s the two of us. We simply don’t have anything to say to each other. When we have to work in pairs at school, Fender always makes sure to quickly join up with Kate or Lucas before the two of us are left over.

  “How did it go tonight?” I say, trying to break the silence.

  “What?”

  “You were just at your band practice, weren’t you?”

  “Oh, yeah. Great.”

  “So what kind of stuff are you playing now?”

  “Huh?”

  What is wrong with Fender? It’s like his mind is somewhere else entirely.

  “What are you playing now?” I repeat.

  “You wouldn’t know it anyway.”

  “How do you know?”

  “I just do.”

  Arrogant jerk.

  I glance over at him. Fender is leaning forward on his bike. A few strands of his long hair have slipped out of his bun and are hanging in front of his eyes. He has two earrings in his right ear. It’s like they forgot his left ear and overcompensated on his right ear instead.

  “Hey, are you actually named after the guitars?”

  “No. My parents just called me Fender because they liked the meaning.”

  “What does it mean?”

  “You know, ‘protector.’ Lik
e ‘defender.’ ”

  “Yeah, that’s a nice meaning. Linnea means ‘lime tree.’ ”

  Why did I say that? Fender stays meaningfully silent, like he really doesn’t care.

  It’s just as well he has to go a different way soon, because I don’t want to cycle next to him for even one more minute. It’s like I’m riding my bike next to a complete stranger. The silence between us is worse than ever.

  Why is he like that? I’ve never felt this way with Kate and Lucas. Not even when I’d known them just a few days.

  The bike path narrows toward the exit, and Fender lets me go ahead. This part of the park is pitch black and I focus on my front light.

  “I can hardly see anything.”

  “At least you’ve got a light,” I hear from behind me.

  It takes a moment to sink in, but then I swing around to look. My bike swerves.

  “Hey, be careful! Or I’m going to have to pick you up off the ground again.”

  Fender’s sarcastic tone barely gets through to me this time. That big headlight, the one that was just dazzling me, is nowhere to be seen.

  Whoever was following me had a different bike.

  It wasn’t Fender.

  I looked like a crazy person, cycling that close behind her.

  What if she’d seen me?

  And what was he suddenly doing there?

  I wonder if he’s read the letter yet.

 

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