Read Broken Hearts, Fences and Other Things to Mend Online
Authors: Katie Finn
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #Marriage & Divorce
last night. She said I’d just caught her off guard. And then I
apologized for what I did, like we talked about, and then she said
she hoped that we could both move on.”
I paused before pulling into Bruce’s driveway and just stared
at Sophie. “And that’s it?”
“That’s it,” she confi rmed. She shot me a relieved smile. “It
looks like we were worried for nothing. Good, right?”
“Right,” I echoed as I pulled into the driveway and put the car
in park. “Good.” While I was relieved that Sophie hadn’t had a
terrible coffee date, I was really, really surprised that Hallie had
acted this way when confronted with the girl she thought was
me. I had been sure that she would still be furious, sure that she
wouldn’t have been able to get past it easily. It had been all over
her face that fi rst day we met again, at the train station.
Had I been that wrong?
And—more worryingly— had I done all this for nothing?
“Hey,” Sophie said, waving her hand in front of my face. “You
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okay?”
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“Fine,” I said. “Just . . . thinking.”
We got out of the car and dashed for the front door. I closed it
behind us, thrilled to be dry once again and planning on not
going out until the weather was back to being what it ought to
have been: hot and sunny and summery.
“I think Hallie’s cool, actually,” Sophie said as she kicked off
her fl ip- fl ops. “She was really nice and funny. The whole apology
part didn’t take that long, so then we talked about boys. Did she
tell you how her boyfriend Ward is out of town?”
“She mentioned it,” I said as I kicked my own sodden fl ip- fl ops
off. I knew, realistically, that it shouldn’t have bothered me that
Hallie was able to let this go so quickly. Just like it shouldn’t have
bothered me that she was apparently becoming friends with my
BFF. Just like it shouldn’t have bothered me that Josh was maybe
being a tiny bit fl irty with her. But that didn’t change the fact
that all these things were really, really bothering me.
“And she invited me to this Fourth of July party she’s throw-
ing at her house,” Sophie said as she headed toward the kitchen.
“She said it’s going to be really fun.”
“Really,” I said, dropping my bag on the hall table and follow-
ing her, trying not to sound as hurt as I felt. “She didn’t invite
me.”
“Oh,” Sophie said, frowning. “Well, I’m sure she will soon. Or
Josh will, right?”
“Right,” I said, trying to keep my voice upbeat. “Sure.” The
Fourth was in two days, so it seemed like time was running out
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on that front. I pulled open the fridge and took out two bottles of
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sparkling water. I held one out to Sophie, and she nodded, and I
slid it across the table to her.
“So what should we do about Reid?” she asked. “I mean, if he’s
staying with them, he’s probably going to be at the party too.”
I nodded and picked up my phone. “I got his e-mail,” I said
grimly. “Time to do damage control.”
Sophie took a long drink of her water, then shook her head.
“You know, Gemma, I came here to
escape
all the drama.”
I felt myself smile as I started typing the e-mail to Reid.
“How’s that working out for you?”
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I pulled open the door and was not quite able to stop myself
from rolling my eyes. “Hi, Reid.”
Reid was standing on Bruce’s doorstep, ner vous ly glancing
over his shoulders. He was wearing a baseball cap pulled low over
his eyes and a pair of sunglasses. His outfi t was made even more
ridiculous by the fact that, even though it had stopped raining, it
was still overcast and cloudy out. Reid could have only been more
obvious if he’d also been wearing a T-shirt that read I’M TRYING TO
GO INCOGNITO.
“Hi,” he said, keeping his voice low. “Is it safe to talk here?”
“It’s fi ne,” I said, opening the door wider and motioning him
inside. “Come on in.”
Reid had responded to my e-mail immediately, but told me
he wouldn’t be able to get away that day without raising suspi-
cions. We’d arranged to meet this afternoon, as both Josh and
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Hallie were running errands for the party, and he didn’t think
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they’d notice his absence. And here he was, on Bruce’s doorstep,
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looking like he was trying to dodge the paparazzi. “I don’t think
I was followed,” he assured me in grave tones, and I gave him a
thumbs- up.
“Good work.” I led him through the back and out by the pool,
where Sophie had been all morning, mostly just shivering in her
bikini and telling me whenever she thought she saw a ray of sun-
shine start to appear.
“Hi!” Sophie called, waving from her lounge chair. I noticed
she’d put on a sweatshirt over her bathing suit, but hadn’t zipped
it. And as we walked across the deck to join her, Reid had a bit of
trouble navigating around the lounge chairs and almost fell into
the pool once, mostly because he hadn’t taken his eyes from my
BFF once. Sophie in a bikini tended to be distracting like that.
“Hi,” Reid managed, sitting and only missing the lounge
chair on his fi rst two attempts. He opened and closed his mouth
a few times, but it didn’t seem like anything else was forthcom-
ing. As I watched Reid take off his sunglasses and lose the ability
to form sentences in Sophie’s presence, I wondered if this was the
best idea. After all, we needed him to be able to follow what was
happening, and it looked like his IQ had just plummeted several
crucial points. I was on the verge of asking Sophie to zip up her
hoodie when Reid managed to pull himself together.
“So. Okay. Um,” he said. He pointed at me. “You’re not Sophie.”
