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Chapter no 20

The Mistake (Off-Campus, #2)

As the firstย week of the semester comes to an end, I finally hear from Ramona again. And after months of ignoring her, I finally pick up the phone.

Itโ€™s time to see her in person. Iโ€™m not particularly enthusiastic about meeting for coffee, but I canโ€™t freeze her out forever. Thereโ€™s too much history between us, too many good memories I canโ€™t pretend arenโ€™t there. But this meet-up is for clearing-the-air purposes only, I assure myself as I walk across campus. Weโ€™re not going to be best buds again. Iโ€™m not sure we can be after what she did.

Itโ€™s not about her sext to Logan. Itโ€™s about what the sext indicatesโ€”her blatant disregard for my feelings and her coldhearted dismissal of our friendship. A real friend doesnโ€™t proposition the guy who hurt her best friend. A real friend puts her own selfish desires aside and offers her support.

Thirty minutes after we get off the phone, I enter the Coffee Hut and join Ramona at a table near the window.

โ€œHi.โ€ She greets me shyly. Fearfully, almost. She looks exactly the same as the last time I saw her, black hair loose around her shoulders, curvy body wrapped in tight clothing. When she notices my hair, her eyes widen. โ€œYou went blonde,โ€ she squeaks.

โ€œYeah. My mom talked me into it.โ€ I sink into the chair across from hers. A part of me is tempted to hug her, but I fight the urge.

โ€œThatโ€™s for you.โ€ She gestures to one of the coffees on the table. โ€œI just got here, so itโ€™s still hot.โ€

โ€œThanks.โ€ I curl both hands around the cup, the heat of the Styrofoam rippling into my palms. I just hiked across campus in eighty-degree weather, but suddenly I feel cold. Nervous.

An awkward silence stretches between us.

โ€œGraceโ€ฆโ€ Her throat dips with a visible gulp. โ€œIโ€™m sorry.โ€

I sigh. โ€œI know.โ€

A sliver of hope peeks through the cloud of despair in her eyes. โ€œDoes that mean you forgive me?โ€

โ€œNo, it means I know youโ€™re sorry.โ€ I pop open the plastic lid and take a sip of the coffee, then make a face. She forgot the sugar. It shouldnโ€™t bother me as much as it does, and yet itโ€™s simply another sign that my best friend is attuned to nothing about me. Not my feelings, not even my coffee preferences.

I grab two sugar packets from the little plastic tray, tear them open, and dump their contents into the cup. As I use the skinny wooden stick to stir the hot liquid, I watch Ramonaโ€™s expression change from slightly hopeful to decidedly upset.

โ€œIโ€™m a shitty friend,โ€ she whispers.

I offer no argument.

โ€œI shouldnโ€™t have sent him that message. I donโ€™t even know why I didโ€”โ€ She stops abruptly, shame reddening her cheeks. โ€œNo, Iย doย know why. Because Iโ€™m a jealous, insecure bitch.โ€

Again, no argument there.

โ€œYou really donโ€™t get it, do you?โ€ she blurts out when I remain silent. โ€œEverything comes so easy for you. You get straight Aโ€™s without even trying, you land the hottest guy on campus withoutโ€”โ€

โ€œEasy?โ€ I interrupt, an edge to my voice. โ€œYeah, I have the grades, but thatโ€™s because I study my ass off. And guys? Remember high school, Ramona? Itโ€™s not like I had a booming social calendar back then. Or now, for that matter.โ€

โ€œBecause youโ€™re as insecure as I am. You let your nerves get the best of you, but even when youโ€™re all nervous and babbly, people still like you. They like you from the moment they meet you. That doesnโ€™t happen to me.โ€ She bites her lower lip. โ€œI have to work so hard for it. The only reason anyone even noticed me in high school was because I was the bad girl. I smoked weed and dressed slutty and guys knew that if they asked me out, theyโ€™d make it to at least second base.โ€

โ€œYou didnโ€™t exactly try to discourage that.โ€

โ€œNo. Because I liked the attention.โ€ Her teeth dig harder into her lip. โ€œI didnโ€™t care if it was good attention or bad attentionโ€”I just liked being noticed. And that makes me really fucking pathetic, huh?โ€

Sorrow climbs up my spine. Or maybe itโ€™s pity. Ramona is the most confident person Iโ€™ve ever met, and hearing her rag on herself like this makes me want to cry.

