Wildefire

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Wildefire Page 7

by Karsten Knight


  If there had been a camera mounted on the hood of the car, facing back through the windshield, the scene it captured would have been beyond hilarious. Six random students squeezed shoulder to shoulder into a tiny convertible, lassoed together by happenstance. With the towering redwoods around them and the thigh-high mists 79

  rolling through the trees, it might as well have been a scene from a zombie movie.

  Something hadn’t been sitting right with Ash for the last few minutes, and it finally clicked. “Serena,” she said,

  “how the hell did you get into town?”

  Slowly but surely all of the passengers turned to Serena for an answer, including Lily, who was driving.

  Serena, sensing the eyes on her, rotated her head to the left and to the right. “I sleepwalked.”

  “You sleepwalked . . . four miles? Through the woods?” Ade asked.

  “Without hitting a tree?” Rolfe added in disbelief.

  “Or getting hit by a car?”

  Serena shrugged as though this were perfectly normal. “I do it all the time when I dream. Restless mind, restless feet, you know?”

  “Not really,” answered Raja.

  “Follow-up question,” Ash said. “Even if you did sleepwalk, how is that supposed to explain why only the five of us heard you screaming?”

  “Weird.” Serena’s face remained placid. “Guess the bar has strange acoustics.” She smiled and pointed to the side of the road. “Look—a moose!”

  The side of the road was empty.

  Serena giggled.

  As they cruised back to campus, Serena spent the rest of the trip staring out the window next to Ashline. Even though Ash knew Serena was blind, she found herself 80

  leaning back so that her head wouldn’t block Serena’s

  “view.” At one point Ash couldn’t help but wave her hand in front of the girl’s face just to make sure she wasn’t fak-ing it.

  The sleepwalking, the screams, the attempted kidnapping—and strangest of all, Serena’s placid acceptance of all of the above—were seriously starting to creep Ashline out. From the way that Ade had shifted as far against the car door as he could, and the way that Lily’s eyes kept flitting up to look in the rearview mirror, it seemed as though the blind girl had that effect on everyone.

  When they drove through the stone pillars, Lily slowed the convertible to a crawl. They wheeled up the side of the quad, approaching the faculty lodge. The lights were off, the dormitory as silent as the grass on the quad itself, but Ash and her fellow passengers held their collective breath anyway.

  Serena tilted her head back, taking in the wind.

  “Smells like Blackwood.”

  As soon as they’d passed the faculty lodge by a good sixty feet, Lily pressed her foot down on the accelerator, taking the corner fast enough to whip her passengers to one side of the car. Rolfe grinned with pleasure as Raja, who was not wearing a seat belt, was tossed bottom-first onto his knees.

  “Who’s sitting in whose lap now?” he asked her.

  The look she gave him in reply would have petrified Medusa.

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  They swept down behind the girls’ dormitory, and Lily showed no signs of slowing as she approached the underground lot. “Get ready to run for your dormitories,”

  she warned her passengers. “Serena, I’ll help you back to your room.”

  They rolled down the hill and through the parking lot’s entrance, and connected with the cement floor of the garage with a thump. Lily rounded the corner and spied an open spot between two SUVs directly in front of them. She gunned it, and even Ash, who adored adrenaline rushes, cringed as they headed straight for the log-braided wall. But Lily successfully stopped the car on a dime.

  Their car doors echoed mightily through the underground garage. They had just slipped out from between the SUVs and were heading toward the stairwell, with Ash holding Serena’s hand and guiding her along, when they came to an unexpected halt on the garage floor.

  Like ninjas that had just separated themselves from the shadows, four professors wielding flashlights and wearing unflattering soured looks had converged around them. Ash spotted Dr. Hammersby, her chemistry professor, as well as Mr. Ashmont, professor of mathematics.

  Most ominous of all, in lavender slippers that matched her bathrobe, was Headmistress Riley, whose bitter expression reminded Ash of someone who had just been force-fed lemons. She held her electric lantern up in 82

  front of her face, letting her fury radiate through the cold, damp underground garage.

