: Chapter 23
The Summer I Turned Pretty
Cam called again the next night, and the night after that. We talked on the phone twice before we met up again, for, like, four or five hours at a time. When we talked, I lay on one of the lounge chairs on the porch and stared up at the moon with my toes pointed toward the sky. I laughed so hard that Jeremiah yelled out his window for me to keep it down. We talked about everything, and I loved it, but the whole time I wondered when he was going to ask to see me again. He didnât.
So I had to take matters into my own hands. I invited Cam to come over and play video games and maybe swim. I felt like some kind of liberated woman calling him up and inviting him over, like it was the kind of thing I did all the time. When really, I was only doing it because I knew no one was going to be at home. I didnât want Jeremiah or Conrad or my mother or even Susannah to see him just yet. For now, he was just mine.
âIâm a really good swimmer, so donât be mad when we race and I beat you,â I said over the phone.
He laughed and said, âAt freestyle?â
âAt any style.â
âWhy do you like to win so much?â
I didnât have an answer for that, except to say that winning was fun, and anyway, who didnât like to win? Growing up with Steven and spending my summers with Jeremiah and Conrad, winning was always important, and doubly so because I was a girl and was never expected to win anything. Victory is a thousand times sweeter when youâre the underdog.
Cam came over, and I watched from my bedroom window as he drove up. His car was navy blue and old and beat-up looking, like his hoodie that I was already planning on keeping. It looked like exactly the kind of car heâd drive.
He rang the doorbell, and I flew down the stairs to open the door. âHi,â I said. I was wearing his hoodie.
âYouâre wearing my hoodie,â he said, smiling down at me. He was even taller than Iâd remembered.
âYou know, I was thinking that I want to keep it,â I told him, letting him in and closing the door behind me. âBut I donât expect to get it for free. Iâll race you for it.â
âBut if we race, you canât be mad if I beat you,â he said, raising an eyebrow at me. âItâs my favorite hoodie, and if I win, Iâm taking it.â
âNo problem,â I told him.
We went out to the pool through the back screen door, down the porch steps. I threw off my shorts and T-shirt and his hoodie quickly, without even thinkingâJeremiah and I raced all the time in the pool. It didnât occur to me to be self-conscious to be in a bikini in front of Cam. After all, we spent the whole summer in bathing suits in that house.
But he looked away quickly and took off his T-shirt. âReady?â he said, standing by the edge.
I walked over next to him. âOne full lap?â I asked, dipping my toe into the water.
âSure,â he said. âYou want a head start?â
I snorted. âDo you want a head start?â
âTouché,â he said, grinning.
Iâd never heard a boy say âtouchéâ before. Or anyone else, for that matter. Maybe my mother. But on him it looked good. It was different.
I won the first race easily. âYou let me win,â I accused.
âNo, I didnât,â he said, but I knew it wasnât true. In all the summers and all of the races, no boy, not Conrad or Jeremiah or certainly not Steven, had ever let me win.
âYou better give it your all this time,â I warned. âOr Iâm keeping the hoodie.â
âBest two out of three,â Cam said, wiping the hair out of his eyes.
He won the next heat, and I won the last one. I wasnât fully convinced that he didnât just let me winâafter all, he was so tall and long, his one stroke was worth two of mine. But I wanted to keep the hoodie, so I didnât challenge the win. After all, a win was a win.
When he had to leave, I walked him to his car. He didnât get in right away. There was this long pause, the first weâd had, if you can believe it. Cam cleared his throat and said, âSo this guy I know, Kinsey, is having a party tomorrow night. Do you maybe want to come?â
âYeah,â I said right away. âI do.â
I made the mistake of mentioning it at breakfast the next morning. My mother and Susannah were grocery shopping. It was just me and the boys, the way it had been for the most part this summer. âIâm going to a party tonight,â I said, partly just to say it out loud and partly to brag.
Conrad raised his eyebrows. âYou?â
âWhose party?â Jeremiah demanded. âKinseyâs?â
I put down my juice. âHowâd you know?â
Jeremiah laughed and wagged his finger at me. âI know everybody in Cousins, Belly. Iâm a lifeguard. Thatâs like being the mayor. Greg Kinsey works at that surf shop over by the mall.â
Frowning, Conrad said, âDoesnât Greg Kinsey sell crystal meth out of his trunk?â
âWhat? No. Cam wouldnât be friends with someone like that,â I said defensively.
