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Authors: Jamie McGuire

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BOOK: Happenstance
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My face screwed into disgust. “You should probably take me home.”

He sat up. “Why? You don’t like the movie?”

“It’s not okay for me to be here. You have a girlfriend, and
we’re . . .”

“Sneaking around?” Weston said with a sweet grin. “Fine.” He
picked up his phone.

“What are you doing?” I asked while he tapped out a message.

“Breaking up with Alder.”

 

 

 

 

Chapter Six

I grabbed his phone and held it away from him. “Are you
trying to make things worse?”

“No. But you telling me you won’t hang out with me because of a
girl I don’t even like anymore . . . that’s an easy fix.”

“Why would you stay with someone you don’t like for five years?”

He shrugged. “Something to do, I guess. She’s not ugly.”

“No,” I said, sighing. “She’s not. You sound like a huge asshole
right now.”

“Do we have to talk about this?”

“No, you can just take me home.”

He groaned, and then sat up, facing me. “My parents have been
married for twenty years, and they don’t really like each other.” He paused,
and when he realized I wasn’t satisfied, he continued, “I liked her at first,
but I never liked the way she treated people. You, in particular. When I talked
to her about you, she just seemed to treat you worse. But every time I thought
about breaking it off with her, the drama I knew would follow didn’t sound all
that appealing.”

“Five years is a long time,” I said.

“You have no idea.”

“So are you just going to wait until you leave for college?”

“That was the plan, but now I kind of want to do it sooner.” He
leaned toward me, and I leaned away. He snorted. “You’re really going to make
me do this by the book, aren’t you?”

“I’m not making you do anything,” I said, handing him back his
phone.

“You’re making me miss this movie.”

I glanced at the television. “It’s paused.”

“Oh, yeah,” he said with a smile, pushing a button. The violence
ensued, along with screaming, gun shots, and helicopter blades whirring in the
air. Weston settled back into the cushions again, and I did the same.

He looked down at his phone, still in his hand. “What’s your
number, anyway?”

“I don’t have a cell phone.”

“Landline?”

“Nope.”

Weston frowned, but kept his eyes on the television screen. “Do
you like hanging out with me?”

I wasn’t sure if I’d heard him right. “Yes?”

“Not because you don’t have anyone else to hang out with?”

“I have other people to hang out with.”

“Frankie?”

“Yes.”

“What if I wasn’t with Alder? Would you . . .?” He stared at the
TV.

“Would I what?”

“Let me kiss you?”

“I don’t know. Maybe. I’m not sure you’d enjoy it.”

He turned to me. “What makes you say that?”

“I haven’t had a lot of practice. None, actually.” I could feel
my face heat up. I preferred to tell the truth, but it wasn’t always easy.

“You’ve never kissed anyone before,” he said, as more of a
statement than a question.

“So?”

He stared at my lips and readjusted so he could look straight
ahead again. “I’m available whenever. If you want to practice.” He was
purposefully keeping his face smooth, but he wasn’t doing a very good job
because the corner of his mouth kept trying to curl up.

“I don’t want to practice. I want a real first kiss. And not from
a guy who’s cheating on his girlfriend.”

He frowned. “I told you I’d break up with her. You don’t want me
to.”

“We’d never have a moment of peace. The whole school would freak
out, and I’m pretty sure your mom would, too.”

“Is that why you don’t want me to break up with her? Or is it
because you just don’t want me?”

I kept quiet, and the air in the room became thick and stuffy. It
was suddenly hard to breathe. Weston squirmed while he waited for my answer.

“I’ve thought you were kind of amazing since kindergarten,” I
said.

He peeked over at me and grinned. “Yeah?”

“Yeah.”

With his eyes back on the television, he spoke softly and nervously.
“Me, too. About you.”

I nodded, and we watched the rest of the movie without another
word.

