to their work. Being a scary murder suspect had its own kind of power. It was less pleasant than
 
 Billings power, but it was still something.
 
 "Anyway, Ivy's not about to let me interview her, and the Web
 
 114
 
 hasn't been much help," I told Marc, tilting my head toward the computers. My station was still
 
 empty, thanks to the reserved sign, but the screen had long since switched over to the Easton
 
 screen saver--an Easton Academy crest bouncing around from corner to corner. "But my gut tells
 
 me she did it."
 
 "Have you tried LexisNexis?" Marc asked, pulling off his hat and gloves as I shed my coat.
 
 "What's that?" I asked.
 
 He dumped his own coat on a chair and then motioned me to follow him back to my reserved
 
 computer. I stood behind Marc as he sat down and brought up a new Explorer page, typing in the
 
 address window.
 
 "It's a subscription-only search engine," he said. "I got a username and password at my summer
 
 job at the Miami Herald and it still works. It's, like, a hundred times more powerful and thorough
 
 than Google and pretty much anything else. Plus it only searches reputable publications so you
 
 don't get any of that gossip or Facebook crap."
 
 "Sounds good to me," I whispered.
 
 I grabbed an empty chair from a nearby table and brought it up to the desk. Once he accessed
 
 LexisNexis, Marc typed in "Ivy Slade" and hit enter. Almost instantly a list of articles appeared.
 
 Some of them were familiar--the same articles I had been staring at for days, like the one about
 
 the horseback riding competition and Olivia Slade's obit. I was just about to groan in frustration
 
 when I noticed a link from the local Village of Easton newspaper--a link I had never seen before.
 
 Next to it was a thumbnail photo that, even in miniature, looked mighty familiar. My blood ran
 
 cold at the sight of it.
 
 115
 
 "Open that one," I said, pointing. I felt so jittery that I was amazed at my steady hand.
 
 Marc double clicked. Instantly, the photo filled the screen. Ivy, Cheyenne, Noelle, and Ariana
 
 smiled out at us. It was the same photo that hung above Ivy's bed. Marc whistled under his breath.
 
 "That's eerie," he said.