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Chapter no 11

I Hope This Doesn't Find You

โ€ŒOur school forces us to fill out these career surveys at two separate points in time: one in year five, and one in year eleven. They assure us that theโ€Œ

surveys are anonymous, so weย should feel comfortable being honest, but the results always end up posted on the very public bulletin board with our

names attached right below. Well, the majority of the results anyway. The student whoโ€™d writtenย sugar babyย for their answer had theirs taken down within an hour.

A quick glance at the board and you can pretty easily spot the emerging pattern. The kid who wanted to be a playwright now wants to be an accountant. The boy who wanted to be an astronaut now plans on becoming a pharmacist. The one who wanted to be an artist now has their sights set on med school. Hobbies are traded for more stable, lucrative, practical careers. Dreams are shattered once the mechanics of going to the bathroom in outer space are taken into greater consideration.

But for Julius and me, our career goals have stayed consistent throughout the years. In year five, we were already researching the highest- paid jobs and the most inโ€‘demand degrees; him, because he craved the prestige, and me, because I just needed the fastest route to the best future for my family. Something that paid the bills on time, that guaranteed stability regardless of what became of my brotherโ€™s sporting career, that would give my mom something to brag about to the nosy aunties. So on both occasions, he wrote downย lawyer, and I wrote downย data analyst.

Abigailโ€™s career ambitions, on the other hand, have jumped all over the place. Her results were a list of crossed-off and rewritten answers, covering everything imaginable: professional taster, professional equestrian,

ballerina, fashion stylist, online dating ghostwriter (which I didnโ€™t even know was a thing), and party planner.

โ€œYou know what? I really, truly feel party planning could be, like, a viable career for me,โ€ Abigail says as she backs away from the confetti machine and surveys my transformed living room. โ€œWhat do you think, darling?โ€

Iโ€™m thinking that thereโ€™s a literal confetti machine in my living room. โ€œItโ€™s very, um . . .โ€ Itโ€™s aย lot. I have no idea what kind of budget Abigail is working with here. Frankly, Iโ€™m not sure Abigail understands the concept of a budget; whenever she wants something, all she has to do is ask her parents and theyโ€™ll give her two of it. Itโ€™s not that sheโ€™s super rich or anything.

Abigail and her family are simply devout believers in the value of a Good Experience, of living in the moment. Theyโ€™re the type to spend a monthโ€™s worth of savings for concert tickets to their favorite artist; to book the trip to Italyย nowย and worry about the cost later; to stay in the hotel room with

the ocean view even if itโ€™s twice as expensive as the regular rooms, because

weโ€™re already here, so we might as well enjoy it properly.

As someone whoโ€™s a strong advocate of saving up just in case a comet crashes into our house and insurance refuses to cover it, itโ€™s a bit harder for me to enjoy the elaborate bouquets of flowers and chocolate fountain Abigailโ€™s bought for this one occasion. I barely even recognize my own house. Sheโ€™s dimmed the lights and planted candles around the place so the walls appear to be a shade of pastel pink, obscuring all Maxโ€™s muddy sneaker marks. There are also giant cartons of alcohol lined up along the couches. I donโ€™t know where Abigail procured them from, but I doubt her methods were fully legal.

As if my list of worries werenโ€™t already long enough.

โ€œIโ€™m only renting the confetti machine for the night,โ€ she reassures me. โ€œItโ€™s just to set the mood from the beginning. You want people to come in and be like,ย Wow, I can tell right away from the quality of the confetti

scattered casually but strategically across the floor that this will be the best party Iโ€™ve ever been to.โ€

I let out a snort. โ€œNobody thinks like that.โ€ โ€œTheyโ€™ll think that when they see your house.โ€

