. . . and then an actual phone call. Mac might have lost Blake, but maybe that was okay? Maybe she should have been aiming higher all along?
So when Nolan asked her out on a date to Le Poisson, the most extravagant restaurant in all of Beacon Heights, and told her to âwear a dress,â she did.
Nolan was so charming that first time . . . and the second, too. And so, when he asked for those pictures, she barely hesitated. She . . . posed . . . and then she hit send on her phone before she could think twice. It wasnât until he showed up at her door the next day that she realized sheâd been tricked.
âThanks,â he said, waving something in front of her face. It was the pictures, printed out on shiny paper. Most of her body was hidden behind her cello, but it was obvious that she was naked. Mac looked past him to his car; his friends hung out the windows, laughing at her. Her heart had sunk.
âI just wanted to let you know you won me an important bet.â Nolan chuckled, then tossed something at Macâa wad of bills. Before she could put the pieces together, before she could throw the money back at him, he hooted again and sauntered back to his car, pics tucked in his back pocket. When Mac came to her senses, she burned that money in the backyard. And then sheâd cried for what felt like days.
No wonder sheâd wanted revenge.
When she finished the piece and opened her eyes again, Blake was staring at her. âThat was . . . wow.â
Mac ran her hands down the length of her face, trying to refocus. Sheâd been so lost in the music that sheâd forgotten Blake was there. She glanced away, his gaze too intense, too potent.
âWhy do you always do that?â he asked.
She glanced at him again. âWhat?â
âLook away. Hide.â He was watching her closely now, his eyes a piercing blue. âItâs so weird. When you play, you look so . . . so confident. Like nothing could faze you. But then you stop, and you get quiet and hidden. Itâs like you save the best of yourself for your music.â
Color rose in her cheeks, her heart stuttering in her chest. âIâm not hiding anything.â
âNo?â He reached toward her and carefully took off her glasses, folding the stems in and setting them on top of the amp. She blinked, the world blurred without her lensesâbut Blake was so close to her she could see him perfectly. His eyes moved slowly across her features, like he was committing her to memory.
âDo you even know how beautiful you are when you play?â Then, to her shock, his lips were on hers, soft but insistent.
For a moment, she sat perfectly still, too confused to react. Blake tasted faintly of chocolate and peanut butter, his unshaven jaw lightly scratchy against her chin. Mac knew she was supposed to do something, to stop this, but soon everything fell away: her jitters, her concerns, what happened to Nolan. It just felt . . . right.
That was when a Feist song erupted from his phone. Mac knew the ringtone: It was Claireâs favorite song. She pulled away fast, her cheeks red.
Blake broke away, too, a guilty expression crossing his face. âShoot.â
He walked uneasily through the door to the kitchen, but not before she overheard him say, âHey, baby, whatâs up?â
Mackenzie sat frozen, her lips still tasting like peanut butter. She squirmed, as though Claire could see her through the phone. As if Claire knew.
She shot up, grabbed her things, and stole out of the cupcake shop before Blake could stop her. She banged through the front door, the bells jingling. As soon as she got outside, the rain misting her face, she realized the enormity of what sheâd done.
Sheâd kissed her best friendâs boyfriend. And sheâd liked it.
CHAPTER FOUR
AVA JALALI SLID INTO HER desk in the film studies classroom just as the bell rang for fourth