  Serena stepped out from behind Ash and squinted around in confusion. “What’s going on?” she asked, her soprano voice projecting clearly through the parking lot.

  Then she whispered to Ash, “I’m not getting kidnapped again, am I?”

  83

  BLUE FLAME

  Frida

  y

  Ashline’s Friday morning was a train wreck, and showed none of the signs that portended a good weekend. She had slept a total of three and a half hours—

  restless, all of it—and had barely made it to trigonom-etry on time. In third-period French she awoke halfway through the class to Monsieur Chevalier pounding his fist on her desk and shouting “Pamplemousse!” over and over again in her face. A rude awakening, to say the least.

  Then, of course, the dreaded chemistry exam. It wasn’t that she didn’t know the material. But it was impossible to concentrate, between Dr. Hammersby’s occasionally scathing glances from her desk, and the sympathetic looks from Jackie. (Darren had smartly hidden his car out beyond the front gates, to be retrieved later, and they’d successfully snuck back onto campus with the other Blackwood kids. The bastards). As she held the pen in her hand and reread for the fifteenth 84

  time the chemical equation she was supposed to be balancing, she could feel the reservoir of knowledge frothing somewhere in the back of her brain, but the bridge connecting all of those thoughts to her pen had been brutally obliterated.

  Later, after school, she found herself sitting in a circle of chairs with Lily, Ade, Rolfe, and Raja, faces that had become overwhelmingly familiar. Ash shifted uncomfortably in her seat. Half of her butt had fallen asleep, which caused her to lean painfully on the other, and the unforgiving mahogany of the chair was doing her no favors in the comfort department.

  “So . . .” Rolfe, who was twiddling his thumbs anxiously, broke the silence first. “This is kind of like a really shitty version of The Breakfast Club, huh?”

  “To put it lightly,” Lily said.

  “What sort of punishment can we look forward to?”

  Ash asked. “Toothbrushes and soap to scrub the hallways on our hands and knees?” Even after her own brushes with trouble back in Scarsdale, she had no idea what to expect from boarding school discipline.

  Raja sighed. “With the new headmistress we’ll be lucky to get graveyard shifts washing dishes in the dining hall.”

  Ade’s eyes explored the room. “And yet our little visually challenged friend is nowhere to be found.”

  “Like Headmistress Riley is going to punish Serena,”

  Raja replied. “Hell, maybe if we all tell her that we were sleepwalking too, she’ll let us off the hook.”

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  Ash had also noticed the empty sixth chair in the waiting room. “No one wants to talk about Serena? Anyone else interested in how a blind girl who seems to keep completely to herself ends up the victim of a kidnapping in the middle of one of the quietest, most boring towns in America? How an entire bar full of people couldn’t hear her screams?”

  “Except for us,” Lily added.

  Ade turned his attention to the office door’s opaque window. “I’m just curious what she confessed to the headmistress. If she told her about the kidnapping, then we should be getting some sort of medals, or plaques.”

  “Or our choice of women in the senior class,” Rolfe added.

  “Pig,” Raja muttered.

  “Sorry, babe.” Rolfe patted Raja’
s knee. “You’ve got another year to go before you’re ripe enough for me. But I’m willing to wait.”

  Raja cracked her knuckles. “Which one of your two balls would you like to keep?”

  Lily quickly picked up a magazine and began to leaf through it.

  The door to the foyer sprung open, and there in the door frame stood the headmistress herself. The five students immediately sat upright in their chairs, their feet coming together as if they were off-duty soldiers surprised by a visit from the general.

  At just over six feet, Abigail Riley stood taller than all 86

  of them, except for Ade, who as a rule dwarfed most people. She was an Amazon of a woman who commanded respect from all, like her or loathe her. Ash hadn’t heard much about her predecessor, only that he had been fairly earthy-crunchy, loose about school rules, and even looser when it came to rules forbidding “close” relationships with students.

