âYou can do this,â I whisper as I fidget with the dark blue blouse Daisy picked out for me last night. Iâm not usually one for pep talks, but the situation seems to call for it as I get ready to start my first day at our new high school.
Today had arrived before I even had time to blink. A moment Iâd been both dreading and anticipating when it had finally sunk in that the marriage was happening and that mom would be moving us from the mainland to Thatcherâs Bay.
âI knew youâd look good in that,â Daisy comments from the doorway, and I jump. She laughs and slides all the way in, shutting the door behind her. âYouâre freaking out.â
âIâm not freaking out,â I snap back, a little more bite to my voice than usual because, letâs face it, I am freaking out.
Daisy looks like a supermodel with her tight white jeans, so tight that I can see the outline of her black thong. Her red shirt is designed to catch everyoneâs attention, showing off a sliver of her toned stomach. Her hair is pulled up into a haphazard ponytail and her make up is expertly applied. Staring at my gorgeous sister in her get-up only manages to do one thingâmake me second guess what Iâve got on.
I suddenly hate my outfit.
I pull on the shirt and then pick up a brush, sighing as I tug at my hair.
âStop,â Daisy orders, yanking the brush from my hands and throwing it on the dresser with a loud clatter. âYou canât be trusted with this brush. This is not a weapon, Sky. Itâs supposed to make you look beautiful, not bald.â She smirks teasingly while gathering some bobby pins before working her magic on my hair. A few minutes later, sheâs done more with my hair than Iâve been able to do for the last thirty minutes.
âMy pretty little sister,â she coos as she stares lovingly at me through the mirror.
Just one of the reasons I love Daisy and would do anything for herâshe actually means it when she says things like this. Somehow, she really believes it. She looks in the mirror and sees me standing next to her like a star standing next to the sun. She sees something I donât.
And I never will.
Not wanting Daisy to be aware of the pitiful thoughts rummaging around my head, I shoot her a wan smile and she plants a smacking kiss on my cheek before sauntering back towards the door. âWe need to leave in five. Iâm fine with being late, but I donât want you to have a heart attack on your first day.â
I stick my tongue out at her, even though a glance at my phone tells me I did lose track of time trying to get ready.
And that does in fact make me panic.
After one last peek in the mirror, I rush to grab my backpack and race out of the roomâ¦smacking right into Noah. I almost fall backwards, but he quickly reaches out and grips my arms, saving me from falling on my ass.
âArenât we in a hurry?â he drawls in that lazy, mocking way of his. I try to step away, but his hold remains tight.
âSorry,â I murmur, biting down on my lip as we lock eyes.
You would assume that I would be used to having a stepbrother by now, but youâd be wrong. Noah has made himself scarce since the wedding, a fact that, up until this very moment, I didnât realize how much I appreciated. Because all I can think about as I stare at him is that I know what his face looks like when he has an orgasm.
Awkward.
I clear my throat, a countdown starting in my brain of how much time I have until Iâm late. His eyes are glittering with amusement, like he can see the numbers in my head. But that isnât the reason why his stare is so unnerving to me. Itâs the way Noah slowly traces my skin with his gaze, all the way from my face to my toes.
âTrying a bit too hard to impress on your first day, arenât you?â
His stare feels like a physical caress across my skin and itâs all I can do not to shiver.
I roll my eyes at him, proud of how steady Iâm acting even if my insides are shaking.
His lazy grin widens and he leans forward.
âWell, color me impressed,â he whispers before he brushes past me and disappears down the hallway to the bathroom.
My nerves are even more messed up as I go the opposite direction, out into the living room where Daisy is sprawled on the couch, scrolling through her phone.
âReady to go?â she asks expectantly. I nod, unable to form words after whatever the hell that had been back there. My sister is used to my awkwardness though, so she doesnât think to question it.