โ€œYouโ€™re not pathetic.โ€

โ€œWell, Iโ€™m not a good friend, either,โ€ she says woodenly. โ€œI was so fucking jealous of you, Grace. Iโ€™ve always been the one who goes out with the hotties and asks forย yourย advice, and suddenly youโ€™re talking to me about having sex with John frickinโ€™ Logan, and I was so consumed with jealousy I wanted to scream. And when the Logan thing exploded in your faceโ€ฆโ€ Guilt flashes in her eyes. โ€œIt made me feelโ€ฆrelieved. And kind of smug, I guess. And then I got it into my head that ifย Iย was the one hooking up with him, thereโ€™s no way he would have rejectedย me, andโ€ฆyeah, so I messaged him.โ€

Jesus. That last thing I said about her not beingย pathetic? Strike that from the record.

โ€œI was stupid and selfish, and Iโ€™m so sorry, Gracie.โ€ She implores me with her eyes. โ€œCan you forgive me? Can we please start over?โ€

I take a long sip of coffee, eyeing her over the rim of my cup. Then I set it down and say, โ€œI canโ€™t do that right now.โ€

Distress lines her forehead. โ€œWhy not?โ€

โ€œBecause I think we need a break. Weโ€™ve spent every waking hour together since the first grade, Ramona.โ€ Frustration clenches inside me. โ€œBut weโ€™re in university now. We should be branching out and forming connections with new people. And honestly, I canโ€™t do that when youโ€™re around.โ€

โ€œWe can do it together,โ€ she protests.

โ€œNo, we canโ€™t. The only friends I made last year were Jess and Maya, and I donโ€™t evenย likeย them. I just need space, okay? Iโ€™m not saying weโ€™re never going to talk again. You were a huge part of my life for so long, and I donโ€™t know if I want to throw all that away over a stupid text message. But I also canโ€™t go back to the way things used to be.โ€

She goes quiet, chewing so hard on her lip Iโ€™m surprised it doesnโ€™t start spurting blood. I can tell she wants to argue, to force a reconciliation, push her friendship on me, but for once in her life, Ramona defers to me.

โ€œCan we stillโ€ฆI donโ€™t know, text? Have coffee sometime?โ€ She sounds like a little girl whoโ€™s just been told the cherished family dog has been taken to โ€œthe farm.โ€

After a beat, I nod. โ€œIโ€™m okay with that. Starting off slowly.โ€

Her hopeful expression returns in full-force. โ€œHow about coffee, then? We can meet here again.โ€

Despite my lingering resistance, I offer another nod.

Relief floods her face. โ€œYou wonโ€™t regret this. I promise you, Iโ€™m not going to take you for granted ever again.โ€

Iโ€™ll believe it when I see it. For now, Iโ€™ve made all the inroads Iโ€™m willing to make with her.

We exchange a brief and incredibly awkward hug, and then she leaves, saying she needs to get to class.

Iโ€™m too sad to move, so I simply sit there, absently stirring the stick in my coffee. I feel as if Iโ€™ve just broken up with someone. In a sense, Iย did.

But I meant every wordโ€”I do need a break from her. She was holding me back last year. Freshman Grace was a confined bird that only got to soar when Ramona decided to let her out of the cage.

Well, Sophomore Grace is going to fly all over the place.

The sadness in my chest disperses, replaced by a twinge of excitement. I already feel like Iโ€™m soaring. I love my new roommate, Iโ€™m enjoying my classes so far, and Iโ€™m looking forward to my new job at the campus radio station. Morris, the junior who runs it, gave me the producing job on the spot when Daisy and I came in at the beginning of the week, and as of next Monday, Iโ€™ll be working on an advice show hosted by a frat boy/sorority girl team who Iโ€™ve been warned are โ€œdumb as posts.โ€ Daisyโ€™s words, not mine.

Also, that Morris guy seems pretty fucking cool.ย Andย heโ€™s ridiculously hotโ€”that delicious factoid certainly didnโ€™t escape me when I met with him.

The bell over the door dings loudly, and my head involuntarily swivels toward it, then immediately swivels back. I hunch over, hoping my hair will shield my face from view of the newcomers.

The newcomers being Logan and four of his friends.

Crap.

Maybe he wonโ€™t notice me. Maybe I can sneak out before he does.