  Headmistress Riley, on the other end of the spec-trum, was a beacon of justice and school policy, without being completely draconian. When she arrived at Blackwood, curfews were set earlier, to the chagrin of all lovers and romantic hopefuls on campus. Penalties for all school rules—curfew violations, cheating, copying, dis-respect, vandalism, disorderly behavior—were made no harsher for the first offense. For all subsequent offenses, however, the gloves came off and the axe came down.

  During Ashline’s entrance interview, the headmistress had shared her philosophy with Ash very succinctly.

  “Everyone messes up,” she had told Ash. “You’re in high school—it’s going to happen. All I ask of my students is that they learn from their mistakes. But a student who repeats her follies is selfish, incorrigible, and—worst of all—cannot be taught. And a student who cannot be taught through the simplest of life lessons has no place at this institution.”

  At the same time, Headmistress Riley, despite her authoritative nature, had the presence and compassion to make regular visits to the dining hall to get to know her 87

  students. Of course, in situations like this, having that sort of friendly relationship with the headmistress made it all the more shameful when the guillotine dropped.

  “Mr. Hanssen,” she announced, and pinned her eyes on Rolfe.

  Rolfe looked like his favorite surfboard had just been fed through a wood-chipper. He wiped his clammy hands on his cargo shorts and followed her into the office. As he reached the threshold, he whispered to Ash, “Tell my parents I want an open casket.”

  Ash attempted unsuccessfully to stifle her laughter, and even Raja couldn’t help it when the corners of her lips perked up.

  The next half hour passed in near silence as they were, one at a time, called in to face the firing squad.

  The door to the headmistress’s office, complete with its unsettling frosted window, let out just enough sound that they could hear the muffled but still firm voice of Headmistress Riley as she passed her sentences. And as each student exited, they walked silently past their classmates, divulging nothing about their punishment.

  After Lily followed Rolfe, Ade passed through the foyer looking grim and simply said “You’re next” to Raja before he disappeared out into the hall, probably off to take an epic afternoon nap.

  The chair in the office squeaked, announcing that the headmistress was on her way to collect her next victim.

  “You want a blindfold?” Ash asked the girl across from her, and offered a sympathetic smile.

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  “I’d prefer a flask, if you have one,” Raja said. Then she added, “Though I suppose that would be distasteful, given the reason we’re here on a Friday afternoon.”

  The headmistress appeared in the doorway and summoned Raja with a flash of her hand. The door snapped closed behind them.

  It seemed like no time at all before Ash heard the groan of chair legs against the hardwood floors the footsteps plodding across the room. Raja stealthily slipped through the door and out into the hallway without casting Ash so much as a sideways glance.

  Ash was still watching Raja scurrying around the corner when she sensed the presence behind her.

  “Ms. Wilde.”

  The office was exactly as Ash remembered it—the leather armchairs, the miniature chandelier, the large world globe sitting quietly on its axis in the corner of the room. The air smelled vaguely of tangerines and licorice.

  The sobering looks from Raja and the others had done nothing to diminish Ashline’s dread, but at least the cushy black leather chair was more comfortable than her seat in the foyer. Her offending ass cheek slowly regained sensation.

  Headmistress Riley gracefully sat down in her chair and leaned back, taking in Ash for a spell. Finally she nodded. “Ash, I’m going to ask you a series of questions, and as soon as I ask them, I want you to answer with the first thing that comes to your mind. Don’t try to answer with what you think I want to hear. Don’t even try to 89

  pad what you say to me. Just blurt out the first thing that comes to your mind. Do you understand?”

  “Yes,” Ash answered immediately.

  The headmistress smiled and nodded. “I see you’ve grasped the point of this very quickly. Well, here we go.

  How are you feeling at this very moment?”

  “Exhausted.” The bags beneath her eyes felt as though they were filled with pudding.

  Headmistress Riley arched her eyebrows. “I should think so. I’d be ready for a nap too if I’d been off cavorting until the witching hour.”

  Ash looked toward the window and remained silent.