I follow her out to the beat up Honda that sheâs taken to driving so proudly, like itâs actually a Rolls Royce. When Daisy asked Curt for a car on that harrowing wedding day, none of us thought heâd actually give her one. So imagine our surprise when he drove the old thing up the driveway a week later, handing her the keys to it. I doubt Daisy heard a word about how the car was so that we both had some kind of dependable transportation to use to and from school. All she heard was the sweet sound of freedom. Sure the car is older than me and her combined, but Curt won her heart that day. I wish I could say the same. The Fontaine men are something Iâm still trying to decipher.
Daisy chatters the entire drive to school, but I wouldnât be able to pass a quiz on what she says even if I tried. All my thoughts are centered on what lies ahead.
And to my chagrin, my mind also comes back to that peculiar interaction with Noah in the hallway.
Itâs like heâs been put on earth to destroy me. At least thatâs what it feels like, thanks to the cornucopia of awkward encounters that are stacking up.
Stop it, Sky. Youâve got bigger problems on your plate than your stepbrother.
I shake all thoughts of Noah away from my mind and force myself to think about school instead. Is everyone going to stare at me constantly because Iâm the new girl? Will it be worse if they donât? If I somehow slide past their scrutiny because I truly am the afterthought, the shadow that no one sees, will that be better?
God, I hate my brain.
Before I can get my anxiety in check, we pull into the school parking lot thatâs already teeming with students.
âChin up,â Daisy commands softly as I stare at the red brick building that looks like something out of a storybook. Our last high school was a gray concrete monstrosity that resembled more of a prison than an institute of learning.
This placeâ¦itâs quaint. With ivy carving its way up the brick and large white windows. The windows in our other school were tiny slits, a style of architecture that was popular in the seventies. You couldnât see anything clearly from inside, and maybe that was the goal. So you felt trapped.
This school, though, doesnât look as scary as I had made it up in my mind. At least not at first glance.
I take a deep breath, inhaling the scent of the sea that permeates everything here, and smile.
Maybe itâs the one thing I donât actually hate about Thatcherâs Bay. In fact, the sea breeze is starting to grow on me. And if I can get accustomed to that, maybe I can feel at home with other things too. But with each step that Daisy and I take toward the building, no matter how hard I try to hold onto that sliver of hope that things will be different for me here, it quickly begins to fade. And in its place, panic sets in, my anxiety reminding me that itâs never far away. I can almost hear it laugh the second we pass through the schoolâs doors, and all eyes fall on us.
Fuck my life.
âI bet weâre the first new people theyâve had in years,â Daisy muses, shooting a group of letterman-clad jocks a flirty smile as we pass. I feel the tip of my ears redden, and I find myself trying to shrink and hide beside her as their gazes bore into my skin. âMmmh. So far, so good. Iâm starting to think that the ocean air does something for the boys here, cause they sure grow up nice around these parts. Iâve already seen some delicious ones Iâd like to nibble on.â
I squeak when one of the so-called âdelicious onesâ pops up next to me and shoots me a winning smile.
âWell, arenât you a sight for sore eyes,â he teases, as if he knows exactly who we are.
Heâs the epitome of tall, dark, and handsomeâ¦with dark blue eyes that remind me of a midnight sky. Unlike Noahâs, whose eyes look like the vast ocean on a summerâs day. Either itâs the thought of my stepbrotherâs eyes sneaking its way into my head without permission, or the fact that this Adonis is still walking in step with us, staring at me like Iâm some candy he wants to put in his mouth, I lose the ability to speak.
âYes, we are,â sasses Daisy next to me, saving me from actually having to form words. The guy flicks his attention her way briefly and grins before bringing it back to me.
I almost faint.
I hate the attention. Especially from strangers. Even cute strangers like him.
âKyle,â he says, holding out his hand for me to take.
My mouth opens and closes, and I swear Iâm trying to force words out. But nothing fucking comes from between my lips.
âSkylar. Her nameâs Skylar.â Daisy saves me yet again, but I know my sister well enough that sheâs doing her best to stop herself from laughing at how ridiculous Iâm being right now.
