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“There goes Kathy Kelley’s political career,” she cackled.

“Zip it, Mary Jo,” Dad said. “That’s enough.”

Dad’s been pretty quiet since the front lawn ruckus, but it’s not his normal, laid-back quiet. It’s a brooding, tense silence as he goes around the house with a furrowed brow, and without his usual good humor.

I don’t pay much attention to politics, but I think Lara’s mom has been a good councilwoman. She always seems to be talking about making sure the schools have enough money, which sounds important to me. I can’t understand why Mom is so happy about her career going down the toilet, especially since she worked on Mrs. Kelley’s campaign when she first ran for office.

It can’t be all because of that stupid tax abatement thing that Mom’s always complaining about, can it? I suddenly wonder if that’s the reason Mom worked on the campaign. I always thought it was because she and Mrs. Kelley were friends.

Just before di

“Are you Brea

“Yeah. Wait, are you filming this?” I ask, wondering if I should be talking to her at all, or if I should just shut the door in her face.

She ignores my question.

“Is your mother home?”

“She’s making di

“Well, can you get her?”

Fine, snippy Reporter Lady. Be that way.

“Moooom!” I shout without moving from the doorway. “There’s a TV reporter here to see you.”

“You were Lara Kelley’s best friend. Why would you do this to someone you allegedly cared about?”

She sticks her big black microphone right next to my mouth, staring at me accusingly, and I freeze, panic stricken. I don’t want a microphone in my face. I don’t want to be there at all. I want to be in my room, with the curtains closed, hiding under the covers, shutting the rest of the world out.

“I … didn’t … mean … to.”

“You didn’t mean to create a fake profile to trick her?”

“No. I just … I didn’t …”

“What’s going on here?” Mom says. “I didn’t give my consent for you to interview my daughter. She’s a minor.”

They need Mom’s permission to interview me? Normally that would make me mad because I’m old enough to make my own decisions, but at this moment I just feel relieved.

“I apologize,” says the reporter, but she doesn’t look or sound the teensiest bit sorry. “Do we have your permission to interview your daughter, Mrs. Co

I hold my breath, hoping Mom won’t agree.

“No,” she says, and I exhale my relief. “Get lost.”

Mom turns to me. “Go finish your homework.”

I’d already finished it, but I use the excuse to escape into the family room.

Still, I notice that I don’t hear the front door slam shut for another five minutes.

“Don’t answer it,” Mom says when the phone rings during di

We all sit listening to the answering machine. Sure enough, it’s a reporter from CNN. Practically as soon as he hangs up, the phone rings again. This time it’s a woman, who says she works for Nancy Grace on Fox.

“For crying out loud, Mary Jo,” Dad says, getting up and turning both the answering machine volume and the phone ringer to silent. “This is giving me indigestion.”

“What do you expect me to do about it?” Mom asks.

Dad opens his mouth to retort, but the doorbell rings again.

Liam jumps up to get it.





“Ignore it,” Dad says.

“But, Dad, what if it’s —”

“I said, ignore it!” Dad shouts.

Liam sits back down, muttering, “Fine,” but then the doorbell rings another time.

I exchange a glance with Liam. How are we supposed to eat di

Then I see movement in the corner of my eye. It looks like there is something — or someone — outside the kitchen window.

I scream.

“What on earth?” Mom exclaims.

“There’s someone outside! I saw them!” I shout.

“That does it,” Dad says. He runs out to the garage and comes back a few minutes later with Liam’s baseball bat. Striding over to the back door, he flings it open, turns on the outside light, and starts shouting at the camera crew to get off his property right now or he will call the police.

“And if I see you step foot on my property again, I’ll do more than make a phone call,” he says, waving the baseball bat around menacingly.

He looks and sounds crazy, not like my normal, level-headed teddy bear of a dad.

After he slams the kitchen door shut and locks it, he closes the blinds in the kitchen.

“Go shut the curtains in the front of the house,” he orders. “Keep the lights off while you do it.”

I creep into the living room, feeling like I’m in some action movie and our house is surrounded by bad guys. There is a little bit of light from the street, but in the shadows I scrape my ankle against the corner of an end table, deep enough to draw blood.

When I get to the window, I peer out before pulling the curtain cord.

What I see turns my stomach. It is unreal. It is the kind of thing that happens to other people, not people like us.

There is a cluster of TV trucks lining the street between our house and the Kelleys’. Reporters and camera people and guys with lights, blocking the sidewalk and our driveways. Some of our neighbors across the street are on their front porches, watching the commotion.

I yank the cord, shutting them all out, and stumble my way through the darkness back to the light of the hallway.

“Did you see what’s out front?” Liam asks as he emerges from the dining room.

I nod slowly, waiting for him to say something about how it’s all my fault, but he doesn’t. He’s pale under his freckles. He looks as scared as I feel.

“The neighbors are going to love us,” Dad mutters as he sits back down at the kitchen table. “And I’m not talking about the Kelleys.”

“You’re always so worried about what everyone is going to think, Sean,” Mom says.

Dad glares at her.

“Maybe if you and Bree had worried about that a little more, we wouldn’t be in this mess,” he snaps.

I stare down at my plate, feeling like the worst daughter in the world. It’s one thing disappointing Mom. I’m used to doing that. But Dad …

Suddenly, my parents’ cell phones start buzzing.

“They must have decided to try our work numbers,” Mom says.

“Great,” Dad says sarcastically. “This is going to do wonders for business. People are already making comments when they come into the store to buy parts.”

“Don’t start, Sean,” Mom warns him.

“What do you mean ‘Don’t start,’ Mary Jo? I didn’t start this. I didn’t even know about this until the police showed up,” Dad says, his voice rising with the anger he’s obviously been keeping under all that quiet. “Bree started this. And when you discovered what she was doing, instead of giving her consequences, you didn’t just encourage her, you took part in it yourself.”

“Oh, so it’s all my fault, is it?” Mom shouts at him. “Is that what you’re saying?”

“What I’m saying is, that because the two of you didn’t think, the legal consequences are just the begi