2006, Camp Wawa, Day One â. . . they were, like, best friends, but then Marie hooked up with Carlos one night, even though she knew Jenny was, like, in love with him,â Ashley murmurs from the side of her mouth, leaning in so I can catch her muffled words over the buzz of laughter and soft music. âIt was a total disaster.â
I covertly study Carlos, a stocky guy in a mustard-yellow T-shirt, standing across from us, laughing with his friends while he stokes the bonfire with a fresh-cut log. The two rivals for his affection sit equidistant to himâJenny, the tall, lithe blonde on the picnic table to the right, and Marie, the petite girl with a jet-black French braid huddled with a group to the left. Heâs cute enough to garner the attention, I guess. He seems to be more interested in the brunette helping him now than either of those two, though.
âSo, did they work things out?â
âNo.â Ashleyâs emerald eyes widen with emphasis. âAnd then Darian had Marie and Jenny bunking together this summer. Thank God Christa saw the list and made her fix the assignments. Can you imagine how tense that would have been?â
I assume thatâs a rhetorical question, so I merely shake my head as I swat the mosquito on my kneeâI should have changed into pantsâand make a mental note to avoid accidentally stepping into any minefields around those two girls.
When Christa asked Ashley to show me around, Ashley took that not only in the physical âgirlsâ restroom to the left, canteen closes at five, stay away from the weedy side of the lakeâ sense, but also as a rundown of key social connections and juicy gossip, and anything else she deems I might need to know about the people Iâll be living and working with for the next two months. The amount of information sheâs off-loaded on me in tiny, private slips between the welcome meeting, dinner, and now is staggering. Iâm doing my best to keep everything straight.
So far, aside from the Carlos-Marie-Jenny triangle, thereâs also the Kate-and-Colin betâa pool going on how long it will take for the two senior counselors to hook up again after last summerâs off-and-on-again fling. Based on the googly eyes and secretive smiles theyâve been throwing each other all evening, Iâm considering throwing five bucks into the hat for tonight. And then thereâs the âWill Tom and Doyle finally come out?â question mark, regarding the lanky blond guy and his friend at the picnic table to the right of us, who were campers here for years and, Ashley swears, have been secretly dating each other for the past two summers.
Iâve also learned that Claire, the girl in the oversized fleece sweatshirt with muscular legs, is the resident waterskiing and wakeboarding instructor for the summer and so good that thereâs talk of her qualifying for the Pan Am Games; and that Oliviaâs dad owns four gas stations, which classifies her as ârich,â especially with the brand-new Honda Civic she pulled up to camp in; and that Justin got into Columbia University for the fall with a full ride from financial aid that heâs been bragging about.
In my circle of friends, no one would ever brag about needing financial aid for anything.
Iâve also been given the quick rundown on Christa. Apparently she isnât well-liked. Partly because she has a tendency to boss people around and she insists on always being right, but also because sheâs been known to rat out counselors. Now that sheâs been tapped as lead counselorâa glorified title for the camp directorâs personal gopher that she announces to anyone who will listenâpeople have been avoiding her at all costs.
And Iâm the lucky one who gets to room with her for the next two months.
Iâm sure there are plenty of questions floating around about the new girl. Everyoneâs been nice so far, but I havenât missed the frequent curious glances, and there was that abrupt end to a hushed conversation between Ashley and two other girls as I returned with my burger, followed by embellished smiles.
I havenât offered much information about my life, so I canât imagine what Ashley would be saying about me by way of introduction. Itâs nice being a mystery. So different from back home, where it seemed half the school knew my name by the end of my first day of freshman year. Or rather, they knew my family name.
The one person Iâm dying to get information on, though, the one Iâve been acutely aware of since crossing the threshold to take a seat at the pavilion for orientation, is the one Ashley hasnât divulged a single detail about yet. The one leaning casually against the trunk of a giant cedar tree, his hands tucked loosely into his pockets, his feet crossed at the ankles, talking with Olivia as she shamelessly flirts with him. The one Iâve swapped frequent glances with for hours now, allowing myself to admire that gorgeous face for a mere second or two before shifting away, so as not to be too obvious.
