- Home
- Pintip Dunn
Malice
Malice Read online
Advance praise for Pintip Dunn’s
MALICE
“Like a virus that takes over the world, my love for Malice replicates with every page. With its shocking twists and to-die-for romance, I dare you to put this book down!”
—Kristin Cast, New York Times bestselling author
“A pulse-pounding, big-stakes romance that warms your heart. Malice belongs on the keeper shelf.”
—C.C. Hunter, New York Times bestselling author
“Unexpected in all the best ways. It has everything—twisty time travel, an impossible romance, and intrigue—wrapped up in an #ownvoices story. Entertaining to the last page!”
—Lydia Kang, award-winning author of Toxic
“A riveting story full of mind games, deception, and romance that had me holding my breath from page to glorious page.”
—Brenda Drake, New York Times bestselling author of the Library Jumpers series
“A gripping read from beginning to end. The twists will keep you on the edge of your seat while the romance will make you swoon!”
—Meg Kassel, award-winning author of Blackbird of the Gallows
“Buckle up! This is time travel like you’ve never experienced before!”
—Marissa Kennerson, author of Tarot
Also by Pintip Dunn
Forget Tomorrow
Remember Yesterday
Seize Today
Before Tomorrow
Star-Crossed
Table of Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Crave, by Tracy Wolff
Keystone, by Katie Delahanty
Sting, by Cindy Wilson
Keeper of the Bees, by Meg Kassel
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2020 by Pintip Dunn. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.
Entangled Publishing, LLC
10940 S Parker Road
Suite 327
Parker, CO 80134
[email protected]
Entangled Teen is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.
Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.
Edited by Liz Pelletier and Heather Howland
Cover design by L.J. Anderson
Cover images by
grandfailure/depositphotos and
oxygen64/depositphotos
Interior design by Toni Kerr
ISBN 978-1-64063-412-1
Ebook ISBN 978-1-64063-411-4
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Edition February 2020
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
For Atikan, my blue-haired bear
Chapter 1
Blue ink spreads like ants across my brother’s skin. He moves the pen over his palm, dipping into the hollow of his hand and rising up again. Never stopping. Never slowing.
“Archie—” I start to say.
“Hold on,” he mutters. He doesn’t say any more. He doesn’t need to. I learned long ago not to interrupt when his genius strikes. He needs to write the equations down—fast—before the insight flees, lost forever in the ether of his brilliance.
My brother and I are opposites. We have the same pale, nearly translucent skin, the same unruly dark-brown hair…but that’s where the similarities end. He’s a bona fide prodigy, while I gained admission to our exclusive STEM-focused private school only by virtue of being his younger sister. I spend a good part of each day fantasizing about the banana pudding from Magnolia Bakery. Archie forgets to eat half the time. I’ve been known to plan my outfits a week in advance, but my brother wears the exact same thing every day: khaki shorts and a Marie Curie T-shirt.
Still, I wouldn’t have him any other way. He is my family, and he loves me deeply, even if he doesn’t always show it.
I sink onto the grass, cross-legged, dropping the pig-and frog-shaped bento boxes. Across our high school’s grassy field, my best friend, Lalana, is jumping up and down to get my attention, her black hair flying and her sneakered feet bouncing. I can’t tell if that means Reggie finally asked her to prom or didn’t. Either scenario would have her fidgeting through our lunch hour.
I give her a quick wave. I’m dying to hear her news, but Lalana’s just going to have to wait. Same as me. I’ll find her after I make sure my brother eats his lunch.
Finally, finally, Archie lifts the pen to his mouth, chewing on the tip. His lips will be partially stained for the rest of the day, but at least his inspiration is safely recorded.
I shove the box toward him and throw a napkin onto his lap. “You know…I have paper. You don’t need to write all over your hand.”
My brother blinks behind his black-rimmed glasses. “Well, yeah, but that’s your paper,” he says, like that explains everything. Maybe to him, it does.
“Half of lunch period is already over.” I take the lid off my bento box to reveal rice balls arranged in the shape of a caterpillar, complete with bell-pepper antennae and string-bean legs.
He arches an eyebrow. “You cooked for me? Should I have the number for poison control ready?”
“Very funny.” Okay, so maybe I’m not the world’s best cook. Something to do with burning the food every. Single. Time.
But I was so careful today. Just look at this gorgeous caterpillar!
“There’s chicken teriyaki inside the rice,” I continue. “You’ll love it.”
He makes a big show of picking up a rice ball and squinting at the eyes I punched out of nori. And then he takes a bite.
