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Authors: Simone Elkeles

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soaked, but neither of us seems to care. “Don’t run away from me when

I need to tell you somethin’ important.”

“What?” I say, hoping he doesn’t notice the tears running down my

face, and praying they’re getting mixed up with the rain.

“Tonight was . . . well, it was perfect for me, too. You’ve turned my

world upside down. I’ve fallen in love with you, chica, and it scares the

fuckin’ shit outta me. I’ve been shakin’ all night, because I knew it. I’ve

tried to deny it, to make you think I wanted you as a fake girlfriend,

but that was a lie. I love you, Kiara,” he says before his lips move

forward and meet mine.

FIFTY-THREE :
Carlos

“What are you doin’ here?” Alex asks me when I arrive at his place

at five a.m.

“I’m movin’ back in,” I say, pushing past him. At least until Keno and

I disappear at the end of the month.

“You’re supposed to be at the Westfords’.”

“I can’t stay there anymore,” I tell him.

“Why not?”

“I was kind of hopin’ you wouldn’t ask that.”

My brother winces as he asks, “Did you do somethin’ illegal?”

I shrug. “Maybe in some states. Listen, Alex, I got nowhere else to

go. I guess I can always go live on the streets with the other kids

whose brothers have kicked ’em out . . .”

“Don’t give me that bullshit, Carlos. You know you can’t stay here.

Judge’s orders.”

Judge’s orders or not, I can’t take advantage of Westford. He’s

one of the good guys that I used to think only existed in movies. “I

screwed the Professor’s daughter,” I blurt out. “So can I stay here, or

not?”

“Please tell me you’re jokin’.”

“I can’t. It was Homecoming, Alex. And before you give me a

lecture on right and wrong, remember that you screwed Brittany for

the first time as a bet—on the floor of our cousin’s auto-body shop—on

Halloween, no less.”

Alex rubs his temples with his fingers. “You don’t know anythin’

about that night, Carlos, so don’t act like you do.” He sits on his bed

and puts his head in his hands. “I’m sorry for askin’, but I’ve got to

know . . . did you use a condom?”

“I’m not an idiot.”

Alex looks up and cocks a brow.

“Okay,” I say. “I admit I’m an idiot. But I still used a condom.”

“At least you did one thing right. You can stay tonight,” Alex says

as he tosses me a pillow and blanket from the closet.

Alex returned the air mattress, so I have to sleep on the floor. Ten

minutes later, when the lights are off and I’m staring up at the

shadows on the ceiling, I ask, “When did you first fall for Brittany? Did

you know it all along, or did somethin’ specific happen?”

He doesn’t answer at first, so I think he’s sleeping. But then a long

sigh fills the silence. “It was in Peterson’s chemistry class . . . when she

told me she hated me. Now stop yappin’ and go to sleep.”

I turn on my side and go over the entire night in my head, starting

with the moment I saw Kiara with that black dress on. The girl literally

took my breath away. “Alex?”

“What?” he asks, annoyed.

“I told her I loved her.”

“Did you mean it?”

I wasn’t kiddin’ when I said the girl had turned my life upside down.

What kind of girl wears baggy shirts every day, has a gay best friend,

stutters when she’s nervous, tapes shower schedules on the bathroom

mirror, makes stupid cookie magnets just to piss me off, works on cars

like a guy, and gets excited about the challenge of puttin’ on a condom?

The girl is fuckin’ nuts. “I’m in deep shit, Alex, ’cause I think I’d like

nothin’ better than to wake up with her every mornin’.”

“You’re right, Carlos. You are in deep shit.”

“How am I gonna get out of this thing with Devlin?”

“I don’t know. I’m as clueless as you at this point, but I know who

might be able to help us.”

“Who?”

“I’ll tell you in the mornin’. In the meantime, shut up and let me

sleep.”

My cell phone goes off, the beeping sound echoing loudly

throughout the small apartment.

“Who the hell is callin’ you at this hour?” Alex demands to know. “Is

it Devlin?”

I read the text and laugh. “No. It’s a text from your ex-girlfriend.”