âSo, whatâs that guyâs story, anyway?â I finally ask, feigning disinterest. âYou know, the one from earlier. Kurt or something . . .â
âKyle,â she corrects, her eyes immediately locking on him, as if sheâs been aware of his location all along, too. âHe runs this place. At least it feels like that, sometimes. Heâs . . . different.â
âHow so?â
âHeâs just . . .â She shakes her head. âI donât know how to explain it. I like him, donât get me wrong. But no one really knows much about him.â She glances around and then lowers her voice even further. âHe used to come here with his brother. He was this quiet, skinny little kid who didnât say much. Then they just stopped coming. No one saw or heard from him for forever, until he showed up as a junior counselor last year, looking like that, and I swear, every girl had an instant crush on him. Well, except for Christa.â Ashley snorts. âShe reported him for skipping out on his activity once and got him into major shit.â She pauses. âWhy? Are you interested?â
âHeâs decent enough, I guess,â I lie, nonchalantly. Decent doesnât even begin to cut what Kyle is. And so different from Trevor, the guy I dated for almost five months this past year. Trevor was a senior, and six feet of brawny muscle, broad shoulders, and baby-blue eyes. He also turned out to be a pig masquerading as a nice guyâpromising he wouldnât pressure me into sex, all while sliding his hand up my shirt and spiking my drinks at parties. When I figured out the latter, I dumped his ass. His ego didnât take too kindly to that. I mean, a sophomore dumping the Trevor Reilly? He ended up with another senior within two days, and told every guy who would listen to not bother with me unless they wanted serious blue balls.
âSo, who has Kyle hooked up with around here, anyway?â Because a guy who looks like that doesnât spend an entire summer surrounded by fawning hormonal admirers and stay celibate.
âHe was with Avery last summer.â
My gaze surveys the crowd. âLet me guess, the one in the navy-striped shirt?â
âYeah.â Ashley frowns. âHowâd you know?â
âJust a hunch,â I mutter wryly, watching the leggy redhead with the bag of marshmallows as she carefully skewers several on the end of a long metal stick. Narrow hips, skinny waist, large breasts, long, glossy tresses the color of a fiery copper. She stands out from all the girl-next-door counselors around the circle, and sheâs easily the most classically beautiful female here.
Kyle doesnât sound as different as Ashley claims, after all. At least not as far as his choice of girls goes. âHow old is she?â
âTwenty, I think? At least twenty. This is her second year as a senior counselor. Kyleâs only seventeen.â Ashley looks knowingly at me. âHe must like them older.â
Or more experienced. If thatâs the case, how quick will he be to abandon the interest he seems to be showing in me? I mean, itâs not like Iâm saving myself for marriage, but Iâm also not in a rush to rid myself of my virginity as if it were a hot potato. I want it to mean something when it finally happens and so far, I havenât met a guy who fills that requirement. Trevor Reilly definitely did not.
Will Kyle?
âSo, what happened between them?â
She shrugs. âSummer ended, I guess. Plus, if you ask me, sheâs not the most interesting person, but Iâm not sure it was her personality he was after.â Ashley accepts a marshmallow roaster stick from a nearby guy with a smile of thanks. âShe bunked with Christa last year. That didnât go over so well.â
I fish out two jumbo marshmallows from the bag and hand them to her, while stealing another glance. Olivia, or âMiss Sunoco,â is moving in on Kyle, her hips casually swaying to the languid beat of the moody alternative music playing over a portable radio, her long golden-brown hair flipping with every exaggerated laugh. Does he find her interesting, I wonder?
âHeâll never go for Olivia,â Ashley says as if reading my mind, her eyes on the two of them as she shifts a few steps to hold her stick high above the flames. âSheâs a total one-upper. Youâll see what I mean soon. And sheâs always talking about money. About their big house, and their cars, and where theyâre going on vacation. Kyle canât stand girls like that. Thatâs what Eric told me, anyway.â
Noted. So I shouldnât mention . . . basically anything about my life around him. âWhoâs Eric?â
âKyleâs partner in crime. That one over there.â
I follow the jut of her chin to a guy across from us, busy dousing himself with bug repellent. Iâd noticed him earlier. He stuck by Kyleâs side during orientation and dinner.
âHeâs cute.â In a Ryan Phillippe sort of way, with dark blond curls that hug his scalp and a mischievous look in his eyes.
âHeâs a loudmouth and a goof.â Ashley chews her bottom lip as if considering her next words. âLast year, Kyle told me Eric said I was pretty.â She laughs nervously and shakes her head, as if brushing it off.
I frown. âYou donât believe him?â
âCome on . . . Guys donât like girls with this many freckles.â A flush crawls up her neck. âEspecially not guys like Eric.â
âThatâs not true.â I canât deny that I pitied her for those freckles when I first saw her. But only hours later, I can see that Ashley has a lithe, natural way about her, and when she smiles, her entire face transforms. Sheâs one of those people who, the more you get to know them, the more attractive they become, wild hair, freckles, and all.
