My name is Maggie Raynard. After sixteen years being just plain me, suddenly, when I lose my temper, my fingers become weapons of mass destruction. Turns out I’m a semi-god, descended from Aphrodite. Sounds cool in theory, but when I accidentally put my ex-boyfriend in a coma, things go downhill pretty fast.
Now some new guy named Mac Finnegan has made it his mission in life to continually piss me off. I’m stuck learning how to use my new powers while also dealing with regular high school problems, and with this annoying—and super-hot—guy all up in my business, I’m about to flip out.
But it gets worse. I just learned there’s this watchdog council of semis who keeps an eye out for any bad apples. They think I’m the baddest of the bunch and want to take me out before I do any more damage. My nemesis Mac might turn out to be my salvation, only he’s got secrets of his own…and they may just kill us both.
Information:
Title: Chaos (A Kardia Chronicles Novel)
Author: Christine O’Neil
Genre: Young Adult
Length: 340 pages
Release Date: August 2013
ISBN: : 978-1-62266-283-8
Imprint: Entangled Teen (Ember)
Excerpt:
© 2013 Christine O’Neil
Chapter One
Dear She:
My boyfriend is obsessed with video games. Like, that’s all he ever wants to do. Even if I get him to take me on a date, we end up at Joe’s Crab Shack, and the second we’re done eating, he’s dragging me into the back room arcade to make me play some stupid game with him. What can I do to get him to stop this B.S. and pay more attention to me?
Signed,
Sad and Lonely
Dear Sad and Lonely,
I’m going to skip the A and lob a Q your way: Why do you even want to be with a guy who’s too dumb to recognize what he has? You might not want to hear it, but my advice? Bounce. There are some guys—even high school guys, if you look really hard—who are mature enough to realize there’s more to life than video games. Join drama or chorus and maybe you’ll find a guy who’s interested in the arts. Like the intellectual type? Join the debate team or the academic squad. There are a ton of options out there just waiting for you. Don’t sell yourself short or settle for less than you deserve.
Forever yours,
She
I clicked my mouse over the send icon with a satisfied sigh. Today’s Q&A for my anonymous column, “That’s What She Said,” was officially in the bag and on its way to my loyal readers. Not bad for the back half of a forty-two-minute study hall on a Thursday.
I logged off the PC and then scooped up my messenger bag just as the bell rang. Next stop, chem lab. Not exactly my favorite subject, but at least my BFF, Libby, was in that class with me.
“Miss Raynard,” a stern voice called.
Dread pooled in my gut as I pasted on a smile and turned to face Hortense Verbiglio, harpy of the computer science department. Mrs. Verbiglio was even less attractive—both inside and out—than her name suggested, and her stopping me could mean nothing good.
“Yes, Hort—erm, Mrs. Verbiglio.” Pretty much the whole school privately referred to her as “Hortense,” so sometimes it was hard to make the switch, but if she noticed my glitch, she didn’t let on.
“What exactly did you accomplish today? I saw a whole lot of type-ity type-ity.” She wiggled her stubby fingers like she was tapping a keyboard. “But I didn’t see you print your work. Do you mind telling me what you were doing all period? This is study hall not goof-off time.”
“Oh, I know. It’s just, I had a big report to do and didn’t want to use up all your paper.” Because I was a real sweetheart like that and all.
She crossed her beefy arms over her chest and stared me down for way longer than was comfortable. Finally, she tipped her head in a short nod. “Go ahead, then. Next time, though, I’ll be expecting to see your work.”
The tension in my shoulders released, and I shot her two cheerful thumbs up, then busted ass toward the door before she changed her mind and kept me there for more grilling. The school administration allowed us what felt like thirty-seven seconds to get from one class to another, and she’d just wasted twelve of mine. If I was late for chem, it was squarely on Hortense.
“Hey! Wait up.”
Libby’s musical voice had me skidding to a stop in the middle of the crowded hallway, which earned me a few dirty looks and someone’s jam-packed book bag slamming into my shoulder blade. Ouch.
