Pretty Little Liars
BURNED
CHAPTER 1 – BEWARE, YE LIARS
On a blustery Monday morning in late March, Spencer Hastings
stared into the vintage Louis Vuitton trunk on her queen-sized bed. It was
packed full of things for her upcoming journey on the Rosewood Day Prep Eco
Cruise to the Caribbean , a combination of class trip and
environmental-science seminar. Using the trunk was a long-standing good-luck tradition:
It had once belonged to Regina Hastings, Spencer’s great-great-grandmother. Regina had
bought a first-class reservation on the Titanic but decided to stay in Southampton for a few
extra weeks and take the next steamer out.
As Spencer tossed a third bottle of sunscreen onto the top of
the pile, her phone let out a bloop. A text bubble appeared on the screen from
Reefer Fredericks. Hey buddy, it said. What are you up to?
Spencer found Reefer’s number in her contacts list and dialed
it. “I’m packing for the trip,” she said when he answered on the first ring. “You?”
“Just putting some last-minute things together,” Reefer
answered. “But I’m bummed. I can’t find my Speedo.”
“Oh please,” Spencer teased, curling a tendril of honey-blond
hair around her finger. “You don’t own a Speedo.”
“You got me.” Reefer chuckled. “But I really can’t find my
trunks.”
Spencer’s heart did a flip as she thought about Reefer in swim
trunks—she could tell through his T-shirt that he was toned. His school was
going on the cruise, too, along with several other private schools in the
tristate area.
She’d met Reefer at a Princeton Early Admission dinner a few
weeks earlier, and although she had been into his hippy, pothead vibe at first,
he ended up being the best thing she got out of her disastrous pre-frosh
weekend on campus.
Since she’d returned to Rosewood, they’d been texting and
calling each other… a lot. During a Dr. Who marathon on BBC, they’d call one
another during the commercial breaks to discuss the doctor’s bizarre alien
adversaries. Spencer introduced Reefer to Mumford & Sons, and Reefer schooled
her on the Grateful Dead, Phish, and other jam bands, and before she knew it,
she had developed a massive crush on him. He was fun, clever, and more than
that, nothing seemed to shake him. He was the human equivalent of a hot-stone
massage-just the type of guy Spencer needed right now.
She hoped that something would happen between them on the trip.
The top deck of the cruise ship seemed like the perfect setting for a first
kiss, the tropical sunset like a huge bonfire all around them. Or maybe their
kiss would happen on a dive—they were both taking a scuba class together. Maybe
they’d be swimming around a crop of neon-pink coral, and suddenly their hands
would touch under the water, and they’d swim to the surface, pull off their
masks, and then…
Reefer coughed on the other end, and Spencer blushed as if she’d
voiced the thoughts aloud. In actuality, she wasn’t sure what Reefer thought of
her—he’d been flirty at Princeton , but for
all she knew, he was like that with all girls.
Suddenly, a banner on her TV caught her eye. DEATH IN JAMAICA : MURDERED
GIRL INVESTIGATION BEGINS. A familiar blond girl’s picture flashed on screen.
TABITHA CLARK, a caption read.
“Uh, Reefer?” Spencer said abruptly. “I have to go.”
Spencer hung up and stared at the TV. A stern-looking
gray-haired man appeared next. MICHAEL PAULSON, FBI, said a caption under his
face. “We’re beginning to put together the pieces of what might have caused Ms.
Clark’s death,” he said to a group of reporters. “Apparently, Ms. Clark
traveled to Jamaica alone,
but we’re trying to re-create a timeline of where she was and who she was with that
day.”
After that, the news shifted to a story about a murder in Fishtown.
Suddenly, the cheerful, colorful resort-wear folded neatly in the steamer trunk
looked perverse and ridiculous. The smiling sun on the sunscreen bottle seemed
be sneering at her. It was ridiculous to be jetting off on a tropical trip like
nothing was wrong. Everything was wrong. She was a coldhearted killer, and the
cops were narrowing in on her fast.
Ever since Spencer and her friends discovered that they’d killed
Tabitha Clark—not the real Alison DiLaurentis, as they’d all thought—Spencer hadn’t
been able to draw in a full breath. At first the cops had thought Tabitha had
accidentally drowned, but now they knew she’d been murdered. And the police
weren’t the only ones.
New A knew, too.
