Before I even opened my eyes the next morning, I thought to myself, I jolted out of bed and sprinted to the bathroom adjoining to my room, before I hurled up all the contents that had been in my stomach since the night beforeâmostly the alcohol. My body react well to alcoholic beverages, apparently. Even with the slight amount of beer Iâd had⦠Okay, so maybe three bottles and half of one of Mattâs to ease my nerves from Coleâs text, but still!
When I was done, I brushed my teeth and showered, washing my hair as a way of trying to feel a little better. I was in a pretty foul mood right now, with a pounding headache and twisting stomach that threatened to make me puke at any given time.
When I was done, I wrapped myself in a fluffy white towel and decided to let my hair dry naturally. I jolted when I saw a note on the bed, and opened the crisp, white paper.
Hey, Gracie. As much as I enjoyed playing Prince Charming for you last night, I donât exactly love carrying sleeping princesses up the staircase. I think I almost broke my back on the way up, so can you please refrain from falling asleep drunk for me in the future?
Love Your Totally Awesome and Bestest Friend (And now probably with back injuries), ~Matt I grinned and then put the note in between the pages of one of the books where I wrote my songs and then put it back in my top drawer where I kept my prized possessions. Matt was one of those people who was awesome at notes and letters and words and emails. He was funny and creative.
The house was all quiet, and I remembered that my mother and Angel were at her tennis training. Thank God my mother didnât have to see me suffering my first hangover. She would be so ashamed.
I went to the fridge to pour myself some orange juice, dressed only in the white towel that just reached mid-thigh and my hair still dripping wet when the voice interrupted my thoughts.
âPlease⦠donât stop on my account.â
I yelped in surprise and grabbed a frying pan off the stove, ready to face whatever burglar or murderer stood before me, whirling around and almost slipping on the floorboards beneath my still-moist feet.
But there wasnât any burglar or murderer there ready to pounce on me. Instead, before me, stood the illustrious and infamous Bad Boy of Alderidge High, Cole Adams, wearing a delectable black t-shirt, leather jacket and dark-washed jeans.
I couldnât even begin to fathom how idiotic I must have looked. Short white towel, dripping hair and frying pan, probably a fearsome expression on my face. Wow, I must be nearly ready for the catwalk.
Before I had time to react or even to really , Cole pulled out his cell-phone and snapped several pictures of me. The light blinded me, and I squinted in terror, not sure what the Hell was going on.
Alright, Grace. Get the facts straightâ¦.
1. You are suffering from your very first hangover.
2. You are wearing nothing but a towel and you are still wet from your recent shower.
3. You are holding a considerably largeâand HEAVYâfrying pan as a weapon.
4. You must look totally pathetic 5. Cole Adams is standing in your dining room, taking pictures of this totally pathetic sight 6. Yeah, you should totally get back to that⦠Like, RIGHT NOW I opened my eyes to see Cole laughing at me. âI just came here to have a friendly conversation with you, Grace. But it seems I got so much more than I bargained for. Nice towel, by the way. Suits you.â
My jaw dropped at the comment and I squeaked in indignation. âDelete those photos right now, Cole. Do not show anybody this. You .â
âWhat, you donât wanna be embarrassed? Like I was when your buddy told the whole school I was gay and he was my boyfriend? You brought this on yourself.â
âI had nothing to do with that!â I lied, cheeks flaming hotly.
âOh, so what⦠I have a lot of enemies who would enlist people I have to say that I was gay? Because thatâs like a daily occurrence for me,â he said sarcastically shaking his head ruefully.
My eyes narrowed to slits. âYouâve done a lot of damage to a lot of people. Who says that they couldnât get someone to do that to you?â
âBecause I know you, Grace. When you want to be, you can be ruthless. This is the kind of prank you would pull as revenge. Well, you know what? I got incriminating photos now. Itâs your turn to go down.â
âNo,â I hissed. âCole, please donât. Iâll call a truce.â
âA truce? You seriously think after the prank you pulled last night that I would just settle for a truce? Youâre insane, Grace. Iâll have my payback.
weâll talk about truces.â
âCole, no!â I cried. âPlease. Not the photos.â
âSorry, Grace,â he said. âBut just remember that you did this to yourself. You started it.â
âI didnâtââ I started, but he had already turned on his heel and was heading into the foyer.
