โItโs Not a Coincidence that Denali and Denialโ
Use All the Same Letters
Jaxonโs standing at the head of the stairs, face blank but eyes searching as he stares at me.
Embarrassment slams through me, makes my face hot and my breath stutter. I start to ask him how long heโs been there, but it doesnโt really matter. Heโs been there long enough.
I wait for him to say something, to ask if Iโm okay again or to tell me to stop whining or to say one of the million and three things that fall somewhere in between those two reactions.
He doesnโt, though.
Instead, he just stands there, watching me with those black-magic eyes of his until I lose my breath againโฆthis time for a whole different reason.
โI-Iโm sorry,โ I finally stumble out. โI should go.โ
He doesnโt respond, so I move toward the stairs, but he keeps blocking them. And keeps watching me, head tilted just a little, like heโs trying to figure something out while I pray for the ground to open up and swallow me.
Now would be a perfect time for another one of those earthquakes, is all Iโm saying.
When he finally speaks, his voice sounds a little rusty.
โWhy?โ
โWhy should I leave? Or why was I crying?โ โNeither.โ
โIโฆhave no idea what Iโm supposed to say to that.โ I blow out a long breath. โLook, Iโm sorry I threatened to hit you in the art studio today. Youโre justโฆa lot sometimes.โ
He lifts a brow, but other than that, his blank expression doesnโt change. โSo are you.โ
โYeah.โ I give a watery laugh, gesture to my still-wet cheeks. โYeah, I can see why you might think that.โ
Iโm only a few steps from him, but he closes the gap, moving in until heโs only inches away from me. My mouth goes desert dry.
I wait for him to say something, but he doesnโt. I wait for him to touch me, but he doesnโt do that, either. Instead, he just stands there, so close that I can feel his breath on my cheek. So close that Iโm sure he can feel my breath on his.
And still his eyes are dark, empty, blank.
More seconds that feel like minutes tick by until finally,
finallyย he whispers, โWhatโs it like?โ
โWhatโs what like?โ Iโm baffled, and a little afraid that Iโm setting myself up to be the punch line of some joke.
โWhatโs it like to just be able to let go like that?โ
โLike what? My crying jag?โ Embarrassment swamps me again, and I wipe at my cheeks, trying to disappear even the remnants of my tears. โIโm sorry. I didnโt mean for anyone to see me. Iโโ
โNot just that. I mean, whatโs it like to be able to show what you feel and how you feel, whenever you want, without having to worry aboutโฆโ He trails off.
โWhat?โ I ask. โWithout having to worry about what?โ
For long seconds, he just looks at me. Then he kind of shakes his head and says, โNever mind.โ He walks past me, opens the door to the room that lays just beyond the alcove, and walks inside.
I stare after him, not sure what Iโm supposed to do. It feels like our conversation is over, like he just dismissed me, but he left his door open in what looks like an invitation.
I stand there for another minute or so, undecided, before he finally sticks his head back out the door. โComing?โ he asks.
I follow him insideโof course I do. But Iโm completely unprepared for what I find when I walk into the room, a room I canโt help thinking of as my own private wonderland.
Books are everywhere, stacked haphazardly on nearly every available surface.
There are three guitars in the corner, along with a drum kit that has my mouth watering and my fingers itching to touch it. To play it, like I used to play mine back when I still had one.
Back when I still had a lot of things.
In the center of the room is a giant black leather couch, covered with piles of thick, soft pillows that all but beg to be napped on.
I want to touch everything, want to run my hands over the drum kit just so I can feel its soul. I have just enough self- control left not to follow my impulses, but itโs hard. So hard that I canโt help but tuck my hands in my blazer pockets, just to be on the safe side.
Because Iโve only just now realized that this is Jaxonโs
dorm room, and to say itโs unexpected is pretty much the understatement of the century.
Jaxon seems completely uninterested in his surroundings, which seems bizarre to me even though I know itโs because this is his stuff. He sees and touches and uses it every day. But thereโs a part of me that still wants to know how he can just ignore the pile of art books by the couch or the giant purple crystal on his desk. Itโs the same part of me all but screaming that, no matter what Jaxon thinks, Iโm nowhere near cool enough to be in here with him.
