: Chapter 15
If You Could See the Sun
We reach the hotel by 10:30 p.m.
By 10:48 p.m., Iâve unpacked all my luggage and told Chanel Iâll be going over to Henryâs. She winks at me and makes a not-so-subtle remark about protection. I let her believe what she likes; besides, in the worst-case scenario, at least Iâll have a decent alibi.
By 11:00 p.m., Iâve visited both the twentieth and ninth floor, taking the stairs to double-check for any hidden security cameras and measuring precisely how long it takes to get from one place to the other.
By 11:15 p.m., Iâve sought out Henryâs room, still fully visible, and slipped through the door when no oneâs around.
By 11:21 p.m., Iâve officially started panicking.
âAm I invisible yet?â I demand as I pace in front of Henry, even though I know itâs unlikely. I havenât suffered through that telltale rush of cold yet, and if anything, I feel too hot, my skin burning, the room stuffy and suffocating despite its vast size.
âYou are most decidedly not,â Henry says, crossing his legs over the plush bedside sofa, the gesture so casual I want to scream. How does he manage to maintain such calm in a time like this?
âWhat about now?â
âNo.â
âNow?â
âNo.â
âHow aboutââ
âDo you intend to keep this up for the rest of the night?â Henry interrupts, lifting an eyebrow.
âWell, what else are we supposed to do?â I snap. âNetflix and chill?â
His brows rise higher.
And suddenly my face is burning too. Hastily, I add, âI meant in the literal sense, of course.â
âOf course.â
The conversation settles into silence for a moment, save for my frantic footsteps on the carpeted floor and the low, persistent hum of the mini fridge. Thenâ
âOkay, fine, Thatâs it.â I press a hand to my throbbing temples. This is the third stress headache Iâve had since we left the night market. âIf you can think of any way to distract me from my sense of impending doom, go right ahead. Entertain me.â
Henry seems to take this as a challenge. He sits up impossibly straighter, dark eyes pensive, and says, âThereâs actually something Iâve been meaning to ask for a while nowâ¦â
âNo, I wasnât the one who sabotaged your science project in Year Nine,â I tell him automatically. âThough, if weâre being honest here, I did consider it for a whileâonly because you were acting so smug about getting advice from Jack Ma himself.â
âThatâ¦is not at all what I was going to ask, but good to know,â Henry says. Clears his throat. âWhat Iâd really like to understand, though, is why you hate me so much.â
I blink at him in surprise.
âFor the record,â I begin slowly, my mind struggling to assemble a proper response. âI donât hate you anymore.â
A flash of a smile, so quick I almost miss it. Still, he doesnât let the question go. âBut you did before.â
I nod once. Sigh. âDo you remember that Scholars Cup competition we both entered in Year Eight? The one they held in front of the whole school?â
âVaguely.â
âWell, I remember it vividly.â The press of the warm auditorium lights against my eyelids, the weight of everyoneâs gazes on me, the loud buzzing in my ears as I fumbled over my last question. The triumphant look on Henryâs face when he answered his; the look of someone born and destined to win. âAfter I lost the final round to youâ¦after you went to collect your trophy and soak in all the teachersâ praise, and I was ushered away offstage⦠I fled to my room and justâjust sobbed. I didnât even eat anything that day, I was so angry with myselfâ¦â
I swallow, hard. The memory still brings a lump of shame to my throat.
âAnd I know it sounds ridiculous because it wasâI mean, letâs be honest, it was Year Eight, and the competition wasnât even compulsory. But there was a cash prize, 500 RMB, and Iâd spent months preparing for that thing. Yet right before we got on stage, I overheard you talking about how youâd entered it last minute, on a whim, how you had more important things to do than study for it anyway andâI donât know. Everything was always so easy for you.â I draw in a tight breath. âBeing around you just made me feel awful. It made me hate myself, and over time⦠I guess that hate grew so big it had nowhere to go butââ
ââtoward me,â Henry finishes, a strain in his voice. âRight?â
âBut I donât feel that way anymore,â I say, feeling an inexplicable, overwhelming need to make this very clear. âI promise. Swear on my heart.â
Some emotion I canât name passes over his face. He reaches out, his fingers forming a warm circle around my wrist, and I stop walking. Stop everything. âThen tell me,â he says, very quietly. âWhat exactly do you feel toward me now?â
âIââ Confusion tangles my tongue, speeds up my pulse. Dimly, I think:Â He really is good at this whole distraction thing. âWhy does it matter?â
âYou really donât know?â
I stare at him. Something is happening, I can sense it, but just like his expression, itâs impossible for me to decipher. âKnow⦠Know what?â
He lets go of my wrist, dragging a hand through his hair instead. âGood god,â he says with a little laugh. Shakes his head. âFor one of the most intelligent people Iâve ever met, you can really be quite oblivious sometimes.â
And maybe itâs the way heâs gazing up at me, somehow tormented and tender at the same time, or maybe itâs the weird half compliment, or maybe itâs every small, subtle moment Iâve missed along the way, now catching up to me in an adrenaline-induced burst of clarity, but all of a suddenâ
âOh,â I breathe.