“Oh, good,” Libby gushed breathlessly, her hazel eyes bright with relief. “You’re late, too. Now I don’t have to walk in alone. I was finishing up this test in psych. It was brutal.”
She fell into step beside me, although her runner’s strides were much longer, so I had to hurry to keep up. Yet another reason to despise being five-three. At five-eight, Libby liked to complain her height was a guy deterrent, but since she’d been asked to the Snowflake Swirl by four different people already and it was still technically autumn, I’d have to call bullshit on that theory. Either that, or the height issue was somehow offset by the fact that her legs went on for years and her bra could comfortably hold a grapefruit in each cup. Not that I cared. Being “blessed” with a solid set of oranges myself, I was of the opinion that boobs mostly just got in the way. Running in gym class was embarrassing as fuck, and forget about sleeping on my stomach. If they were any bigger, they’d be worthy of serious male attention and that was the last thing I needed.
I was done with guys.
Not in that fake, I-say-that-but-deep-down-I-really-want-a-boyfriend kind of way, but in, like, the seriously-I’d-rather-eat-maggoty-cheese kind of way. No relationships. Not for me. Not now and maybe not ever. Who I am…what I am, and what I’m capable of? Everyone’s better off this way.
“I have to stop at my locker real quick.” I veered to the right and cut through the crush of kids heading straight at me, like wildebeests to a watering hole. Libby followed and then stood by me as I fiddled with the lock.
“What’s that?” She pointed to a white piece of paper sticking out half an inch from one of the slots in the olive metal door.
I tugged the padlock open and flicked the catch with my thumb. “Dunno.” Maybe Bink had left me another note. Bink was my neighbor, bud, and—most days—my ride home. Last time I’d found a note in my locker, his cell phone had died and he needed to bail early. I seriously hoped this wasn’t a repeat performance.
I mentally ran down the list of people I could bug for a ride and came up empty. Libby always had to stay after for some activity or another, and I only really had two other people I could call “friends” and neither lived near me. I wrinkled my nose in anticipation of the dirty-sneakers-meets-day-old-bologna smell of a bus filled with kids who’d had last-period gym and opted not to change clothes. With a sigh, I pulled open the door and the white rectangle floated to the floor.
Libby bent to grab it and read it out loud. “Dear Sad and Lonely…” She trailed off and went quiet for a few seconds until her peachy complexion went hot pink, and then she gasped. “Oh my God. Holy… Oh, Mags, you are so not going to like this.”
I snatched the paper from her, trying to ward off the growing pit in my gut.
Dear Sad and Lonely,
Since I can almost guarantee She is about to give you some seriously shite advice like she does every week, let me be the voice of reason. Your boyfriend is just like most high school guys. Cut him some slack and, even better, why not offer to learn how to play some of the games he likes? He’d probably appreciate the effort and might even take you somewhere nice after. If that doesn’t work, sit him down and let him know how you’re feeling so he can tell you what’s going on with him. Could be that constantly calling the things he likes stupid isn’t the best way to get what you want in this situation, yeah? In any case, don’t let the ramblings of some bitter emo chick who’s probably never had a boyfriend ruin your relationship.
Hope it helps,
He
My skin prickled with alternating hot and cold flashes while my brain churned. The shock was too thick to let the anger in right away, but as stunned as I was, I knew exactly who was behind this. There was only one person in the whole school who would use the word “shite.”
Mac Finnegan.
Opinionated, annoying, hot—did I mention annoying?—Mac Finnegan, who had barely given me the time of day since he’d come to Crestwood High. Mac Finnegan, who thought he was soooo cool with his Irish accent and his mocking smile. Mac Finnegan, who inexplicably made me want to lick him like an ice cream cone and then immediately rinse my mouth out with acid.
How had he discovered my secret? Only Bink and Libby knew I was the girl behind “That’s What She Said,” and I would have bet everything I owned that neither of them would have ratted me out.
Didn’t matter though. One way or another, he knew.
