We were lying on the flat roof over his garage, basking in the sun. It was a summer break routine weâd had for nearly two weeks now: meet on the roof at ten, lunch around noon, swimming in the river, home to our families for the rest of the evening.
For as much as he enjoyed my company, Dad liked the quiet of solitude. Or maybe a teenage daughter was exhaustingly alien to him. Either way, he seemed content to let me stay out doing whatever I wanted with the Petropoulos kids until the bugs grew louder and the sky grew dark.
Andreas was on one side of me, Elliot on the other. One brother playing something on his PSP, the other reading Proust.
âYou two cannot possibly be related,â I mumbled, turning the page of my book.
âHeâs a loser.â Andreas laughed. âNo game to speak of.â
âHeâs a meathead,â Elliot said, and then grinned at me. âRuled by hisââ
A horn honked below in the driveway and we all sat up to see a rusty Pontiac come to a crunching stop on the gravel.
âOh,â Elliot said, glancing at me and then jumping up. âShit. Shit.â He spun in a half circle, fisting the front of his hair and looking like he was panicking, then climbed into the window to the family room. A minute later he appeared in the front yard. A girl climbed out of the car and handed Elliot a stack of papers.
She was medium height, with thick dark hair in a cute bob and an average, pretty face. Vaguely familiar. Sporty but not thick. With boobs.
I growled internally.
She said something to Elliot and he nodded and then looked up at where Andreas and I sat watching them.
âWho is that?â I asked Andreas.
âSome chick named Emma from his school.â
âEmma? Prom Emma?â My insides froze. âDoes he like her?â
Andreas looked at my face and laughed. âOh, this is so good.â
âNo, Andreas, donâtââ I hissed, frantic.
âElliot,â he called out, ignoring me. âBring your girlfriend up here to meet your other girlfriend!â
I closed my eyes and groaned.
When I looked back down at the ground, Emma was looking up at me, inspecting, eyes narrowed. Elliot was watching me, too, with a wide, terrified expression, and then looked at her.
I waved. I wasnât going to play the petty game.
She waved back, calling out, âIâm Emma.â
âHi, Iâm Macy.â
âDid you just move here?â
âNo,â I called down, âwe live next door on the weekends and some vacations.â
âElliotâs never mentioned you.â
Elliot looked at her in shock, and from the expression on his face I would have guessed he mentioned me plenty. Well. Apparently Emma was going to play the petty game.
âSheâs my best friend, remember?â I heard Elliot say stiffly. âShe goes to Berkeley High.â
Emma nodded and then looked back at him, putting her hand on his arm and laughing at something she whispered to him. He smiled, but it was his tight courteous expression.
I lay back down on my blanket, ignoring the nausea rising in my stomach. His words from only a week beforeâwhen heâd been on the brink of sleep on the roof and admitted quietly that he was more himself with me than anyone elseâcycled through my mind.
Iâd told him I felt that way, too. During the school year, my weekdays were a blur, hours smoothed together in a mess of homework and swim and crawling into bed hoping whatever Iâd packed into my brain that day didnât seep out onto my pillow at night. In a sense, my time away from him felt like going to work, and the weekends and summer were coming homeâunwinding, being with Elliot and Dad, being myself. But then things like this happenedâand I was reminded that most of Elliotâs world existed without me.
Several minutes passed before I heard the car start and drive away. Moments later, Elliot was climbing through the window back onto the roof. I quickly pushed my nose into my book.
âSmooth, Ell,â Andreas said.
âShut up.â
His feet came into view in front of my book and I pretended to be so engrossed that I didnât even notice.
âHey,â he said quietly. âWant to grab a snack?â
I continued pseudo-reading. âIâm good.â
He kneeled down close to me, ducked lower to catch my eye. I could see his apology written all over his face. âCome inside, itâs sweltering.â
In the kitchen, he pulled out a pitcher of lemonade and two glasses, and started making us sandwiches. Andreas hadnât followed us inside and the house was cool, dark, and quiet.
âEmma seems lovely,â I said dryly, rolling a lemon across the countertop.
He shrugged.
