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Authors: Tamsen Parker

School Ties (15 page)

BOOK: School Ties
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“Dad there?” That would explain why he wouldn't want to say much.

“No.”

“Mom?”

“No.”

“So what's up?” Another silence so long it makes me want to get in my car and drive straight to Shamokin to shake the answer out of his head. “Caleb. Tell me. Now.”

“I got my mid-semester grades.”

“And?”

“I'm getting Cs in social studies and English.”

“Okay. How about math and science?”

“I'm flunking.”

Shit. I knew he'd been having a rough time—he'd told me so a few weeks ago—but I didn't know it was this bad. I rein in my flip-out and try to keep my tone even. “What're you gonna do about it?”

“I don't know.”

“Maybe talk to your teachers? Ask for extra help after school? During lunch? Before school if you have to.”

“But Dad says—”

“I don't give a rat's ass about what Dad says. You can't . . .”

Flunk out. I won't be able to help you if you flunk out.
I haven't mentioned it because I don't want to get his hopes up, but I've been dropping hints with Headmaster Wilson about Caleb. His grades aren't good enough to get him in here, but I'm hoping everything else he has to offer might give him a boost, and being my kid brother won't hurt. Once he got here, his grades would get better. It was sure as hell easier for me to focus on my schoolwork and on the soccer field once I had more than enough to eat and didn't have to worry about which bill my parents couldn't afford to pay that month, what we'd do without until they scraped together some more cash: Phone? Oil? One month it was so bad, we didn't have electricity.

“You don't want to stay back, right?”

“No.”

“You want to go to college, right?”

“Yeah, but—”

Defensiveness is building in his voice, and I'm struggling with my own impatience and fear. “Then you can't flunk. You can't.”

“Fuck you, Zach. I'm not like you!”

His bluster is uncertain; he swears like a kid who's experimenting with how the words sound coming out of his mouth. My brother is not a naturally angry kid. He might be pissed at me, but that's not the only thing going on here. I take a deep breath and scrub a hand over my face, catching a glance at my watch when I do. Fuck, I'm late to the art show. I've got to go. But I have to smooth this over first.

Caleb's a good kid. He deserves better than what he's been handed. I can't stand the thought of my Tiny Tim brother turning into a bitter drunk like our dad because I wasn't good enough to save him and he wasn't strong enough to save himself.

“I know you're not. I don't want you to be. Nobody wants that. I'm an asshole.” He snorts a laugh and a relieved smile splits my face. I'm not known for my comedic timing, but I'll take it. “What I do want is for you to get the hell out of Dodge as soon as possible. I know it's the long game and it's hard to see from where you're standing, but you need to pass. I'm not asking for straight As. That's not your style and that's cool. But you can pull Cs. Can you do that? For me? If you pick up your grades I'll ask Dad if you can come up and stay with me for spring break. I'll drive you back and forth myself.”

“Yeah, okay.”

“Good man. Hey, I gotta go, but I'll talk to you on Sunday.”

•   •   •

I turn my conversation with Caleb over and over in my head on my way down to Turner. What am I going to do if he fails? What if he gets held back? What if he gets frustrated and angry, says fuck it and drops out as soon as he can? He'll never leave Shamokin. It'll be Doug Shepherd Redux. I can't let that happen. Maybe he could come live with me? Even if I can't get him into the Hill, Hawthorn public schools are good. At least I'd know he'd have enough to eat and he wouldn't have to listen to my parents go at each other all the time.

But my place here isn't certain. Fellowships are for a year. While some people get to stay, most of them move on. John Phelps might be leaving. If he does, he'd leave a few holes in the math department and on the coaching staff I'd fill like Spackle, but it's no guarantee. What if they don't think I'm a good teacher? What if I'm not?

In the meantime, I'll try to call more often. It's rough because of my dad, but I should be able to sneak in a few more times a week. If I thought Caleb could keep it a secret, I'd get him a cell myself. But he's not so great at subterfuge, my brother. Maybe I could offer to get him a tutor since I can't be there to help?

