The Hit List (21 page)

Read The Hit List Online

Authors: Nikki Urang

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Coming of Age, #The Hit List

“I don’t know how to be in a relationship.” Luke looks out at the water, almost like he’s talking to himself.

I stare at my hands, not sure whether I should respond. He’s silent and it’s awkward. We’re not the kind of friends to divulge this kind of information to each other. We’re barely the kind of friends who spend time with each other outside of school.

I play with a rock on the pier, tossing it between my hands. I don’t know what to say, but I can’t just not say anything. He’s expecting some kind of answer after dropping that bombshell on me.

I knew he had commitment issues, but I’d always heard it from other people. Hearing it from him feels special somehow.

He continues, saving me from having to come up with something to say. “I don’t know how to pretend to love you. I sleep around a lot because I can’t do relationships.” He leans back against his elbows on the pier.

My hand twitches when he mentions sleeping around and I find myself focusing more on how many girls he’s slept with this year than on the important information he’s giving me. I watch the horizon so I don’t have to look at his face. The same sailboat drifts back and forth. For the first time today, I’m a little mad we’re not back in the city. At least there are more distractions in L. A.

His vulnerability is back. I know it’s to help me understand him better, to trust him better, but it has the opposite effect. It makes me want to dive off the end of the pier to get out of the awkward situation he’s putting me in.

He tosses the corner of his sandwich into the ocean, still not looking at me. “My career will always come before a girl, and I feel like it’s unfair to lead someone on like that. I don’t know what it’s like to be in love. Or to break-up. So it’s kind of hard for me to act like I do.”

I’m frozen, refusing to make eye contact, my arms wrapped around my knees, just trying to remember how to breathe.

In. Out. In. Out.

I resist the urge to tell him the truth about New York, the reason I’m so hesitant to trust anyone. I swallow my nerves and step off the edge of the cliff with him again.

“I thought I was in love once. Back in New York. But he did something that people in love don’t do. And it took that for me to realize I probably wasn’t in love with him. I was in love with the idea of being in love.”

He watches me, but my eyes stay glued to the sailboat. “What happened?”

The sailboat gets blurry as tears form in my eyes. This is it. I have to make this leap. Just like Adam said, I have to choose to trust Luke.

“You’ve read the article, but I guess no one knows what really happened. We were dating, things were awesome. We had everything going for us. And then I got hurt when he dropped me.”

He nods. “That was in the article.”

I look out at the water again. I don’t like that he’s read the article. It paints me in a bad light. The injury had really bad timing and it became the sole focus. I’ve never wanted anyone to feel bad for me, especially not him. “What the article doesn’t say is how that injury was right before our final show of the year—the show the New York Ballet Company’s artistic director came to see. We were both supposed to be signed. And then I got hurt and I couldn’t dance, so I didn’t get a contract. But he did. And as soon as he was offered a spot, it was like I didn’t exist anymore.”

“You felt abandoned.”

I glance over at him, nodding. His eyes burn into me in a way only someone who’s felt the exact same thing can express. His mouth opens a little like he’s going to say something else, but he doesn’t. “It was like none of it mattered to him. He just wanted a step up in the world and he used me to get it. I never wanted to partner again after that. I won’t be someone else’s stepping-stone. That’s why it’s hard for me to trust you.”

His hand finds mine at my side and we sit like that for a long time, silently staring out at the ocean while every thought fills my head. Thoughts of what it would be like if we were different, if we weren’t afraid of our feelings, if I wasn’t so scared all the time. We’re crossing another line just by having this conversation. Pretty soon it’s going to be hard to find our way back.

“Why do you do it? It’s so hard for you to dance with me. You’re doing better, but you still hold back. Why stay here and continue to put yourself through that every day?”

His thumb rubs against mine and I pull it out of his grasp to remove the sensation. I can’t think when he does that.

“It’s been my dream to do this since I was a little girl. This is what I love. I don’t know who I am without dance.”

