sheâd parked her car. Parker sat unmoving for a long moment, staring after her. She noticed a gargoyle in a high cornice on the side of the church, sticking its tongue out at her. A shiver ran through her as she met its malicious little eyes.
Thereâs nothing to worry about , she told herself. Thereâs no reason anyone would even suspect you were involved.
But she couldnât shake the feeling that her already damaged life was about to get a whole lot worse.
CHAPTER SEVEN
âSTRINGS, I CAN BARELY HEAR you!â Mrs. Rabinowitz shouted, gesturing at the violins. âThat crescendo needs to be powerful!â
Mac sat in a small chair in the Beacon Heights High music wing, her cello wedged between her knees. It was Monday and Mrs. Rabinowitz was making them rehearse Mahlerâs funeral march. Sheâd added it to the fall concert program, in memory of Nolan.
The room smelled like the floral Febreze spray Mrs. Rabinowitz always sprayed before practice, and there were pictures of famous conductors and composers on the wallâa persnickety Mozart, a scattered-looking Beethoven, a haughty Scarlatti, who Mackenzie thought was always following her around the room with his discerning gaze. Today she felt as if they were all glaring at her, condemning her for what sheâd done to Nolan. She still couldnât wrap her mind around it. Was someone really trying to frame them?
You were the one who sent out those photos, a punishing voice in her head said. You really think that trick that techie guy from band camp taught you to set up a fake email address is going to fly with the cops? Theyâre going to find you.
Next to her, Claireâcurrently the second-chair cellist to Macâs first-chairâleaned back and forth with the music as they played. When they got to the end of the page in the sheet music, Claire hurriedly flipped the page and fumbled her bow. It was always the second chair who turned the pages. Mac knew the duty well: She and Claire were always swapping positions, the two of them almost equally talented.
When Mac glanced up again, the room was silent, and Mrs. R was staring at her. âMackenzie, youâre a half beat off.â
Mac blinked. âI am?â
Mrs. R nodded. âYou didnât notice?â
Mac started to panic. Was she that out of it?
Claire glanced at Mac sympathetically. âWeâre all a little distracted today.â
That was an understatement. All day, Mac had been on the verge of hyperventilating. What made it worse was Principal Obataâs announcement when everyone returned to class after lunch. Social workers are on call for anyone who needs extra support right now. And please, if you have any information about the party, please talk to a teacher or a counselorâno questions asked.
No questions asked . The words kept swirling through Macâs mind as she ran her bow across her strings. Maybe they should step forward. What if theyâd seen something important, something they didnât even realize? Maybe they could help catch the real killer.
âPsst.â
Mac looked over. Claire sat with her cello bow resting lightly on her instrument. She pulled out a brown paper bag and handed it over.
âI got these for you,â Claire whispered.
Mac peeked inside. Mini gummy violins lay in a pile almost to the top. Gummies were her favorite food, and the violins were hard to findâyou could only get them at a specialty candy shop in Seattle.
She looked at Claire. âWhatâs this for?â
Her friend shrugged. âA pick-me-up. Youâve seemed down lately.â
There was no malice in her expression. No snarky, underhanded manipulation, only a kind, earnest look. A sour taste welled in Macâs mouth. You kissed her boyfriend , a voice chided. You said something terrible about her in film studies. And itâs too late to take any of it back.
For the first time in her life, Mac wondered if she was