I press my face against the window, watching the man jog off into Lincoln Park. He moves quickly for someone so massive.
Then I sink back in my seat, feeling like the whole car is spinning around.
I canât believe I kissed him.
That was my very first kiss.
I went to an all-girls boarding school. And while that didnât stop any of my classmates from finding romantic partnersâmale or femaleâI never met anybody I liked enough to date. I never had the time, or the interest.
In all my wildest imaginations, I never thought my first kiss would be with a criminal. A kidnapper. A carjacker. And who knows what else!
I donât even know his name. I didnât ask him, because I didnât think heâd tell me. I didnât want him to lie.
My heart is slamming against my ribs. My dress feels too tight around my chest, and I keep breathing faster and faster.
That ten minutes together in the car seemed like hours. And yet, I can hardly believe it happened at all. No one else would believe it if I told them.
I canât tell anyone about this. For one thing, my father would be furious. Also, as foolish as this sounds, I donât want to get that man in trouble. He stole the car, yes, but he didnât hurt me. He didnât even take the Benz with him.
Actually . . . he was quite a gentleman. Not in mannersâhe was rough and abrupt, especially at first. His voice sent shivers down my spine. It was deep and gravelly, definitely the voice of a villain.
He didnât look like a gentleman either. He was hugeâboth tall and broad, barely able to fit in the car. His arms looked as thick as my whole body. He had ink-black hair, rough stubble all over his face, black hair on his arms, and even the backs of his hands. And his eyes were ferocious. Every time he looked at me in the mirror, I felt pinned in place against the seat.
Still, I believed him when he said he wasnât going to hurt me. Actually, I believed all the things he said. The way he talked was so blunt that it seemed like he had to be honest.
I press my palms against my cheeks to cool them off. I feel flustered and hot. My hands are hot, tooâtheyâre not helping.
I canât stop thinking about his eyes looking back at me, that rough voice, and those insanely broad shoulders. His huge hands gripping the steering wheel . . .
Iâve never seen a man like that. Not in any country Iâve visited.
I feel my phone vibrating in my little clutch, and I pull it out. I see a dozen missed calls and many more messages.
I pick up the call, saying, âTata?â
âSimone!â My father cries, his voice thick with relief. âAre you alright? Where are you? Whatâs happening?â
âIâm fine, Tata! Iâm okay. Iâm at the History Museum, at the corner of Lincoln Park.â
âThank god,â my father cries. âStay right where you are, the police are on their way.â
I couldnât leave, unless it was on foot. I never got a driverâs license.
It only takes minutes for the police to arrive. They pull me out of the car and surround me, putting a blanket around my shoulders, asking me a hundred questions at once.
All I say is, âI donât know, I donât know,â over and over.
They take me directly back home, on my fatherâs insistence Iâm sure. Heâs already waiting out on the front porch. He pulls me away from the police, telling them not to ask me any more questions.
Mama keeps kissing me and holding my face between her hands like she canât believe itâs really me.
Even Serwa is awake and down from her room, wrapped up in her favorite fuzzy robe. She hugs me tooânot as hard as Mama. I hug her back just as gently. My sister is ten years older than me, but a head shorter. I rest my chin on her hair, smelling her familiar scent of jasmine soap.
Once the police are gone, the real interrogation begins.
My father sits me down in the formal living room, demanding to know what happened.
âA man stole the car, Tata. I was in the backseat. He told me to get down and cover my eyes. Then he dropped me off.â
The lie comes out of me with remarkable ease.
Iâm not used to lyingâespecially not to my parents. But thereâs no way I could explain to them what really happened. I donât even understand it myself.
âTell me the truth, Simone,â my father says sternly. âDid he touch you? Did he hurt you?â
âYafeuââ Mama says.
He holds up a hand to silence her.
âAnswer me,â he says.
âNo,â I say firmly. âHe never touched me.â
âGood,â my father says with immeasurable relief.
Now he hugs me, wrapping his strong arms around my shoulders and squeezing me tight.
I wonder if he would have done that if I been âtouched?â
âYou missed your party,â I say to Mama.
âIt doesnât matter,â she says, tucking a lock of pale, shimmering hair behind her ear. â
what a city! I knew this would happen. Everyone said itâs all criminals and thieves here, shootings every day.â
She looks at my father with reproach. Itâs always his choice which appointments he takes, where we go. Only twice has my mother put down her foot with himâwhen she was pregnant with my sister, and then with me. She insisted on going home to Paris both times so we would be born on French soil.
My fatherâs personality is so strong that Iâve never seen anyone win an argument with him. Iâve certainly never done it. Heâs like a glacierâcool, and immovable. Nothing can stand before him. He could crush an entire city in his path, given enough time.
It took an immense amount of will to escape the poverty of his birth. Nobody else in his family made it out. He had three older sistersâall three died or disappeared while he was still a boy. His parents are gone, too. Heâs a world unto himself. Heâs Jupiter, spinning around the sun, and Mama, Serwa, and I are tiny satellites, pulled along in his orbit.
I donât think Mama minds, generallyâshe told me she fell in love with my father the moment she laid eyes on him. Sheâs been devoted to him since. He was incredibly handsomeâtall, lean, as sharp as if he were carved out of obsidian. But I know it was more than that. She was an heiress, born in luxury. It was his obsessive drive that she loved. Sheâd never seen anything like it amongst all the children of privilege.