Though I’m starting to get an idea. Every time he touches me, every time he lets me pull away, every time he celebrates my small victories, I’m starting to see the person I’ve become through the people I’ve met here, the person they’re helping me to be.

A couple of kids run past us, giggling as they chase each other up and down the pier. The younger one stops to wave at us as she passes. I wave back. She takes off down the pier, her chaser in hot pursuit.

Luke stretches his legs out in front of him. His feet dangle over the edge of the pier. Earlier today he looked like a carefree guy enjoying a day off. Now the heaviness of the conversation weighs on his face. “Don’t let dance define you. One day, you won’t have it anymore, either from age or injury. And then you won’t have anything left because you spent your life chasing something that has to end, eventually.”

“What defines you?”

He looks over at me, a frown creasing his forehead. “I haven’t decided yet.”

He doesn’t say anything else. I know he’s right. Eventually, I’ll be too old to dance. And if I’m lucky, another injury won’t end my career early. If it does, it leaves me to find something else to focus on. Hopefully that never happens.

A shadow passes over the sun as the clouds begin to roll in. Luke sits calmly beside me, but he looks over at me when I shift my position to lean back against my hands. His eyes tell a different story than all the words he’s spoken today. There’s hope. Like maybe a relationship could work. He’s the only one in his own way now, and I can’t help him with that. Maybe he’ll figure out a way before it’s too late for him.

He stands up and holds out his hand to me. “Will you dance with me?”

The last thing I want to do is dance. I’m perfectly content sharing this space with him in silence. “Now? Can’t we take a break from dancing? We dance all the time.”

“Not on a pier in the middle of the ocean.”

I raise an eyebrow at him and look around at the minimal space surrounding us at the edge of the pier. “We can’t dance here.”

I don’t want to tell him the real reason I don’t want to dance with him. I’m afraid I can’t conceal my emotions right now. I don’t want him to realize that I want exactly what he’s already told me he can’t give me.

“We’ll be fine. We’re not going to break out in choreography right here. Come on. Just dance with me. We won’t fall in.”

That’s exactly what worries me. Falling. But I roll my eyes and grab his hand, letting him pull me up. “We don’t even have any music. This isn’t the movies. Music doesn’t just start playing in the background.”

He takes his phone out of his pocket and presses some things on the screen before tucking it into the pocket on his sweatshirt. Soft music from the phone speakers floats around us and I can’t help laughing at him.

“This is weird,” I say.

“This is fun,” he says, pulling me close to him.

He leads me around in small circles, careful not to get too close to the edge. This is the most real we’ve been with each other since we met. And I can feel it in our dancing. Luke feels at ease, and I allow myself to relax in his arms.

“Truth or dare.” He leans his head against mine on his shoulder.

“No. I’m not playing this again.”

It ended badly the last time. I don’t know why he thinks it will be any different this time.

“If you don’t pick, I’m going to pick for you.”

I lift my head off his shoulder and lean back to look at him, trying to decide if he’s kidding. He’s not. “Fine. Whatever. Dare.”

He pauses for a beat before he answers. “I dare you to trust me.”

All the blood rushes away from my head and I feel a little lightheaded. My hands shake and I clench them into fists so he doesn’t notice. Maybe I heard him wrong.

“What are you afraid of?” His eyes sparkle with the challenge. A smile plays at the corner of his mouth.

There are too many things to name. I’m afraid of what I feel, what he feels, what will happen to us if we ever admit to each other how we feel.

I nod. “I do trust you. I wouldn’t be here right now if I didn’t.”

His brow creases. “There’s a ‘but’ in there somewhere.”

If I don’t tell him now, I probably never will. “I don’t want to live the real-life version of our dance. And I don’t want a repeat of New York.”

His grip tightens around me. “I would never let that happen.”

My heart soars at his words, but I won’t allow myself to be happy. This isn’t a relationship. This is the two of us, so far removed from what’s normal, and grasping at anything that might work better than the two of us alone. “You can’t promise that.”

“I can’t. But I can promise to try like hell not to hurt you.” He kisses my temple and rests his chin on the top of my head.

