Read Broken Hearts, Fences and Other Things to Mend Online
Authors: Katie Finn
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #Marriage & Divorce
I stood up, feeling incredibly relieved. I had gotten to the re-
ceipt before Hallie had seen it. My cover wouldn’t be blown.
Things were still good with me and Hallie. Feeling like I was now
ready to join the party, I straightened my (Sophie’s) shirt, doing a
last check in the mirror on the door of what looked, from the
crack it was ajar, like Hallie’s closet. I turned away and headed for
the door when I it hit me that I’d seen something in there. I back-
tracked slowly, my eyes resting on what they’d caught a glimpse
of— a fl ash of hot- pink silk.
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I just stood there, frozen, staring into the closet. My heart
wasn’t hammering hard— instead, it seemed like it was going
the other way, slowing down, making me feel like I wasn’t get-
ting enough air. I just stared at the one segment of fabric I could
see, as other items were piled all around it.
Had Hallie stolen my shoes from the pool party? Why would
she have done that?
My brain was spinning with justifi cations— maybe she’d brought
them back for me, to keep them safe. But then why wouldn’t she
have mentioned it? Or given them to me? Why would they still be
in her closet?
And then a thought struck me with such force that it weak-
ened my knees a little. What if Hallie knew who I really was? What
if she’d fi gured it out? And she’d taken the shoes on purpose?
“Hey.” I whipped around to see Hallie standing in the door-
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way, arms folded and eyebrows raised. “You okay?”
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“Fine,” I managed, even though it felt like my throat was too
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tight, and speaking was harder than usual. “I just . . .” I looked
at her, taking in her concerned expression. It wasn’t possible.
Was it?
I looked back to the closet, then away again, trying to bring
some order to my thoughts. My eyes fell on Hallie’s laptop, where
the screensaver was now showing her leaning against some-
one— it looked like a guy, his arm wrapped around her shoulder.
But before his face became visible, Hallie crossed to the laptop
and closed the screen, tucking it under her arm.
“I came up to get this,” she said. “Josh has some crazy idea
about projecting movies against the house.” She looked at me
closely. “Is everything all right?”
“I . . .” I looked back into the closet. “I just . . .” I didn’t want to
say anything about my suspicions. Because what if I was wrong?
But— and this was even worse— what if I wasn’t?
“Oh, I wanted to show you this,” Hallie said. She set the lap-
top down on the bed and crossed to the closet. To my shock, she
fl ung the door of the closet wide and reached down for the hot-
pink object I’d been staring at. I held my breath as she lifted a
clutch purse and turned around, showing it to me with a smile.
“What do you think?”
“It’s a bag,” I said, feeling a little wobbly with relief.
“Yes,” Hallie said slowly. “But I meant, what do you think of
it? I was maybe going to carry it to a party on the Fourth. Ward’s
going to be there, and I want everything to be perfect.”
“I think it’s great,” I said, totally meaning it. I gave her a
smile. “Really.” Now that there was an explanation— and a ratio-
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nal one— I felt stupid that I would have thought anything else.
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And really, what did it say about me that I so easily leapt to these
conclusions? Just because I had behaved badly, I assumed Hallie
would do the same? When she hadn’t been anything but nice to
me this whole summer.
“Yeah,” she said with a smile, turning it over in her hands. “I
think it’ll go.” She tossed the clutch back into the closet, then
picked up her computer. “Come on,” she said, nudging me toward
the doorway. “The party awaits.”
I followed her down the hallway, my relief over the fact that
Hallie hadn’t found out the truth and extracted footwear re-
venge becoming replaced by ner vous ness over seeing Josh again.
Hallie led me across the foyer and into the kitchen, which
was all gleaming surfaces and new- looking appliances. We went
out a side door, and I saw there was a wide deck, with a table cov-
ered with drinks and bowls of snacks. There were steps that led
directly down to the beach, and I could see, at the water’s edge, a
ring of stones surrounding a pile of sticks— what would become
the bonfi re.
There weren’t very many people yet, and I remembered what
Hallie had said about keeping it small. There were a handful of
people I recognized from the pool party hanging out on the deck,
and another small group standing around by the water. I was
relieved to see that, this time at least, I was dressed appropri-
ately for the occasion.
Hallie’s phone beeped with a text and she looked down at it.
“I’ve got to get the door,” she said, heading back toward the
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kitchen. “But make yourself at home! Help yourself to the food!”
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I nodded and made my way to the refreshments, looking
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around for Josh while trying not to be obvious about it. I pulled a
Diet Coke out of a cooler and had just popped the top when I
heard a voice behind me say, “Hey.”
It was Josh’s voice, and I felt myself smile as I heard it, my
pulse racing with a mixture of excitement and nerves. I turned
around and there he was, looking somehow even cuter after an
absence of four days, his hair tousled and a faint sunburn across
his nose. “Hi,” I said. Now that he was in front of me and not just
theoretical, I felt my anxiety fade. What had I been so ner vous
about? This was
Josh
. I’d seen him with a pillow crease across his
face, wearing meerkat sweatpants.
“How are you feeling?” he asked, and for some reason, the
question didn’t embarrass me.
“Much better,” I said. “All recovered. You?”
“I’m great now,” he said. “But I think you may have perma-
nently prevented me from trying seafood ever again.”