On their wedding day, she handed him control of her trust fund. In one year he grew it to three times its original size.
I wonder if there really is such a thing as love at first sight.
What does it feel like?
Does it feel like an arrow shooting into your chest, every time a pair of coal-black eyes fix on yours?
I can feel my face flushing all over again, just remembering.
âWhat is it?â Mama asks me. âYou look strange. Do you need water? Food?â
âIâm fine, Mama,â I assure her.
My father is getting up from the couch.
âWhere are you going?â she asks him.
âIâve got to talk to Jessica.â
Jessica Thompson is his assistant.
âRight now?â Mama says, that line between her eyebrows appearing again.
âImmediately. Sheâs going to have to issue a press release. Thereâs no covering up the fact that our daughter was abducted. Not with all the commotion at the hotel.â
This is my fatherâs wayâas soon as one problem is solved, heâs on to the next. Iâm safe, so the next task at hand is damage control.
âItâs fine, Mama,â I say. âIâm just going to go to bed.â
âIâll go up with you,â Serwa says.
I know my sister means it kindly, but honestly, sheâs probably the one who needs help up the stairs. Sheâs currently in the throes of a lung infection, and her antibiotics arenât working.
As we climb the wide, curving staircase, I slip my arm around her waist to help her up. I can hear her wheezing breaths.
My bedroom is the first on the left. Serwa follows me in, sitting on the edge of my bed.
I turn around so she can unzip my dress for me. Iâm not embarrassed to be naked in front of herâSerwa is so much older that sheâs always taken care of me, from the time I was little.
I step out of the dress, hanging it up carefully again in the closet. I only wore it a short time, and I never danced in itâthereâs no need to send it to the cleaners.
As I hunt around for my favorite pajamas, Serwa says, âSo tell me what really happened.â
I use the excuse of the pajamas to avoid looking at her.
âWhat do you mean?â
âI know you didnât tell Tata and Mama everything.â
I find my pajamas with the little ice cream cones all over them and pull them on.
âWell,â I say, from inside the comforting darkness of the pajama top, âhe was very handsome.â
âThe thief?â Serwa cries.
âYesâ
! Mama will hear you.â
âWhat did he look like?â Serwa whispers, her eyes bright with curiosity.
âHe was hugeâlike one of those Russian powerlifters. Like he eats a dozen eggs and two chickens every meal.â
Serwa giggles. âThat doesnât sound handsome.â
âNo, he was. He had this brutal face, broad jaw, dark eyes . . . but I could see he was intelligent. Not just a thug.â
âYou could tell that just by looking at him?â Serwa says skeptically.
âWell . . . we talked a little too.â
â
!? About what?â she says, forgetting to be quiet again.
â
!â I remind her, though this house is massive and itâs unlikely anyone could hear us unless they were standing right outside the door. âJust . . . about everything. He asked where I was from, where I lived, and why I was crying before the party.â
âWhy were you crying?â Serwa asks, frowning.
âTata found out about Parsons.â
âOh,â Serwa says. She knew I was applying. She was too kind to tell me it was a terrible idea. âWas he angry?â
âOf course.â
âIâm sorry,â she says, hugging me. âCambridge is lovely, though. Youâll like it there.â
Serwa went, just like she was supposed to. She graduated with distinction, with a masterâs in macroeconomics. She was offered an analyst position with Lloydâs of London, but before she could start, she caught pneumonia three times in a row.
My sister has Cystic Fibrosis. My parents have paid for every type of treatment under the sun. And often, she gets better for months at a time. Or at least, sheâs well enough to attend school or travel. But always, right when sheâs on the cusp of her next achievement, it brings her low again.
Itâs been the shadow hanging over our family all along. The knowledge that Serwaâs life is likely to be shorter than ours. That we only have her for so long.
That would be tragic in and of itself. Whatâs worse is that my sister happens to be the kindest person Iâve ever known. Sheâs gentle. Sheâs warm. She never has a bad word to say about anyone. And sheâs always been there to help me and support me, even when her lungs are drowning and sheâs weak from coughing.
Sheâs still so pretty, despite her illness. She reminds me of a doll, with her round face, dark eyes, flushed cheeks, and hair pulled back from a straight center-part. Sheâs petite and delicate. I wish I could hold her like a doll and protect her from anything awful happening to her.
I donât tell Serwa about the kiss. Itâs too bizarre and embarrassing. Iâve never behaved like that before. Sheâd be shocked. Iâm shocked at myself, quite honestly.
âWell, Iâm glad youâre safe,â Serwa says, squeezing my hand. My hand is bigger than hers. All of me is biggerâI grew taller than her when I was only ten years old.
âI love you, I say.
âI love you, too,â she says.
Serwa goes back to her own room. After a moment I can hear the sound of her vibrating vest whirring away, knocking the mucus out of her airways.
I put on headphones, because that sound makes me sad.
I lay in my bed, listening to my Apocalypse playlist. I never listen to peaceful music to go to sleep.
I squirm under the covers, remembering the moment my lips met the lips of the thief . . . heat flooded through my body like a match thrown into dry grass. The flame spread in all directions, consuming everything in its path.
It was over in an instant, but it keeps repeating again and again in my brain . . .
I drift off to the sounds of âZombieâ by the Cranberries.