A strange expression crosses his face, and quickly, he shoves the entire thing in his mouth.
“What?” I ask, alarmed. “What is it?”
“Nothing,” he says, chew
ing as fast as he can. “It’s delicious. Best thing you’ve ever cooked. You should make it every week. Every day!”
I cringe. Archie couldn’t lie convincingly to solve the Riemann hypothesis.
Snatching up my own rice ball, I sample it. A bitter, acrid taste spreads across my tongue. No question about it. I burned the chicken.
“But how?” I moan. “I only took my eyes off the pan for a second, I swear. One tiny, little second. There was this fascinating article in this week’s National Geographic about the authenticity of these nine-thousand-year-old masks from the Judean desert—”
Archie bursts out laughing, and I join in grudgingly. Maybe one of these days I’ll stay focused enough to make the perfect meal. Just not today.
He eyes another rice ball. “My sister. The only foodie account holder on Instagram who can’t actually cook.”
“For your information, the caterpillar post has already gotten a hundred likes!” I grab his arm as he reaches for another piece. “Don’t. Really. The chicken’s disgusting.”
“I kinda like it,” he says loyally, even as he grimaces. “The flavor’s…interesting.”
I rock back onto the grass, shaking my head even as my cheeks go soft. What am I going to do without my brother? He leaves for Harvard in a few months, and already I’m dreading my final year in high school without him.
It’s bad enough that I’m the only student here who’s not a science wiz. My dream is to take photos for National Geographic, not solve world hunger with a well-placed equation. My fledgling foodie account is a poor facsimile of what I hope to one day achieve.
But more than any of that, Archie gets me.
Losing a parent will do that to siblings.
He’s the one who picks up a pint of cookie dough ice cream for me on the rare occasions he remembers to go to the store. He listens to me agonize over whether to use “yesterday” or “the day before” when I’m posting on social media. He even watched Thor with me thirteen times in a single weekend because he knew I needed to forget the anniversary of our mom leaving.
My brother understands, without me saying a word, the hole in my heart that Mom created when she abandoned us. Maybe because he has one, too. Maybe because he’s the only one who ever comes close to filling mine.
Dad doesn’t have a clue. Since Mom took off six years ago, he only talks to me when he has to—about dinner, the plumber, my allowance. It’s almost like I lost both of them that day, instead of just her.
My stomach tightens at the thought of my absentee parents—one literal and the other in practice. But I push away the sensation and toy with the carrot slices I carved into flowers this morning. “You…um, you didn’t come out of the basement for dinner last night.”
“Oh.” Archie’s grimace morphs from distaste into guilt. “I was working on a proof. Sorry.”
“With Zeke?” I ask.
He frowns and looks away. “No. Just me.”
Zeke is a year below Archie, a junior like me. Since middle school, he and Archie would sit in our basement for hours, heatedly debating hypotheses with names as complicated as one of the old languages that dies approximately every fourteen days.
Zeke makes me laugh. A lot. We share a mutual love of Emily Dickinson, and we’re both obsessed with the Avengers. But more importantly, we both love my brother.
He hasn’t been around as often as he used to, and I can tell that’s bothering Archie. “So…how is Zeke?” I ask carefully. “I haven’t seen him at our house lately.”
“He’s busy,” Archie grumbles.
“Oh. Okay.” I chew on my cheek, wondering how to continue. “It’s just that you don’t talk as much anymore, not even to me. I thought maybe if you and Zeke—”
“Don’t worry about it,” Archie says gruffly, dropping his eyes. “It’s not your job.”
Damn it. I’ve embarrassed him. He might spend the bulk of his days in a science-induced daze, but that doesn’t mean he likes admitting that his little sister takes care of him.
Just as he takes care of me.
Pointing that out won’t make him feel any less awkward, however.
“You’re right. It’s not my business.” I pause. “Dad didn’t show up, either,” I say, just to change the subject. That particular fact isn’t exactly groundbreaking. Dad never has dinner with us. Too busy running the biotech company he founded when he graduated from Harvard at nineteen. “I had to eat the lasagna by myself.”
Archie tilts his head. “You could’ve called Lalana. She would’ve been happy to have dinner with you.”
“It’s not that.” The backs of my eyes heat. I blink rapidly, chasing away the warmth before it can materialize into something ridiculous like tears.
What’s wrong with me? I’ve eaten countless meals alone. Archie and I have always fended for ourselves, and each other, even when Mom was around. She’d get caught up in her studio so often, my childhood growth spurts were practically fueled by microwavable pizza rolls.
“Could you…come out for dinner tonight?”