โ€œBut . . . will they even come?โ€ I worry, pressing my ear against the front doorโ€”because itโ€™s a comfortable position, of course. Not because I think this is the most effective way for me to be alerted and prepare myself the instant I hear the sound of footsteps in my driveway. โ€œWe said it would start at six on the dot andโ€”โ€ I glance at the clock. โ€œAnd itโ€™s already five

forty-three.โ€

โ€œNot everyone is as punctual as you are,โ€ Abigail says. โ€œYour idea of ten minutes late is equivalent to the average personโ€™s idea of twenty minutes early. And trust me, theyโ€™reย definitelyย going to want to come. Theyโ€™d rock up to a serial killerโ€™s house if there was the promise of free booze.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s highly concerning. You realize thatโ€™s highly concerning, right?โ€ She shrugs. โ€œJust how it is.โ€

โ€œAlsoโ€”โ€ I pause. Frown. โ€œIโ€™m sorry, did you just compare me to a serial killer?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ย she says, with too much emphasis. โ€œAlthough, just to put it out there, even if youย wereย a serial killer, I would absolutely stick by you and sharpen your knives.โ€

โ€œHow sweet.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d also clean the blood off your bathroom floor,โ€ she adds brightly. โ€œI was reading this fascinating article the other day about how to use basic laundry detergents to do just that. You wouldnโ€™t have to worry about leaving behind any evidence.โ€

โ€œOkay, wait.โ€ I hold up a hand. โ€œIn thisโ€”frankly disturbing, highly unrealisticโ€”scenario youโ€™ve conjured out of nowhere, why am I murdering people in myย bathroom?โ€

โ€œWell, you wouldnโ€™t be murdering people in your kitchen. Thatโ€™s just unhygienic.โ€

I grimace. โ€œI fear this conversation has gotten away from us.โ€

โ€œYeah, sorry, what were we talking about again? Oh right. Theyโ€™ll show up, Sadie, I promiseโ€”โ€

Before sheโ€™s even finished her sentence, the sound of voices drifts over from the front yard.

โ€œOh my god, people are actually coming,โ€ I say, my throat drying. All of a sudden, it feels like someoneโ€™s playing kickball with my intestines. The skirt Iโ€™m wearing is too tight, the fabric too itchy.

โ€œSee? Iโ€™m always right.โ€ Abigail smiles. She refastens the sash around her shimmery dress, fluffs up her hair, and gently guides me out of the way to open the door. โ€œHello, hello,โ€ she calls out. โ€œPlease do come in.โ€

Itโ€™s Ray.

Heโ€™s rocked up with four other guys from our history class, and as he steps inside in his oversized varsity jacket and pristine trainers, his eyes

sweeping over the party decorations, I experience a moment of pure, heart- stopping panic. What if he isnโ€™t here for the party itself? What if theyโ€™ve coordinated some kind of attack on my house? What if theyโ€™re going to all start egging the place or laughing at me? But then he sees the alcohol, and he breaks into a grin. โ€œDamn, I knew Iโ€™d come to the right place.โ€

โ€œWelcome,โ€ I say tentatively.

โ€œSee, you guys?โ€ Ray calls to his friends as he moves past me. โ€œTold you thereโ€™d be free drinks. Letโ€™s get the others over here as well.โ€

He shoots off a message on his phone, and in hardly any time at all,

dozens of people start pulling up in my driveway. Abigail really was right. I shouldnโ€™t have worried about my classmates not showing, even with my current social status. Soon, thereโ€™s so little room left for parking that the

cars are lined up all the way down the street, girls checking their lipstick and giggling as they join the crowds streaming inside.

Nobody eggs my house. Nobody stalks up to me and slaps me. Nobody calls me a bitch. Though I brace myself for the worst every time I open the door, people seem more impressed than anything by the alcohol supply and the decorations. I even manage to get a little smile and a compliment on my outfit from one of Rosieโ€™s influencer friends.

Slowly, my muscles relax.

My heart unhooks itself from my rib cage. My breathing evens out.

Then the door swings open again, and I find myself staring at the last person in the world Iโ€™d expect to appear.

