Read The Avery Shaw Experiment Online

Authors: Kelly Oram

Tags: #Romance, #ya, #Love, #teen, #Contemporary

The Avery Shaw Experiment (10 page)

Owen raised a brow and Avery backed right off, turning a deep shade of red. “I mean, if you want to,” she said quietly. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to interrupt.”

“You’re sure?” Owen asked her.

She looked mortified that she’d said anything, but she nodded.

Owen looked back at the table and shrugged. “Why not?”

He lined up his shot, and it did exactly as Avery said it would. He sunk the eight ball with ease, and everyone around who’d witnessed the scene cheered.

“Aves!” I said, pouting a little. “Whose date are you anyway? You just won him the game!”

“Sorry.” Avery looked at her shoes.

I laughed and pulled her to me. “It’s okay. He was going to win anyway. He’s by far the superior player.”

“Hey, how’d you know about that?” Owen asked, still smiling from his victory.

Avery’s face paled, and she stared at the floor again. “Um, I just . . .” She cringed. “It’s all physics.” The irony was not lost on me. “Angles, trajectory, mass, momentum, velocity . . . Newton’s laws are—”

“Whoa, whoa, whoa, okay.” Owen laughed. “That’s enough geekspeak. I get it. But can you actually play the game, or do you just coach?”

Avery shrugged. “I’m all right.”

I saw the gleam in Owen’s eyes and wondered just how good Avery really was. The girl was the most modest person I’d ever met. I was sure she was downplaying her skills. I also knew there was no one more competitive than Owen.

“You up for a game?” he asked, exactly as I knew he would. “Say we make it interesting with a little friendly wager?”

Avery looked at the table and bit her bottom lip, contemplating. She wanted to give it a try. She looked back up at Owen and warily asked, “What are your terms?”

That’s where I stepped in. “Oh, no, hold up! I get to pick the stakes.”

“What?” Owen argued. “Why? I’m the one playing. It was my bet.”

“Because,” I said, “she won the last game for you.”

Owen scoffed.

“She’s
my
date,” I continued. “
And
she gave me free reign over her social life, so I’m in charge of this bet.”

Owen crossed his arms over his chest. “Fine. Name it.”

I thought for a minute. We were gathering a small crowd now, so it had to be good. “Okay. Avery wins and you have to get from this pool table to your car without any clothes.”

Avery gasped and tried to protest on Owen’s behalf, but Owen doesn’t know how to back down from a challenge. “Done. And if I win?”

I looked at Avery. It couldn’t be anything too crazy—she was way too fragile, and I didn’t actually know how good she was. I glanced around, looking for inspiration, and noticed the people in the corner. “If you win, Avery has to learn how to dance tonight.”

Owen was going to argue that the terms weren’t equal until Avery gasped again. The look of terror on her face said it all. Dancing may not have been a big deal to Owen, but for Avery it was going to be every bit as awful as streaking through a crowded party.

“Deal,” Owen said and racked the balls. “I’ll even let your little ringer break.”

“Dancing?” Avery hissed in panic as I pushed her up to the table and handed her a cue. “Are you serious? I
can’t
dance! Especially not in front of all these people! I will die!”

“Dancing does not kill people.” I laughed. “If you’re really that worried about it, then just beat Owen. Come on, Aves, you have to admit it would be highly entertaining to see him lose.”

She was lined up in front of the balls now. When she looked at the table, she seemed to come back to herself. Pool was apparently a game Avery knew well and felt confident about. I was surprised by this and briefly wondered if Aiden knew this side of her. The possibility made me startlingly jealous.

“Okay,” she whispered and lined up her first shot. “I agree to the terms.”

And then I stood there and watched Little Avery Shaw run the table like a professional pool shark. She sunk ball after ball, analyzing every shot and never losing concentration. I’d never seen anything so hot in my life.

By the time she sunk the last ball, leaving only the eight left to sink for her win, even Owen was cheering her on. She stepped around the side of the table next to where I was standing. I bent down and kissed her cheek. “For luck.”

She blushed and gave me a shy smile, then leaned over to line up her cue. It looked like a clear, easy shot. Just as she called it and pulled back her cue, I maybe, sort of, accidently-on-purpose let my hand slide down her back and over the curve of her butt. At my gentle squeeze, Avery let out a shriek and botched the shot so bad the cue ball jumped the table.

The entire room gasped, and then there was a mixture of laughs and angry shouts.

Avery stood there, face brighter red than I’d ever seen it, gaping at me in utter disbelief. “I just lost,” she finally said. “You just made me lose.”

“I know,” I admitted, trying to look more repentant than I felt.

“By grabbing my butt!”

She was pissed. But was she mad that I’d copped a feel, or mad that I’d made her lose? I was hoping it was the latter.

“Yeah, I know, and I’m sorry. But seriously, Aves, you working that table had to be the sexiest thing I’ve ever seen, and I simply couldn’t let you win because I really, really, really want the chance to dance with you now.”

Owen clasped a hand on my shoulder and laughed. “Well, I’m not going to argue. My dignity thanks you.” He turned to Avery and put a hand on her shoulder too. “Try to go easy on the guy. It really was very sexy. I’ve never seen anyone play like that. You were amazing.”

Aves blushed again and muttered, “It’s a science club thing.”

“Well, I’ll be damned.” Owen laughed again and squeezed Avery in a quick hug. “Now throw this pathetic loser a bone and go dance with him.”

Avery

Dance.
Grayson expected me to dance. And this wasn’t middle-school dancing where you put your arms on your partner’s shoulders and turn in a circle. This was fast, fluid, and sexy. I was doomed.