âWhoâs Cam?â Jeremiah asked me.
âThat guy I met at Clayâs bonfire. He asked me to go to this party with him, and I said yes.â
âSorry. You arenât going to some meth addictâs party,â Conrad said.
This was the second time Conrad was trying to tell me what to do, and I was sick of it. Who did he think he was? I had to go to this party. I didnât care if there was crystal meth or not, I was going. âIâm telling you, Cam wouldnât be friends with someone like that! Heâs straight edge.â
Conrad and Jeremiah both snorted. In moments like these, they were a team. âHeâs straight edge?â Jeremiah said, trying not to smile. âNeat.â
âVery cool,â agreed Conrad.
I glared at the both of them. First they didnât want me hanging out with meth addicts, and then being straight edge wasnât cool either. âHe doesnât do drugs, all right? Which is why I highly doubt heâd be friends with a drug dealer.â
Jeremiah scratched his cheek and said, âYou know what, it might be Greg Rosenberg whoâs the meth dealer. Greg Kinseyâs pretty cool. He has a pool table. I think Iâll check this party out too.â
âWait, what?â I was starting to panic.
âI think Iâll go too,â Conrad said. âI like pool.â
I stood up. âYou guys canât come. You werenât invited.â
Conrad leaned back in his chair and put his arms behind his head. âDonât worry, Belly. We wonât bother you on your big date.â
âUnless he puts his hands on you.â Jeremiah ground his fist into his hand threateningly, his blue eyes narrow. âThen his ass is grass.â
âThis isnât happening,â I moaned. âYou guys, Iâm begging you. Donât come. Please, please donât come.â
Jeremiah ignored me. âCon, what are you gonna wear?â
âI havenât thought about it. Maybe my khaki shorts? What are you gonna wear?â
âI hate you guys,â I said.
Things had been weird with me and Conrad and also with me and Jeremiahâan impossible thought crept its way into my head. Was it possible they didnât want me with Cam? Because they, like, had feelings for me? Could that even be? I doubted it. I was like a little sister to them. Only, I wasnât.
When I finished getting ready and it was almost time to go, I stopped by Susannahâs room to say good-bye. She and my mother were holed up in there sorting through old pictures. Susannah was all ready for bed, even though it was still pretty early. She had her pillows propped up around her, and she was wearing one of her silk robes that Mr. Fisher had bought her on a business trip to Hong Kong. It was poppy and cream, and when I got married, I wanted one just like it.
âCome sit down and help us put this album together,â my mother said, rifling through an old striped hatbox.
âLaurel, canât you see sheâs all dressed up? Sheâs got better things to do than look at dusty old pictures.â Susannah winked at me. âBelly, you look fresh as a daisy. I love you in white with your tan. It sets you off like a picture frame.â
âThanks, Susannah,â I said.
I wasnât all that dressed up, but I wasnât in shorts like the night of the bonfire. I was wearing a white sundress and flip-flops, and Iâd put my hair in braids while it was still wet. I knew Iâd probably take them out in about half an hour because they were so tight, but I didnât care. They were cute.
âYou do look lovely. Where are you headed?â my mother asked me.
âJust to a party,â I said.
My mother frowned and said, âAre Conrad and Jeremiah going to this party too?â
âTheyâre not my bodyguards,â I said, rolling my eyes.
âI didnât say they were,â my mother said.
Susannah waved me off and said, âHave fun, Belly!â
âI will,â I said, shutting the door before my mother could ask me any more questions.
Iâd hoped that Conrad and Jeremiah had just been kidding around, that they werenât really gonna try to come. But when I ran down the stairs to meet Camâs car, Jeremiah called out, âHey, Belly?â
He and Conrad were watching TV in the family room. I poked my head in the doorway. âWhat?â I snapped. âIâm kind of in a hurry.â
Jeremiah turned his head toward me and winked lazily. âSee you soon.â
Conrad looked at me and said, âWhatâs with the perfume? Itâs giving me a headache. And why are you wearing all that makeup?â
I wasnât wearing that much makeup. I had some blush and mascara and a little lip gloss, that was it. It was just that he wasnât used to me wearing any. And Iâd sprayed my neck and wrists, that was all. Conrad sure hadnât minded Red Sox girlâs perfume. Heâd loved her perfume. Still, I took one last look at myself in the mirror in the hallwayâand I rubbed a little of the blush off, also the perfume.