Alex practically jumps out of bed and snatches my phone from me.

“What did she say? Why is she textin’ you?”

“Keep your pants on, bro. She asked me how my date was, and I

texted her back before I came to your place. I didn’t know she was

gonna respond right away.”

“She wants to know if I’m as miserable as she is,” Alex says,

reading Brittany’s text. The glow of the screen on his face reveals it

all. He’s still hopelessly and disgustingly in love with Brittany. I’d make

fun of him if I didn’t think I had the same look on my face when I woke

up with Kiara’s naked body pressed against mine and I realized that I’d

rather die than live one day without her. I haven’t known her long at all,

but just lookin’ at her feels so right. Being with her feels like . . . home.

It may not make sense to anyone else, but it does to me.

“Yo, Alex, just text back that you’re a complete mess, and that

you’ll do anythin’ to get her back . . . even if it means havin’ dinner with

her stupid parents and kissin’ her pearly white ass for the next seventy

or so years.”

“What do you know about relationships, or pearly white asses?

Forget it. I don’t want to know the answer to that question.” He walks

into the bathroom with my phone and closes the door. As long as he’s

not in the room, I might as well take advantage of his empty bed. He’ll

be in the bathroom awhile, texting his ex-girlfriend until she’s his

girlfriend again. I guess it didn’t hurt that I was sure to text her just

before I came here, knowing she’s probably awake and as miserable as

my brother is.

Back at the dock when I stroked Kiara’s long hair as she fell asleep

in my arms, a paralyzing fear washed over me. I realized that what I

had with Destiny wasn’t anything compared to what I have with Kiara.

It scared me, and I panicked. I just needed to get away from her to

process everything, because being near her makes me fantasize about a

future with Kiara instead of focusing on reality— that I’m leaving

Colorado at the end of the month. As Keno said, there’s really no other

choice.

The next thing I know, Alex is shaking me. “Get up,” he orders.

“I need a few more hours of sleep,” I tell him.

“You can’t,” he says. “It’s already noon. And you got a message.”

Brittany again. Those two better get back together so I have one

less thing to worry about. “I told you to text her and let her know you’ll

do anythin’ to get her back.”

“The message wasn’t from Brit.”

I open one eye. “From Kiara?”

He shrugs. “You did get one text from Kiara.”

I bolt upright, the sudden movement giving me a nasty head rush.

“What did she want?”

“She wanted to know if you were okay. I texted her back and said

you slept here last night, and you were still sleeping. But you got a voice

mail message from Devlin. He wants to meet with you tonight.”

I rub the knot of tension forming on the back of my neck. “Well, I

guess that’s it, then. No use thinkin’ he forgot about me. He spent a lot

of energy recruitin’ me. I don’t see a way out, Alex.”

“There’s always a way out.” He tosses me a towel. “Take a shower

and get dressed. You can wear my clothes. Hurry up, we don’t have

much time.”

Alex drives me to the Boulder campus. I follow him into one of the

buildings, but freeze when we get to a door marked ‘RICHARD

WESTFORD, PROFESSOR OF PSYCHOLOGY’.

“Why are we here?” I ask my brother.

“Because he can help us.” Alex knocks on the Professor’s door.

“Come in,” he says. Westford looks up when we enter his office.

“Hey, boys. I trust you and Kiara had a good time last night. Colleen

told me she was still sleeping this morning when I left the house, so I

didn’t have a chance to ask her.”

“It was fun,” I mumble. “Kiara is—”

“A handful sometimes, I know. She definitely keeps us on our toes.”

“I was gonna say amazin’,” I tell him. “Your daughter is amazin’.”

“I can’t take all the credit. Colleen has done an incredible job

raising the kids. Kiara just needed to come out of her shell a bit. It was

nice of you to take her. I know she really appreciated it. Now, I’m sure

Alex didn’t want to meet me here just to shoot the breeze. What’s on

your minds?”

“Tell him what you told me,” Alex orders.

“Why?”

“’Cause he’s hard-core.”

I take a look at the balding Westford. Hard-core, my ass. Maybe

he used to be, but not now. He’s a shrink now, and no longer a soldier.

