Read The Sound of Us Online

Authors: Ashley Poston

The Sound of Us (13 page)

When I look back to Roman, he’s still and silent. He closes his eyes and breathes out a breath, and then opens them again. There is a subtle shift in him, as if a cold part of him slides into place like the last piece in a puzzle. It’s the slant of his eyebrow, the way his lips purse into a thin line, the bitterness that festers under his skin. Was the orange-haired hipster just a mask? A dream? Someone he could be for a few days—a lie?

The Roman I know is gone.

The longhaired photographer heckles, “Hey, Roman! How did it feel to kill your best friend and
get away with it
?”

Another flash brightens the room like a firecracker, and another, and another. The crowd is now turning, migrating their attention away from Boaz, to Roman, to us.

Roman takes a step back, and then two.

Helplessly, I watch him leave me behind.

Onstage, Boaz rounds in front of his piano, squinting out into the crowd. He points at someone and shoots a rude gesture.

“Hey, how’s it like to lie to everyone?” the paparazzo barks. “How’s it feel to lie to
Junie Baltimore
?”

The moment he says my name, Roman freezes, and whips around to me. Hurt fills his eyes, and I want to explain that he came looking for me last night, that I don’t know how he found me...but then the hurt transforms into contempt.

“All the lies catch up to us, Roman!” Cackling, the paparazzo waves his camera in the air. This has to be the guy who’s trailed him for a year; the one Maggie always talks about. “All
your
lies! That cutie Junie looks like a nice little
secret
!”

That’s it. Setting my jaw, I elbow through the crowd to the paparazzo himself. “Leave him alone!”

“Thanks, doll, you really made my job easy,” he sneers.

“I said leave him
alone
.”

He gives me a lewd once-over. “How long have
you
screwed him? You’re pretty enough, at least.”

I pale. “Excuse me?”

“You know he’s just using you, right?”

The crowd begins to react, finally, taking out their cell phones and disposable cameras, but I barely notice. Roman, using me? “I don’t understand.”

“Don’t play dumb, doll,” the paparazzo chides. “You know Roman.”

“He’s different.”

A sickening, twisted grin contorts his face. “And how many girls do you think he told that to, sweetie?”

I narrow my eyes. “Don’t call me sweetie,
asshole
.” I thrust my knee into his money-sack. The impact makes him gasp, and he jerks to his knees. I snag his camera as he goes down. Maggie has the exact same one. I pop open the bottom and take out the memory card.

Then, someone grabs me by the shoulder.

I spin around, fists raised, expecting one of the paparazzo’s friends. Boaz holds up his hands in defeat. “Calm your tits! You kosher?” he asks, glancing down at the pap. “Nice shot. C’mon.” He takes my hand and leads me through the crowd. A girl screams Roman’s name, crawling up on the barstool.

“ROMAN?” She yells. She has on a pink SAVE HOLIDAY shirt.

“I LOVE YOU ROMAN!” Another girl yells.

“COME BACK ROMAN!”

“Oh my God, they’re insane,” I mutter.

Boaz scoffs as he pulls me into the green room and locks the door. The noise suddenly mutes, like a CD track on pause. “No shit, bro-ho.”

In the center of the room, Roman stands with his arms crossed over his chest. His finger taps patiently on his tattooed bicep.

I deflate in relief. “I thought I’d lost you—”

He narrows his eyes at me. “You told him.”

My eyebrows furrow. “Told who what?”

“Birmingham!
John Birmingham.
You’re the only one who
knew
.”

I begin to shake my head. “I didn’t tell him anything, I wouldn’t—”

“What else am I supposed to believe, Junie?” he barks, and begins to pace the length of the room. He didn’t call me
Junebug
. My own name hits me like a punch in the stomach. “I must’ve been blind.”

“Bro-ha, that exudes harshness,” his friend chides. “Does she
look
like the type?”

“For a little extra fame? Who wouldn’t?” he snaps. “She probably—”

“You’re being ridiculous,” I interrupt, fisting my hands. “You know me. I wouldn’t do that.”

He scoffs, “And why not, huh? Don’t you just
hate
Roman Holiday?” I purse my lips into a thin line, and he takes that as some sort of agreement. He throws his hands into the air. “And this is why I don’t trust people! This is why I
shouldn’t
trust people. Because you are
all
the same.”

