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Runaway (Airhead #3)

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by Meg Cabot




  Runaway

  MEG CABOT

  FOR BENJAMIN

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Dedication

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-One

  Twenty-Two

  About the Author

  Acknowledgments

  Books by Meg Cabot

  Copyright

  One

  SO ACCORDING TO THE TABLOIDS, I’M on a secret love getaway (not so secret anymore now, though, is it? Thank you, Us Weekly) with Brandon Stark, the only son and sole heir of billionaire Robert Stark, currently the fourth-richest person in the world, after Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, and Ingvar Kamprad (who founded IKEA, in case you didn’t know).

  There are paparazzi staking out the oceanside mansion where Brandon and I are holed up. They’re hiding in the dunes all along the beach. They’re stretched out in ditches up and down the road, their telephoto lenses pointed through tufts of sea grass in the hopes of capturing me topless on a chaise longue by the pool (like that’s going to happen).

  I even saw one perched in a tree, trying to get a shot of me and Brandon Stark together that time we came out of the house to go grab some takeout at the local crab shack.

  It’s big news, I guess, the Face of Stark and the heir to the Stark fortune hooking up with each other over the holidays. My roommate, Lulu, texted me that she heard a picture of us together can fetch upward of ten grand…as long as I’m facing the camera and smiling.

  So far, Lulu says, there hasn’t been a single shot of me facing the camera and smiling. Not in any magazine or on any website anywhere.

  I know people are wondering how that’s even possible. I’m the girl who has it all, right? The little white poodle, yawning delicately at my feet; the thick, luxurious blond hair; the perfect body; the gorgeous boyfriend with the limitless credit card, who seems to care so much about me that he’ll buy out the local women’s boutique in my size just because I said I can’t come down to dinner because I have nothing to wear.

  That same gorgeous boyfriend was currently pacing up and down the hallway outside my room, so eager was he for me to join him that he could hardly wait to escort me down to the sumptuously set modern steel-and-glass table.

  “How are we doing in there?” he asked, tapping on the door for the umpteenth time this hour at least.

  “Not so good,” I croaked. I glanced at my reflection in the mirror hanging over the dressing table in front of me. “I think I have a fever.”

  “Really?” Brandon sounded sweetly concerned. The best boyfriend a girl could ask for. “Maybe I should call a doctor.”

  “Oh,” I said through the door, “I don’t think that’s necessary. I think I just need fluids. And bed rest. It would probably be better if I stayed in my room tonight.”

  I knew anyone who might have been watching— for instance, through a high-powered telephoto lens— could only have been thinking, What is wrong with this girl? After all, I was faking sick to get out of dinner with the hot son of one of the richest guys in America, while staying in his palatial, Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired mansion. It came complete with a huge heated outdoor pool (with vanishing edges, so that the water appeared to be dropping off into the horizon). Along one wall there was an aquarium big enough to hold Brandon’s pet stingray and shark (it so figures that Brandon Stark would have a pet shark, doesn’t it?), a home theater built to seat twenty, and a four-car garage that housed Brandon’s European sports car collection, with a brand-new buttercup yellow Lamborghini Murciélago, a Christmas gift from Dad, of which Brandon was immensely proud.

  Any other girl would have swapped places with me in a second.

  But no other girl had my same problems.

  Well…maybe one other girl.

  “Don’t think this means I like you,” Nikki informed me, bursting into my room from the connecting door to hers, wearing a brightly colored maxidress, a leather motorcycle jacket, fringed wedges, and an enormous jeweled “statement” necklace that looked like a drunk frat boy threw up on her chest.

  “No worries,” I said. Nikki had made it more than clear that she doesn’t like me— that she doesn’t want to spend one waking minute with me unless she absolutely has to.

  “It’s just that your mirror is bigger than mine,” she said, clip-clopping across my room to check out her reflection in my mirror, “and I want to see how I look in this.”

  “You look nice,” I said.

  I was lying.

  Nikki beamed at the compliment I’d given her, though. This was a relief. It was the first time she’d smiled at me— or at least in my direction— since the private plane we took to get to this subtropical resort town touched down a few days earlier.

  And who could blame her, really? It wasn’t just that it was boring for her, being cooped up in this house, palatial as it was. She couldn’t go into town, or one of the paparazzi might get a snap of her.

  And even though they wouldn’t have any idea who she was if her photo showed up in a magazine, someone who had known her from her body’s previous life might recognize her and wonder what the heck a girl who was supposed to be dead was doing walking around alive and kicking in ugly statement necklaces.

  Because, like me, Nikki is a member of the Walking Dead.

  But unlike me, Nikki’s body was supposed to be dead and buried.

  “You think?” Nikki stared at herself in the full-length mirror on the far wall of my room, across from a bank of floor-to-ceiling windows that face the curling waves of the Atlantic— black and ominous-looking this time of night— just a few dozen yards away.

  Then she distractedly tucked a strand of her medium-length auburn hair behind her ear and made a face.

  “Ugh,” she said. “What is the point? Why do I even try?”

