Authors: Sarah Ockler
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Love & Romance, #Social Themes, #Dating & Relationships, #Friendship, #Social Issues, #Dating & Sex, #Adolescence, #Emotions & Feelings
. We’re all alone out there, and I’m like, this is it, dude. If you let her go now, she’s gone.”
I wasn’t. I’m not.
The forest is green and alive in the rain, the dogs curled up and panting at the base of the boulder, everything lush and beautiful as if it were painted just for us, just for this moment.
My eyes are on the dirt when I say, “You don’t regret it?”
“On the deck?” he says. “I only stopped . . . I was worried I freaked you out. Like, maybe I was wrong when I thought you liked me too.” He sighs, the rain tapping a gentle rhythm on the leaves above. “Maybe I’m still wrong.”
My heart is thunderous, a raging storm that drowns out the warnings and the shouldn’ts and the can’ts, and I meet his gaze, hold it, look for the stars in his eyes.
I find them, glittery and infinite.
“You’re not.” The space between us is gone.
“God,” he whispers, “I’m in so much trouble with you.” My skin is electrified by his touch, slick and muddy and cool. The rain dampens our faces, leaves trembling 229
overhead as his body shudders against mine, a moan soft and breathy in my ear, and I give in.
Just this once.
I make the silent promise and give in to four years of wanting. Four years under the sheets with the lights off, eyes closed in the dark hours of the dawn, thinking only of him, his hands, his mouth, his breath, all of it on me, covering me, enveloping me.
Just this once. Just this once. Just this once.
Love. Devours. Heart.
“Isn’t there anything you can do?” Jayla’s saying into her phone. She leaning against the kitchen counter, her back to me, shoulders high and tight. “Are you sure they won’t reconsider? No. I know. It’s just . . . Yeah. I’m sorry too.” With a defeated sigh, she drops the phone on the counter.
“Jay?”
She whirls around, presses a hand to her heart. Her eyes are red, charcoal eyeliner smudged beneath them.
“You scared me to death!”
“Are you crying?” I nod toward her phone. “Who was that?”
“No one.” She swipes at her eyes, tired and crestfallen.
“Just my useless agent. I’m thinking of letting him go, but it’s
so
hard to find a good one.” She slides a bottle of red 230
wine from the rack on the counter, reads the label, puts it back, selects another. This one she uncorks. When she looks at me again, her eyes narrow suspiciously. “What happened to
you
? Why are you shaking? Where’s Night?”
“Had to hose him off. He’s drying in the garage.” I tug off the hoodie and try to walk past her to the laundry room, but she stops me.
“Is that my hoodie?”
“Is it?” I look at the muddy blue-and-orange ball in my hands. “Sorry. Didn’t know you were a Broncos fan all of a sudden.”
Jayla reaches toward me, pulls a twig from my hair. She inspects it with great interest. “Explain to me, little sister, how one goes on a simple walk with her dog and comes back hours later with mud on her face and sticks in her hair and muddy handprints all over her shorts.
Boy
handprints.”
“Oh . . . I ran into Cole.” I comb my fingers through my hair, realizing what a bad criminal I’d make. A wet leaf falls to the kitchen floor.
With feigned indifference, I announce, “It’s pretty muddy out there, Jayla.”
Her eyebrows shoot up. “You and Cole were mud wrestling?”
“What? I fell! Night was running and I slipped and landed in this . . . um . . .”
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“Tar pit?”
“Creek bed?”
“Cole’s bed
whut
?”
“Jayla!”
“Lucy!”
My hand flies to my mouth, covers it instinctively. His kiss lingers, invisible evidence hot on my lips. I’m sure she can see it beneath the mud, read it as if the story’s written in tabloid headlines all over my face.
She pours a generous glass of wine and hands it over.
“Drinksies?”
I shake my head, and she takes a long swig instead.
“A bath, then.” She tops off her glass from the bottle.
“I’ll run it. Drop those clothes in the washer and prepare to tell me your dirty little secrets. All of them.” Comfortably perched on the closed toilet, Jayla scrutinizes me over her wineglass as I recap the events of prom: Ellie’s bird flu fake out, the dance, the party, the kiss on the deck, the argument. All the pictures, tagged and uploaded.
There’s a hot washcloth over my eyes, the rest of me submerged in Jayla’s luxurious imported lemon-ginger bubble bath, but I still feel her gaze.
