THIS GUYâALFRED, I only learned his name after about ten minutes of conversationâis pretentious as hell.
The moment he spotted me at the party, he walked over and started to flirt. A drink in, I havenât done much but nod along as he drones on and on about himself. He might be attractive, with long blond hair pulled into a bun and wire-framed glasses perched on his strong nose, but heâs self-centered, and if I was looking for more than a hookup, I would have wriggled my way out of the conversation ages ago.
âWhat do you think?â he asks. Iâm so taken aback by the fact heâs asking me a question that I donât answer right away. âWe could go together; itâs playing at the theater in town.â
I blink. When the conversation veered into date territory, I have no idea, but thereâs nothing Iâd like less. I muster a smile and say, âSorry, what?â
âItâs too damn loud in here,â he says, leaning down so he can talk into my ear. âI said, do you want to go to see the newest A24? Itâs a psycho-erotic thriller aboutââ
I grab his arm and yank him even closer. At least he smells nice. I can appreciate a man who knows that Axe isnât a suitable body spray past sophomore year of high school as long as heâs using any cologne but Tropic Blue.
âWant to go upstairs?â I interrupt.
He raises an eyebrow with a lazy sort of interest. âWhat do you have in mind?â
I lean up and press a kiss to his lips. âLess talking, more⦠other things.â
Itâs not the smoothest way I could put it, but right now, I donât need smooth; I have the advantages of a sexy outfit and the inhibitions of the party. He flicks his gaze down to my cleavage. Thereâs not much to see, but my push-up bra helps, and my plum-colored sweater dress clings to my hips nicely. Paired with sheer tights and my thigh-high leather boots, I know I look like a snack. He strokes the hair back from my neck, and I shiver. Itâs not him thatâs turning me on so much as the thought of finally crossing another item off The List. Taking back another piece of power. The experience with Cooper was intoxicating. I have no idea if it was him, or the fact we were in a closet where technically anyone could walk in, or just that I finally did something with a real guy after years and diminishing returns on orgasms, but I feel more confident. More like the girl I always wanted to be, and maybe who I was on the way to becoming back before Preston shattered everything.
I grip Alfredâs hand in mine and lead him through the crowd, nodding to Mia as we pass. Sheâs making out with some girl I donât recognize, but she winks at me. I fight my blush as we head upstairs. Itâs probably hoping against hope that thereâs total privacy to be found, but if we take this out of the party, I know I wonât want to go through with it. Itâs either happening here, or not at all.
I open the first door, hoping to find a dark corner, but Alfred takes us to the end of the hall. âMight have a better chance here.â He squeezes my hand as he opens the door. âYouâre feistier than I thought youâd be, Penelope.â
I fake a laugh even though I want to poke him in the ribs, hard, for calling me by my full name when I very clearly introduced myself as Penny. He pushes me back against the door, his hands on my waist.
Before he can kiss me, I notice who else is in the room.
Cooper Callahan. With not one, but two girls.
It shouldnât surprise me. He told me himself that he only hooks up with girls onceâto him, weâre Kleenex. He makes it worth your while, but the price of admission is the acknowledgement that it wonât be anything more than a fleeting moment. Seeing him with two brand-new puck bunnies shouldnât hurt. Itâs not allowed to hurt. Here I am with a guy of my own, after all, and an agenda just like him.
But it does hurt, and that realization is enough to push Alfred away.
âCallahan,â I say. I have no idea where Iâm going with this. What do I even want? All I know is that if he kisses either of those girls in front of me, itâll hurt worse than wiping out while attempting a triple axel.
He looks at me, his expression unreadable. I know they won the game thanks to his goal, and maybe the smart thing to do would just be to congratulate him and find a different room to go to, but before I can make myself say anything else, the dark-haired girl throws up all over him.
He staggers back, cursing up a storm. I snort with genuine laughter at the sight of him covered in vomit. The girl is fluttering around him, apologizing in a high, distressed voice. Alfred heaves, clapping his hand over his mouth.
