The Lying Game #5: Cross My Heart, Hope to Die

The Lying Game #5: Cross My Heart, Hope to Die

 

Shepard, Sara

 

 

EPIGRAPH

 

 

Betrayal is the only truth that sticks.

 

—ARTHUR MILLER

 

 

 

 

 

CONTENTS

 

 

Epigraph

 

Prologue: A Familiar Face

 

1 Drive-By Mom

 

2 The Good, the Bad, and the Sexy

 

3 The Face That Launched a Thousand Fists

 

4 Karma’s a Bitch, and So Am I

 

5 Daddy-Daughter Dine-and-Dash

 

6 The Fourth Floor

 

7 Strangers in the Night

 

8 Who Are You?

 

9 White Lies and Alibis

 

10 Tea for Two

 

11 A Picnic Under the Stars

 

12 Monsters in the Attic

 

13 Never Underestimate the Power of a Little Retail Therapy

 

14 The School of Bitchcraft

 

15 Hopes and Schemes

 

16 Every Day Should Be Senior Skip Day

 

17 Researching and Reminiscing

 

18 Mom, Interrupted

 

19 Mommie Dearest

 

20 The Escape

 

21 Calm in the Storm

 

22 In Hot Water

 

23 Help from an Unexpected Source

 

24 Meet Me at the Plaza

 

25 File M for Murder

 

26 You Better Get This Party Started

 

27 A Voice in the Dark

 

28 Scenic Overlook Ahead

 

29 Arts and Crafts Time

 

30 Things That Go Bump in the Night

 

31 Origin Story

 

32 Hello, and Good-Bye

 

33 The Most Important Meal of the Day

 

34 Kiss the Girl

 

35 Call Me Maybe

 

Epilogue

 

Acknowledgments

 

About the Author

 

Other Works

 

Credits

 

Copyright

 

Back Ads

 

About the Publisher

 

 

 

 

 

PROLOGUE

 

 

A FAMILIAR FACE

 

 

I watched the two teenagers sitting together outside the Coffee Cat Café on a sunny Saturday morning. They leaned toward each other, their voices low and almost intimate, their bodies close but not touching. Most people probably thought they were a couple—a really attractive couple. The boy had high cheekbones and a lean, athletic build. His blue-and-green striped polo shirt brought out the green flecks in his hazel eyes. He was movie-star hot. But maybe I was just biased: Thayer Vega was my boyfriend, after all.

 

Or at least he was before I died.

 

The girl next to him looked exactly like I did, back when I had a body. Her bright blue eyes were lined with my velvety chocolate liner, and her light brown hair spilled down her back in thick waves just like mine used to. She was wearing a gray cashmere sweater and dark-wash skinny jeans from my closet. She answered to my name, and when a tear streaked down her cheek, my boyfriend leaned over to hug her. Instantly, I felt the ghost of my heart constrict.

 

I should have been used to this by now: living a bodiless existence as a dead girl, floating around like a plastic bag behind my long-lost twin, Emma, watching her inhabit my life, sleep in my bedroom, and talk to the boyfriend I’d never get to kiss again. The night Emma and I were supposed to meet for the first time, I never showed up—because I’d been murdered. My killer threatened Emma into taking my place, or else. She’d been living my life for months now, trying to solve the mystery of my death. But knowing all of that didn’t make it any easier to watch moments like the one I was seeing now.

 

When Thayer had first returned to Tucson from rehab a few weeks ago, Emma had thought he might be my killer. But even though he was with me that night in Sabino Canyon, her investigation proved—to my great relief—that he definitely hadn’t killed me. She had cleared my adoptive parents, too, even though they had been hiding a huge secret from me—that they were actually my grandparents. Our birth mother, Becky, was their troubled daughter. She had us when she was a teenager, leaving me with her parents and taking Emma with her when she left town, only to abandon her in foster care five years later.

 

I watched Thayer and Emma talk until a car backfired loudly. Emma’s head snapped up, her gaze locking on a brown Buick idling in the parking lot in front of the café. The woman at the wheel had a wrecked look to her, her hair a wild black tangle, her cheeks sunken and pale. And yet I could sense that she’d once been pretty.

 

When I looked back at Emma, her hands were trembling. Her coffee cup tumbled to the patio tile, and the lid flew off, spilling lukewarm coffee all over her black flats. But she didn’t even flinch.

 

“Oh my God,” Emma whispered.

 

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