These are the thoughts that churn in my brain as I lope toward Turner, but I shove them aside when I walk in the door because the guys deserve my undivided attention. I know how hard they've worked. All those nights spending study hall down here, cramming in my other homework whenever, wherever I could so I could walk Erin home at the end of the night. My favorite time of day: the ten minutes I could be alone with her. Shards of uncertainty and longing stab me in the chest, and I pluck them out with dogged determination. Leave Erin Brewster alone.

Erin

The show is great, as usual. There's a ceramics student who's particularly impressive this year and everyone is ooh-ing and ah-ing over bowls so wide and thin and vases so tall and soaring they look like they're defying gravity. I make sure to compliment the other kids in his class because their work is very fine as well, but when your work is great and someone else's is earth-shattering, it's easy to feel overshadowed.

I'm finishing up a conversation with Takeo Ninomiya about his own solid technique when I see Shep. My hope he wouldn't be here has been for naught. Maybe he hoped I'd have come and gone already. To be fair, that had been my plan, but I always end up staying at this stuff for longer than I expect. The way his face darkens when he sees me makes me wish we'd set up a time-share system already. He'd tell me,
You get the art show from eight thirty to nine thirty, I'll take it from nine thirty to ten thirty. You can have cross-country meets because I'm coaching soccer. You chaperone the dance and I'll drive the van to the movies.
How have I ended up making custody arrangements with a man I never got to speak with, never mind sleep with? So unfair.

But I haven't seen everything yet. There's still a whole floor to look at and I won't be driven out by Zach Shepherd and his grouchy, stormy, dreamy blue eyes. I head to the refreshments table and am about to ladle myself some punch but the memory of spilling it on Shep's crisp white shirt and touching him makes my stomach roil. Water it is.

I take my sorry excuse for a beverage and tour the rest of the studio before ducking into the underused women's bathroom. When the door falls shut behind me, the sound of retching erupts from the far stall. There's a long flowy skirt pooled on the floor with Birkenstocks peeking out of the hem. I thought I saw Ellie Fishburne, the new art teacher, wearing something like that earlier.

“Ellie?”

I wince when I'm answered with more puking. When it stops, a meek voice follows. “Yeah?”

“Oh, Ellie.” I ease the stall door open since she hasn't locked it. She's slumped against the far wall, her usually polished chestnut skin dusky and her hand resting limply over her midsection. “How can I help?”

“Water?”

I take my half-f cup and dump it out, wiping off a lipstick smudge before refilling it. I'd get her a new one, but I don't want to leave her alone. She sips at it gratefully when I give it over.

“Was it something you ate?”

She regards me warily. “Can you keep a secret?”

“Of course.”

“I'm pregnant. It's early so we haven't told anyone yet, but I have been sick as a dog. Morning sickness, my ass.”

As if to prove her point, another wave of nausea hits her, and I crouch beside her and rub her back while she heaves. Poor Ellie. I hadn't been sick during my pregnancy. What little of it there was. “You should go home. Can I walk you?”

“Cole's here. Could you find him? He'll take me. But could you do me a favor?”

“Of course, whatever you need.”

“I'm supposed to stay and supervise cleanup. Would you mind—”

Yeah, she needs to go home, poor thing.

“No problem. I'll get Cole. I'll be back as soon as I can.”

I refill the cup of water before I run out the door, on the lookout for Ellie's husband. I've met him several times before and I recognize his spiky blond head and rocker-meets-prep-school aesthetic standing by a wall of angry black and red oils, talking to the artist.

“Excuse me, Mr. Luciani, would you mind if I stole Mr. Fishburne for a minute?”

I stand on tiptoes to tell Cole about Ellie, then lead him to the downstairs bathroom in time to hear Ellie get sick again. He bangs the door open and rushes the stall, dropping to his knees at her side.

“Again? I'm sorry you're so sick, babe.”

The soles of his boots line up with the soles of her sandals, and his sweetness and concern make me ache, his murmured words drifting soft to where I shouldn't be listening in.

“Sorry to interrupt, but unless you need me . . .”

“No. Thanks for your help, Erin. I appreciate it. Cole should be able to take it from here. He's used to it.”

