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Authors: Erynn Mangum

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BOOK: Sketchy Behavior
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I wanted to say that was a big name for a little guy, but for some reason, I didn’t think our friendly officer would like that. And considering he was going to be following me around for the foreseeable future, I wanted to be on his good side.

“So, should I call you Officer Kirkpatrick or DJ?” I asked.

He thought about it. “DJ. At school, I’m going to be dressed in plain clothes.”

School.

I really needed to study for my test tomorrow. I nodded. “Well, it’s time for me to get to studying.”

Madison looked at the still-closed blinds on the front windows. “I don’t think I’m going to go home until my parents will be there,” she said. “If it’s okay with you, I’m going to stay here and watch TV.”

“Fine with me.”

I went to my room and shut the door. It was the first time all day I had been alone.

I took a deep breath and closed my eyes.

Which is when someone knocked.

“Yes?” I yelled, quietness shattered.

“It’s DJ. You need to leave your door open, Kate.”

I opened it and looked at him. “How am I supposed to use the bathroom or take a shower or get dressed?”

He nodded. “The bathroom doesn’t have any windows. You can shut the door when you are in there. But not in your room.”

He smiled a friendly smile and then moved to the hallway where he could see almost all of the house.

I was going to have to have a very serious talk with Miss Yeager tomorrow.

Chapter Six

F
RIDAY MORNING. APPROXIMATELY FIFTEEN MINUTES
before the bell was scheduled to ring.

School looked normal enough. I was peering out the windows of the unmarked police car that DJ had driven me to school in. Apparently, me driving by myself was a definite no. DJ did swap the uniform with a pair of jeans and a Polo shirt though.

Still. So much for all the privileges that came with that hard-earned driver’s license.

DJ, who looked as refreshed as a man could look after sleeping on an air mattress in the hallway of my house, was looking out the window too. Another policeman, Officer Colton, came at night as well, only he stayed awake so DJ could sleep.

“Let me get out first and you follow. Your first class is drawing. You are to be no more than five feet away from me at any given moment. Understood?”

I wondered if this is what the daughters of the president had to go through and I immediately was overcome with despair for them. Dad always said that pity is pointless. Mom said it’s only pointless if we don’t do something to help.

Aside from kidnapping the first daughters and showing them what life outside of a security detail was like, which I imagined was a federal crime to the highest degree, I couldn’t think of a way to help them.

So I stopped pitying them and glared at DJ instead.

“Hey,” he said, holding his hands up. “I didn’t draw John X.”

“I didn’t mean to.”

Good thing art was first. Miss Yeager and I were about to have it out.

DJ got out of the car and I followed him as instructed. What I didn’t expect was that all the news crews that had been parked outside my house for half the night would be at SWF High.

“Kate! Kate!” one lady yelled incessantly at me as DJ hustled me into the school.

I would think there must be more exciting news in South Woodhaven Falls, but surely there was not. One of the perks and apparently curses of living in a small town.

I remembered when Dusty McSweeny, the local grocer, put up the very first “Handicapped Parking Only” sign in all of South Woodhaven Falls in front of his store. That was the only news we got for the next three nights. People were getting their picture beside it and making bad jokes about it like, “Hey, did you see the new sign outside of McSweeny’s? It’s pretty handy!”

Suddenly, I found myself wishing for another natural “disaster” like the Great Tornado of 1993 that took out a woman’s leaning storage shed and knocked over a couple of other people’s grills. That story lasted on the local news for about three weeks.

DJ and I made it inside, barely, and then the real chaos started.

“Hey, it’s Kate Carter!” one guy I’d never seen before in my life shouted.

“Kate Carter?” another girl I did not know repeated.

“Kate Carter?”

“Kate Carter!”

Suddenly, my name was being repeated so consistently and on such a good beat that I was waiting for the music to start and my personhood to be sung about like what happens in
High School Musical
. DJ kept pushing me toward my locker.

“Wow, that was really brave,” one guy said as we passed him.

He was actually kind of cute, so I wouldn’t have minded talking to him, but DJ didn’t seem to care. It was all for the better, anyway. We already know my history with guys.

I grabbed my pencils and sketchpad from my locker and then heard another rousing chorus of “Kate Carter!” and “Wow, that was amazing what you did!” as I was rounded into art class.

Considering my history of tardiness, I wasn’t even sure what to expect as I pushed open the classroom door at ten minutes until class time. Miss Yeager was busy writing instructions on the board, and no one else was there yet.

