“Tell me what happened,” I said.
“A little more than a week ago, we had tryouts for the cheerleading squad. There was only room for three new girls this year, and maybe fifty girls showed up. One of them was Ashley.”
That surprised me. “She was trying out for cheerleading?”
Rachel nodded.
“So how did it go?”
“Not well. The new girls were being selected by three of us. Cathy, Brittany, and me. I thought that she was good, had real talent, but her audition was, well, it was weird.”
“In what way?”
“This place is old-school. We do classic cheerleading. It’s more gymnastic based. Most of the girls did familiar routines—acrobatics, tumbling, showing that they could help form a pyramid. That kind of thing. Ashley, on the other hand, danced. I thought she was pretty good, showed a lot of promise, but the other girls thought . . .”
“Thought what?”
“That her routine was a tad”—she stopped, either searching for the word or afraid to say it—“well, it was pretty racy. Not over the top. But it was enough to get the other girls going.”
I said nothing. I thought about the Plan B Go-Go Lounge and wanted to close my eyes.
“And so Ashley finishes this, and then, well, she’s waiting for applause. No one claps. Ashley is standing there, all nervous, waiting for feedback. And the girls just dig into her. First Cathy snickers and says, ‘Where’s your stripper pole?’ Then they start in on her clothes, her hair, the whole thing.”
“What’s wrong with her clothes and hair?”
“You’re a guy, so you wouldn’t notice. The clothes are secondhand.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. “So what? You guys made fun of her for having old clothes? Are you really that snobby?”
Rachel looked hurt when I said that. “You guys?”
“I just meant—”
“I’m not a snob. I don’t care how much money someone has. That’s not the point.”
“What is then?”
“The clothes weren’t even secondhand, so much as thirdor fourth-hand. There was a pretense here. It’s like she went to a thrift shop and searched for Eighties Prep. I mean, a monogrammed sweater?”
“I still don’t get it.”
“It was like,” Rachel said, “she was trying to look like something she wasn’t. Like she was in disguise. Anyway, it got cruel. Everyone started laughing at her.”
“Did you laugh at her too?”
“No,” she said quickly. Then Rachel looked down at the floor and her voice got softer. “But I didn’t stop it either. I should have. I mean, she was just standing there, alone, in front of everybody. She didn’t know us. She looked so vulnerable and there we were, laughing in her face, until finally, she just ran off.”
Rachel stopped then. I tried to imagine the scene, how it must have wounded Ashley to hear those laughs.
“Nice,” I said, trying to sound sarcastic without crossing into bitter.
“Yeah, I know.”
“So what happened next?”
“I ran after her. You know, to apologize. She started down Collins Drive, so I headed that way. I looked down Mountainside Road, and there, about a hundred yards down, I spotted her walking toward Northfield Avenue. I called out, but Ashley didn’t stop. I don’t know if she didn’t hear me or was just ignoring me.” She stopped and swallowed. “And then something weird happened.”
“What?”
“A car screeched up to her, and this big guy jumped out of the passenger side before the car had even stopped. Ashley started to back up, but he was on her fast. I mean, it was a second, maybe two. He picked her up and threw her over his shoulder. She screamed. I screamed too. I ran as fast as I could toward them. I didn’t even think, you know? I just started running and screaming. The big guy ignored me. He started to throw her in the back, but Ashley resisted. She got her hands on the outside of the door, trying to pull herself back. The big guy started pushing, but she held on. The driver yelled, ‘Hurry!’ and then the big guy actually made a fist. He reared back to hit her, but I was closer now. I screamed again, kept trying to get his attention. I took out my cell phone and pointed it at him. I shouted, ‘I called nine-one-one and I’m recording everything. Let her go.’ ”
“Were you?” I asked.
“Was I what?”
“Recording it.”
“I wish. You have to find the app button and click it and then hit Record . . . There was no time. I was just reacting.”
My cell phone buzzed again. I took a quick glance. It was from Ema again: where r u??! IMPORTANT.
No time to respond now. I nodded at Rachel to continue.
“Anyway, the big man finally turned toward me. Ashley used that. She kicked out, and the guy stumbled back. She broke free and ran. The guy was going to go after her, but he saw me with the phone and I guess he decided to cut his losses. He jumped back in the car. Before they peeled out, the driver called out in the spookiest voice, ‘You can’t hide forever, Ash, you know I’ll find you.’ And then they were gone.”
“Did you get the license plate number?”
Rachel nodded. “I memorized it and then I ran over to make sure Ashley was okay. I started to dial nine-one-one for real now when Ashley put her hand on mine and whispered, ‘You can’t call the cops.’ She sounded so scared.”
Rachel had her hands in her lap. She started nervously twirling a ring on her right index finger. My phone buzzed again. Then another time. I didn’t even look.
“Why didn’t she want you to call the police?”
“She said it would make it worse. She begged me not to, so, I mean, what was I going to do? We went back here, to my house. At first, Ashley didn’t want to talk about it. She just kept crying and blaming herself. I told her it wasn’t her fault, but she wouldn’t listen. I got on the computer and Googled the Kents’ phone number. I said, ‘Let’s call your parents,’ but again she stopped me. She told me that her real last name wasn’t Kent. What she did was, she found a Kasselton resident without any kids in the school system. Then she just pretended to be their child so she could enroll in the school.”
“You can just do that?”
Rachel shrugged. “I guess.”
“So the Kents didn’t know about her?”
“I don’t think so. She said she worked at a horrible nightclub and that everyone there thought that some creepy guy kidnapped her and sold her overseas into white slavery. But really she escaped.”
White slavery, I thought, feeling a chill slip down my spine. Candy had talked about Antoine making girls disappear into “White Death.” White death, white slavery—they had to be the same thing.
“So,” Rachel said, “here she was, in Kasselton, hiding from her past until she got sent to the final place.”
“The final place?”
“That was what she said. Like staying here in Kasselton was only temporary. But she liked being here. She said . . . she said she’d never been this happy before. She wanted to find a way to make Kasselton her final place, but they found her. That, she said, was her mistake.”
Another buzz. I risked a quick look. Yep, it was Ema: I need to show you something. promise me you won’t get mad.
“The guy in the car,” I said to Rachel. “Did he have a tattoo on his face?”
“No. He was tall—your height maybe—but twice your size. And he was black.”
I thought about Derrick the bouncer at the Plan B Go-Go Lounge. “How did they find her?”
“Ashley didn’t know, but I think I figured it out,” Rachel said.
“How?”
“Both of you were new students, right?”
“Right.”
“So you participated in Ms. Owens’s weird bonding orientation.”
I remembered. Man, how dumb had that been? “So?”
“We get the Star-Ledger delivered every day. They did a story on it. One of the pictures was some kind of relay race. And there, pretty clear to see, was Ashley.”