Killing Time follows a true-crime obsessed teenage girl who sets out to uncover a killer when her favorite teacher is murdered. With a dual POV that sends the reader back twenty years, this engrossing and twisty thriller is perfect for fans of Courtney Summers and Karen McManus.
Summer in Ferry, Connecticut has always meant long, lazy days at the beach and wild nights partying in the abandoned mansions on the edge of town. Until now, that is.
Natalie Temple’s favorite teacher has been murdered, and there’s no way this true-crime obsessed girl is going to sit back and let the rumor mill churn out lie after lie. Not if she has anything to say about it – even if she has to hide her investigation from her disapproving mom and team up with a new boy in town with a mysterious smile and a talent for making fake IDs.
But the more Natalie uncovers, the more she realizes some secrets were never meant to be told.
With two interwoven mysteries, Killing Time is a deathly warning to a generation of murderinos: what happens when the stories we’re chasing finally catch up with us?
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CHAPTER TWO
Natalie didn’t ask her mom if she wanted to come to Lynn
Halsey’s memorial, which was just as well because, apparently, Helen did not
want to go. When Natalie came down for breakfast that morning, she found a note
under the orange juice saying that Helen was heading to dojo in the next town
over to train for a while—which meant she was either stressed, angry, or both.
(Helen said a while back she had started doing karate for self-defense, not
that Natalie was aware of anything she’d need to defend herself against in
Ferry.)
Natalie balled up the note and threw it on the floor,
equal parts relieved and pissed off by her mother’s absence, but she quickly
forgot all about it when she saw the envelope leaning against the box of
cinnamon cereal her mom had left sitting out for her. It was your standard
business envelope—plain, white—and it had only one word neatly typed across the
front: Natalie.
Plopping down on a rickety kitchen chair, Natalie pulled
her feet up onto the seat and ripped the envelope open, expecting, perhaps,
some spending money from her mom—a small contrition for avoiding the
memorial—but instead finding a piece of computer paper with a single message
typed out on it: Stay out of it. I’m warning you. Her heart did a cold, little
leap like it always did when the first body was found in one of her books, then
confusion set in. She blinked, scanning the words again, flipping the paper
over to see if she’d missed something—a name, an address, anything. But that
was it. Just those two ominous sentences. She shivered despite the heat of the
kitchen, which was barely mitigated by the lazily oscillating ceiling fan. Her
mom was too cheap for AC.
Cereal forgotten, Natalie pushed away from the table and
scanned the room as if the toaster or the microwave might suddenly fill her in
on where, exactly, the letter had come from. The kitchen seemed eerily quiet in
the diffuse morning light, the only sound the birds that spent the day
gossiping at the feeder in the backyard. Natalie pulled out her phone, typing
off a quick message to her mom.
Did you leave me a note?
It seemed the mostly likely scenario, since the envelope
had been on their kitchen table, but a vague threat wasn’t exactly Helen’s
style. No, her mom was more direct than all that, much to her daughter’s
annoyance. And then there was the it she was supposed to be staying out of. She
could guess what that was: Mrs. Halsey’s murder was the only thing that had
happened in Ferry for decades, as far as she was concerned. But someone would
have to know about her podcast to suggest that she stay out of anything, and no
one really knew about that aside from Katie and the internet randos. They had
one all the way in Mount Carroll, Illinois (wherever that was). Could one of
them have turned stalker? Broken into her house to… What? Warn her not to
discuss a very local crime with her audience of roughly three people who had
probably clicked on her podcast by mistake?
Three bubbles appeared immediately on her phone screen.
Natalie scoffed. Her mom was supposed to be sparring. Did she keep her cell
phone tucked into her black belt?
Yes, honey, I’m at the dojo. Be back around 4.
Natalie snorted. Well after the memorial. No, another
one, she typed, her fingers shaking slightly. This was all too bizarre. In an
envelope?
There was one with the paper that I brought in for you.
More dots, as if her mom were trying for casual. Why? Who is it from? Katie?
Natalie rolled her eyes. Helen would have implanted a
tracking device in her daughter’s neck if she could, like those chips they have
for cats and dogs—watched her roam the town on her trusty path from school to
Katie’s to home, called the cops if she veered off course. It was a wonder she
hadn’t just opened the envelope herself. There wasn’t time to fume, though, now
that there was a mysterious, threatening letter with her name on it. Which
Natalie was aware sounded like a sentence from a bad teenage soap opera. That
didn’t negate its existence, though.
She sank back into her chair, staring at the words marching
across the page. Stay out of it. I’m warning you. It could be Katie playing a
bad joke, but that didn’t seem likely, as Katie could never keep a secret and
would have spilled that morning, when they were texting about the memorial.
Feeling silly, Natalie sniffed at the paper. Nothing. As if it had just
materialized on the table, origin-free. She considered calling the police, but
that would mean telling them about her podcast, which would mean telling her
mom about her podcast, which would mean never seeing the sun again. Instead,
she shoved the note into her backpack—not bothering to put away the juice and
cereal—and trundled outside to her bike and Mrs. Halsey’s memorial. She would
let it all stew, she decided. Maybe an answer would come to her while she was
biking to the high school. She always thought better when she was in motion,
legs pumping and lungs full of clean air.