I study Eric again. Heâs put down the can of bug spray and is now having a whispered conversation with another guy, their attention veering to Kyle and Olivia across the way, impish smiles on their lips. âWould Kyle do something like that to you?â Because playing on an insecure girlâs emotions like that would make him a douchebag.
Ashleyâs brow furrows, as if sheâs giving that question serious thought for the first time. âNo. I guess he wouldnât. I mean, they both joke around, but theyâre not mean-spirited.â
âSo then . . . you and Eric?â
âWhat?â She giggles. âNo. Weâre not compatible. Ericâs a Sagittarius and Iâm a Pisces. It would never work.â
I wait for her to crack a smile, or laugh. Something to tell me she didnât just invoke unsuitable zodiac signs as a valid reason for avoiding a hookup.
Her face remains serious.
âAnyway, Eric was messing around with someone else, like, a week after Kyle told me that, so he couldnât have been that into meââ
âFreckles!â Eric hollers, attracting everyoneâs attention as he marches toward us.
Including Kyleâs.
I feel my body naturally stand up straighter.
âStop calling me that!â Ashleyâs scowl quickly fades to a smile as Eric rounds the bonfire. âGod, youâre so tall now!â
With a wide grin, he wraps his arms around her, pulling her into a friendly hug. âYeah. Late growth spurt, I guess.â
They break apart and she playfully pokes him in the ribs. âYou never emailed me.â
âYou know how it is when you leave here.â His inky blue eyes flip to me. âSo? Whoâs your new friend?â
Ashley waves dramatically toward me. âPiper, this is Eric. Eric . . . Piper.â
He offers his hand and I take it, but the handshake quickly morphs into a weird slap-snap-flap move that leaves my hand frozen midair, my eyebrows raised in surprise, feeling foolish.
Eric frowns with astonishment. âWow. Youâve really never been to Wawa before.â
âUh . . . no.â
â âCause you know, thereâs a secret handshake.â
âThereâs a secret handshake?â I echo, feigning shock.
He grins. âOh, yeah, thereâs a secret handshake. Better learn it fast because youâll be doing it a thousand times this summer.â
âTen thousand times,â comes a throaty male voice. I turn to find Kyle standing beside me, close enough that I can smell the mix of Deep Woods bug spray and whatever hair product he uses to get his hair to stay up.
He must have broken free of Oliviaâs advances and made a beeline here as soon as he saw his best friend approaching. I swallow, forcing down the swirl of giddiness over that thought. âTen thousand. Thatâs a lot.â
âIt is,â he agrees with mock seriousness. âSoon youâll be waking up to your hand doing the motions in your sleep.â
âYeah, thatâs not what your hand is doing while youâre asleep,â Eric retorts, earning himself a swift punch to the shoulder from his friend.
Kyle turns his attention back to me, his golden eyes glittering with amusement. âHey.â
âHey.â A blush creeps along my cheeks. Knowing Iâm blushing only makes my face grow hotter. I wish the sky would plummet into full darkness right about now.
âIâm Kyle.â He holds his hand out and I eye it warily. A cute smile curves the corner of his mouth with the lip ring. âNothing funny. Promise.â
His fingers are long and slender as they slip over mine, his skin cool to the touch. âIâm Piper.â
âPiper,â he repeats, his hand lingering a beat or two longer than normal before he releases me. âI like that. Itâs different.â
âItâs definitely different.â And it has come with an arsenal of unwanted nicknames. Pipe Cleaner, before my stick figure began to fill out; Pipes, courtesy of my brother; Piper the Viper, from opposing players on the tennis courtsâthat oneâs growing on me. And of course, there are also the gags. Iâve found more than one jar of dills in my locker this past year, and the guysâ swim team has taken to trailing me in the halls while whispering some stupid rhyme about picking their pickles.
Kyle slides his thumbs into his pockets and lets them hang in that casual way. âSo, howâd you end up at Wawa for the first time ever, Piper?â Heâs watching me so intently, his eyesâwith a vibrant green hugging the pupils, I can see nowâsearching mine.
