Sisters of Misery Page 2
“Get out there, Crane,” Bronwyn Maxwell called. She was also a Hawthorne Academy alum and a recent college graduate. Bronwyn was the all-time field hockey champion of Hawthorne Academy, and the school had offered her the chance to lead their teams to victory once again, this time as a coach. Hawthorne Academy always took good care of its own.
Maddie pulled on her cleats, the sweat already dripping down her back. She would be completely spent later on that day when her relatives were scheduled to move in.
Ugh, she sighed, exhausted by just thinking about it. After running a couple of warm-up laps, Maddie collapsed onto the fresh-mown grass, feeling the prickles of the blades against her steaming skin.
“Crane, you loser, get up.” Kate laughed as she dropped down next to her. She stretched her toned legs out in front of her and arched her back like a cat, allowing her long, honey-blond hair to graze the ground. She looked seductively over her shoulder, knowing she had the boys on the Hawthorne soccer team practicing on the next field as an audience. “Oh, I see, you’re checking out the lawn boy. He’s pretty cute for a townie.”
Maddie looked up to see a dark-haired guy riding a lawn mower on the other side of the field. His shirt was off, revealing a deep tan and sinewy muscles. Maddie hadn’t even noticed him, but he seemed to be watching them intently. “Maddie and the lawn boy sittin’ in a tree…” Kate sang, giggling.
“Not today, Kate,” Maddie warned, hoping to fend off Kate’s usual bitchy remarks. She’d grown accustomed to Kate’s taunts and teasing—even expected them as part of her daily ritual—but for some reason, she knew she couldn’t handle them today. Not with the craziness going on in her own house. Today, of all days, she just couldn’t deal.
“What’s the matter, Maddie? Feeling a little hungover? Didn’t you have fun at my party?” Kate asked innocently.
Just then Hannah, Bridget, and Darcy jogged over. “I was just asking Maddie if she liked the party last night. Did you girls have fun?”
They all giggled. Something was up.
The party was just like all the others Kate threw. Drunken guys in baseball caps, girls in overpriced outfits, tons of beer and alcohol, and the inevitable “get thrown into the pool fully dressed.” Then everyone would either skinny-dip in the ocean or get more wasted in the hot tub. It was like there was an unwritten script that every Endicott party had to adhere to.
“Kate had fun.”
“Lots of it.”
More giggles and hushed laughter.
Bronwyn saw them sitting down and blew her whistle. “Get up, you lazy bitches. I need to see some hustle out there.”
Maddie grabbed hold of Kate’s wrist before they headed back down to the field for dribble practices. “What happened last night?”
“Trevor and I finally did it,” Kate said, smiling as if she had really expected Maddie to believe that she hadn’t lost her virginity long ago. Maddie clearly remembered the night it happened. It was one of those parties at Fort Glover where the older guys ended up preying on the “new blood.” Kate got so wasted that she gave it up to her older sister Carly’s boyfriend on the dirt floor of the old fort. Maddie remembered warning her not to go off with Carly Endicott’s boyfriend that night, but Kate hissed that she knew what she was doing and that she could take care of herself. “I guess you can say I’m no longer part of The V Club.”
Maddie rolled her eyes. Honestly, the V Club? Kate had always acted as if she was the most worldly and the oldest of the group. Back when they were all first initiated into the Sisters of Misery, a select group of girls from Hawthorne Academy, Kate was so anxious to please the older “sisters” that she would do anything to be accepted as one of them. There was never a question that Kate would be part of the clique. Her older sister Carly made sure she was inducted into the not-so-secret society of girls who were known to have the best parties, date the cutest boys, and hold secret meetings out on Misery Island. Maddie wasn’t sure how far back their group had begun and it wasn’t something she would ever question. Like the monstrous Ravenswood Asylum at the center of town, it was something that was always there, bigger and more powerful than any of them. But once inside, you never got out.
