: Chapter 11
Wicked Sexy Liar
THE PLAN IS to meet Luke at Tourmaline Surf Park at two. Any other day this would sound like a suicide mission, but knowing itâs going to be packed gives me a small measure of comfort: maybe with a crowd of people around I wonât do anything stupid.
Iâve gone so far as to make a list of goals for the day:
Iâm definitely going to focus on goals one and three.
The only way to get to Tourmaline is by a road that winds down from La Jolla Boulevard and empties into the parking lot. Itâs almost always crowded and Iâm about to give up and park on the street outside, when on my second pass I spot someone leaving. I put on my blinker to thwart off any would-be thieves, and pull in as soon as itâs open.
Even with the engine off, my old car still manages the occasional unsettling knock and ping from under the hood, and I sit, fiddling with my phone and looking around. Luke hasnât texted that heâs here yet and I briefly wonder if itâs too late to call this whole thing off.
Cocky Luke I can handle, but sweet, earnest, tipsy Luke with puppy eyes asking to be friends? Apparently thatâs my hard limit.
I canât stall forever, and so I check the time before sending him a quick text.
There might not be any parking, so find a spot on the street, I type, before climbing out onto the hot pavement and making my way to the trunk.
My board barely fits in my small car and is wedged between the folded backseats so the hatchback needs an extra little shove to close all the way. Itâs not an ideal situation and requires more maneuvering than I might like, but it works.
Iâve just managed to pull it free when I hear a familiar voice over my shoulder.
âNeed some help?â
âI got it,â I say, leaning the board against the car and reaching for my bag before locking up. âBut thanks.â
When I turn, I see heâs got his own board tucked under his arm and a towel rolled up next to it. Heâs wearing a thin white T-shirt and blue board shorts that hang lowâreally lowâon his hips. It takes my breath away how good he looks. Warning bells are already going off in my headâand possibly somewhere else. This was a bad idea.
Iâm suddenly nervous weâll see Not-Joe here, and heâll mention to Oliver that he saw us. Then Oliver will tell Lola, and Lola will tell Harlow, and Harlow will get up in arms all over again about all the Girl Code breaking Iâm doing by ogling Luke so thoroughly.
Just friends.
Friends is fine.
âYou all set?â I ask, looking around. I can hear how tight my voice is. Hopefully he reads it as impatient rather than hard-core swooning.
He gives a small shake of his head and laughs when he admits, âNot even a little bit.â
âNice board, though,â I tell him, and run my hand along the nose. âNot too long and a good width for your frame. Iâm glad you went with a longboard. Itâll make it easier to pop up.â
âI like that youâre giving me credit, like I picked it out and not the guy at the shop.â He smiles tightly before looking past me, squinting into the sun.
âJust trying to boost your confidence.â
God, this is awkward. Weâre both flailing around this attempt at friendship. I make a final check of everything I need and then nod toward the water. âLetâs do this.â
The parking lot is perched high above our destination. Tourmaline is surrounded by sea cliffs that tower over the beach, some as tall as seventy-five feet. Thereâs a pretty steep hill we have to navigate to reach the bottom, and I can hear Lukeâs footsteps as he follows the path behind me. Itâs only as we near the sand that I realize heâs quieter than usual, and didnât even crack a joke when I mentioned the length of his board.
I try to puzzle this out as I look out over the crystal-blue sky, where the ocean stretches until it melts into the horizon. The surf crashes below us and I can taste the salt in the air. Itâs like Xanax to my nerves. I suppose everyone has a quiet day. I actually kind of like seeing a different side of Luke.
When we get to the beach, I find a spot with enough room to set down my board. Luke leans his against a large rock and turns to me.
âWhatâs all that?â he asks, watching me dump out my small bag.
âSunscreen, fin screws, fin key.â I hold up the bottle, offering.
âI put some on already, thanks, though.â
I nod, unsure how to handle Quiet Luke, shaking the bottle to stall before undressing. But I might as well just get this over with; Iâve never liked wearing wetsuits, even in the icy Pacific Ocean, and instead surf in a swimsuit. Todayâs selection is pretty modestâa one-pieceâbut weâre going to be wet and practically naked together for the next few hours; thereâs no point in letting the moment grow heavy now.
I pull my T-shirt over my head and toss it to the sand before unbuttoning my shorts and stepping out of them.
