Chapter 2
KEATS
Five minutes until midnight, I’m standing on the edge of the party with my hands clasped in front of me like a damn bouncer. The kitchen is clean with only the finale left before I get to go home.
I’ll need to load the truck in a few minutes, so I use the time I do have and search the room, sifting through the guests in hopes of seeing Sosie again.
I’ve done it more times than I can count.
I searched the bathrooms, asked the piano player if he had seen her, talked to a kid hanging around the perimeter who said his parents dragged him there, and even found a valet to ask if he had seen her in front of the house. She’s disappeared without a trace.
It’s been frustrating. I thought I’d have that chance, but I didn’t take it when we were outside. If I weren’t already in a bad mood from being hungry and exhausted, this would tip the scales.
Sierra and Darren push the cake cart front and center.
She lights a single tall candle on top of a champagne bottle-shaped dessert, then they join me in the shadows of the party.
The hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Stansbury, take over, calling their daughter to come blow out the candle and rousing their guests to sing “Happy Birthday” to the star of the show.
Keeping my voice down, I ask, “I thought it was a holiday party?”
With her eyes locked on the display, Sierra replies, “They wanted to celebrate their daughter’s birthday right at midnight.”
I’m nudged on my other side. When I glance over at Darren, he waggles his eyebrows. “She’s twenty-one. Hot. Have you seen her?”
I shake my head, not willing to admit I’ve been too distracted by another girl tonight, someone who has blown me off. I’m an idiot for believing there was a spark between us when she clearly didn’t feel it.
The crowd sings off-key and parts like the Red Sea for the birthday girl as she comes through the opening.
Are you fucking kidding me? Short blond hair, an electric-pink glittering dress that hits mid-thigh, and a pair of Converse that are the only thing remotely tying her back to the girl I met at the guesthouse.
Mystery solved. Right there in the center of attention I’m sure she lives for, Sosie blows at the candle. When it’s still flaming, she licks her fingers and taps the hot wick, putting out the fire.
My cheek lifts in amusement, then drops to a scowl as irritation from being conned by her wins out. I excuse myself. “Going to load the truck.”
I grab a stack of crates from the kitchen and head out to the street where the truck is parked. Too many questions and no real answers run rampant through my head.
Why would she trick me into believing we were one and the same? Yeah, we’re not.
Was she testing me? I should have clued in that she was a mole when she was standing out in the freezing weather. I’m so easily distracted by a pretty face.
Is she going to report back to catering management to get me fired? Tell them I was smoking on private property even though she bummed most of it?
A little rich girl wanting to slum it on her birthday? Boringly cliché.
“Is that how she gets her kicks?” I roll my eyes as I send the door sliding up. I slip the crates into the cargo bay and jump up to stack them in the back.
I turn around to see Sosie standing behind the truck.
It’s a shock to the system when I believed we’d made a connection.
And I thought I was safe out here, that I could finish this shift without having to face her again.
No such luck. I eye her, barely recognizing the girl before me.
“You’re missing your party.” My tone is flat, wishing she’d stayed inside and let me finish what I need to do.
“I should have told you.”
“You think?” Sarcasm infiltrates the accusation. Tread carefully, Keats. I should probably heed management's warning and keep my mouth shut. After all, she’s the client, and I’m just a mere server at her disposal. Yeah, that sarcasm isn’t going away.
I start for the opening, ready to go inside for the second load and avoid this confrontation, which will be best for both of us. “I have a job to do. I’m sure you can’t relate.” I tried . . .
Bright headlights light up the back of the truck, exposing me to the gaze that doesn’t hold any of the joy caught in her eyes earlier. She says, “I wasn’t purposely keeping it from you. You assumed and I—”
“So now I’m to blame?” I laugh through my words. “That’s rich.” My gaze levels on her. “Like you.”
Crossing her arms over her chest, she raises an eyebrow at me.
“It’s my parents’ money, not mine.” The contempt in her tone purses her lips.
The confidence she wore so boldly earlier isn’t lacking in her expression, with her eyes set on mine.
Seems I’ve struck a nerve. Can’t say I wasn’t trying.
I just wish I didn’t find her so attractive, given that attitude that’s sprung up in her stance.
“It will be, and that’s what makes it a lie. Even now, you’re acting like . . .” I look back at the mansion and throw my hand toward it. “Like you don’t live here, as if you can relate to someone who struggles to make ends meet.”
“Is that what it takes? A struggle for a struggle? My opinion holds no value because my life is different?” She shakes her head as she releases a heavy breath that fogs in a cloud in front of her.
When she looks back up, regret slopes her shoulders forward.
“I thought you were different, Poet. My mistake.”
She steps onto the sidewalk and reaches the gate before I realize I’m triggered by something she has no control over.
It was good earlier. The betrayal I feel now is manufactured.
She’s not a different person from the Sosie I met before.
I’m just getting in my own way at this point.
I liked the girl I met. “Hey,” I call, rushing to the end of the bay and jumping down to the street.
Turning back, she stands in her pretty dress like she isn’t freezing to death despite the goose bumps covering her skin. I don’t have a coat to give, so I move closer to block the breeze from touching her and ask, “Why did you come out here?”