  “What are you talking about?” I asked. “You look amazing.”

  Okay, I was exaggerating. But only a little. Actually, if she’d just worn makeup that suited her new skin tone, and quit flatironing her hair until it didn’t have a hint of body left in it, and put on some clothes that weren’t my castoffs from the boutique Brandon had raided on my behalf— which she didn’t seem to realize were way too tight and long on her— she’d have been totally cute.

  But no way was I going to tell her anything that wasn’t one hundred percent positive. I wanted Nikki on my side even more than Brandon did.

  “But do you think Brandon will like me in this?” Nikki asked anxiously.

  Now we were getting to the root of the problem: the whole reason why I was faking sick…so she could get some one-on-one time with Brandon, without me being there to hog the limelight from her.

  “Of course he will,” I lied.

  He’d better. I knew how desperately she craved Brandon’s attention.

  Not that I could blame her. Really, who wouldn’t be in love with Brandon Stark? He had everything most girls could want in a guy: stunning good looks, an enviable sports car collection, a Greenwich Village brownstone and a beach house in the tropics, not to mention access to a private jet to go from one to the other.

  Brandon really would make some girl a great boyfriend.

  Except for the part about him being a low-down, two-faced snake, of course.

  I stared at the back of Nikki’s skull as she turned toward the mirror again. I
couldn’t help lifting my hand to finger the spot on my own scalp where, more than three months earlier, surgeons at the Stark Institute for Neurology and Neurosurgery had cut open my head, slipped out Nikki’s brain, and inserted my own.

  It sounded like something out of a cheesy made-for-TV movie, one that would be awesome to curl up in front of and watch on a rainy Sunday afternoon with a big bowl of popcorn.

  Except for the fact that it was actually happening in my real life.

  And little had I known that at the exact same time my brain was being inserted in Nikki’s body, one of those neurosurgeons was secretly taking Nikki’s brain and slipping it into the head of this girl standing in front of me.

  Nikki— her brain, anyway— was supposed to have died.

  And the secret she carried was supposed to have died along with her.

  Unfortunately for Mr. Stark— but fortunately for Nikki— Nikki was still very much alive. Both her brain and her body. Just in two separate locations.

  The secret she knows, however? That’s still a secret.

  And Brandon hasn’t done a very good job of sweet-talking her out of it…mainly because he’s been too distracted lately, trying to sweet-talk me.

  And God knew, Nikki hated me way too much because of that to utter a barely civilized word to me, no matter how often I’ve tried to get her to open up to me.

  I wondered how much of that is because her scar still aches sometimes, the way mine does.

  “I’m sure you’re right,” Nikki said, her nose in the air as she left my room. “Brandon loves the color blue.”

  He does? This was news to me.

  But I was finding out that there was a lot about Nikki Howard’s ex-boyfriend that was news to me. His favorite color was the least of it, really.

  What about the fact that he has a secret beachside lair where he likes to stash girls he’s either kidnapped against their will, the way he has me, or intends to seduce, then blackmail to get what he wants, the way he does Nikki…

  …which, in this case, is information to use against his father so Brandon can take over his company himself? Super!

  Yeah. If it turned out Brandon Stark also likes to dress up as Strawberry Shortcake while playing croquet with his miniature pony collection, I totally wouldn’t be surprised anymore.

  “Em?” Brandon thumped on my door again.

  “What?” I said, more sharply than I meant to. I had a headache that I really wasn’t faking.

  “I think I found a cure for what you have,” Brandon said through the door.

  I looked up in surprise at this.

  Because there is no cure for what I have, since what I have is one hundred percent fake.

  “Really?” I said. “What is it?”

  “It’s called you better get out here,” Brandon said, in a different tone of voice, “or you’ll be sorry.”

  Oh. Right. I forgot.

  Because the tabloids have got it wrong.

  I’m not on a secret love getaway. I may not exactly be behind bars.

  I’m not sporting shackles or handcuffs.

  There aren’t even men in black suits standing on either side of me, speaking into little mini-microphones in their sleeves.

  But I’m Brandon Stark’s prisoner, just the same.

  Two

  I OPENED THE DOOR AND STOOD THERE in the long black velvet evening gown Brandon had had sent over for that evening’s festivities— a gourmet dinner being prepared by the Cordon Bleu–trained chef Brandon had stolen away from a nearby five-star hotel to come work for him for the week.

  One thing about Brandon Stark: He doesn’t mess around when he’s trying to impress a lady.

  The question was, why couldn’t he figure out the right girl to impress? It was Nikki he was supposed to be trying to win over, not me.

  Not that he’d even have to try that hard with her. If he’d expended half as much energy on her as he kept expending on me, he’d have had her eating out of his hand.

  Why couldn’t he understand that?

  Probably for the same reason he thinks it’s cool to hang out in Ed Hardy shirts with reality show stars on his dad’s yacht: He’s kind of stupid.

  And yet at the same time, he’s completely evil.

  It turns out the two combined are deadly. Well, for me.

