It was Laney.
“Trevor! Stop, you’re hilarious!” Laney said.
“You’ll laugh at anything, Lane.” Chelsea.
Someone mumbled something that Bex couldn’t make out, and the laughter rang out again. Her heart thumped painfully, slamming against her rib cage, but relief gave her breath.
“Guys?” Bex called.
The voices immediately stopped, and Bex’s own voice echoed back to her. She continued walking, sliding her hand along the wall between the banks of lockers, looking for a light switch. The voices started again, but they were heavy whispers and low murmurs. Bex was certain they were whispering about her.
“Bexy!” It was Laney, her voice cheerful and friendly.
“Where’s my fox?” Trevor chimed in.
Bex glanced over her shoulder, her fear starting to fall away. Her heartbeat slowed to its normal rate. “Guys?” she called again.
She could see a light coming from one of the classrooms up ahead; it was where the voices were coming from.
“Oh thank God.”
Bex ran toward Mr. Rhodes’s room and stopped in the doorway, her blood turning to ice in her veins. Her friends weren’t sitting in the classroom waiting for her. They were projected on the movie screen in the front of the classroom.
“What?” Bex walked toward it, then away again, following the light from the projector.
“I love you, Bexy!” she heard Chelsea call.
“The Wife Collector has struck again.”
Bex stepped back as Loretta Harris, the Raleigh Super Eight news anchor’s concerned face flooded the screen. A picture of Erin Malone flashed on the screen over her left shoulder. Bex could feel the bile at the back of her throat.
“Bexy!”
The image on the screen flashed back to Laney, Chelsea, and Trevor sitting on the beach, the bonfire illuminating their faces. But now Bex was in the scene too, wrapped in Trevor’s letterman’s jacket, curled underneath his arm. She was mesmerized, watching as Trevor leaned close to her, laying a quick kiss on the part of her hair.
“Okay,” he roared, holding up his red Solo cup. “Bex is here. Now the party can begin!”
There was a flood of raucous laughter and cheers, then Loretta Harris’s serious voice breaking in. “…Monroe’s body was found by employees at the beachfront restaurant where she worked. She had been dumped outside and when found—the sight was gruesome.”
“Oh God.” Bex crumpled into one of the empty desks, knowing she should run but unsure where. Her eyes were glued to the screen. There were a few more flashes, a few more pictures, then a computer screen.
A log-in.
IMHIM_HESME.
Bex’s heart was in her throat.
The next picture showed the full log-in screen, Detective Schuster’s avatar lined up under IMHIM_HESME’s.
Bex clapped a hand over her mouth. IMHIM_HESME was Detective Schuster.
Someone you love is going to die.
“Bex!”
The hall was dark, but the silvery flashes from the screen illuminated the man in the doorway. Schuster.
He was dressed all in black, a bulletproof vest bulking his slim frame, a gun more terrifying than any Bex had ever seen strapped to his thigh.
Bex stood, surprised that her legs would even work. “Don’t come near me,” she said, her voice small but steady.
“Bex, we have to get out of here. You father is here. I need to get you somewhere safe.”
“No.” She shook her head, hot, angry tears flicking down her cheeks. “I know who you are. I know what you did. You’re not going to get away with it. You’re not!” Her fingers closed around the only thing she could find—an oblong vase full of pencils—and she launched it. It crashed at Schuster’s feet. He quickly stepped around it, closing the distance between them. Bex mashed her finger on her cell phone’s Send Call button.
“I’m calling my dad. I’m calling him, and he’ll tell everyone that you killed all those women!”
“What are you talking about?”
“You’re the Wife Collector! I know you are! You used me to frame my father! And now you’re trying to kill Chelsea!”
“Bex—”
“I saw the charm you gave her, you sick freak. The earring? You took it when you killed Lauren’s mother!”
Bex judged the distance to the door from where she was. In order to make it, she’d have to pass by Detective Schuster and his gun. She backed into a corner, barricaded herself behind a desk.
Schuster put out his hands. “No, I didn’t. I didn’t do any of that. I don’t even know Chelsea or Lauren. Bex, who are they?”
“Shut up! You killed Dr. Gold too, didn’t you? Didn’t you?”
“Bex, you’re wrong.”
“Chelsea told me about you.” Bex spit out the words, each one viler than the last. “She said she was dating a detective. Danny. Daniel Schuster.”
“Bex, that’s not me.”
“Aren’t you Daniel Schuster? Detective?”
“Yes, but—”
“You did it! He told me!” She pointed to the screen, frozen on IMHIM’s log-in screen. “And you were the one on the site!”
“Bex, stop. Look.” Detective Schuster unholstered his gun and laid it on the desk in front of him, then held his hands up. “I’m not armed. We can sit down and talk.”
She wagged her head, pressing her phone to her ear. “My dad will explain everything. You ruined my life, Schuster. You took away my dad, and now you’re going to pay for it!”
“No, Bex, no.” He held his hands in the air.
Bex could hear her father’s phone ringing. It was loud, almost as if it was in stereo. She pulled the phone from her ear and the ring still sounded. She took a few steps toward the door, and the ring grew louder, reverberating through the hall. Schuster kept his hands up and took several steps back while Bex followed the sound. It was coming from a garbage can outside of the classroom—right by the entrance to D hall.
She peered into the mouth of the can, her breath hitching, each ring sucking that much more air out of the room as she saw her name flash across the screen. Bethy.