This week has flown by. Not only have I been incredibly busy with school, but I also went to the new Reese Witherspoon movie with Chloe, hit up the mall with Siobhan, took my mom to two different medical appointments, and made a respectable dent in unpacking and organizing my things. Admittedly, the last one is still ongoing, but I can see the floor again so thatâs progress.
Tylerâs been even busier than I have. We havenât had any time together aside from a handful of stolen kisses and daily marathon text sessions. Luckily, our drought is about to end. Chase and Dallas left for their couples weekend an hour ago, and Iâm at home waiting for Tyler to get back from working with his goalie coach. Weâve flat-out abandoned our questions today in favor of torturing each other via the dirtiest messages possible in preparation for later.
Iâm what some might call excessively prepared for this occasion. Iâve shaved everything from the neck down, applied perfume (including behind my knees), opted for waterproof mascara so itâll hold up better during sex, and selected the sexiest matching bra and underwear I own. Not that I expect either of those to stay on for very long.
According to the clock, I still have nearly two hours to wait. I settle onto the couch with a cup of coffee and my lap desk, opening my laptop. Iâve been secretly working on a poem for the magazine contest Chloe told me about. No one else knows yet, and depending how things play out, itâs possible they never will.
Forty-five minutes in, my coffee is empty and so is my brain. Iâve been tinkering with the same three lines over and over again, trying to arrange the words for maximum oomph. Biting my lip, I re-read the stanza. Something is off but I canât place it.
I check my email and find a message alerting me to new grades in the student portal. Maxine was sick last week, so she was late marking our first assignment. Weâve since handed in our second and Iâm so nervous about them both it hurts.
Holding my breath, I wait for it to load.
Seraphina Carter, Student ID 29989797
Introduction to Creative Writing
Assignment 1: 91
Assignment 2: 92
No way. My hand flies to my mouth, and I let out a happy little squeak. According to the classâs grading scale, those are both As. For some people, this is a regular occurrence. Possibly even an expectation. For me, itâs an anomaly. I rarely get As. I donât get all that many Cs, either. My grades tend to hover within a nice, predictable, B- to B+ range.
Though it is only an introductory class. Maybe sheâs an easy grader.
Closing my browser, I navigate back into the word processor and pull up the thesaurus bar on the right in hopes it will help solve my wording woes. Itâs tempting to get fancy with vocabulary sometimes, but I also have to be careful not to fall prey to substituting synonyms that arenât strictly identical in meaning.
I read through the passage again, lingering on the part that isnât working. His face⦠No, maybe it should be, His features⦠That isnât quite the same, though. Neither is right. Is there really only one word for âfaceâ in the English language? How limiting.
âTink.â A deep voice startles me.
I jump in my seat, slamming the laptop shut. âHi!â
Tyler studies me, a smile playing on his lips. Heâs freshly showered and changed into his street clothes in his omnipresent shades of black and gray. As irrational as it may sound, I can tell just by looking at him that he smells amazing.
âLooking at something naughty?â He nods to the gold MacBook in front of me. âI said your name three times and you didnât even react.â
âUm, I wasâ¦â I flounder. Any of the alternative explanations I can formulate seem even worse than the truth. âWriting, actually. Itâs a poem Iâve been working on for class.â
My face heats, and I stop talking. Why didnât I just leave it at âdoing schoolworkâ? I havenât told anyone outside of class about my writing, and for good reason. Itâs unlikely anything will ever come of it.
He lifts his eyebrows. âReally?â
âYeah.â I wipe my palms on my skirt. Why are they so sweaty? Not cute.
âThatâs cool, Ser.â He lowers onto the couch and rests a hand on my knee, warmth radiating from his palm onto my skin. âCan I ask what itâs about?â
The curiosity in his tone almost makes me want to open up. Almost.
âItâs a secret.â This particular poem may or may not contain elements that were heavily inspired by him, and thatâs why heâll never, ever read it.
âSo I was close, then. Youâre writing something naughty.â His mouth tips up at one corner in that delicious way that makes me want to grab his face and press my lips to his.
âDefine naughty,â I hedge.
âDoes it contain any of the things you let me do to you in the announcerâs box?â
âNot this one, but some of them might. Maybe Iâm using you for sexy poem research.â
He chuckles. âUse away. Do you write often?â
âA lot, actually.â What the hell, Seraphina? No one knows this. Now that Iâve flung open Pandoraâs Box of secrets, I canât seem to close the lid.
Maybe itâs the mixture of admiration and desire on his face, tinged with a hint of tenderness. No one has ever looked at me this way before.
My ears burn and I untuck my hair to hide it. âUntil now, writing has been something I did for myself. This class is the first time Iâve ever shared it with anyone.â
âI wonât pressure you, but Iâd always be down to read something if you felt comfortable.â
Thatâs more terrifying than sharing it with my class. Maybe someday.
âLetâs see how far I get on this one. Itâs giving me a bit of trouble.â
Tylerâs expression shifts like he only just realized weâre alone. He takes the closed laptop from me, setting it on the coffee table. Then he pushes the lap desk aside and picks me up, hauling me to sit on him. He smells every bit as good as I expected.