âI like this place,â Luke says, hands on his hips as he looks aroundâpointedly not looking at me. âIâve been here before but only for a campfire or something.â
âNever to surf?â I ask, smoothing sunblock over my arms and shoulders.
âHa, no. I barely go in the water.â
I stop. âYouâre kidding.â
He ruffles the back of his hair and looks a little sheepish. âAfraid not.â
âWait, I mean . . . How could you have lived this close to the ocean for most of your life and not go in the water? You swim. You were on a national championship water polo team.â
âYeah, thatâs a pool. And nothing in there is trying to eat me.â
I cough out an incredulous laugh. âLuke, thereâs something likeâI donât knowâeight hundred thousand things that live in the ocean, and out of that only a microscopic percent of a fraction would want anything to do with you.â
He tilts his head and pins me with a serious look. âIâve seen Jaws, Logan.â
âDo you play bridge?â I ask him.
Clearly confused, he says, âSometimes, with Grams and some of her friends.â
âStatistically speaking, more people have died playing bridge in the last century than by shark attacks in the entire states of California, Oregon, and Washington combined.â
âYou made that up.â
I might have made that up.
I toss my sunscreen to the sand and turn to face him. âI donât understand. If you didnât want to go in the water, then why on earth did you agree to come out here?â
âI already told you, I like you. And when youâre not handing me my balls, youâre a lot of fun.â The corner of his mouth tilts up into a smile before the other side joins it. âEven then.â
Honest Luke is really throwing me for a loop. âDo you want to do something else?â I say. âWe could, I donât know, see a movie?â
Heâs thinking about it, looking out at the water with a considerable amount of apprehension in his eyes. âNo. No, I think I want to do this,â he says, and then begins to nod, like itâs taking his body a moment to agree with his mouth.
âYouâre sure,â I say, giving him the chance to back out. âI donât want you to do something that makes you uncomfortable. I promise Iâm not keeping score here.â
âNo, I . . . I want to.â He reaches behind his neck and tugs his shirt up and over his head. I feel my lungs constrict at the sight of his bare chest in the bright sun, the definition of muscle cutting down his torso and bisected by sharp lines on his abdomen. I blink away.
âYeah,â he says. âLetâs go.â
âOkay,â I say, voice steadier than I feel, and reach for Lukeâs board. âBasics first.â
With a stick I find in a group of rocks, I trace the outline of his board in the sand and prop it back up again.
Luke watches me, confused. âWhy donât you just use the board itself?â
âBecause boards are expensive and we donât want to ruin it,â I say, and toss the stick back into the brush. âThis is your board.â I grip his forearms and bring him over to stand in the shape Iâve drawn, and then point to the various parts. âThis is the nose, the rails, the tail. This vertical line down the middle is called the stringer, and will keep you centered. Remember that,â I say. I point out the Velcro strap lying in the sand. âIâm assuming you already know this, but this is the board leash; never go in the water without this around your ankle, okay?â
âGot it.â
âWeâll go over paddling and everything when weâre actually in the water, but letâs start with the easy stuff.â I stand next to him, legs spread just wider than shoulder-width apart. âFirst, your stance. You need to make sure youâre in the center of the board, not too far forward or too far back. No, let me . . .â I say when he tries to mimic my stance, and bend, gripping his ankle, physically moving his feet into position. Heâs so warm, bones strong and solid under my grip. âDonât be too open; put the arch of whatever foot you lead with right there, on the stringer. The other behind it.â
âLike this?â he asks, demonstrating.
I straighten. âPerfect. Being in the center of the board means youâll have more control. Always stay in the center.â
He nods and tests out the movement. âOkay, I can imagine what you mean.â
âNow, arms upââ I reach forward, trailing my hands down along his forearms until my fingers wrap around his wrists. I can feel the steady beat of his pulse under my fingertips, the heat of his skin. It reminds me of when he held my hands down, above my head, and my mouth suddenly feels dry. Iâve been trying to avoid looking at his torso and his arms ever since he took off his shirtâknowing Iâll only be able to remember what they looked like over meâbut realize thatâs only going to work for so long.
Lukeâs silhouette is the definition of a swimmerâs body. His shoulders are broad, lats bulky like all strong swimmers, biceps clearly defined. His torso is long and lean and I count an eight-pack on his flat stomach. Itâs a body designed for power and hours of cutting through the water with little resistance. Itâs a body built for endurance.