  “Do you feel like you fit in here?” the headmistress asked, probing deeper. “Here at Blackwood?”

  “If I say no—that I’m having trouble making friends, and that’s why I did it—then will you let me off the hook?”

  After a pause Headmistress Riley laughed with delight—nothing sinister, just pure mirth. “Why, Ashline Wilde. You always look so serious. I didn’t realize you were a comedian, too.”

  “I do mostly weddings and bat mitzvahs,” Ash said.

  “And apparently the occasional bar night in Orick?”

  “I knew you’d understand. A girl has to pay tuition, you know?” Ash smiled hopefully. “So that means no detention?”

  “A stand-up comedian and a dreamer. Nice try, though.”

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  The headmistress reached over to a small stack of manila folders on the edge of her desk. Our files, Ash realized. Four of the folders were thin and manageable. One, at the bottom of the stack, was half the thickness of a phone book. Ash thought it resembled a suitcase that had been so overstuffed that it wouldn’t zip closed.

  She wasn’t surprised when the headmistress retrieved the fat file and opened it in front of her. On the top was a series of green records—report cards from junior high.

  “Someone did her homework,” Ash said.

  “I’m meticulous to a fault. Call it a personal flaw,”

  the headmistress said. “But either way, it’s very clear that your grades have significantly improved since you arrived at Blackwood. You’re obviously a brilliant young lady, and I think that a little distance from the crisis in Scarsdale has given you a second chance at life.”

  Ash stiffened. “Crisis?” She’d done her best to sweep the incident with Lizzie Jacobs under the rug so that her transfer to Blackwood would truly be a clean break.

  But if a half-wit like Bobby Jones could do his research online . . .

  The headmistress’s chair creaked as she leaned forward. “Your sister running away. Your father mentioned it during the phone interview when I asked about siblings.”

  Ash let out a long breath, though she wondered what else her parents had mentioned during their phone con-ference with the headmistress. “If it’s all right with you,”

  Ash said carefully, “I’d like to just take my punishment 91

  and move along with this. I was the one who made the choice to go off campus yesterday. I have no desire to point fingers at any unresolved personal
issues from my past and blame them for why I did it. I was tired. I was having a bad day. And I just needed to escape.”

  The headmistress pursed her lips, but her eyes were compassionate. Still, when she broke eye contact with Ash, she looked more than a little disappointed that she wasn’t going to get to explore deeper with psycho-analysis. “I’ll respect your privacy with regard to the issue,” she said quietly. “And I certainly respect that you’ve assumed full responsibility for your actions last night.”

  Ash nodded, relieved. She hadn’t transferred to a prep school three thousand miles away only to have her demons resurrected.

  “I don’t believe in traditional detention,” Headmistress Riley said. “How can I expect students to learn by sitting silently and uselessly in a study hall? It’s inefficient and totally unproductive. So—are you ready for this?—

  I’ve been in touch with the local park ranger service and have arranged for the five of you to help out with park cleanup on Sunday.” She pulled a map out from under Ash’s bulky file and twisted it around so Ash could see.

  The headmistress’s finger came down on an area of green within the national park, adjacent to Gold Bluff’s Beach and not far from Blackwood. “This is the Fern Canyon I guess one of the movie studios filmed a big shoot there 92

  last week for some new monster feature they’re produc-ing, and there’s still debris to be collected.”

  Ash smirked. “So you’re making us a chain gang?”

  she asked. “Mom and Pop will be really proud about that one.”

  The headmistress leaned back and crossed her arms.

  “If you’d prefer spending your Sunday scrubbing maple syrup off the brunch plates in the dish room, I’d be happy to talk to the sous-chef.”

  “I’ll take the fresh air, thanks.” Ash stood up. “Is that all, Headmistress? Coach Devlin will eat me alive if I’m late for tennis practice.”

  “Just one more question.” The headmistress remained seated but stared piercingly up at the student hovering over her desk. “Same deal—respond immediately and don’t think about the answer.”

 

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