pointedly. “She weighs about ninety-five pounds soaking wet.”
Somebody from the back of the crowd muttered about insane people having superhuman strength. “Vickie has a psychiatric record—”
“Elena told us it was a guy!” Bonnie almost shouted, losing her battle with self-control. The faces tilted toward her were shuttered, unyielding. Then she saw one that made her chest loosen. “Matt! Tell them you believe us.”
Matt Honeycutt was standing on the fringe with his hands in his pockets and his blond head bowed. Now he looked up, and what Bonnie sawin his blue eyes made her draw in her breath. They weren’t hard and shuttered like everyone else’s, but they were full of a flat despair that was just as bad. He shrugged without taking his hands from his pockets.
“For what it’s worth, I believe you,” he said. “But what difference does it make? It’s all going to turn out the same anyway.”
Bonnie, for one of the first times in her life, was speechless. Matt had been upset ever since Elena died, but this …
“He does believe it, though,” Meredith was saying quickly, capitalizing on the moment. “Now what have we got to do to convince the rest of you?”
“Channel Elvis for us, maybe,” said a voice that immediately set Bonnie’s blood boiling. Tyler. Tyler Smallwood. Grinning like an ape in his overexpensive Perry Ellis sweater, showing a mouthful of strong white teeth.
“It’s not as good as psychic e-mail from a dead Homecoming Queen, but it’s a start,” Tyler added.
Matt always said that grin was asking for a punch in the nose. But Matt, the only guy in thecrowd with close to Tyler’s physique, was staring dully at the ground.
“Shut up, Tyler! You don’t know what happened in that house,” Bonnie said.
“Well, neither do you, apparently. Maybe if you hadn’t been hiding in the living room, you’d have seen what happened. Then somebody might believe you.”
Bonnie’s retort died on her tongue. She stared at Tyler, opened her mouth, and then closed it. Tyler waited. When she didn’t speak, he showed his teeth again.
“For my money, Vickie did it,” he said, winking at Dick Carter, Vickie’s ex-boyfriend. “She’s a strong little babe, right, Dick? She
could
have done it.” He turned and added deliberately over his shoulder, “Or else that Salvatore guy is back in town.”
“You creep!” shouted Bonnie. Even Meredith cried out in frustration. Because of course at the very mention of Stefan pandemonium ensued, as Tyler must have known it would. Everyone was turning to the person next to them and exclaiming in alarm, horror, excitement. It was primarily the girls who were excited.
Effectively, it put an end to the gathering. People had been edging away surreptitiously before, and now they broke up into twos and threes, arguing and hastening off.
Bonnie gazed after them angrily.
“Supposing they did believe you. What did you want them to do, anyway?” Matt said. She hadn’t noticed him beside her.
“I don’t know. Something besides just standing around waiting to be picked off.” She tried to look him in the face. “Matt, are you all right?”
“I don’t know. Are you?”
Bonnie thought. “No. I mean, in one way I’m surprised I’m doing as well as I am, because when Elena died, I just couldn’t deal. At all. But then I wasn’t as close to Sue, and besides … I don’t know!” She wanted to hit something again. “It’s just all too much!”
“You’re mad.”
“
Yes
, I’m mad.” Suddenly Bonnie understood the feelings she’d been having all day. “Killing Sue wasn’t just wrong, it was
evil.
Truly evil. And whoever did it isn’t going to get away with it. That would be—if the world is like that, a place where that can happen and go unpunished … ifthat’s the truth …” She found she didn’t have a way to finish.
“Then what? You don’t want to live here anymore? What if the world
is
like that?”
His eyes were so