Though it could have been worse. At first, Grayson tried to pull me into the crowd, but Pamela and Chloe came to my rescue.

“No way! I won this dance fair and square. You guys go find your own partners!”

Pamela crossed her arms and gave Grayson a stern look. “You cheated! As your punishment, Avery will be fulfilling the terms of her bet with Chloe and me. You said she had to dance. You didn’t say who got to teach her.”

“Yeah, she’s ours now.” Chloe tucked me behind her and pointed to the empty sofa. “You can go park it over there, Mr. Grabby McGrabbhands, and think about what you’ve done.”

Grayson eyed the couch and then frowned. “You guys are putting me in time out?”

“Yes!” Pamela very much liked that idea. “You, Grayson Kennedy, have earned a time out. Now go on. Shoo.”

Grayson looked worried for me, so Pamela eased up on him. “Avery is in excellent hands. Go find a drink or something and give us fifteen minutes to ease her into it.”

Grayson wasn’t happy, but eventually he looked at me and sighed. “You’re right. It’ll probably be easier for her to relax if it’s just you girls.” He smiled at me. “Remember it’s supposed to be fun.” He pointed to the couch that Chloe had just banished him to. “I’ll be right over there doing exactly as I’ve been told and thinking very hard about what I did.” He grinned then, so wickedly that I feared his next statement. “Remembering every glorious detail.”

I know he got smacked on the arm, but I wasn’t sure who’d done it, because I had to look away from him. The next thing I knew, I was being escorted into the middle of a crowd of people. Pamela whirled around to face me and grabbed onto my hands. “First, I just want you to relax. This isn’t as hard as you think.”

“Yeah,” Chloe chimed in. “You’ll be fine. It’s a lot easier to dance by yourself than with a guy.”

I looked at them with gratitude and a sense of awe. I’d always assumed that the most popular girls in school would be the catty mean girls you read about. Those girls definitely existed, Pam and Chloe had even warned me of the worst ones, but so far I’d discovered that Grayson didn’t put up with jerks, so the people at the top of the food chain with him were all really nice.

“You guys didn’t have to do that,” I said, even though I was more than grateful for their rescue.

“Oh, yes we did!” Chloe laughed. “Grayson gets away with murder. You were amazing out there. I can’t believe he made you mess up like that. We girls have to stick together. Plus, I was really looking forward to Owen’s strip show.”

“More than that,” Pamela said, “you are not ready to dance with Grayson.”

Chloe moaned in agreement and fanned herself. “So true. He means well, but . . .” She shivered at a memory. “That boy is trouble without even trying.”

I had no doubt about that. I looked at the couples dancing around us. That was enough to make me blush, and I was sure it would be worse dancing with Grayson.

“The best kind of trouble,” Pamela said wistfully.

I was pretty sure I understood what that look meant. Not that it was surprising that she’d dated Grayson.

Pamela may as well have been named after Pamela Anderson, because she was destined to be a supermodel. She was five ten and a perfect hourglass. She had rich chestnut hair that flowed all the way to her waist and always behaved no matter what the weather was like. She was the ideal counterpart to a guy like Grayson.

“You guys dated, didn’t you?” I asked.

She and Chloe both gave me guilty smiles.

“She was first,” Pamela said of Chloe.

“But she lasted longer,” Chloe said.

That surprised me. I was serious when I said I didn’t think anyone had ever lasted longer than the weekend with Grayson. “How long did you guys go out?”

Pamela smiled. “Not as long as you.”

“Me?” I gasped.

“It’s been almost three weeks since New Year’s Eve. I think that’s some kind of record for Grayson.”

“But Grayson and I aren’t dating!”

“Please.” Chloe laughed. “You are the closest thing to an actual girlfriend Grayson has ever had. You may not be kissing, but he doesn’t even look at other girls anymore.”

My jaw fell open and Pamela turned me around to face the couch. Grayson was sitting there watching us. He smiled at me and then yelled across the room at Pamela. “I don’t see any dancing going on! Do I need to come over there?”

Pamela rolled her eyes at him and then turned me back around.

“You see?” Chloe teased. “He only has eyes for you.”

“Completely smitten,” Pamela agreed.

I felt a flutter in my stomach and told myself it was nerves. No way could it be actual butterflies. I was in love with Aiden, not Grayson. The two brothers couldn’t be more different. Grayson and I had nothing in common. He just felt sorry for me. I was just one of the few girls he hadn’t conquered yet. It had him curious, but his interest, if it was really there, would fade. I was just a shiny new toy at the moment.

“I think it’s sweet,” Chloe said, while Pamela shook her head and laughed.

“I think it serves him right. As many girls as he’s made fall for him? It’s about time he gets a dose of his own medicine.”

I stumbled at the insinuation. “You think he’s
fallen
for me?”

“Enough chatting,” Pamela said with a knowing smile. “We’re supposed to be dancing. So, first I want you to just hear to the music. Listen for the beat. Close your eyes if it helps.”

She’d changed the subject, and that was fine by me. I couldn’t think about Grayson anymore, so I closed my eyes. The song was one I didn’t recognize, but the underlying beat was easy to pick out. The base was so deep that it vibrated in my chest. “Okay, so what am I supposed to do now?”

“Now? You just start to move.”

Like that was any kind of instruction?

“Try bobbing your head in time with the beat,” Chloe suggested.

“Or shifting your weight,” Pamela said. “Bounce on your toes. You have to get your whole body moving.”

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