Kate, not wanting to be the only girl her age in the group (and the sole target of the older girls’ taunts), brought Maddie and her other friends into the mix. This pleased Abigail to no end, but Tess grew more and more concerned every time Maddie took off with her group of friends. Even though she’d had playdates with the girls since grade school, taking ballet lessons, sailing courses, anything and everything that Abigail could sign Maddie up for, she still felt like an outsider. It was as if she didn’t really “know” them, and they would never understand her. Maddie just assumed that’s how all friendships were—on the surface and for show.
“So Trevor’s not with Nicole anymore?” Maddie had heard that Kate’s on-again, off-again boyfriend had been hooking up with another girl in their grade recently. Kate obviously felt she needed to get the upper hand and win Trevor back by sleeping with him.
Kate looked out at the field, smirking as Nicole ran up and down the field, going through the rigorous drills. “Like he was ever serious with that fat ass?”
Nicole looked as though she’d been crying, her eyes red and puffy. But it wasn’t enough for Kate to take her boyfriend. Nicole’s red and puffy eyes had a matching puffy lip by the end of the practice after Kate “accidentally” smashed into her head-on. It was just par for the course for Kate Endicott. No one ever got in her way.
Chapter 2
GEBO
THE GIFT
Partnerships, Relationships, and Unions Are Reached
Through Sacrifice and Balance
After a particularly grueling field hockey practice, Maddie was dead tired. Her coltish legs felt like rubber, and her long brown hair was sticking to the back of her neck and the sides of her face. The humidity was almost too much to bear as she trudged toward home, but she could always count on the extraordinarily icy Victorian to cool her down once she passed through the front door.
When Tess had informed them a few weeks earlier about her plans for Rebecca and Cordelia’s arrival from the West Coast, it didn’t seem set in stone. Rebecca was known for planning a return visit to Hawthorne, only to end up in some distant, exotic location. But this time, it seemed like the real deal. They were, without question, moving to Hawthorne, and Abigail was, in Tess’s words, fit to be tied.
“Mark my words, we are not going to let them spoil everything I have worked for,” Abigail hissed when she first learned of their homecoming. From the beginning, she was dead set against the return of her sister.
Maddie, however, was ecstatic. She had grown up hearing stories—ones that had almost a fairytale-like appeal—about the eccentric and willful Aunt Rebecca who fell in love with Simon LeClaire, an ornithologist (Abigail always referred to him as “the crazy bird guy”) who had come through Hawthorne conducting research on the migrating pattern of brown-speckled sandpipers. Abigail always said it was one of the happiest days of her life when her newly pregnant sister and her boyfriend had taken off for the West Coast in search of a warmer climate and the endangered Snowy Plover. Maddie, on the other hand, always wished that Rebecca would return with her daughter Cordelia. It would have been like growing up with a sister, despite her mother’s insistence that Sisterhood was highly overrated.
It wasn’t until a few months after Uncle Simon’s death that they learned of Rebecca’s plans to come home. Abigail used every opportunity to show Tess how small the house was, how expensive it would be to have two more people in the house, how difficult it would be for Rebecca to readjust to life in Hawthorne after so many years away. But Tess wouldn’t have it. They were as welcome in her home as Maddie and Abigail were, and she never failed to remind Abigail whose house Ten Mariner’s Way really was.
Tess had brought Maddie and Abigail in after Malcolm Crane deserted them and they had nowhere else to go. Abigail used to run around behind
him, picking up the evidence of his destructive outbursts, formulating excuses for the noise if the neighbors dared to mention the commotion the next day. But no matter how hard she tried, she just couldn’t put the broken pieces of the family back together again. Now Malcolm existed only as a drunken, bullish figure in the recesses of Maddie’s early childhood memories.
“It’s a good thing that he took off when he did,” Tess often replied when Maddie asked about her deadbeat dad. “If he ever pulled any of that nonsense with you that he pulled with your mother, he’d be six feet under by now.” Maddie loved hearing her frail grandmother talk about how she’d protect Maddie against the big brute of a father who had left them long ago. Abigail, on the other hand, was only concerned about town gossip. She kept their dire financial situation a secret, guarded it like a sore. Coming from a wealthy seaport town on Boston’s North Shore and having a prestigious last name like Crane, they had everyone fooled. Abigail made sure of that.