“Lucy.” There’s a swallow of wine, then a sigh. “You
so
232
lie. There’s way more to this story and it’s eating you up inside. A mother knows these things. Spill it, sister.”
“Wait, are you a mother or a sister?”
“You think I’m judgy, right? That’s it.” More sipping.
Sighing. “Luce. My whole life is one long tabloid joke.” Her voice cracks on the last word. “I’m the last person to judge anyone. I just want you to trust me again. We’re
sisters
.” The room is silent now except for the water—water dripping from my hair, water dripping from the faucet, water lapping the sides of the tub as the bubbles fizzle. I poke my toes out of the bath, wriggle them in the cool air above.
“Cole and me . . .” I say. “The pictures . . . It’s not
exactly
how it looked. But . . .” Behind the washcloth, darkness is anonymity; in it I find the courage, for the first time, to confess. “There was more than one kiss on prom night.
Um, kind of a lot more.”
For the record, if you ever got sick, I would totally hold your
hair back. . . .
Cole’s voice was low and my heart was racing and I turned, just a little, and he pulled me the rest of the way.
We were facing each other, so close I could taste him, but still I held back. We didn’t kiss, didn’t speak, barely breathed, and finally, despite the pounding in my chest and the buzzing in my head, I drifted off.
233
An hour? Maybe two? I’m not sure how long I was out, but when I opened my eyes again, tangled up in Cole’s arms, pale lavender light illuminated the room. In the sliver between night and day, the cabin was silent, the stars fading, the moment full of dangerous possibility.
One last chance before the spell breaks. Before the sun laces her
fingers through the sky, paints the shadows gold and sends us back
to real life . . .
Cole’s eyes were closed, his lips parted, hair sticking up everywhere. He sighed in his sleep, and I drifted toward him, brushed my lips against his.
A second. Maybe three. His eyes stayed closed, but he stirred, his breath catching. My name was on his lips . . .
Lucy . . .
whispered into my mouth like smoke, like a ghost, and he pulled me to his chest, kissed me soft and forever.
I slipped beneath him in his bed that night, welcomed the weight of his body over mine, looked into his eyes as if the world were ending. Maybe it was. I wouldn’t have noticed.
We didn’t sleep after that. We held each other as the sun rose, said everything and nothing at all with one last kiss.
In all the stories about that night, the pictures that followed, the explanations and defenses, the recaps and apologies, the hints and fears and secret admissions, we 234
never spoke of that moment. It was too intimate, too fragile. Too ours.
I know now that the pictures had already been taken by then, that they’d already started telling their story. A different one with all the wrong lines, all the wrong scenes.
It wasn’t like the pictures say.
Our story, soft and silent before the dawn, was so, so much more. And for days after—sometimes even still—I wondered if I’d dreamed it all along.
Still hidden by the washcloth, I tell Jayla my secrets, my truths, and by the time I get to the part about tonight, about the woods, I know that I’m a villain. That regardless of Cole and Ellie’s precise breakup timeline, I deserve the scandal, the bullying that comes with it. That everyone is right about me.
Slut. Narc. Liar. Home wrecker.
Best friend backstabber and all around bad person. I earned the Juicy Lucy page, the posters on my locker, the judging smirks in the hallway.
Heartless, someone called me the other day. A heartless bitch.
But that’s where I get stuck.
If I’m so heartless, what’s this bruised thing in my chest, full of fire and hope, banging so loud I can’t sleep, can’t think? What is it that aches when he kisses me, aches when I walk away?
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I slide the washcloth off my face and meet Jayla’s eyes, shame and confusion heating my cheeks.
“You’re in love with him,” she says. It’s kind and contemplative, not a question. “Seriously in love.” I nod. “But it’s, like, tainted. Like I cheated to get him. And now I have to decide between my best friend and my heart. The girl I’m supposed to go away to college with and the guy who’s moving to the other side of the country in three months. A girl who might never forgive me and a guy who might not love me back, no matter what I decide.”
“What does Cole say?” she asks.
“He wants us to be together, but I can’t do that to Ellie.”
“You’re already doing it, and that’s not the point.” Jayla sips the last of her wine and sets down the empty glass, closes her eyes. I watch her and wait, steel myself for the jabs about how I’m becoming more like Angelica Darling every day, how it sounds like a made-for-TV movie, how all I need is a drink and a few credit cards to make it all go away.