Boaz puts a hand on Roman’s shoulder to calm him down, but he just shoves Boaz off. “Bro-ha, you’re the one who bought her the ice cream.”

“Yeah.” He glares. “My mistake. And now I can’t even stay for my best friend’s memorial because of
her
.”

Those words, above the sharp and scathing knives in his voice, pierce the deepest. I know how much Holly meant to him, because my dad meant more to me than the whole world. The last thing I would want would be to prevent him from paying respects to his best friend.

My throat tightens.

Did Roman ever trust me? All those smooth words and quixotic glances? The kiss? Were they all to just to get me into bed with him before the week was through, and then leave me like some old, abandoned piece of luggage?

“So he was right.” My voice is so sharp, I barely recognize it as my own. I’ve never felt so used, or so bitter. “You just wanted another score, right? All that bullshit about not being a man-whore? Thought you could keep me your
dirty little secret
?”

His face turns stony. “No, that’s not what I wanted.”

“Well, I’m
done
being someone’s secret. And stop pointing the blame at me!
You’re
the one who bought me the condoms. So, screw you,
asshole
.”

A timid knock taps at the door. The manager, a voice says form the other side. Boaz and Roman give each other a hesitant look. I roll my eyes and shout, “Then come in with your key!”

No answer.

“John,” Roman concludes.

Boaz points to the private bathroom and tells us to escape through the window. “I got this jerkoff.”

In the bathroom, I stare up at the window. Roman climbs up onto the back of the toilet and pushes the window open. It whines outward. He heaves himself up and wiggles through the two-by-two square, then reaches his hands back in for me.

I’m shaking my head. “I’m not getting through that.”

“C’mon, I’ll pull you out.”

“And that’s a definite no.”

“Junebug.”

Pursing my lips, I climb onto the back of the toilet and grab onto his warm hands. His muscles ripple as he heaves me out. The glittering lights of the Strand ignite the street with uncomfortable brightness. My foot catches on the ledge of the window and I stumble forward into his chest. His hands fold around my shoulders gently, and then he lets go as if I’m diseased.

Not ten feet out of the alleyway, John bursts out of the front door to face us. Roman scowls and seethes to me, “This your plan?”

“You’re kidding,” I deadpan.

His hands tighten into fists in anger.

John holds open his empty camera. “Very funny, Junie!” He calls to me. “Do I need to ask nicely for it back? Or can I just fuck you, too?”

Curiously, Roman eyes me again, as if beginning to think that I’m telling the truth. “Run,” I tell him, “since you’re so good at it, anyway.”

“Oh no way, you’re going to—”

“I’m asking you to trust your dirty little secret, Roman.”

For a split second, he doesn’t say a word. What makes him listen to me, I don’t know. Maybe it’s the three days of whatever we had, washed away in ten terrible minutes. He leaves down the sidewalk and disappears into the parking lot. He doesn’t say he trusts me, and he doesn’t say goodbye. It’s hard to say goodbye to a secret anyway, isn’t it? Because a secret isn’t something you want to begin with.

Way to get All-American Rejected, Junie.

“Junie-baby!” the paparazzo catcalls.

I put my hands on my hips. John’s not getting out of this alleyway alive. “Where’s Boaz?”

“Why don’t you give me back my memory card and I’ll tell you?” he asks, snapping his fingers impatiently, slowly creeping, like molasses, toward me.

I steel myself and take the chip out of my pocket. “This thing?”

“Yeah. It’s worth more than your life.”

“Pretty confident about that,” I retort.

“Yeah.” He nods. Five feet from me. Four.

I curl my fingers around the card and put it back into my pocket. “You know, I think I’ll keep it. For good leverage.”

“Leverage? Doll, you don’t know who you’re messing with.”

I smirk. “You’re right. But neither do you.” Suddenly, I spin around on my heels and rocket out of the alleyway.

“HEY! STOP!” John bellows after me.

I hurtle over a fire hydrant and dart across the street, barely dodging a purple car before jumping up onto the other sidewalk and cutting through the gaming pit on the other side of the street. John follows, shouting for me to wait with words that only make me run faster. Up the other side of the pit, I hang a right and follow down the boardwalk, through couples, around children, dodging and weaving until the ends of the planks are in sight. I plant my hands on the railing and catapult myself over onto the white sand. Where the Strand is bright with neon lights, the beach is dark. The sand is cool and soft against my feet. In other words, perfect running ground. I hop out of my Converses, stumbling, but John’s voice is so far back now it’s only an echo.