It was as hot if not hotter than yesterday, and beads of sweat rolled down Natalie’s forehead into her eyes as she crested the hill toward the school that had been her de facto prison for the last four years—the only bright spot being a woman who would no longer walk its halls. The only teacher who didn’t hold her eccentricities at arm’s length.
The Halsey house wasn’t on Natalie’s route, but she could
feel its presence a few streets over—could imagine the yellow police tape and
silence—and a tremor traveled over her neck like phantom fingers.
The True Crime Club had only lasted for one year, officially;
after Jessica graduated and her parents effectively bought her way into
Columbia, Katie and Natalie were the only members, meaning that the club was no
longer valid in the school’s eyes. (No yearbook picture, which was good since
Natalie didn’t relish explaining that to her mom. She used to lie and say she
was staying after school to study until, well, it all went to hell when she
said what she said.) Still, Mrs. Halsey kept up their meetings, critiquing the
relative merit of different podcasts, documentaries, and true-crime books
through the lens of story. She was a fan of gripping, well-researched accounts
of criminal investigations, like Michelle McNamara’s inquiry into the Golden
State Killer, but felt a decided disdain for podcasts like this really popular
one called My Murder Obsession, which was basically just two guys discussing
their favorite murder mysteries. She thought the name was bad enough, but she
couldn’t stand the gleeful, error-riddled way the hosts talked about crime. She
was a stickler for accuracy—and empathy. “If you can’t get the facts straight,
you don’t deserve the story,” she used to say.
As she coasted past Sammy’s Shack and the flinty sea,
Natalie wondered what Mrs. Halsey would think of the note on her kitchen table:
Stay out of it. Her legs pumped harder, sweat running down to her eyes as she
squinted into the sun, her breath getting ragged. Lynn Halsey was the only person
she wanted to talk to right now, and she couldn’t because she was dead. The
thought brought sudden, angry tears to her eyes. She was dead, and there was
nothing Natalie could do about it. Who was the letter writer to tell her stay
out of it? How to care? Maybe her mom had written the note. Maybe she had found
out about her podcast somehow and wanted to punish her. Helen hated Lynn
Halsey; Natalie knew that. Tears flooded her eyes as she pulled into the
school parking lot, dropping the toes of her black shoes to the ground to
steady herself as her vision swam.
The last time she had spoken to her teacher was at the
diner midway through senior year. She had been crying—or trying not to, rather.
Her shift had ended, and she was crammed in a booth where her mother couldn’t
see her—couldn’t send her home and straight to her room. The night before had
been bad. The kind of bad that made your stomach heavy and your mouth flood
with acid when you thought about it. She and Katie had been celebrating getting
into the colleges of their choice by having a clandestine marathon of the
worst true-crime movies on offer. Straight-to-streaming shit. Cheesy cable
fare. Trash. Helen’s rules were pretty clear when it came to her daughter’s
interests: fine, she could study it in school, but true crime as entertainment
was completely off-limits. Sure, she got away with the occasional horror movie
or novel, but true stories were, for some untold reason, strictly verboten.
Which was why she and Katie had waited until Helen went
to a Garden Club cocktail night to indulge. Helen, not being the biggest
drinker, had come home in the middle of a truly terrible early-thousands
clunker called Teacher’s Pet—all about a TA who had an affair with his
student, then killed her—and had lost her shit. She’d gone so far as to
threaten to move to college with Natalie and live in her dorm room, which
seemed like an empty threat if you didn’t know Helen, who wouldn’t let Natalie
sleep over at Katie’s until she was thirteen.
“You okay, Natalie?” Mrs. Halsey asked, sliding into the
booth across from her, holding a to-go bag of burgers and fries. She was
wearing her leather jacket and had her hair up in a blue paisley scarf, her
cheeks pink from the early spring chill; she brought with her the smell of the
omnipresent daffodils that blanketed Ferry this time of year.
Natalie shook her head mutely, picking at a plate of cold
fries she had pilfered from the cook. People in town knew her mother was
strict, but she wasn’t quite sure she wanted her role model to know that Helen
had had a meltdown over a Lifetime Channel movie.
“I dunno,” she muttered, chastising herself internally for her lack of eloquence. She always tried to speak as intelligently as possible in front of her favorite teacher, but right now she was too wrung-out to care. Her mother’s overprotectiveness was a shroud, stifling and heavy. And what was so ironic was Natalie had gotten into true crime because of her mom in the first place—she’d found a box of old books in the attic when she was twelve about the Manson murders, the Night Stalker, all the big ones. She had read them under the covers until all hours, equal parts scared and thrilled. She loved it when the killers were caught, the intricate work it took to track them down. That is, until her mom found out and burned all the books in the yard with the autumn leaves. She wouldn’t even tell Natalie where they’d come from in the first place.
