Kurtis,” he said into the phone. “You won’t believe what I just walked in on. Do you remember that cheerleader chick? The crazy tall one? She’s totally hooking up with—”
I was off the table and across the room with his phone in my hand before he could finish that sentence. I snapped it shut and glared at him. But the drunk dude just stared at me, confused.
“What was that for? Why’d you hang up on Kurtis?”
“I will not be gossiped about.”
His eyes traveled down, down, down and rested firmly on my chest.
I glanced at my shirt and realized I was wearing a black bra—completely visible through my thin white tank top. I wrapped my arms around my chest, fighting the urge to vomit. “Eyes up here, moron.”
The drunk dude looked at my face again. “Huh?”
“Are you paying attention at all?” I asked. “Look, what you just saw—you aren’t going to tell anyone. If you do, I’ll make sure you never get laid in this town again. Got it?”
“What? How… how would you do that?”
“I have my ways. And trust me, you’ll find I’m telling the truth if you let anyone know about what you saw tonight. Understood?”
“Uh… sure. Okay. Can I have my phone back?”
“Yeah.” I handed him his phone and practically shoved him out the door before shutting it again. “OMG,” I groaned. “That was… Toby, what are you doing?”
He was standing in the corner, putting his blazer on. “Leaving.”
“What? Why?”
“I’d rather not be here.”
“Well… maybe I can go with you. I’ll tell Jess I’m—”
“Don’t bother lying to your friends,” he said.
“W-why not?”
“Because I’d rather not be with you.”
He started for the door, but I grabbed his arm. “Toby! What’s going on? Why are you acting like this?”
When he looked at me, I expected him to be mad. The words he was saying, the tone of his voice—it made me think he was angry. Instead, he just looked hurt. Like
I’d
hurt him.
“You said you’re good at keeping secrets,” he said. “And I guess you are. But I don’t want to be your secret, Casey.”
“Toby—”
“At first I thought it was just about Bianca—that’s what you said—but it’s been weeks, and you still haven’t told her. Or anyone. Even though you said you would.” He shook his head. “I’m starting to think it’s not about Bianca at all. Maybe it’s about you. Maybe… maybe you’re just embarrassed because you still see yourself as the cheerleader and me as the geek with the bowl cut.”
“What? Toby, how could you think that?”
“How could I not?” he asked. “The way you just treated that guy…. Casey, I like you. I like you a lot. But I’m not going to be your secret. I’m done sneaking around.”
He pulled his arm from my grasp, turned, and walked out of the room. This time I didn’t argue. Or follow. Or try to stop him at all. I just stared at the door, tears stinging in my eyes, feeling like the biggest idiot in the world.
Chapter Five
As if I didn’t have enough to feel bad about, it turns out rushing B through those beers so I could keep running to the kitchen wasn’t such a great idea. She wasn’t normally much of a drinker, so her tolerance was pretty low. Low enough that Wesley had to
carry her
out to Jess’s car that night.
“I don’t know who’s going to regret this more tomorrow,” he said once she was sprawled out on the backseat. “Her, with the hangover, or you, because you get to deal with her while she has a hangover.”
“Is she that bad?” I asked. “I’ve never actually seen B get drunk before, so this is pretty new to me.”
“It’s only happened once since we started college,” Wesley said. “And it was pretty miserable for both of us. You know how cranky she is normally?”
“Uh… yeah.”
“Multiply that by about ten.”
“Shit.”
“Yeah… well, Merry Christmas, you two. Have fun tomorrow.”
“Oh, I will,” Jess said, rubbing her hands together in front
Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child