Read Sloth Online

Authors: Robin Wasserman

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Dating & Sex, #Friendship, #Love & Romance, #General

Sloth (22 page)

Reed turned to exchange a glance with Fish, but the drummer had already laid his head down on the snare drum and shut his eyes. So much for the gig.

Reed stumbled off the makeshift stage and began to walk without a direction in mind. This wasn’t his scene.
Some asshole in a letter jacket with a squealing girl slung over his shoulder slammed into him with a glare and a warning. “Watch it, loser!”

Definitely not his scene.

He was well away from the party and halfway to his car when he realized that he wasn’t alone. He didn’t turn around to see who was following him, figuring that whoever it was would eventually reveal themselves or, preferably, lose interest and wander away.

It took about five minutes.

“Reed?” Her voice was tentative and musical.

He turned around. “Hey.” She looked good. Reed hated himself for noticing.

“Leaving?” Beth asked. “It’s early.”

“Yeah.” He shrugged. “I’m just . . .” He wasn’t leaving. He had a tent and a sleeping bag in the truck, and he had a plan. He and the guys were going to hike out to somewhere quiet and alone and have a party of their own. But the guys were useless. “... you know.”

“Yeah.” Beth gave him a wry smile. “This isn’t really my thing either.”

“Really?” She was too blond and beautiful not to be one of
those
girls.

“I hate parties.” There was a pause, though not an awkward one. “I guess I’m going too.”

“Unless—” He wanted to be alone. But even with her there, he felt alone—in a good way. He didn’t have to put on a show. And maybe—he remembered her tears, and the way she’d shaken in his arms—maybe there were some things she could understand. “You want to hang? You know, just for a while?”

Her eyebrows crinkled together, and there was another pause. Maybe she was trying to decide if he was good enough for her, or what the odds were of anyone seeing them together. Reed decided to forget the whole thing. But she spoke before he could. “Yeah. Okay. Let’s, uh . . . hang.”

“Cool,” he said, wondering if that unclenching in his shoulder blades was relief.

“Cool.”

“Baby, you are so hot!” the guy said, nuzzling his greasy head into Harper’s chest. Harper’s head lolled back, her eyes half closed. The guy’s fingers crept up her thigh and across her stomach and, encountering no resistance, began to unbutton her shirt. “I mean, damn!” he exclaimed, catching his first glimpse of her bare cleavage and pale, creamy skin. “Makes me wanna—”

“Hold that thought,” Kane drawled, clamping an iron grip around the guy’s scrawny shoulders and tossing him away. “We’ll get back to you.”

“What’s it to you?” the loser whined, trying to elbow Kane out of the way. “Jealous? She wants me.”

Kane looked down at Harper, sitting cross-legged on the ground, slumped over at the waist now that there was no one left propping her up, her tangled hair falling over her face. She looked limp and pliable, like a doll that would be content however you posed her.

“She doesn’t know what she wants,” Kane murmured, then turned toward the greasy loser and smiled. He didn’t need to raise a fist to convey his warning. “You should probably get out of here, asshole. Now.”

Kane could have taken the guy in a fight, but he knew
it would never come to that. Even a loser like this knew that Kane had all the power, and knew better than to stick around.

“You okay, Grace?” Kane asked, hauling her up. She lifted her head and scowled.

“What are you doing?” she asked, her voice slurred.

“Rescuing you, in case you hadn’t noticed.”

She shook him away. ”I don’t need rescuing. I was fine.”

“Yeah, you and Drunky McDateRapist were having a grand old time.”

“I can hook up with whoever I want.”

“Your warm gratitude means the world to me,” he said dryly. This knight-in-shining-armor business didn’t come with many perks. Probably a good thing: A few more good deeds and his rep would end up in the toilet.

Standing up and arguing seemed to revive her a bit, because the color seeped back into her face and her hand suddenly squeezed down on his. “Let’s go!” she cried.