âSheâs the one you kissed at prom, right?â
He looked up at me and scrunched his glasses up his nose. âYeah.â
âDo you still kiss her?â
Turning his attention back down to the sandwiches, he spread the peanut butter on the bread and added jelly before answering. âNo.â
âIs that a lie by omission?â
When he met my gaze again, his eyes were tight. âI have kissed her on a few occasions, yes. I donât still kiss her.â
His words hit my ears like bricks dropped from an airplane. âYou kissed her other times besides prom last spring?â
He cleared his throat, turning a brilliant scarlet.
Jerk.
âYeah.â He shifted his glasses up higher again. âTwo other times.â
I felt like Iâd swallowed a jagged ice cube; something cold and hard lodged in my chest. âBut sheâs not your girlfriend?â
He shook his head calmly. âNo.â
âDo you have a girlfriend?â I wondered why I even had to ask this. Wouldnât he tell me? Or spend time with her during the summer instead of me? He was always honest, but was he forthcoming?
He put down the knife and assembled the sandwiches before looking at me with a smirk. âNo, Macy. Iâve been with you every day this summer. I wouldnât do that if I had a girlfriend.â
I wanted to throw the lemon at his head. âWould you tell me if you had a girlfriend?â
Elliot gave this full consideration before answering, his eyes locked on mine. âI think so. But, I mean, to be honest, this is the one topic where Iâm never sure how much to share with you.â
Even though a significant part of me knew what he meant, I still hated this answer. âHave you ever had a girlfriend?â
Blinking away, he returned his attention to the sandwiches. âNo. Not technically.â
I rolled the lemon again and it fell onto the floor. He bent to pick it up and handed it back to me.
âLook, Macy. I guess what Iâm trying to say is that I wouldnât want to hear if you kissed someone if it didnât mean anything, and kissing Emma didnât mean anything to me. Thatâs why I never told you.â
âDid it mean anything to her?â
His shrug said everything his silence omitted.
âMaybe it isnât my business,â I said, âbut I do want to know those things. I feel weird that I didnât know you have a thing with her.â
âWe donât have a thing.â
âYou kissed her on three separate occasions!â
He accepted this with a nod. âHave you kissed anyone?â
âNo.â
He froze with his sandwich midway to his lips. âNo one?â
I shook my head, taking a bite and breaking eye contact. âI would have told you.â
âReally?â he said.
I nodded, face burning. I was sixteen and hadnât been kissed. His No one? echoed inside my head, and I felt completely pathetic.
âWhat about Donny? Or . . . whatâs his name?â
I looked up at him and stared meaningfully. He knew Dannyâs name.
âDanny?â
He smiled, busted. âYeah, Danny.â
âNope. Not even Danny. Like I said, I would have told you. Because youâre my best friendâjerk.â
âWow.â
He took a ginormous bite of sandwich and stared at me as he chewed.
I thought back to all the weekends weâd spent together, all the stories heâd told me about Christian being a maniac or Brandon having zero game with girls at school. I thought about his updates about his brothers and their girlfriends, and wondered why Elliot was always so tight-lipped about his own escapades. It threw me. It made me feel like maybe we werenât as close as I thought we were.
âHave you kissed a lot of girls?â
He mumbled, âA couple.â
Something inside me was rioting. âHave you done more than kiss?â
He turned a new shade of red and finally nodded, taking another big bite so he wouldnât have to elaborate.
My jaw slowly lowered to the floor. I waited until he was done chewing and had taken a sip of lemonade to ask, âHow far?â
Countries were established, went to war, and split into smaller countries in the time it took for Elliot to answer.
âElliot.â
âShirts off.â He scratched his eyebrow and nudged his glasses up his nose again with the tip of his finger. Stalling. Avoiding eye contact. âUm . . . and with one girlânot Emmaâhands in pants.â
âYou have?â I felt my eyes bug out. âWho?â
âEmma was just shirts off. The rest was this other girl, Jill.â
I put my sandwich down, my appetite completely gone. The kitchen was on the darkest side of the house this time of day, and it suddenly felt too cold. I lifted my hands, rubbing my bare arms.