Oh. Wow.
I sit down on the carpet, dizzy with comprehension.
After a few minutes of pure, unadulterated silence, I realize Henryâs watching me, sharp-eyed and tight jawed, waiting for my response. This might be the most nervous Iâve ever seen him.
âGood,â I manage at last. âItâs good. For me as well.â
I donât expect him to get anything out of my ridiculous jumble of words, but he does.
He moves so our knees are close to touching, and I ask without thinking, âIs this the part where you kiss me?â
He leans closer, and even in the dim hotel lights, I can make out the silent laughter in his eyes. âThat was not my intention.â A pause, teasing. âWhy? Did you want me to?â
âWhat? N-no, of course not,â I stammer, twisting away at once. Then, because Iâm physically incapable of keeping my mouth shut, I babble on, âItâs justâyou know, in the moviesâ¦when it gets to this kind of scene, with this kind of lightingââ
Thereâs a sharp rap on the door.
We both freeze.
It almost gives me whiplash, how quickly the mood changes, like having your emotional, family-friendly farm animal movie interrupted by a cheery ad from McDonaldâs.
Another knock. Even louder than the first.
The irrational, already terrified part of my brain is convinced the police have found us somehow, that theyâre waiting to arrest us right this second, that itâs over, my life is ruinedâ
But then I hear a girlâs giggle. Someone else whispers something I canât quite catch, and the giggle turns into a muffled shriek of laughter.
Henry and I exchange a quick, silent look, and from the grim set of his jaw, I know weâve arrived at the same conclusion. The roomâs lights are on; thereâs no point pretending he isnât inside.
âWho is it?â Henry calls.
âGuess!â a voice thatâs obviously Rainieâs replies.
Henry moves toward the door in slow, careful strides, hands held up, the way youâre meant to approach an animal in the wild. âEr⦠Rainie? What are you doing here?â
âTo see you, of course,â she says, the same time another person shouts:
âWe heard you got the best suite, dude! Let us inâwe want to check it out!â
At this rate, theyâre going to wake up the entire hotel.
And to make everything so much worse, at least two othersâgod, how many people are there outside the door right now?âstart chanting: âLet us in! Let us in! Let us in!â
Henry glances at me in a thereâs-nothing-we-can-do kind of way, and despite the stone in my stomach, I nod.
âOkayâjust be quiet you lot,â Henry says as he pulls the door open. Immediately, Rainie Lam, Bobby Yu, Vanessa Liu, and Mina Huang stumble into the room in a giggling heap, bringing with them the strong, unmistakeable scent of alcohol.
âWonderful,â Henry mutters under his breath.
But even in their intoxicated state, our four unwelcome guests stop and stare when they realize Iâm here as well. Vanessa almost drops the half-empty bottle of Jack Danielâs in her hands. Bobbyâs mouth opens so wide Iâm tempted to ask if his jaw hurts.
Rainie actually gasps. âAlice?â
âHi,â I say.
After the four of them have recovered from their initial shock and voiced their suspicions that Henry and I are secretly dating, they make themselves at home, lounging on the plum-colored sofa and the king-sized bed. They show zero sign of planning to go back to their rooms anytime tonight.
I want to vomit.
I want to scream and shove them all back out the door.
But instead I just smile and smile as Vanessa fumbles through the mini fridge for a packet of Pringles chips and Rainie pulls out a speaker and starts playing one of her motherâs hit singles, swaying and belting out the lyrics as if weâre in a karaoke bar, and Bobby Yu starts doing pushups on the carpet.
The smile remains frozen on my face. Only my eyes move, checking my reflection in the window, tracking the time. The neon alarm beside Henryâs bed flashes: 11:59 PM.
Iâm still not invisible yet.