  Brandon didn’t say anything for a minute. He just stared at me, his eyes blank as the spinning beach balls of death Mac users always got when an application on their computer wasn’t responding.

  Which was good. It meant plan B— which I’d come up with in case plan A, faking sick, didn’t pan out— was working. I may seem like a defenseless blonde on the outside, but I actually do have a few weapons in my arsenal.

  One of them was the Armani I was wearing. I realized the moment I saw it on the rack of clothes that had been sent over from the expensive designer boutique Brandon decided he was going to raid on my behalf that this particular gown was totally going to be my ally.

  I may not have known a thing about fashion a few months ago when I’d been the worst-dressed girl in the entire eleventh grade at Tribeca Alternative High School.

  But I’ve always been a fast learner.

  “Brandon,” I said to him. The long hallway— which was glass on one side so you could see the ocean and dunes (when it wasn’t so dark out)— was empty except for us two (and the paparazzi, of course. But I’m fairly certain the private security guards Brandon had hired, who were patrolling outside of the house, had flushed out any photographers). I closed the guest room door behind me so there was no chance Nikki would overhear what I was about to say to him.

  I figured it was probably useless. I’d tried reasoning with him before.

  But never in Armani.

  “This is ridiculous,” I went on. “You’re supposed to be trying to seduce Nikki, not me. She’s the one with the secret your dad tried to have her murdered for. The one you want to steal so you can kick your dad out and take over?”

  Brandon just stared down at me. He’s no smarter, in some ways, than Jason Klein, the king of the Walking Dead (aka the jocks) back at my high school.

  Just richer, and with fewer morals.

  “Which is great, but I have to get back to the city,” I said to him. I was trying to speak slowly and clearly, so he would be sure to understand me. “I have the Stark Angel fashion show in a few days. You know I can’t miss that. This romantic getaway over the holidays with Brandon Stark? The press is eating it up.”

  Though the truth was, I couldn’t imagine my mother was too happy about it. Not that I’d spoken to her. I’d been letting her calls go to voice mail. I knew if I spoke to her, the hurt I’d hear in her voice— Really, Em. Spending the week with a boy? What’s the matter with you?— would be like a stab wound to the chest.

  But what was worse was that no one else besides her— and, of course, Lulu and my agent, Rebecca, who’d called me approximately a zillion times— had left me a voice mail.

  No one else, meaning the single person whose feelings I was most anxious about having wounded by taking off with Brandon Stark.

  Right: Christopher Maloney, the love of my life, hadn’t called.

  I don’t know why I thought he would have, after what I’d done to him— which was lie and tell him I didn’t love him anymore…that instead, I loved Brandon. It wasn’t like I deserved a call. Or an e-mail, or a text message, or anything at all from him.

  I guess I just thought he’d get in some kind of contact…even if it was only to send me a letter of bitter recrimination or something. Sure, I wouldn’t have enjoyed being on the receiving end of a Dear Em: Thanks for ruining my life e-mail. I mean, Christopher didn’t know Brandon had forced me to say what I had.

  But even a Dear Em letter would have been better than this cold stone silence….

  But no. Nothing.

  Better not to think about that now.

  Or ever.

  “But eventually,” I forced myself to go on to Brandon, “the p
eople I’m close to are going to start getting suspicious. They know, Brandon, that you and I aren’t…well, what you’re trying to make them think we are.”

  I was lying, of course. The people in my life had no idea that I wasn’t in love with Brandon, and that this whole thing was a fake. They didn’t know. Hadn’t I been the one going around basically hooking up with every cute guy I’d come into contact with ever since I’d gotten my brain slipped into this hot new bod? How was anyone supposed to have known which of those guys I actually cared about and which of those guys I didn’t? Right: I had made the mess I was in right now.

  And I was the one who needed to get myself out of it.

  Which I was actually trying to do at the moment. Although it may not have looked like it.

  “I’ve got to get back to the city,” I said to Brandon again, stalling for time. “Just let me—”

  Brandon reached up to lay a finger over my lips. And left it there.

  “Shhh,” he said.

  Uh-oh. His reboot was apparently completed. His pupils stopped looking like twin spinning beach balls of death. He’d taken a step forward.

  Now he was standing just inches away from me, looking down at me with an expression I couldn’t quite read.

  But, like a lot of things about him lately, it scared me a little.

  “Everything’s going to be all right,” he said in what I suppose he thought was a soothing voice.

  Except I was about as soothed as a Dalmatian puppy at Cruella de Vil’s house.

  “I know what I’m doing,” he went on.

  “Uh,” I said from behind his finger. “Actually, I don’t think you do. Because Nikki’s not going to tell you anything if you don’t start paying less attention to me and more attention to—”

  Then he removed his finger and started to lean his head down to place his lips where, a second before, his finger had been.

  Ugh, no. Seriously? Again?

  I had goose bumps, and not because I was in a sleeveless dress.

  Look, I couldn’t blame Brandon. I’d been giving him mixed messages for months. And straight up using him, basically. That’s the kind of girl I’d turned into since I’d become Nikki. It wasn’t nice to admit, but it was the truth.

 

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