Gorgeous gruesome faces, p.1

Gorgeous Gruesome Faces, page 1

 

Gorgeous Gruesome Faces
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Gorgeous Gruesome Faces


  Begin Reading

  Table of Contents

  About the Author

  Copyright Page

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  Roaring Brook Press ebook.

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  To JM,

  For every adventure we’ve gone on, and every storm we’ve weathered

  Prologue

  THEN

  Two years ago

  Candie predicted I was going to ruin everything months before it all happened. When we were told that our sophomore album was put on hold and our show wouldn’t be renewed, I knew she was right. Our careers were officially over.

  She said I was selfish and stupid, that I was throwing away everything we’ve worked for, that my bad decisions were going to cost us our futures. I called her an egotistical glory hound who doesn’t give a shit about anyone’s feelings or anything other than fame. And Mina, always the peaceful mediator, was caught in the middle of the storm yet again, doing her best to hold her umbrella of nonpartisan support over both our heads as Candie and I lashed out at each other.

  The truth is, I think that fight was what broke us for good, not what came after.

  I said a lot of terrible things I shouldn’t have. But isn’t that what “best friends” are for? They alone can reach into your core, scoop out the ugliest bits, and hold them up to your face so you can see exactly what kind of damage you’re carrying around.

  No. That’s an excuse. I said those things to hurt her.

  The three of us have spent the past several years conquering stage and screen together, hand in hand, in matching costumes. Our bond was forged under the burn of spotlights and the intrusion of cameras, stewed in the sweat we poured out in practice rooms, sworn in with the blood that dripped from the blisters between our toes. I thought what we had would last forever. Now all we have is a scandal-tainted legacy and a surplus of unsellable merch.

  The only reason Candie’s meeting up with me today is because we agreed that, for Mina’s sake, we need to set aside the crimes we’ve committed against each other and go check on her as a united front.

  Mina hasn’t been herself since we attempted the ritual.

  The last time we saw her, bubbly, happy Mina, who reliably banishes dark moods and has an inspirational glass-is-half-full speech for every occasion, she didn’t smile or say a word, even as our manager unloaded a metric ton of bad news on us. No anecdotes of encouragement, no soothing hugs. Afterward, she left without a goodbye. Then she stopped answering her phone.

  Mina moved out on her own a few months ago. At first, I thought there was literally nothing cooler than living in a fancy downtown apartment with barely any adult oversight. But with her family on the other side of the country, there’s no one there to look after her.

  Candie’s BMW is already in the visitor’s spot when I pull into Mina’s building. At the same time, we step out of our cars into the dim fluorescent lights of the parking garage. I struggle to meet her eyes.

  “Has Mina responded to you?” Candie’s voice echoes against the concrete.

  I force myself to look up. “No. She text you back?”

  Candie shakes her head, bone-straight hair bending gently against her clavicle. Our world is imploding around us and she still looks radiant and assured, her outfit precisely put together, while I barely managed to put on a bra and wrangle my hair into a messy bun. She’s in a blazer, a skirt, and her favorite oversize sunglasses, the ones that make her look like a total movie star. Like she was born to be pop royalty.

  Standing beside her has always made me acutely aware of the differences between us—the way my eyes don’t shimmer with alluring depth, how my cheeks are chipmunk round instead of high and defined, the coarse texture of my wavy hair compared to her shampoo-commercial-grade locks. The glow she exudes is mesmerizing, like a light shining down from an otherworldly place. When she performs, it’s impossible to look away from her.

  But if you cross her … that’s when the idol vanishes, and a whole other persona surfaces.

  I want to ask Candie if she’s still angry with me. Her shoulders are rigid, her expression closed off. The emotional distance between us spans a few more feet, and for one frantic second, I consider reaching out to catch her wrist and pull her back before she can float further away. But then Candie turns and walks into the building. My hands stay where they are.

  The elevator ride up to Mina’s floor is pin-drop quiet, Candie and I occupying opposite corners of the silent gray box. The doors slide open before I can work up the nerve to ask how Candie’s feeling. I shouldn’t even be thinking about us right now, I remind myself. We’re here for Mina.

  Candie uses the spare key to let us into Mina’s apartment. The interior is pitch-black.

  “Mina? It’s us,” Candie calls out into the darkness.

  I feel for the light switches. “Are you home, Minnie?”

  The overheads come on with a click, illuminating the front hallway. A sample of Mina’s colorful heel collection forms orderly lines on the rack, undisturbed. We remove our own shoes and leave them beside hers. In the living room, the walnut coffee table is free of clutter, the plush pillows on the sectional couch neatly propped. Nothing appears out of place.

  The walls of Mina’s apartment are a curated collage of her life. Sweet Cadence promo posters and magazine covers hang in frames among candid pictures of family and friends. My favorite of her displays is a photo strip from our early era, before anyone knew our names. I remember that day so clearly, the three of us squeezed into that smelly mall photo booth, our faces pressed together, arms looped over necks and shoulders. Our show had just premiered, and between us there was only trust and camaraderie. No cruel words said out of spite, no awful secrets that pushed us apart.