Even worse, he’d chosen to taunt me with it. Bitter emo chick who’s probably never had a boyfriend, indeed. I had a boyfriend once, and it hadn’t ended well for either of us. I was in no rush to repeat the experience. Besides, what did this Irish asshat care?
Anger tightened my chest, and my vision went hazy. I could feel the power rising in me, clawing to get out, roaring to be heard. The hair on my arms stood on end as I tried to breathe through it, to let the fury dissipate and flow out of my pores in harmless pings of energy, but it was no use.
I pressed a hand to my locker and opened up the tiniest of escape valves, the spout of a teakettle, whistling off a stream of steam. The cheap metal instantly heated against my skin, the door buckling and warping on the spot just beneath my fingertips.
“Uh, Mags—” Libby whispered urgently, but a male voice cut her off.
“How’s it going there, Libby? Maggie.”
I turned around, still trying to catch my breath, and there he was, strolling by, a cocky grin splitting his sinfully beautiful face.
Mac Finnegan, who had decided that being the new kid wasn’t bad enough, so he had to actively go out of his way to make enemies. Mac Finnegan, who wanted to turn my world upside down rather than minding his own business. Mac Finnegan, who didn’t know the meaning of live and let live.
Mac Finnegan, who clearly had no idea who he was fucking with.
…
It was one fifty-three, and I stared at the clock, willing the hands to move faster. Dr. Pepper—I so wish I was kidding—droned on endlessly and everything seemed like it was moving in slo-mo as I seethed.
I’d get a tardy for cooking class if I went to track down Mac at his locker on the opposite wing before sixth period, but my head would literally explode all over these avocado walls if I didn’t. So for the good of the school, I’d suck it up and take the detention if I was late.
Earlier when Mac had strolled past my locker, I’d tried to get my shit together and let him know exactly what I thought of his little note. To hit him with one of the dozens of cutting put-downs that would’ve been on the tip of my tongue had I been a different person. A regular person. The kind of person who used her brain to come up with kickass comebacks instead of letting anger get the better of her, making her think—and sometimes do—bad things.
Instead, I watched him walk by, impotent rage writhing under the surface of my skin like a nest of vipers.
Now that I’d had time to settle down some—I was still mad, but I had things under control—a gazillion witty comebacks waited in the wings, each one carefully crafted and designed to wipe that smug fucking smile right off his face.
Still, I needed to find out what the hell was going on with him. More importantly, I needed to figure out why he’d chosen me as the person he wanted to screw with most.
It seemed so random. He’d barely even acknowledged my existence at school since he’d enrolled in September, and now he was all in my business. I couldn’t understand for the life of me what I’d done to deserve it. Did he really just hate my column so much he felt like he had to put me on blast like that?
My cheeks grew warm again, and I wondered who else, if anyone, had read his response. Was he passing them out everywhere, or was that a special edition just for me? While neither was ideal, option B was at least less humiliating. It was also the least likely one, but a girl could hope.
I looked up again and realized, while I’d been stressing, the clock had finally decided to cooperate and Dr. Pepper started wrapping it up. About time.
“So with that, I need you to read pages eighty-three through eighty-nine for homework and answer the questions at the end of the chapter for tomorrow.” The bell cut him off, and per the status quo, we all stood, grabbed our books, and walked out with his nasally voice chasing us. “Make sure you restate the question in your answer, and—”
I didn’t wait for the rest of his speech or for Libby, and went barreling down the hall.
“So what are you going to do?” she asked, rushing behind me to catch up. Funny how much faster my stubby little legs could go when I was hella pissed off.
“I’m going to call him out, and then I’m going to tell him…” What? What exactly was I going to tell him? That my unauthorized and highly frowned-upon little school column was the only one allowed, and he’d better stop stepping on my turf? I pictured a bad dance-off à la High School Musical between us and smiled despite my fury. Mainly because, in my imagination, I’d saddled Mac with a pair of red leather pants and a faux-hawk, and he looked like a friggin’ idiot.
“You know what? I’m just going to ask him flat out what he thinks he’s trying to pull. I mean, we hardly know each other.”