âSkylar,â he repeats, like heâs savoring the taste of my name on his lips. âWelcome to Bayshore High. Hope to see more of you.â
Before I can get a âme too,â or anything out, someone calls his name ahead of us. He shoots me one more smile and then strides off, leaving me in a puddle of regret.
âI really didnât think you could level up any further from how awkward you are, but it seems I was wrong,â she groans with an exaggerated exhale, after sheâs made sure no one is close enough to hear her. I shoot my sister a glare, wanting to find a hole to bury myself in. But of course sheâs not done with me yet. She places both her hands on my shoulders and gives me a supportive smile. âRepeat after me. âHello. My nameâs Skylar. Do you want to be my friend?ââ
I giggle, remembering myself on the playground with pigtails repeating those exact words in kindergarten. Who knew Iâd still be needing that same script years later?
âYou think you can handle that?â she asks with her manicured brow arched up high.
âYeah, I can handle that.â I laugh half-heartedly, praying that Iâm not lying to my sister.
âGood.â She grins, throwing me a wink before releasing her grip on my shoulders so we can continue on our merry way.
We endure more curious stares as we walk to the Admissions office, but thankfully no one else tries to talk to us.
When we walk inside, we come face to face with a lady sitting at a computer behind a long white counter with black granite on the top. She must be pushing sixty at least, but by the loud red dress sheâs wearing, I donât think age is something sheâs too concerned about. Sheâs the very definition of a cougar if Iâve ever seen one. Not only is the dress sheâs wearing a vibrant red that you almost need sunglasses to stare at it, but itâs also tight. And I mean tight. I can literally see her nipples from what I can only assume is a very expensive boob job, poking through the fabric. But Iâm thankful that thereâs fabric at all. Because the dress is so low cut that her nips are in danger of popping out if she takes too deep a breath. Her hair is dyed an almost fluorescent yellow, and sheâs got so much makeup on, I bet if someone pressed on her face, their finger would push in at least an inch.
âWell, hello girls,â she coos in a very thick, very fake, southern accent. Daisy and I trade wide-eyed glances. This woman is a character and I can already envision writing her into one of my stories. âYou must be the Fontaine girls.â
âAmes,â I rectify quickly, surprising even myself with the vehemence in my voice. But I have to make it clear, my mother may be a âFontaine girlâ now, but we are still Ames girls.
Daisy shoots me an approving smile, but the woman frowns.
âAlright,â she drawls, âthe Ames girls.â
âDaisy and Skylar,â Daisy presses as a bell rings in the hallway behind us.
I begin to panic. Thatâs the start of school bell. Which means Iâll be walking into my first class late. Which means everyone will stare. Which means there is no way Iâll go unnoticed today even if I tried. The buzzing sound in my ears increases until itâs the only sound I hear.
Daisy cuts off my impending panic attack by grabbing my hand and squeezing it tightly. She knows all the signs for when Iâm about to lose my shit. I take as many non-descript breaths as I can, trying to avoid the womanâs attention as she types on her computer.
Iâm almost all the way back to normal by the time she glances back at us. âAll honors classes?â she asks me with a raised eyebrow. âAre you sure you can handle that?â
âMy sister is basically a genius,â pipes in Daisy.
I flush under both of their stares. The woman is frowning again, her red lips showing off a myriad of wrinkles. Mercifully, she doesnât push anymore. She simply hands us both a packet. âClass started ten minutes ago, so head right there,â she chides as if we were the ones moving at a snailâs pace. I didnât even know people could type that slow. Especially school admin personnel whose main job is to type.
The panic threatens to burst forward again at the thought of walking in so late, but I do my best to hold it at bay.
Daisy shoots the woman one of her trademark mocking smiles that always seems to make people fall all over themselves, and then weâre blissfully free. We walk out into the perfectly still hallway.
âYouâre going to write about her, arenât you?â Daisy teases.
I shoot her a sly grin. âHow could I not?â
We both erupt into giggles, and itâs all I can do to pull myself together as I open my folder to look at my class schedule.