A manic-depressive drunk. Great. Party on, Kane, he thought sourly, wondering if it was sexist to believe girls couldn’t hold their liquor. Not that he wasn’t already an unapologetic sexist—he just liked to be consistent. “Go where?” he asked wearily.

“Dance!” she tugged him toward the whirling crowd, thrashing her head in time to the tinny hip-hop bursting from some cheap speakers. “Come on.”

“I don’t dance,” he reminded her, reluctant to leave her alone again. “How about we go visit your good friend Miranda. She’s just over—”

“Shut up and dance with me,” she said, threading a finger through his belt loop and pulling him toward her. She
ignored the pulsing beat and instead collapsed into his arms, hanging around his neck and swaying back and forth. “Stop rescuing me,” she said, her voice muffled by his shirt.

“Stop screwing up,” he suggested.

She dragged herself up a few inches and propped her chin up against his chest so that, when he looked down at her, their lips nearly met. “I know what you want,” she said, too loudly, a harsh smile twisting her face.

“A private jet? A harem? My own private island?”

“Stop!” she cried, hitting against his chest.

“Stop what?”

“Being nice to me.”

Kane tilted his head down enough that their foreheads touched. “I’m never nice. You know that.”

Before he knew what was happening, she’d pushed herself up on her toes and kissed him, her hands tightening around his neck. A soft moan escaped her as she pulled away.

“Now I know you’re drunk,” he joked, his mouth on autopilot as he struggled to plot his next move.

“Shut up,” she murmured, kissing his chest, sucking on the bare skin at the nape of his neck.

“You don’t know what you’re doing, Grace,” he warned her, halfheartedly trying to push her away.

“Who cares?” And then her lips were on his again, her tongue probing, her hands massaging his back and then slipping beneath his shirt and clawing against his skin.

If he were a cartoon character, this is the point at which the tiny angel and devil would pop into existence, one perched on each shoulder.

Angel, complete with halo and miniature golden harp:
She’s drunk. She’s self-destructive. She’s out of her mind.

Devil, with red horns and a familiar smirk:
She’s drunk. You’re drunk. Let’s party. It’s all good
.

Angel:
She doesn’t really want you.

Devil:
Everyone wants you. Don’t be stupid.

Angel:
Don’t be evil.

Devil, jabbing him with his tiny pitchfork:
Don’t forget about that tight ass, and her magic fingers crawling down toward your waistband, and—is that a black thong peeking out over her jeans?

Angel:
Ohhh, definitely a thong. And that ass . . .

Devil:
Told you so.

Angel:
And that thing she’s doing with your ear?

Devil:
Do they give gold medals for tongue aerobics?

Angel, slapping the devil five:
God, she’s good.

Devil:
Hallelujah.

Kane groaned, half in pleasure and half in torture, as he wrestled with himself (and with Harper). And while he deliberated, she kissed him, and groped him, and he let it happen, their bodies tangling together and his mind s voice growing quieter and quieter, drowned in the force of desperate, physical need.

He’d push her away.

He would.

In a minute.

Miranda wandered unsteadily through the crowd. At least the world had stopped spinning and her head had stopped throbbing. But as her mind and vision cleared, she’d realized she was sitting alone on a rock, waiting for someone who, apparently, wasn’t coming back.

She was still drunk enough to go and look for him.

First she flipped open her pocket-size mirror and checked things out. Eye shadow a little smeared, mascara intact, fresh coat of “Midnight Rose”-colored lipstick in hopes of looking extra kissable, and she was ready to go.

He wasn’t hanging with the stoners, who were sprawled on their backs, passing around a massive bong.

He wasn’t, thank god, groping the cheerleaders or charming the prom committee.

He wasn’t wandering along the edges of the crowd, looking for her.

He wasn’t by the keg, or the speakers, or the jocks, or the trees.

And then time stopped.

She didn’t see it as a fluid series of events, but rather as a series of frozen snapshots, flashing in front of her eyes and then fading away:

Kane’s back, and a girl’s arms roaming across it.