âCole, get back here,â I screamed. âDonât you walk out! Cole Adams! Donât do this.â
He walked out through the front door and jogged to his bike. I sprinted out, ready to stop him and work out some kind of deal.
I got to the bike just as he started it, and I grabbed onto his leather jacket, pulling him closer. âDonât do this,â I repeated.
âWhy?â he asked, looking at me with his steely brown, hardened eyes. âWhy should I, Grace? Give me one good reason why I shouldnât do it.â
âBecause,â I choked up, tears filling my eyes. âBecauseâ¦â
But the thing was, I couldnât think of a legible reason. I mean, I deserve it. Of course I did! I was responsible for most of the school believing Cole was gay. I spilt my drink over him at the party. Sure, he had pulled that science prank and paid that guy to dump his tray of food all over me, but I had retaliated. I had pulled a completely unlike-Grace action. I hadnât sat back to let karma take its course. I hadnât taken Mattâs advice. After two years of wallowing and hatredâI could finally admit to myself I somewhat hate ColeâI had finally given him payback for it. Could he be blamed for wanting to fight back?
I looked him in the eye. âCole, Iâm begging you, donât do this to me.
.â
He looked sincere when he said what he did next, âIâm sorry, Grace.â
He revved the bike and I let go, not wanting to add to this fabulous Saturday morning by being run over by a black motorcycle. He kicked the bike into gear and sped off.
On Monday morning there would most definitely be posters of me wearing nothing but a towel all over lockers and classroom doors. I would never be able to stop everyone from seeing it; it was impossible. I would just have to face the inevitable.
But the inevitable came sooner than I thought it would.
The knocking on the door broke me out of my numb state.
I was sitting at the island bench, gazing off into space and thinking about those horrible photos. I wore a t-shirt and cargo shorts, not wanting to chance any more Bad Boys with phone cameras. My hair was piled in a messy bun on the top of my head with a few wisps hanging loose around my face.
I got up and opened the door to see a panicked Annie standing in front of me. She wore a sparkly red halter-neck and jeans, with her satchel and silver laptop in hand.
âGrace, we need to speak immediately.â
I opened the door wider, and she scurried inside quickly. âAnnie, what is it?â
She flew into the kitchen and took a seat in the breakfast stool next to where I had been sitting. I joined her at the island bench and turned to her.
âWhy do you look so panicked? Are you OK?â
âHave you been on the Internet lately? Checked any social networks in, say, the last two hours?â she asked hurriedly.
I stared at her in confusion. âNo, why?â
âLike, not at all? No oneâs texted you, called you, emailed you?â
âI donât know. My phone and laptop are off. Annie, Iâm freaking out a little. Whatâs going on?â
âItâs you, Grace. Youâre all over the Internet!â
Oh, no Please donât be talking about the pictures. Donât hyperventilate, stay calm.
Slowly and carefully, I asked, âWhat do you mean, Annie?â
âLet me show you,â she said, and opened the laptop.
And there it was. The photos. She had several tabs open and she clicked through them. Every single blog and social network website you could name, my photo was posted on there. All by Cole Adams.
People were voting, Liking, Reblogging, commenting. Hundreds and hundreds. Maybe close to a couple thousand. My blood ran cold as I stared at myself.
Cole wasnât going to do something like make posters and put them all over school. No, he would use all of his social networks and blogs. Because then he would have a much wider reach than the one-thousand-two-hundred pupils that attended Alderidge High. He would have people from nearly every school in this state. He knew thousands and thousands of people due to his notoriety and pranks. And he was using all of his power to post this picture. He had taken it to every friend and Follower he ever knew.
Annie pulled out her phone and clicked on numerous tabs that held pictures of myself. On apps you could only get on phones. He had exhausted every resource he had. And every single one of his fans, Followers and friends was lapping it up, despite what happened the night before.
I looked at Annie. âOh, my God. Iâm done for. Everyone in the whole state would see this. All of his fans are spreading this by Reblogging and Forwarding and Liking and Sending it. Everyoneâs gonna know.â
âGrace, what are we going to do?â
I finally let the tears flow, feeling like my life was over. Done for. These incriminating photos could never go away. I sobbed into Annieâs t-shirt as she patted my back comfortingly.
âI donât know,â I whimpered. âGod, Annie, I just donât know.â