Iâve got Honors Algebra II first. Math is the bane of my existence. Itâs the subject I have to work ten times as hard in as everything else, but the guidance counselor in our last school had told me it wouldnât reflect well to colleges if math was a regular class, so Iâd been forcing myself into torture every year since then.
Thereâs not a single honors class on Daisyâs schedule, and thatâs how she likes it. Daisy has no plans for college; she has no idea what sheâll do. She just knows sheâll do something, be something. My stomach clenches because I know the second she graduates, Daisy will be gone, and I worry Iâll never see her again.
But thatâs my little secret too. I know that Daisy is going to leave the second school is overâ¦but then again, so am I.
âReady?â Daisy asks, finally recovered from our bout of laughter.
I nod and square my shoulders, ridiculously wishing Daisy and I were actually twins so I could be in all of her classes with her and not one year behind. She waves at me and heads off in the opposite direction of where I have to go.
And then Iâm all alone. I trudge to class, every step feeling like a death march. I know Iâm being dramatic. Starting at a new school is the least of most peopleâs problems, but with my anxiety, it feels like Iâve been asked to climb Mount Everestâ¦butt naked.
Iâm finally standing outside the door. I can see the teacher behind his desk, standing up and talking to everyone. For a brief second, I think about dropping everything and running out of the school, disappearing forever. But since that wouldnât go over too well with my mother, I find myself pulling down on the lever to open the door.
Itâs exactly as I envision it, except maybe a million times worse. The teacherâs voice trails off, and I can immediately feel the room full of people staring at me. I make sure to keep my eyes locked on the teacherâs and not on the rest of the class.
âYou must be Skylar,â he says, except he pronounces the âarâ part of my name all wrong.
âSkylar,â I gently correct, impressed with myself that I was able to even do that. Itâs not a hard name to pronounce, at least I donât think so, but people do it all the time. My first grade teacher actually called me the wrong name for half the year and I never had the courage to correct her. Look at me now, growing a set of balls, if balls were what it took to have someone actually say your name right.
Daisy would be proud.
But just as that fleeting thought crosses my mind, I start to panic again when I realize the teacher asked me something, and I completely missed what he said.
Some of the class titters at my awkwardness.
âWhy donât you head to that desk in the back and Iâll get back to it,â he says gently, and I already like him. He has kind eyes, dark brown, sort of like a puppyâs.
With flushed cheeks, I nod, turning towards the class, right as a familiar voice cuts through the room.
âI think she should introduce herself, donât you think, Mr. Evans?â the cold voice drawls. I say cold, but the sound of Noahâs voice is enough to set my blood boiling.
As if his gaze has a tractor beam on it thatâs forcing me to stare at him, I find him immediately. His seat is of course next to the only empty one. Thereâs another jockish dude to the right of him, and three pretty girls in cheerleader uniforms in the other seats surrounding him. Heâs sprawled back, his hair a mess, looking unbelievably gorgeousâno, I didnât just think that.
Argh, Sky!
Get a grip girl.
Thereâs a challenge in his gaze, like he expects the idea of speaking in front of the room to send me running for the hills, which it very well could.
I glance back to Mr. Evans, Iâm sure a plea written all over my face. He glances down, a small frown on his face, and he fidgets with the buttons on his long sleeve dress shirt, like he has issues not doing whatever Noah says.
âWellââ Mr. Evans begins.
âItâs been years since thereâs been a new face in the school. We should make it the big deal it is,â Noah continues. Unlike with Daisy, thereâs no missing the mocking air in his tone. I highly doubt Noah thinks my starting school here is a big deal.
âWell then, go ahead,â Mr. Evans says sheepishly, a note of apology in his gaze as he flicks his head at me.
I immediately feel lightheaded. Thereâs only around fifteen people in the class, but it might as well be a thousand.