Guilt pricked me at the white lie. We knew each other a little.
He’d just moved in two streets over from me, and one night, when I’d gone out for a walk to clear my head, I’d seen him at the park on the corner playing with his dog. He was impossible to miss. Tall…so frigging tall, with shoulders wider than any guy on the Crestwood football team, even with their pads on. I’d tried so hard not to look when he squatted low to give his German shepherd a pat, but his button-fly jeans pulled tight over his muscular thighs and it was a wonder I didn’t wind up drooling on his hand right next to Fido. So. Hot. I don’t know if I whimpered or he just sensed my presence, but when he looked up it only got worse.
His face was beautiful. The kind of face with the power to make even a seriously badass girl start scribbling her first name next to his last name in the margins of all her notebooks. Straight, masculine nose, chiseled cheekbones, full but firm lips, and perfectly groomed light brown hair made for a pretty fine picture. Then he smiled and “pretty fine” became “holy-mother-of-God” and my stomach bottomed out.
Luck was with me, for once, and before I could make a total fool of myself, his unleashed shepherd came at me fast, barking like he meant serious, unpleasant business. An animal lover through and through, I stayed chill and waited, grateful for the reprieve and using that time to get my shit together before I became a stuttering idiot or worse. The dog stopped barking and sniffed my leg, eventually licking my hand while I patted him.
Mac had come running up, breathless and semi-apologetic. Ish. The blood was pounding in my ears, but I think I made some sense as I responded. Then again, who’s to say? We talked for a minute but things got…weird.
If it had only happened that day, I could make sense of it. First sighting of a gorgeous guy around my age, maybe my insta-lust had made it awkward. But months had passed and things had never gotten less weird. We only had two classes together—Art II and Mythology—so it wasn’t like we had to spend a whole lot of time together, but the time we did spend?
Weird.
Like I wanted him in a way that made no sense. Like I was drawn to him even though I knew almost nothing about him. And when he looked at me a little too hard, and his smile was always sort of mocking… I wanted to grab him tight and smack the shit out of him all at the same time. Yeah, weird. Enough that I wanted to turn away the second our paths crossed. But that was before. Those days were over.
If anyone should be uncomfortable now, it was him. Because I didn’t care about his body or his stupid face anymore. I was about to get medieval on his ass.
Libby continued chattering from behind me. “At least if he does go public with his column, he didn’t name you in his response. Maybe he’ll keep it to himself.”
I didn’t get my hopes up because although she was right so far, there was still a very real chance that he’d blow my cover whenever it suited him.
“Maybe he just wants to make more friends and thinks this will make him popular or whatever,” Libby said, not even bothering to hide her disgust at that theory.
Libby was like the patron saint of nerds, which was pretty odd if you were on the outside looking in. Blond, beautiful, funny, with a body from long-distance running that made most of the cheerleaders want to rush to the bathroom and hork up their chicken nuggets and tater tots after lunch. She was exactly the type of person you’d think would be all about her image and what people thought.
Not even close.
Libby was a theater geek, with a passion for woodwind instruments and Victorian literature. She loved clothes and dressing up but always seemed to miss the mark, with kooky stuff like berets and leg warmers making appearances, sometimes simultaneously.
Today she had on a pink puffy skirt with matching flats and her blond hair was secured in a bun at the top of her head with a pair of chopsticks. All in all, she looked like either the prettiest girl to ever escape a mental hospital or like she’d jacked a ballerina on the way to school and stolen her gear. And she didn’t give a crap. She was entirely unconcerned about popularity, so the idea that Mac had stooped to some stealth attack on me to gain street cred had made her even more indignant on my behalf than she’d been before.
I rounded the corner to the east wing and was about to shoot down her theory about Mac, since in the few months he’d been at Crestwood, he’d amassed a shitload of groupies and a bunch of male imitators. He might not hang out with the jocks or be part of the way “in” crowd, but he was definitely on everyone’s radar.