โ€œWhat are you here for?โ€ I ask Julius. Iโ€™m too surprised to remember to sharpen my words, to hold on to my grudge from the bookstore. To do anything except stare.

He looks just as confused, as if someone else had guided him to my house. Heโ€™s certainly not dressed for a party; heโ€™s wearing a navy blazer that brings out the darkness of his eyes, the natural red tint of his lips. But then his features wrap themselves into a perfect little scowl, and he stuffs his hands into his pockets, straightens his spine. โ€œThe same thing as

everyone else,โ€ he says. โ€œI heard there was free liquor so I thought Iโ€™d drop by.โ€

I blink at him. โ€œI didnโ€™t know you drank. Actually, I recall you saying last year thatย the only beverages worth your time were coffee and mineral water.โ€

His skin flushes, though his scowl remains in place. โ€œPerhaps Iโ€™ve changed my mind.โ€

โ€œOr perhaps youโ€™re here to make fun of me,โ€ I guess.

โ€œThis may come as a shock, but not everything is about you, Sadie. I donโ€™t care whose party this is; I simply didnโ€™t have anywhere better to go,โ€ he says, his voice bored.

โ€œHow sad. Youโ€™re not wanted in your own home? You have to come bother me in mine?โ€

He flinches, then rights himself again with cool poise. The twist of his mouth turns cruel. โ€œWell, if I can make your night a little worse, why not? Iโ€™ll at least have accomplished something here.โ€

I lean against the doorframe, my heart speeding. Had I imagined it?

Struck some invisible nerve? Was it something I said? But when I assess his face, his gaze is cold as stone; it seems impossible he could feel any human emotion at all.

โ€œWhat are you waiting for?โ€ He glances over his shoulder at my front yard, then back at me, his brows raised. โ€œYouโ€™re blocking the entrance.โ€

I realize itโ€™s true. Thereโ€™s already a line forming behind him, people squeezing past one another to edge closer. I sigh and step back and they spill through the door all at once. A guy Iโ€™ve never spoken to before pauses on his way in, catches Juliusโ€™s eye, and calls out at the top of his voice so itโ€™s audible even over the thudding music, โ€œCute outfit, Julius Caesar. Are you planning on heading to a job interview soon? Because with that blazer, Iโ€™mย sureย theyโ€™d hire you.โ€

Laughter bubbles up from around the house.

Juliusโ€™s face darkens. โ€œAre you satisfied?โ€ he hisses under his breath, the accusation stark in his gaze. โ€œItโ€™s all thanks to you.โ€

I swallow. I canโ€™t lie, Iย doย feel bad. No doubt that comment was inspired by another one of my responses to his emails, which had unfortunately been addressed to our entire class. The new nickname as well. โ€œIโ€™ll fix it,โ€ I tell him. โ€œI can fix it. Iโ€™ve got it under control already.โ€

โ€œDo you consider yourself a god or something? How are you planning to fix it?โ€ he demands.

โ€œIโ€™m throwing the partyโ€”โ€

โ€œHang on. Isย thatย what this is about?โ€ He shakes his head with disbelief. โ€œSee, Iย knewย you had some kind of ulterior motiveโ€”โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t make it sound so sinister,โ€ I snap.

โ€œDonโ€™t be so naive about this,โ€ he retorts, just as fiercely. โ€œYou really think you can just put on some upbeat music, bring a bunch of alcohol, and everyone will haveย suchย a wonderful time tonight theyโ€™ll forget you insulted a significant portion of the student body?โ€

โ€œWell, itโ€™s working,โ€ I say.

At least, thatโ€™s what it seems like. People are lounging on my couch, chatting in the corridors, drinks in hands, falling over themselves laughing, their expressions open, relaxed. Happy. The air is warm with the heat of

bodies and the flickering candle flames. Aside from that guyโ€™s one remark, the emails might as well not exist in this space.