Spencer had no idea who New A, the insidious text messager who
knew everything about their lives, might be. First, she and the others had
thought it was Real Ali—maybe she’d survived the fall off the roof deck and was
after them once and for all. But then the authorities identified the washed-up
remains of Tabitha’s, and they realized how crazy they’d been to even consider
that Ali had survived the fire in the Poconos. Her bones might not have been
found, but she’d been inside the house when it exploded. There was no way she
could have gotten out, even though Emily still clung to that theory.
Next, the girls had thought A might be Kelsey Pierce, whom
Spencer had framed for drug possession the previous summer. Kelsey made sense:
Not only had Spencer wronged her, but Kelsey had also been in Jamaica at the same
time the girls were.
But that turned out to be a dead end. Next they had thought A
was Gayle Riggs, the woman to whom Emily had promised—and then unpromised—her unborn
baby, and who happened to be Tabitha’s stepmom. But that theory fell through
when Gayle ended up dead in her driveway. Even more chilling? They were pretty
sure the New A had killed her.
Which was baffling—and terrifying. Did Gayle know something she
shouldn’t have? Or had A meant to kill Spencer and the others instead? And A
knew everything. Not only had A sent pictures of the girls talking to Tabitha
during dinner the night they’d killed her, but the girls had also received a
picture of Tabitha’s broken body on the sand. It was like A had been poised and
ready on the beach, camera in hand, predicting the fall before it happened.
There was another weird twist too: Tabitha had been a patient at the Preserve
at Addison-Stevens, a mental hospital, at the same time the Real Ali had been there.
Had they been friends? Was that why Tabitha acted so much like Ali in Jamaica ?
Spencer’s phone bleated again, and she jumped. Aria Montgomery ’s name
flashed on the screen. “You’re watching the news, aren’t you?” Spencer said when
she answered.
“Yeah.” Aria sounded distraught. “Emily and Hanna are on the
line, too.”
“You guys, what are we going to do?” Hanna Marin said shrilly. “Should
we tell the cops we were at the resort, or should we keep quiet? But if we keep
quiet, and then someone else tells the cops we were there, we’ll look guilty,
right?”
‘”Calm down.” Spencer eyed the news again. Tabitha’s father, who
was also Gayle’s husband, was on the screen now. He looked exhausted—as he
should. Both his wife and his daughter had been murdered in the span of a year.
“Maybe we should just turn ourselves in,” Aria suggested.
“Are you crazy?” Emily Fields whispered.
“Okay, maybe I should turn myself in.” Aria backtracked. “I was
the one who pushed her. I’m the guiltiest.”
“That’s ridiculous,” Spencer said quickly, lowering her voice. “We
all did it, not just you. And no one is turning themselves in, okay?”
A tiny movement outside caught her eye, but when she went to the
window, she didn’t see anything suspicious. Her mother’s fiancĂ©, Mr.
Pennythristle, had parked his enormous SUV in the driveway. The new woman who’d
moved into the Cavanaugh’s house across the street was kneeling in the flower
bed, weeding. And to the left, Spencer could just make out Alison DiLaurentis’s
old bedroom window. When Ali had lived there, the pink curtains were always flung
open, but the room’s new owner, Maya St. Germain, always kept the wooden blinds
twisted closed.
Spencer sat down on the bed. “Maybe it doesn’t matter that the
cops figured out Tabitha was killed. There’s still no way they can trace the
murder back to us.”
“Unless A talks,” Emily warned. “And who knows what A is capable
of—A might not stop at blaming Tabitha’s murder on us. A could frame us for
killing Gayle, too. We were there.”
“Has anyone heard from A?” Aria asked. “It’s weird that A’s been
quiet since Gayle’s funeral.” The funeral had been almost a week ago.
“I haven’t,” Spencer said.
“Me neither,” Emily piped up.
“A’s probably planning the next back attack,” Hanna sounded
worried.
“We need to stop it before it happens,” Spencer said.
Hanna snorted. “How are we going to do that?’
Spencer walked over to her bed and nervously fingered the gold
latch on the steamer trunk. She didn’t even have the beginning of an answer.
Whoever the New A was, New A was crazy. How could she anticipate a lunatic’s
next move?
“A killed Gayle,” Spencer said after a moment. “If we figure out
who A is, we can go to the cops.”
“Yeah, and then A will turn around and tell the cops about us,”
Hanna pointed out.
“Maybe the cops wouldn’t believe a murderer,” Spencer said.
“Yeah, but A has pictures to prove it,” Aria hissed.