And now he was on mine. Literally. I zeroed in on his annoyingly broad shoulders covered in that dumb too-fitted tan jacket he always wore and cut a path toward him. Libby slowed and called after me. “I, uh, guess I’ll see you in Mr. Weston’s class. Be careful, Mags…”
Another thing about Libby: she always knew when I was going to make a scene and magically seemed to melt into the background. I didn’t blame her, but I didn’t respond either. I was too focused on my target.
“What the hell, Finnegan?” I spat when I was close enough for him to hear.
He turned around casually, like it was every day that an irate female came from behind and bitched him out in the hallway. Who knew? If he treated the girls at his old school the way he was treating me, that was probably the case. And even so, I still felt the odd little pull in my stomach.
Want.
I shoved it back and glared at him.
“Hey, Maggie.” His gray eyes seemed to twinkle with a challenge then flickered lower. Was he seriously checking me out right now? I scowled at him harder and his lips twitched a little before his face went blank and his gaze zeroed back in on mine. “What can I do for you?”
He said it like, “Fer ya,” in that accent that both irritated me and always somehow made me want to repeat him out loud, which made me even madder.
“What do you think you’re doing?” I bit out through gritted teeth.
“Just now?” His brows drew together. “I was thinking how they must have some shirts in the girls’ section and wondering why you opted to get yours from the guys’ department instead.” He leaned back against his locker and shrugged. “Then I decided to be polite and keep my thoughts to myself.”
My mouth dropped open, because WTF, and I barely resisted the urge to tug on my standard-issue vintage concert T-shirt that, aside from being a little big, looked just fine, thank you very much. “Do you have a specific problem with me, or are you just a pain in the ass in general?”
He tipped his head to the side like he was considering each word. “Hard question to answer, but I’m going to have to say no on both counts, although my mother might disagree on the latter.”
“Don’t play stupid. You know what I’m talking about. I got your little letter in my locker.” I jammed a hand on my hip and tried not to let my voice go all shrill, like it did when I got really pissed. It was a short trip from that to the prepubescent boy cracking stage, and that always felt like it undermined my credibility.
I glanced around at the thinning crowd and hissed in a furious whisper, “The advice column thing is my deal. You starting your own is bad enough, but doing it just to argue with my points is crossing the line. And the name calling… What the hell?”
I tapped my booted foot in a furious beat on the scuffed black-and-white linoleum. I started to say more, but his brow was furrowed like he was deep in thought. Maybe that was all that needed saying. Maybe he hadn’t realized what a dickwad he was being, and now that I’d pointed out the error of his ways, he’d stop and—
“Thing of it is, Maggie…your column is shite.”
My brain booted down, and I stopped tapping, staring up at him in shock.
“What did you just say?”
He shrugged a ridiculously wide shoulder and shook his head, sending a lock of brown hair slipping onto his forehead, which he shoved away impatiently. “Come on. It’s the ranting of an unhappy, boyfriendless teenage girl with no real understanding of relationships or guys at all. Not to mention the terrible, Dr. Phil advice you always give. That’s not real life.”
He shifted his pile of books to his other arm and slammed the door of his locker shut as I stood there, speechless, still trying to process what he was saying. But he wasn’t done yet. “They’d be better off cracking open a fortune cookie and getting an answer there. I’m just trying to offset your damage.”
My jaw was still swinging when the bell rang and he walked away.
Walked. Away. Seriously? If I was mad before, this time, the anger that tore through me was a living thing, with breath and pulse and depth and color.
Red.
When I called after him this time, my voice was the furthest thing from shrill, and it echoed down the now-empty hallway. “Don’t move, Finnegan. Or else.”
He slowed and then stopped, but he didn’t turn to face me. Instead, he shifted to peer at me over his shoulder. “Or else what, Maggie?” The icy look in his eyes made me pause, but only for a second.
My nails dug deeply into the palms of my hands as a thousand ancient curses I didn’t even realize I knew flew to my lips, unspoken.