โ€œIf you truly believe that, youโ€™re about to be very disappointed,โ€ Julius scoffs. โ€œAnd whatโ€™s the point of hosting a party if you arenโ€™t even having

fun?โ€

I tighten my jaw. โ€œWhat do you mean? Iโ€™m havingย plentyย of fun.โ€ My eyes snap to the group of boys on the other side of the room. โ€œIn fact, Iโ€™m just about to go and tell those people to stop dipping raw cabbage into the chocolate fountain.โ€

โ€œYeah, a real blast,โ€ he mutters. But when I turn to go, he stops me. โ€œWait.โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ I say irritably.

He hesitates. Runs a slow, self-conscious hand through his hair. โ€œDo they . . . really look bad? My clothes, I mean.โ€

Iโ€™m dumbfoundedโ€”as much by the question as the fact that heโ€™s asking

me. โ€œYou look how you always look, Julius,โ€ I manage.

His eyes are wary. โ€œAnd how is that?โ€

โ€œCompletely pretentious,โ€ I say. I shouldnโ€™t elaborate any further, but something about the stiffness of his posture, the rare vulnerability in his face, makes me add: โ€œIn a nice way though.โ€

Then I bite down on my tongue and make a quick exit before I can say anything else Iโ€™ll regret.

โ€ข โ€ข โ€ข I should have prepared myself for this.

Iโ€™ve heard of it happening at other parties. Iโ€™ve seen it play out in movies. I know itโ€™s a popular way to pass the time, especially once the novelty of the chocolate fountain and confetti machine starts to wear off. But I still experience a horrible shock when someone suggests, two hours into the party, that we play a game of truth or dare.

โ€œItโ€™ll be fun,โ€ Georgina says. She arrived about thirty minutes ago, with sparkly butterfly clips in her hair and blue mascara streaked down her cheeks. The word has since spread that sheโ€™d been dumped by a girl on her gymnastics team for one of the glamorous equestrians at another school. โ€œI really just want to have fun tonight, โ€™kay?โ€

I accepted long ago that my definition ofย funย tends to differ from the general teen demographic. Fun is baking a new batch of egg tarts, or beating my previous record for the two-hundred-meter dash, or adding my grades to my academic spreadsheet. Itโ€™s not roller coasters or getting wasted on a beach or participating in a game that requires you either embarrass yourself or expose yourself to a number of people.

But Iโ€™m clearly the only one with reservations.

โ€œSounds cool to me,โ€ Ray chimes in, and the others are all nodding, sitting themselves down in a circle.

โ€œHey.โ€ Abigail nudges me. Sheโ€™s rarely sheepish, but thereโ€™s no other way to describe the way sheโ€™s smiling. โ€œIโ€™m so, so sorry to do this, but I have to leave early. My sisterโ€™s car just broke down on a freeway and

Liamโ€™s been ignoring her textsโ€”yes, again, I know, donโ€™t give me that look

โ€”but are you going to be okay on your own? Because I can, like, figure something else out if you need me to.โ€

I do need you here, I want to say.ย Donโ€™t leave me at this party by myself. Please donโ€™t go yet.ย But the words stick to my throat; Iโ€™ve never been good at asking people for things. โ€œNo, thatโ€™s completely fine,โ€ I tell her. โ€œGo.โ€

โ€œGive me updates later,โ€ she says, grabbing her purse.

โ€œIโ€™ll message you,โ€ I promise.ย If I manage to make it through this alive, I add inside my head, dread dragging its ice-cold fingers over my stomach.

The first few rounds of the game are fairly tame. Somebody dares Rosie to text her ex; she whips out her phone without hesitating and sends them a selfie. Somebody dares Ray to do fifty push-ups, which he performs with such flair, the sleeves of his shirt rolled up to expose his muscles, that I

have to wonder if heโ€™d arranged the dare beforehand just to show off.

Someone else asks one of the theater kids what her biggest fear is, and she responds with โ€œThe realization that life is little more than the slow leak of time until we meet our inevitable demise,โ€ which sends everyone into an uncomfortable silence for a while.