“Did something happen with Katie? A friend?” Mrs. Halsey
pressed, her voice so gentle and caring that Natalie caved.
“My mom flipped out on me last night,” she choked out,
studying the table. “I was watching some stupid true-crime movie, and she
just…lost it.” Natalie dug her chipped nails into the red vinyl of the booth
and let it all spill out. “She’s just so controlling. Like, why does she care
what I watch? I’m eighteen. I’m an adult, basically. And I’m good!” She raised
her eyes to look at her teacher, who was studying Natalie with a furrowed brow.
“I don’t break curfew. I have, like, no social life. I don’t drink. So why
can’t I just…read and watch and do what I want? Who am I hurting?”
Mrs. Halsey gave a sad smile. “I understand, Natalie.
It’s hard being eighteen. Almost independent, but not quite. But, I promise,
it’ll get easier. You might even miss your mom worrying about you.”
Natalie grunted and folded her arms. “I doubt it.”
Mrs. Halsey laughed, then steepled her hands on the diner
table. “I’m confused, though, Natalie. Why would a movie upset your mom so much
when you’re in a true-crime club at school?”
Natalie swallowed hard. In her fit of rage, she’d forgotten
all about forging her mother’s signature all those years ago to join Mrs.
Halsey’s after-school group. She had forgotten the countless lies she’d told.
Or maybe she was just subconsciously tired of it all.
“You’re in what?” Helen appeared behind her like the
ghoul from that horror movie—the one that just slowly wanders after its prey
until it wears it down and eats it. Natalie didn’t turn around. Instead, she
gritted her teeth and dug her nails even deeper into the booth, anchoring
herself to the spot. She couldn’t even sit with her favorite teacher for five
minutes without her mom butting in. Without her ruining everything.
“You didn’t know about this?” Mrs. Halsey asked Helen, as
if Natalie weren’t there, which Natalie found hard to believe, considering
anger was radiating off her like a bad aura. Why did everyone treat her like a
child? Like she couldn’t make her own choices without consulting her mother
first? Why didn’t they see her?
Helen shook her head, her eyes locked on Natalie’s
teacher, a twin rage coursing through her. The pencil she used to take orders
snapped in her hand, but she didn’t seem to notice the pieces as they clattered
to the floor and rolled to rest under the booth.
“I’m sorry, Helen,” Mrs. Halsey sputtered, getting to her
feet, looking between mother and daughter, both practically vibrating with
indignation. “I thought you knew about the club.” She raised a conciliatory
hand. “And, really, it’s all educational. We talk about story and methodology
and…” The words died on her lips as Natalie’s mother shook her head again.
“I appreciate all you’ve done for Natalie, Lynn, but we
have rules,” Helen said in a voice befitting an android. “This stuff is not
entertainment. If she wants to go to school and learn the proper way to engage
with it, then fine. But no clubs. No movies. No bullshit.”
Mrs. Halsey cut in. “I would hardly call our club bull—”
Natalie couldn’t help smiling, which didn’t make matters any better. Her mom
gave a look filled with such pure menace she dropped her eyes to her feet.
“I don’t care,” Helen snapped, smoothing her apron as if
eradicating the wrinkles would fix everything. As if she could control the
world with her nervous hands. “My kid, my rules. Now, I think you should
leave.”
Mrs. Halsey opened her mouth, shooting Natalie an inscrutable
look. She took a step toward the door.
“Please, don’t go,” Natalie asked in a small voice before
she knew the words were coming out of her mouth. “You don’t have to listen to
her. Please.”
With her hands tucked into her jacket pockets and her
hair coming free from her scarf, the teacher suddenly looked younger than she
was. She was probably the same age as her mom, thirty-eight, but Helen’s face
was much harder. Likely because she’d had Natalie so young, because she’d been
worrying for eighteen years. “I’m sorry, Natalie.” She glanced at her bag of
food but made no move to pick it up. “I think I should go…”
Natalie got to her feet then, leveled her eyes at her
teacher, watching her one tether to everything she cared about cut her free,
let her go. “You never cared about me,” she said finally, seething and holding
Mrs. Halsey’s eyes for a long moment before retreating to the kitchen so she
wouldn’t have to see her mentor go, regretting the words as soon as they left
her mouth. She turned back to stop her, to apologize, but her teacher was
already gone.
Mrs. Halsey deserved more than that. More than her mom’s
disdain and her own parting words. She deserved to be remembered. To be
avenged. And no anonymous note writer could tell Natalie otherwise. An idea
that prompted a mix of excitement and shame deep down in her stomach germinated
in Natalie’s head as she pushed through those familiar swinging doors and
entered the bizarre world that is school during summer.
Excerpted from Killing Time by Brenna Ehrlich, Copyright ©
2022 by Brenna Ehrlich. Published by Inkyard Press.
Brenna
Ehrlich is a journalist, YA author, and editor who has
worked everywhere from MTV News to Rolling Stone. She resides in New Jersey
with her husband Morgan and their two cats, Nimbus and Hazel. She enjoys horror
movies and romcoms in equal measure.
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