2
I MAKE IT THROUGH the rest of biology
without a meltdown and then move on to trigonometry and slide into
my seat next to Ben’s empty desk. By some act of God—or maybe the
devil, I still haven’t decided—the random seating arrangement ended
with us next to each other.
Three months and four days ago—June 19, to be
exact—I would have died of happiness to be seated next to Ben. I
mean, finally, I’d have the opportunity to talk to him.
Of course, him becoming my best friend’s boyfriend
kind of changed that.
I never told her about my crush. If I’d only said
something months ago, before she went out with him, maybe I
wouldn’t be in this mess. But I didn’t.
Oh, sure, I told her how hot he was, how amazing he
looked in jeans, how beautiful his blue eyes were. But there was no
way I could really be in love with a guy I’d hardly spoken
six words to, right? What else could I tell her? That we’d had a
connection for a long time, only he didn’t know it? That I knew,
without a doubt, that he was my soul mate?
Right. And ponies fly. So of course we would always
talk about how hot Ben is, and I’d never reveal my deeper feelings,
and that was that.
Until June 19.
Maybe June 19 was the day Nicole decided she didn’t
want to be shy anymore, the moment of change. It’s easier to see
now, in retrospect, that there’s the old Nicole and the new one,
and June 19 is the day smack in the middle of it all.
I know Nicole better than anyone in the world, and
so I know that though she comes off shy, once she’s around someone
long enough, she warms right up. And she got paired as Ben’s
partner in table tennis, and they spent two weeks playing
together.
And I still have a hard time picturing it, but
somehow, she got up the nerve to ask him out. She probably blurted
it out and turned all red, but she did it.
And he said yes.
She was totally beaming when she told me, bouncing
around as if she’d won the lottery.
I couldn’t bring myself to tell her that I was
almost positive I’d been in love with him for years. And now that I
know him better—through Nicole—now that Ben and I talk and joke in
class and he tells me all about his dates with her, I’ve only
become more sure. More sure that he and I fit together.
Ben is that one guy for me, my perfect match.
Except he’s already matched, and now they’re
celebrating their three-month anniversary. Three months is, like, a
decade in high school years. I spent most of the summer at that
stupid diner, so I haven’t been forced to endure that much quality
time with both of them at the same time.
Thank God.
For the next fifty-five minutes, I will hold my
breath, my heart will beat erratically, and the hairs on my arm
will stand on end. This is life inside Ben’s orbit, and it is the
height of every day of my otherwise meaningless existence.
My crush on Ben began a few years ago, the summer
after sixth grade. Nicole and I were at Flaming Geyser. It’s a
state park just outside our hometown of Enumclaw, a tiny cow town
about an hour southeast of Seattle. The park is at the north end of
the Green River Valley, and you have to drive long, windy roads to
get to it. It’s surrounded by achingly tall fir trees, where the
river is wide and slow and perfect for swimming and tubing. On a
hot day, cars line up on either side of the road for almost as far
as you can see.
That day, I was wearing the last bikini I’ve ever
owned, a teeny pink triangle top with white polka dots, the sort of
thing I’d never be caught dead in now. Nicole was in a matronly
one-piece—plain navy blue, the kind of thing a high school swim
team would wear. By then, she was at least a C cup, and she wore a
white sarong over her suit. I didn’t tell her that it just made her
chest look even bigger, because I didn’t want to make her paranoid.
She was even shyer back then, afraid to talk to just about anyone
but me.
Nicole wanted to spend most of the day on the
shore, lying out, eating Doritos, and reading one of her romance
novels. Back then she was on this acne medication that made her
skin really sensitive to light, so she was slathered in the
thickest layer of 60 SPF I’ve ever seen. She was paranoid about
actually swimming and letting it wash off. I guess the only thing
worse than a face full of acne is a sunburned face full of
acne.
I, however, could not tolerate sitting still. I
guess you could say I’m a little impatient, forever ready for
adventure.
So I swam across the river and then climbed up the
reddish-brown clay banks, using tree roots as handholds, my feet
getting muddy and slick. Although my hair was still dripping with
the icy water, the short hike made me sweat. Even in the middle of
summer, Enumclaw didn’t often get hotter than ninety degrees, but
that fateful day, it was ninety-seven.