Then itโ€™s Juliusโ€™s turn.

Frankly Iโ€™m surprised heโ€™s still here. Even more surprised that heโ€™d join the game.

โ€œWhat do you pick?โ€ Rosieโ€™s friend asks him.

Julius manages to look indifferent when he replies, โ€œTruth.โ€

Of course heโ€™d pick that, I think scornfully. God forbid anyone force him to do something unseemly, like mess up his hairstyle.

Rosieโ€™s friend giggles. Peers at him under her long lashes. โ€œOkay, then . . . Do you like anyone?โ€

It has nothing to do with me, but my heart seizes as if Iโ€™ve just been electrocuted. Iโ€™m blinking too fast, sitting up too straight. I canโ€™t control my body, canโ€™t control the weird, nervous feeling fluttering through my veins.

Canโ€™t stop myself from looking at him as if I can find the answer written over his face.

For the briefest second, he looks back at me.

Then he frowns and shakes his head, once. โ€œNo.โ€ His voice is firm. The girlโ€™s face swiftly crumples in obvious disappointment.

Inexplicably I feel a pang of it echo through my own chest.

โ€œHow boring,โ€ Georgina complains. โ€œYou really donโ€™t likeย anyone?

There are so many pretty girls in our year level.โ€ Julius shrugs. โ€œYou asked for the truth.โ€

โ€œFine. Next person, then. Truth or dare, Sadie?โ€ Georgina asks. Now all eyes are on me, and the air in the living room suddenly seems to have weight. I can feel it pressing down on me, crushing my ribs, sealing my next breath inside my lungs.

My throat dries. Ifย Iย choose truth like Julius did, theyโ€™ll most definitely ask me about the emails, and I canโ€™t afford to upset anyone further. All my work for tonight, this whole partyโ€”itโ€™ll be for nothing. So I reply, โ€œDare.โ€

Ray grins. โ€œDare, huh?โ€

Too late, Iโ€™m hit with the terrible, sinking realization that Iโ€™ve chosen wrong. Walked headfirst into a trap. I canโ€™t even imagine what theyโ€™ll think up.ย Thisย is why I should have been better prepared; I could have thought

through my options more carefully, made up for my lack of experience by doing more research.

Ray ducks his head and murmurs something to his friends, and they hoot with laughter.

โ€œIs it too much?โ€ the girl sitting cross-legged next to them asks. โ€œNah, itโ€™s all for fun, right?โ€ Ray replies, his smile widening. โ€œAnd

Sadieโ€™s a good sport.โ€

Dread simmers through my veins like acid. I wring my fingers in my lap, then curl them behind my back. Nothing helps.

โ€œOkay.โ€ Ray claps his hands together with the pompous air of a game- show host. โ€œWeโ€™ve decided. We dare you . . . to kiss Julius.โ€

My mind shuts down on itself.

I can only gape at him, unsure if this is their idea of a joke, if Iโ€™ve misheard. I must have. Thereโ€™s absolutely no way they would ask it of me. Theyย knowย our history by now, theyโ€™ve read the emails, they know weโ€™ve hated each other for the past ten yearsโ€”

But of course, thatโ€™s exactly why theyโ€™re asking.

My gaze cuts to Julius again. I just need to see his reaction. I expect him to look disgusted by the idea, or enraged, or perhaps delighted at my imminent humiliation. But his expression is unreadable. He shows no outward emotion, and somehow thatโ€™s worse. Maybe thatโ€™s how little it

affects him, how little it means. Maybe thatโ€™s how littleย Iย matter.

Itโ€™s like thereโ€™s a stone lodged in my chest, blocking the blood from rushing to my heart.

โ€œWell?โ€ Ray challenges.

I swallow. Force myself to mimic Juliusโ€™s nonchalance. โ€œSure, why not?โ€

Surprised murmurs rise from the circle. Even Ray looks stunned, like heโ€™d been waiting for me to protest.