Then I slammed the door shut and ran down the driveway, where Cam was turning in. Iâd been watching from my bedroom window so Iâd know the exact moment he drove up, so he wouldnât have to come inside and meet my mother.
I hopped into Camâs car. âHi,â I said.
âHi. I wouldâve rung the doorbell,â he told me.
âTrust me, itâs better this way,â I said, suddenly feeling very shy. How is it possible to talk to someone on the phone for hours and hours, to even swim with this person, and then feel like you donât know them?
âSo this guy Kinsey, heâs kind of weird, but heâs a good person,â Cam told me as he backed out of the driveway. He was a good driver, careful.
Casually I asked, âDoes he by any chance sell crystal meth?â
âUm, not that I know of,â he told me, smiling. His right cheek had a dimple in it that I hadnât noticed the other night. It was nice.
I relaxed. Now that the crystal meth stuff was out of the way, there was only one more thing. I twisted the charm bracelet on my wrist over and over and said, âSo, you know those guys I was with at the bonfire? Jeremiah and Conrad?â
âYour fake brothers?â
âYeah. I think they might be stopping by the party too. They know, um, Kinsey,â I said.
âOh, really?â he said. âCool. Maybe theyâll see that Iâm not some kind of creep.â
âThey donât think youâre a creep,â I told him. âWell, they kind of do, but theyâd think any guy I talk to is a creep, so itâs nothing personal.â
âThey must really care about you a lot to be so protective,â he said.
Did they?
âUm, not really. Well, Jeremiah does, but Conrad is all about duty. Or he used to be anyway. He shouldâve been one of those samurais.â I glanced over at him. âIâm sorry. Is this boring?â
âNo, keep talking,â Cam said. âHow do you know about samurais?â
Tucking my legs under my butt, I said, âMs. Baskervilleâs global studies class in ninth grade. We did a whole unit on Japan and Bushido. I was, like, obsessed with the idea of seppuku.â
âMy dadâs half-Japanese,â he said. âMy grandmother lives there, so we go out and visit her once a year.â
âWow.â Iâd never been to Japan, or anywhere in Asia for that matter. My motherâs travels hadnât taken her there yet either, though I knew she wanted to go. âDo you speak Japanese?â
âA little,â he said, rubbing the top of his head. âI get by okay.â
I whistledâmy whistle was something I was proud of. My brother, Steven, had taught me. âSo you speak English, French, and Japanese? Thatâs pretty amazing. Youâre like some kind of genius, huh,â I teased.
âI speak Latin, too,â he reminded me, grinning.
âLatinâs not spoken. Itâs a dead language,â I said, just to be contrary.
âItâs not dead. Itâs in every Western language.â He sounded like my seventh-grade Latin teacher, Mr. Coney.
When we pulled up to this guy Kinseyâs house, I kind of didnât want to get out of the car. I loved the feeling of talking and having somebody really listen to what I had to say. It was like a high or something. In this weird way, I felt powerful.
We parked in the cul-de-sacâthere were a ton of cars. Some were halfway on the lawn. Cam walked quickly. His legs were so long that I had to hurry to keep up. âSo how do you know this guy?â I asked him.
âHeâs my supplier.â He laughed at the expression on my face. âYouâre really gullible, Flavia. His parents have a boat. Iâve seen him down at the marina. Heâs a nice guy.â
We walked right in without knocking. The music was so loud I could hear it from the driveway. It was karaoke musicâthere was a girl singing âLike a Virginâ at the top of her lungs and rolling around on the ground, her mike getting twisted up in her jeans. There were ten or so people in the living room, drinking beer and passing around a songbook. âSing âLivinâ on a Prayerâ next,â some guy urged the girl on the floor.
A couple of guys I didnât recognize were checking me outâI could feel their eyes on me, and I wondered if I really had worn too much makeup. It was a new thing to have guys looking at me, much less asking me on dates. It felt equal parts amazing and scary. I spotted the girl from the bonfire, the one who liked Cam. She looked at us, and then she looked away, sneaking glances every once in a while. I felt bad for her; I knew how that felt.