  I’m pulled from the whirlpool of nostalgia when I notice something strange about that photo strip. I lean in and squint.

  There’s a brownish-red smudge smeared across Mina’s face in each square.

  And it isn’t just that photo strip. Mina’s face is vandalized in every photo and poster on the wall. The glass over each shot of her face is caked over in the same brown muck, leaving dark blots between Candie’s and my shining photo-shoot smiles.

  “Candie, look…” My voice trembles. “Is that … what I think it is?”

  Beside me, Candie’s eyes are already wide with alarm. It jolts me every time I see cracks in Candie’s composure. Like standing on an empty beach as the ocean suddenly recedes. A warning that something terrible is coming.

  We call out for Mina again and again.

  The kitchen and the rest of the living area are empty. We turn down the hall toward her bedroom. At the end of the corridor, the door to Mina’s room is cracked. There’s someone muttering inside. For the second time, I fight the urge to reach out and grab on to Candie. Our feet pound in unison as we hurry down the hallway. When we reach the door, Candie doesn’t hesitate, pushing it wide open.

  There’s a shadow of a person sitting on the edge of the bed, back facing us.

  “It’s not right. It isn’t mine,” the shadow whispers.

  Candie reaches for the light. I gasp in relief to see that it’s Mina, that she’s here, she’s home, she’s safe.

  “Minnie, didn’t you hear us calling for you?” I rush forward.

  Candie’s left arm shoots out, a sudden barrier across my midsection. I freeze at the abrupt impact.

  “Careful.” Candie points to the floor. There’s broken glass all over the carpet.

  Before I can fully register the warmth of her touch, it’s already gone. Candie steps past me into the room, carefully dodging the shards as she makes her way to Mina.

  I follow her and find the source of the mess. The full-length mirror on the wall has been completely shattered. So has the mirror on her vanity table. My stomach clenches into a solid knot. I hurry to Mina’s bedside to join Candie, who’s already kneeling down, her brows pinched in concern.

  Mina’s head is hung low, the ends of her short bob trailing forward, obscuring her face. There’s a handheld mirror in her lap. The glass is broken as well, scattered in a jagged halo at her feet. Her hands and nails are filthy. Like she’s been digging in dirt.

  “It’s not right,” Mina mumbles.

  “What’s not right? Are you feeling sick?” I brush my hand across Mina’s forehead, and then I flinch. “Oh my god, Minnie, you’re burning up! Here, lie down, I’ll get you some ice—”

  “Ice won’t help,” Candie says. “She needs to come with me.”

  “To where?” I snap. “And you better say the hospital!”

  Mina looks up, finally, and I suck in a breath. Her face looks … different.

  At first, I think she’s wearing makeup. It’s as if a beauty filter has been applied to her features, shifting and heightening them to uncanny proportions. Enormous eyes turn up to me, alien wide. Her pupils are massive. Is she wearing circle con

tact lenses? Her nose is thinner, pixielike, her mouth miniature. Her jaw seems daintier, curving down to a tiny, pointed chin. Did she contour to change the shape of her face? Mina has always preferred natural looks, secure and comfortable with herself in ways I can only dream of being. The girl sitting in front of me looks almost like a complete stranger.

  “Minnie?” I ask in a faint whisper.

  “It isn’t right.” Mina looks down at the broken mirror in her lap again. “It’s not my face…”

  “I’m going to call her parents.” I reach for my phone with shaky hands.

  “No!” Candie shouts. “I can help her; I just need her to come with me.”

  Mina starts scratching at her cheeks with her dirty hands. “This isn’t my face!” she cries, clawing at her neck, her jaw, brown nails sinking in, dragging out red marks down her paper-white skin. “This isn’t my face!”

  I jump to my feet. A sliver of glass presses into my heel as I step back, but I hardly feel it. All I can feel is my thundering heart about to burst.

  Candie grabs at Mina and wrestles her hands away from herself. “Mina, calm down! Everything is going to be okay; we’re here to help you!”

  “I want to go! I have to go! Let me go!” Mina screams.

  I stumble back a few steps as Mina starts to sob, long animal howls of anguish. I’ve never heard her make sounds like that. I’ve never heard anyone sound like that.

  “This is happening because of me, isn’t it?” I turn to Candie, like I always do, for her guidance, for her care, things I have no right to ask for anymore. But I’m spiraling, panic choking me, my breaths raging faster and heavier. “It’s because I stopped the ritual … Because I couldn’t go through with it…”

  Candie looks up, and the second her attention is split, Mina breaks free from her hold. Mina bolts out of the bedroom, her bare feet slapping across the glass shards littering the floor.

  “Mina!”

  We race after her out into the living room to see Mina throwing open the balcony door. The night breeze lifts the sheer curtains, enveloping her in a white shroud.

  Time congeals. Everything churns in slow motion. We run toward her, arms stretching, fingers reaching. Candie pulls ahead of me, and the grip of terror eases because I know she will fix this.

  Candie will make Mina come back inside.

  Candie will save her.

