The Kissing Booth (2 page)

Read The Kissing Booth Online

Authors: Beth Reekles

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Love & Romance, #cookie429, #Kat, #Extratorrents

Lee groaned. ‘Why do you need to go shopping? Don’t you have enough clothes?’

‘Yes, I do . . . But you’re having a party tonight and I’m in a good mood since we’ve sorted out this booth
at last
. So we’re going shopping to buy me something to wear later.’

Lee groaned again. ‘You just want a hot dress so you can impress my brother, don’t you?’

‘No. I just want to go get something to wear. But if I do end up impressing your brother . . . that’s just a bonus. Not to mention a freaking miracle. We both know he doesn’t even think about me in that way . . .’

Lee sighed. ‘Fine, fine, we’re going shopping. Stop your moaning.’

I grinned triumphantly; I knew I could convince him. Lee realized I was faking my moaning, but he didn’t want to hear it either way.

I picked up my sweater and waited for Lee to grab his wallet and sneakers. I bounced downstairs while he trailed behind me. We got into his car – a 65 Mustang he’d got for a steal at a scrap yard – and Lee turned on the engine.

‘Thanks, Lee.’

‘The things I do for you,’ he sighed, but he was smiling.

We were at the mall in twenty minutes. Lee turned off the engine, leaving my ears ringing slightly from the hip-hop that had been blasting out.

‘You know you owe me for dragging me here.’

‘I’ll buy you a donut.’

Lee wavered. ‘And a milkshake.’

‘Done.’

He slung his arm around my shoulders and I quickly realized why – when he guided me straight to the food court before I could conveniently forget about his bribe. Once Lee was pacified with snacks, he was quite happy to trail around after me to the shops.

After browsing a few stores, I found the perfect outfit.

It was a coral-colored dress, the skirt not too tight or short, and the neck low enough to be flattering without revealing everything. The soft, sheer material was bunched up down the left-hand side, concealing the long zip.

‘Do we have to go shoe shopping now too?’ Lee moaned as I announced I was trying it on.

‘No, I have shoes, Lee,’ I said, rolling my eyes.

‘Yeah, well, you have clothes too, but that didn’t stop you,’ he muttered, following me to the changing rooms. He didn’t think twice about wandering into the cubicle with me and lying across the stool. But then again, I didn’t give a second thought to changing in front of him.

‘Zip me up?’

He sighed wearily, and got to his feet to oblige. I looked in the mirror, smoothing the dress. It looked better on the hanger, I thought doubtfully. It showed an awful lot of leg . . .

Lee let out a low wolf-whistle. ‘Nice.’

‘Shut up. Do you think it’s too short?’

He shrugged and smacked my ass. ‘Who cares?’

Playfully, I smacked him across the head in reply. ‘I’m serious, Lee. Is it too short?’

‘Well. Maybe a little. But it looks good.’

‘Are you sure?’

‘You think I’d lie to you, Shelly?’ he asked sadly, putting on a pained expression and staggering back, hands clutched over his heart.

I gave him a look in the mirror. ‘Do you need me to answer that, Lee?’

‘No, I guess not,’ he laughed. ‘So you gonna get it?’

I nodded. ‘Yeah, I guess. It’s fifty percent off.’

‘Cool.’ Then he groaned. ‘You’re not spending that other fifty percent on shoes, are you? Please tell me you’re not. If you are, then you owe me a soda
and
pizza.’

‘I promise I’m not buying shoes, or anything else, okay? We can go home after I buy the dress.’ I stepped out of it and put on my jeans and top and sweater: the air-con in the mall made it freezing.

‘Aw,’ he sighed. ‘I wanted pizza.’

I laughed, walking out of the cubicle with him in tow. I walked straight into something – no, some
one
.

‘Sorry,’ I apologized reflexively. Then I realized who it was. ‘Oh, hi, Jaime.’

She looked suspiciously from me to Lee, and a sly smile slipped onto her face. Jaime was the biggest gossip in the school, and while she was really nice, she is one of those people who can annoy you very easily for no reason.

‘What’re you two doing in here? This is the girls’ changing rooms, Lee, you know.’

He shrugged. ‘Elle needed a second opinion.’

‘Okay,’ she said; she actually sounded kind of disappointed, like she’d hoped there was a more gossip-worthy reason. ‘Sure thing. Hey, I heard you’re having a party tonight. Your brother’s going to be there, right?’

Lee rolled his eyes. ‘Yeah.’

Jaime smiled brightly. ‘Great!’

‘Are you dress shopping too?’ I asked her, just making small talk.

‘No, I need a new pair of jeans. My dog decided that my jeans made a better toy than his squeaky ball.’