I have to clear my throat before I can manage words. âMy mom used to go here, and sheâs a firm believer that everyone should experience being a camp counselor at least once in their life, so . . . here I am.â
âThose damn parents, always forcing us to experience life and shit,â he murmurs, his lip twitching with amusement as he reaches up to casually scratch the back of his neck. His sleeve slips, showing off the edges of black ink. Seventeen and tatted. Did his parents actually allow that? Because mine are vehemently opposed to it. My dad has basically told me that every tattoo is a digit lost from my trust fund if he finds out.
âSo you get it, then.â I smile softly.
His gaze flickers to my mouth. âI do.â
âEveryone!â Darian, our petite and energetic camp director, has climbed up onto one of the picnic tables. She claps several times, showing off toned arms. âEveryone, grab a seat! Chair, table, grass, wherever. Get comfortable!â
Thereâs a shuffle of bodies around the campfire as people settle in. I find myself perched on one end of a picnic table bench, next to Kyle. His jean-clad thigh softly nudges mine, momentarily distracting me from everything else.
âIt looks like youâre all having fun, catching up. That is awesome!â Darian emphasizes the word awesome by throwing her arms in the air. My guess is that she was that spunky high school cheerleader in her former life. Somewhere in the last twenty or so years, she traded in her long blonde ponytail, short skirt, and pom-poms for a cropped cut, hiking boots, and a tennis visor that reads âCamper 4 Life!â across the front. âNow, I know I donât have to remind you guys what the first day of camp is like, right? All the excitement and nerves can make for a long night. Kids are excited, nervous, homesick . . . which means they donât sleep, which means you guys,â she jabs the air with her index fingers, âdonât sleep either.â
A chorus of groans sounds out.
âAnd then youâre up at the crack of dawn for an even longer day.â
More groans.
Darian holds her hands up in surrender. âI know, I know . . . But taking care of these kids and making sure they enjoy their week away is kind of why youâre here, am I right?â She pauses, waiting for a few sounds of agreement. âAnd you all need to get a good nightâs sleep tonight so youâre ready for whatâs to come. You catching my drift?â She casts a searching look around the group.
âNo shenanigans?â Eric calls out with an impish grin, earning a few laughs.
âYou got it, Mr. Vetter! No shenanigans! And I donât want to have to treat you like children by watching your every move. Listen, I know there will be times when you need to unwind a bit after refereeing and corralling kids all day. I get it. Iâve been there, too. But I expect everyone in their cabins by ten tonight, snoring softly, so youâre bright-eyed and bushy-tailed when those parents and kids pull in tomorrow. Is everyone with me on this?â Again, her arms go above her head, her question seeming more like a practiced cheer.
Kyle leans in toward me. âDarian tries hard to be âhip,â â he murmurs, his voice low, his mouth close to my ear as he air-quotes the word hip.
I take a deep, calming breath to balance my spiking heart rate. âSo Iâm noticing.â
âShe usually misses the mark, big time.â He settles back, resting his elbows behind him on the picnic table, his long legs stretching out in front of him. âBut sheâs all right, as far as bosses go. No oneâs allowed to be a dick to her.â
It sounds oddly like a warning. Like, if youâre a dick to Darian, youâre going to have a problem getting along with the other counselors. Or maybe just with Kyle.
âOkay! So on that note, we do have a few new people in our group. One who is brand-spanking new to Wawa.â Darianâs hand flies my way and I instinctively tense at being singled out. âSo, I think itâs a good time to play our favorite ice-breaker gameââanother round of groans carriesââand see what new things we can learn about one another. Come on! Itâs been a year. Stuff has happened. Besides, Iâm sure thereâs still plenty you donât know about even your closest friends here.â She claps her hands. âOkay! Two truths and a lie! Whoâs going first? Donât make me pick.â
Someone shouts, âNew girl goes first!â and a chant of âNew girl, new girl!â begins.
âOkay, then! Piper, stand up and try to fool us.â Darian nods encouragingly.
âAre you kidding me?â I mutter under my breath, squirming in my seat as forty-odd sets of eyes land on me. Two truths and a lie? What the hell do I say? Couldnât they have given me two minutes to prepare?
My mind has gone completely blank.
âIâm going first,â Kyle announces, standing and taking a step forward, steering everyoneâs attention to him.
Darian doesnât object.
I let out a shaky sigh of relief.
âLetâs see . . . two truths and a lie . . .â He slides his fingers over his chin in exaggerated thought. âThis is my second year as a counselor at Wawa, I got caught up in an armed robbery, and I just got my fifth tat last month.â He rhymes them off so smoothly, Iâd think he had them long since prepared.