I donโ€™t want to draw any attention to myself, so I donโ€™t get up right away. Logan and his buddies approach the order counter, and every gaze in the coffee house hangs on their every move. Something about these guys changes the air in the room on a molecular level. Theyโ€™re larger than life, and not just because theyโ€™re all tall, strapping hockey players. Itโ€™s the confidence with which they walk, the good-natured insults they toss back and forth, the easy grins they flash to people.

I know I should be skulking off, but I canโ€™t look away. Itโ€™s almost criminal how attractive he is. Granted, Iโ€™m only looking at the back of his head, but itโ€™s a very sexy back of the head. And itโ€™s so easy to pick him out as an athlete. The long limbs and toned muscles beneath his cargo pants and snug T-shirt create a drool-worthy package that my fingers itch to unwrap.

Argh. I need to drag my head out of the gutter. Lusting over him is too close toย likingย him, and Iโ€™m not ready to open that door yet. If ever.

But common sense comes too late, because Logan is now moving away from the counter and marching in my direction.

โ€œHey, gorgeous.โ€ He slides in the seat across from me and places a chocolate-chip muffin on the table. โ€œI got you a muffin.โ€

Damn it, I guess heโ€™d noticed me right when heโ€™d walked in.

โ€œWhy?โ€ I ask in suspicion, and without saying hi.

โ€œโ€™Cause I wanted to get you something, and you already have coffee. Ergo, muffin.โ€

I raise one eyebrow. โ€œAre you trying to buy your way into my good graces?โ€

โ€œYup. And excellent pun, by the way.โ€

โ€œI wasnโ€™t punning. My name just happens to be a homonym.โ€

His blue eyes gleam as he downrightย smoldersย at me. โ€œI love it when you talk homonyms to me.โ€

โ€œUh-huh.โ€ I choke back a laugh. โ€œI appreciate the gesture, but do you really think a muffin is going to wow me?โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t worry, Iโ€™ll buy you an entire meal when weโ€™re out on our date.โ€ He winks. โ€œAnything you want off the menu.โ€

Damn him and his seductive winking powers.

โ€œSpeaking of that, when should we do it?โ€

I eye him warily. โ€œDo what?โ€

โ€œGo out.โ€ His head tilts in a thoughtful pose. โ€œIโ€™m free tonight. Or any night, really. My schedule is wide open.โ€

God, this guy is incorrigible. And too damn gorgeous for his own good. His chiseled jaw is covered with scruff, as if he hasnโ€™t shaved in a few days, and my tongue tingles with the urge to lick a path along the strong line of his chin. This is the first time Iโ€™ve ever wanted to lick a guyโ€™sย stubble. What is the matter with me?

โ€œCongrats on your wide-open schedule,โ€ I grumble. โ€œBut Iโ€™m not going out with you.โ€

Logan grins. โ€œTonight, or in general?โ€

โ€œBoth.โ€

Weโ€™re interrupted by the arrival of one of his friends. โ€œReady?โ€ the guy asks Logan as he flips the top of his coffee cup.

โ€œGo away, G. Iโ€™m wooing.โ€

His friend snickers, then turns to me. โ€œHey, Iโ€™m Garrett.โ€

Right. As if I donโ€™t know who he is. Garrett Graham is a legend at this school, for fuckโ€™s sake. Heโ€™s also incredibly good-looking, the kind of good-looking that brings a blush to my cheeks despite the fact Iโ€™m not evenย interestedย in the guy.

โ€œIโ€™m Grace,โ€ I answer politely.

โ€œI didnโ€™t mean to interrupt.โ€ He edges away, a barely restrained smile on his lips. โ€œIโ€™ll wait outside so my boy can keep, ah, wooing.โ€

โ€œNo need. Weโ€™re all done here.โ€ I scrape my chair back and hop to my feet.

โ€œWe most certainly are not,โ€ Logan mutters.

Amused, Garrett glances from me to Logan. โ€œI took a mandatory conflict resolution seminar back in high school. Do you guys need a mediator?โ€

I pick up my coffee. โ€œWell, the stenographer who follows me around is on a lunch break, but I can catch you up no problem. Logan asked me out, and I solved the conflict by respectfully declining. There. I did all the work for you.โ€

Garrett laughs loud enough to attract the attention of everyone around us, including the three hockey players who wander over from the counter.