They have wan smiles for each other and Cole holds her tight around her shoulders before he plants a kiss on her forehead.

“Okay. Don't worry about cleanup. I've got it covered and my lips are sealed.” I toss a quick wave in their direction and as the heavy door swings shut behind me, I hear Cole say, “We are going to have the best damn baby in the whole world, El. I promise.”

Envy twists in my stomach. It's not Ellie's fault, nor is the universe plotting against me, throwing a reminder of everything I don't have in my face, but it still hurts. And on tonight of all nights. This sucks. I don't mind doing a favor—Ellie would do the same for me—but now I'm stuck here for the duration. No escaping Shep tonight, another reminder of things I can't have.

Shep

The show's winding down and most everyone's gone back to the dorms. It's coming up on curfew, so I start nudging the lingering guys toward the door. When I've cleared out the first floor and the basement, I head up to the second floor. It's empty, except for Erin, who's picking up stray cups and napkins left on benches and pedestals, party detritus.

She looks up, startled at my approach before turning back to her chore. “I thought everyone had gone.”

“They have.”

This is so painful. Every time I see her, it hurts. This is especially hard, remembering four years ago. Those drawings are hanging up in my bedroom because I'm an emotional masochist. The dress she's got on isn't helping. The dark purple fabric clings in a way tweed has no right to. It shows off her shape, and a hint of cleavage. And she's wearing those shoes. Those same stupid shoes with the tiny fucking bows on them.
Universe, you blow.

“I thought Ellie was on cleanup duty for this?”

“She was. She wasn't feeling well so I said I'd do it.”

Erin's not looking at me. Her eyes are searching for every last scrap to pick up and throw away so she doesn't have to.

“I'll help.”

A bitter expression flits across her face but it may as well fly across the room and stab me in the chest.
Ouch.

“That's not necessary. There's not much to do; it won't take me long.”

But because I'm a stubborn fuck and as noted earlier, a specific type of masochist, I can't help it. “Then it'll take even less time with the both of us.”

“Suit yourself.”

I may not be able to have her, but I also don't want her to hate me. Especially if I end up getting to stay. She's right, there isn't much to do, and we're finished up here in a few minutes, silently dragging furniture back to its place before heading downstairs for a repeat performance. The truth is I don't want her walking across campus alone at this time of night, though I'm sure she'd be fine. But I'm going to allow myself to walk her up to Sullivan because it's one desire where Erin is concerned I can indulge in safely.

When we've picked up every stray gum wrapper and moved back all the benches that had been moved to accommodate the crowds, we stand awkwardly in the entryway.

“Let me walk you home.”

The words are out of my mouth before I can shove them back down and I curse myself. I should've done it like I used to, not spelling out the obvious and give her a chance to say no, but it's too late.

“You want to walk me home?” Her tone and her expression are cloudy with doubt. A hint of defiance makes me want to drag her by the hair over to the nearest bench, take her over my knee and spank her until her face is wet with tears and she says she's sorry, she'll never doubt me again. But that's not an option. So though my dick is getting ideas, my brain squashes it and what comes out of my mouth is a tight, “It's late.”

“You know I managed to walk from here to my apartment for three years escortless with nary a kidnapping, right?”

The sass, the hard sarcasm, that's not Erin. I want to wash it out of her mouth and replace it with my cock. How she'd look on her knees with her hands tied behind her back so she wouldn't fight me—a bell clutched in her fingers she could ring if she was actually scared, the gagging noises and the way her eyes would water as I taught her how to take me deep in her throat . . . For fuck's sake.

This is not a banner night for me. First my brother, now Erin. Can I not do anything right?

“Let's just go.”

She locks up while I wait in the glow of a streetlamp that lights the path back to the main campus. She walks down the steps with her arms crossed over her chest and doesn't wait for me as she starts up the narrow paved ribbon. I take a few quick steps to catch up with her. It's not hard because she's tiny, and I notice that with her arms crossed, her breasts swell farther out of the modest neckline of her dress. I know what I'll be doing when I get back to my apartment.

BOOK: School Ties
13.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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