And Lord, does it endure. He could take me all night and only come at sunrise.
I really didnât need that reminder right now.
âYou okay there, Logan?â he says, and I snap my attention back to where my fingers are still wrapped around his wrists.
âThis is for balance,â I tell him, pushing on as if my every thought isnât written on my blazing-hot face. âPoint your leading arm wherever you want to go, rear arm at shoulder height and flexed with the elbow back.â I show him and he mimics the action.
âGood, just like that. Let your body move back and forth, wherever the board takes you. Hips loose, like youâre doing the hula hoop.â
He laughs. âTell me I look amazing doing this, okay? And not as ridiculous as Iâm guessing.â
âVery manly.â I make a few adjustments to his posture and stand back to see. âSo with your arms, people think they need to keep them at their side, parallel with the rails, but thatâs wrong. Keep them squared with your hipsââ I step forward again, bracing a hand on either side of his ribs. Luke curls inward, away from my touch, and giggles.
âSorry,â he says quietly. âTicklish.â
âUh, sorry,â I mumble, and have to mentally count down from ten before I can remember what I was doing. Iâve had sex with Luke, seen his naked body over and under me, from behind, and somehow this feels . . . more intimate than any of that.
My cheeks are hot as I reach for him again, and I bring my hands down down downâhow long is his torso?âto rest on his hips.
I never fully appreciated how low boys wear their trunks until this very moment, now that I can feel the bony ridges and hollows of Lukeâs hip bones under my fingertips. There are so many shadows on his body, so many places where bone and muscle meet, and for a moment Iâm back on his couch, watching these same parts of his body move and flex while he fucks me.
When I blink up, I find him watching, mouth open and hair falling gently forward across his forehead. His cheeks are flushed, too, visible even out in the sun, as if heâs thinking of exactly the same thing I am.
I clear my throat and blink away, hoping he doesnât realize Iâm not quite as unaffected as Iâd like to be, and every one of his smiles is another chink in my armor.
âStay low,â I say, voice rough as I try to get my thoughts back in order. âYou want to adapt to the waves and the way the water moves under your feet. Youâll never be able to do that if youâre all tall andââI wave in the direction of his bodyââstiff.â
Luke chuckles and I roll my eyes. âBend at your knees, not at your waistâthis is the heaviest part of your body,â I tell him, and pat his chest. âYou need it centered. Too far forward and youâre over the rail, see? Youâll lose your balance.â He bends forward as if to test the theory. Unfortunately this brings his face directly in line with my crotch.
He looks up at me from beneath his hair with a cheeky grin. âLike this?â
The top of his head is literally inches away from my lady parts, and I give him a gentle shove, effectively knocking him into the sand. âJust like that,â I say, and step over him. ÂâArenât you glad that didnât happen in the water?â
He jumps up, knocking sand off his shorts before getting back into position. âI might have deserved that,â he says.
I adjust his stance, hands sliding over his skin to angle him this way or that, to bring attention to the parts of his body he needs to tighten. There was clearly a flaw in my plan because I failed to anticipate thereâd be this much touching in a surfing lesson.
âSo a few more things before we get you in the waterââ
âDo I have to go in the water?â he asks.
âYou have to go in the water.â
He looks out over the ocean, worry etched in every feature. Turning back to me he says, âTell me something you hate.â
âLike people who take too long in the shower and donât separate their recycling, orâ?â
âSomething that scares you.â
There are a lot of things that scare meâLuke scares me if Iâm being honest, the fact that heâs nice and funny and he makes my stomach do strange things. The idea of ever reliving what I went through with Justin . . . that definitely scares me.
âI donât like roller coasters,â I say.
âReally?â he asks, and I nod. A tiny disbelieving smile pulls up the corner of his mouth. âRoller coasters are designed to give you the illusion of danger without any of the actual danger of death. But surfingââhe motions to the Âwaterââout there you might as well be a tasty morsel in an all-you-can-eat buffet.â
âDoesnât make the fear any less real, though, does it?â
âNo, I guess not.â He looks at the water again before turning back to me. âLetâs make a deal. I do this and you go to Six Flags and ride Goliath with me.â
I actually snort. âFuck that.â
He reaches for my forearm, thumb brushing over my wrist. âIâm trusting you, you trust me.â
I could be wrong, but it feels like heâs talking about a lot more than roller coasters. I look into his brown eyes and thereâs nothing but absolute sincerity there.