“I’ve realized I shouldn’t have,” she says as if it pains her to admit, and a shiver runs through her.
“No, please. For real. I’d like to know.”
She remains quiet as if she doesn’t want to rock the peace between us. “Because I liked our conversation.” She swallows, still hesitant to respond. “And I liked the way you looked at me.”
I search her face, her eyes, even staying longer than I should on her lips.
A paler pink has replaced the red. I prefer the cherry stain, the dark eyeliner that ringed her eyelids, the cut T-shirt, and the combat boots, wilder hair, and confidence that didn’t shrink under some guy’s assumption and unapologetically smoked most of my cigarette.
She’s still so beautiful, but it’s the change of seeing someone entirely new that’s a shock to the system. “How did I look at you, Sosie?”
Raising her chin, she says, “Like I wasn’t one of them.
” I’ve never felt more of an asshole than I do now.
She didn’t need my judgment. Who am I to put my issues on her anyway?
When she glances back at the party, I dumbly look in the same direction as if I needed the confirmation of whom she’s referring to.
“I’m not.” The spite in her tone matches the clenching of her fists at her sides.
Raising my hands in surrender, I reply, “I’m just a guy working your folks’ event.
That’s all. I’m a nobody.” I cock my head, still staring at her because it’s so easy to do with a face like hers.
But then I lower my eyes and shake my head, my hair falling forward again.
Don’t do it, Keats. Taking no accountability for the cold reception I’ve given her, I look her over again, already leaning into an urge I know I shouldn’t.
I can humor myself, though . . . “So why would someone like you care what I think?”
The question leaves her shifting her feet as she rubs her arms again since we’ve been standing out here without coats or a better sense of self-preservation.
I was too focused on leaving, and she rushed out after me.
Just to talk to me? Futile efforts on both our parts because I have a feeling we’re exactly where we’re supposed to be.
There’s something more between us—a spark or inferno—and only one way to find out where it goes from here.
Seems we’re just two fools standing at the end of a cold December, making confessions and concessions as if we owe it to each other.
She takes a deep breath as if it will fight the cold by how she interrupts a shiver, and says, “Because you let me bum your cigarette when you could have just ignored me altogether.”
I chuckle, though I don’t hear the humor in it, so I know she doesn’t. I run my hand over my head, not quite sure what to do with myself, much less her. “I have a feeling you don’t get ignored much.”
“More than you’d think.” She comes forward, holding out a crumpled piece of paper in the palm of her hand.
“You can leave tonight, forgetting any of this ever happened.” I take the paper and open it up to see a number written on it.
When my eyes meet hers again, she adds, “Or you can text me sometime. Doesn’t have to be anything serious.
It can be for a walk, or coffee, a concert if you have a spare ticket and no one to take, or just want to burn through a pack of cigarettes on a fire escape. I’m your girl.”
It was then, the embers burning in her hazel eyes, that I knew I was a goner for this girl.
My girl. I tuck the paper in the front pocket of my pants, still staring into her eyes as I drag my tongue over my lower lip.
I can’t seem to pin down words to match the thoughts spinning in my head.
Maybe it’s simple. I’m drawn to her, even if it isn’t in my best interest.
“Keats?” I suck in a deep breath when I hear Sierra call my name from a distance and spy her silhouette up the long driveway.
“Yes?”
She says, “Come get the racks.”
“Coming.” I can see her eyeing the two of us, but her shoulders ease as she walks away, leaving us in peace.
When I look at Sosie, the innocence in her rounder face and an expectation in her eyes causes my chest to clench.
She carries a plea in her stance as if she’s on edge unless given the word—the right word.
Yes. “You should get back to your party.”
“They’ll never know I’m missing.”
“Impossible.” I grin, though it’s more for show.
I’m not sure what it is about her I find so damn captivating, but I’d be willing to bet that she wasn’t entirely wrong when she said she was my girl.
Seems to be leading in that direction if she has her way.
And I selfishly have mine. “There’s no ignoring the moon in a universe of darkness.
” And there I go safety-pinning my heart on my sleeve like I don’t bleed easily.
“But it’s also too cold to be hanging around out here.
You need to go inside and warm up, and I need to get back to work. ”
I may not have said the words she wanted to hear, but rejection doesn’t reach her eyes. A small smile does. She rubs her arms once more, then takes a few steps toward the gate. Her eyes stay on mine when she stops and says, “It was nice meeting you, Poet.”
“Same.” I wish I had better words before she returns to her world, and I remain in mine. “Happy birthday, Sosie.”
Her smile brightens my world more than any motion-detecting light ever could. “Thanks.” She rushes toward the house without hesitation this time, no lingering goodbyes or promises to keep in touch.
We don’t need it.
We both know this isn’t how we end.
But there is no middle ground when it comes to girls like her.
She has the world at her feet while I’m trying to climb out from beneath them.
We’ll get to know each other. There’s no harm in that.
What’s the worst thing that could happen?
She’s either going to be the best thing that ever happened to me or my downfall. But half the fun is finding out.