When it was over, Weston put on his jacket, picked up my backpack,
and walked me upstairs. He snatched his keys from the kitchen counter. We made
our way outside into the chilly night air. Weston pulled off his jacket and
draped it over my shoulders. It was warm and smelled like him, and I pulled it
tighter around me. Weston helped me climb into the passenger seat. Before he
could round the front of the truck, his parents came outside to talk to him.

Their conversation immediately looked tense, and Weston kept
stealing glances at me. He put his hands on his hips, shifted his weight
nervously, and shook his head a lot. He was beginning to look angry. I wished
he didn’t have automatic windows so I could roll mine down to hear what they
were saying.

Finally, his parents turned to go inside, and Weston joined me in
the truck.

“Sorry about that,” he said.

“Don’t be.”

“No, that’s just fucking rude to do that in front of you. They
could have waited.”

“What did they say?”

He shook his head and backed out of the drive. When he pulled onto
the street, I reached over and touched my fingertips to his. He intertwined his
fingers in mine.

“What did they say, Weston?”

He sighed. “They’re concerned about my new friend. They don’t
think it’s appropriate for me to be spending time alone with you because of
Alder.”

“They’re right.”

He squeezed my fingers. “I can’t give you up now. When we spend time
together, I feel this peace that I don’t get when you’re not around. It’s kind
of like when you’re a kid, and you put on fresh PJs after a bath and get into a
made bed with clean sheets straight out of the dryer. That’s what being with
you feels like.”

My eyebrows lifted, and a surprised, appreciative smile swept
across my face. “I think that’s the nicest thing anyone’s ever said to me.”

“It shouldn’t be. You’re so good, Erin. You’re just . . . good.
You don’t deserve the way they treat you, and I don’t even know why they do it.”

“I don’t know, either. One day, they just stopped talking to me,
and then the silence turned into anger.”

“That’s so weird. I don’t get it.”

The Chevy pulled into my gravel drive, and Weston put the gear
into park.

I leaned back and stretched. “Just one more day before Spring
Break. After that we have five weeks before graduation. None of this will
matter after that.”

“Are you . . . are you going to prom?” he asked.

I laughed once. It was shrill, and it even surprised me. “No,” I
said, amused.

“Would you want to go with me?”

“You’re going with Alder.”

“I haven’t asked her, yet. Everyone just assumes we’re going
together. Even her.”

“I . . .” I shook my head, feeling overwhelmed. “I don’t have a
dress. I wouldn’t even know where to look. And I don’t have the money, anyway.”

“Okay. Don’t freak out. Just think about it. If you want to go,
we’ll figure something out.”

I swallowed, hard. “You’re freaking me out. I’m not sure how to
feel about all of this.”

Weston lifted my hand and touched his lips to my fingers. “We’re
just winging it, remember?”

I pulled the door handle and jumped down to the grass below, then
pulled his jacket from my shoulders.

“Hang on to it for me.”

I tossed it into his truck. “I have a jacket. Thank you.”

He smirked. “Not one that smells like me.”

“Are you afraid I’m going to forget about you overnight?” I
teased, trying to hide my embarrassment that he’d spoken my private thought.

He pointed to his chest. “This? No way!”

Weston waved to me as he pulled away, and I walked into my house,
still giggling. It was dark and quiet. I crept into my room and let my backpack
fall to the carpet, and crawled straight into bed. I was too tired to take a
shower or even brush my teeth. I just wanted to lie between the sheets and
replay what Weston said about how I made him feel over and over again in my
head. It was like a dream, one that I would inevitably wake up from soon.
Something was going to come along and take it all away, because things like
this didn’t happen to me.

I reached over and set my alarm for half an hour earlier than
usual, and then relaxed against my pillow. Tomorrow was Friday, the last day
before Spring Break, and the beginning of a week-long vacation from the Erins,
and nine whole days and evenings with Weston, doing whatever we wanted. He was
becoming my best friend, and not just because he was my only friend at school.
We actually had a lot in common, from music to art to a mutual love for the
first three episodes of
Star Wars
.

I felt my eyes grow heavy, and I drifted off, with his words
about PJs and warm sheets playing over in my mind, narrated by his smooth, deep
voice.