And Julius is staring at me, his brows faintly creased. Iโ€™ve managed to catch him off guard as well. I feel a flush of victory, not so dissimilar to the thrill of finishing ahead of him in a race.

โ€œCome on,โ€ I say, standing up and smoothing out my skirt, praying nobody can see my hands quiver.ย Itโ€™s just a kiss, I tell myself.ย Itโ€™s just a boy.

Julius hesitates, then pushes onto his feet too. Nobody speaks; theyโ€™re all watching us, deadly focused, anticipation building like the wind before a storm. The lights seem to dim further, and the space between us feels like nothing, like twenty miles, like ghost flames.

Heโ€™s waiting. For me to make a fool of myself. For me to make the first move.

I let my anger carve away my nerves and close my eyes and kiss him. Itโ€™s so fast, so light that I only have time to register the startling softness of his lips before Iโ€™m reeling back again.

Oh my god.

I did it.

I actually did it.

The guys are laughing in the background. Someone else is calling my name, but I canโ€™t hear them. This isnโ€™t about them anymore. This is only about us, about the painful beat of my heart, the heat scorching my face.

Julius touches a finger to his lips like he canโ€™t quite believe it either.

Then he straightens. Cocks his head, his eyes black with cool amusement. โ€œYou call that a kiss?โ€ he says on a scoff. His voice comes out lower than usual, and I can see the effort in the movement of his throat. โ€œThat was barely anything.โ€

The heat inside me flares higher, incinerating all logic and reservation. I want to slap that smug look off his face, but then I think of something even better.

โ€œWhat about this, then?โ€ I challenge, and before he can reply, I grab the collar of his shirt and pull him to me.

This time, when our lips meet, I donโ€™t back away. I deepen the kiss, letting my fingers slide up his neck, curl into his hair. For one moment, I can feel his shock, the tension running through his frame like a heated wire, and I think:ย Iโ€™ve won.ย Iโ€™ve proven him wrong. Then he kisses me back,

presses me closer, and something inside me slides off-balance.

Itโ€™s not meant to be like this.ย The thought is hazy, distant, lost to the sensation of his mouth on mine.

Because I was lying to myself before. Julius isnโ€™t just a boy. Heโ€™s my enemy. My equal. My point of comparison. Heโ€™s the one Iโ€™m constantly trying to outrun, to outsmart, to impress. Heโ€™s the ever-moving target in my peripheral vision, the person Iโ€™ve mapped all my plans around, the start and finish line and everything in between. All my dreams and nightmares are about him and only him.

I canโ€™t concentrate. The most terrible part of this is that it doesnโ€™t feel

terrible at all; not the warm flush of his skin against mine or the firmness of his grip or the breathless sound in the back of his throat.

I want to stay like this. I want to keep going.

As soon as I think it, white-hot panic jolts through me, reviving the little common sense I have left.ย No.ย No, I shouldnโ€™t want this. I shouldnโ€™t be doing this at all. I push against his chest and he lets go instantly, eyes wide, hands dropping to his sides as if heโ€™s been jerked out of a daze.

Neither of us speaks, and Iโ€™m mortified to find myself breathing hard.

The harsh, uneven sound fills the room.

โ€œDamn.โ€ Someone whistles. โ€œDidnโ€™t know she had it in her . . .โ€

On a regular day, this alone would make me curl into a ball and die on the spot. But my attention is pinned on Julius.

โ€œExcuse me,โ€ he murmurs, clearing his throat. He wonโ€™t meet my eyes. โ€œIโ€™m going to go outside forโ€”โ€ He makes a vague gesture to the door without finishing his sentence, and then heโ€™s striding out, his footsteps quick and urgent, his shoulders tensed.

I donโ€™t even want to imagine how red my face is right now.

โ€œIโ€™m also, umโ€”I need to grab a drink,โ€ I say. My voice sounds odd, choked. โ€œI-Iโ€™ve already done my dare.โ€

Nobody tries to stop me.