There is a cliff on that side of the river, about
twenty feet high. People jump in from up there, but you have to aim
for this perfect little swimming hole; otherwise you’ll slam into
the rocks six feet under the surface of the water, likely breaking
a leg.
Rumor has it someone died jumping off, years ago. I
heard they drank too much and jumped headfirst. It scares a lot of
people and they’ll spend ten minutes up there, staring down, only
to chicken out and climb back down the way they came.
Sometimes spectators, people smart enough not to
climb up there at all, will tie their tubes up to the shore and
just float there, waiting to see who has the guts to actually jump,
mocking those who don’t.
That day I met Ben, he was up there with three
other guys, all of them staring down at the water with eyes full of
worry. I guess he wasn’t quite the daredevil yet, not the one he is
now. I didn’t recognize any of them, not even Ben, but I found out
later they went to Thunder Mountain, the other middle school in
town.
Once I realized they were a bunch of scaredy-cats,
I wanted so badly to just walk straight up and jump over, no
hesitation. Show them what I was made of. But they were so freaked
out, and it leached into me, until the butterflies in my stomach
were the size of seagulls. I had shivered a little, river water
dripping off me, the sun blocked by the trees.
Ben, when he saw me, sort of snorted to himself and
then tried to cover it up.
“What?” I had put my hand on my pink-bikini-clad,
bony hip. I didn’t have curves. Not back then, not now.
Ben’s hair was even lighter back then, sun streaked
and longer than he wears it now. Kind of a bowl cut, almost long
enough to tuck behind his ear. He had on blue-and-red board shorts,
his body lean, just a hint of the muscle he would later
develop.
“Nothing.” He crossed his arms and leaned against a
tree near the edge. “Nothing at all.”
My heart skipped a beat as his intense blue eyes
bored into me, daring me, pushing me, doubting me. “Afraid I’m
going to show you up? You’ve been up here a half hour.” I raised an
eyebrow, determined not to show him that he was making me more
nervous than the jump.
Ben didn’t say anything. He knew I had a
point.
My lips curled into an enormous smile, and I
stepped to the edge. The boys backed up a little, as if I was going
to take them with me. Like my brand of crazy might be contagious.
My heartbeat seemed to stop as I peered over the edge, looking down
at that tiny little swimming hole. Suddenly I understood why they’d
been standing there so long. It reminded me of those cartoons where
the clowns climb up a ladder that extends into the clouds, then
jump off into a tiny bucket of water.
I could have turned around, told the boys I was
just as scared as they were.
But I didn’t. I leapt, soaring through the air, the
Green River rushing up toward my feet. As I fell into the river,
the cold surface of the water closing around me, swallowing me, I
knew I was already falling for Ben and that arrogant, adorable
smile. There was something about the way he challenged me, stared
straight at me, that twisted its way around my heart.
I spent the rest of the day watching him and his
friends swim and splash and laugh, and yes, eventually they did
jump off the cliff. I guess they had to, once I waltzed up
there and jumped with no hesitation.
A month later, he moved across town, and that meant
going to EMS with me, instead of TMMS with all of his friends. We
shared an English class. But he didn’t seem to remember me, and
when I realized that, it was like a painful stab to the chest. I
couldn’t bring myself to speak to him when we sat so far apart, and
the other girls were already latching onto him. He’d looked even
better in his new fall school clothes than he had in his board
shorts.
It was as if that moment at the river, when we
stared right into each other’s eyes, never happened at all.
Sometimes I wonder if that’s why I’ve never told Nicole about the
crush. If it’s embarrassment over the fact that the moment meant
everything to me and nothing to him.
“Hey,” he says three minutes later when he slides
into his chair. His blondish hair is tousled with gel, and his skin
has a natural, dark tan. Even his baggy jeans and loose T-shirt
can’t hide his now well-muscled body—one he’s earned through a
combination of working his butt off all summer for his dad’s
landscaping business and riding motocross every chance he
gets.
That’s the other thing about Ben. He races dirt
bikes. He’s totally, completely amazing, and I could watch him all
day. He has this bright-yellow motorcycle, and every time he
launches into the air, my heart jumps right with him. It’s
mesmerizing to watch. Someday he’ll probably go pro and get all
these sponsors and stuff.