 

 

 

 

Chapter Seven

Friday morning, I stepped out of my home to see a white
SUV parallel parked next to the curb. Mrs. Pyles rolled down the window and
waved.

“I told you I would be here!” she called, a big grin on her face.

I looked up. The clouds were gray, the sidewalk and grass were wet,
but the raining had stopped. “I think it’s okay to walk.”

“It’s supposed to rain on and off all day, Easter. Get your rear
in this car!”

I turned around, double-checking that Gina wasn’t watching me
from the door then hurried to Mrs. Pyles’s vehicle.

“Buckle up,” she said, twisting the key in the ignition.

“Can we please hurry?” I asked, hearing the click at my hip as I
fastened the seat belt.

She pulled away, and moments later, paused at a stop sign. A blue
pickup passed through the puddle that always filled the corner of that
intersection when it rained, splashing water all the way up the sign.

“If you’d been standing there, you would have been soaked,” Mrs.
Pyles said, shaking her head.

“Thank you,” I said, biting at my thumbnail.

She pulled forward, and after a block, stopped at another stop
sign. I looked over at the Dairy Queen. It was dark and the parking lot was
bare. If it kept raining, we wouldn’t be much busier after school. Just as that
thought crossed my mind, the sky began spitting on us.

Mrs. Pyles turned right toward the school, her blond hair grazing
her shoulders as she leaned forward to turn on the windshield wipers. “Do you
have plans for Spring Break?” she asked.

“Not really.”

“You’re not going to South Padre with the other seniors?” I gave
her a side look. She smiled sheepishly. “I’ve noticed you’ve been spending time
with Weston Gates. I thought maybe you would. Hoped maybe you would.”

“You’ve noticed?” I said, my heart beating fast. I thought we
were being careful. Weston had been taking up for me in class, but I thought no
one knew that we’d actually been spending time together.

She smiled her sweet smile. “Veronica Gates is in my women’s
auxiliary church group. She’s talked about you two a little bit lately. That’s
all. Just to me.”

“She doesn’t want anyone else to know, I’m sure.”

“She doesn’t want to cause problems.”

“For Weston and Alder.”

We parked in the teacher’s lot, and Mrs. Pyles turned to me. “He’s
a nice boy.”

I waited, imagining she might tell me to stay away from him, or
something equally offensive.

“You sure can pick ’em,” she said, winking at me.

She got out and shut her door. After briefly processing her words
and feeling half a second of appreciation, I got out and hurried to walk next
to her. We strode toward the school, dry under Mrs. Pyles’s umbrella. She
pointed her key ring at the white SUV, and it made a stunted honking noise as
it locked.

In grade school, before I realized I wouldn’t get a car at
sixteen, I dreamed about what car I wanted. No matter what it was, it always
had keyless entry. Something about holding that remote in my hand while the
keys dangled from it seemed so cool. Then sixteen came and went, and so did
seventeen. I went ahead and got my license, just to have an ID, but there was
no point. Owning a car seemed so impossible. So I would just do one impossible
thing at a time, starting with somehow getting myself to OSU’s campus. But even
if I had to start walking in July, I would get there.  Maybe, if he wasn’t already
at Dallas or Duke, Weston could drop me off.

That thought warmed me as I walked down the long hallway lined with
lockers, across the commons area to a set that sat alone in the middle of the
floor next to the library. I specifically requested a locker here because, even
though it wasn’t with the rest of the seniors, the library was surrounded by a
wall of glass, and the librarian, Mrs. Boesch, always kept a watchful eye
between classes.

I pulled books out of my backpack and hung it up on a hook. The
morning sun streaming in through the front windows of the school was suddenly
blocked, and I looked to my right to see Weston leaning against the locker next
to mine.

“What are you doing after work tonight?”

I shrugged.

“Let’s eat at Los Potros.”

I looked around, and then nodded.

Weston beamed and walked away, not trying the slightest bit to
conceal our conversation. I shut my locker, and Sara Glenn stared at me with
her big, dark eyes.

