Thereโs not a single person at this too-formal dinner table that Celine would like to draw. To be fair, sheโs already drawn Michael a dozen or more times.
She knows his face almost as well as her own.
โThe boys will be lining up for this one soon.โ Mr. Pritchettโthe guest of honorโnods at Celine and smiles knowingly at her parents. โIf they arenโt already.โ
Why do grown men say such stupid things?ย Celine manages not to say that out loud. Her parents should truly appreciate her discretion. Theyโre the ones who insisted that this grown-ass manโthe one acting likeย prettyย is the ultimate honorific an adolescent girl could receiveโis important.
A valuable business connection.ย It is all Celine can do to keep from rolling her eyes. In a show of great restraint, she instead pictures the muscles and bones buried beneath Mr. Pritchettโs healthy jowls.
โCeline isnโt interested in boys yet.โ Her mother, college professor that she is, has just enough feminist bones in her body to add, โSheโs really more invested in her studies.โ
Studiesย come easily to Celine. Itโs the seventh grade, not rocket science. โAnd her art,โ Michael interjects. The comment, in addition to being
true, yields an immediate result: his fatherโs attention. The shift in Thatcher Townsendโs position is noticeable, even to Celine. Sheโs done a good job of not looking at Michaelโs father this evening.
At the elder Townsendโs face.
Itโs amazing, really, that no one else sees it. Not Michael, not Thatcher, not Celineโs hapless father, who has no idea that she doesnโt carry his DNA at all. Itโs all there in the bone structure that she and her fatherโs long-time business partner share.
Itโs all in the face.
โYou might not be interested in boys now, Celine,โ Michaelโs father says, playing to Mr. Pritchettโs ego by shooting him a conspiratorial look, โbut you will be someday.โ
You want to bet?ย Celine, again, restrains herself. Michael doesnโt. โLeave her alone.โ
Celineโs stomach flips. Those words will cost Michael. Thatcher Townsend is charming. Thatcher Townsend is generous, a renowned philanthropist, an excellent businessman.
Thatcher Townsend is a monster.
Most of the time, Michael tries to hide the bruises, but he canโt hide the way his nose isnโt quite straight anymore. Not from Celine. Faces donโt lie. And if Michaelโs father has broken one bone, who says he wonโt break another?
No.ย Celine wonโt let that happen.ย Not tonight.ย She speaks up before Thatcher can turn his gaze intently toward his son. โWhy?โ
If she can distract Thatcher, then maybe heโll forget what Michael said. Maybe Michael wonโt have to stay home โsickโ tomorrow. Maybe Celine wonโt see the echoes of it in his cheek or nasal or jaw bones, long after the bruises have healed.
โWhy, what, sweetheart?โ Thatcher asks indulgently. His gaze is on Celineโs, but he hasnโt forgotten the way Michael spoke to him.
Iโll just have toย makeย you forget.ย This isnโt how Celine planned on making this particular announcement. But this isย herย truth, andย herย decision.ย Screw her parentsโand screw Thatcher Townsend.
Celine smiles sweetly. โWhy would I be interested in boys,โ she asks the table innocently, โwhen there are girls?โ