โ€œWhatโ€™s so funny?โ€ Dean asks curiously. He notices me and offers a delighted smile. โ€œGrace. Long time. Iโ€™m loving the hair.โ€

Iโ€™m surprised he even remembers my name. โ€œThanks.โ€ I inch closer to the door. โ€œIโ€™ve gotta go. See you around, Logan. And, uh, you too, Loganโ€™s friends.โ€

Iโ€™m halfway out the door when I hear him call, โ€œYou forgot your muffin.โ€

โ€œNo, I didnโ€™t,โ€ I answer without turning around.

Male laughter tickles my spine as the door closes behind me.

โ€œHereโ€™s what youโ€™reย gonna do. Pick up a bottle of wine, invite him over to your place, and make sure some old-school Usher is playing when he walks in. Then, you take off all your clothes andโ€”you know what, baby girl?โ€ Pace Dawson drawls into the microphone on Friday afternoon. โ€œForget the wine and Usher. Just be naked when he shows up and thereโ€™s no doubt in my mind that heโ€™ll be ready to go to the bone zone.โ€

Paceโ€™s co-host, Evelyn Winthrop, pipes up in agreement. โ€œNaked never fails. Guys like it when youโ€™re naked.โ€

In the privacy of the producer booth, I do my best not to gag. Through the glass that separates my booth from the main one, I see Pace and Evelyn grinning at each other as if theyโ€™ve just dispensed Dr. Phil-worthy advice to the freshman whoโ€™d called in for โ€œseductionโ€ tips.

Itโ€™s my first week at the station, and the second segment of โ€œWhatcha Needโ€ that Iโ€™ve heard Pace and Evelyn host. So far, Iโ€™m not blown away by the caliber of wisdom theyโ€™re handing out, but according to Daisy, the bi-weekly advice show gets more listeners than all the other student shows combined.

โ€œAll right, next caller,โ€ Evelyn announces.

Which is my cue to take the caller off hold and put him on the air. One of my other tasks is screening the calls to ensure the people calling in have real questions and/or arenโ€™t cuckoo-bananas.

โ€œHey, caller,โ€ Pace says. โ€œTell us whatcha need.โ€

The sophomore whoโ€™s been waiting on the line wastes no time getting down to business. โ€œPace, my man,โ€ he greets the host. โ€œI wanted to hear your thoughts about manscaping.โ€

In his plush seat, the rugby-shirt-wearing frat boy snorts. โ€œDude, totally against it. Downstairs grooming is for chicks and sissies.โ€

Evelyn speaks up as if sheโ€™s leaving a comment on a blog post. โ€œStrongly disagree.โ€

As the hosts start bickering about the pros and cons of male pubic hair, I choke down laughter and concentrate on monitoring the time. Each caller is allowed five minutes, tops. This one still has four left in the allotted five.

My gaze drifts to the other window in the booth, and I watch as Morris organizes a stack of CDs in front of the massive wall of music. Shelf after shelf holds hundreds and hundreds of albums, which is a strange sight to behold. I canโ€™t remember the last time I listened to an actual CDโ€”I figured they were as obsolete as VCRs and cassette tapes by now. But the station is old school and so is Morris. Heโ€™s already confessed to having a record playerย andย a rare Underwood typewriter in his dorm room, and heโ€™s also rocking a retro fashion sense I find sexy as hell. Part hipster, part newsie, part punk, partโ€”I could go on forever, actually. Thereโ€™s a little bit of everything in the guyโ€™s style.

It suits his quirky personality, though. Iโ€™ve only known him a week, but Iโ€™m quickly discovering that Morris canโ€™t go an hour without making a dry quip, a dirty joke, or at least one groan-worthy pun.

Iโ€™m also fairly certain he has a thing for me, if his constant flirting and readily available compliments are any indication.

Iย thinkย Iโ€™d be open to it if he asked me out, but every time I consider it, a part of me raises a protest and encourages me to go out with Logan instead. I wonโ€™t lieโ€”that muffin stunt had beenโ€ฆcharming. Presumptuous, sure, but adorable enough that I couldnโ€™t stop smiling during the entire walk back to my dorm.

But that doesnโ€™t mean Iโ€™m giving him a second chance.