“Are you screwing Weston Gates?” she asked.

I narrowed my eyes at her, disgust weighing down my face. What
was it with small-town people automatically assuming that because two people of
the opposite sex were speaking, they must be having sex? “No.”

“What was that, then? He just asked you to dinner. Why is he
asking you out?”

“He didn’t ask me to dinner. You heard him wrong,” I said.
Technically, it was the truth. He didn’t ask.

“I heard him,” Sara snapped. “I’m telling Alder.”

“Go ahead. She won’t believe you. She’ll assume you’re trying to
get them to break up so you can take a stab at him.”

Sara thought about that for a moment, and then walked away, her confidence
gone.

I took a deep breath and continued to class, my hands shaking and
my heart trying to beat its way out of my chest. That sudden burst of courage came
from deep inside; a place I didn’t know existed. The thought of Sara ruining my
little bit of happiness made me desperate enough to offer a threat that I
myself found frightening.

Everyone was too excited about South Padre to bother giving me
grief. By the time I’d made it to seventh period, as weird as it was to say,
I’d actually had a pretty good day. Weston had pulled his stool over to my
desk, and a combination of nausea and exhilaration swirled in my stomach.

“Check this out,” Weston said. His poster-sized project was
spread out across the table, and I looked it over with an uncontrollable smile.
It was a girl looking out the window, her face in shadow except for her bright
blue eyes. She held her knees to her chest, and a small necklace hung loosely
from her fingers. It was a silver heart with intricate detail chiseled around the
border. In the middle appeared one word: Happenstance.

“It’s incredible,” I whispered. “She’s so pretty.” I felt an urge
to run my fingers over it, but didn’t want to smear the charcoal.

“It’s you.”

I looked up at him, in shock. We’d been working on this project
for three months. My eyebrow shot up, and I shook my head, unconvinced. “You’re
such a liar.”

“I’m completely serious.”

“Is everyone ready to reveal their final project?” Mrs. Cup said
as she sauntered into the classroom, dressed in a black shawl and pants suit. “I
know you have all been working incredibly hard. In years past, you’ve taken
home these projects and framed them, given them away, or did with them as you
choose. But I’ve asked more from you this year. We’ve learned about Faulkner’s
lessons and that as artists, you must learn to kill your darlings.” She sighed.
“For your final grade, I’m going to ask this of you.” She held up Shannon LaBlue’s
poster-sized painting and ripped it in half, length-wise. It made a quick,
high-pitched sound, and we all gasped.

Shannon’s mouth fell open. She looked around, unsure of what to
do.

Mrs. Cup walked to Zach Skidmore, who sat next to me. “Well?”

“Are you serious? I thought this was going to be the crowning
project of my high school years. I worked my ass off on this, Mrs. Cup!”

“It’s your final grade.”

Zach stared at the ground for a moment, breathed out through his
nose, and then took his project, a beautiful landscape, and ripped it in half.
We all winced, as if he’d cut his wrists.

The teacher stood in front of my desk. I had worked hard on my
project, a charcoal piece featuring a dark hallway with Victorian paintings. It
made a horrid ripping sound as I separated one side from the other.

Mrs. Cup took a step, standing in front of Weston. His project
was still laid out on my desk, behind him.

“Weston.”

“This is cruel,” he said.

“It’s a lesson. Not all lessons are easy. The best ones—those you
learn the most from—are the most difficult.”

“I’m not doing it,” Weston said, shifting just slightly,
protecting his elegant and tender rendering of me.

“It’s your final grade, Weston. It was the whole point.”

He stood, pulled his poster from the desk, and rolled it
carefully. “Then I guess I fail.” He left the classroom and walked down the
hall toward the parking lot.

Mrs. Cup shook her head, then took a step toward the next
horrified student.

“It was you?” Frankie asked, a little stunned.

I nodded.

“An art project he’d been working on for three months . . . and
it was you?”

“It was me.”

“Whoa. And he failed his art class to keep it. That’s . . .
that’s kind of poignant.”