โ€ข โ€ข โ€ข

The night air wraps around me when I step outside.

Itโ€™s warmer than itโ€™s been for months, and I can find the early hints of spring in our backyard. The budding roses, the sweet scent of fresh green grass, the birds rustling in the trees. A breeze snakes through my hair, ruffles my skirt. The sky is a deep, starless black, but the fairy lights

twinkle over the back porch, glowing pink and blue and yellow, as if the stars have fallen down to earth instead.

Julius is looking up at the sky too, the outline of his frame lit with gold. His arms rest over the railing, and when I step closer, I notice him digging his nails into his palms.

My feet slow over the wooden planks. I pull at my sleeves, self-

conscious all of a sudden. I donโ€™t know how to act, what to say. I donโ€™t even know why I followed him out here.

Then Julius spins around, and so many emotions flash over his face that I canโ€™t begin to decipher them all before theyโ€™re wiped clean again, leaving just one: anger. โ€œWhy did you have to do that?โ€

The venom in his voice makes me freeze. โ€œWhat?โ€ I say, confused. โ€œWhat do you mean? Iโ€” It was a dare. They asked me to.โ€

โ€œYou would kiss someone you loathe just because of a childish dare? Just because other people wanted you to?โ€ Contempt laces his tone. Each word is an arrow, and his aim lands true every time. โ€œDo their opinions really mean that much to you?โ€

This is so unreasonable, so deeply insulting, Iโ€™m rendered speechless. I canโ€™t believe Iโ€™d kissed him bare minutes ago. I canโ€™t believe Iโ€™d let him pull me close like thatโ€”run his fingers over my skin like thatโ€”

Something blazes over his face, as though heโ€™s remembering it too. โ€œWhatโ€™sย wrongย with you?โ€ I finally choke out. โ€œIf you didnโ€™t want to

kiss me, you could have just refused.โ€

โ€œYou think I had a chance to? You grabbed meโ€”โ€

โ€œYou stood up too,โ€ I cut in, my voice trembling with fury. โ€œYou kissed me backโ€”โ€

โ€œIt was a natural reflex,โ€ he says. โ€œNot that I expect you to know, but

โ€”โ€

โ€œWhoโ€™s to say I wouldnโ€™t know?โ€ That shuts him up.

He stares at me. Through the brick walls, the noise from the partyโ€”the

pounding of music, the rattle of bottles, the hum of conversation punctuated by muffled shrieks of laughterโ€”feels a hundred miles away. Like it belongs to another world, another time, another place. โ€œThat . . . wasnโ€™t your first

time kissing someone,โ€ he says. A half question.

โ€œOf course not.โ€ It was only my second kiss, but Iโ€™m enjoying this, proving his assumptions wrong. And I donโ€™t want to give him any reason to think that what happened just now was special, that it meant something when it didnโ€™t. It shouldnโ€™t.

โ€œWho?โ€ he asks. A full question now.

I lean over the railing, my head turned away from him. โ€œWhy do you care?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t,โ€ he says heatedly. โ€œBut I want to know.โ€

โ€œWell, I donโ€™t want to tell you,โ€ I say, just to be difficult. Just to deprive him of something too, after he stripped me of my pride.

โ€œDoes he go to our school?โ€ he presses, then corrects himself. โ€œNo, that isnโ€™t possible. Iโ€™m sure I would have heard rumors about it.โ€

I stay strategically silent.

โ€œOn vacation, then? At camp?โ€ Heโ€™s right.

It must show on my face, because he presses in, โ€œIt was at camp, wasnโ€™t it? One of those outdoor adventure camps?โ€

The idea that I would attend a camp to learn fun little skills like woodcutting and weaving and marshmallow baking instead of something academically rigorous is too offensive for me to swallow. โ€œCoding camp,โ€ I say, then see the satisfied curve of his mouth. Heโ€™d been baiting me. Of course. He knows I wouldnโ€™t be caught dead wasting my summer on a camp like that when I could be getting ahead of the coursework.