âMy name is⦠Skylar,â I begin in a choked voice. My hands are shaking, and I wonder if I really might pass out. My gaze locks with Noahâs though, and somehow it gives me the strength I need to muster through. Because heâs such a freaking asshole, it makes me want to run over to him and punch him in his too perfect face. âI just moved here from Falmouthâ¦and if Iâm honest, I really, really hate math.â I finish lamely, causing a few people to laugh.
And for once, it doesnât feel like theyâre laughing at meâ¦it kind of feels like theyâre laughing with me.
Noahâs face scrunches in annoyance as I head to my seat. I donât meet anyoneâs eyes on the way there, and it feels like Iâve accomplished something when I finally slide into my seat.
âHopefully, I can change your mind about math,â Mr. Evans says with a smile, looking as relieved as I feel that itâs over. He flips the page of the math textbook on his desk and then asks us all to turn to page thirty.
My hands are still trembling as I reach into my backpack and pull out a notebook, praying that I can follow the lesson without the textbook that I failed to bring.
âYou looked like you were about to pass out up there, little stalker,â he murmurs, casually twirling a pencil in between his fingers while Mr. Evans talks about complex numbers.
It takes me a moment to realize the nickname heâs called me.
âWhat did you just call me?â I snap, my voice a little too loud.
I wince and sit back in my seat, determined to ignore him as I try and listen to what Mr. Evans is saying.
But itâs freaking hard to concentrate when Noahâs sitting thereâ¦clearly not paying attention at all. And then thereâs a girl seated in front of me, who keeps turning to stare at him and give him flirty smiles. In fact, itâs not only herâ¦it seems like the whole class is taking turns trying to stare at him. Like heâs some Hollywood star theyâre desperate to get the attention of.
Itâs reallyâ¦weird.
And really bad for Noahâs ego. Iâve never seen someone occupy so much space in a room. I mean, heâs tall, already over six feet. But itâs like his aura is a living, breathing thing. Or maybe thatâs my writer brain imagining things again.
I guess Iâd been hoping that the waitressâs worship was a one-off. But itâs obvious itâs not, because everyone else in the room is doing the same thing she was. Bleeding all over themselves for his attention.
The jock next to him, who is handsome in his own right, glances over at Noah every few seconds, like heâs checking to make sure Noah approves of the way heâs breathing.
Itâs all veryâ¦gross.
And fascinating.
And what did he mean when he called me âlittle stalker?â
The boy strode through the hallway, a devilish gleam in his gazeâ¦
âMs. Ames, can you please tell us the answer to question number four?â Mr. Evansâ voice cuts through the story Iâm writing in my head.
My cheeks flush and I eye my empty notebook page in a panic, searching for question number four that of course isnât there. Agitated, my gaze falls to Noahâs open textbook on top of his desk, slanted in a way that Iâm able to perfectly read the problem Iâve been called to solve.
4x+(3y+4)i=21+7i
Evaluate y.
Okay, complex numbers, what do I remember about complex numbers?
Y=, y=â¦.what does y=?
âY=1,â Noah drawls, sounding bored, but ultimately saving me from further embarrassment.
âI donât think your name is Ms. Ames, Mr. Fontaine,â Mr. Evans chides. âPlease give your new colleague time to get the answer herself.â
âThen weâll be here all day waiting for her to get the answer right,â Noah quips back.
The class laughs, and tears threaten in my eyes.
Get your shit together, I curse myself. The last thing I need is to burst into tears right now. Iâm sure Noah would have a field day with that.
I really would have to run out of the school in that case.
With a slanted frown, Mr. Evans moves on, and thankfully doesnât call on me for the rest of class.
But the lesson has been learned. Noah wonât be my friend here.
It feels like hours later that the bell rings, signaling class is over. Iâm exhausted, like one period has been the equivalent of half my life span.
Noah strolls out of the room without a glance back, a gaggle of people following him desperately.
Mr. Evans shoots me a sympathetic smile as I drag myself from my desk.
âJust try and stay out of his way. School will run much smoother if you do,â he says softly, and of course I know heâs talking about Noah.