Despite the aloof coolness Maddie tried to maintain around her friends—Kate especially—she could barely contain her excitement about the arrival of Rebecca and Cordelia. As Maddie approached the house, Abigail came outside in a huff, her thin brown hair swept tightly into a severe bun, her long face pulled into its usual grimace. Tess stood next to Abigail her face, in stark contrast, brimming with excitement.
“So, are they here yet?” Maddie asked her mother.
Abigail’s body visibly stiffened. The blades of her shoulders twitched beneath her Talbots linen tank dress. She stood erect, spine perfectly straight, head held high.
“Just get inside already,” Abigail Crane said in an exasperated tone. “Our guests have already arrived.” Abigail was obviously hoping their stay wouldn’t be permanent, and from the stories Maddie had heard about Rebecca, she didn’t seem to stay rooted in one place for too long. But Maddie had a feeling this time would be different, and she hoped her premonitions were true.
Maddie moved past her mother and threw her arms around her grandmother’s frail body. “Hi, Grams. So they’re really here? Can you believe it? Are you excited?”
“You have no idea,” Tess said brightly. The wrinkles in her face deepened as she smiled widely. She was so tiny, fragile like the porcelain dolls Maddie’s mother had given her as a child. Maddie could look at them but was never allowed to touch. “All my girls back together again. It’s simply magical!”
“Don’t get too comfortable,” Abigail warned, ignoring her mother. “Remember, we’re going to the Hamilton’s for a cookout, and I’d like you to look presentable.” She eyed her daughter up and down, silently appraising her appearance, and then added, “Well, the best that you’re capable of. Don’t worry. We’re not bringing them.”
Maddie followed her mother’s gaze up to the guest room window of the old Victorian and caught a glimpse of a pale girl’s face peering out the window. The moment they made eye contact, the red-haired girl vanished from the window, leaving the curtains fluttering.
Tess nodded toward the house. “Rebecca is getting ready for the farmer’s market since we’re going to be fending for ourselves for dinner tonight,” she said. “Cordelia’s upstairs in the guest room. It will be a nice change for you to get to know some real folk, not just those uppity girls your mother’s always forcing on you.” Maddie’s mother threw her hands up in the air and stormed inside.
Despite Abigail’s insistence that they were the “right” friends for Maddie—the type of friends that would open up more social circles to all of them—Tess wasn’t fooled. She always seemed to know what nasty tricks they had up their sleeves—even before they did anything. Tess had always encouraged Maddie to be more independent, to stand up for herself more. Maddie tried, but what her grandmother didn’t realize was that sometimes, it was just easier to go with the flow than risk Kate’s wrath.
“Go on and introduce yourself,” Tess said. “You’re really going to like her; I can just feel it.”
Kissing her grandmother on the cheek, Maddie hoped that she was right.
Then, as Maddie pushed through the expansive front door, Tess whispered, “The cycle is just beginning.” Her grandmother’s words sent a ticklish feeling up Maddie’s spine as she trudged up the narrow staircase.
In the guest room, Maddie found a girl sitting cross-legged on the bed, her long, red hair spilling over her shoulders and trailing down her back. She dangled a crystal necklace from her slender hand, swinging it back and forth in front of her face. Her wide blue eyes fixated on the makeshift pendulum as if in a trance. Cordelia looked as if she didn’t belong in this century, let alone this town. She had a haunted, almost unearthly look about her. Solemn yet regal, like the black and white photos of historical royalty. She didn’t look like she had ties to Hawthorne, but more like a descendent from the lost Russian princess Anastasia, the one who was never found after the fall of the Romanov dynasty.
Even though they had moved from California, her creamy skin was porcelain pale and flawless, as if she never saw the light of day. Her upturned nose and full lips made her look like a cross between a pixie and a princess. She was shockingly beautiful, something that Maddie hadn’t expected. Though she’d seen pictures through the years—Christmas cards and vacation shots—her exquisite beauty somehow had never been translated through the lens.