He pointed at Sophie. “You are, right? I remember you from
Clarence Hall.”
“That’s right,” I said, happy that we were all fi nally on the
same page. “The thing is, this all started with a misunderstand-
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ing.” I took a breath and was about to launch into the story of the
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iced latte cup with Sophie’s name on it when the doorbell rang.
Figuring that this was just another one of Bruce’s deliveries, I
stood up. “I’ll get that,” I said. “Soph, can you fi ll him in?”
I headed around the side of the house and saw, to my sur-
prise, Josh standing at the front door, ner vous ly smoothing down
his hair and checking his refl ection in the Davidson Manor panel.
The sight of him— and this private glimpse I was getting—
made me feel a sudden wave of affection for him. I realized we’d
never had that talk he’d mentioned when we stood on the street
under our umbrellas. It just seemed like suddenly there were too
many land mines to avoid, and normal conversation had become
impossible. But as I watched him now, it registered how much I’d
missed talking to him, even though it hadn’t really been that
long.
“Hi,” I called, and Josh turned around, startled.
“Hey,” he said, dropping his hands and sticking them quickly
in his pockets. “I guess I thought someone would answer the
door.”
“We were around back,” I said, gesturing to the side of the
house. “I heard the bell.”
“Got it,” Josh said, nodding. He looked behind me, to where
Reid’s car was parked. “Is Reid here?” he asked, his voice clipped,
like he was upset about something.
“Um, yeah,” I said. “He’s out by the pool.” Josh nodded and
looked down at the ground, and I felt disappointment hit me as I
realized that was probably why he’d shown up at the house. He
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wasn’t here to see me, he was trying track down his friend. “Is . . .
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that why you’re here?”
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“No,” Josh said, without looking up. “I came to ask you a
question.”
“Oh,” I said. I took a breath, then let it out. “Okay.” I resolved,
then and there, that what ever he asked me, I would be totally
honest with him. Even if it was about me and Hallie and who I
really was, I would tell him the truth.
“Is something going on with you and Reid?”
That was not the question I had been expecting, and it was
one that was not at all diffi cult to provide an honest answer to.
“No,” I said, a little incredulously. “Of course not.”
“I just . . .” Josh started, then took a breath and continued. “I
mean, I saw the two of you in the alley yesterday, and he’s been
acting really strange ever since— like he’s hiding something. And
then I come over, and I see that he’s already here . . .”
When he put it all together like that, I could see how it didn’t
sound good. “No,” I said emphatically. “Nothing like that. He
just . . .” I thought quickly, then decided to settle on something
that was probably closest to the truth. “I think he likes So—
Gemma,
” I corrected quickly, hoping Josh hadn’t noticed this,
“and he um, wanted me to see if she liked him too. And that’s
why he’s here.”
“Oh,” Josh said, looking relieved. “Good.”
“Yeah,” I said, giving him a smile, hoping he’d bought it.
Josh glanced around to the back of the house, then shook his
head. “I have to say, thought, I’m a little surprised. Reid doesn’t
usually act so impulsively.”
“Right,” I said quickly. “Well . . . um . . . maybe he’s turning
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over a new leaf out here.”
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“Maybe,” Josh said, sounding unconvinced. “I’m not sure it’s
such a good idea, though— Gemma and Reid.”
I certainly didn’t think it was, either, but couldn’t exactly tell
him why. “I agree,” I said, and he just nodded. Silence fell and,
suddenly, I was aware of just how many unsaid things there were
between us. “So,” I said after a moment, “was that the question
you came to ask me? About my undying passion for Reid?”
Josh laughed. “No, that wasn’t it. Actually, I wanted to know
if you wanted to come to our Fourth of July party tomorrow. Ap-
parently all the houses on our stretch of land do it, they call it the
beach block party. It should be fun. Hopefully the weather will
be better by then too. If it’s a clear night, there’s going to be
fi reworks.”
I felt a smile take over my face. “I’d love to,” I said. I was also a
little relieved. The fact that Hallie had asked Sophie but hadn’t
yet asked me had been bothering me. But maybe she knew Josh
was always planning on asking me himself. Either way, I was just
happy to be going.
Josh took a tiny step closer to me, then stopped. He looked
down at me, and I could see the fl ecks of gold in his green- brown
eyes. And just like that, I had a fl ashback to the beach, to the
shocks that had gone through me when we touched. Was he ask-
ing me to the party as his date?
Maybe Josh was having a similar tangle of thoughts, because
he broke eye contact with me and took a step away.
“Tomorrow?” he asked, as he began to back away toward his
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truck.
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“Tomorrow,” I said, nodding at him. Once again, I heard the
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promise in the word. I waved as his truck headed down the
driveway.
Even after his taillights had disappeared, I stayed where I
was, bare feet on the gravel, just thinking. I had promised more
than just to attend the party when I’d echoed his
tomorrow
. Be-
cause right there, in the driveway, I made a decision.
Tomorrow night, I would tell Hallie, and then Josh, who I re-
ally was.
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“Are you sure about this?” Sophie asked.
We were standing in front of the hall mirror, giving
our party outfi ts fi nal looks. I’d told her my plan the day before
after I’d fi nally gotten Reid to leave. Sophie had explained the