“Hi,” I say, not looking up from last night’s
homework.
On an average day, we will exchange at least
seventy-three words, his arm will brush mine seven times, and his
knee will come in contact with mine on at least three occasions. He
will look me in the eye and grin at least once, a grin that tells
me in a half second that we would be a perfect couple.
If he weren’t already one part of what is probably
the perfect couple.
I will sigh inwardly at least once per minute and
accidentally sigh aloud at least a half-dozen times. I will picture
Nicole’s face more times than necessary, trying to remind myself
why I can’t flirt with him. I suppose I should find it ironic that
the very reason I can’t date him is pretty much the only reason he
knows who I am now. If he wasn’t dating Nicole, I’m not sure he’d
even recognize me in a crowd.
He leans closer to me. “Why are fish salesmen so
greedy?”
I chew on my lip and stare forward, pondering. “Not
a clue.”
“Because their business makes them sel-fish,” he
says, slapping his desk.
Ben and I share the same horrible sense of humor.
We like jokes. The lamer, the better. But that one? Beyond
lame.
“I’ve got a better one. Why did the orange go to
the doctor?” I say.
“To donate vitamin C?”
I roll my eyes. “Because he wasn’t peeling
good.”
He chuckles. “Nice. You win.”
I grin and meet his eyes. It makes my heart twist a
little. He’s too gorgeous for words. His perfect, tanned skin, the
way his faded black T-shirt sort of clings to the muscles that
seemed to be stretched tightly over his shoulders, the light
calluses on his hands. “So you guys are going to some fancy dinner
tonight, huh?”
“Yeah. Supposedly the food is amazing, and it’s got
a view of the water. It’s supposed to be a pretty fun place. Nicole
was excited.”
“Cool,” I say, turning back to my homework.
“Is it? Cool? I didn’t know about your birthday
until today. . . . We could always reschedule. . . . ” He adjusts
the silver watch on his wrist, and his arm brushes mine for the
first time today.
I wave my hand in the air, as if it’s no biggie at
all, even though some irrational side of me wishes Ben had known it
was my birthday. His is March 6. I’ve known that for two years,
since I heard one of his friends wish him a happy birthday in the
hall outside the gym. “Nah, I have a birthday every year. You’ll
only have one three-month anniversary.”
I reach down and rub at the seam on my fishnets
again. It’s driving me crazy. I’d rather have a hundred ants
walking up my leg right now than wear these for another minute. I
reach down and rip a big hole in them so that the seam isn’t
rubbing against my knee anymore.
When I look up at Ben, he’s staring at me, his
perfect, dark eyebrows raised, his deep-blue eyes looking at my
stockings.
I grin, my cheeks warming. “Sorry. These things are
driving me nuts.”
He shrugs and then slides down a bit in his chair
and stretches his lanky legs out in front of him. His knee bumps
mine. Twice. “They’re kind of hot, though.”
Oh no, he didn’t. Ben has never, not in a million
years, paid me a compliment. He reserves those for Nicole.
I suddenly wish I hadn’t ripped a big hole in the
knee. Then I shake my head. Thou shall not covet thy best
friend’s boyfriend.
“So, did you get your homework done?” I ask,
forcing myself back to safer topics.
Ben flips open his binder and taps on the homework
inside the front cover. His arm brushes mine again. “Barely. I
finished the last two during homeroom.”
Mrs. Vickers finally walks to the front of the
room, a full ten minutes after the bell rang. She begins the day by
writing down our assignments, and we all groan when we see that
she’s giving us another thirty problems.
Due tomorrow.
Ben leans toward me, so close I can smell his spicy
cologne. It washes over me and I have to force myself to keep my
eyes open instead of closing them and taking in deep, ragged
breaths. “This woman is trying to kill us,” he says. His breath is
warm against my neck and minty fresh. If I turned my face, just
half a turn, my lips would brush against his, and I’d finally know
what it feels like to kiss him.
Instead I just nod and stare forward at the teacher
as if I am totally unaffected by being closer to him than I’ve ever
been.
Which I am. Unaffected, that is.
Because he’s my best friend’s boyfriend.