Read The Problem with Forever Online
Authors: Jennifer L. Armentrout
My lips pursed as Rosa shot him a look.
“What?” He shook his head. “That wasn’t even a serious answer from her. Anyway, there’s something else we need to talk about.”
I cut off a huge chunk of enchilada as the conversation veered away from college studies to another topic I would just as soon avoid.
“Carl told me about tomorrow,” Rosa announced as I was about to shove a huge forkful of enchilada into my mouth. I froze, eyes wide. Round two was about to begin. “I think it’s a...good idea.”
Huh.
My gaze darted to Carl. He was cutting his enchilada with his fork in short, stabby motions.
“But I do have a favor to ask,” she continued, sitting back in her chair, and I went still, fork halfway to my mouth. “Try setting up a study date when we’re actually home.”
Holy balls.
Rosa smiled at me. Carl kept murdering his food. And I finally put the fork in my mouth. Okay. Round two was not happening.
After dinner I cleaned up and stored the leftovers in the fridge. They’d be perfect for tomorrow, for when I—
oh my God
—hung out with Rider, and then grabbed my bag and headed upstairs. Carl and Rosa were settled in the living room, and I could hear the
Jeopardy
music playing. Once upstairs, I opened up my laptop and clicked on the messenger app. Ainsley was online.
Clicking on her icon, I sent her a message.
You there?
A bubble appeared below and then her response:
Always.
I carried my laptop over to my bed and sat down, resting it in my lap.
I need your advice.
I am your sensei.
Rider is going to come over after school tomorrow and help me with my speech, and I’m not sure if I should have extra soda and food.
I paused.
And stuff.
The bubble immediately popped up.
Wait a sec. Back up. Rider is coming over to your house tomorrow?
I grinned, because I could practically see her face in my mind.
Yes.
Do Carl and Rosa know?
That grin faded and my stomach knotted.
Yes.
I paused.
Carl wasn’t too happy about it, but Rosa was okay.
Mallory Dodge!!! I’m so proud of you! You’re no longer a rebel. LOL.
My fingers flew over the keyboard.
Should I have soda or some food?
You normally have that stuff at the house anyway. So yes? I guess.
Ainsley was right. I already had those things and I was being stupid, but as I stared at her message, I wondered if it was smart to bring him here. Maybe studying at my house was too...too intimate and also not the coolest idea.
As much as Paige was a complete jerk to me, she had valid reasons. Rider coming over to my house would just be another reason for her to dislike me.
My mind raced over the possibilities. We could just go to the library. They had private study rooms. Going there would fix the problem about what snacks to serve. There would be no makeup retouching. That was probably another good thing. I wasn’t that great at putting makeup on and my face couldn’t handle a lot. Ainsley, on the other hand, could teach the beauty vloggers a thing or two.
Satisfied with my decision, I relaxed.
I think I’ll just ask if we can go to the library.
A couple of moments passed before she responded.
Um. Why?
I think it’s just smarter
, I sent back after a few seconds.
His girlfriend wouldn’t be happy with him being at my house.
Who cares about his girlfriend?
Ainsley!!!
I’m just kidding
, she typed back.
Though you’d think if it was a problem, he wouldn’t have agreed to come over to your house in the first place.
Good point.
It’s just easier to go to the library.
The bubble reappeared.
You’re weird, but I still love you and I have a question for you. A serious question. Totes serious.
My brows rose.
Okay.
Do you like Rider, like really like him?
The knots were making another appearance, but for a totally different reason. Did I like him,
like him
? The knots were pretty telling, but saying it made it real and something I couldn’t take back.
And I couldn’t make it real.
I liked Rider,
really
liked him, in a way that was so different than when we were kids. It was like being twelve all over again, but the crush this time around was much more powerful. And I knew it wasn’t right to have those feelings. He had a girlfriend and no matter how much I liked him, that wouldn’t change. I was okay with that. I had to be. What I was beginning to realize I felt for him belonged only to me.
It was all mine and no one else needed to know about it.
I exhaled slowly.
I didn’t respond, but Ainsley did with:
That’s what I thought.
I waited for her to say more, but when she didn’t, I typed:
Are you still there?
A minute or two passed and then her bubble popped up.
Sorry. Mom was in here making sure I wasn’t setting up meetings with random thirty-year-olds on Facebook.
Knowing she wasn’t joking, I laughed.
Another message from Ainsley popped up.
Text me and let me know how tomorrow goes. I’ll need some entertainment while waiting at the doc’s office.