Hysterical laughter bubbles up inside meâ¦because how do you stay away from someone you live with?
âAnd if you need extra help, I have tutoring available,â he adds helpfully.
âThank you,â I squeak, before rushing out of the room. Iâve done such a good job of setting myself up with a stellar first impression. The man probably thinks Iâm a moron.
I spot Daisy as soon as I walk out into the hallway, and my jaw drops. Not with shock, but in utter awe. The girl is basically holding court. Similar to the way Noah is across the way. She has at least twenty people gathered around her, all of them listening avidly to whatever story sheâs telling.
I love my sister. But I canât help the hot envy that catches in my throat. Iâve just embarrassed myself for an hour and a half, and in that same time sheâs managed to cement herself into school lore.
The envy is laced with self-loathing, and I put my head down and tuck my backpack close to my chest as I rush down the hall to the class Iâm hoping will offer me some sort of solace.
English.
Iâm early as I step into the room; the bell wonât go off for another few minutes, but as the door closes behind me, it immediately feels like a safe place.
Thereâs a woman in a navy cardigan typing at a laptop, her hair in a haphazard bun, and a pair of librarian glasses perched on her nose. Exactly what I like to see in an English teacher. As the door closes behind me, her eyes meet mine and she offers a stiff smile thatâs not unkind. Itâs like sheâs awkward too, and thatâs the best she can do under the circumstances. My schedule said the teacherâs name is Ms. Julian, so I assume thatâs her.
âYouâre Skylar, arenât you?â she asks quietly, pushing her glasses up the bridge of her nose. When she pronounces my name correctly right off the bat, I like her even more.
âYes,â I answerâ¦just as quietly.
âOne of your teachers actually reached out to me from your old school.â She shuffles through some papers on her desk before grabbing one. âMrs. Higgins?â
I perk up. Mrs. Higgins was my favorite person at that school. Iâd had her as my English teacher for the past two years and like Daisy, she had this thing about her. Like sheâd seemed to believe in me and my capabilities. Iâd shown her my stories, something I didnât show anyone. And sheâd always acted like she liked them, giving me constructive feedback whenever sheâd felt I could learn from it.
âOh?â I respond.
âShe was raving about you. Making sure I knew I had a real writer on my hands.â She giggles nervously, like the thought of that actually scares her.
âI donât know about that. But she was a great teacher.â
Ms. Julian nods. âWell, better get to your seat,â she says, even though the classroom is still empty. I nod gratefully, sensing she needs the out from our conversation as much as I do. Introverts unite and all that.
People start trickling in, and I check each time the door opens, my stomach clenching at the thought of Noah being in this class as well. The thought of having to be on guard in my favorite class sends terror running through my veins.
The door opens and a familiar face appears. Kyle. He makes a beeline for the desk next to me when he sees where Iâm sitting, offering me a boyish grin. Thereâs someone at the desk already, but that doesnât stop him.
âGet up,â he says casually to the girl sitting there who had just pulled out her notebook.
I wait for her to say no, or just say anything really, but she only shoots him a nervous smile and immediately gets up. I watch in wide-eyed amazement as she finds another desk without a word.
Kyle settles into the seat nonchalantly, like thatâs a normal, everyday occurrence. Iâm starting to wonder if there really is something in the water here that theyâre feeding certain people to give them this exaggerated sense of self importance and outright entitled douchery.
âHow was first period?â he asks, and butterflies take flight in my stomach as I realize Iâll actually need to talk this time.
Iâm not used to this, peopleâ¦seeing me.
He catches me off guard with his question. Why is he bothering to talk to me when heâs shown himself to be an asshole by making that girl move?
âIt was fine,â I finally say, watching as his grin transforms into something even more spell-binding.
âShe does talk,â he teases, and I curse myself as I blush for the umpteenth time that day.
âShe does,â I answer.
