Authors: Paige Harbison
Dana smiled apologetically at Max.
As soon as they were outside, she untangled her arm from Dana’s and sat down on the sand with Blake (who was positively beaming), Madison and Julia. Everyone was clearly less worried about being quiet than they had been at first, and were laughing and talking without filter.
“So,
Becca,
” Blake started, “who do
you
think is hot?”
All the girls laughed. Becca simply smiled back. “I’m not telling.”
Of course not. She needed to be told who everyone
else
wanted first.
“Oh, come
on,
” Julia cooed. “Who? Is it Johnny?”
She started to shake her head when Madison cooed.
“Ooh, he’s so sweet. He’d be, like, the
best
boyfriend.”
“Max is pretty attractive, too,” Becca said.
“Well, obviously.” Julia rolled her eyes. “Everyone knows that, but he’s not even worth it.”
“Why not?”
“Everyone has had a crush on him at some point,” Madison elaborated. “But he’s just…”
“Unattainable?” Becca filled in the blank. That’s who she’d have to go for, then. Too bad he’d already exhibited little to no interest in her.
“Exactly.” Blake nodded. “I do want to warn you though, Becca.” Blake leaned in a little bit. “The girls at this school will be crazed with jealousy if you get together with Max.”
So she couldn’t act like that was her plan.... Becca shrugged. “Maybe he’s gay and that’s why he doesn’t date.”
Everyone laughed again, but then made it very clear that no one thought that was the case.
Madison, who was clearly seeing the world in double, leaned toward Becca. “No, but seriously. Seriously. Max is so hot. But you and Johnny would be so cute together!”
“I don’t know, Max is okay,” she said, playing it cool. He was much more than okay. And that’s why she had to have him. But she couldn’t seem too interested—not to anyone.
“What?”
Everyone squealed in unison.
Madison’s jaw dropped. “I’ll be right back.” She darted inside.
“What’s she doing?” Becca asked.
“Probably puking,” Julia said simply. “Okay, but so you’re not into Johnny. I don’t know, I mean—”
The boathouse screen door flew open and Madison stumbled out, dragging Max behind her.
“I got Max!”
Julia and Blake burst into laughter.
“Oh, my God! I can’t believe you did that!” said Julia.
Becca stood cautiously and raked a hand through her hair. “Are you even drunk?”
“Not as drunk as you.”
She raised an eyebrow.
Madison slung an arm over each of their shoulders. A struggle for her because she was probably about five feet, Becca was five-nine, and Max had to be about six-two.
“Guys, I have a secret.” Madison was trying to whisper but barely succeeding. Julia and Blake were listening intently, ready to laugh at any second. “Max. Becca thinks you might be gay.”
He raised his eyebrows and grinned, exposing straight white teeth. “That so?”
Becca smiled. “I was hypothesizing, since it was said that apparently you never date.”
He nodded and looked away from her.
“Sh-sh-shh. Also,” Madison said, reeling her audience back in. “She doesn’t think you’re that unattractive. Or…that you’re not attractive. Or…wait…”
He looked back to her, appearing amused.
“I didn’t mean you weren’t
attractive.
I just meant—”
“It’s okay. I don’t think you’re all that attractive, either.”
He was obviously kidding, but Becca didn’t think it was funny at all. She scoffed, trying to mask her embarrassment. Three other people had heard him say it. They might report that to other people, who would then think he wasn’t kidding. She was going to have to make him want her.
Immediately.
“Well, aren’t you sharp?” She looked him straight in the eyes.
“We should let you two get to know each other.” Blake stood and pulled up Julia. Madison nodded vigorously and led the way back into the boathouse.
They were alone. She smiled at him and walked toward the waves that were breaking quietly on the shore. She turned to crook a finger at him. “Come on.”
He followed her. She stepped into the water.
“Cold?” he asked.
Becca didn’t look back before answering. “How scared are you?”
He chuckled, and a moment later he’d rolled up his jeans and stood next to her. The water wrapped itself around their ankles, and he sucked air in through his teeth.
“Yup. It’s cold.”
“Wimp.”
They were silent together for a moment, looking out at the black water and sky. It all ran together, with no horizon.
“This is seriously the worst beach.”
“Are you always so unhappy with your surroundings?”
She glared at him. “No, I’m not unhappy with them. I’m just saying. It’s hardly a beach. It’s just sand and rocks that happen to be next to water.”
Max stepped backward and sat down on the sand, away from where the water was breaking.
