THIS GIRL, THIS GIRL. SHE hums tunelessly along with songs she says she doesnât remember. She does the craziest things with her hair and uniform, weaving leaves and ribbons into her long braid. She laughs loudly at his jokes when they walk down the hall together and doesnât seem to care that no one ever notices her. Colin wonders why that is. Jay sees her. A few of the teachers. But thatâs it. Itâs as if, for them, her face blends into the background. Plain. Generic.
But Colin notices everything.
And these small detailsâher simple confidence, flirty smile, and infectious laughâmake it impossible for him to stop obsessing about touching her the way he wants to. Sheâs easy with her affection: a hand on his arm, leaning into his side on a bench. But heâs so fascinated with her, with her thoughts and lips and hands, the easy touches make him increasingly hungry, feeling too small in his skin.
She asks him to walk her around campus and the woods and tell her about growing up in a small town where the prestigious boarding school employs practically everyone.
âPeople assume I had this traumatic childhoodâwhich I guess I didâbut it was mostly me being a crazy townie and doing wild tricks wherever I could. There were so many people here taking care of me, it was impossible to ever feel lost or lonely.â
She smiles up at him, but her eyes are a provocative, sympathetic indigo. He drags his frantic gaze across her face, cataloging every expression. This kind of longing makes him want to roar, to hurl logs and stones, to claim her somehow.
âSo, were you always the Kid Whose Parents Died?â she asks.
He laughs at her instinctive recollection of how everyone in this small town has an unofficial title. âI think I used to be. Now Iâm the Kid Who Jumped Fifteen Feet to Flat in the Quarry and Didnât Die. Even Dot heard about that one.â
Shaking her head, she says, âYou were crazy to do that,â but her eyes have gone metallic brown, swirling.
âNot you too!â
âColin. Objectively, that was an insane move.â
âItâs not insane,â he says. âItâs about fear. Everyone has the same abilities physically, at least they can. The difference is Iâm not afraid to try.â Colin can remember that stunt better than almost anything: He pulled his bike to the ledge, took a deep breath, and balancedâeyes focused and muscles tautâbefore jerking the frame up in a hop over the lip. The bike cut a razor path straight down to the boulder, slicing cleanly through the air. Both wheels glanced off the stone in unison before rolling a rocky path down to the base of the quarry. He landed at the bottom next to it. Body: bruised. Arm: broken. âI met you the next day,â he adds. Heâd still felt nearly high from the jump, and then she was there: the most gorgeous thing heâd ever seen. This second memory, just as clear.
She hums, brushes her fingers against his, and the tickling current travels up his arm before evaporating. He wants more. He practically aches for her touch. Itâs more than hormones. Itâs like heâs physically drawn into her space, has to force himself to keep any sort of acceptable distance. He pulls away slowly, forming a fist.
âWonder what your title was,â he says, distracting himself from the sudden urge he has to drag her down on the trail and cover her body with his. âThe Girl with the Snorting Laugh?â
She snorts, and then smacks his arm as if it were his fault. âMaybe.â
âThe Girl with the Wicked Eyes?â
âOnly to you.â Her dimple makes a cameo appearance.
âRight,â he says, laughing. âThe Girl Who Kicked All the Boysâ Asses in Chemistry?â
She starts to answer, grinning, her jaw already pushed out in pride, but she looks at his hands, formed into tight fists at his hips, and her expression straightens. âWhatâs wrong?â
He shakes out his hands, laughs nervously. âNothing.â
âAre you upset?â
Colin begins walking again, tilting his head for her to join him. He doesnât know how to do this, how heâll ever do this. He likes her. He wants Lucy to be his girlfriend in every way that matters, including the ways that mean he can touch her. The urge to kiss her is becoming suffocating.
âColin?â
Stopping, he turns back to face her. âWhat?â
She laughs at his stalling, walking toward him. âWhatâs wrong?â
âI like you,â he blurts. âA lot.â His heart clenches and then begins pounding manically, and he half wants to turn and run down the trail. Instead, he stands and watches her expression shift from surprise to elation.
âYeah?â
âYeah. And itâs hard to be so close all the time and not touching,â he admits quietly.
âFor me too.â Stretching onto her tiptoes, she whispers, âBut I want to try.â
His tongue slips out, sliding over his piercing.
