Exposure Read online




  exposure

  KIM ASKEW AND AMY HELMES

  F+W Media, Inc.

  Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter One: Fair Is Foul and Foul Is Fair

  Chapter Two: I Dreamt Last Night of the Three Weird Sisters

  Chapter Three: How Now! What News?

  Chapter Four: Full of Sound and Fury, Signifying Nothing

  Chapter Five: It Is a Knell That Summons Thee to Heaven or to Hell

  Chapter Six: That Which Hath Made Them Drunk Hath Made Me Bold

  Chapter Seven: What’s Done Cannot Be Undone

  Chapter Eight: Nothing in His Life Became Him Like the Leaving It

  Chapter Nine: Present Fears Are Less Than Horrible Imaginings

  Chapter Ten: Say, from Whence You Owe This Strange Intelligence?

  Chapter Eleven: To Throw Away the Dearest Thing He Ow’d, As ’t Were a Careless Trifle

  Chapter Twelve: Look Like the Innocent Flower, but Be the Serpent Under It

  Chapter Thirteen: I Have Almost Forgot the Taste of Fears

  Chapter Fourteen: Out, Damned Spot!

  Chapter Fifteen: This Place Is Too Cold for Hell

  Chapter Sixteen: Screw Your Courage to the Sticking Place

  Chapter Seventeen: Your Face Is as a Book Where Men May Read Strange Matters

  Chapter Eighteen: Why Do You Dress Me in Borrowed Robes?

  Chapter Nineteen: Stands Not Within the Prospect of Belief

  Chapter Twenty: Be Bright and Jovial Among Your Guests Tonight

  Chapter Twenty-One: Double, Double, Toil and Trouble

  Chapter Twenty-Two: Drink, Sir, Is a Great Provoker

  Chapter Twenty-Three: The Patient Must Minister to Himself

  Chapter Twenty-Four: Is This a Dagger Which I See Before Me?

  Chapter Twenty-Five: Me Thought the Wood Began to Move

  Chapter Twenty-Six: Two Truths Are Told, As Prologue to the Swelling Act

  Chapter Twenty-Seven: When Shall We Meet Again?

  Chapter Twenty-Eight: Leave All the Rest to Me

  Epilogue: Come What Come May

  Copyright

  Prologue

  FOUR GIRLS IN ONE DORM ROOM. If it’s not the very definition of hell, it’s at least purgatory. Sharing a hundred and fifty square feet of living space in an ecru-painted cinderblock cell with three randoms, any of whom could turn out to have chronic Doritos breath, an unhealthy obsession with goth metal, or a tendency to slip into bizarre “baby talk” on the phone with her parents. School officials are forever insisting that roommate selection for incoming freshmen is completely arbitrary, but that never seems to explain how every dorm room ends up with a token weirdo.

  For the residents of Room 315 in Birnkrant Hall, Skye Kingston was that girl. There was nothing overtly freakish about her, aside from the semi-creepy Diane Arbus photographs of circus midgets and identical twins plastered on the wall next to her bed. She was majoring in fine arts, with a specialty in photography, but “artsy” probably didn’t entirely account for her singular personality; the way she seemed to hover attentively around campus like a studious fly on the wall.

  Skye didn’t resemble the Quasimodo-types typically identified — and ostracized — within the first few days of the semester. She wasn’t mousy, overweight, or sporting an unfortunate excess of hormonally induced facial hair. Rather, her looks tended to land her on the other end of the hot-or-not spectrum, somewhere between “stunning” and “drop-dead gorgeous.” She was model tall, with Eastern European features: long red tresses, pale skin, and glacial blue eyes that appeared, at once, both severe and serene. Hers was an exotic beauty, in stark contrast to the tanned, toned bottled blondes with whom she shared tiny quarters on the dorm’s third floor.

  Whether or not she was cognizant of her good looks was up for debate. Her striking face was usually buried in a book — not hogging the bathroom mirror. She seemed to have a quiet confidence that was uncharacteristic of most of the freshmen girls who roamed the campus in lemming-like packs, thus singling her out out as an “untouchable.” Upon occasionally emerging from the study lounge or library stacks, she’d peer out at the world through an ancient-looking 35-millimeter camera, avoiding direct eye contact with the unwashed masses of undergrads surrounding her. With a name like Skye Kingston, many presumed she had climbed straight off Daddy’s yacht prior to arriving on campus. Others, including her roommates, had been speculating for weeks about the real story behind this mysterious freshman who defied classification.