I shift my gaze back to the main booth and force myself to concentrate on the radio show. For the next thirty-five minutes, I fight hard not to laugh as I listen to quite possibly the two dumbest people on the planet give advice. Seriously, if their combined IQ is in the double digits, Iโ€™ll eat my hat. Proverbial hat, of course, since I canโ€™t for the life of me pull off hats. My head refuses to look good in them.

Once the hosts sign off, I switch on the rap mix Morris gave me to use as a placeholder while the next deejay sets up. His name is Kamal, and heโ€™s a rabid hip hop fan who plays obscure tracks that almost no one has ever heard of, myself included.

When I leave the booth and step into the main room, Morris wanders over with a lopsided grin. โ€œWere you listening to that manscaping call?โ€

โ€œHow could I not? It was one of the most ridiculous debates Iโ€™ve ever heard.โ€ I pause, then grin back. โ€œBut I did enjoy when Evelyn said that if she wanted to see foliage, sheโ€™d take up hiking or gardening.โ€

He laughs and rakes a hand through his hair, drawing my gaze to those unruly dark strands.

Heโ€™s got the most interesting appearance. Honeyed skin, jet black hair, golden brown eyes. I honestly have no idea what his background is. Asian maybe? Mixed withโ€ฆno clue. Like his fashion style, his features are a collection of unique elements that I find incredibly attractive.

โ€œYouโ€™re staring at me.โ€ His lips twitch with humor. โ€œIs there something in my teeth?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ My cheeks warm up. โ€œI was just wondering about your ethnic background. Sorry. You donโ€™t have to answer that if you donโ€™t want to.โ€

He looks highly amused by the question. โ€œMy face is like a melting pot of ethnic goodness, huh? Donโ€™t worry, I get asked that all the time. My family is like the United frickinโ€™ Nations. My mother was born in Zambiaโ€”her mom was black, her dad was a white doctor who ran a clinic there. And my father is half-Japanese, half-Italian.โ€

โ€œWow, that is a lot of culture.โ€

โ€œWhat about you?โ€

โ€œNot as interesting. The Ivers family practically founded Massachusetts, and weโ€™ve got some Scottish and Irish roots, I think.โ€

A high-pitched giggle sounds from behind us, and we turn to see Pace and Evelyn making out against the wall. On my first day here, I asked Evelyn how long theyโ€™ve been dating, and she looked at me as if Iโ€™d just gotten off a spaceship, then informed me that they only make out at the station because โ€œradio isย soย boring.โ€

As Morris and I exchange amused looks, Pace catches sight of us and grins over Evelynโ€™s slender shoulder.

โ€œYo, Morrison,โ€ he calls out, even as the blonde continues to nibble on his neck. โ€œKegger at Sigma tonight. Fat Ted has a new game he wants you to try to beat. You should come too, Gretchen.โ€

Even if Iโ€™d wanted to correct him, Pace is no longer paying attention to us, because his tongue is in Evelynโ€™s mouth again.

โ€œWhy does he call you Morrison, and who on earth is Fat Ted?โ€ I inquire in a dry voice.

Morris chuckles. โ€œHe calls me Morrison because he thinks thatโ€™s my name, no matter how many times I tell him itโ€™s not. And Fat Ted is one of his frat brothers. Heโ€™s a hardcore gamer, and we sorta have this competition going on. Whenever one of us gets a new game and beats it, we pass it off to the other one and see if they could do it better. Tedโ€™s awesomeโ€”youโ€™ll meet him at the party tonight.โ€

I have to laugh. โ€œWho says โ€˜Gretchenโ€™ is even going to that party?โ€

โ€œMorrison says so. Heโ€™s wanted to ask Gretchen out since he met her.โ€

I blush at the impish smile he shoots me. โ€œSo this will be a date?โ€ I ask slowly.

โ€œIf you want it to be. If not, then itโ€™ll be two friends going to a party together. Morrison and Gretchen, taking on the world.โ€ He cocks a brow. โ€œTake your pick. Date or friend-hang. The choice is yours.โ€

Loganโ€™s face flashes in my head, making me hesitate. Except then it makes me mad, because Logan shouldnโ€™t be part of the equation. Weโ€™re not together. We werenโ€™t together before. And Morris is a really cool guy.

โ€œWhat do you say, Gretch?โ€

His mischievous voice summons a laugh from me. I meet his twinkling dark eyes and say, โ€œLetโ€™s make it a date.โ€

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