I laughed. ‘What a nice dog.’

‘Tell me about it. Are you wearing that tonight?’ She nodded at the dress in my hands.

‘Yeah.’

‘I’m not sure it’s really your color . . .’ she said, but I caught the muscle twitch in her cheek, and the expression was one I’d learned to read over the years. Jealousy. I took that as a good sign.

‘Hmm, maybe . . . But it’s on sale. I can’t resist a good bargain.’

She laughed politely. ‘Yeah, I guess. Well, see you guys later!’

‘Bye, Jaime,’ we chorused, and I heard Lee sigh and mumble something about how much she annoyed him.

I paid for the dress and we made another stop by the food court so he could get a slice of pizza before we left. I just had a milkshake.

‘Don’t spill that in my baby,’ he warned when I was slurping it as I got into his car.

‘Of course I won’t!’ I nearly did, though, and, seeing his threatening look, I didn’t dare take another sip till we hit a red light.

As Lee pulled up in his driveway, I checked the time. ‘Almost six . . . I’d better head home and get ready,’ I said.

‘You can be such a girl sometimes, Shelly.’

I laughed. ‘Are you only just noticing?’

Lee laughed and headed inside. ‘See you later,’ he called over his shoulder.

‘Bye!’

Nobody was home when I got in, but I wasn’t that surprised. My younger brother, Brad, had a soccer tournament today and Dad had probably taken him out for burgers or something after.

I put my iPod into my speakers and let Ke$ha blast out loudly, so that I’d hear it from the shower with the water roaring in my ears.

When I stood in my towel, scrutinizing the dress, doubts about it started creeping into my mind. I’d grown up with Lee, and without a mom, so I wasn’t the biggest girly-girl; but that didn’t stop me from dressing up for things like this. I shook my head and berated myself. The dress was way longer than some of the girls’
school
skirts, for Pete’s sake. It was fine.

So I sat at my dresser, make-up in front of me, my curling iron heating up. I carefully blended foundation over my skin, and perfected my eyeliner to make my brown eyes pop. I took my time to make sure my hair, shiny and coconut-scented after my shower, was cascading down my back in perfect coal-black ringlets.

I felt more than a little self-conscious when I looked at myself in the dress – along with a pair of black wedges with two-inch heels. I knew there would be girls who had their make-up way over the top, dresses way shorter than mine, and heels much higher than mine. But I wavered, wondering if I really did look okay.

But by then it was suddenly thirteen minutes past eight. Where had my two hours gone?

I tore my phone out of its charger, seeing a text from Lee asking where I was.

I walked cautiously around to his house. My heels weren’t high, but I always felt more comfortable in flats.

There were people milling around the yard, and the front door was open, letting the bass spill out; it made the grass tremble. I smiled and greeted people on my way through to the kitchen to get myself a drink.

I was looking through the refrigerator, unsurprised that they’d moved all the food out to make space for the drinks people had brought. Lee and Noah tended to do that, after some kids thought it’d be funny to stick slices of ham and turkey to the walls with condiments a few months back.

I grabbed a bottle of orange soda and cracked it open on the kitchen worktop, a trick Lee’s dad had shown me.

‘Hey, Elle!’

I turned and saw a group of girls waving me over. I smiled to them.

‘Hi, guys.’

‘Olivia said you and Lee are doing a kissing booth for the carnival,’ said Georgia. ‘That’s so cool!’

‘Thanks.’ I grinned.

‘Nobody’s done one of those for years,’ said Faith. ‘It’s such an awesome idea!’

‘Well, we are pretty
awesome
people.’

They laughed. ‘I will most definitely be stopping by that booth,’ Candice said with a sly smile. ‘I heard Jon Fletcher’s doing it.’

‘And Dave Peterson,’ Georgia added.

‘Jon’s doing it?’ I asked.

‘That’s what Dave said.’ Candice shrugged.

Faith laughed. ‘It’s your booth, Elle – you should know.’

I smiled sheepishly. ‘Yeah, well . . .’

‘Hey, you know who you should’ve got to do it?’ Olivia told me. ‘
Flynn
.’

For a brief moment I wondered who the hell she was talking about. Then I realized she meant Noah, of course.

‘I don’t think he’d do it.’

‘Well, did you ask?’

‘Not exactly . . .’

‘Couldn’t he do it as a favor to his kid brother, at least?’ Georgia said. ‘Pull the guilt card – that’d work.’

‘But I think we’ve got our four guys . . .’

‘But if you had Flynn, every girl in the
state
would turn up at our carnival,’ Olivia said. She, like every other girl, thought she had a chance with Flynn. Well, she kind of did, being head cheerleader, and Noah being on the football team, but Noah never gave her a second glance.