Heâs about to say more, but Ms. Julian stands up and hesitantly clears her throat. I like that Kyle settles back in his seat and doesnât try to talk over her. I doubt she would say anything if he did. She seems too nervous for that, so itâs nice that she doesnât have to and that she can give her class in peace and without fear of being interrupted.
My thoughts drift from Kyle to Noah, envisioning what heâd do in the same situation.
It wouldnât be pretty.
Heâd eat Ms. Julian alive.
Which is unsurprising since wallflowers like us could never survive the beat down of a merciless tidal wave.
And make no mistake. Noah is a tsunami in the making.
âCan I walk you to the cafeteria?â Kyle asks after heâs helped me find my locker.
I nervously chew on my lip, not accustomed to so much friendly attention from someone Iâve just met.
âActually, I brought my lunch with me,â I tell him, taking out the tuna sandwich I made this morning from my backpack.
âAh, come on? You canât eat that on your first day at Bayshore High,â Kyle retorts playfully, shoving my sandwich back in my bag and closing my locker for me.
Iâm uncomfortable with his assertiveness, but heâs been nothing but nice to me all day so I donât have the heart to tell him no.
âSure. Okay,â I concede with a thin smile.
âAwesome!â he cheers, like I just made his day.
Kyle leads me through the school hall towards the cafeteria, chatting away like heâs known me all his life. In return, I nod and offer him a few hmms and aahs to show him Iâm listening.
Iâm not.
How could I be when my anxiety is playing its games with me?
All I can concentrate on is the curious stares from the other students flicking our way as we walk down the hall.
Daisy was right.
These kids havenât had fresh blood in this school in a long ass time, which means there was no way I would have ever passed under their radar. It only gets worse when Kyle and I enter the busy cafeteria. Kids pry their gazes from their lunch trays to gawk and stare at me. Itâs almost like Iâm some beacon, attracting all this unwanted attention.
Itâs unnerving.
Kyle, however, seems to be utterly oblivious to it all.
Or maybe, heâs just pretending to be.
âSee? Isnât pizza better than a tuna sandwich?â he teases, placing two slices of pepperoni pizza on my plate.
Iâm a little miffed that he just assumed I wanted pizza instead of anything else on display. Honestly, my anxious stomach wonât be able to handle it, and I would rather have had a simple salad than greasy cafeteria junk food.
Still, instead of getting what I want, I let him pay for my lunch, making a note of only having a few bites so I donât get sick later on.
âHey, youâre in luck. Thereâs an empty seat at your brotherâs table,â he proclaims excitedly, heading to a large round table at the corner of the room.
âI donât have a brotherââ I start confused, then slam my mouth shut when it hits me.
He means Noah.
Fuck.
Word sure gets around here. I bet Kyle knew who I was before he even laid eyes on me this morning.
My gaze scans the table in question, and just as I suspected, Noah is surrounded by what I can only assume are his friends. Yeah, no way am I sitting there.
âKyle!â I call out, but heâs too far away to hear me.
Goddamn it!
I take a deep breath and plant the fakest smile I can muster as I follow him.
One lunch.
I can survive one lunch with Noah.
If I can survive family dinners with him, I can survive this.
I think.
âHey, look who I found?â Kyle says when he reaches the table, me now at his heel. Everyone stops what they are doing to see what Kyle is going on about, but itâs not their prying eyes that churn my stomachâitâs his.
After Kyle places his tray on the table, he grabs an empty chair for me, which to my chagrin, I have no choice but to sit in.
âThought it would be nice if your sister could have lunch with a familiar face, being it her first day and all,â Kyle adds cheerfully after heâs taken the empty seat next to me.
âHavenât you heard?â Noah says, not taking his eyes off his phone. âThe road to hell is paved with good intentions.â He then breaks his gaze away from his screen just long enough to stare me in the eye. âAnd thatâ¦is not my sister.â
My cheeks flush crimson with the few chuckles that erupt from the table.
âFine. Stepsister. Donât be a dick.â Kyle waves him off like heâs used to this type of bad behavior from Noah.
But then again, maybe he is. Perhaps they all are.