She turned when she heard the door close and at first she smiled. “Kate!” she said excitedly. Then I guess she noticed the man behind me and the firm set to my jawline.

“How are you?” she asked all hesitantly, putting the dry erase marker down and walking over slowly.

“Well,” I started, ready to unload on her.

Which of course is when Silent Justin walked in. I almost growled in frustration. I couldn’t lambaste Miss Yeager in front of a classmate. It’s like the highest form of insult to get mad at an authority figure in front of her subordinates.

Or so I thought. My knowledge of authority and subordinates is completely from movies like
The Guardian
and
Remember the Titans
. Which was about the only thing I took from those movies, other than a fear of boating or swimming in the ocean.

“Good morning, Justin,” Miss Yeager said to my classmate. She got a grunt of recognition before turning back to me.

“Miss Yeager,” I said, carefully, keeping one eye on Justin as he started arranging his pencils on our table. “Were you aware that we were sketching a nationally known and state-feared criminal when you had me complete the last assignment?”

Miss Yeager looked at me and then at DJ.

“Kate,” she started.

“Did you know we were sketching John X?”

She took a deep breath. “No, for the record, I did not know it
was John X. I knew it was a man who had committed a crime and hadn’t been caught, but I was not aware it was him.”

Which placed the blame squarely on the good Detective Masterson’s shoulders.

“I see,” I said. I went to my table and sat down.

“Kate,” Miss Yeager said again, apology reigning in her tone.

“Miss Yeager, I can barely even go to the bathroom by myself now. My dad’s constantly got his 9mm strapped to his chest, my mom is on the verge of a mental breakdown, and I’m constantly shadowed by
him.
” I jerked my thumb toward DJ.

He smiled and waved at Miss Yeager. “Officer Kirkpatrick. Pleased to meet you.”

“Likewise.” She was smiling back at him.

I really hoped I wasn’t interrupting the moment. Oh wait, yes I did.

“Seriously, you guys?”

“Okay, okay,” Miss Yeager said, coming over and putting a hand on my shoulder. “Listen, Kate, I’m very sorry about the sketching assignment. But, if it makes you feel better and it should, you are the person to thank for protecting our state from a very dangerous man. And you wouldn’t have gotten that opportunity without the detective providing you with that assignment.”

Justin was sitting directly to my left, and he made a tiny noise in the back of his throat like he agreed.

That sent me over the edge. “Look, instead of grunting like a caveman, why don’t you just speak? We all know you can. Gosh!”

“Kate Carter!” Miss Yeager exclaimed, only it wasn’t in the adoring way that everyone outside in the halls was proclaiming it.

“Sorry,” I mumbled. I rubbed my head. I hadn’t even taken a good shower this morning — I was so weirded out by the fact that DJ was standing in the hall waiting for me. I could feel the start of several zits along my hairline.

Fabulous.

I held my head for a few seconds and then looked over at Justin, who was flipping through his sketchbook. “Sorry,” I said.

He nodded.

Wordlessly, of course.

Miss Yeager sighed. “Listen, Kate, I understand that you’ve been through a lot of emotions in the last twenty-four hours. In fact, I really wasn’t even anticipating you being here today at all.”

“I’ve got a geography exam.”

She smiled at me. “I think Mr. Walsh might have let you take it later, all things considered.”

I just blinked at her. If I didn’t come to school, what would I do? Sit on the couch with DJ and Lolly and watch E! reruns?

All last night, I dreamt about some shadowy figure sitting in a jail cell and carving
Get Kate Carter
over his cell door like the poor man in
The Count of Monte Cristo
. Only that man was carving the name of the woman he loved.

I was fairly sure that John X did not harbor feelings of affection of any kind toward me. Even though my dad said that prison these days was better than the outside world, because apparently they get cable, no taxes, basketball games, and pot roast. Dad said that if he weren’t an upstanding citizen, he would have hoped to get into prison years ago.

Part of me thought my dad was just kidding because I’ve seen some of those documentaries on the Discovery Channel about life in the slammer. I’ve never seen anyone playing basketball in the yard. All the clips they ever show are the ones where the guards were breaking up one of the daily fights with tear gas and bean bag guns.

No, it was better to be at school. At school, I have to concentrate on art and math and what the population in the capital of Brazil was. At home, I would be researching prison and worrying.

“I’m fine,” I said, pretty much lying through my teeth, but trying to look calm as I wove my fingers together and set my hands on top of my sketchbook.