That should have been a good thing, the unspoken part. Problem was, they didn’t need to be spoken. All I had to do was…nothing. I didn’t have to do anything. It was there. Ready. Waiting. I just had to take the cap off and let it flow. It would be a relief I only knew when I was sleeping. Even earlier, my little locker meltdown had only been the barest minimum leak. The finest of cracks in the eggshell, with a trickle of power allowed to ooze out.
If I really let it go—
“Get to class, Mr. Finnegan. Miss Raynard.” Hortense’s stern voice called from the open doors of her classroom.
Mac finally turned then to face me fully, and his gaze held mine for what seemed like an eternity but was probably only a second. What I saw there confused me enough that when Hortense repeated herself, I obeyed without argument. Disgust? Challenge? Hatred?
The haze that had clouded my vision dissipated as more questions flooded my already overloaded brain, but I dragged my ass down the hall to my next class, refusing to give in and look over my shoulder to see if someone was still watching me.
Who was Mac Finnegan, and why did it feel like he knew me? Like, knew me knew me. The way Libby and my mom and my grandma knew me.
And why did it feel like he had so much loathing for me?
It might have made sense if he knew what I was. That I had this power living inside me that had been fighting its way out for the past six months. The thing that had indirectly almost killed a boy…
But he didn’t know that. He couldn’t. Still, the shame that came every time I thought of Eric filled me, and I fought the slick of nausea battering my belly.
By the time school ended, I’d talked myself in mental circles only to come to the realization that I was being paranoid. Mac was a jerk, but it was nothing more than that. Still, I was totally wrung out. I felt like I’d gone to the dentist for ten fillings, stopped by the doctor for a tetanus shot and some stitches, and then took a midterm all in the same day. When I pushed through the heavy metal doors to the outside world, the icy air that hit me was a relief.
“Hey.”
I tensed but then was relieved to see it was only Bink swaggering toward me. I couldn’t take another run-in with Mac right now without imploding.
“Hey yourself. How was your day?” I asked, working up a grin. Bink wasn’t what I’d call intuitive, but he had a sixth sense when it came to my moods, and I wasn’t in any shape to answer questions or discuss a certain arrogant asshole. Not yet.
“Pretty good. Coach says if I ace my English paper, he can start me again next game.” His face broke into a wide smile, and a group of girls walking by stared at him. I could hear their whispers when they passed, and the words “hot” and “dimples” were definitely in the mix.
It was hard to judge objectively after fifteen years of friendship, but I stole a glance up at him as we strolled side-by-side toward the parking lot. At six-one, 210, he was a wall of muscle capped off by a mop of dirty blond hair and the chronic chin stubble that had some girls referring to him as Thor behind his back. He was one of those kids who had looked like a man since eighth grade but whose maturity level hadn’t quite caught up with the rest of the package.
That aside, he was easy to look at. I probably should have been affected by it, but most of the time, I saw him as the same scrawny kid I used to catch salamanders and share PB&Js with during long summer days.
I was no fashion model, but the old Bink hadn’t really cared what he looked—or smelled—like when we were kids, and he was pretty ripe most days. While I didn’t miss that, there was one thing I did miss…
Being able to tell him everything. Because the fear of him knowing? The fear of him looking at me differently? It was more than I could stand. With all the changes going on in my life, he was one of the few constants, and I needed us to be exactly what we’d always been. Only we weren’t.
I wished I could’ve blamed the recent change on our respective social standings at school. Before the “incident,” I was pretty much invisible. Then, I became all too visible.
The past few months, since I’d started the column and some time had passed from the thing with Eric, I’d slipped back into a semi-comfortable state of anonymity. Sure, girls liked the column, but they didn’t know I wrote it, and even if they did, I doubted I’d ever be really popular.
Despite having overheard my mom’s friend say that my black hair and green eyes made for some “striking coloring,” anything notable about my looks stopped there. I had a decent figure, but it wasn’t what I’d call standout. My nose wasn’t small and it wasn’t big. My cheekbones did their job as advertised and held my face up adequately, but they weren’t going to cut glass or anything. My lips weren’t Jessica Alba plump or Kate Middleton thin. I was pretty with a lowercase p. As for standing out in other ways, well…I just didn’t.