  “Did she live in an igloo or something?”

  “No, you idiot. She’s not an Eskimo!”

  “I heard she lived in pitch black for half the year because the sun never rises there.”

  “That would explain the pasty-white skin.”

  “Well, I’d kill to have her skin, actually. It’s like porcelain.”

  Skye sighed underneath her covers, listening to her roommates’ gossip with a detached fascination. Like the Northern Lights in her native Anchorage, these Skye-centric chat sessions had become a nightly phenomenon, a fun pastime they routinely turned to after exhausting all of their catty comments about other socially condemned undergrads. Surely they couldn’t think she’d be asleep already at quarter to ten, and even if she were sleeping, being openly conjectured about while she was less than four feet away was ludicrously ballsy of them.

  “Maybe she’s a vampire.”

  “Um … in that case, I’m putting in for a room transfer!”

  “Well, supposedly she dabbles in the occult. That’s what somebody in the caf told me at dinner yesterday.”

  “For real?”

  “Yeah. Apparently she was involved with some lesbo coven of witches.”

  “Oh, come on, guys. You really don’t think — ”

  “Some girl on the fourth floor heard from her R.A. that her boyfriend murdered a dude.”

  “No way.”

  “I’m serious. It was apparently all over the papers and stuff in Alaska.”

  “Holy shit.”

  Skye’s heart began to race furiously underneath the covers. Being called “Ice Princess” and “Nanook of the North” was bad enough, but this time they were nearing a dangerous precipice with their idle gossip, threatening to reopen old wounds. She shifted underneath her blanket and cleared her throat. She hated confrontation — always had — but she had to at least let them know she could hear every word they were saying from her top bunk. Her movements prompted a shushing giggle down below.

  “Uh … Skye? Are you awake?”

  “What?” she said, knowing she was likely to regret it.

  “You’re from Alaska, right? And, well, it gets really cold there, right? And I’m wondering….” the roommate could barely stifle her laughter. “Did your butt cheeks ever freeze to the toilet seat?”

  The room below Skye’s bunk erupted into self-satisfied cackles.

  • • •

  Sleep continued to elude Skye as her three roommates performed their fastidious evening bathroom rituals and finally clamored noisily into their twin beds. As she lay roasting underneath her blanket, she reflected on her bunkmates, who, so far, seemed to be the type of girls more worried about the intricacies of performing the perfect keg stand than such trivial matters as homework or attending class. She recognized the insecurity behind their conceit, and hoped that time would help soften their cutting edges. She had survived their brand of callousness before — barely, god knows. She didn’t relish the thought of having to endure it all over again: the manipulation, the backstabbing, the selfish lust for power, the reckless disregard for people’s feelings … people’s lives.

  Skye threw the blanket off her sweaty torso — Southern California was too hot for her — and took a deep breath. She hadn’t plann
ed on delving into her tumultuous past, but a candid discussion seemed in order. If laying all her cards on the table helped to break the ice, then it might be worth reliving the pain.

  “‘Murder’ is a strong word, but not entirely off base,” she said, breaking the dark silence. “If you insist on turning me into a movie of the week, I should at least provide you with some semblance of the facts.”

  She could hear the unsettled sound of sheets rustling and bedframes creaking, and saw the silhouette of one startled roomie as she sat up from her pillow.

  “First, to answer some of your ongoing questions, the answers are, no: I’ve never seen Santa Claus. Yes: I have eaten reindeer meat, but it wasn’t Rudolph. No: I would not strip for a Klondike Bar. And yes,” she finally added, in a more stoic tone. “My boyfriend did kill someone … in a manner of speaking.”

  Skye stared at the ceiling three feet above her bunk. She had affixed glow-in-the-dark star decals there to remind her of home, forming the constellations of Ursa Major, Cassiopeia, and Orion. California’s night sky was virtually a starless swath of smoggy gray. But looking at her artificial version of Alaska’s heavens gave her little comfort. The perspective was all wrong. She was too close to the ceiling. You needed distance to really appreciate the staggering scope of it all….