Miss Yeager didn’t look like she believed me, but she nodded. “Fine.”

She walked back to the board, DJ moved to the back corner of the class, and the bell buzzed once as a flood of bodies came through the door.

I felt Justin looking at me, but when I looked over at him, he snapped his head around so fast I heard his neck pop.

Then again, he wasn’t the only one looking. Everyone was craning their heads as they sat down, gawking at me and whispering.

I will never stare at babies in McSweeny’s Market whose mothers dress them in horrendous clothing again. I know now what it feels like.

“Okay, everyone, stop staring at Kate,” Miss Yeager said finally, as the second bell rang.

Allison Northing dropped into her chair beside me right as the bell finished. “Oh my gosh, Kate, I cannot
believe
you are here today!” she tried to whisper but didn’t really succeed. “Oh wow, did you know who we were drawing? Did you get like an award or something? Holy cow, you should
totally
hang it in your locker!”

“Today, we are going to continue with our discussions on how to use art in the career world,” Miss Yeager started and, thankfully, Allison quieted.

I tried to focus on what Miss Yeager was saying, but honestly, the word
career
just reminded me of Deputy Slalom’s job offer yesterday.

Now, granted, I had told Mom and Dad that I wanted to look into getting a job over the summer. Something with casual work attire, nice hourly pay, and good benefits. I was thinking about maybe working at Kelly’s Creamery and serving ice cream. For every ten cones you sold, you got one free.

That sounded like good benefits to me.

Dad wanted me to consider working at the local hardware store. I figured he wanted some discounts for when he finally built that shed he’d been talking about building for years.

I didn’t like the smell of sawdust, however, and the hardware store always smelled of sawdust and wood glue. Which also made me worry a little bit about the architectural integrity of the store.

But working as a forensic sketch artist? With the police?

I was willing to bet there was no free ice cream with that job.

“… makes it one of the best choices for an art major’s career,” Miss Yeager said, and I shook my head slightly, trying to bring myself back to the present.

I raised my hand.

“Yes, Kate?”

“I’m sorry. What’s one of the best choices for an art major’s career?” I asked, feeling dumb but not wanting to miss what she was talking about. Justin wouldn’t have answered me if I’d asked him and Allison doesn’t know the meaning of whispering.

Miss Yeager smiled faintly at me. “Freelance artistry,” she said. She looked at the class. “I have several friends who make a very good living contracting out with people to design their restaurant menus, drawing the winter art you see on store windows, and painting creative pieces on people’s walls. You have to be willing to keep very unusual hours and have very good self-marketing skills, but it can be a great line of work.”

She told us that we would now spend the rest of class designing a menu. “I want you to use your creative brains and come up with a restaurant, a good description of the kind of food they serve, and a sample menu for me. I need it in color and finished on my desk by Monday morning. Don’t worry about putting prices on there.”

She walked around handing out huge sheets of paper that had been pre-folded into a menu with three sections.

Allison immediately started working on hers. She’d only had her paper for seventeen seconds before
Allison’s Awesome Appetizer House
was written across the top of the front page.

Justin was lightly sketching a few lines here and there, making what looked like a vine wrapping around the edges of the menu. I was willing to bet his was going to be an Italian restaurant.

Everyone around me was working and sketching. I stared at my blank piece of paper.

All I could think about was John X whiling away time in prison by cutting my name into the rubber sole of his shoelace-less shoes, listening to a basketball game outside his window while the smell of pot roast wafted down the barred hallway.

“Kate?” Miss Yeager said softly.

I jerked up. “Oh. Yes?”

She just smiled one of those sad, sympathetic smiles at me. “You don’t have to be here,” she said.

I nodded. “Yes, I do.” I picked up my pencil.

I worked quickly and I worked hard. By the time class was over, I had a halfway decent menu about halfway done.

Granted, it was for a restaurant called
Jailbird’s
and the main thing they served was pot roast, but it was done very tastefully in an art-deco design.

The bell rang and everyone stuffed their pencils, menus, and sketchpads into their backpacks. “Have a great weekend everyone, see you on Monday!” Miss Yeager yelled over the chaos.

DJ waited for me while I gathered up my supplies. “So,” he said as I shrugged on my backpack. “Jailbird’s?”

“DJ,” I said, walking into the loud hallway and trying to ignore yet another chorus of “Kate Carter! Kate Carter? Kate Carter!”

“Yes, Kate?”

“Do they serve pot roast in prison?”

BOOK: Sketchy Behavior
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