Read Broken Hearts, Fences and Other Things to Mend Online
Authors: Katie Finn
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #Marriage & Divorce
little longer this time.
My heart started to pound. It hadn’t been an accident. Josh
had just touched my hand. And that touch alone made me feel
like every nerve in my body was suddenly wide awake.
A tiny voice in the back of my head was reminding me about
Teddy, about the mourning period. But I was no longer listening
to it. Forget about the mourning period. Teddy had broken up
with me, and this was happening here, now. I let out a breath, let
Teddy go, and before I could stop myself, reached out for Josh’s
hand.
My fi ngers just grazed his wrist, and Josh still didn’t look at
me, but I saw the corners of his mouth lift in a smile. And we
walked like that all the way back to the bonfi re, touching— but
not quite holding— hands.
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“Okay, I’ve got one,” Hallie said, leaning back on her hands
and stretching her legs in front of her. “I’ve never . . . gone
skinny- dipping.”
I looked around the circle, at the faces illuminated by the
fi relight, and tried not to choke on my soda when Reid sheepishly
popped a marshmallow into his mouth. We were playing I Never,
which was technically a drinking game. But since most of us had
curfews— not to mention the fact that nobody had been able to
get anything to drink— we were playing it with marshmallows. If
you had done the thing that was said, you had to eat one.
It was the end of the night, and the party had pretty much
run its course. There were only a handful of us sitting around
the bonfi re under the stars— me, Josh, Hallie, Reid, and a guy
named Brian who seemed to have quite the adventurous life, and
as a result was currently looking a little green.
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I was sitting next to Josh on the sand. I knew my lip gloss was
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in place, as I’d taken a surreptitious “bathroom break,” which
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actually involved going inside, grabbing my purse, and reapply-
ing. Josh had given me his sweatshirt once the sun went down,
and I was already planning on not giving it back. It was a gray
Clarence Hall hoodie, and it felt soft and much- washed. It was
infi nitely cozier than Teddy’s sweatshirts, which had been stiff
and scratchy, maybe because they had been made out of stuff—
like hemp and fl ax— that you could also fi nd in breakfast cereals.
Josh and I were sitting close to each other, and even though we’d
taken a step away from each other before we returned to the
group, I noticed that Hallie kept shooting looks my way, like she’d
somehow picked up on what had happened.
Out of the blue, I’d gotten kind of a weird text from Sophie as
the bonfi re was being lit. She’d asked me where I was, which
made me worry what she’d gotten up to that night. To be funny, I
texted her Hallie’s whole address and added “(the Hamptons J)”
after it. I hadn’t heard from her again, so it seemed like my text
was enough to remind her, however hard she was currently par-
tying, that I was not in Putnam at the moment.
But that was the only thing that had even come close to dis-
turbing the peace of the night. It just felt really magical to be
sitting there, under the stars, the remains of a bonfi re in front
of me, close to a boy who I liked as a friend and maybe liked as
more, his sweatshirt, which smelled like woodsy cologne and
spearmint gum— like him— around my shoulders.
“Okay,” Reid said, rubbing his hands together. “I’ve never . . .
stolen anything.”
I was about to sit this one out, when I looked down and saw
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the hem of Sophie’s shirt. Not to mention the two pairs of
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Gwyneth’s shoes. I wasn’t sure where the line between stealing
and indefi nitely borrowing actually was, but I felt like I’d been
sitting out most of these, so I picked up a marshmallow and
tossed it in my mouth. After a moment, I saw Hallie take a marsh-
mallow as well. She gave me a small smile, and Josh nudged me
with his shoulder.
“So what’d you take?” he asked.
I shook my head. “Nope,” I said, smiling at him. “Not telling.”
“Brian?” Hallie asked loudly, turning to him. “It’s your turn.”
“Nnnrgh,” Brian said, looking greener than ever in the fi re-
light. “I’ll pass my turn.”
“Okay,” Josh said, glancing over at me and raising his eye-
brows. “I’ve never kept a secret from someone.” We all took a
marshmallow on that one, though I noticed Brian didn’t eat his,
and groaned a little as he looked at it. Everyone in the circle
looked at me, and I realized it was my turn to ask.
“I’ve never . . .” I started, thinking. Maybe this was my chance
to maybe, indirectly, apologize for what I’d done to Hallie. “I’ve
never hurt someone on purpose,” I said, taking a marshmallow
as I did. I saw Hallie look at me, confused, probably wondering
what I’d done. Little did she understand that she knew all too
well what I’d done— because I’d done it to her.
And maybe she was thinking along those same lines, because
it was her turn next, and she said softly, “I’ve never been hurt on
purpose.” She took a marshmallow then, and so did Josh.
“Whoa,” Reid said. “This game got dark.” Brian grunted in
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response. Maybe Hallie felt this too, because she stood up, brush-
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ing her hands off.
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“Okay,” she said. “Who wants s’mores?” She widened her eyes
at me, and I knew this was my cue to go inside with her. She
clearly wanted to talk to me about what was happening with Josh.
I wasn’t sure what I would be able to tell her, though, as I wasn’t
sure myself. Unless it turned out that Josh only gave his sweat-
shirts to girls he desperately wanted to date. That would help
to shed some light on things.