“Not of us specifically,” Spencer said. “And anyway, if we
figure out who A is, maybe we could find them and delete them.”
Aria sniffed. “That all sounds great if were, like, James Bond. Right
now we don’t know who A is.”
“You know, it’s good we’re going on this trip,” Hanna said after
a moment. “It’ll give us time to think.”
Aria scoffed. “You really think A is going to leave us alone?”
Hanna breathed in. “Are you saying A might come?”
“I hope not,” Aria said, “but I’m not holding my breath.”
“Me neither,” Spencer said. She’d considered the possibility of
A being on board, too. The idea of being trapped in the middle of the ocean
with a psycho was chilling.
“How do you guys feel about going back to the Caribbean ?” Emily
asked nervously. “I feel like it will remind me of… everything.”
Aria moaned.
“At least we aren’t going to Jamaica ,” Hanna
said. The cruise ship was stopping in St. Martin , Puerto
Rico , and Bermuda .
Spencer shut her eyes and thought about how excited she’d been
to go to Jamaica last
spring break. They had al planned to put Real Ali, the evil A notes they’d received
from her, and their near-death in the Poconos behind them. She’d packed
bikinis, T-shirts, and the same Neutrongena sunscreen she’d plopped in the
steamer trunk, hope rising in her chest. It’s all over, she’d kept thinking. My
life is going to be great now.
She glanced at the clock on her bedside table. “Guys, it’s ten.
We’d better go.” They were supposed to be at the boat docks in Newark , New
Jersey , a little after noon .
“Shit,” Hanna said.
“See ya there,” Aria answered.
Everyone hung up. Spencer dropped her phone in her canvas beach
bag, then hefted it onto her shoulder and righted the steamer trunk on its
wheelie-board. When she was almost to the door, something out the window caught
her attention once more.
She walked over to the window again and stared out at the
DiLaurentises’s yard. At first, she wasn’t sure what was different. The tennis
courts, which the new family had built over the half-dug hole where the workers
had found Courtney DiLaurentis’s body, were empty. The wooden blinds of Ali’s
old window were still shut. The multileveled deck at the back, where the girls
used to hold court, gossiping and boy-rating, was swept clean of leaves. But
then she saw it: There was a child-sized life preserver in the middle of Ali’s
yard. It was red-and-white striped, like a candy cane, and had large, curly,
piratelike script across the bottom that read DEAD MEN TELL NO TALES.
Acid rose in Spencer’s throat. Even though there was no one
around, it still felt like the preserver was a message expressly from A. Better
hang on to this for dear life. A seemed to be saying, because I might just make
you walk the plank.
CHAPTER 2 – EMILY’S LITTLE MERMAID
The road leading up to the Newark shipyards
was a nondescript two-lane highway with generic-looking office complexes, gas
stations, and seedy bars. But when Emily Fields and her father took a sharp
left and pulled onto the waterfront, the sky opened up, the scent of salt hung
heavy in the air, and the enormous Celebrity cruise ship rose before her like a
giant, many-tiered wedding cake.
“Whoa,” Emily breathed. The ship stretched several city blocks,
and there were more circular portholes on each level than she could count.
Emily had read in the Eco Cruise brochure that the vessel contained a theater,
a casino, a gym with nineteen treadmills, a yoga studio, a hair salon and spa,
thirteen restaurants, eleven lounges, a rock-climbing wall, and a wave pool.
Mr. Fields pulled into an available parking space near a big
tent with a banner that read PASSENGERS, CHECK IN HERE! There was a line of
thirty or so kids with suitcases and duffels. After he cut the engine, he sat
staring straight ahead. Seagulls circled the sky. Two girls squealed excitedly
when they saw each other.
Emily cleared her throat awkwardly. “Thanks for the ride.”
Mr. Fields turned abruptly and looked at her hard. His eyes were
iron-cold, and two curved lines accentuated his mouth like parentheses.
“Dad…” Emily’s stomach started to hurt. “Can we talk about this?”
Mr. Fields set his jaw and faced front. Then he turned up the
radio. They’d been listening to a New York news
station for the second half of the drive; now a reporter was droning on about
someone nicknamed the Preppy Thief who’d escaped from a New Jersey holding
cell that morning. “Ms. Katherine DeLong might be armed and dangerous,” the
reporter was saying. “And now, on to weather…”
Emily turned the volume down again. “Dad?”
But her father didn’t pay any attention. Emily’s jaw wobbled.
