Read an Excerpt
  The Sixth Form 
 By TOM DOLBY   KENSINGTON BOOKS 
  Copyright © 2008   Tom Dolby 
All right reserved.  ISBN: 978-0-7582-2258-9  
    Chapter One 
  Before he met Todd, in those first few weeks at Berkley Academy,  Ethan Whitley sought refuge in the cool calm of the art studios,  amidst the smells of dried paint and eraser shavings. The  heat had surprised him; Massachusetts in September was balmy,  sweltering, mosquitoes buzzing around brackish pools, verdant  lawns that spread for acres beyond the brick facades of Berkley's  Colonial campus. The advanced studios of the Stevenson Art Center  were air-conditioned, a rare luxury for a school that prided itself  on its Spartan, character-building accommodations. When he was  working alone in these rooms, Ethan imagined that they protected  him from all that lay waiting outside.  
     As he worked, he would think ahead to the next hour or two,  safely tucking his portrait in his cubby, shuffling across the linoleum  floor, walking upstairs, past the library, its fifty thousand  volumes tempting him, across the inlaid marble of the school's  foyer, through its atrium of white columns and vaulted ceilings,  out the French doors of the main building. His fellow classmates-he   didn't know their names; they were as anonymous as  strangers in Grand Central Terminal-would lay sprawled on  the grass under a cluster of birch trees like a clothing advertisement,   a triple-page spread, their chlorinated blond locks falling  lazily over their eyes, tanned legs, scratched in the right places  (sports injuries, not clumsiness), skin free of blemishes. They  lived in a world where people made witty remarks to each other,  and no one worried too much about things like money or popularity  or sex.  
     He was shocked then to find himself one evening, three weeks  into the school year, sitting in a taxicab, a rattling old station  wagon, barreling into town with Todd Eldon, a boy who lived on  the floor above him. Five days earlier, Todd had burst into Ethan's  room with the force of a raid-Hands up! We know you have no  friends, and we're going to do something about it!-and asked him to  summarize the week's English reading, the first section of Jane  Eyre. Since that evening, the friendship had progressed so effortlessly  that Ethan had nearly forgotten those horrible weeks prior,  the sitting alone in his room after check-in, staring at the Jackson  Pollock poster he had tacked to the wall above his bed, dreading  the mealtime ritual of finding people to sit with, making conversation,  smiling politely even when everyone who was done got  up to study or goof off in the dorms.  
     Now Todd rifled around in his messenger bag and pulled out  a nearly empty pack of cigarettes, its crumbs of tobacco littering  the backseat. "Need to get more on the way back," he muttered.  
     Ethan felt his brow furrowing in disapproval, and he forced  his visage to soften. He didn't smoke and had always suspected  that people who did were not to be trusted. The cab pulled into  the gravel driveway of Wilton's tearoom, one of a handful of  places where students could eat in town, and Ethan reached for  his wallet. Todd waved him away, signing the charge slip with a  scribble.  
     The boys entered the tearoom and Todd greeted a young  woman who was wiping down several of the tables, introducing  her to Ethan as Laura. The room felt cozy, with yellow walls, ancient  red tea canisters on high shelves, antique tables and chairs  of varying sizes, a potted palm next to a fireplace. A group of girls  from school, Fourth Formers, were chattering at the front table,  occasionally giving the boys flirtatious glances; a local woman  and her two children sat in the far corner. A sideboard held an  assortment of desserts-fruit cobblers, pies, bread pudding, chocolate,  pound, and carrot cakes. Ethan breathed in the deep warm  aroma of vanilla and cardamom.  
     Madame Beauchamp, the old French lady who owned the  tearoom, led them to a table near the window looking out on the  back garden. They followed her, the wake of her old lady perfume  trailing behind.  
     Laura came over and handed them menus. On the back were  all the varieties of tea; on the front were the food selections. Ethan  read the menu-soups, salads, sandwiches, scones-and then  looked hungrily over at the cakes and pies on the sideboard.  
     The little that Ethan knew of Todd already made him feel inadequate.  Todd had an older brother who had gone to Berkley,  had apparently had numerous girlfriends (surely he had already  had sex), played sports, and had grown up in New York City.  Being from California, Ethan was embarrassed to admit that he  had only been there once.  
     The door of the tearoom opened, bringing with it a burst of  cool air, and in stepped a woman with flowing blond hair and  light freckles on her cheeks. She wore a white dress and was carrying  four boxes, the type used to carry baked goods. She was  older than a student, but she didn't quite look like a teacher, either.  
     "Just in time!" She brushed past the boys and placed the four  boxes down on the counter of the open kitchen, smiling at Madame  Beauchamp. "Carrot, cheesecake, blueberry cobbler, and a strawberry  rhubarb. All fresh from the oven."  
     Madame Beauchamp took the desserts and placed them on  the island in the small kitchen, opening up the top box and examining  its contents. "Délicieux," she said.  
     The woman with the blond hair turned toward the boys and  smiled.  
     "You guys look like you'll be wanting dessert."  
     Todd and Ethan stared at her. Ethan wondered why this woman,  this exotic creature, was speaking to them.  
