101

“Hey, Perry.”

He could feel it, just like in the clichés, his heart sinking, his heart leaping. Was he ever as aware of that muscle at the center of his body as he was when Nicole Werner stood in front of him?

Now he could feel all four chambers, and the blood traveling in and out of them, and the valves squeezing open and shut.

She was wearing a grungy sweatshirt tonight, like that night he’d found her on the front steps of Godwin Hall feeling homesick, getting ready to cry. Now her hair was in a messy ponytail. Bits of it hadn’t been pulled back and gathered with the rest, and they fell around her face—but not artfully, not the way they would if she had, as he sometimes sensed she must have, spent hours at the mirror loosening just the most golden strands.

She wasn’t wearing her usual pearl earrings, either, and the tiny empty holes in her earlobes looked pretty, he thought, and strange. He looked at them.

Pierced ears: one of the hundreds of the odd customs of girls. He remembered asking Mary if it had hurt, getting her ears pierced, and how she’d rolled her eyes back, fluttered her eyelashes, and said, “Oh, my God, Perry. I can’t even tell you how much it hurt.”

“Can I come in?”

“Why?”

She shrugged.

“Okay,” he said, “come in,” and stepped out of the way. He turned, and sat down at his desk, and sighed. She sat across from him at the edge of Craig’s bed.

“What’s the point of this?” he asked her without looking at her. “Why are we doing this?”

She was silent so long he finally turned around. She was staring at the floor, but he could see that she was smiling.

“Are you sick or something, Nicole?”

She looked up at him then, and seemed to tuck the smile away so he couldn’t see it. She said, “You mean, like, mentally ill or something?”

Perry shrugged. “Okay,” he said. “Maybe. Like mentally ill.”

“Or, do you mean like evil?”

“Okay,” he said. “That sounds good, Nicole. Let’s say evil.”

The anger in his voice seemed to make her flinch, and he was immediately sorry, but it was too late to take it back.

She stood up. She took a step toward him. She said, “What about you? Are you? Are you mentally ill, or evil?”

Perry turned his back to her again and put his elbows on his desk, put his head in his hands. As he’d known she would, she came up behind him and put her hands on his shoulders.

He could feel the cool, smooth fingers near his neck.

And his heart—that pleasurable pain, all anticipation and dread.

When Mary had forced him into such places, he’d seen those girls at the mall (what was that store called? Claire’s?) having those little pistols held to their earlobes, flinching and crying out, and the stinging tears in their eyes, the smiles on their faces.

He felt her breath on his neck just before he felt her kiss, and when he stood and turned to her, for just a second he thought he saw what it was—in her eyes, in her face. It almost knocked the breath out of him.

He remembered (or was he imagining it?) turning once in the hallway at Bad Axe High. Mary’d had her arm slipped between his elbow and his side, and she was pulling him toward her, but he’d seen a shadow behind them, and for some reason it had made him turn, and he saw Nicole there, holding an armful of books in her arms.

She was just standing there, watching them with what looked like an expression of complete grief on her face, as if she were witnessing her own death, or the death of something she’d loved all her life.

He’d nodded to her, and the expression was instantly gone, replaced with that pretty little smile. Perry had been watching those expressions pass over her face like the moon’s phases for as long as he could remember.

And then she’d turned and walked in the opposite direction, and he realized that Mary had spun around to look at her, too. She huffed. She tugged Perry’s arm closer and leaned over to whisper to him, “That girl’s in love with you. She always has been.”

The Raising
Cover.xhtml
Title_Page.xhtml
Dedication.xhtml
Epigraph.xhtml
Contents.xhtml
Prologue.xhtml
Part_1.xhtml
Chapter_1.xhtml
Chapter_2.xhtml
Chapter_3.xhtml
Chapter_4.xhtml
Chapter_5.xhtml
Chapter_6.xhtml
Chapter_7.xhtml
Chapter_8.xhtml
Chapter_9.xhtml
Chapter_10.xhtml
Chapter_11.xhtml
Chapter_12.xhtml
Chapter_13.xhtml
Chapter_14.xhtml
Chapter_15.xhtml
Chapter_16.xhtml
Chapter_17.xhtml
Part_2.xhtml
Chapter_18.xhtml
Chapter_19.xhtml
Chapter_20.xhtml
Chapter_21.xhtml
Chapter_22.xhtml
Chapter_23.xhtml
Chapter_24.xhtml
Chapter_25.xhtml
Chapter_26.xhtml
Chapter_27.xhtml
Chapter_28.xhtml
Chapter_29.xhtml
Chapter_30.xhtml
Chapter_31.xhtml
Chapter_32.xhtml
Chapter_33.xhtml
Chapter_34.xhtml
Chapter_35.xhtml
Chapter_36.xhtml
Part_3.xhtml
Chapter_37.xhtml
Chapter_38.xhtml
Chapter_39.xhtml
Chapter_40.xhtml
Chapter_41.xhtml
Chapter_42.xhtml
Chapter_43.xhtml
Chapter_44.xhtml
Chapter_45.xhtml
Chapter_46.xhtml
Chapter_47.xhtml
Chapter_48.xhtml
Chapter_49.xhtml
Chapter_50.xhtml
Chapter_51.xhtml
Chapter_52.xhtml
Chapter_53.xhtml
Chapter_54.xhtml
Chapter_55.xhtml
Chapter_56.xhtml
Chapter_57.xhtml
Chapter_58.xhtml
Chapter_59.xhtml
Chapter_60.xhtml
Part_4.xhtml
Chapter_61.xhtml
Chapter_62.xhtml
Chapter_63.xhtml
Chapter_64.xhtml
Chapter_65.xhtml
Chapter_66.xhtml
Chapter_67.xhtml
Chapter_68.xhtml
Chapter_69.xhtml
Chapter_70.xhtml
Chapter_71.xhtml
Chapter_72.xhtml
Chapter_73.xhtml
Chapter_74.xhtml
Chapter_75.xhtml
Chapter_76.xhtml
Chapter_77.xhtml
Chapter_78.xhtml
Chapter_79.xhtml
Chapter_80.xhtml
Chapter_81.xhtml
Chapter_82.xhtml
Part_5.xhtml
Chapter_83.xhtml
Chapter_84.xhtml
Chapter_85.xhtml
Chapter_86.xhtml
Chapter_87.xhtml
Chapter_88.xhtml
Chapter_89.xhtml
Chapter_90.xhtml
Chapter_91.xhtml
Chapter_92.xhtml
Chapter_93.xhtml
Chapter_94.xhtml
Chapter_95.xhtml
Chapter_96.xhtml
Chapter_97.xhtml
Chapter_98.xhtml
Chapter_99.xhtml
Chapter_100.xhtml
Chapter_101.xhtml
Chapter_102.xhtml
Chapter_103.xhtml
Chapter_104.xhtml
Chapter_105.xhtml
Part_6.xhtml
Chapter_106.xhtml
Chapter_107.xhtml
Chapter_108.xhtml
Chapter_109.xhtml
Chapter_110.xhtml
Acknowledgments.xhtml
About_the_Author.xhtml
Also_by_the_Author.xhtml
Credits.xhtml
Copyright.xhtml
About_the_Publisher.xhtml