I also recognized our neighbor Jill, who spent weekends at Cousinsâshe waved at me, and it occurred to me that Iâd never seen her outside of the neighborhood, our front yards. She was sitting next to the guy from the video store, the one who worked on Tuesdays and wore his name tag upside down. Iâd never seen the lower half of his body before, he was always standing behind the counter. And then there was the waitress Katie from Jimmyâs Crab Shack without her red-and-white striped uniform. These were people Iâd been seeing every summer for my whole life. So this is where theyâd been all this time. Out, at parties, while Iâd been left out, locked away in the summer house like Rapunzel, watching old movies with my mother and Susannah.
Cam seemed to know everybody. He said hi, shoulder-bumping guys and hugging girls. He introduced me. He called me his friend Flavia. âMeet my friend Flavia,â he said. âThis is Kinsey. This is his house.â
âHi, Kinsey,â I said.
Kinsey was sprawled out on the couch, and he wasnât wearing a shirt. He had a scrawny bird chest. He didnât look like a meth dealer. He looked like a paperboy.
He took a gulp of beer and said, âMy nameâs not really Kinsey. Itâs Greg. Everybody just calls me Kinsey.â
âMy nameâs not really Flavia. Itâs Belly. Only Cam calls me Flavia.â
Kinsey nodded like that actually made sense. âYou guys want something to drink, thereâs a cooler in the kitchen.â
Cam said, âDo you want something to drink?â
I wasnât sure if I should say yes or not. On the one hand, yeah, I kind of did. I never drank. It would be, like, an experience. Further proof that this summer was special, important. On the other hand, would he be grossed out by me if I did? Would he judge me for it? I didnât know what the straight edge rules were.
I decided against it. The last thing I needed was to smell like Clay had the other night. âIâll have a Coke,â I told him.
Cam nodded, and I could tell he approved. We headed over to the kitchen. As we walked, I heard little snatches of conversationââI heard Kelly got a DUI and thatâs why she isnât here this summer.â âI heard she got kicked out of school.â I wondered who Kelly was. I wondered if Iâd recognize her if I saw her. It was all Steven and Jeremiah and Conradâs faultâthey never took me anywhere. That was why I didnât know anybody.
All of the chairs in the kitchen had purses and jackets on them, so Cam moved over some empty beer bottles and made an empty space on the counter. I hopped up and sat on it.
âDo you know all these people?â I asked Cam.
âNot really,â he said. âI just wanted you to think I was cool.â
âI already do,â I said, and I blushed almost immediately.
He laughed like I had made a joke, which made me feel better. He opened up the cooler and pulled out a Coke. He opened it and handed it to me.
Cam said, âJust because Iâm straight edge doesnât mean you canât drink. I mean, Iâll judge you for it, but you can still drink if you want to. That was a joke, by the way.â
âI know,â I said. âBut Iâm good with this Coke.â Which was true.
I took a long sip of my Coke and burped. âScuse me,â I said, unraveling one of my braids. They were already too tight, and my head felt sore.
âYou burp, like, baby burps,â he said. âItâs kind of gross but also kind of cute.â
I unraveled the other braid and hit him on the shoulder. In my head I heard Conrad go, Ooh, youâre hitting him now. Way to flirt, Belly, way to flirt. Even when he wasnât there, he was there. And then he really was.
Out of nowhere, I heard Jeremiahâs signature yodel on the karaoke machine. I bit my lip. âTheyâre here,â I said.
âYou want to go out and say hi?â
âNot really,â I said, but I hopped down from the counter.
We went back to the living room, and Jeremiah was center stage, falsetto and singing some song Iâd never heard of. The girls were laughing and watching him, all googly-eyed. And Conrad, he was on the couch with a beer in his hand. Red Sox girl was perched on the armrest next to him, leaning in close and letting her hair fall in his face like a curtain that encased the two of them. I wondered if theyâd picked her up, if heâd let her sit shotgun.
âHeâs a good singer,â Cam said. Then he looked where I was looking and said, âAre he and Nicole together?â
âWho knows?â I said. âWho cares?â
Jeremiah spotted me then, as he bowed at the end of his song. âBelly! This next song goes out to you.â He pointed at Cam. âWhatâs your name?â
Cam cleared his throat. âCam. Cameron.â
Jeremiah said right into the mike, âYour name is Cam Cameron? Damn, that sucks, dude.â Everyone laughed, especially Conrad, when just a second ago heâd looked so bored.