At some point, Rainie gets tired of singing and turns the music down, and starts bitching about Julie Walsh instead. Everyone joins in enthusiastically, even Mina, who hardly ever talks, and Rainie does an impression of Julie thatâs so accurate Vanessa falls back on the floor and cries real tears of laughter. Then the conversation turns to who they think might hook up by the end of this trip, then how much of an asshole Jake Nguyen is (âI canât believe I used to like, like him,â Rainie laments, and Bobby complains that most girls have bad taste while Mina gives her a few sympathetic pats on the shoulder), then about what Drunk Henry would look like.
âItâs just funny to imagine,â Rainie says between giggles. She points to Henry, whoâs been standing stiffly in the corner of the room beside me this whole time. âBecause youâre soâsoâwhatâs the word?â
âAloof?â Vanessa suggests.
âComposed?â Mina offers.
âHot?â Bobby says, and we all turn to stare at him. âWhat?â He scowls. âThe dude is objectively good-looking. Donât judge me for saying it aloud.â
But perfect is the term Rainie settles on.
âGod, youâre so perfect,â she says with a little hiccup. Then, to my surprise, her eyes flicker to me as well. âAnd you, Alice. Both of you. King Henry and the Study Machine. Our perfect model students.â
I force myself to laugh along with them, but everything sounds off. The compliment burns on its way down like acid.
If only you knew what Airingtonâs two model students were up to tonight.
But beneath the panic, beneath all the guilt, thereâs another emotion clawing at my chest. Resentment. Because if it werenât for the school fees and Beijing Ghost and the terrible task waiting ahead, this night would beâ¦everything.
I would be able to join in their silly gossip and laugh with Rainie and maybe work up the nerve to sit close to Henry, continue right where we left off, snake my fingers through his. I would be just a teenager, giddy in a fancy hotel in a beautiful new city, with old classmates and potential new friends: Rainie, who gave too much of herself to a boy who took too much; Mina, whose parents recently got back together after a messy divorce, and are working to patch everything up; Bobby, whose older sister ran away three years ago, but youâd never know it from looking at him now.
I would actually be happy with these people, carefreeânot checking the cursed clock every two seconds and waiting for a strange wave of cold to soak through my body.
It makes me almost dizzy, thinking about the stark differences in realities, what will be and what couldâve been. But thatâs the kind of difference wealth creates.
By the time I tune back into the conversation, the topicâs moved on to Beijing Ghost.
ââ¦wonder whoâs behind it,â Vanessa is saying. âOh, come on, Alice, donât act as if you havenât heard of the app,â she adds irritably, misreading my stunned expression.
âI have heard of Beijing Ghost,â I say, choosing my words with care. My heart is pounding so hard I wouldnât be surprised if they could all hear. âBut I donât know whoâs behind it.â
âWell, obviously,â Vanessa says, rolling her eyes, and relief washes over me. âNo one does. Though thereâs plenty of theories going around.â
Bobby nods, then winces, as though the movement makes his head hurt. âSome people think the appâs run by, like, a top government spy who just wants to make a quick buck. Sorta makes sense, if you really consider itâtheyâd have all the right connections and the technology to make it work.â
âBobby,â Rainie says, with the air of an adult speaking to a very naive child. âTop government spies donât need to build their own illegal school app to get rich quick. Thatâs what bribery is for.â
âWho dâyou reckon it is, then?â Bobby challenges.
âI donât know,â Rainie says, grabbing the whiskey bottle from Vanessa and gulping down the rest of the brown liquid in one go. Then she wipes her mouth roughly with the back of her sleeve. âBut whoever it isâtheyâre a hero.â
Hero.
Another compliment, and from Rainie Lam, out of all people, but the word only chafes my conscience. I canât bring myself to meet her gaze.
âIâm going to do it,â Vanessa says abruptly, pushing herself onto her feet with surprising steadiness. Even though sheâs had more alcohol than the rest of the bunch, she also seems the most soberâwhich, considering the fact that Bobby is now balancing the room service menu on his head like a hat, isnât saying much.
âDo what?â Mina asks.
âConfess,â Vanessa says, and maybe sheâs drunker than I think she is, because I have no idea what she means.
Rainie does, though. âLet her go,â she tells all of us as Vanessa staggers toward the door, fumbling twice to turn the knob. âSheâs been crushing hard on this guy for ages.â
The menu slides off Bobbyâs head with a loud flapping sound as he turns, eyes wide. âWho?â
But whatever the answer is, I donât hear it. A chill has started creeping up my spine, and before Iâm forced to prove Bobbyâs government conspiracy theory incorrect firsthand, I leap up, mumble something about checking to see if Vanessaâs okay, and run.