Last week, she’d broken down and told her parents that she’d secretly had a
baby girl over the summer and had given her up for adoption shortly after she
was born. She’d omitted a few of the more sordid details, like accepting money
from Gayle Riggs, a wealthy woman who’d wanted the baby, and then changing her mind
and returning the payment, which A had intercepted. But she’d told them a lot.
How she’d hid in her sister Carolyn’s dorm room in Philadelphia during the
third trimester. How she had seen an ob-gyn in the city and had a scheduled
C-section at Jefferson Hospital .
Emily’s mom hadn’t blinked through the whole story. After Emily
had finished, Mrs. Fields took a long sip of her tea and thanked Emily for
being honest. She even asked Emily if she was okay.
The clouds had parted in Emily’s mind. Her mom was being normal—cool,
even! “I’m holding up,” she’d answered. “The baby is with a really great family—I
saw them the other day. They named her Violet. She’s seven months now.”
Then a muscle in Mrs. Field’s cheek twitched. “Seven months?”
“Yep,” Emily said. “She smiles. And waves. They’re wonderful
parents.”
And then, like a light switch abruptly flipped on, reality hit
Emily’s mom at full force. She blindly groped for her husband’s hand as though
she were on a sinking ice floe. After letting out a squeak, she leapt up and
ran to the bathroom.
Mr. Fields sat, stunned, for a moment. Then he turned to Emily. “Did
you say your sister knew about this, too?”
“Yes, but please don’t be mad at her,” Emily said in a small
voice.
Since that day, Emily’s mom had barely come out of her bedroom. Mr.
Fields handled the chores, making dinner, signing Emily’s permission slips, and
doing the laundry. Every time Emily tried to broach the subject with him, her
dad shut her down. And forget about talking to her mom: Whenever Emily even got
near her parents’ bedroom, her father appeared, seemingly out of nowhere, like
a rabid, protective guard dog, shooing her away.
Emily had no idea what to do. She would have preferred her
parents to send her to reform school or to live with her uber-religious
relatives in Iowa , like
they’d done when they were mad at her in the past. Maybe she shouldn’t have
told her parents about the baby, but she didn’t want them to find out from
someone else—like New A. The Rosewood PD knew, too, as well as Isaac, the baby’s
father, and Mr. Clark, Gayle’s husband.
Amazingly, the news about the baby hadn’t made its way around
Rosewood Day, but it didn’t matter—Emily still felt like a pariah. Add in the
fact that she’d witnessed a murder two weeks prior and that the police were now
investigating Tabitha’s death, and most days she could barely hold it together.
She was also more certain than ever that A was Real Ali—that she’d survived the
fire in the Poconos and was out to get them once and for all. Real Ali had framed
Kelsey Pierce, driving Emily to almost kill her at Floating Man Quarry. Then
she’d thrown suspicion on Gayle, shooting her when she got in the way. Emily
shivered. What would she do next?
A loud horn on the boat roused her from her thoughts. “Well, I guess
I should go,” Emily said softly, glancing at her dad again. “Thanks for, um,
still letting me go on this.”
Mr. Fields took a sip from his water bottle. “Thank the teacher
who nominated you for the scholarship. And Father Fleming. I still don’t think
you should go.”
Emily fiddled with the University of North
Carolina ball cap in her lap. Her parents
didn’t have the money to send their kids on frivolous class trips, but she’d
won a scholarship through her botany class. After her parents had found out about
the baby, Mr. Fields had gone to Father Fleming, their priest, to ask if they
should still let her attend. Father Fleming had said they should—it would give
them time to process what had happened and figure out their feelings.
There was nothing left for Emily to do but open the door, grab
her bags, and start toward the check-in tent. She hadn’t walked but three steps
when her dad gunned the engine and took off down the road, not even staying to
see the boat off as most parents were. She blinked back tears, trying hard not
to cry.
As she joined the line, a twentysomething guy wearing a pair of
red, star-shaped sunglasses bounded up to her. “I’m on to you!” he said,
wagging a finger.
Tabitha’s face flashed in Emily’s mind. “W-what?” she croaked.
“You’re totally a secret Cirque du Soleil fan!” The guy stuck
out his hand. “The name’s Jeremy. I’m your cruise director this week. How would
you like to be a guest in tonight’s kickoff Cirque du Soleil performance in the
theater? The show’s theme is Mother Earth, in honor of this being an Eco Cruise
and all.”