I was a decent student, but I was nobody’s valedictorian or any kind of laude. I didn’t play a sport or have the urge to put on a short skirt and shake plastic tassels for anyone who did. In fact, aside from the whole semi-god thing, I was basically regular.
But Bink? Bink was not only gorgeous, he was fun to be around and also the starting quarterback of the football team, which all the girls seemed to like even more than my column. Through it all, though, he hadn’t changed much.
When push came to shove, he’d not only have my back, he’d also keep a watch on the front, side, top, and bottom if I needed him. If anyone had changed, it was me.
I had secrets now that hurt too much to tell. I had done things…terrible things, and the thought of seeing the disappointment in his eyes if I said them out loud made me keep my piehole shut. And this was creating a thin but very real wall between us that I fucking despised but felt helpless to stop building. Maybe some quality time with him was exactly what the doctor ordered on a craptacular day like this one.
“Do you need help with your paper? I have some time tonight if you want.”
He turned grateful baby blues on me and nodded. “That would be excellent, thanks.”
We slowed as we reached his car, a red classic Firebird that looked way better than it ran. We’d had to get my mom to jump it that morning when it wouldn’t start before school, and I crossed my fingers that we didn’t run into the same problem again. It had already felt like the longest day in history.
“So what’s your paper supposed to be about?”
“Jane Austen. I tried to read the books, but jeez, Mags. They’re so boring.” His brow wrinkled, and he looked pained. “How could anyone like that crap?”
I shrugged and tugged open the passenger door. “You’re asking the wrong girl.”
Although Bink and I were the same age, I was a better student and had taken a lot of the classes he was taking now the year before, so I’d already choked down my dose of Austen. My taste ran more toward Veronica Roth and Sarah Dessen, so it hadn’t been fun times.
“But we don’t have to like it to write a paper on it. We’ll make it fun. No worries.”
He slid into the driver’s seat, and we both held our breath as he turned the key. It sputtered but then caught, and the engine roared. Maybe things actually were looking up.
“Sweet,” he murmured under his breath and clicked on his seatbelt.
It wasn’t until we’d pulled out of the lot that I managed to let go of some of the tension that had knitted my neck into knots since I’d found Mac’s little note. I had a reprieve. Another sixteen hours or so before I had to go back there. Before I had to face him again.
It wasn’t long enough, but I’d take it.
Determined to make the best of the afternoon, I turned to Bink. “I heard some gossip today. Talk to me. What’s up with you and Ally?”
His cocky smile made his response unnecessary, but I let him crow about it anyway. “I asked her out at lunch and she said yeah. She’s going to see family in Vermont this weekend, but next weekend we’re going to the movies to see House of Demons. I figure I’ll pull the old ‘it’s okay, I’ll protect you’ arm around the shoulder move and see if I get a chance to touch her boob.”
He looked at me expectantly, and I gave him the patented deadpan eyes he’d set me up for, which made him laugh.
“Speaking of which, Libby wants to go out tomorrow and see the new Spiderman movie. You down?” He turned hopeful puppy dog eyes on me, and I nodded.
“You and Libby, eh? Sure I won’t be cock blocking you?” I teased. Bink and Libby were always arguing, and I’d been teasing them for years it was pent up sexual tension. Neither of them had taken the bait yet, though Bink’s face turned an interesting shade of pink all of a sudden.
“Yeah right. Libby?” He coughed. “Not likely. So you down or what?”
I stared at him hard, for the first time wondering if maybe there was something weird brewing between the two of them. I didn’t know how I’d feel about that either. Probably not good.
“Sure,” I said.
I was down. It would likely do wonders for my mood to get out and be around people who loved me. And who knew? Maybe today was just a fluke. Not an omen of a lot of crappy days to come, but only one crappy day. Maybe Mac would forget about whatever he’d been trying to pull and leave me alone altogether and tomorrow would be better.
Then again, maybe not.