     "You're-hold on-Todd, right?"  
     Todd nodded.  
     "I've seen you here before. And who's your friend?"  
     Ethan felt a blush blooming in his cheeks as he looked up (he  had noticed her dress, its neckline, the pale skin on her breastbone;  his eyes darted away from this area, as though he had  touched a hot teakettle and been burned). "Ethan Whitley," he  said.  
     "Well, hello, Ethan Whitley," the woman said. "I'm Hannah.  Ms. McClellan. You can call me Hannah."  
     Ethan was confused; he thought he had seen her around. "Are  you a teacher?"  
     "That's what they tell me. I make some of the desserts here,  too. Sort of a hobby I do on the side. Gets me out of my head."  
     Ethan wondered why she was inviting them to use her first  name. Perhaps the younger Berkley teachers, the ones right out  of college, might do this in private, but no one on the Berkley  faculty who was Hannah's age-she had to be at least thirty-would   ever allow this.  
     She sat down on a chair at the counter, facing the boys. "Ethan  Whitley ... you're new, right? Did I read some of your short  stories last year that came in with your admissions packet?"  
 Ethan's blush deepened. "It's possible. I submitted a few."  
     "I loved them. They were really gorgeous. The one about the  mother. I hope you keep writing."  
     "Thanks," Ethan croaked.  
     "Anyway, have some dessert. It's on me." She winked at  Madame Beauchamp. "What do you guys want?"  
     "I usually get the carrot cake," Todd said.  
     "Um, blueberry cobbler?" Ethan said.  
     "Give them extra big pieces," Hannah said to Laura. "They're  growing boys." She smiled again. "I haven't made as much of the  blueberry cobbler lately. It's hard to find good local blueberries  this time of year."  
     "It's my favorite," Ethan said. His mother used to bake it for  him and his father when he was growing up. But not recently-recently   she hadn't been doing much cooking at all.  
     "I'd better get going," Hannah said. "Laura, if they want it,  give them seconds."  
  
  Looking back, Todd would sometimes think it had all happened  by accident. He was behind in the reading-he was always behind  in the reading-and Ethan was the closest guy in the dorm  who was also in Ms. Davis's English class. Taking him to the tearoom  a few days later had been partly a tactical move: Todd had  discovered several weeks ago from his friend Izzy that Laura, the  waitress, was selling the best weed in western Massachusetts.  There were only so many times he could go to the tearoom  alone; Ethan would be the perfect cover. Laura had taken some  convincing, but once he assured her that he was a city kid, that  he wasn't going to get her in trouble, she agreed to sell to him. It  wasn't practical, after all, to go home each time he needed to replenish  his stash, and the student he had bought from in previous  years, an Upper East Side brat-turned-drug-dealer, had  graduated.  
     Todd knew he shouldn't be smoking-not as a member of the  cross-country team, and not with college applications looming  in the coming months. But he hated running. Sometimes during  practice, he would will his lungs to collapse on him, pushing  himself harder and harder, savoring the sharp pain his breathing  cavities exerted on his body, knives cutting him inside, blades  steeped in nicotine and sinsemilla. Afterward, there was no camaraderie.   His fellow runners weren't like the football players,  who would shower together in the field house after practice, exchanging  taunts and laughing all the way to the dining hall. His  teammates were lonely creatures, climbing up the hill toward  the dorms each evening, retreating to their rooms, one by one,  in preparation for dinner. If he had to be alone, he wanted to be  high; that was one of the few things he could do without anyone  else. The weed helped him shut out the silence, the drudgery: of  classes, of college applications, of feeling so alone.  
     The plan had gone flawlessly that evening, as Todd went inside  again while they waited for their cab, saying he had forgotten  something. He slipped Laura five twenties, and she handed  him a small package, just out of Ethan and Madame Beauchamp's  sight.  
  
  After arriving back on campus, Ethan and Todd headed to the  snack bar. Now that he was with Todd, Ethan felt confident  about entering the gossipy haven that was dominated by Sixth  Formers each evening from seven until ten. He hoped they  would stay awhile, hang out, talk with some girls.  
     "I need to find Alex," Todd said, looking around for his girlfriend,  Alexandra Roth. He was suddenly in a panic, as if his future  livelihood at the school depended on it. Todd could not be  seen entering the snack bar with Ethan Whitley (the puzzling  Ethan Whitley, a blank slate, a cipher, for some; for others, one  who was suspect-a bit too well read, a bit too smug: California,  after all? Who came from California?). Ethan felt a glum sensation  as Todd ignored him. He imagined himself being demoted  back to his place in the social strata, as if he had been given a  glimpse of what it would be like to be popular, to be granted the  attentions of someone like Todd Eldon, and was now being informed  that actually there had been an error, that he was not  meant to have been at the tearoom at all, that he had been mistaken   for someone more popular, someone better-looking. He  looked around the snack bar: all the usual suspects. Athletes in  one corner, stoners in another, the African-American and Asian  cliques at their own tables, the artsy crowd (they hadn't embraced  him, either-even the outcasts weren't taking new admissions,  though he was an artist himself) scattered in the middle.  Books and papers everywhere. Empty bottles of soda and paper  plates littered with the remnants of hamburgers and grilled  cheese sandwiches. Todd located his friends across the room and  motioned for Ethan to follow him.  