They don’t come.
“What do I do?” I ask.
“Tell her.” When she opens her eyes, they’re clear and determined. “What happened, happened. All you have left is the truth. Ellie has to hear it eventually, even if she 236
doesn’t want to. For chrissake, Lucy. You and Cole are in love. You can’t just walk away.”
“But everyone—”
“All the haters and scandals in the world can’t change your heart. You’re already on the battlefield, right? So fight for it.” Jayla picks up the empty glass and leans down to kiss my head, trailed as always by her pear perfume. “Fucking fight.”
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THE SHIT SHOW MUST GO ON!
MISS DEMEANOR
3,396 likes
C
803 talking about this
Monday, May 5
Angelica Darling may be a schemer, but one thing she’s not afraid of is a little improvisation. When conspiracy theorists stole her spotlight on Friday to go all fanboy on the founding fathers? Angelica didn’t whither like a dainty flower. She rolled with it, pun intended. I don’t care what the tabloids say.
Jayla Heart’s a class act, and she deserves our fickle online loyalty, so head on over to the Jayla 238
Heartthrobs fan page and thumb-thumb-thumbs it up!
If we’ve learned anything this weekend from Jay-gelica’s grace in the face of being defaced, it’s this: No matter what the soul ess scandalhounds throw at us on our paths to self-righteousness, march onward we must. So even though it’s Cinco de Mayo and it’s time for a Monday-morning margarita (shout out to Mexico!
Thanks for giving me the opportunity to misappropriate your cultural heritage in order to justify my drinking tequila before nine a.m.!), the show must, after all, go on.
I’ve got an important announcement.
*Shuffles papers*
The award (yes, OMG, finally!) for Miss Demeanor’s final (you know you’ll miss me) (try not to cry) (nothing says I’ll miss you like anonymous cash donations to the bank account of my choosing) #scandal goes to a gent who puts the ass in class, and that’s no insult.
For his unwavering embodiment of class in world of utter classlessness, and for so perfectly capturing the 239
quintessential high school #scandal moment in all its glitter and desperation at the Lav-Oaks postprom party of the century, we’ve selected . . .
PRINCE FRECKLES!
*Applause applause applause*
Sadly, like all our equestrian-American brethren, Prince Freckles lacks opposable thumbs and is unable to sign into his Facebook account and claim his winnings. He’s also unlikely to give two horseshits about winning a gold star of immortality on a cheesy, high school gossip column. After consulting with my wise adviser Jose Cuervo, I’ve decided to award, by proxy, the esteemed random photographer who
captured
the prince’s special moment. Step forth and claim your fifteen seconds of fame, esteemed random photographer! You deserve every last second and not a moment more!
xo ~
Ciao!
~ xo
Mis Demeanor
240
LOV E IS IN THE AIR . . . AND IT
TOTALLY SMELlls LIK E T EEN SPIRIT
AF T ER THE T EEN SPIRIT ST EPPED IN
DOG P O OP
I
don’t see any tarts.”
In the cafeteria on Monday, Ellie gives me a frosty once-over. She meets my eyes for just a second; then her attention returns to her tropical-breeze sandwich—a combination of coconut, peanut butter, honey, and banana we invented last summer.
“What do you want now?” she asks coolly.
You’re already on the battlefield. . . .
“Come outside with me.” I take a deep breath, lean against the table to steady myself. “Those pictures don’t tell the whole story, El. I need you to hear it from me.” 241
She stops midchew, slides her eyes over the top of her sandwich to meet mine. “What if I don’t care?”
“I know you. You
totally
care.”
She doesn’t deny it, and I press on.
“I screwed up. Majorly. And if you want to end our friendship, that’s your right. But not until you hear me out. After that . . . I’m not transferring out of UCLA, but I’ll leave you alone. We can get different roommates or .
. . something.” I throw it out there, hoping she’ll throw it back. Tell me I’m crazy for even suggesting we’ll be anything other than BFFs for life.
Ellie shoves the sandwich crusts into a paper bag. “I don’t want you to transfer. God, Lucy. I thought we agreed that melodrama was Griff’s job? Speaking of which, last period she started using a British accent. Any ideas?”
“She’s got a little crush on our valedictorian.”
“Shocking.” Ellie rises, scoops up her lunch scraps.