âI think about it,â she says, her breath smelling like rain and petals. âI want to kiss you until youâre dizzy with wanting too.â
It takes Colin four tries to get a sound past his lips. âYou mean youâre dizzy with wanting me?â
She lifts herself up again, and he feels a sensation like lips against his cheek. He turns to her and is met not with her mouth but with her quickly ducked head. Just before he can step back, a little embarrassed and a lot confused, her hand presses against the front of his shirt.
âWait,â she says. âJust go slow.â
First with his cheek, then with his nose barely touching her lips, he moves closer, hoping that the way she shakes is from anticipation and not something far less pleasant. She tilts her head just enough for him to brush his mouth over hers, and his fists curl in restraint at his sides. Itâs different; her skin there feels different. Still buzzing energy and the sense that if he pressed too hard she would evaporate, but lips nonetheless: full and smiling and now wet from his. When he comes back again and tastes her, she makes a tiny sound of relief. Itâs a sound of lust, of air and fire, and Colin nearly loses himself: grasping, fingers digging. But instead, he pulls back, breaths choppy as he looks down at her.
âOkay, that was a good start.â
âA good start?â she says with a small laugh. âMy mind is a giant sieve, but Iâm pretty sure that was the best first kiss in the history of this town.â
He gently touches her elbow, carefully urging her to start walking again. The kiss was an enormous step in the right direction but still only a fraction of what he needed from her. Inside his chest, a rope coils tightly, fraying at the knots.
Colinâs cast came off two days ago, and he doesnât think heâs ever been so grateful to be able to wash dishes. He and Dane finished cleaning the kitchen, and Colin lingers around to keep Dot company. Sheâs been quiet tonight. No whistling while she cooks, no smacking them with the spatula. Just thoughtful, quiet Dot, and it weirds him out.
âLong day?â he asks.
She shrugs. âYou know how it is when a storm is on its way.â
âYour barometric knees acting up?â
She scowls at him over her shoulder. âVery funny, smart guy.â When she turns back to the sink, he can see her reflection as she looks out the wide window overlooking the back side of the quad. She looks worried. âItâs sort of like that,â she begins, searching for words. âSomething feels off. Iâm not sure what.â
Colin swallows hard and busies himself by stacking plates. âHey, Dot, do you remember a girl named Lucy Gray?â
She pauses as she unties her apron. âOf course. Everyone around here remembers that name.â
âYeah.â Colin struggles for breath. âSo were you on campus when . . . when it all happened to her?â
âWhyâre you asking about something like that?â
He shrugs, taking a heavy sack of flour from her arms and placing it on the counter. âNo reason. Some kids were down at the lake, started talking about it at lunch.â
She pins him with a serious expression. âI better not catch you down there.â
âOf course not,â he says. Itâs a lie, and as a general rule, he doesnât lie to Dot. But Colin is always at the lake and figures since itâs the same lie heâs told over and over throughout his life, it counts as only one.
âShe was killed,â Dot says finally, watching as he begins sorting clean silverware. Out of the corner of his eye, he can tell sheâs got her fist planted on her hip and he can almost hear the ticking sound as her brain works something out. âDo you remember any of it?â she finally asks.
He points a handful of forks at his chest. âMe?â
She nods.
âWhat? No.â
âShe was killed when you were six.â
He lived on campus and had just lost his parents. He remembers so little about that time other than the strange, constant desire to dissolve and float away. âI donât remember anything about it.â
She nods and turns back around, bracing her hands and looking back out the window. âNo, I guess you wouldnât. You had so much going on around then. It was brutal, Col. Just . . .â Her head drops and she shakes it. âJust awful.â
He doesnât want to hear her version of the story, but a sick part of him wants to know everything.
âYour parents had died, and you were living at Joeâs. I donât think you could sleep that night, and Joe was at a meeting with the other dorm heads. You were out on the porch playing alone with your little army men.â She turns to look at him and smiles sadly. âYou saw him carrying a girl into the woods. You ran and found me. It didnât save her, but because of you this guy was caught. We had no idea that monster was living right alongside us. And he had killed . . . God, I think he had killed seven other kids.â
Colin stands and bolts from the kitchen, feeling his dinner coming back up.