Since heโs not talking, I turn to look at the art on the wall, big, wild paintings with bold colors and strokes that excite all kinds of ideas inside me. And hanging next to his deskโ even more unbelievablyโis a small pencil sketch of a woman with wild hair and sly eyes, dressed in a voluminous kimono.
I recognize it, or at least I think I do, so I walk closer, trying to get a better look. And sure enoughโ
โThis is a Klimt!โ I tell him. โYes,โ he affirms.
โThat wasnโt a question.โ Itโs under glass, so I reach out and tap the artistโs signature in the bottom right corner. โThis is an original Klimt, not a reproduction.โ
This time he doesnโt say anything, not evenย yes.
โSo youโre just going to stand there with your hands in your pockets?โ I demand. โYouโre not even going to answer me?โ
โYou just told me you werenโt asking questions.โ
โIโm not. But that doesnโt mean I donโt want to hear the story.โ
He shrugs. โThereโs no story.โ
โYou have an original Klimt hanging next to your desk. Believe me, thereโs a story there.โ My hands are shaking as I trace the lines through the glass once again. Iโve never been this close to one of his pieces before.
โI liked it. It reminded me of someone. I bought it.โ โThatโs it? Thatโs your story?โ I stare at him incredulously.
โI told you there wasnโt a story. You insisted there was.โ He cocks his head to the side, watches me through narrowed eyes. โDid you want me to lie?โ
โI want you toโฆโ I shake my head, blow out another long breath. โI donโt know what I want you to do.โ
At that, he lets out a small laughโthe very first sign of emotion heโs shown since that one franticย are you okayย in the art room. โI know the feeling.โ
Heโs halfway across the room, and thereโs a part of me that wishes he were closer. That wishes we were touching right now.
Of course, thereโs another part of me thatโs still terrified of touching him, even more terrified of having him touch me. Being in his room is too much. Looking at him worry his lower lip in the first show of nerves Iโve ever seen from him is too much.
Being touched by him, held by him, kissed by him, would be so, so,ย soย too much that Iโm afraid Iโll implode at the first brush of his lips against mine. Afraid Iโll just burn up where Iโm standing. No warning, no chance to stop it. Just a brush of his hand against mine and poof, Iโm a goner. I swear it almost happened when he carried me back to my room the other night, and that was before he sent me waffles and
walked me to class and charmed me with his text messages. Way before I saw this place.
I wonder if heโs afraid of the same thing, because instead of answering, he turns around and enters what I assume is his bedroom. At least until he realizes Iโm still staring at the Klimtโand every other fabulous thing in the roomโto be following him.
He kind of rolls his eyes, but then he comes back and gently herds me toward his bedroom, all without laying a finger on me.
โCome on. Thereโs something I want you to see.โ
I follow him without question. With Flint earlier, I had moments of concern, of worry that it wasnโt safe to be alone with him. Everything inside me warns that Jaxon is a million times more dangerous than Flint, and still I have not an ounce of trepidation when it comes to being alone in his bedroom with him. When it comes to being anywhere, or doing anything, with him.
I donโt know if that makes me foolish or a good judge of character. Not that it really matters, because it is what it is.
Jaxon stops near the edge of his bed and picks up the heavy red blanket folded across the edge of it. Then he reaches into his top dresser drawer and pulls out a pair of faux furโlined gloves and tosses them to me. โPut those on and come on.โ
โCome on where?โ I ask, baffled. But I do as he asks and slide my hands into the gloves.
He opens the window, and frigid air rushes in.
โYou canโt be serious. No way am I going out there. Iโll freeze.โ
He looks over his shoulder at me and winks. Heย winks.
โWhat was that?โ I demand. โSince when do you wink?โ
He doesnโt answer beyond a quick twist of his lips. And then climbs out the window and drops three feet onto the parapet just below the tower.
I should ignore him, should simply turn around and walk out of this room, away from any boy who thinks Iโm dumb enough to hang out on an Alaskan roof in November with nothing more than a blazer to keep me warm. Thatโs what Iย shouldย do.
Of course, just because I should do it doesnโt mean I will.
Because, apparently, when Iโm with this boy, I lose all common sense. And part of losing that common sense means doing exactly what I shouldnโtโin this case, following Jaxon straight out the window and onto the parapet.