I WALKEDย into the house and dropped my backpack on the bench by the front door. I could hear noise coming from the kitchenโMom cookingโ and started up the stairs.
Two voices came through the open doorway to Aidenโs room. His girlfriend had been a fixture at our place for the last two years, and as much as I hated going to someone younger for help, I needed their advice.
I peeked my head through the open door and caught them lying on top of the blankets, their heads together as music played softly through the speakers.
They did that sometimes. Just sat quietly together like there werenโt any words that needed to pass between them. Theyโd all been spoken.
โHey,โ I said.
โHi,โ Casey replied, sitting up.
Aiden propped himself up too, leaning against the gray headboard. โWhatโs up, sis?โ
I picked at my nails. โI need some…advice. About relationships.โ His smirk earned him a glare, which he ignored.
โStep into my office,โ he said, pointing to the giant beanbag chair near his desk.
โUh huh.โ I pulled out the rolling desk chair, sitting there instead.
Mischief still glinted in his eyes, but Casey had a kind smile on her face. Even though she went to the public high school in Seaton, I knew her better than most of my classmates. But she was Aidenโs girlfriend before she was my friend.
โWhatโs going on?โ she asked.
โThereโs this guy, and I donโt know how to get his attention,โ I grinded out the words, hating every minute of this. I was the older sister. Shouldnโt I have been imparting sisterly wisdom on him?
โEasy,โ Aiden said. โDonโt.โ
My brows came together. โWhat?โ
โIf heโs not already interested, heโs not worth your time.โ He gave me an actual smile, not one of the teasing ones I usually got. โJust be yourself.โ
โThatโs not exactly working,โ I said, fighting tears. โItโs important.โ Casey ribbed Aidenโs side.
It must have been hard because he shied away from her elbow. โOkay, okay! I will give you one tip. And then if heโs not immediately smitten, Iโll give him a swirly.โ
I rolled my eyes. โDeal or no deal?โ
There were way too many deals being made lately for my liking. Still, I nodded. Beggars couldnโt be choosers. โHelp,โ I pleaded.
โOkay, hereโs what Casey did,โ he said, smiling at her in a way that made me want to look away. โYou have to make him work for it. Let him know, without a doubt, that youโre the prize and heโd be lucky as hell to even be graced with your presence.โ
I made a gagging sound as Casey giggled. โWho is it?โ Aiden asked.
โWhat difference does it make who he is?โ
โYou might not believe it, but not all guys are the same.โ
They could have been for all the exposure Iโd had. But I couldnโt even bring myself to say Beckettโs name.
โCome on,โ Aiden said. โI wonโt tell anyone.โ โPromise?โ
He drew a pretend cross over his heart. I coughed and then muttered, โBeckett.โ โWho?โ he asked.
โBeckett,โ I repeated.
โWhat? I canโt hear you when youโre mumbling.โ โOh my gosh!โ I cried. โBeckett. Beckett Langley!โ
Aidenโs eyes widened, and I saw something worse there than humor. I saw worry. Pity.
โSis…โ he said. โAre youโโ He chewed his lip. โAre you sure?โ
Feeling all the blood in my body pooling in my ears, I stood up. โForget I asked.โ I knew when it was my time to leave. I hadnโt even felt this humiliated with someone mooing at me. My own brother didnโt think Beckett could be interested in a girl like me.
โNo.โ He rose from the bed and took my hand. โI just donโt want to see you get hurt.โ
I lifted a corner of my mouth. โToo late.โ
I walked down the hall, hearing him and Casey whispering furiously to each other, until he called, โRory!โ
I turned and walked back, a spark of hope flaring in my chest. โYeah?โ โOne piece of advice,โ he said.
I launched into his lean arms and hugged him. โThank you.โ
โDonโt thank me yet,โ he said, shooting a glare at Casey, who nodded encouragingly. โHereโs the deal with Beckett. Heโs the kind of guy whoโs always had everything handed to him. Football, money, popularityโit all came naturally. You know how many girls are interested in him. You donโt want to be one of them.โ
โBut I am,โ I deadpanned. I wasย veryย interested, and for reasons beyond the bet.
Aiden shook his head. โHeโs going to give up if itโs easy.โ โSo…โ I said, not following.
โGive him hell,โ he said. โAnd really, Beckett would be lucky to have a girl like you. Youโd be way better for him than Merritt.โ
I smiled. โThanks, Aiden.โ
As I left his room, my heart felt heavy. For all of Aidenโs good intentions, he saw me the way everyone else did, and that picture didnโt mesh with the perfect image of Beckett Langley.
Walking down the carpeted hall, I passed my room and walked into the studio Mom and Dad had redecorated for me for my seventeenth birthday. It used to be a guest bedroom, but now it was all mine for creating and thinking. The room had a sweeping view of the greenbelt behind our house, and evening light poured in through the west-facing windows.
I picked up a canvas and set it on my main easel. I hadnโt been in here much in the month since school started, consumed by the returning duties of studying and applying for college. Emerson Academy was nothing if not rigorous. They didnโt prepare students to be average. They made โwinnersโ like my dad, who took on trials of national significance. Like Zaraโs dad,
who owned a multi-million-dollar production company, or Beckettโs dad, who agented for Super-Bowl-winning NFL players.
In another school, I might have stood out, but here, I was a minnow in a Pacific-sized pond.
I sighed and got out my brushes and palette of watercolors. I liked working in the softer tones. They were like me, blurred around the edges, fading into the canvas, never standing out or making a bold statement.
My first strokes were in soft blues, a muted version of Emersonโs school colors. As I blended paint to create an image, I lost myself as I always did when creating. Here, I could paint any reality I wanted and escape the gnawing feeling of being just a little out of place. Of not being good enough.
By the time my mom called me down for supper, a couple covered the canvas. A curvy girl with thick legs and wavy hair and a handsome guy staring down at her, his arm around her.
Was Merritt right? Was my painting the only place a couple like Beckett and me could exist?
I sighed and left the room. I would be finding out soon enough.