     He bought two Cokes at the counter and brought them to a  table where Todd was sitting with Izzy Jacobsen, Miles Nolan,  and Kevin Bradshaw; they were part of what Ethan had heard  referred to as the "banker boys," guys whose fathers had made  their money in investments. Todd introduced Ethan to everyone  and pulled out a chair for him. After he sat down, Alex appeared  behind Todd and wrapped her arms around him. He squirmed  uncomfortably, releasing himself from her grip.  
     Alex smiled at Ethan. "Hi." Her cheeks glowed from the brisk  night, a warm peach color. Ethan had noticed her before, in the  hallways, near the mailboxes. The girl with the brown pageboy  cut and the large eyes, the one who wore Doc Martens with  Laura Ashley dresses. He felt a green pang of jealousy. Todd was  that guy, the type who existed in books or movies or his imagination,  who had everything a teenager wanted (everything, in fact,  that Ethan wanted): friends, a girlfriend, as much money as he  needed. There was so much he could learn from Todd, but what  did Todd want from him?  
     Alex turned to Todd. "Should we go?"  
     Todd shrugged and got up, grabbing his fleece pullover.  
     Ethan felt his gut flip: nervousness, then annoyance. He wanted  what Todd had, not only emotionally, but physically, in the deepest,  most visceral part of him. He imagined what they would do  together: a romantic walk back to the dorm, perhaps a visit to  the studio to show Todd what she had been working on (now  Ethan remembered her name from one of the paintings in the  main hallway's exhibition of student work). They would hold  hands, and then in some dark corner, he would kiss her, pressing  his body to hers, pushing his erection against her pelvis.  
     "I'll catch you guys later," Todd said to everyone, and the two  left the snack bar.  
     "Lucky bastard," Izzy Jacobsen said, as he scratched his crotch.  "That guy gets laid more often than I jerk off."  
 
  The following evening, Todd made a call from the pay phone on  the fourth floor of Slater Dormitory. Though this arrangement  afforded Berkley's students little freedom, it was one of the few  options they had to make contact with the outside world. Cell  phones had been banned years ago after several students' phones  went off during class, the chimes of Beethoven's Fifth sending them  directly to the deans' wing. The only permitted alternatives for  communication were pay phones or e-mail. In this case, Todd  needed to talk to his father directly.  
     He was about to hang up when Don Eldon picked up on the  fourth ring. They hadn't spoken in several months, and Todd  hadn't seen him in over a year. From a practical standpoint, it  didn't matter. His mother, Jackie, had plenty of money to take  care of him and his brother, and their father was busy keeping  his development ventures in Florida afloat (Todd had to admit  that he never understood exactly what it was that his dad did  each day). Jackie had never been clear with Todd or his older  brother, Brian, about whether it was raising two children, her  flourishing literary success in the field of romantic suspense, or a  combination of the two, that had driven him away. Miraculously,  she had been able to crank out a bloodcurdling best-seller every  year while supervising the changing of diapers and the scheduling  of play dates. She had become a publishing sensation, and  her husband was still a failed real estate broker with a drinking  problem. When Todd was five, Don Eldon did what Todd figured  most men would do: he left. Jackie had filed for divorce, instructing  her lawyers to make sure the man didn't get a penny of  her hard-earned book advances.  
     "Yeah?" Todd's father said, over the din of a baseball game  playing on the television.  
     "It's Todd."  
     There was a pause as he turned down the game. The pauses:  Todd had forgotten about them. They took forever, were like  that peculiar feeling of being on a family car trip and never  knowing when you would arrive.  
     "Hey, kiddo. What can I do for you?" his father finally said.  
     "I wanted to talk to you about my college applications."  
     Todd heard his father sigh. "Todd, you know I can't contribute  to that. Your mom's got plenty of money set aside for you  and your brother."  
     "It's not about paying, Dad."  
     "What's it about then?"  
     "There's a statement that's supposed to be written by your  parents-you can do it separately, if they're divorced-but it's  supposed to be about what your parents think of you, why they  think you should go to that college, stuff like that." Todd nervously  scratched away at a Harvard sticker that had been plastered  on the wall next to the phone.  
     "Todd, your mother is the writer in the family. I think she  would be much better handling that sort of thing."  
     "Okay," Todd said. "I just thought I'd ask."  
     "No problem, kid. Let me know if you need anything else."  
     Todd hung up without saying good-bye. His hands were shaking.  Was it too much to ask his father to write a five-hundred-word  recollection of his younger son? Todd thought he had  written a statement for Brian. Or had his mother simply mailed  in one on both their behalf? It would be like Jackie not to want  to admit to an admissions officer that Don Eldon played no role  in his sons' lives.  
  (Continues...)  
     
 
 Excerpted from The Sixth Form by TOM DOLBY  Copyright © 2008   by Tom Dolby.   Excerpted by permission.
 All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.