I frowned and quickly typed back.
What doctor?
Mom is taking me to the eye doctor to get new glasses.
Didn’t you get new glasses last year?
Yeah, but I don’t think the prescription is good anymore. I have crap eyes. Plus, I think I need to get prescription sunglasses. The sun is sooooo bright. Anyway, I’m going to be bored waiting, so I expect updates.
I stretched out my legs.
I’m not sure if there’s going to be any exciting updates.
Oh, there should be.
She added a smiley face.
There better be.
Setting my laptop aside when the conversation ended, I threw my legs off the bed and walked over to where I left my bag on the desk. I fished out my phone and went to messages. I bit down on my lip as I sent Rider a quick message about practicing in the library.
Once done, I placed the phone on my bedside table and then picked up my history text and got down to studying. It wasn’t until it was close to nine o’clock that my phone dinged. I picked it up, seeing that it was a text from Rider.
That’s cool
, he’d responded.
For some reason, I wondered if it really was.
Chapter 17
Thursday officially became the day that would never end. The hours ticked by slowly and I turned into a nervous little freak when I left the class before speech and Rider wasn’t waiting for me. Immediately, my brain went into worst-possible-scenario mode.
What if Rider wasn’t in school? What if he really didn’t want to help me with my speech? What if he bailed? What if he didn’t want to jeopardize his relationship with Paige? All of these things felt like very real possibilities.
I hurried to class and took my seat in the back, my eyes glued to the door.
Paige came into class and I almost didn’t recognize her. She was wearing loose, black sweats and an oversize shirt. Her hair was pulled back at the crown in a ponytail, one not as sleek as before. As she drew closer, I could see that her eyes were slightly swollen.
She took her seat and as she dropped her bag onto the floor, she turned her head toward me. “What the hell are you staring at?”
Flushing, I cast my gaze back to the front of the classroom.
“Stupid bitch,” she muttered, and I flinched.
Retorts formed and then fizzled out on my tongue. I pressed my lips together, inhaling through my nose.
Next into class was Hector. He strode in, smiling at something Keira was saying. My chest squeezed at the ease in which she spoke and laughed with him. God, I wanted that.
My throat thickened, and I told myself that if Rider didn’t show, it wasn’t personal even though I knew I was going to take it personally. Just when I was about to face-plant the top of my desk, Rider moseyed on into class, notebook in hand and sleepy grin on his lips. Of course. He hadn’t bailed.
Tension eked out of my shoulders, and I told myself that I needed to get a grip.
“Yo.” Hector nodded at him as he passed his desk.
Rider murmured a response and then took his seat. He leaned over toward Paige, speaking too low for me to hear. I saw her shake her head. He put his hand on her arm. Surprise flickered through me when she jerked away. She slammed her textbook down on the desk, and I thought I heard him sigh.
He glanced over at me. “Hey, Mouse.”
“Hey,” I replied softly.
And that was the extent of what I said to him the entire class, which probably didn’t bode well. I was suddenly so incredibly nervous as we packed up our stuff at the end of the class and Rider waited for me.
“We heading straight over?” he asked.
I nodded, noticing that Paige had already exited the classroom. He arched a brow and said nothing as we filed out of the room, waving goodbye to Hector and Keira. It was a good thing that I was driving, because I could focus on that instead of the internal freak-out that was occurring.
We were heading to the library that was about a twenty-minute drive from the school, and I was white-knuckling it the moment we pulled out of the parking lot.
Rider noticed. Of course. “You doing okay over there?” he asked.
I nodded and then cleared my throat. I wanted to ask him about Paige, but the plug was filling up my throat. So stupid. I never had that problem with him, but I was just too stuck in my head. I needed to get my mouth to work.
“Is...is everything okay with...you and Paige?” It was painful but I managed to get the words out.
A moment passed. “Not really.”
“Do...you want to talk about it?” I asked.
“No.”
“Okay,” I breathed.
“I want to talk about anything other than that right now,” he added. “Okay?”
I tightened my grip on the steering wheel as I glanced up at the red stoplight. I could do that even though I was more than curious about the whole Paige situation now. But there was so much I wanted to know about him.
“How...did you...?” I glanced up at the red stoplight, mentally stringing together a litany of curse words until my tongue untied. I was so nervous it was like it was two years ago. “How did you start working at...the garage?”
He didn’t answer immediately, because I probably caught him off guard with the pure randomness of my question.
