We were never pre-assigned seats for Biology so itâs one of the only classes wherein I get to sit next to my best friend Kit. Her name is actually Kitty but she insists on the shortened version because it sounds more curt.
Sheâs sweeping her long black hair into a ponytail whilst Mr Miller draws a DNA ladder on the whiteboard when she gives me a nudge with her elbow.
I look over at her and her fierce cat eyes are locked onto mine like a target. How is she not the most popular girl in school? Sheâs definitely the hottest. For some reason people always avoid the nerds.
She hisses over to me, âDid you submit your poster to the Homecoming committee?â just as her overly-stretched hair bobble snaps and flies across the room, Pablo Picasso at the whiteboard evidently none the wiser.
I nod at her. Kit is on every committee available. Itâs her attempt at forced social interaction, which she says is for the maintenance of her natural animal requirements, otherwise she would undoubtedly avoid our classmates like the plague.
âYou better have,â she continues, pinning her hair back with a red clippy-grip instead. âNo way am I letting Maddenâs get picked.â
I write â
She pushes it back to me and whispers, âThis note is better than Maddenâs poster.â
I donât know who Madden is but I laugh and get back to copying Mr Millerâs diagram into my Bio book. I glance over at Kit and sheâs drawing a severed penis with a sad face on her hand.
Once Biology class ends and we try to get out of the room we have to shove our way through the bulging swarm because thereâs a blockage in the upper corridors. Everyone is pressed up against the window panes, trying to get a glimpse at the outside sports courts.
âThat sophomore team is annoyingly good,â Kit remarks as I put my biology book into my locker. âItâs going to be so gross when some of them go pro, and whenever we see them on TV weâll remember what assholes they were in high school.â
We push past the wall of bodies and make our way downstairs.
âWanna objectify them a bit?â she asks, craning her neck over the students by the windows as we walk down the corridor.
âWeâll only encourage them,â I say.
In reality, the reason why I donât want to look is because I have purposefully been avoiding Tate Coleson all week and I know that he will be out there scoring hoop after hoop with the other sophomores. I watched him like a sleuth all of last week and in a stomach-sinking twist it turns out that he Kit slips into a small gap and peeps out at the court. She sighs dramatically. âI hate this. Why couldnât I be more gay? This feels so anti-feminist.â
We have one more minute until the next bell for class so I wait with her as she watches the court melancholically. I stand with my back to the window, my heart thumping hard as I think about what Iâm going to do when I see Tate outside again tonight. Iâm so nervous that my hands are sweating. I rub them down the front of my skirt and I shakily re-tie my ponytail.
âOh my God, incoming,â Kit hisses, and she shoves herself against me as the crowd moves away from the doors to make room for the players heading inside to the water fountain. I keep my eyes on my shoes but I can hear the bass tones of their voices as the joke around and get their drinks.
âCocky pricks,â she whispers. Then she adds, âWhose penis do you think is the tiniest?â
The bell will ring any second now so I push myself off the wall and turn to walk to class. I feel Kit behind me but I can sense her potent glower on the boys up ahead.
âThe blond one,â I whisper to her, and she nods earnestly in agreement.
As we approach them I feel a wild animalistic pull and I canât seem to stop myself from shooting a glance towards the big sweaty bodies lounging around the fountain. The boy with spiky black hair is drinking directly from the spout, his eyes on us as he lets the water gush between his lips, over-spilling only slightly. I look away, mortified but also mesmerised, and my eyes naturally find the most beautiful thing in the area. Tateâs smooth tan skin is glistening with sweat and rain, and his hands are fisted low in the pockets of his basketball shorts. His eyes are scorching, like liquid fire, as they pierce into mine. They burn a message deep in my brain that says I send back *
Now that the moment is here I am a lot less confident in my plan. I know that I shouldnât be going out there â we havenât exchanged one word to each other in our I go to my window and look down at Tateâs porch. His head is ducked just outside of the porch roof, allowing the rain to run down the tousles of his hair, and his hands are gripping his head, pressing firmly against his ears.
Enough.
I run quietly downstairs, not wanting to disturb my mom from her work in her office, and I quietly unbolt the door. Once Iâm outside I look up at Tateâs porch, and to my surprise he is now on his feet. Itâs as if he knew that I was about to come out here. Itâs as if he was awaiting me.