He bends at the knee to meet my gaze. âOkay?â
I reluctantly nod. âBut I donât want to hear about it when I freak out and end up riding the stupid thing in your lap.â
Luke grins. âItâs cute that you think I would complain about that.â He holds out a hand to shake and I take it, ignoring how much bigger it is than mine, and that I know exactly what it feels like on my body.
âOkay, okay,â I say, pulling away from his grip and shaking my fingers where I hope he canât see. âDeal made. Now, letâs get back to surfing so I can see you punk out and I never have to step foot inside that godforsaken amusement park.â
âYouâre really hot when you get all worked up,â he says, and I punch him in the shoulder.
I have him lie facedown on his board and we go over the basics of paddling out. One look at his broad, tan back, and I realize Iâve made another mistake.
âYou can spot a beginner because they paddle out with their legs open and that drags in the water,â I tell him, and tap his ankle with my foot. âLegs together.â I point out a group of guys running out into the water, and I show him how to read the waves, how to tell which direction theyâll break. âSee that guy right there?â I say. âThatâs how you want to pop up. Do what heâs doing.â
Luke mimics his position and lies on his board again. âPretend thereâs a beach ball under your chin. Yeah, just like that,â I say, and move around to the other side and lie down in the sand next to him. âSo youâll see the wave . . .â I start, becoming distracted by the way his gaze flickers over my body, down along my curves and back up again, not even remotely subtly.
When he makes the full circuit and meets my eyes, he breaks out in a huge smile. âI was just checking your position,â he says.
âSure you were.â
âWhat? I like to be thorough. This is the only part Iâll be good at, okay? Once we get in that water all bets are off; let me keep my manhood for just a little longer.â
I grin up at him, finally pulling my bottom lip between my teeth so I donât let it slip how fucking adorablehotsweet heâs being.
âSo Iâll feel the wave . . .â he says, and waits for me to continue.
Nodding and getting my shit together, I say, âYouâll feel the push, take two extra paddles to make sure youâre actually in it, hands here, under your chest. With your head up youâll roll your body and pop up, knee under your chest, feet under you and into your stance, ready to hula-hoop.â
He doesnât look overly confident but he tries it a few times.
âGood! And if you did everything correctly, you should be able to do it in reverse, too,â I say, and show him, kneeling down, pushing my legs back behind me until Iâm lying on my stomach again. âAnd just do it until you feel comfortable.â
âComfortable?â He looks less than convinced. âI donât think thatâll ever happen,â he says, bringing his knees to his chest and popping up.
âYes it will, look how good youâre doing already.â
âYeah, on the beach.â
âAll in good time,â I tell him, rubbing my hand over his warm shoulder. He looks down at my hand, I stare at my hand, and we fall into a heavy silence before I pull it away completely. âYou ready to hit the water?â
Luke shakes his head, eyes playful. âNope.â
I tilt my head and wait.
âOkay, yeah. Iâve got roller coasters to get you on, and Iâve lived a good life already anyway,â he says, and we head down to shore.
The water is cold and it takes us a few deep breaths to work up the nerve to dive in together, but eventually we do, surfacing with shouts and laughter. We swim out, stopping where the waves lap just at our waist. Luke has his leash strap hooked around his ankle, and hasnât stopped looking in the frothy water, as if a shark might materialize at any moment and take him down.
âCan you get up on your board?â I ask, and he nods, gingerly climbing up, eyes darting at every little ripple next to him. Heâs terrified, and a part of my chest squeezes with fondness that he trusts me enough to even do this.
âThe waves are that way,â I tell him, and he looks up from the water. âYou can look at my boobs if you need the distraction.â
âDonât think I wonât hold you to that,â he says.
We work on getting him balanced on his stomach on the board. He slides around a little, complaining good-naturedly, and we talk more about spotting a wave. I quiz him on which direction theyâll break. I teach him how to duck-dive and punch through the smaller waves on his way out, and though he never actually looks any less tense, he listens and does everything I ask.
âAs the wave comes, you want to push the nose of the board down, sinking it. Arms straight, hands on the rails, deep breath before the wave breaks over youââ
âWhy do I need to take a deep breath?â he asks, eyes wide and panicked.
âBecause youâre going to be underwater.â
âUnder?â
âYouâll be fine,â I tell him.