And Iâm the one who needs to get with the program.
With my head hung low, I fiddle with my food while Kyle tries to entertain me. When he sees that Iâm not the talkative type, he starts a conversation about basketball with the two guys across from us wearing the same letterman jacket he is.
God, I wish Daisy had the same lunch hour I have.
I could use her as an excuse to get up and walk away from this wretched table.
Twenty minutes.
Thatâs all the time Iâm going to give this awkward lunch. Twenty minutes should suffice to appease Kyle and not have him be offended by my bailing.
Satisfied with that plan, I inwardly start counting down the minutes while playing with the food I have no intention of eating.
But then it happens.
A nagging feeling that this awkward lunch is about to get a whole lot worse.
I lift my head and discreetly look over to where Noah is seated, knowing heâs the only person here who could make my life difficult. His eyes are no longer on me but on a familiar redhead that is sashaying past our table. His smug smile is all the coaxing she needs to come and talk to him.
It doesnât take long to realize where I know her from. Sheâs the waitress from The Scarlet Letter Café. The same waitress I saw on her knees for Noah.
Itâs only when she gets close enough that I see her staring at the raven-haired girl sitting beside Noah with apprehension. When said girl rolls her eyes at her and dismisses her presence by continuing to talk with her friends, does the redhead eat the distance between her and Noah.
âAh shit. Things are about to get heated.â Kyle laughs beside me.
âWhy?â I ask curiously, not bothering to look at him since Iâm too focused on Noah and his hookup talking to one another.
âSee the girl sitting right next to your brother? The one with the high ponytail to show off her Tiffany diamond studs? Thatâs Noahâs girlfriend, Stacy. Or maybe sheâs his ex now. You never know with those two.â
My jaw goes agape at this piece of gossip. So much so that instead of me staring at the redhead blatantly flirting with Noah, Iâm far more interested in Stacy, who doesnât seem to mind that another girl is talking to her boyfriend in such an intimate way.
Itâs only when Noah crooks his finger to the waitress, ordering her to bend down so she can get close enough for him to whisper in her ear, that Stacy ends whatever talk she was having with her friends to listen in on what heâs saying. Whatever he says canât be good because both girls start to stare at me for some reason. While the waitress looks embarrassed by what he just told her, with the way her cheeks flush all sorts of red, Stacy seems disgusted.
Noah, though⦠looks like the cat who got the cream.
The waitress quickly retreats from the table, rushing away like she canât get far fast enough. Stacy, however, stays seated precisely where she is, throwing me an ugly smirk and whispering in her friendâs ear. Her friendâs eyes widen as she stares at me, and before I know it, sheâs whispering to the girl sitting beside her, too.
It all feels surreal, this juvenile game of telephone.
And it was all provoked by something Noah said to the redhead, loud enough that he knew Stacy would pick up on it.
What did he say?
What the fuck did he say?
But just as the question pops into my head, Stacyâs quick to clarify for me.
âStalker!â she shouts while pretending to cough out the word.
The tip of my ears begins to heat when everyone around the table takes Stacyâs cue and begins to cough out the word âstalker.â They donât even have the decency to pretend they arenât talking about me, staring directly at me as they laugh away at my ridicule.
Stalker.
Thatâs Noahâs favorite word for me.
All because I caught him with his pants down, literally.
He was the one in the ladiesâ bathroom getting off, but Iâm the one being judged for it.
You did watch.
You stayed and watched.
Thatâs why theyâre laughing at you.
Because you stayed. Because you enjoyed watching him.
And now everyone knows it.
Not waiting for the twenty minutes to pass, I get up from my seat and walk away. I donât even care to look back when Kyle worriedly calls out my name.
I canât look back.
Because heâs watching me. Taking pleasure in my embarrassment and humiliation.
If I thought Bayshore High would be different from the school back home, then I was right.
Going to school here is going to be so much worse.
All because of my asshole of a stepbrother.
Isnât that a kick in the headâ¦