I flushed and squeezed down on the steering wheel. “I... I was just wondering about it. So I thought I’d ask. Sorry.”
“No. No, it’s cool.” When I peeked at him, he was staring out the windshield. “Razorback Garage is about a block or so from where I live. So I saw the owner—Drew—often. We talked whenever we crossed paths, you know? Sometimes I would hang out at the garage, because they had this detailer who did amazing work. Anyway, about a year ago or so, I got busted for tagging—unrelated to the school thing.”
“You get...caught a lot,” I said, turning right.
“Ha. Yeah. Apparently. Anyway. Drew ended up hearing about it. So when I saw him again, he asked me to show him some of my stuff. And I did. He liked it. Thought it was pretty cool. The rest is history.”
I slowed for another stoplight. “That’s really...amazing.”
“I’m lucky,” he replied, grinning then. “Drew pays me pretty good.”
“Because you’re really good at what you do,” I told him.
The dimple appeared. “I could, um, show you some of my work at the garage if you want? I mean, it’s not that exciting and you’d probably like to do something else, but—”
“I’d love to.” My heart was tripping over itself.
His dimple hung around for that.
“Do you...save the money from working?” I asked.
“Nah. I spend it all on liquor and girls.”
I shot him a look.
Rider chuckled. “Yeah, I save the money. I’m eighteen, going to graduate in May. Need to be looking toward the future. Got to get a place. The checks will stop coming in and even though I know Mrs. Luna wouldn’t kick me out, it isn’t right. She’ll have to bring in another kid.”
At the library, I pulled into the parking lot and searched for a space. “What about college?”
“Ah, I don’t see that in my future to-do list.”
“Why?” I didn’t understand. “You’re...really smart. College will probably be a breeze for you.”
He shifted in the seat. “I don’t know. That costs money, Mouse, and I’m not saving up that kind of money.”
“But there are scholarships and grants.” Finding a parking spot near the back, I eased in and turned off the car. I looked over at him. “What about that?”
A muscle flexed along his jaw. “Yeah, I know, but...I just don’t see it in my future. I mean, hell, people would probably fall over dead from shock if my ass ended up in college.”
I frowned. “I wouldn’t.”
He glanced over at me as he unlocked his seat belt and his grin tipped up a notch. “You’ve changed. A lot. But there are still things about you that are the same.”
I wasn’t sure if that was a good or bad thing.
Rider reached over and unhooked my seat belt. “You’ve never seen what everyone else sees when it comes to me,” he explained.
Now I was just confused. “What is that supposed to mean?”
“You think— I don’t know. That I’m something that I’m not.” Stretching behind him, he grabbed my bag off the backseat. “You see me as a white knight.”
What in the hell?
I watched him open the car door and climb out with my bag in hand. Frozen for a moment, I snatched my keys out of the ignition and hurried after him. “I don’t think you’re a white knight.”
Rider cast me a long side look. “You’re pretty much the only person who thinks my name and college go together in the same sentence.”
I had to pick up my pace to keep up with his long legs. “That’s stupid.”
He eyed me warily as he opened the door. “It’s whatever.”
“No, it’s not.” I stopped inside the set of doors and stared up at him. He was suspended in motion, reaching for the main entrance. “You could do college if that’s what you wanted. Your name and college...make total sense together.”
His gaze lifted to the ceiling as his lips pressed together. What felt like an eternity passed before he said, “Huh.”
That was it?
Rider walked into the library, and after a moment I followed him. He went right up to the circulation desk and we lucked out since there was only one room available. As we walked through the tall, stocked stacks, I breathed in deeply, loving the scent of books. A memory wiggled loose.
I curled onto my side, knees tucked to my chest. Tears had dried on my cheeks. Tonight had been bad. Mr. Henry’s friends were over and I knew they wouldn’t be leaving for a while. The room was cold and dark and the ratty blanket was so thin. I huddled down, shoving my hands between my legs to keep them warm.
The door cracked open and a slight form slipped inside. I let out the breath I was holding. Rider crept toward the bed. I scooted over, against the wall. The mattress shook as he settled in beside me. A second later a soft yellow light flipped open. The small flashlight wouldn’t draw attention.
Rider brought his knees up, pressing his against mine as he took a deep breath. “There was once a Velveteen Rabbit, and in the beginning he was really splendid
.”
Drawing in a sharp breath, I looked up at Rider and for a moment I saw him in the past. “Do you remember reading to me?”
He nodded as his lips curled up. “Of course.”