Chapter Nineteen

I don’t stop running until I reach the CherryTree Ocean Club and lock myself into the condo, drenched in sweat. My parents aren’t home yet. Instead of going to the seafood restaurant with the big crab, they went on the gambling boat instead so I doubt they’ll be back before dawn. Catching my breath, I lean against the wall to keep myself up, sure if I sit down I’ll never get back up, and dial my best friend’s number. I’ll call Caspian after and explain why Roman Montgomery answered my phone. Then I’m going to tell him I don’t want to be a secret anymore—to anyone.

Because I’m worth more than a secret, right?

Aren’t I?

Maggie picks up on the first ring. “Trouble again, I see.” Her voice is so sharp I wince.

“Sorry, was followed by—called as soon as I—” I lean against the Jacuzzi to try and catch my breath. “I know you’re mad.”


Mad
?” she scoffs. “I’m livid! When were you going to tell me that Caspian Gardener’s
gay
?!”

I sink down onto the couch and wish the ground would just swallow me whole. Or that a carnivorous seagull would come in and eat my heart out. Or a serial killer would break into the condo and end my poor, pathetic life. I’m a secret girlfriend of a gay guy. Of a gay,
hot
guy.

Of a gay hot guy who
took my virginity
.

“I think I’m going to puke,” I moan, curling my free hand around my stomach.

“I know, right!
Totes
terrible
! Oh, my poor va-jay-jay is crying in agony! Agony I tell you! But it’s totes ballsy, you know? If his parents found out...”

I really do think I’m going to puke. I stumble to my feet and b-line it for the bathroom. I’m not even a secret. I’m a
shame-scape
. Just in case he
is
found out, he can whip me out and I’ll play girlfriend. No one would ever know.

Just like Roman will never tell anyone he sang to me or danced with me to the Rolling Stones. Or kissed me.

Maybe I’m not worth more than a secret.

I barely make the toilet before I heave up the contents of my stomach. My virginity meant
nothing
. Not love, not devotion. There was no bed of roses, no French kisses, no whispers of “Baby, you’re all that I need.” There was nothing.

I am nothing.

“... Juniper? Are you okay? This is ridic, I know, but hey at least we’ll never have to go nuclear if he ever got a girlfriend, right?”

I wipe my mouth with a piece of toilet paper. “No,” I reply, biting my bottom lip to keep myself from crying. “No, no
no
.”

“But look at it this way—”

“We had sex,” I blurt, and Maggie goes silent. “On Friday. After I left. I didn’t go with you because I met Caspian. And we...”

“Oh my God, you did
not
ride the carnal carousel with him! You—how
big
is he?”

I moan and sit back against the ledge of the bathroom.

“And when you were going to tell
me
? Aren’t I supposed to be your best friend?” she accuses. “What else aren’t you telling me? That you had sex with
Roman Montgomery
too?”

And that is a whole other can of worms.

I massage my temples, gnawing on my bottom lip.
Hold it together, Junie.

I should be livid, but I’m not. Not sad, not angry, not heartbroken. I am not enough to be anything.

“I’m not mad at you,” my best friend finally relents. “I’m just
pissed.
You should’ve told me. I feel
so
insensitive now. But, I mean, bestie to bestie...how big
is
he?”

That’s it. That is my breaking point. I burst into tears in the bird-shit yellow bathroom and spew all of my dirty little secrets to my best friend—Caspian, Roman Montgomery, and the foreclosure.

“How stupid am I to think that I am enough?” I hiccup, tearing off another wad of toilet paper to blow my nose. “Why aren’t I enough?”

“You are. They just can’t see past their dicks to notice. If it’s any consolation, you’re more than enough for me.”

A laugh bubbles up in my throat despite the snot running down my face. “You’re the best. I’m sorry I didn’t tell you.”

“I understand. I...kinda bludgeoned Goyle the other night.”

I choke on my own laughter. “
Goyle
?”

“He was hot in the sack, okay! I don’t need no lip from you!”

“I solemnly swear,” I rely nasally before I blow my nose with a wad of toilet paper. Half my brains come out with it. I haven’t cried this much since... well, since the funeral. “Are we okay?”

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