âMacy, donât be mad.â
âIâm not mad! Why would I be mad?â I took a shaky sip of lemonade, trying to calm down. âIâm not your girlfriend. Iâm just your best friend who apparently knows nothing about you.â
He took a step around the kitchen island, and stopped. âMacy.â
âAm I overreacting?â
âNo . . .â he said, and took another step closer. âI would definitely take issue if I knew some guy had his hand down your pants.â
âI think youâd also take issue if it happened and I never told you.â
He seemed to give this fair consideration. âLike I said, it depends. It would bug me, yeah, so I wouldnât want to know about it unless you felt something more than . . . momentary attraction.â
âIs that what it was for you with Emma?â I asked. âââMomentary attractionâ?â
He nodded. âAbsolutely.â
âWhen was the last time you fooled around with someone?â
He sighed and leaned a hip against the counter where he stood.
âIf the situation was reversed, you would be giving me the Spanish Inquisition,â I pointed out. âDonât sigh at me.â
âEmma and I fooled around in March, then went to prom in May, and kissed again the weekend after, but it was nothing. It was sort of . . .â He floundered a little, staring up at the ceiling. âIf you havenât kissed anyone, then itâs hard to say what I mean, but we were all at a park, and she came up to me, and it just sort of happened.â
I pulled a face at this and he laughed uncomfortably, shrugging. âJill is Christianâs cousin. She was visiting last December and we made out once. I havenât talked to her since.â
I dismissed Jill with a wave of my hand. âSo you donât like Emma, then?â
âNot the way you mean.â
I looked away, taking a minute to calm down. I realized it would have been dramatic, but I wanted to storm out and make him follow me and grovel for, like, an entire day.
âI fooled around with Emma because sheâs here,â he said quietly. âYouâre in Berkeley and weâre not together and Iâm in this tiny Podunk town. Who else am I supposed to kiss?â
Something shifted in that exact moment, something that would never shift back.
Who else am I supposed to kiss?
I looked at his big hands and his Adamâs apple. I let my eyes linger on the muscular arms that used to be so thin and stringy, on legs that stretched, defined, beneath his torn jeans. I looked at the button-fly on the front of said jeans. I blinked away, up at the cabinets. Look anywhere but at those buttons. I wanted to touch those buttons, press my hand to them, and for the first time I realized I didnât want anyone else touching them.
âI donât know,â I mumbled.
âThen come over here,â he said in that same quiet voice. âYou kiss me.â
My eyes flew to his. âWhat?â
âKiss me.â
I thought he was calling my bluff, but I was worked up from the Emma situation and the way he looked, leaning against the counter, watching me. I was warm from the way his hands seemed so big now, and his jaw so angular . . . and the buttons on his jeans.
I walked around the center island and stood right in front of him. âOkay.â
He stared down at me, a smile playing on his lips, but it straightened when he realized I was serious.
I pressed my hands to his chest and moved closer. I was so close that I could hear every quickly accelerating inhale and exhale, could see his jaw twitch.
Fascinated, he moved a hand to my lips, pressing two fingers there and staring. Without thinking, I opened my mouth and let his index finger slip inside and against my teeth. When he grunted quietly, I ran my tongue over his fingertip. He tasted like jelly.
Elliot pulled it back sharply. He looked like he was going to devour me: eyes wild and searching, lips parted, pulse a hammering presence in his neck. And because I wanted to kiss him, I did. I stood on my toes, slid my hands into his hair, and pressed my mouth to his.
It was different than I would have guessed. Different thanâI could admit to myselfâI had imagined it would be. It was both softer and firmer, and definitely bolder. A short kiss, another, and then he tilted his head, covering my mouth with his. His tongue traced my bottom lip and it felt like instinct to let him in, to taste me.
I think that was probably his undoing. It was certainly mine. After that the moment dissolved for me into only sensation; everything else fell away. All the forbidden images of him, flesh and fantasy, secrets I kept even from myself, tore through my mind and I knew, somehow, that he was thinking the same thing: how good it felt to be this close . . . and everything else that touching like this could lead to.
One of his hands moved up my back and into my hair, and it was the weight of that touch, I think, that kept me from floating off the floor. But when his other hand slid up my side to my ribs and higher, I stepped back.
âSorry,â he said immediately, instinctively. âShit, Mace. That was too fast, Iâm sorry.â
âNo, itâs just . . .â I hesitated, my mouth suddenly crammed with words that I didnât want to be thinking, let alone say out loud. âDoing that might not mean anything to Emma,â I said, touching my lips where they tingled. âBut it means everything to me.â