“Sure,” he says, but by the way his eyes travel back to the writing on his hand, I can tell he’s done with the conversation. He picks up his pen and starts scrawling another row of numbers, as if determined to fill the last few centimeters of free space.
Sighing, I shove the bento boxes into my backpack and make my way across the lawn, toward Lalana. The sun reflects off the squat brick buildings, and tiny purple flowers bloom under the oak trees. A basketball court covers one end of the neatly shorn grass, and picnic tables are strewn across the other.
Closing my eyes, I lift my face to the sun, soaking up the warmth. April in Maryland can either be freezing or scorching. Thank goodness the weather is finally cooperating, with spring break two days away and prom a week after that.
Yeah, I know. What kind of fresh torture is that timing? The dance is earlier than usual this year—something about exam schedules and budget constraints. Which means, my friends will spend every moment of our vacay consumed by their outfits and accessories and hair. Ugh. Good thing I’m not going—
A streak of electricity zaps through my head.
My eyes pop open. What was that? I swear I felt my brain short-circuiting.
Cautiously, I glance around. A couple of my classmates are biting into fat, foil-wrapped burritos, and a girl with a feather tattoo is stretched on the lawn, using her girlfriend’s stomach as a pillow. A group of guys throw a basketball around on the court, and Lalana is frantically scrubbing at her pants, as though she might have spilled something.
Not a single person looks at me. Clearly, no puff of smoke billows around my head.
Okay, then. I was probably just imagining it. Lack of sleep and too much fatigue from carving all those veggies. That combo’s enough to make anybody hallucinate.
Giving my head a firm shake, I start walking—
Zapppp.
My breath hitches.
The synapses inside my brain sizzle, as though they’re being held over an open fire. I grab my temples between my hands, but it doesn’t help. The pain intensifies, as though my brain is slowly being brought to a boil.
My vision blurs, and I lurch behind a tree, dropping to my knees. A muffled voice rumbles. I don’t pay attention. I have more pressing concerns, like keeping the brain inside my skull. The voice rumbles louder. FLAMING MONKEYS. Can’t you see a girl is dying here? Go. Away.
“Maybe I would if you would listen a moment,” the Voice snaps, much more clearly this time.
What? Disoriented, I look up. But there’s no one around other than a butterfly flitting by my head.
“I’m in here,” the Voice says, as though I’m a wayward two-year-old. “In your head.”
The pain dials back a notch, but my stomach is still swirling with nausea. A voice…in my head? No way. I’m hallucinating. I’ve got to be
. The chicken tasted worse than normal—maybe I have food poisoning. Any second now, I’m going to vomit or pass out. Probably both.
“Focus,” the Voice barks. She sounds feminine, but I can’t tell if she’s young or old. “Do you want this pain to stop?”
The flames roar back, burning even hotter. This is the worst food poisoning ever. I’m never cooking again. “Yes!” I moan. “I’ll do anything. Just make it stop.”
The pain shuts off like a door being slammed, and I collapse against the tree trunk, panting.
“Good. I’ll go away, once and for all. You won’t have to deal with this pain anymore. You just have to do one thing for me.” She pauses, as though gathering her thoughts. “Tell Bandit that you love him.”
“Huh?” The electricity must’ve fried my hearing. “Who?”
“Bandit,” the Voice bites out. “You know. The Thai boy playing basketball across the field?”
Pushing myself off the tree, I peer around the trunk. Across the courtyard, a guy with electric-blue hair raises his hands to shoot the ball, and his shirt rides up, revealing nicely defined muscles.
That’s right. Now that I can string two brain cells together, I know exactly who she means. Bandit Sakda. We don’t travel in the same circles, but his reputation precedes him—he’s as smart as he is aloof.
I should know. We had Visual Studies together last year. The one—and only—time I tried to talk to him, I complimented him on a photo he’d taken of an older woman holding a garland of jasmine and roses. Instead of responding, he just pressed his lips together and turned away.
“You’ve g-got to be kidding,” I sputter. “I’m not listening to some voice that I’m probably just imagining. I don’t even know him! I’m not going to profess my love to some random guy.”
The Voice sighs. “You’re not imagining me. And yes, actually. You are.”
The sharpest, most intense lightning bolt yet sears my brain. The world fractures into a dozen glowing stars, each one bigger and brighter than the last.
When I can see again, my heart rate has tripled and I’m heaving in air. This can’t be happening. If it’s not food poisoning, then I must be dreaming. Or maybe I’m having a bona fide break with reality. Better still, I’ve been kidnapped by aliens who are putting me through a sick simulation.