She followed him.
She leaned back like a pinup girl, and was quiet for a moment. “Why doesn’t anyone here
drink?
”
“What’re you talking about, there’s a bunch of people in there drinking as we speak.”
“Yeah, but at my old school, there were parties all the time.”
“Public school?”
“Yep.”
“Where can you have parties ‘all the time,’ doesn’t everyone live with their parents?”
“Yeah, but there was this guy Vince that always had people over. He was like nineteen and lived by himself.”
He nodded. “We drink in the dorms, we’ve just never come down here.”
“That’s because of the cameras, but I handled that.”
“What’d you do, blow the guy?”
She turned sharply and was about to look angry when she saw that he was smiling.
She smiled, too. “No, I didn’t
blow him.
I just talked to him.”
“Okay.” He said it like he didn’t believe her.
So her conversation wasn’t doing it for him. She’d try something else.
She put her hand on his hipbone and moved it up his stomach. He didn’t flex, but it was still flat and solid.
She looked up at him and moved her hand across his stomach muscles. “Should I stop?”
Please don’t say yes…
He shook his head. She ran her fingernails up his chest. She put her face close to his. Her hand, now in his hair, tugged lightly. He kissed her. A moment later they were making out.
He was on top of her. He kissed her cheek, her neck, pulled up her tank top and kissed her more.
They took each other’s shirts off. He put a hand on her thigh, and then up her skirt. She let him. She was getting nervous, but fought it off. He was strong and a little forceful—but not in a bad way. Then Becca made a decision.
If he wanted to, then she was going to. And it seemed like he did.
He was an amazing kisser. He was hot enough that everyone else was obsessed. He was evidently
popular. And she was sixteen already. This needed to happen.
“Do it,” she whispered in his ear when the time seemed right. The second he did, Becca realized she didn’t even know his last name.
That was messed up—even Becca knew that. You should seriously know the full name of the guy you lose your virginity to.
CHAPTER FIVE
“HEY, BECCA.”
Johnny stopped in front of Becca. He, Cam and Max all had lacrosse bags over their shoulders. Blake smiled at her, her hand in Cam’s. Apparently the last two had taken her advice and had been talking, a lot.
Becca smiled, her eyes slightly narrowed. “Hey,” she said to Cam and Blake. To Max she said, “Mike, was it?”
He had not said anything to her since they’d hooked up. That was weird. And she hadn’t just made out with him. They’d actually
done it.
He was really going to act like it hadn’t happened?
Max grinned. “Yep, that’s it.”
She looked back to Johnny, wondering if he knew what she and Max had done. “I was just on my way to the courtyard,” she let out.
“Mind if I come with you?” he asked.
No, she didn’t mind. Maybe Max would get jealous and then realize he should really
talk to her.
“Sure.” She glanced back to Cam, Blake and Max. “I’m sure I’ll see you all soon.”
Cam said nothing, but smiled and started off with Blake. Max held her gaze a few extra seconds, laughed, and followed them. Something in her plummeted as he did it.
She shook it off, and turned her focus to Johnny. Walking with him to the courtyard felt like walking the red carpet with Brad Pitt for all the stares they were getting. In the tabloids, she’d be a “mystery blonde.”
Not for long.
He held the door open for her. “After you.”
She walked through and sat down on a bench obscured mostly by bushes. “These socks are so ugly,” she remarked, taking a cigarette from the top of one of hers.
“Everyone has to wear them, so it’s not like you’re going to stand out. You’re not going to be the girl with those weird, ugly socks.”
Becca raised her eyebrows. “Well, at least I found a use for them. They’re so freaking bulky you can’t even see my cigarettes—” she reached for her other sock “—or my lighter.”
“You kind of can,” he said, and watched her as she lit it. “I didn’t know you smoked.”
“What, do you not like it or something?”
He made a face. “Not my business.”
True.
“I’d stop if I had to.” She eyed him, and took a drag. “So, why did you want to come out here with me?”
He looked as if this was a subject he’d hoped she wouldn’t broach. “I don’t really know. I kind of…just wanted to talk to you.”
“Oh,
really?
” She smiled playfully. She was used to this approach. This was much more comfortable for her than what Max was doing. Or wasn’t doing.
People passing by the windows that overlooked the courtyard were noticing them. She blew some smoke out of her lungs and stood in front of him.
“Do you like me, Johnny?”
“I barely know you.” He looked into her eyes. “But I’d like to get to know you.”