โ€œSo a coding camp,โ€ he says, turning this information over on his tongue like itโ€™s something sour. โ€œWhatโ€™s his name?โ€

My shoulders hunch in self-defense. โ€œYou seem awfully invested in the details for someone who doesnโ€™t care.โ€

โ€œI already told you, I donโ€™t.โ€ He pauses, his lips sculpted into a sarcastic smile. โ€œIโ€™m curious to know who would have suchโ€”peculiar tasteโ€”to have dated you. Unless, of course, youโ€™re making it upโ€”โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not,โ€ I snap, pushing off from the railing and whipping my head around. A misstep. He looks dangerous in the darkness, the scattered lights sharpening the hollows of his cheekbones, the bladed look in his eyes. โ€œHis name was Ben. He asked me out after our second seminar together. You can look him up, if you want. He was a swimmer, and he tutored kids during spring break. Everyone said he was attractive.โ€

I leave out the part where he broke up with me only two weeks after our first date. The night before that, thereโ€™d been a game of trivia, and my team had beaten his. Iโ€™d gone to him when it was over, holding up the plastic trophy and beaming, expecting him to be impressed, but he hadnโ€™t even congratulated me. When he dumped me outside the lecture room, heโ€™d said it was because I was too intense.ย Everythingโ€™s a competition with you,

Sadie, heโ€™d accused, rubbing a hand over his face.ย You only care about winning. It just gets really exhausting being around you all the time, you know what Iโ€™m saying? I want someone who can, like, chill out.

Itโ€™s funny, thinking about it now. Because Julius has also accused me of plenty of things in the past, but heโ€™s never faulted me for being intense. For being too much of anything. For wanting to win. Heโ€™s part of the reason why winning is worth it.

โ€œDid you . . . think he was attractive?โ€ Julius asks. The words sound forced out.

I consider this. Yes, I could understand on a general, biological level why others found Ben attractive. He had a swimmerโ€™s body, thick lashes, a smile like the sun. Every time I think about him I associate him with summer: salt air and warm sand and open waves. Nothing like Julius, with

his cold glances and sharp edges. Julius is the dead of winter, ice on your tongue and white frost and the ghost of your breath in a dark hall.

But I donโ€™t tell him that. โ€œYeah,โ€ I say, lifting my chin. โ€œOf course. And he was a great kisser too.โ€

Heโ€™s silent.

It makes me nervous. โ€œWhat? Are you jealous?โ€ I say it only to provoke a response out of him, to annoy him.

What I donโ€™t expect is for his cheeks to flush. For his hands to bunch into fists. โ€œWhy would I be jealous?โ€ he demands with a sneer, distaste written all over his face. โ€œI would rather die than kiss you again.โ€

Shame burns my skin. It feels like my whole body has caught fire. The flames shoot through my bloodstream, fill my throat, scald the inside of my lungs. It hurts. It hurts so much that the only way to distract myself from it is with rage. The need for revenge, to hurt him back, hurt him more. I lurch forward and do the first thing I can think of: I kick him. Hard, right in the knee. The sound of impact is even louder than I anticipated, a terribly satisfying thud that vibrates through my own bones.

He lets out a hiss, part pain and part surprise. โ€œHave you completelyย lost your mind, Sadie?โ€

โ€œYou deserve it,โ€ I say hotly, my blood pounding in my ears. My head is buzzing. Nothing about this night feels real.

โ€œSadieโ€”โ€

But Iโ€™ve wasted enough time. It was an awful idea to follow him out here in the first place. What had I been looking for? What had I expected from Julius Gong? So when he calls me againโ€”maybe to demand an

explanation, maybe just to throw out another insultโ€”I ignore him. I toss my hair over my shoulder and march back into the house, slamming the door behind me so hard the glass panes rattle.

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