âItâs just Cam,â Cam said quietly. He looked at me then, and I was embarrassed. Not for him, but of him. I hated them for that.
It was like Conrad and Jeremiah had deemed him unworthy and so I had to too. It was funny how Iâd felt so close to him just a few minutes before.
âOkay, Cam Cameron. This song goes out to you and our favorite little Belly Button. Hit it, ladies.â Some girl pushed the play button on the remote. âSummer lovinâ, had me a blastâ¦â
I wanted to kill him, but all I could do was shake my head at him and glare. It wasnât like I could grab the mike out of his hand in front of all these people. Jeremiah just grinned at me and started to dance. One of the girls sitting on the floor jumped up and started dancing with him. She sang the Olivia Newton-John part, off-key. Conrad watched in his amused, condescending way. I heard someone say, âWho is that girl anyway?â She was looking right at me as she said it.
Next to me, Cam was laughing. I couldnât believe it. I was dying of embarrassment and he was laughing. âSmile, Flavia,â he said, poking me in the side.
When someone tells me to smile, I canât help it. I always do.
Midway through Jeremiahâs song, Cam and I walked outâwithout even looking, I knew Conrad was watching us.
Cam and I sat on the staircase and talked. He sat on the step above me. He was nice to talk to, not intimidating at all. I loved the way he laughed so easilyânot like with Conrad. With Conrad you had to work hard for every smile. Nothing ever came easy with Conrad.
The way Cam was leaning into me, I thought he might try to kiss me. I was pretty sure Iâd let him. But heâd lean in and scratch his ankle, or tug at his sock, and then shift away, and then heâd do it again.
When he was in the middle of a lean in, I heard pissed off, belligerent voices coming from the deck outside. One of them was definitely Conradâs pissed off, belligerent voice. I jumped up. âSomethingâs going on out there.â
âLetâs check it out,â said Cam, leading the way.
Conrad and some guy with a barbed wire tattoo on his forearm were arguing. The guy was shorter than Conrad, but stockier. He was packing some serious muscle, and he looked like he was, like, twenty-five. Jeremiah watched, bemused, but I could tell he was alert, ready to jump in if he needed to.
To Jeremiah I whispered, âWhat are they fighting about?â
He shrugged. âConradâs wasted. Donât worry about it. Theyâre just showing off.â
âThey look like they might kill each other,â I said uneasily.
âTheyâre fine,â Cam said. âBut we should probably get out of here. Itâs late.â
I glanced at him. Iâd almost forgotten he was standing next to me. âIâm not leaving,â I said. Not that I could do anything to stop a fight from happening. But it wouldnât be right to just leave him there.
Conrad stepped up close to the tattoo guy, who shoved him away easily, and Conrad laughed. I could feel an actual fight brewing, like a thunderstorm. Just like the way the water got really still before the sky broke open.
âAre you gonna do something?â I hissed.
âHeâs a big boy,â Jeremiah said, his eyes close on Conrad. âHeâll be fine.â
But he didnât believe it, and neither did I. Conrad didnât seem fine at all. He didnât seem like the Conrad Fisher I knew, all wild and out of control. What if he got himself hurt? What then? I had to help, I just had to.
I started walking over to them, and I waved off Jeremiah when he tried to stop me. When I got there, I realized I had no idea what to say. I had never tried to break up a fight before.
âUm, hi,â I said, standing between the two of them. âWe have to leave.â
Conrad pushed me out of the way. âGet the hell out of here, Belly.â
âWho is this? Your baby sister?â The guy looked me up and down.
âNo. Iâm Belly,â I told him. Only, I was nervous, and I stuttered when I said my name.
âBelly?â The guy busted out laughing, and I grabbed Conradâs arm.
âWeâre gonna leave now,â I said.
I realized how drunk he was when he swayed a little as he tried to swat me off. âDonât leave. Things are just getting fun. See, Iâm about to kick this guyâs ass.â Iâd never seen him like this before. His intensity scared me. I wondered where Red Sox girl had gone. I kind of wished she was here to handle Conrad and not me. I didnât know what I was supposed to do.
The guy laughed, but I could tell he wanted a fight just about as much as I did. He looked tired, like all he wanted was to head home and watch TV in his boxers. Whereas Conrad was running on all cylinders. Conrad was like a soda bottle that had been shaken up; he was about to explode on somebody. It didnât matter who it was. It didnât matter that this guy was bigger than him. It wouldnât have mattered if he was twenty feet tall and built like a brick. Conrad was looking for a fight. He wouldnât be satisfied until he got one. And this guy, he could kill Conrad.