âOne . . . two . . . three . . .â Eric, whoâs sitting on the other side of Kyle, counts out loud, his brow furrowed in thought. âHey, Avery! Does Kyle have any ink on his ass? Or you know . . . â He waves a hand at his own groin area.
Laughter erupts.
âDonât pretend you guys donât walk around butt-naked together every chance you get,â Avery throws back in a snippy tone, her face flushing to match her red hair.
âYeah. But we donât get up close and personal.â Ericâs eyebrows waggle. âIf you know what I meanââ
âThank you, Eric!â Darian cuts him off with a warning tone. âAnyone want to take a guess? What is Kyle Millerâs lie?â
Even I know this is his second year as a counselor. A general consensus of âNumber Two!â and âArmed robbery!â echoes around the campfire as Kyle waits patiently, his arms folded over his chest, a knowing smirk on his lips.
âWell?â Darian watches him expectantly, though, I note, with a touch of apprehension in her gaze.
Kyle reaches up and tugs at his shirt collar, stretching it to reveal a slender but muscular shoulder and the fresh outline of a tattoo in progress. âThis will be number four when itâs finished.â
Eyebrows pop and looks are exchanged, and then a flurry of curious questions about the robbery erupt.
âWeâre going clockwise,â Kyle announces, ignoring them all, settling back into his seat beside me. He nudges a surprised-looking Eric beside him with his knee.
âDude,â Eric mutters, peering at his best friend. âSeriously? When?â
Kyle shrugs nonchalantly. âI canât remember. Two truths and a lie, Vetter. Go.â
Eric shakes his head and then, just like thatâas if Kyle is the camp director running the showâhe stands and rattles off his own three lines.
But Ericâs words donât register for me. My focus is on the boy beside me, his elbows resting on his knees, his attention locked on the dancing flames. I have so many questions.
Golden eyes turn to me suddenly and I avert my gaze to the sparse grass at my feet, but itâs too late.
âYou come up with anything yet?â he asks casually.
âAlmost,â I lie. âThanks, by the way, for buying me some time.â
He shrugs. âBeing the new guy sucks.â
I guess that would have been him last year, after so many years away.
Eric is done and everyoneâs shouting out numbers, most of them having chosen âone.â
Kyle discreetly holds out three fingers for me and winks. âHeâs a shitty swimmer.â
I guess he was listening to his friend, after all. Meanwhile, my attention is now on his wrist, on the ink peeking out from beneath the tan leather band. I jut my chin toward it. âWhatâs that?â
Kyle smooths his thumb back and forth over the bracelet for a moment, his mouth working over words that donât seem to want to come. And then he unfastens the snap and stretches his arm out to settle on my bare knee, palm up. Waiting for me to see for myself.
I struggle to ignore the feel of his hot skin against mine as I take in the tattoo. Two rows, two numbers, with several decimal points following each. The second number is a negative.
âTheyâre coordinates.â I look up in time to see the small, satisfied smile on his profile as he watches the fire. âTo where?â
A few beats pass before he pulls his arm away and refastens the leather band, covering the tattoo. âNowhere special,â he says casually, leaning back on his elbows once again.
âYou permanently marked your body with coordinates to a place that isnât special?â
The smile grows wider. âMaybe I did.â
I shake my head but chuckle. I canât get a read on this guy, other than that heâs lying and we both know it.
The ice-breaker game is rolling through the group swiftly and I really should be listening, but I canât seem to pay attention to anyone except Kyle.
âSo, whatâs your lie going to be?â
âIf I tell you, it kind of defeats the purpose of the game, doesnât it?â
His tongue slides out to flick his lip ring absently, drawing my attention to it. Iâve kissed three guys in my life and none of them had a lip ring. I wonder what it would feel like, to kiss Kyle.
My blood begins rushing at the thought.
âIâll know which one it is, anyway.â
âReally . . . And what makes you so sure?â I ask playfully.
Another lip ring flick. âIâm a telepath.â He turns to look at me, catching my gaze on his mouth. âIâll bet you.â
âHow much?â
Kyle shifts ever so slightly, bringing himself closer to me. âLoser has to eat five Fun Dips in under a minute. Winner buys.â
âWhat?â I laugh through a cringe. âIs that even humanly possible?â
âEric did it when he lost a bet with me. And he always loses when he bets me, by the way.â The smug smile touching his lips is downright devilish.
I set my jaw with determination. I love Fun Dips. I love winning even more. âThe doubles or the singles?â
âIâll let you get away with the singles.â
âYouâre on.â
An excited gleam sparks in his eyes.