I want to look at him, to ask him what he feels, but I already know. He feels exactly like I do. Scared shitless by the thought of caring about another person, but willing to try to make something work.

THE HIT LIST UPDATE

October 18

This isn’t so much an update as it is a notice to let everyone know I’m officially shutting down the blog. Things have gotten way out of hand since it started. I wanted it to be big, but I wasn’t really anticipating that it would be as big as it’s gotten. I can’t keep up with it and I don’t have time for it. I hope all our Hitters had a great time and our audience playing along got some entertainment out of it.

Happy hitting!

~ THE HIT MAN

13

The cafeteria is packed. I grab an apple from the line, not feeling up to anything else. My stomach can’t handle anything heavy on tryout day. Brielle grabs a granola bar from the line and hands a dollar to the girl behind the register.

We sit down at an empty table. Brielle doesn’t talk as she eats her granola bar. It’s fine with me. My mind is consumed with tryout stuff anyway. I take a bite of my apple and stare off into space.

There are so many things that could go wrong. Our chemistry could suck, Luke could drop me, we could forget the steps. Ugh. This is too much pressure.

A tray slams down on the table in front of me. “Good morning, ladies.”

I smile up at Luke. “Morning.”

Brielle rolls her eyes and stands up.

I grab her sleeve and pull her back down into the seat. “Get over it and sit down. You’re fine.”

“Fine.” She points at Luke. “But I’m watching you, Morrison.”

The table is silent as everyone chews their breakfast. Brielle looks content. Most of her attitude in front of Luke is all for show. She’s already told me I should go for it with him if that’s what I want.

“Did you guys hear about that blog? It was shut down last night.” Luke pushes a chunk of waffle around his plate with his fork. He shoves it in his mouth when the waffle won’t hold any more syrup.

“You’re joking. It seemed so popular. Why would they shut it down?” Brielle shoves the last of her granola bar in her mouth.

“Maybe the faculty got involved.” It’s not like the blog was a secret. Anyone could find it with a Google search.

Luke shakes his head as he chews. “I don’t think that’s it. He said he was too busy.”

“Well, that’s probably true. Fall Showcase is right around the corner. Sex should probably take a backseat to your career.” Brielle slides down in her chair and rests her head against the back to look up at the ceiling.

Luke points his fork at Brielle as he chews. “Unless sex is your career.”

She rolls her eyes and turns sideways in her chair to look at me. “Why do you like him again?”

His eyes widen playfully. “You like me?”

“So, how about tryouts? Everybody ready?” I take a bite of my apple to avoid having to say anything else.

Luke watches me as he eats. The grin never leaves his face. “We’re totally ready.”

“I can’t believe they’re making us go to class today. That’s like torture. I just want to get tryouts over with.” Brielle balls up the wrapper from her granola bar.

“They’ll be here before you know it.” Luke leans back in his chair and stares at the table.

Brielle scoots her chair closer to the table. “Well, I think we’re all going to make it.”

“What if we don’t?” Luke says it as a joke, but I can hear the seriousness behind his question. Even he isn’t guaranteed a spot.

“You don’t have a choice, Morrison. Sadie needs to be in that show.” Brielle raises an eyebrow at Luke.

He looks across the table at me and shrugs. “I guess you have a point.”

I cross my arms. “I feel so confident now. Thanks.”

He reaches for my hand across the table. I don’t pull it away. “We’ll be fine. Promise.”

The last time someone promised me something was Patrick. And he broke it. I have to believe Luke. I won’t have anything left to believe in if I don’t.

Other books

Adrienne Basso by How to Be a Scottish Mistress
Flood Rising (A Jenna Flood Thriller) by Jeremy Robinson, Sean Ellis
The Quilter's Daughter by Wanda E. Brunstetter
The Reluctant Husband by Madeleine Conway
Rosemary: The Hidden Kennedy Daughter by Larson, Kate Clifford
My Never: a novella by Swann, Renee
Shattering Inside by Lisa Ahne