âIâve got to go,â he says, his voice cracking. He books it out of the room without so much as a glance over his shoulder.
I sigh. Itâs not like I wanted to suck his dick all that much, anyway.
âIzzy,â Cooper says, his voice somewhat more level now. âStop crying, itâs fine.â
âItâs not fine, youâre going to hate me!â she says. âI ruined your shirt!â
âNot everyone cares all that much about clothes,â he says, but he grimaces, looking down at the shirt. Itâs a vintage-style band tee advertising Nirvana, and the stain is, unfortunately, electric blue. He looks over at me and adds, âDoes your date have an overactive gag reflex or something, Red?â
I ignore the nickname and stalk over to the closet. Maybe thereâs something in here we can use to clean him up. âHe wasnât my date.â
âLooked like you were about to get something going.â
I pull out a towel and toss it to him. âNot your business.â
âHe looked like a prick.â He makes a face as he mops at his shirt. âIzzy, what were you even drinking? This is blue.â
âTequila something,â she says with a hiccup. Her friend, who had disappeared into the bathroom, comes back with a wet washcloth. She helps Izzy wipe at her face without ruining her makeup, although they need to sacrifice the lipstick.
âNo, he wasâ¦â I sigh, unable to fake any interest. âFine, yes, he was a bit of an ass. But whatever, I just wanted to blow him.â
He blinks. âWeâre going to unpack that later.â
âWe?â
âYeah, come on, I need you. Help me get my sister out of here.â
I ignore the little tendril of relief that pokes its head up at his words. His sister, not his latest hookup. âSure, okay.â
âUnless you want to go track down that weasel.â
âYouâre terrible,â I say, even as I take Izzyâs arm. âYou donât even know him.â
âAnd you do?â
I flush. He cocks his head to the side, like heâs witnessing an interesting reaction in chemistry lab.
âI have questions, Red,â he declares. âAnd as soon as I donât smell like tequila and my sisterâs stomach acid, youâre answering.â
âIs this your idea of flirting?â Izzy mumbles to her brother as we head out of the room, her friend on our heels. âYouâre terrible at it.â
âWeâre not flirting,â I say with a scowl. âCooper doesnât know how to flirt.â
âNeither do you,â he shoots back.
That hurts more than it should, so I keep my mouth shut and focus on not falling down the stairs in my heels. When weâre back on the main floor, we wind through the crowd to the entrance. Cooperâs scowl is even more pronounced, the black energy coming off him in waves as he cuts through the mob of drunk college kids with ease. At the door, he allows Izzy to lean on him, stroking a hand through her hair in a tender gesture that makes my breath stick in my throat. âGive me your phone, Iz.â
She plunges her hand down her front and pulls it out of her bra. Cooper stares at it like itâs a scorpion, which makes me double over with laughter; he snatches it out of his sisterâs hand and glares at me. âNot another word, Red.â
âI didnât even say anything!â
He turns his back as he presses the phone against his ear. Izzy giggles, poking me in the stomach. âHe likes you.â
Cooper puts up his middle finger without looking back at us. Iâm not sure if heâs telling off Izzy or denying that he likes me. I push down the warmth that wants to spread through me; a drip of happiness that could easily settle low in my belly. Izzyâs just doing what drunk people do: talk.
Izzy hugs her friend, who promises to check in later. She disappears into the knot of people on the dance floor as a guy I vaguely recognize as Sebastian Callahan walks over. Even though heâs not related to Cooper by blood, which I remember Mia telling me ages ago, thereâs something similar about them; they both have a determined set to their mouths and commanding energy.
âOh, good,â he says. âYou found her.â
âOnly cost me my favorite t-shirt,â Cooper says. âLetâs go, Iâm getting a fucking headache.â
âDoesnât care about clothes, my ass,â Izzy mutters to me as we head out into the night. I bite my lip to keep from laughing again.