“I kind of thought that, but I wasn’t sure if I was reading it
wrong.”

“How can you read that wrong? It’s so romantic I could die!” She
bent over, nearly in half, pretending to sob in a very unflattering way.

“That’s ugly,” I said, trying to stifle a grin.

“It’s soooo beautiful! I can’t stand it! Agh ha ha!”

“Stop,” I said, scooping M&Ms into the cup of vanilla I’d
just pulled out.

She stood up. “Sorry. I had a moment.”

I handed the M&M Blizzard to the little girl. She turned on
her heels, revealing my next customer, Alder. Her eyes were red, and she was
beyond pissed.

“What are you doing?” she asked, her voice already breaking.

“We were just joking around. What can I get you?” I asked.

“Fuck you. You know what I’m talking about, Easter,” she seethed.

My mind raced for a response, but she hadn’t come for a fight.
She was alone, and that wasn’t like the Erins.

She cocked her head a bit, impatient with my silence. “Answer me.
And don’t you dare pretend to be innocent. We both know what’s been going on.”

Frankie stood beside me. “She’s working, Alder. You can talk
about this later.”

“No, I can’t,” she said, her eyes glossing over. “Because I’m
leaving in half an hour for South Padre. I was supposed to be riding with
Weston, but he’s suddenly decided that he doesn’t want to go, so I’m riding
with Sonny. Explain to me why that is, Easter.”

“I can’t speak for him.”

“Well someone’s going to have to. The only thing he said was that
it wasn’t working out between us.”

“He broke up with you?”

Alder put both of her hands on the little counter in front of the
window, palms down. “That’s what you wanted, isn’t it?”

“I never expected him to,” I said. It was the truth.

“He didn’t have a lot of time to go into details, because he was
taking some stupid drawing to Ponca City to have it framed.”

I choked. “He . . . what?”

“So you can tell me, Easter. Why are you doing this to me?”

“I’m sorry,” I said, that same anger I felt with Sara bubbling up
again. “Why am
I
doing something to
you
?”

“Has he been cheating on me? I deserve to know!”

Frankie put her hand on her hip. “If he broke up with you, does
it really matter?”

Alder’s eyes targeted Frankie. “Oh, go push out another kid,
Frankie.”

Frankie slowly moved me to the side and leaned down. “You need to
leave right now, or you’re going to have to try to enjoy your senior trip with
no boyfriend and a new black eye. Because I will come through this window at
you.”

Alder rolled her eyes. She walked away, but stopped and came
back. “You watch yourself, Easter. When I get back, I’m going to make it my
mission to make you so miserable you’ll have to finish high school at home. You
think I’ve been mean to you? You haven’t seen anything yet.”

“That sounds like a threat.” Frankie narrowed her eyes at Alder.

Alder smiled, but she looked more frightening that I’ve ever seen
her. “I don’t make threats. I’m just giving her an idea of what the next six
weeks of her life are going to be like.”

“Same thing,” Frankie said.

“I’m going to go enjoy my Spring Break. You should really try to
enjoy yours.”

“I will,” I said, lifting my chin.

She shot me a look that made my blood run cold and returned to
her Honda.

“Whew! You lit a fire under her ass!” Frankie said, nearly
euphoric from the confrontation.

I leaned my butt against the counter. “She’s serious. When she
gets back, it’s going to be hell.”

“Who cares?” Frankie said with a wink. “You’ve got Weston.”

“I don’t
have
him.”

“He’s framing your drawing.” She sighed. “He’s got it bad.”

“This is all really weird. Everything has been the same every day
since first grade. Things have steadily gotten worse, and now they’re . . . I
don’t know.”

“Amazing?”

“Different.”

Frankie nodded. An SUV pulled into the parking lot, and four kids
hopped out, followed by their toddler-toting mother. Frankie and I got back to
work.

I was feeling even more excited for Spring Break. If I was going
to be punished for it, I was going to make sure every second was worth it.

 

BOOK: Happenstance
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