Yet somehow he had a reputation as a player, even though you never saw him pay girls much attention. The weirdest thing was, he almost seemed proud of that status.

‘You know, if you got Flynn to do the kissing booth, you’d be a legend,’ Faith told me.

‘You’ve got a boyfriend, Faith,’ Georgia reminded her with a laugh. ‘You can’t go to the kissing booth.’

‘Why not? It’s all for a good cause. What is it this time – saving the dolphins?’

‘I think that was last year,’ I laughed. ‘No, it’s for cancer research charities this year.’

‘Even better!’ Faith exclaimed, making us all laugh. ‘Ask him.’

‘Yeah, go on,’ Olivia urged me.

‘Just ask,’ Candice pleaded. ‘Please, Elle?’

‘Well . . . I don’t know . . .’

‘Look, here he comes,’ Candice said suddenly, interrupting me. She gave me a gentle shove. ‘Just ask him, at least. If he says no . . . at least you tried.’

‘Fine,’ I sighed, giving in. I wandered over to intercept Noah on his way to get another beer.

He nodded at me.

‘Will you do the kissing booth for us, for the Spring Carnival? Please? We can’t find a fourth guy. It’s for charity. Lee and I really need a favor.’

Noah straightened up, cracking open his can. ‘Kissing booth, huh?’

‘Yeah.’

‘That’s cool.’

‘I know. I’m a cool person.’

‘Better than your duck idea.’

‘Ha-ha.’

He gave a breath of laugher and a half-smirk that made my heart skitter wildly. ‘And you want me to be a kisser? At your kissing booth?’

‘It’s for a good cause?’ I tried.

‘Don’t think so, Shelly.’

‘Please, Noah?’ I begged, using the puppy-dog eyes and putting a heavy emphasis on his name.

‘Will you go on your knees and beg?’

‘No,’ I said slowly, ‘but every other girl will. Would that do it?’

He laughed a little. ‘That’s why I’m going to say no, sorry.’

I sighed. ‘Well, they can’t say I didn’t try.’

‘Hold on,’ he said. ‘Did you actually
need
me to do it, or do they just want me to do it?’ he asked, jerking his head past me at the girls.

‘The latter.’

He nodded. ‘Well, sorry. I don’t think I can risk my dignity. Plus, imagine how much all the other guys would hate me for stealing all the kisses,’ he said with a smirk.

‘I was thinking something more along the lines of how much the charity would hate you for putting people off coming to the kissing booth.’

He smirked. ‘
Touché
.’

‘Whatever . . .’ I shook my head. ‘Forget it.’

I wandered back to the cheerleaders, shrugging with an apologetic smile. ‘Sorry, guys. He won’t do it.’

‘You should’ve tried harder,’ Olivia said. ‘Watch and learn.’ She thrust her drink at Faith, and sauntered over to Noah, who was talking to a couple of boys. Olivia, in her extremely little black dress, was leaning on Noah’s arm, all but throwing herself at him, and it looked like she had something in her eye, the way she was batting her eyelashes.

Then again, maybe I was just being a little too critical. I mean, her technique seemed to turn a few other guys’ heads, at least.

Needless to say, he obviously told her no too: she pouted and stalked back to us. ‘That guy is so obnoxious.’

‘And so hot,’ Georgia muttered, sipping her drink.

‘Hell yeah,’ Olivia agreed with a laugh. The girls all giggled and looked around to check him out.

‘Don’t you think Flynn’s hot, Elle?’

I looked at Faith, blinking. ‘Well, yeah. Of course he is.’

‘Then why aren’t you talking about his fine ass?’

I smiled wryly. ‘Because he’s so far out of my league there’s no point in even trying.’

She gave me a sympathetic look. ‘What are you on about? You’re really pretty! I mean, I’d kill for hair like yours.’

I shrugged, and blushed a little. ‘Thanks, I guess. But whatever, he’s just Lee’s big brother to me now.’

‘Maybe there’s something there. You never know.’

I laughed. ‘Yeah, right. In my dreams.’

Faith shrugged and Candice started talking to her, so I excused myself and slipped into the lounge, where everybody was dancing. I finished off my soda in a few gulps and set the bottle down before joining in. The atmosphere was contagious; not everybody was drinking alcohol, but that didn’t stop them from letting their hair down and going a little crazy.

I hadn’t intended to get drunk. I knew I could have a good time without any of that stuff. But I was a complete lightweight, so by the time I’d had two cans of apple cider, I was pretty out of it. Time flew past, and I was dancing around, laughing and chatting to people.

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