âThatâs easy for you to say.â
âLuke.â
He has goose bumps up and down his skin and Iâm a pervert for even noticing this right now, but I canât look away from his chest, at the drops of water that cling to it and the way his nipples are pert and hard. I want to flick them with my tongue. God, he has great nipples.
âWill you hold my hand on Goliath?â he asks, and I have to blink back to what heâs saying.
âWhat?â
âI think you heard me, Logan.â He ducks his head, adding, âMy eyes are up here, by the way.â
I snap my attention to his face, biting back an embarrassed laugh. âFine. Yes, Iâll hold your hand on Goliath.â
âOkay, good. I can do this,â he says, and takes one last look into the water. âShow me this duck bill thing.â
âDuck-dive.â
âWhatever. All I care about is surviving. Iâm listening.â
I shake my head and reach for the nose of his board. âSo your board is under, you take a deep breath, and the wave goes over. Youâll pop right back up and be ready to keep paddling. It takes some time to get but it wonât take long to feel when you get it right. And you donât have to go deep. Just enough to get under the wave. Deeper isnât always better.â
He snorts. âIf thatâs true then you wouldnât haveââ
I slide my hand over his mouth to get him to stop talking, and we both look up at the same time, our attention snagged by something to our right.
A huge set comes up, and we watch another surfer paddling out. âSee how heâs going right through those?â I point to the smaller swells. âWhen you paddle out you want full steam because that wave is stronger than you and if youâre not working to move through it itâll knock you on your ass. Watch how he pops, look at his stance . . .â
As we watch the other surfer, Luke eventually lets out a âMan, heâs good,â clearly impressed.
âYou could be that good,â I tell him. âYouâre definitely strong enough and a great swimmer. Itâs all technique and practice. Youâll have the small waves down in no time.â
âAnd the big waves?â
âI donât think youâre ready for a big wave yet, Blue Crush.â
âVery funny.â
âOkay, Iâll do it and then itâs your turn. Deal?â I ask.
He nods and I paddle out, watching the wave. Three more strokes and I tilt my board under, letting it roll over me. I pop back up and do it a few more times before I catch the edge of a larger one.
Itâs short, and I barely have enough time to pop up and ride before the wave falls apart under me. When I break the surface again, I climb back up on my board and paddle over to him.
âSee?â I say, squeezing the water from my hair. âYou can totally do that.â
âYour confidence in me is impressive,â he says, looking out over the water.
âI know you can do this, Luke. Come on, up you go.â
He looks terrified but lies down and starts paddling out. He looks back at me a few times but keeps moving forward. I stay as close as I can, watching as the smaller waves rush over him, one of them knocking him off his board. Protectiveness surges tight in my chest. He pops back upâlooking a bit shakenâbut doesnât let it stop him and tries over and over again.
A wave forms off in the distance and I see him size it up before paddling toward it. Butterflies form in my stomach as I watch him, already cheering him on. âKeep going . . . Nose down, hips forward, deep breath! Yes!â I shout, even though thereâs no way he can hear it.
He disappears momentarily under the water. Then, head turning frantically side to side, he breaks the surface again.
When he spots me, he breaks into a huge smile. âHoly shit. I think I did it!â
âYou totally did it!â I say, laughing at how excited he is. âThink you can try it again?â
He nods and climbs back on his board, pushing his hair back from his face before looking out at the water.
Watching Luke as he paddles forward, warm from the sun and wet, twitching with exertion . . . Iâm sure Iâll never forget this sight. He spots a wave in the distance and aims his board forward. I hold my breath as he dives through the smaller waves and breaks the surface again, before finally popping up to his feet on the last one. He doesnât stay up for long before heâs knocked off and it certainly wasnât pretty, but he did it, and I feel wildly, fiercely proud. I try not to stare as he comes back over to me, because I know my adoration would show all over my face.
âI TOLD YOU,â I tell him for the tenth time as we paddle back to the shore something like an hour later.
Luke is exhausted but he hasnât stopped smiling. âNow I know why youâre in such amazing shape,â he says, looking appreciatively at my body. âThat kicked my ass.â
âBut you still did it,â I say.