“No!” I protested. “You can’t let one bad experience make you
give up.”
“What are you talking about?” Josh asked. “That’s like, the
whole reason for giving up. You have a bad experience, it’s the
universe’s way of telling you not to eat seafood. And who am I to
go against the universe?”
“That’s not what the universe is saying,” I said with great au-
thority, and Josh threw his head back, laughing.
“Oh, it’s not?” he said with a grin. “Please, Sophie. Enlighten
me.”
“Bridges!” A big guy with a very red face hustled up to Josh. “I
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think we’re all set up down by the water. Just need some
fuego
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and we’ll be in business. I mean, you know, fi re.” He seemed to
notice me then, and turned even redder, taking a step away.
“Sorry, man,” he said. “I didn’t—”
Josh just shook his head in a way that made me think he was
used to this guy saying these kinds of things. “Reid, this is So-
phie,” he said. “Sophie, Reid.”
“Oh, hi,” I said, remembering that on the drive to the restau-
rant, Josh had talked about his closest friend at boarding school.
“Nice to meet you.” Reid was taller than Josh, and big— not ex-
actly fat, but big- boned. He had close- cropped auburn hair and
blue eyes that he seemed to blink a lot.
“You too,” he said, his face still a little red. “I didn’t mean to
interrupt, or anything.”
“You didn’t,” Josh said fi rmly, grabbing Reid, who was con-
tinuing to edge away, by the shoulder and pulling him back to-
ward us. “Reid’s staying with us for a week.”
“Yeah,” Reid said, looking down at the deck. “My internship
didn’t really work out the way that I’d hoped.”
Josh shook his head. “I still don’t understand why you quit.”
“I didn’t
quit,
” Reid said. “I was fi red. For overwhelming in-
competence. Remember?”
“Oh, right,” Josh said, shooting me a small smile.
I smiled back and let out a long breath as Josh and Reid con-
tinued to banter. It was a beautiful night, my secret was safe,
and Josh was looking over at me occasionally and smiling. Sud-
denly, I was in the mood for a party.
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“What about that one?” Josh asked.
“Nope,” I said fi rmly. “Too big.” We hadn’t been talking
with Reid for long before Hallie had broken up our group, pulled
Josh away, and moved the party down to the beach. She was re-
ally running the whole thing, I’d noticed— getting people drinks,
putting out bowls of food, or ga niz ing everything. It was like she
had a vision for the night and was going to see it through. Mostly,
I was just trying not to be in the way, and doing what I could to
help. So when she realized she needed sticks for roasting marsh-
mallows, I volunteered to go look for some, and Josh immediately
said he’d join me. Reid had volunteered too, but after Josh shot
him a look, he sat down and said he’d changed his mind.
Josh and I were walking on the beach, both of us holding
small handfuls of sticks. Josh was grabbing anything made of
wood, not appearing to care if it was a twig or a massive branch.
The sun was starting to set, casting the water and the whole
beach in a pale pinkish- orange glow. I had left my shoes back
at the house, and was walking barefoot on the beach, the sand
warm between my toes.
“Here,” I said, spotting a perfect marshmallow stick up by
the dunes and grabbing it. “This is what we’re looking for.”
“Ah,” Josh said, nodding. “I see what you mean.” He reached
down and picked up what could only fairly be called a twig. “Like
this?” he asked, deadpan.
I laughed, even though I was trying not to. “That can be
yours,” I said, and Josh grinned at me. “Think we have enough?”
“Well, now that we have this one,” Josh said, lofting his twig
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on his palm, “I think we’re all set.”
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We both turned and started walking back toward the house.
As it came into view, I was struck by how cool and modern it was,
and how it stood out from the houses on either side of it. “Your
house really is amazing,” I said.
Josh looked at it for a moment and nodded. “Yeah,” he said. “It
was pretty much my dad’s vision.”
“Did he design it?” I asked, not even thinking about it. But
when Josh stopped walking and turned to me, I realized what I’d
just said. Oh, crap.
“What?” he asked.
“Um,” I said, ner vous ly. I couldn’t believe I’d let myself slip up
like this. Gemma Tucker knew that Mr. Bridges had been an ar-
chitect. But Sophie Curtis would have no idea. “I just . . . didn’t
know if . . .”
“Did Hallie tell you about him?” Josh asked, his brow fur-
rowed, like he was trying to put something together. “She usu-
ally doesn’t bring him up.”
“Well,” I said, drawing out the word, trying to buy myself
time. I was trying to decide if it would be better to say that Hallie
told me and hope Josh wouldn’t bring it up to her, or else just
pretend I had been doing some recreational googling, when Josh
spoke again.
“I’m glad that she can confi de in you,” he said, his voice a little
softer. “That’s sometimes hard for her.” I just nodded, not really
trusting myself to say anything. “He did design this house,” Josh
said, looking at it with a faint smile. “I didn’t know my mom
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saved the plans all these years until she started building.”
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I nodded, trying to think of what I could say— like how sorry
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I was— when Josh started walking again, and I fell into step with
him. We hadn’t gone very far when his hand, the one empty of
sticks, brushed against mine, sending an electrical jolt through
me.
I glanced over at him, but Josh was looking out at the water,
and I fi gured it had probably just been an accident. But we took
a few more steps, and his hand touched mine again, lingering a