Maddie watched for several moments as the girl’s eyes followed the dangling stone.
“What are you doing?” she finally asked.
“Hypnotizing myself,” the girl said flatly.
“Why?”
“Why not?” Cordelia answered without looking away from the crystal. “This will help me harness my psychic powers, give me something to do in this strange little town.”
Maddie raised a skeptical eyebrow. How could Cordelia think that this was an unusual town? Obviously, she hadn’t taken a good look at herself. Maddie turned to leave, suddenly deflated.
“Well,” Maddie sighed, disheartened, and said flatly, “Welcome to the neighborhood.”
“Thanks. Thrilled to be here.” With that, Cordelia dropped her necklace onto the floor and walked into the bathroom, closing the door behind her. Maddie looked at the bathroom door, shook her head, and retreated downstairs, trying to quell her feelings of disappointment. She’d already had to deal with being friends with the most beautiful girls in the school, but now, her model-perfect cousin was just one more person to be overshadowed by. And the worst part was, Cordelia didn’t even seem to like her.
Tess convinced Abigail to allow Maddie to skip the cook-out that evening. At first, Abigail objected, but she knew that once the old woman set her mind on something, nothing but an act of God would change it. Maddie was secretly thrilled to be let off the hook. It was just one less social event that she was forced to fake smiles at and endure boring conversations all night. When Rebecca asked if she’d like to join them for a picnic on the beach, Maddie jumped at the chance.
Abigail grabbed Maddie firmly by the arm as she followed her aunt and cousin out the front door. “Don’t worry,” she whispered. “You won’t have to miss out on any upcoming social obligations. Let’s just let this one slide to keep your grandmother happy and off my back for a change, okay?”
As they walked down to the water’s edge, mixing with the other evening beachgoers, Cordelia and her mother stuck out like wild tiger lilies in a field of plain green shrubs. With their long crimson hair hanging down their backs, their pale, almost translucent skin, and skirts that swirled and gathered as they walked, they drew attention and curiosity from the Patagonia-clad onlookers. This was a town where the men and women didn’t dress that differently from each other. Khaki shorts, polo shirts, and boat shoes during the summer; in the fall, Oxford shirts and fleece vests. And when the temperature dropped to single digits, out came the cable knit sweaters and down ski parkas from trunks all around Hawthorne, carrying the sharp, woody scent of cedar.
In contrast, Rebecca and Cordelia looked like they had stepped right out of a fair
y tale. Consequently, the women they passed smiled politely, but Maddie knew they were seething behind their tight smiles and steely gray eyes. But Rebecca and Cordelia didn’t notice, or if they noticed, they obviously didn’t care.
Tess and Maddie paced a few steps behind their new house-guests, who were so caught up in taking in the sights of Hawthorne, chirping and laughing as they toted their picnic basket overflowing with food from the farmer’s market, that they hardly noticed the serious discussion taking place behind them.
“Rebecca and Cordelia are starting a new cycle, Maddie,” Tess explained solemnly. Everything was cyclical in Tess’s mind. The world, time, seasons, everything was just one big circle. “Now that Simon has passed, we have a very important role to play in helping them start over. You must remember that. They need us now. And perhaps one day”—she stopped and placed a hand on Maddie’s shoulder—“we will need them.”
“My mother doesn’t seem to want to help them with their new cycle,” Maddie said wryly. Tess waited a beat as Rebecca and Cordelia started unpacking the food on one of the weathered picnic tables on the beach.
“Your mother has her own issues that she needs to resolve, things that shouldn’t concern you. You need to listen to your heart and your soul and your dreams. Your mother has always blocked those messages out. You need to learn how to let them in”—she nodded then to Cordelia and Rebecca—“and let your new family in, too.”
Maddie couldn’t resist a smile. Tess was always making things sound more mysterious—like there were larger forces at work.
It wasn’t until much later that Maddie realized how true Tess’s words would turn out to be.
Chapter 3