We reach the shore and Luke collapses in the sand, chest heaving. âI did.â He closes his eyes and stays there, trying to catch his breath. âMy dadâs going to flip when he hears about this. He tried to get me out there with him when I was little, but Iâd never go. My sister will never believe it.â
âWant me to call her? I can text if thatâs easierââ
âNo. Youâre not getting her number, ever,â he says, tilting his head to look at me. âThe two of you together are dangerous.â
âI like your sister.â
âAnd she loves you,â he tells me, still catching his breath. âThe idea of you two hanging out on a regular basis scares the hell out of me.â
He squeezes his eyes closed, pinching the bridge of his nose, and I wonder if heâs recovered yet from a recent roll that got salt water up his nose.
âYou okay?â I ask him, reaching out to brush some sand from his back.
He stills before turning his head to look at me. âYeah. Just stings a little still.â
âI hate it, too. Itâs why I could never imagine snorting anything on purpose.â
He laughs. âGod, I tried coke exactly one time, in some blur of parties sophomore year. I knew immediately I would want more, so I neverââ He does a double take, noticing my shocked expression. âWhat?â
âNothing,â I say. âBut thatâs gross.â
Luke laughs. âWhy did you bring up snorting things if you were going to be all weird about it?â
I shrug. I realize itâs odd in some ways that Iâm a bartender and so uptight about harder drugs, but I am. Iâve seen too many people turn into complete messes when they play around with cocaine. âIt just seems like really bad judgment for an athlete.â
Luke barks out an amused laugh, saying, âYou think?â
This makes me laugh, too. âSorry, yeah, just had a knee-jerk reaction to it.â I have such a hard time imagining healthy, together Luke doing something so stupid.
âI mean, letâs be real,â he says, nudging my shoulder with his. âIâm not really known for impulse control.â
I giggle as I pick up a rock and start drawing in the sand.
âTry not to agree with me so gleefully.â He leans in, voice playful but hiding something tighter beneath when he adds, âAre you slut-shaming me, Logan?â
The words burst out before Iâve realized Iâve actually had the thought: âIsnât it ever lonely?â
And goddamnit. What have I said? Iâve opened up this door, and I absolutely, one hundred percent do not want to step through.
My frank question seems to surprise him: âTotally. Iâm sick of it, actually.â
âSo why donât you . . . ?â
âCommit?â he asks.
Shrugging, I say, âYeah.â
âBecause the first girl Iâve really wanted since I was nineteen thinks Iâm an impulsive man-slut.â
I go still. Blood riots in my ears, hammers through my veins. âIâm serious.â
âMe, too,â he says, blinking away and staring at the sand. âI like you. But I also like you. I would commit to you.â
Silence engulfs us, and slowly I relax enough to notice the crashing of the waves, the cry of gulls all around us.
Luke nudges me again. âI made it awkward.â
âTotally awkward,â I tease, nudging him back. I knew he was attracted to me, but I didnât realize it was a thing.
A committing-to-London thing.
A crush, feelings, something more than just good sex.
My thoughts are tumbling from the storm cloud inside me, pouring down. I like Luke, too. Iâm attracted to Luke. I have fun with Luke.
I just donât trust Luke.
And even if I did, I canât have him.
We watch a surfer catch a pretty amazing wave, and turn to smile at each other in unison.
âI have to admit,â he says, shaking his head a little, âit is pretty cool being out in the water. Learning the rhythm of the waves.â
He bends his knees, propping his elbows on top of them, and weâre both silent, watching more of them crash against the shore.
âThanks for bringing me out here,â he says. âI know you didnât really want to, and I appreciate it.â
âItâs not that I didnât wantââ I start to say, but he holds up a hand, cutting me off.
âAnd itâs fine, you know?â He picks up a shell near his leg and brushes the sand off with his thumb. âYou know I would never refer to you that way, right?â
I tilt my head, confused. âWhat?â
He swallows. âAt Bliss that night. I know you heard what Daniel said.â
âOh,â I say, finally understanding. âI did hear, yeah.â
âIs that why you stopped wanting to see me?â He says this in a way that tells me he already knows the answer.