Itâs Averyâs turn now, and she hops off the picnic table to stand, showing off a set of long and slender but shapely legs. Everyoneâs attention is on her as she scoops her glossy red locks back with both hands, then tucks strands behind each ear.
But Iâm stealing frequent glances Kyleâs way, trying to catch any flicker of interest that may linger for last summerâs fling. Did he sleep with her? Ericâs joke implies that theyâve gone pretty far.
A tight, uncomfortable feeling stirs in my stomach with the thought.
But I remind myself that heâs sitting beside me.
He came to me.
âOkay. So . . . letâs see . . .â Avery swings her arms at her sides twice. âIâm changing my major to herpetologyââ
âLie,â he murmurs without missing a beat.
âHow do you know?â And what the hell even is that?
âBecause she hates reptiles.â
Ahhh . . .
âEspecially turtles.â
I frown. âWho hates turtles?â
âExactly.â His eyebrows pull together. âI need to be with the kind of girl who likes turtles.â He pauses a beat and then peers at me with intense scrutiny. âAre you the kind of girl who likes turtles?â
I struggle to suppress what would no doubt be a stupid grin, as flutters stir in my stomach. âI love turtles.â The chocolate pecan kind. As far as the living kind go, Iâm indifferent. I mean, Iâd swerve if I saw one crossing the road, but I have no plans to join a âSave the Turtlesâ advocacy program.
But this has nothing to do with turtles, anyway.
I swallow my nerves. âActually, I have a bunch of them at home.â
âReally . . .â His eyes narrow and I canât help but note the thick fringe of long, dark lashes. âHow many?â
âA hundred and one.â I struggle to keep a straight face.
Kyle lets out a low whistle. âThatâs a lot of turtles.â
âWe have a turtle farm.â
His head falls back and he belts out a laugh that grabs everyoneâs attention, including Averyâs, whose eyes narrow and dart from him to me.
âSomething you need to share, Kyle?â Darian asks through a tight smile, her annoyance thinly veiled. I wonder if she feels the same way about Kyle that Christa does.
He holds a hand in the air, palm out. âIâm sorry, but have you ever heard of anyone having a turtle farm?â
âWhat the hellâs the point of a turtle farm?â Eric mutters. âAll theyâd do is sit around in the sand all day.â
âAnd swim,â Kyle offers. âBut youâd need a big pool, especially for a hundred and one of them.â
âA hundred and one? You mean, like the Dalmatians?â
âExactly like the Dalmatians, Vetter. Exactly.â
Eric frowns as if considering that. âAre the spots on their shells or their bodies?â
âOkay, boys . . .â Darian interrupts the Ping-Pong match of wit between the two friends. She points toward Avery. âCan we please focus?â
âYes. Of course. I apologize,â Kyle says somberly. âPlease, Avery . . . continue telling us about your cats.â
With another wary glare Kyleâs way, Avery continues. âTheir names are Snow and Coal.â
âBecause oneâs all white and oneâs all black. She said the same thing last year,â Kyle mutters, and thereâs no missing the boredom in his voice. Whatever Avery may feel for himâwhich right now appears to be a fair amount of resentmentâthereâs no love lost on his end.
âDidnât stop you from hooking up with her all summer,â I retort before I can stop myself.
Kyle muffles another laugh through a fake coughing fit, earning a dirty look from Avery and a throat-clearing from Darian. âI see Ashleyâs been busy filling you in on everything you wanted to know?â
And now Kyle is fully aware of the fact that I wanted to know about him.
My cheeks flush. But I shouldnât be embarrassed, should I? Because, unless Iâm horribly imperceptive, the signs are all there that this interest is mutual.
Avery has finished and people are now shouting out their guesses.
âI missed her third thing. What was it?â I ask.
âProbably that she has a sister who looks exactly like her, or something equally lame.â Kyle waves a dismissive hand in her direction. âDo you have a sister who looks like you?â
âNo. A brother, who looks nothing like me.â He is my motherâs son, while Iâm a much more feminine version of my father.
Kyle smiles smugly. âNow I know one truth about you.â
Shit.
âCome on, Piper. Iâm counting on you to come up with something more interesting than siblings and cats.â
âWell, Iâm sorry if I havenât been involved in any robberies lately.â
An odd, unreadable look flickers over his face, but itâs gone in an instant. âSo then shock me.â His eyes roam my face. âSay something that you wouldnât want to stand up in front of a group of strangers and admit to.â
âFine.â My stomach flips.
