Читать книгу Ms. Longshot - Sylvie Kurtz - Страница 11
Prologue
ОглавлениеNew York City. December. Ten years ago.
The second-floor bathroom of the Constance Gramercy School for Girls was crowded as usual. I elbowed my way to the mirror and puckered up to see if the zit I’d felt growing on my chin in social science had popped up. Wouldn’t you know it, the timing sucked. I had a horse show in the morning.
Nathalie Huston, my best friend since we’d bitten each other the first day of kindergarten, came pounding through the door, big boobs leading the way and her long, black ponytail flying behind her. She’d had that magnificent chest since she was eleven. At fifteen, I was still waiting for mine to show up. My mother said British roses took longer to bloom, which only made me wish I’d inherited more of my father’s American genes.
Back of the hand pressed to her forehead, Nat paused and sighed dramatically. Of course the contrast of Wedgwood-blue eyes and raven hair had made her dramatic from birth. I couldn’t help smiling.
“What’s wrong this time, Nat?” I turned back to the mirror and swiped boring clear lipgloss—the only kind the builds-the-character rules allowed—across my lips.
“Oh, Alexa, I can’t take it anymore.” Nat plopped her book bag against the white sink and checked to see if what little makeup was allowed needed retouching. “I simply can’t sit through Mr. Ziegler’s algebra class today.” She sniffed in perfect imitation of Mr. Ziegler’s postnasal drip problem and pushed nonexistent glasses up her nose—just as Mr. Ziegler would do. “Forty minutes of that is enough to drive anyone nuts. Like what am I ever going to use algebra for anyway?”
I didn’t mind math. I was kind of good at it, actually. Daddy kept telling me I had a head for business and, as uncool as that was, I liked hearing him say it.
“Let’s cut last period,” Nat whispered. She stretched open the top of her Gucci bag and showed off the fresh pack of smokes.
“It’s raining,” I said with a sigh. No need to look outside for a weather update. Not with the frizz I had going. Even in a French braid, even inside, even with half a bottle of Aveda frizz tamer, the humidity made my mahogany curls look like one of the rusted Brillo pads in the science lab.
“I’ve got an umbrella.” Nat grinned and tugged on the minicompact, red-plaid Burberry umbrella tucked in her bag.
I made a quick calculation. With two weeks left to the semester before the Christmas break, I could afford another warning on my record before someone notified my parents they had a delinquent daughter. Besides, Daddy had promised to pick me up right after school today so we could get to the Ridgefield Winter Dressage Show early. If I was already standing outside, he wouldn’t have to wait for me.
I slung my Coach bag over my shoulder. “I’m in. Let’s go.”
Traffic honked up and down Ninety-third Street. Breathing in that exhaust had to fry our lungs more than any cigarette could. Nat popped open the umbrella and passed it to me. I angled it to shield us from most of the rain. Cold wind pried apart the blue cashmere Marc Jacobs coat I’d pulled from my bag, but I didn’t care. I hated stuffy English almost as much as Nat hated algebra. Shivering outside was a small price to pay to miss the dreaded class.
I untucked my boring white Calvin Klein button-down shirt, rolled the waist of my gray uniform skirt and leaned back against the cold stone wall. What was the point of having great legs if you couldn’t show them off? And what idiot had come up with gray as the uniform color in the first place? No one I knew looked good in gray.
Nat passed a coffin stick. “I can’t wait for break.”
I lit it with the gold lighter I’d pilfered from my mother’s purse and puffed out a geyser of smoke. “Me either.”
“Sucks that I’ll be stuck going skiing with my dad in Aspen again, though.” Nat made a face. “He’s bringing his new girlfriend.” A gold-digging bimbo only seven years older than Nat.
“Maybe you’ll get lucky and she’ll run into a tree,” I sympathized.
“She’s more into the après than the ski, if you know what I mean.” Nat took a long drag on her cigarette. “What are you going to wear to the Black-and-White Ball?”
“Ralph sent over a black number that’s so hot,” I said, practically purring. My long legs had caught Ralph Lauren’s attention when I was thirteen, and he’d tried to get me to pose for one of his ads ever since. Naturally my mother had nixed the idea. Modeling is apparently beneath the station of Lady Cheltingham’s daughter. I secretly believed that my stiff-upper-lip mother just didn’t want me to have any kind of fun. Still, for every major event, a dress appeared at our Park Avenue penthouse, and even my mother wasn’t too proud to accept the gift of couture.
“It’s cut down to here.” I twisted my body around without moving my feet and dragged a hand down to the small of my back.
At that moment, someone leaned on a horn and didn’t let go. Tires screeched and a yellow taxi hopped the curb, trying to avoid a collision with a town car zigzagging like crazy through traffic.
He’s not going to stop, I realized as the taxi charged toward us.
The world slowed around me as I untwisted my feet. My heart pounded a ragged beat against my eardrums. A gust of wind wrenched the umbrella from my hand. Nat’s screams echoed as if she were in a tunnel. Too late, I lifted a leg to bolt out of the way. The thud of metal against stone and bone registered as something foreign and far away—like it was all happening to someone else—pinning me to the wall like a butterfly.
The taxi recoiled. I fell and I could tell you every second of the trip to the pavement. Inanely what floated through my mind was Newton’s First Law I’d learned in Mrs. Collin’s science class: “For every action there’s an equal and opposite reaction.” And the weirdest thing of all was the way my head bounced sideways against the wet concrete like a tennis ball, splashing dirty puddle water into my eyes. When my vision cleared, what filled my sight was the perfectly whole cigarette, end glowing red, between my fingers.
Well, crap, I thought as pain screamed through my body and pierced my brain. Daddy was right. Cigarettes were going to kill me.