âItâs one of the reasons.â
âDanielâs an assholeââ
âHeâs not the problem. I mean, he is but . . .â I pull in a breath, trying to organize my thoughts. âThe single-serving thing was gross. Guys are disgusting sometimes, but the concept, I get. You and I had a casual thing, a couple of nights that were fun andââ
He turns toward me. âThey were fun.â
I give him a play-exasperated eye roll. âMy reaction to that comment wasnât because I didnât have fun. Iâm not angry that he said it about me, or that you have one-night stands or even that you agreed with Daniel. I mean, it embarrassed me, yeah, but I got over it.â He winces apologetically, and I lower my voice so he doesnât feel berated. âIâm annoyed that guys talk about women like theyâre snacks. Like theyâre disposable or easily replaceable when something more appealing comes along. So yeah, things between us stopped after that, because I donât even want casual sex with someone who has such prehistoric views on women. But I hadnât expected it to turn into more anyway.â
Pink colors the apples of Lukeâs cheeks and he looks down, nodding. âWell, youâre not replaceable,â he says. âI just want to make sure you know that.â
Butterflies invade my chest, and I swallow, struggling to push them down. âI appreciate that, friend,â I say.
The word elicits a wry, perhaps wistful smile from Luke, but after a second he says, âWhat were the other reasons?â
I blink, having lost the beginning thread of the conversation.
âThe other reasons why you didnât want to see meâÂromantically,â he clarifies.
âI mean, thatâs the main one,â I say, drawing a spiral in the sand with my fingertip. âIâm not sure I want anything right now. Iâm sort of distrustful in general, and youâre not exactly easy to trust . . .â
Heâs quiet beside me, picking up another shell and turning it over in his hand, looking at it. Waiting for me to continue.
âHarlow freaked out a little when she found out that we . . .â I trail off.
âI could tell.â He drops the shell and brushes the sand off his hands. âSheâll get over it.â
Looking at him, I ask, âWhy does everyone say that?â
âBecause itâs true.â Luke shrugs. âItâs just Harlow. She burns like paper, not wood. The fire will be out before you know it.â
His casual confidence is exponentially more reassuring than a roomful of nervous Lolas, Olivers, Finns, and Ansels. âYou sound pretty confident.â
He smiles over at me, but itâs actually a little sad. âI was with Mia, but Harlow and I were really close. Lola, too,â he adds, âbut my friendship with Harlow was different. Tighter. Lola was a little more reserved emotionally. Harlowââhe laughsââHarlow not so much. I was more brother than friend to her. I wonder whether part of her feeling prickly about this is because it makes her realize we arenât all that close anymore, and havenât been for a while. Itâs certainly the way I felt when I found out theyâd all gotten married and I had no idea.â
Iâm not entirely sure what to say in response to this, so I just nod, listening.
Luke squints as he looks out across the water. âAnyway, I assume she worries Mia is fragile about anything related to that time. And she probably is, but I bet not as fragile as Harlow suspects. Harlow is a Mama Bear.â
âIt doesnât bother you?â I ask him. He turns and looks at me. âThat Mia knows we slept together?â
His eyes narrow in a way that tells me he thinks Iâm being a little silly. âNo . . . ?â
âOkay. Good.â
He turns and slowly grins at me. âIâm hoping that our deal still stands.â
I search my memory before realizing what he means. âYou held up your end of the bargain,â I say. âI wasnât lying, you did great.â
âThanks,â he says, smiling proudly. âAnd despite everything I said just now, I really do mean it about the âjust friendsâ thing. I wanted to be up front about where I stood.â
âThanks for telling me.â The sun has shifted lower in the sky and I donât need a watch to tell me itâs time to go. âI should go, though.â I stand and brush the sand from my legs.
âWork?â
âYeah.â
He bends to lift his board. âMy sister is seriously going to lose her shit when she finds out I went in the ocean.â
âI had fun.â I drag my board up the beach and begin to towel off. âYou did so much better than I expected.â
âIâm taking that as a compliment,â he says, and pulls his T-shirt on. I almost whimper as all those muscles disappear beneath the cotton.
âSorry, I just meant most first-timers arenât great.â
He smirks, letting this opportunity roll. âIâll text you and we can figure out Six Flags.â
My shoulders slump and I groan. âThere has to be a loophole in there somewhere.â
He shakes his head, grinning. âIâm going to be a lawyer; you think Iâd have made that deal if there was some way out? No way. But we can go this summer. Let you work up your nerve a little.â
I watch as he bends and straightens his flip-flops to step into them. Heâs so sweet.
Heâs so genuinely good.
âAre you even going to still be here this summer?â I ask. And with that realization, my heart pistons into my throat.
âOh, right.â He shrugs, giving me his sweet, eye-Âcrinkling smile. âI guess weâll see.â