âAnd letâs up the stakes. Ten Fun Dips, two minutes.â
âFine.â
âFine.â He smirks. He turns his attention back to the circle.
I feel compelled to ask him somethingâanythingâto keep our conversation going. âSo . . . do you have a brother?â
His fingers move for that leather band again, fumbling absently with it. âYeah. One brother. Jeremy.â
âIs he going to come here this year?â
âNah.â Kyleâs eyes roam the treetops falling into darkness, now that the sun has dropped past them. âSo, what activities did you sign up for?â
âUh . . .â I struggle to think, his diversion away from his brother swift. âKnitting and badminton.â
He cringes. âKnitting? Thatâs the worst.â
âOptions were slim. You?â
âKayaking and hiking.â
I frown. âBut those slots were full when I signed up, and you came after me.â
âPays to know people.â
âApparently,â I grumble. âIâve never even held a knitting needle.â
Kyle nods toward the counselors. Theyâre halfway around the circle. âBetter start thinking up a good lie, unless you want to lose our bet.â
We sit quietly next to each otherâme, hyperaware of Kyleâs every shift, twitch, and glanceâand listen as one by one, everyone takes a turn standing before the crowd, attempting to trick the group. Most tries are unimaginativeâanswers people throw out just to get their turn over with and the attention off them. Then there are people like Christa, whose truths are so blatantly obviousââIâm a Type A personality, I like to be in controlââthat itâs impossible to mistake the lieââI drive Formula One race cars in my free time.â
A few are good. A guy named Vince had everyone divided over whether he went skydiving last week or if a shark did in fact brush past his calf at Cocoa Beach during spring break. Turns out Vince is scared shitless of heights and would have to already be dead and tossed out of a plane in order to agree to skydiving.
Tom stood up and outed himself as gayâto a round of cheers, proving that many already suspected that truth.
And then there was Olivia . . . I got my first real taste of her and her âI spent New Yearâs Eve in Paris,â âMy dad said that if I keep my four-point-oh, heâll buy me a Range Rover when I graduateâ truths, along with her âI met Harry Styles last yearâ lie. Apparently she met him two years ago.
As each person pauses to wait for the consensus, Kyle holds up one, two, or three fingers for me. And heâs right, every time. Iâm beginning to think there is such a thing as telepaths. At the very least, he has a natural ability to read people.
By the time my turn comes, my palms are sweating.
âOkay! And last but not least . . .â Darian makes a drum roll with her palms on the back of the cardboard box used to shuttle over wood scraps for the fire.
I stand, feeling everyoneâs gaze on me once again.
âHope you like sour apple,â Kyle murmurs, and I can hear the smug smile in his voice.
And I hope this doesnât backfire terribly on me.
âWe have turtles at home, Iâm crushing hard on Kyle, and I dumped my high school soccer team captainâs ass for trying to pressure me into having sex.â
Probably not what Darian had in mind for this ice breaker, but there you have it.
Eyes flash wide, mouths drop, and shocked, nervous giggles sound, and then people begin shouting out numbers. I stand with my head held high, like Iâm unfazed, even as heat crawls up the back of my neck. Thank God for the cover of night, finally.
âOkay, that was . . . interesting.â Darianâs own eyebrows are arched as she looks at me, her words failing her. âWell, Piper? Whatâs the lie?â
Taking a deep breath, I finally dare look over my shoulder and down.
Kyle peers up at me with a small smile on his lips, dipping his head once as if in approval. I guess I didnât totally fail. He holds up his index finger.
Number one.
I feel the triumphant smile take over as I turn to the group. âIâd never date a soccer player. Theyâre a bunch of crybabies.â
Laughter and jeers explode around the circle as I settle back down next to Kyle, my blood still racing through my ears, my eyes on the flames, unable to gather the nerve to meet his gaze.
Darian begins addressing the groupâreminders for where to be tomorrow and whenâbut I dismiss her instantly. With Christa as my bunk mate, I basically have a walking, talking agenda anyway.
âYou do not have a turtle farm,â Kyle mutters.
âI didnât say I did.â
âYeah, you . . .â His words drift as he realizes his own error.
âWe have two snapping turtles living in our pond at home. Theyâve been there since April.â My mother has tried to have them relocated, but theyâve somehow eluded the animal control guys so far. âBut thank you for the idea. I never would have remembered them.â
He shakes his head in disbelief, and a soft curse slips from his lips.