“Good. I like you, too.” She focused on the grass beneath her feet. “But I don’t want to get a bad reputation.”
She raised her head, hoping he’d say that Max had told him about what had happened. She envisioned a proud scene in which Max went for high fives and everyone was jealous.
But Johnny just furrowed his brows. “Bad reputation?”
Dammit. “Oh, you know. I don’t want to jump into something with someone too fast.”
“That’s okay, I’m not saying— I just feel like I want to know you. It’s stupid....”
More looks from inside. She smiled winningly at him. “It’s not stupid at all. Let’s go eat lunch.”
They walked down the hallway, Becca telling a story about her old school. He made a joke, and she laughed, laying a hand on his arm. “You are
so
funny.”
Together they waltzed into the dining hall.
“Let’s sit by ourselves, okay?”
“Sure,” he said.
Becca set her purse down on a table and got a small bowl of soup. As they ate and he talked about whatever it was he was talking about, Becca surreptitiously scanned the hall for Max. Finally she caught him at a crowded table across the room. He wasn’t looking at her. She couldn’t help but glance up every now and then at him. Finally he did look in her direction, then quickly averted his gaze.
It was working, she could tell. He cared if she talked to Johnny. So she didn’t look up again, but directed her attention to Johnny only.
“So how long have you and Max been friends?”
He ignored the change in subject and took a bite of his sandwich. “Since we were kids. We both grew up in D.C.”
“Cool. How come he doesn’t date?”
He looked at her with a small smile. “You like Max, don’t you? See, here I thought you
weren’t
like every other girl here.”
She laughed, trying to look as though this were preposterous. “I do
not!
I’m just curious. He’s not even that good-looking, I don’t get the appeal. So many girls like him, and he never dates.” She took a sip of her water. “It’s just weird.”
“Girls are always throwing themselves at him. He doesn’t need to date.” Johnny shrugged. “I guess he’s never gone for the desperate type.”
“Well, who does?”
“True.”
“So,” she said, “tell me something about you.”
Whatever he said, she didn’t listen. She was just trying to look like she thought every word he said was fascinating.
A couple days later, as Becca left her last class of the day, she saw Max going into the gym. She hurried upstairs to put on her “workout clothes” and then walked in, too. She stepped onto a treadmill a few down from his, her headphones on, and acted like she didn’t see Max.
She had to run for fifteen minutes before he came up next to her.
He was in a gray T-shirt, soaked with hard-earned sweat in all of the right places. She lowered the speed and took out her pink headphones.
“Hey,” she said, with a small smile.
He smiled back. “So, you’re hanging out with Johnny now?”
“What do you mean ‘hanging out with’?”
He shrugged. “You tell me.”
“I’m getting to know him, but I’m not
hanging out with
anyone.”
“Right.”
Not being able to take it anymore, she turned off the treadmill.
“I’m going to get in the sauna. You want to come?”
He considered her for a moment, and then said, “I thought you weren’t hanging out with anyone?”
“I’m not,” she said, and led the way. Then she added, without looking back at him, “And besides, we’ve already done our hanging out. What interest are you to me now?”
“Ha!” he said.
The sauna was already warm. She took off her shirt and her shoes, leaving her in her neon pink sports bra and black nylon shorts. He followed her lead and stripped down, too.
It was the first time she’d really seen his body. It was perfect. The type of body artists would want to sculpt and poets could gab endlessly about. He was lean but strong.
They sat next to each other for a minute in silence, him leaning against the wall with his eyes shut, and her looking around the small brown room. The door had a lock. She leaned forward and turned it.
He turned to her, a small smirk on his face. “Yeah?”
Determination filled her. He
had
to want her. She couldn’t be just another girl throwing herself at him, but she needed him to do something.
“What? I’m generally quite modest,” she said, “and I just want to make sure no one comes in while I don’t have my shirt on.” She indicated her sports bra.
He nodded, visibly not believing her. “Come here,” he said.
Yes. Now she had the power. “Why?”
“You know why.”
She smiled and stepped up to where he was and lowered herself onto his lap. She wrapped her arms around his neck and let him kiss her. Soft at first but then with urgency.
The surge she felt in her chest was not romantic. It was victorious. She knew that as soon as he started to show interest in her, that she’d have no trouble walking away. But right now…
He laid her on the surface of the wooden bench and they did it again. By the time they emerged from the room, their faces were pink, and their bodies were slick with sweat from the heat.