Sebastian throws me a look when he realizes Iâm tagging along, and I stop on the porch, unsure if I should continue or if I should go back to the party and find Mia, but then Cooper says, irritably, âPenny, come on,â so I loop my arm through Izzyâs again and let her lean on me as we troop across the half-frozen lawn.
In the car, a nice new Jeep which must be Sebâs, because thereâs no question that heâs driving, Cooper gives me the front seat and sits in the back with his sister, who is petting his hair again. I text Mia to let her know Iâm leaving. Sebastian turns on the radio to cut through the semi-awkward silence, and when âKing of my Heartâ by Taylor Swift comes on, Izzy hollers along. I sing along too, catching the look in Cooperâs eyes through the windshield. Heâs still scowling, but really, heâs fighting a smile.
After a couple minutes, we pull up to a house in town thatâs close to my fatherâs. Itâs cheerful looking, with pumpkins on the porch steps and a fall wreath on the door. Seb helps Cooper get Izzy to the door. I follow along, somewhat hesitantly. I thought weâd be heading to the dorms. Iâd rather not walk all the way to my dorm from here, especially past midnight, or try to catch the bus.
âShe doesnât live in the dorms?â
âNope,â Cooper says. âWe all live here.â
I step into the entryway. âThatâs cute.â
âIt would have been better with James,â Izzy says with a pout. âI miss him.â
I look around the house. The entryway has a staircase to the left, and to the right, it opens to a living room. Thereâs a big leather couch, a matching loveseat, and an armchair with a plaid blanket folded neatly over the back, grouped around a wall-mounted television. Itâs easy to tell what belongs to Cooper and his brother, and what touches their sister has added; the bottle-opener in the shape of a skull must be theirs, but the tapered pink candles on the coffee table, hers. âHe lives in Philadelphia, right?â
âWith his fiancée,â Izzy says with a sigh as she flops down on the couch. âWe havenât seen them since the summer. He abandoned us to go play football.â
Sebastian ruffles her hair as he walks past, heading into the kitchen. âYou can call him whenever.â
Izzy brightens at that. âCoop, whereâs my phone?â
Cooper shakes his head. âNot now, heâll have my ass for letting you go wild at a senior party.â
Izzy rolls her eyes. âYou didnât let me do anything. Besides, I wonât tell him.â
âIz, I love you, but secrets arenât your strong suit.â He sighs, looking down at his shirt again. âCome on, letâs get changed. You should have some water and go to bed, so youâre good to go for your game tomorrow. Iâll drive you home in a minute, Penny.â
When they troop upstairs, Sebastian gives me a narrow-eyed look, clearly unwilling to let go of the fact that Cooper brought a girl heâs already been withâbecause I donât believe for a second he wouldnât tell his brother about the indignity of accidentally sleeping with his coachâs daughterâto their house, and apparently is going to drive me home himself instead of offering to pay for an Uber like a normal guy. I shuffle my feet, unsure what to do with myself. Thereâs a slamming sound from upstairs, and then a high-pitched giggle.
âSebastian!â Cooper roars.
Sebastianâs gaze flickers to the stairs before settling on me once more. âYou should have told him who you were beforehand.â
I swallow. He doesnât even sound all that upset, but the words chastise me all the same. âI didnât know.â
âWhen the consequences only go one way, you make sure.â He nods once, like heâs pleased with himself for that cryptic, metaphorical slap, and then bounds up the stairs two at a time.
Of course, he doesnât know that the consequences wouldnât just go one way; if my father finds out, it could ruin the relationship Iâve fought carefully to repair. What better way to remind my father of the version of me who forced us out of Arizona than recklessly getting involved with another hockey player? His hockey player? Iâll lose the little respect of his that Iâve built back up, and it wasnât until I did something as monumentally stupid as asking Cooper Callahan to go down on me that I realized how much I treasure it. If I tried to explain The List to him, on top of being mortifying, he wouldnât understand. It wouldnât be growth to him; itâd be regression.
Yet despite knowing that, I know something else, too: Iâm about to ask Cooper to do it again.