I didn’t say anything else as we walked into the room. It was cool inside, and at once, I was grateful for the long-sleeved shirt.
Rider flipped on the light and then dropped my bag on the table. “So why did you change it to the library?” he asked before I could start harping on the college thing again.
Ainsley’s question from last night resurfaced and I shoved it away. I could tell him it was because of Paige, but I figured he didn’t want to hear that right now. “I thought...it would be easier.”
He nodded in response.
I watched him for a moment and then walked over to my bag and unzipped it. The tinny sound echoed in the cool, white-walled room. There was nothing in here except a round table and four chairs. A lone black Sharpie rested in the center of the table.
Rider sat and leaned back, tossing his arm along the back of the chair next to him. He looked over at me, a small grin teasing his lips. Our gazes collided and held. A flutter took flight deep in my chest. His grin spread and the flutter increased.
“Why are you looking...at me like that?” The moment the question left my lips I sort of wanted to shove it back in. It was a stupid question.
The dimple appeared. “I like staring at you.”
My brows rose.
He chuckled. “That kind of sounded creepy, didn’t it? What I meant is that... Well, yeah, I like staring at you. So it is as creepy as it sounds.”
Smiling, I shook my head. “It’s not...creepy. I just...”
“What?” he asked when I didn’t continue.
What could I say to him? That I didn’t get why he would enjoy staring at me? That there were much better options out there for him? That would sound terrible. It wasn’t like I thought I was the ugliest person in the world. I was...I guess, passably pretty. But I was realistic about the way I looked, and I didn’t look like Paige or Keira or Ainsley.
I shook my head, focusing on something else. “You want...to go first?” I offered, pulling out my notebook. I flipped it open, and pulled out the speech I had folded.
“Would love to.” Rider leaned forward with a grin. “But I haven’t written mine yet.”
My mouth dropped open. “What?”
“I’ll get to it.” He waved his hand dismissively. “Go ahead.”
“But you’ve seriously only been drawing in class? Not working—”
“I’ll have it down, Mouse. Promise.” He lifted his hand, wiggling his pinky at me. “I’ll pinky promise.”
I sighed. “I don’t...need a pinky promise.”
Rider just grinned as he leaned back and crossed his arms. Taking a deep breath, I stared down at my speech. The words blurred a bit, as if there was something wrong with my vision. My heart rate kicked up. I drew in a deep breath that got caught.
“You can do this,” he said quietly.
I closed my eyes briefly. I could do this. “The United States of America...has th-three branches of the...”
I did it.
Well, I struggled through it, and I was pretty sure my first run did not come in under three minutes. More like ten as I got hung up on a word and then I started stuttering, because my eyes kept wanting to read ahead, so that didn’t help. At Rider’s suggestion, I tried it sitting down. Then standing again. I did it so many times there was a good chance I might be able to remember it by heart.
Rider was patient through the whole thing, which pretty much raised him to saint status, because who seriously wanted to listen to me pause and stutter through an informative speech about a dozen times. Someone could record it and Satan could play it over and over, on an endless loop, to torture people in hell.
“I...I hate that I have to think about every single word.” I sat down and dropped the paper on the table, my arms falling into my lap. “It’s embarrassing. People are going to make fun...of me.”
“People are assholes, Mouse. You already know that.” He paused as he scooped some of my hair back, gently tossing the strands over my shoulder. “And there’s nothing to be embarrassed about.”
I glanced over at him. Everything about his steady gaze and the serious press of his lips screamed earnest. But he was wrong. “It
is
...embarrassing.”
“Not if you don’t let it be.” His leg brushed mine as he turned in his seat, facing me. Our eyes met. “You have the power over that. People can say crap. They can think whatever they want, but you control how you feel about it.”
Damn.
That was deep and mature.
“You sound like Dr. Taft,” I blurted out.
His brows lifted. “Who’s that?”
“He was...” Oh. Hold up. Rider didn’t know I’d been seeing a therapist.
He tilted his head to the side and waited. “He was what?”
Oh no. I should’ve kept my mouth shut. Deep down, I knew that having received therapy wasn’t something to feel bad about. With my background—our background—it was, frankly, expected. But just like with not talking, there was an ugly and oftentimes brutal stigma attached to therapy.
And Rider? He appeared to come out of our childhood relatively unscathed. Hadn’t he? He wasn’t seeing a therapist. He talked normally. Was he really unscathed, though? I thought about all the classes he skipped and how he said no one really cared. Rider believed that, so did he expect nothing for himself?