Several kids nearby stopped and smirked. “I think I’ll pass,”
Emily mumbled, scurrying forward.
She flashed here passport to the check-in girl and was given a
key to her cabin, a meal card and daily menu, and a map of the boat. Last but
not least, she received a pamphlet that listed the various classes, activities,
seminars, group meetings, and volunteer opportunities for the week—students were
required to participate in one for-credit class and volunteer in the ship’s “community”,
helping to clean, cook, plan events, or take care of the ship’s enormous
endangered-fish aquarium, and so on. The volunteer spots were on a first-come,
first-serve basis; Emily had already signed up for lifeguard duty at the main
pool. She still didn’t know which class she’d take, though, so she scanned the
list quickly. There was Exploring the Reefs Responsibly, Hunt for Sunken (Eco)
Treasure, Clean Up the Tide Pools in a Kayak. She decided on a course called
Caribbean Bird-Watching.
She boarded an elevator that would take her to her room. A
calypso band played loudly on the upper deck, the bass thudding through the
walls. A few girls were talking about a great bar in St.
Martin they’d heard about. Two guys chattered about kiteboarding in Puerto
Rico . Everyone was dressed in shorts and flip-flops, even though it
was forty-five degrees outside.
Emily envied their carefree excitement—she couldn’t even coax
the corners of her lips to bend into a smile. All she could think about was her
mother’s vacant eyes, her dad’s punishing scowl, the hatred in their hearts. The
FBI agent on the news this morning. Gayle’s dead body. Tabitha’s face just as
she realized she was falling. A lurking in the darkness, laughing, ready to
hurt her for real.
She thought about Ali, too – Real Ali and Their Ali. All this
time, Emily had been hiding a secret: In the Poconos, the girls had escaped the
house just before it blew up, with Real Ali still inside. What the others didn’t
know, however, was that Emily had left the cabin door open so that Real Ali could
escape, too. She’d told everyone she’d closed it tight. And when the cops didn’t
find her body, Emily was positive Real Ali had gotten out and was still alive.
For many, many months, Emily had hoped that Real Ali would come
to her senses and apologize to all of them for being A. Emily would be the
first one to forgive her, of course. After all, she’d loved Ali—both Ali’s. She’d
kissed both of them, Their Ali in her tree house in seventh grade, and Real Ali
last year.
But that was before Real Ali messed with her daughter. Some of the
notes from A threatened Violet’s life. It was then that she realized Real Ali was
beyond the pale. Real Ali didn’t care for Emily at all, and she certainly had
no intention of trying to make things right. She was just… evil. Almost
immediately, the hope and love Emily had felt withered away, leaving a huge
hole in her heart.
The elevator dinged, and an automated voice announced that they
were on the Sunshine deck. A bunch of kids marched down the long, garishly
carpeted hall to find their rooms. Not wanting to get stuck behind them, Emily turned
toward the sliding-glass door that led to a small patio overlooking the water
instead. She stepped through it and let the chilly sea air fill her lungs.
Gulls called overhead. Traffic swished in the distance. The
waves had foamy white tops, and a lifeboat bobbed seven decks below. Then Emily
heard a cough and jumped. A girl with olive skin and long, chestnut-colored
hair stood at the far end of the balcony. She wore dark sunglasses, a white eyelet
dress, and ballet flats with pink-and-white grosgrain ribbon trim.
Emily didn’t speak at first. The girl was so ethereal and quiet
that she thought she might be a ghost.
But then the girl turned and smiled. “Hey.”
“Oh!” Emily said, stepping back. “Y-you scared me. I wasn’t sure
you were real.”
The corners of the girl’s mouth turned up. “Do you often see
people that aren’t real?”
“Never anyone like you,” Emily blurted, and then clamped her
mouth shut. Why had she just said that?
The girl raised her eyebrows, taking her sunglasses off. And
then she strolled over. Up close, Emily could see the dimples on her cheeks.
Her arresting green eyes sparkled, and she smelled so fragrantly of jasmine
perfume that Emily felt a little light-headed.
“Maybe I am a ghost,” the girl whispered. “Or a mermaid. We are
at sea, after all.”
Then she touched the tip of Emily’s nose, turned around, and
disappeared through the sliding door. Emily remained in a cloud of jasmine, her
mouth hanging open, the tip of her nose tingling. She wasn’t sure what had just
happened, but she definitely liked it. For one fleeting second, the ghost—or mermaid,
or whatever she was—had made her forget absolutely everything wrong with her
life.