âSo . . .â I swallow away my nervousness. âWas that shocking enough for you?â
Kyle leans forward to rest his elbows on his knees again, making it impossible for me not to look at him, short of turning away. âWell, letâs see . . .â He uses his fingers to count out. âThe most fucking convenient truth, if Iâve ever heard one . . .â
I giggle.
He hesitates. â . . . a pretty ballsy admission . . .â But by the soft smile touching his lips, Iâd say one that heâs pleased with. Is that a slight flush in his cheeks? â . . . and then your lie.â A frown touches his brow. âSo who was he, then?â He tilts his head to meet my gaze, and for the first time I see a genuinely somber look.
My breath hitches at the beauty of it. âCaptain of the rugby team,â I admit. âHowâd you know that part was true?â
He shrugs. Thereâs a long pause. âSounds like he was a real dick.â
âYouâre perceptive.â Please donât be a dick, like him.
Kyleâs face splits with a wide smile. âSo Iâve been told.â His gaze dips to my lips.
I feel the overwhelming urge to find out if Kyle is as good at kissing as he seems to be at guessing lies, and the brazenness to make sure I find out on my first night at Wawa. âHey, so do you want toââ
âMiller! Rematch time!â a guy yells out, pulling Kyleâs attention away from me. A group of guys are jogging toward the nearby field, where a bright overhead light has been turned on to illuminate the grass. A guy bounces a soccer ball off his knee.
âOh, you mean Eric. I donât play soccer!â Kyle hollers back.
âWhat? You scored fiveâumph!â Ericâs words cut off when Kyle elbows him in the ribs.
âThese guys donât know what theyâre talking about,â Kyle dismisses, then stands and stretches, his T-shirt lifting to give me a glimpse of a narrow but chiseled waist and dark hair trailing south of his belly button, his jeans sitting below the elastic waistband of his navy-blue Calvin Kleins. âBut you know, I should, uh, head over there to, you know, console all those crybabies.â
I laugh. âRight.â
âI mean, I donât play.â
âNo, of course not.â I mock-frown.
He begins walking backward, away from me, grinning. âBecause Iâm not a crybaby.â
âYouâre not. And by the way, did you want those ten sour apple Fun Dips with breakfast or lunch tomorrow?â
He gives me a gritted-tooth smile. âCanteen opens at ten thirty.â
âMid-morning sugar rush it is.â
âCanât wait.â He saunters away, Eric jostling him playfully.
âOh my God!â Ashley squeals, sliding down to me. âI canât believe you actually said that in front of everybody!â
âI know. Me neither.â And a quick glance around the group, namely at Averyâs and Oliviaâs tight expressions, tells me they arenât exactly pleased by it. But I guess when the new girl strolls in and basically stakes claim to the boy everyone else wants on the very first night, thatâs bound to happen.
Crap, did I just guarantee myself enemies for an entire summer?
âI knew you liked him, by the way.â Ashley playfully jabs my ribs with her finger. âI could just tell.â
She could tell, but she doesnât seem bothered or annoyed by the fact that I lied. She seems genuinely . . . giddy for me. Itâs at that moment that I decide Ashley is a friend I need to have this summer.
Christa sits next to Ashley. âSeriously? Kyle Miller?â Her voice drips with disapproval. Her expression isnât much better.
Iâm immediately on the defensive. âAnd whatâs wrong with him?â
âHeâs a jerk.â
âNot to me, he isnât.â I give her a knowing look. Judas.
âHeâs irresponsible, he lies, he thinks everythingâs a joke,â she says, listing Kyleâs supposed faults on her stubby fingers. âHe shouldnât have been allowed back here.â
âBut he was.â I flash Ashley a wide-eyed âWhat the hell?â look.
âSomething bad is going to happen one day, and itâll be because of him. Mark my words.â
I canât help it. I laugh. âMark your words? What are you, ninety years old?â
âSo . . .â Ashley leans forward to effectively block Christaâs face from mine and end a brewing confrontation. âWhat did you two talk about?â
I struggle to shake off my growing irritation with my new roommate. âJust . . . stuff.â As if Iâm going to divulge anything within Christaâs earshot. âWe made a bet, to see if he could guess my lie.â
Her eyes flash with excitement. âWho won?â
I look to the field in time to see Kyle peer over his shoulder at me, the sly smile touching his lips as infuriating as it is sexy. Ashley was right, heâs just . . . different, and I canât put my finger on exactly how.
But Iâm quite certain that Iâm done for.
âDefinitely me.â