He nudges my nose with his affectionately. âHow are things, Tink? I feel like I barely saw you all week.â
âBetter now.â
A contented sound reverberates deep in his throat, and his lips press to my jaw, then my cheek. I shift a little more, turning fully toward him. One hand snakes up to grip my face and he kisses me, long and deliberate and deep.
When he pulls away, Iâm on cloud nine.
Instead of kissing me again like I expect, his gray eyes bounce back and forth between mine. âWe never get to sit like this. Itâs kinda nice.â
I rest my head on his shoulder. âIt is.â
Something in me eases slightly; a tension I hadnât realized I was carrying. As much as Iâve been eager for him to rail me, itâs oddly reassuring that isnât the only reason weâre talking at the moment. I legitimately consider him one of my friends. In fact, I trust him more than some of my âfriends.â I like to think weâd hang out together even if the sexual element between us wasnât there.
Tyler runs his hands through my hair, and I nearly start purring at how good it feels. Asking him to pet me that night in his room gave him insight into one of my biggest weaknesses; an unfair advantage he didnât need.
âWhat color is this, technically?â he asks. âI know itâs pink, but thereâs some gold in here, too.â
âMost people call it rose gold, but my hairdresser back in Arizona called it strawberry champagne. Itâs a little brighter and pinker than a regular rose gold. She blended the color specifically for me.â
A low laugh rumbles in his chest. âOf course you have a custom hair color, princess.â
âYou got a problem with that?â I wriggle upright, pretending to glare at him.
âNo, I love your hair.â He holds up a section, studying it in the light. âYou know, it looks different depending on the lighting and the angle.â
If by âdifferentâ he means âbrassyâ then heâs correct. Beneath the living room lamp, itâs mostly copper with hints of rose. Red-based tones fade quickly, and even with special color-preserving shampoos and UV-protective styling products, I pay a hefty coloring fee on the regular to keep it looking the way I want. But having pink hair makes me happy, so itâs worth it.
âProbably because the color is starting to fade. Iâm overdue for a touch-up. I need to find a salon here to make me pretty again.â
âYouâre always pretty, Tink.â His mouth tugs into a crooked grin.
If humans could melt, Iâd be a puddle on the floor.
âI have an idea,â he adds, still running his fingers through the strands.
âWhatâs that?â
âWeâve both had a long week. Letâs go grab something to eat.â
My stomach practically gurgles at the very suggestion. Itâs nearly six, and I havenât eaten since noon. Hanger territory is looming in plain sight. Thereâs one tiny snag with his plan, however.
âItâs Valentineâs Day, Hades. All the restaurants will be packed.â
He lifts a broad shoulder. âYeah, but how often do we get the chance to do things together?â
True. Itâs a lot harder to coordinate hanging out in or out of the house during the week, whether itâs due to our schedules, living situation, or all the other things standing in our way. Weekends are even less workable because he always has games both nights. This weekend is one of the only breaks they have.
Lately, Iâve been wondering if it would be simpler to bring our friendship out of the closet to everyone. Thereâs a risk they might do the math on the rest. Itâs not that I think weâre doing anything wrong, itâs that I donât think my brother would understand. Nor does he need to.
âI donât think weâll be able to get a table unless weâre talking about something like McDonaldâs or Chipotle. But Iâm good with something like that too. Anything works.â
âLet me see. Iâll check OpenTable to see whatâs available.â Broad hands shift me on his lap, readjusting us. He grabs his phone and enters the passcode to unlock it, then taps at the screen. Brow furrowed, he scrolls with his thumb. âNo⦠All-you-can-eat sushi sounds dicey. No⦠Definitely not. What the fuck is Bobâs Pancake and Taco Bar? Wait⦠There. We can get a table at Rouge. Thereâs one reservation for two open at eight oâclock. Someone mustâve canceled at the last minute.â
âRouge?â I echo. âIsnât that really fancy? And expensive?â Iâm vaguely familiar with it because Chase took Bailey there awhile back and while it was reportedly amazing, she confessed to me over Christmas that sheâd had sticker shock at the prices.
Then again, money isnât an issue for Tyler, and we both know it. His father is one of the most famous sports agents in the entire country. Chase knew who Tylerâs dad was from hockey industry news long before he ever met Tyler.
âHereâs my take,â he says. âYouâve been working hard at school, you havenât been out much lately, and I think youâre due for some fun. And Iâve been killing myself with hockey. If you ask me, we both deserve the break.â
âGotta admit, I like your logic.â Iâm a big fan of treating myself. If anything, I do it a little too much. Did a page of homework? Chocolate. Went to the gym? Celebration smoothie on the way out. Passed a final? Sephora time. I can justify anything. And itâs especially hard to turn down doing something with Tyler.
It does sound an awful lot like a date, though. Is that against the rules? I guess the nice part of our arrangement is we get to make our own.
âUnless you donât want to be seen in public with me,â he says, teasing. âIn which case we can order a heart-shaped pizza and it should arrive in approximately three to five hours according to the internet.â
âGoing out it is.â