Iâm instantly fifty times more nervous than I was a minute ago, so I watch my feet as I step in puddle after puddle instead of looking up at his face. It takes all of ten seconds to get across the street and then Iâm standing right in front of him.
I risk a glance at his face and heâs frowning down at me, large tan hands clenched at his sides.
âYou shouldnât be over here,â he says in a commanding tone. He almost sounds like heâs disappointed in me. Iâm actually a little confused as to why Iâm over here myself, so I shuffle on my feet for a moment, my wellies squelching.
I glance at the door behind him because I can hear sounds coming from inside, his mom and her boyfriend both home from work for the day.
âI⦠I brought you something,â I croak out. Iâm embarrassed and breathless because I have never spoken to this boy in my life, and now I am deciding to technically give him a present. I hold my hand out and cringe for being such a weirdo.
His brow creases even further. âWhatâs this?â he asks. Heâs looking at me like Iâm insane, which is probably accurate.
My stomach has folded into itself so many times that I donât think Iâll ever be able to eat again.
âI know â sorry â this is so weird, I didnât mean it like that. Itâs just â well â because you live across from me⦠and sometimes I see you out here⦠and I thought that this might help â itâs stupid, sorry, Iâll just-â
I begin to retract my arm but he swipes his hand out and holds my wrist to stop me. Iâm so surprised that I gasp, and then drop the object in my hand. He darts his other hand out and catches it before it hits the ground.
Basketball players.
âItâs a CD player,â he says, no longer frowning as his eyes search mine. Tate Coleson is one of those rare people who have incredibly beautiful eyelashes, and his irises sparkle like sugar crystals. When I look into them I feel like Iâm falling inside of a kaleidoscope.
âYes,â I admit.
âRetro,â he replies, smiling.
Smiling.
I shake my head. âItâs⦠archaic. Very primitive. Iâm sorry. I just thoughtâ¦â I trail off.
I donât have any new gadgets even though Iâm at the top of my Computer Tech class. I know the other kids have smaller, sleeker, non-battery-powered devices, but I donât mind. It makes me feel like Iâm from a different generation, and in turn it makes the rebuffal of people my own age hurt a little less.
Then I realise. âObviously you donât want to listen to music anyway â otherwise you would be using your phone. Sorry â
âMy mom gives me technology curfews, and Iâm not allowed to go out on weeknights,â he says. âIâm supposed to be studying and I donât like doing it when her boyfriend comes over is all.â
He brings down the device and holds it between us. He swallows hard.
âSo⦠youâre letting me use this tonight?â he asks. We look into each otherâs eyes again and I think about how his warm fingers are still firmly wrapped around my wrist.
I nod. âYou can use it tomorrow night too if youâd like. And the next night. And the night after that.â
Shut up, shut up, shut up.
He ducks his head, shaking it slightly, and when he straightens his posture I can see that his eyes are glittering in the glow of the golden porch sconce.
âThank you,â he says. His voice is deep and thick. I think that itâs the nicest voice that I have ever heard.
I look up at him with a small smile. âYouâre welcome. I guess.â I laugh nervously, which makes him laugh too.
âCan I look inside?â he asks.
Heâs talking about the player, but it feels as though heâs about to look inside my brain.
I nod again.
He pops open the top and he cocks his head to look at the inscription on the disc. Itâs my Breaking Benjamin Thereâs a gentle flutter in my tummy when he does that.
âYouâre a little emo,â he says with a laugh, but he says it in an endearing way.
I feel my cheeks heat but I donât feel as embarrassed anymore so Iâm smiling now too.
âIâll give it back to you tomorrow morning before school,â he says.
Instantly, my stomach drops like a tonne of bricks.
He must notice because then he bends his knees a little so that weâre at more of a similar height and he locks my gaze in with his.
âAnd then tomorrow evening you can come back over here again,â he adds. Then he pauses, eyes wide like he just said something incriminating. âI mean, you can bring it back over here again.â He gives me a nervous smile, eyebrows raised as he awaits my answer.
I can feel my heart in my stomach. Itâs thumping like Iâm going to be sick and pee my pants at the same time, but kind of in a good way.
I scrunch up my nose, blush, and smile simultaneously, and his eyes are glowing when I meet them with mine.
âOkay⦠yes, sure, okay. See you tomorrow,â I say, and a warm feeling spreads through my chest.
Dimples appear in his cheeks. âSee you tomorrow, River.â