“Just do it,” Alex says, getting impatient.

I’m out of options, so I might as well tell him. Maybe Westford can

come up with somethin’ I haven’t thought of. Unlikely, but it’s worth a

try.

“You know when I got beat up and I told you I got jumped near the

mall?”

He nods.

“I lied. Truth is . . .” I look over at Alex, who’s urging me on. “I got

recruited by this guy named Devlin.”

“I know who Devlin is,” the Professor says. “I never met the guy,

but I’ve heard about him. He’s into drug smuggling.” His eyes narrow,

and I detect a little bit of that hard-core personality trying to shine

through. “You’d better not be dealing drugs for Devlin.”

“That’s my problem,” I tell the Professor. “It’s either I deal drugs,

or he kills me. At this point I’d rather deal drugs than die.”

“You’re not doing either,” Westford says.

“Devlin’s a businessman who only cares about the bottom line.”

“Bottom line, huh?” Westford leans back in his chair, those wheels

in his brain working overtime. The chair tips so far back he has to

quickly grab on to his desk so he doesn’t tumble backward. The

Professor is hard-core, all right. All the way down to his designer penny

loafers.

“Any suggestions?” Alex asks. “We’re out of ideas.”

Westford holds up a finger. “I might be able to help. When are you

supposed to meet with him?”

“Tonight.”

“I’m going with you,” Westford says.

“Me too,” Alex chimes in.

“Oh, goodie. We’re startin’ our own little renegados gang.” I give a

short laugh. “You can’t just walk up to Devlin.”

“Watch me,” Westford says. “No matter what it takes, we’ll get you

out.”

Is this guy kiddin’ me? He’s not my flesh and blood. He should think

of me as a burden and liability instead of someone worth fighting for.

“Why are you doin’ this?” I ask him.

“Because my family cares about you. Listen, Carlos, I think it’s

about time I tell you about my past so you know where I’m coming

from.”

Oh, I gotta hear this.

I lean back in the chair, ready to get a long drawn-out sob story

about how his parents were mean to him because they didn’t buy him

the exact toy he’d asked for on his sixth birthday. Or the fact that a

kid in high school beat him up for his lunch money. Maybe he was upset

because his parents bought him a used car instead of a brand-new one

when he turned sixteen. Does the Professor expect me to actually feel

sorry for him? I can beat him in the sob-story department, hands

down.

Westford shifts in his desk chair uncomfortably, then lets out a

long breath. “My parents and brother died in a car accident when I was

eleven.” Whoa. I wasn’t expectin’ that. “We were driving home one

night, it was snowing, and my dad lost control of the car.”

Wait. “You were in the car, too?”

He nods. “I remember him swerving, then the car spinning.” He

hesitates. “Then the truck colliding with the car. I can still hear my

mom’s screams as she saw the big headlights aiming right at her, and

my brother looking to me as if I could somehow help.”

He clears his throat and swallows, and my cockiness over winning

the game of ‘whose childhood was worse’ starts to fade quickly.

“After the impact, when my body stopped jerking around like a rag

doll, I opened my eyes and saw blood splattered all over the car. I

wasn’t even sure if it was mine or my parents’ . . . or my brother’s.” His

eyes are glassy now, but he doesn’t shed a tear. “It was like he was in

pieces, Carlos. Even though I thought I would die if I moved because of

the pain I was in, I needed to save him. I needed to save all of them. I

held the gash in my brother’s side together for as long as I could, the

hot, fresh blood streaming all over my hands. The paramedics had to

pry my hands off him, because I wouldn’t let go. I couldn’t let him die.

He was just seven, a year older than Brandon.”

“They all died except you?”

He nods. “I didn’t have relatives who could take me in, so I spent

the next seven years bouncing from foster home to foster home.” He

stares right into my eyes. “Actually, I got kicked out of most of them.”

“For what?”

“You name it. Fighting, drugs, running away . . . basically, I was in

need of some understanding and guidance, but nobody was willing or had

the time to straighten me out. Eventually I turned eighteen and was

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