Curly auburn hair falling across a shoulder.

Two faces in profile, eyes closed, tongues locked.

Harper, her eyes open, locked on Miranda. Her smile.

Harper turning away, kissing him again.

Miranda sat down where she’d been standing, Harper and Kane fading from view. All she could see now were people’s legs and feet, some walking, some dancing, some standing around, some wrapped up in others. She tried to catch her breath.

She’s drunk
, Miranda told herself.
Self-destructive. She doesn’t know what she’s doing
.

But Harper had stopped. Looked at Miranda. Smiled and turned away. She knew exactly what she was doing.

Miranda suddenly felt completely sober and clear. But
she couldn’t have been, or she wouldn’t have stood up and walked purposefully off toward the crops of Joshua trees, where she’d seen half the basketball team breaking bottles and doing keg stands. If she wasn’t drunk, where did she get the nerve to wrap her arms around Adam and whisper in his ear, “I need you, now”?

She didn’t think about the consequences or fear humiliation. She just acted, tugging him away from the group, deeper into the trees. She didn’t need to think. She’d come to this party to give in to her desires. At the time, those had been: longing, lust, hope.

Now they’d been replaced with one: revenge. She didn’t pause to acknowledge that to herself or explain it to Adam. She didn’t even need to take a deep breath before kissing him. And she had to admit that Harper had been right. The chiseled face and perfect body was a definite turn-on. As was the prospect of smashing Harper’s heart to pieces.

“Miranda?” Adam was out of it, completely, his face slack and his words thick. “Whuh?”

“This doesn’t have to mean anything,” she said, stripping off her shirt. “It’s just for fun.” She tugged at the edge of his shirt and stumbled against him. “It’s a party, right?”

Adam didn’t say anything. But he let her tug him down to the ground, and he didn’t resist as she ran her fingers through his hair. She didn’t know how to seduce someone, or how to follow up the first move with a second one.
Harper would know
.

Harper was probably doing it right now.

She lay down on her side, ignoring the sharp edges digging into her. “Come here,” she told Adam, hooking her finger into his collar and jerking him toward her.
He toppled over with a grunt, then rolled to face her. “Miranda, I’m not really—”

“You waiting around for Harper?” she snapped, enjoying his wince. Suddenly it seemed like the whole world should share in her pain.
See? I can be just like you
, she told Harper silently. I can be cold, and
I can take what you want
. “She’s with Kane. Déjà vu all over again, right?”

“Shuddup.”

“Kane gets everything, and you get—”

“Shut up.” Louder this time.

“Make me,” Miranda challenged, jerking her face toward his. Their noses bumped, and then awkwardly but without hesitation, their lips met.

His face was stubbly and his hair too short. His breath was sour, his kiss was rough, angry, but at least she had acted. And her eyes were dry. He grunted like an animal, and she accidentally bit his tongue, and the rocks beneath them felt like they were drawing blood. But she persevered. She closed her eyes, kissed him harder, and tried not to pretend he was someone else.

Beth drew in a breath and tried not to cough out the smoke. “This is harder than it looks,” she sputtered, lying back against the sleeping bag.

“You’ll get the hang of it,” Reed assured her. He lay down next to her, and for a long time all she could hear was their breathing, and the whistling of the wind. “You feeling anything?” he asked.

“I don’t know . . .”The words sounded strange, and
felt
strange, as if her tongue had suddenly doubled in size. She stuck it out at him. “Does my tongue look weird?” (This
came out sounding more like, “Doz ba tog look eered?”) She burst into giggles before he could answer.

Other books

Tulip Fever by Deborah Moggach
Kornel Esti by Kosztolányi, Deszö
Key West by Lacey Alexander
Shallow Grave by Alex van Tol
Strange Sisters by Fletcher Flora
A Trial by Jury by D. Graham Burnett
Captain Vorpatril's Alliance by Lois McMaster Bujold