The guy kept looking at Conrad and then back at me. Shaking his head, he said, âBelly, you better get this little boy home.â
âDonât talk to her,â Conrad warned.
I put my hand on Conradâs chest. I had never done that before. It felt solid and warm; I could feel his heart beating fast and out of control. âCan we please just go home,â I pleaded. But it was like Conrad didnât even see me standing there, or feel my hand on his chest.
âListen to your girlfriend, kid,â the guy said.
âIâm not his girlfriend,â I said, glancing over at Cam, who had no expression on his face.
Then I looked back at Jeremiah helplessly, and he ambled over. He whispered something in Conradâs ear, and Conrad shook him off. But Jeremiah kept talking to him in his low voice, and when they looked at me, I realized it was about me. Conrad hesitated, and then he finally nodded. Then he half jokingly made like he was going to hit the guy, and the guy rolled his eyes. âGood night, douche,â he said to the guy.
The guy waved him off with one hand. I let out a big breath.
As we walked back to the car, Cam grabbed my arm. âAre you okay to go home with these guys?â he asked me.
Conrad whirled around and said, âWho is this guy?â
I shook my head at Cam and said, âIâll be fine. Donât worry. Iâll call you.â
He looked worried. âWhoâs driving?â
âI am,â Jeremiah said, and Conrad didnât argue. âDonât worry, Straight Edge, I donât drink and drive.â
I was embarrassed, and I could tell Cam was bothered, but he just nodded. Quickly I hugged him, and he felt stiff. I wanted to make things okay. âThanks for tonight,â I said.
I watched him walk away, and I felt a stab of resentmentâConrad and his stupid temper had ruined my first real date. It wasnât fair.
Jeremiah said, âYou guys get in the car; I left my hat inside. Iâll be right back.â
âJust hurry,â I told him.
Conrad and I got in the car silently. It felt eerily quiet, and even though it was only just past one, it felt like it was four in the morning and the whole world had gone to sleep. He lay down in the backseat, all of his energy from before gone. I sat in the front seat with my bare feet on the dashboard, leaning back far in the seat. Neither of us spoke. It had been frightening back there. I didnât recognize him, the way heâd acted. I suddenly felt very tired.
My hair was hanging low, and from the backseat, all of a sudden, I felt Conrad touching it, running his fingers through the bottom. I think I stopped breathing. We were sitting in perfect silence, and Conrad Fisher was playing with my hair.
âYour hair is like a little kidâs, the way itâs always so messy,â he said softly. His voice made me shiver, it was like the sound of water when it pulls off the sand.
I didnât say anything. I didnât even look at him. I didnât want to scare him off. It was like the time I had a really high fever, and everything felt gauzy and dizzy and unreal, it felt just like that. All I knew was, I didnât want him to stop.
But he finally did. I watched him in the visor mirror. He closed his eyes and sighed. I did too.
âBelly,â he began.
Just as suddenly, everything in me was alert. The sleepy feeling was gone; every part of my body was awake now. I was holding my breath, waiting for what he would say. I didnât answer him. I didnât want to break the spell.
Thatâs when Jeremiah came back, opened the door, slammed it shut. This moment between us, fragile and tenuous, snapped in half. It was over. It would do no good to wonder what he was going to say. Moments, when lost, canât be found again. Theyâre just gone.
Jeremiah looked at me funny. I could tell he knew that heâd walked in on something. I shrugged at him, and he turned away and started the car.
I reached over to the radio and turned it on, loud.
The whole way home, there was this strange tension, everyone keeping quietâConrad passed out in the backseat, Jeremiah and me not looking at each other in the front seat. Until we pulled up the driveway, when Jeremiah said to Conrad, in what was a harsh tone for him, âDonât let Mom see you like this.â
Which was when I realized, remembered, that Conrad really had been drunk, that he couldnât really have been responsible for anything heâd said or done that night. He probably wouldnât remember it tomorrow. It would be like it had never happened.
As soon as we got inside, I ran up to my room. I wanted to forget what had happened in the car and only remember the way Cam had looked at me, on the stairs with his arm touching my shoulder.