  CHAPTER ONE

  Fair Is Foul and Foul Is Fair

  THIS TIME I HAD HIM IN MY CROSSHAIRS. Two more seconds and I’d take the shot.

  “Hey, Skye! Over here.”

  Damn. I looked up through the throng of orange-and-blue-clad spectators to see Jillian Folger, the editor of our high school newspaper, waving frantically at me from the second row in the stands. Her brown curls bounced like springs as she waved, fittingly spastic hair for her hyperactive temperament.

  As I returned my focus to the rink, the arena erupted into a cacophony of screaming voices.

  “GO RAVENS … !!!”

  Thirty-seven seconds left in the hockey game and we were tied, 4 – 4. The crowd was on its feet, and our archrivals, the Golden Grizzlies, were on the offensive attack. I should have been focusing on the players speeding across the ice like angry sharks in a giant tank full of chum. Instead, I took aim at Craig MacKenzie, who was still in the penalty box. High-sticking an opponent had earned him two minutes in the “sin bin,” as it was sometimes called, and being a man down this late in the game was going to make it tough for us to clinch a victory in this first match of the season.

  “WE WANT BLOOD! WE WANT BLOOD!”

  The crowd was going primeval, but I was more interested in getting a closer look at Craig’s gorgeous face through my zoom lens. I didn’t care about the game itself, which was practically sacrilege for a native Alaskan like myself to admit. Hockey here was the equivalent of football in Texas — a religion — which explained why our school had its very own ice arena on campus as well as “The Ice Girls,” a squad of pinup-worthy skating cheerleaders who helped enliven (or should I say incite?) the crowd during timeouts.

  “Now’s your chance, MacKenzie! Annihilate them!” said someone standing a few rows behind me.

  Craig was back on the ice now with eight seconds left on the clock. I gazed at him through my lens, stalker-like. He was taller and leaner than most of his teammates, with dark, wavy hair that fell over his green eyes in a charmingly cavalier fashion. Of course, you couldn’t tell any of this through his armor of shoulder pads, shin guards, bulky gloves, and helmet.

  Our star center, Duncan Shaw, grabbed my attention having just recovered the puck. He shot it with a forceful slap across the ice to a waiting Craig, who half-ran, half-skated toward the opposing goalie, elbowing a Grizzly defenseman out of his way before directing a shot that skimmed the goalpost and ricocheted into the net. With the click of a button, I caught Craig in his moment of triumph. His fists pumped the air just before the rest of his teammates piled onto him in celebration.

  As our side of the rink erupted into cheers, I threaded my way over to Jillian.

  “Talk about a clincher! This game’s definitely destined for the front page,” she shouted through the din. “Dream boy is going to be everrrrr so grateful when he sees your pics!”

  Anyone would be happy to see their mug on the front page of the Polar Bear Post, but especially Craig. As much as I liked him, I also knew he was the kind of guy who couldn’t pass a mirror without sneaking a glance.

  Jillian and I made arrangements to meet at the newspaper office after school on Monday to lay out the issue. I headed gingerly onto the ice rink to where the team had convened for the typical self-congratulatory ritual of high-fives, back slaps, grunts, and play-by-play recaps. Craig was at the center of it all with Duncan, the senior team captain. With his white-blond hair and yoked physique, Duncan could have been cast as a Norse god in a Hollywood epic. My flair for fading into the woodwork made it easy for me to snap a few more photos of the sweaty victors.

  “Nice save, bro! Granted, you hooked that guy good heading into the goal. I can’t believe the ref didn’t call the foul.”

  “What can I say, man?” Craig said, sounding barely winded. “Foul is fair, fair is foul. I knew he wouldn’t send me back to the box with eight seconds left.”

  “Hey, I don’t care if the ref needs laser eye surgery, as long as it works in our favor. Way to hustle, Mac!”

  I was surprised to see Craig blush, but Duncan covered for him by pulling him into a headlock and slapping his helmet hard. Just then a chill traveled down my spine, and I realized that Craig’s Gestapo girlfriend, Beth Morgan, and her loyal henchwoman, Kristy Winters, had swooped in right behind me on their skates (both were Ice Girls).