“Be right back,” I said to Josh as I pushed myself to my feet,
grabbed my bag, and crossed the sand to catch up with Hallie.
As soon as we were both in the kitchen, Hallie turned to me,
eyebrows raised. “So,” she said, and I noticed her voice was high
and a little strained. “Um, what’s going on with you and my
brother?”
“Nothing,” I said automatically, but then thought about the
zingy way I’d felt when our hands had touched, the way I’d been
aware of every breath he’d taken next to me as we sat close on the
sand. “Well,” I amended after a moment, “I don’t know. Nothing
has
happened, though.”
Hallie just looked at me for a moment. “You’re wearing his
sweatshirt,” she said.
“I was cold,” I said, and she just nodded, but didn’t confi rm
that this was Josh’s one gesture of true love, which was actually a
little disappointing. It would have cleared things right up.
“I just . . .” Hallie started, then yanked open one of the cabi-
nets and took down a package of graham crackers. “I thought I
told you . . . I mean, I thought you said that you weren’t going to
date him.”
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“And I’m not,” I said quickly. “But . . .” I looked closely at her,
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and saw for the fi rst time just how upset she really was. “I mean,
would it really be the worst thing in the world?” I asked, my voice
quiet, and I could hear the hurt in it coming through. Because as
far as Hallie knew, I was just Sophie Curtis— why would she have
something against it?
“No! God, Sophie, I’m sorry,” Hallie said, turning away from
me and pulling down a bar of chocolate and a package of marsh-
mallows. When she faced me again, her expression was more
composed. “I just really don’t want Josh to get hurt,” she said, in
quiet, almost desperate voice.
“I don’t want that either,” I said, in total honesty.
“Do you really like him?” Hallie asked, looking at me closely.
I took a breath, about to deny it, say what I’d been saying to
her and myself all along. But I found I couldn’t. It was what I had
realized on the beach. I was done pretending that I didn’t have
feelings for Josh, out of . . . what? Loyalty to Teddy? The sense
that it was too quick for me to be interested in someone new?
Instead of denying it, I just nodded. “I really do.”
Hallie looked away from me, making a pyramid of the s’mores
fi xings, taking a moment before she spoke. “It’s funny,” she fi -
nally said. “But Josh said something to me earlier. About how . . .
he thought you were a really good friend to me. And how he was
glad that I had found someone that I could trust.”
I opened my mouth and closed it, not sure what to say to this.
I knew Josh had only told Hallie this because he thought she’d
confi ded in me. But I didn’t know how to set her straight without
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wrecking the moment. Was this her way of telling me that she
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was okay with the possibility of us? “Oh,” I said.
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“Who knows what made him say it,” Hallie said with a shrug.
“But . . .” She looked at me, then down again, like she was fasci-
nated with the graham crackers’ nutritional information. “I mean,
he’s right. You’re a really good person, Sophie.”
I felt my breath catch in my throat. It suddenly occurred to
me that maybe this was the moment I had been waiting for,
working for, this whole summer. Was I going to fi nd a better op-
portunity? It was what I’d wanted before I told Hallie the
truth— to get her to see me differently than the person she re-
membered. And I’d done it. Hallie and I were friends. She liked
me and thought I was a good person. What more was I waiting
for?
I took a breath. “Hallie,” I started.
“Sophie,” she said back, imitating my serious tone.
“I . . . should tell you something.”
“What?” she asked, her expression maybe a little wary.
“I . . . the thing is . . .” Even as I thought about how best to
put it, I could feel myself hesitating. What would happen once I
told her? What would happen to our fl edgling friendship? And—
my stomach plunged at the thought— what would happen with
Josh? Was I really ready to potentially wreck all of this?
“Yes?” she asked.
I paused, still torn, not sure what I should do. But was I going
to get a better moment than this? I took a breath and prepared
myself to say it. “Hallie,” I started. “There’s something I have to
tell you—” Before I could continue, though, my phone beeped with
a text that sounded very loud in the quiet kitchen. “Sorry,” I said,
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looking down at it.
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Sophie Curtis
11:15 PM
Hi! I’m here!
I stared down at the phone, baffl ed. What was Sophie talking
about? Was she outside my house in Putnam, expecting me to
come down?
At that moment, though, I heard the sound of a car outside,
getting closer, pulling into the driveway, and headlights fl ashed
through the windows.
“Is someone here?” Hallie asked, frowning, as she crossed to
the front door. “If so, they’ve totally missed the party.”
I followed behind her, my heart starting to beat hard. There
was an explanation for this. It
wasn’t—
couldn’t be—
what I
thought.
I stepped out of the house with Hallie and felt my stomach
plunge at what I saw. There was a taxi idling in the driveway.
And standing next to it, bags in hand, was my best friend.
Sophie Curtis— the real one— had just arrived in the Hamptons.
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I stared at Sophie as she paid the driver, trying to somehow
make her presence here make sense. And then I remembered
I’d texted her Hallie’s address when she asked me where I was.
And that she was about to totally blow the entire cover I’d con-
structed for myself.
“I don’t think I know her,” Hallie said in an undertone to me,
as she stared at Sophie. “Maybe she has the wrong address? We’re
up the street from the Southampton Arms, people sometimes
come here thinking it’s the hotel . . .”
I licked my lips, which suddenly felt very dry. I could feel my