  But Mina doesn’t stop. She starts to climb, pushing herself up to stand on the balcony railing. Behind the billowing curtains, she spreads her arms out wide as she turns to face us, and we hear her say:

  “I want to go home.”

  Then Mina’s body tips, and she drops backward into the night.

  Chapter 1

  NOW

  I’m never wearing anything cute or doing something glamorous when I get recognized these days. Either some TMZ photographer’s trying to get pictures of me eating a burrito from a deeply unflattering angle or I’m in a sweatpants–flip-flops combo on day three of not washing my hair, standing in the frozen aisle of Kroger.

  The lady hovering next to me pretending to look at Eggos while not so covertly examining my profile waits for me to drop the sixth frozen meal into my shopping cart before she shuffles forward.

  “Excuse me, dear, I don’t mean to bother you, but I just wanted to ask, were you on that TV show? The one about the Asian pop group?”

  The fact that she didn’t use my name or the title of the show is enough to tell me that the best course of action here is to show myself out of this potential social disaster by offering her a polite “Sorry, you’ve got the wrong person.”

  But the corners of my mouth lift and the words are spilling out before I can stop them.

  “Yes, I was!” My voice automatically pitches into a higher register, the one that makes me sound younger, friendlier. “That’s me.”

  The lady lets out an excited whoop. “Oh my gosh, would you mind taking a quick picture with my daughters? Just one? They absolutely adore you!”

  “Of course.”

  The rational, self-respecting part of me floats away, untethered, glancing down in disappointment at the lesser me left behind—the one who still craves the validation of strangers.

  “Aubrey! Anya! Come here, quick!” the lady hollers. “You’re not going to believe who I just met!”

  Two tween girls come bounding around the other end of the aisle. One has locks of purple twisted into her curls, and the other’s got streaks of blue weaving through her high ponytail. They look twelve, thirteen at most, but their style is impeccable, their makeup stunning enough to be on a Sephora ad. They probably have a dance video out there that’s got eight hundred thousand views. The next generation of trendsetters, here to step all over the corpse of my career with their rhinestone sneakers.

  “It’s Candie—from that show you love!”

  The name lands like a gut punch, and I bite the inside of my cheek as the pang hits.

  Even during the height of our popularity, Candie and I still got mistaken for each other all the time. I used to get happy butterflies when it would happen, thinking that it meant people thought we looked alike. It took me a while to realize they merely thought of us as interchangeable.

  The mother presents me like she’s unveiling a prize, and the girls’ faces progress through a slow-motion car crash of emotions, shifting from surprise to recognition to alarm to disappointment to unbearable secondhand embarrassment. And finally, to pity.

  “Um, no, Mom, that’s—” Purple Curls attempts to correct.

  “And she was nice enough to agree to a picture!” The woman’s already got her phone out and she’s shoving her daughters forward, arranging them next to me, one on each side, like we’re estranged relatives being forced into a family photo.

  I flash Purple Curls and Blue Pony a tight smile, hoping to assure them with my eyes that I won’t make this any more uncomfortable than it already is and that the sooner we get this over with, the sooner we can all be released from this awkward circle of hell. The girls cooperatively stay silent and lean into me as their mother snaps a picture of us against a backdrop of frozen peas.

  “Thank you so much!” the woman gushes.

  “Yeah, thank you,” Blue Pony mumbles.

  “Uh, good luck with everything,” Purple Curls adds.

  “It was nice meeting you both,” I tell them, forcing myself to maintain the smile until the girls rush their mother away into the next aisle. The lady’s voice comes sailing over the top of the shelves.

  “What’s the matter with you two? What are you upset about? I thought she was the one you liked.”

  “Mom, you are so embarrassing; that wasn’t Candie—that was Sunny!”

  “We have literally never liked Sunny; she was such an annoying character, and then it turned out she was trying to steal Jin-hwan from Brailey—”

  I flee out of the aisle before I can hear the rest of the indictment. Even with two whole years’ worth of new celebrity scandals, the internet is forever—and no matter how far from the limelight I retreat, the long, ugly shadow of my mistakes always finds a way of reaching me.

  On my way to the front of the store, I pass by a long shelf of fashion and tabloid magazines. Instead of the current models and actresses on the covers, all I can see is the past. My past. I see our debut, the three of us posing in our trademark formation.

  The headline says: Meet the stars of Sweet Cadence: the K-pop inspired musical hit!

  Candie stands in the middle, the centerpiece of the show. I’m on her right, my elbow propped on her shoulder, in a cheerleader outfit. And to the left, Mina. The heart and soul of our group, with her bob cut and freckled nose, nothing but the purest joy reflected in her smiling eyes.

  When my eyes move across the rack, the headlines and covers change.

  K-pop star Jin-hwan Woo phone-hacking scandal! Leaked nudes!

  Teen pop triangle feud ends in heartbreak.

  Splashed across the front of People magazine are photos of Jin-hwan and me. Stills from his cameo on our show. Pics taken backstage at an award show, his hand on my waist, me leaning in with a smitten smile. Pap shots of me getting into his car.

  I push my shopping cart down the aisle, and the headlines change again.

 

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