  “Did you get what you were looking for?” Beth’s sleek golden ponytail swung authoritatively behind her, as if it, too, had a major beef with me. Confused for a nanosecond, I actually felt guilty. For what, I wasn’t exactly sure.

  “The shots,” Beth said, rolling her brown eyes toward their heavily shadowed lids. “Did you get any good shots of him?”

  “Yeah, actually.”

  “I bet you did.” Her knowing look made me feel, uncharitably, like scratching out her eyeballs, but I wisely refrained. Even though she was at least a head shorter than me, her ability to intimidate was on par with that of a trained assassin. Who knew a couple of bow-headed cheerleaders holding pompoms could look so threatening?

  Beth motioned with her hand as if she was swatting away a fly, my apparent cue to step aside. I tried to do so without splaying myself across the ice. She brushed past me and practically leaped into Craig’s arms, clutching him with heightened histrionics, as if he were Romeo, soon to be forever banished from Verona. You’d think they hadn’t seen each other in months, when in reality it had probably only been two measly hours since their last make-out session. I couldn’t seem to tear my eyes away from the horror of it all, but Duncan and the rest of the team acted totally indifferent to the blatant PDA as they mulled over plans for later that night. Apparently there was a postgame party over at The Hurlyburly Bar and Grill a mile from school. The food there was abysmal but it was an open secret that Easy Reynolds, the grizzled Vietnam vet who owned the joint, spiked glasses of Coke with bottom-shelf whiskey. In return for not checking IDs, he expected that a few extra tenners would be tacked onto his tip at the end of the night.

  “Remember that time Duff tried to pay him in Canuck money and Easy went all PTSD on him?”

  Kristy grimaced at the mention of her boyfriend, Duff Wallace. He was the team’s power forward, but he was spending the semester in Edinburgh, Scotland, as part of a student-exchange program.

  “He’s probably not wasting any time thinking about us,” she bellyached, evidently concerned that he was at that very moment kissing some winsome Scottish harpy.

  Duncan shrugged his shoulders. “We’re doing pretty okay without him, thanks to Mac’s ability to channel Gretzky. Who knows? Duff might come back and find he’s been dethroned!”

  Kristy scowled. Beth smiled smugly. Craig’
s face held a mixture of pride and embarrassment.

  As the team headed off the rink toward the locker room, I clumsily made my way back to terra firma. Fifteen minutes later as I was packing up my camera equipment, I sensed someone looming over me. I looked up to see our sports reporter, Leonard Livermore, smiling down at me with complete and utter adoration on his shiny face. It was probably the only time I’d seen him from this vantage point since he stood all of five-foot-two inches and I pretty much towered over him. On the social totem poll, he was equally diminutive, and yet he had a disproportionate level of self-confidence, at least where I was concerned. No matter how many times I rejected his romantic overtures, he seemed absolutely certain that someday soon I would throw myself into his welcoming arms as the dramatic score from some sappy romance movie reached an inspiring crescendo in the background.

  The worst part about the whole situation was that bad breath, dandruff, and turbo-charged sebaceous glands aside, Lenny had a good heart. I felt like a total bitch for not requiting his ardent passion — after all, I fervently subscribed to the beauty-is-more-than-skin-deep philosophy. But there was no way Leonard and I were ever going to end up in a state of couple-hood. Not even my pinky finger could dredge up any romantic interest in the guy. I mean, even the poor guy’s name was a turnoff. Since I couldn’t find my way to being cruel — the only thing it might take to get him off my back for good — I had to play the tactful Elizabeth Bennet to his sniveling Mr. Collins on more than one occasion. Painful, to say the least.

  “Hey, Lenny, I was just on my way to — ” I stood up, peering around for the nearest exit and thinking of the best way to pull the ripcord on this conversation as quickly as possible.

  “Skye, I really need to talk to you,” he said, adding dramatically, “It’s important.”

  Oh no. I quickly did a mental thumb-through of the excuses I could use for the upcoming weekend like watching my baby brother, finishing my project for art class … oh sweet Jesus — my social schedule wasn’t exactly jam-packed.