Read 26 Kisses Online

Authors: Anna Michels

26 Kisses (26 page)

He hesitates for a moment, then pushes me away and stands up, running the back of his hand across his face. His nose is red, his hair matted with sweat. “He already left us once. Why does he have to leave again?” His shoulders heave. “Mom is always busy. And everyone is talking about you, Vee.
Everyone.
I’m going to start middle school soon, and everyone will be telling jokes about you and asking me if you’re really a ho.”

“Jeffrey.” I kneel in front of him. “I’m sorry. I don’t know what else you want me to say—”

“Stay away from me.” Jeffrey backs up, holding his hands out to stop me from trying to get close to him. “Just leave me alone.” He turns and runs, and I stare out over the beautiful Michigan farmland, hating every single thing I see.

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

I pace back and forth in the grass behind the barn, unable to stop thinking about my little sister flying all the way to the West Coast, gazing out the window of an airplane as Dad and Lila take her about as far away from us as she can get without leaving the country. How often will I see her, every year or two? A year is an eternity when you’re that little. She’ll grow up without me. She might not even recognize me and Jeffrey the next time we see her.

I have to get out of here.

Mel is at work. I can’t call Seth—it would be too weird now that he knows about the Twenty-Six Kisses thing. Killian doesn’t need to know any more about how screwed up my life is.

I text Mark.

The last time I rode in Mark’s car, my world was falling apart. I never would have thought I could feel worse than I did at that moment. But—surprise!—life is funny that way. It can always be worse.

“Please don’t ask any questions,” I say as I climb inside the little blue car I know so well, the one that witnessed so many important moments in my life. “Just drive.”

“Okay,” Mark says, his hands at ten and two on the steering wheel, and I feel a flash of relief that he’s not Killian, that he doesn’t need to ask a million questions. He understands that sometimes it’s better not to talk.

I send Jeffrey a quick text as we pull onto the road.
tell dad i’m leaving. sorry. about everything.

I roll down the window and close my eyes, focusing on the comforting, familiar smell of Mark’s car and the feeling of the wind in my hair. I erase everything from my mind and imagine myself running on the beach, not letting anything into my head but the rhythm of my feet over the sand, repetitive, soothing, unending.

I jolt awake when the car stops and forget where I am for a moment. “Mark?”

“Hey,” he says, tilting his baseball cap off his forehead. “Sorry. I didn’t know where else to go, so . . .” He shrugs.

We’re parked on the street in front of the library, our go-to meeting place back before either of us could drive. We’d each have our parents drop us off here under the pretense of doing homework, then hole up in a study carrel together or sit outside on the broad concrete steps if the weather was nice.

“This is fine.” I climb out of the car and walk up to the top step, our usual perch. Mark follows slowly behind me and sits down, locking his hands together between his knees. Now that I’m used to Killian’s bulk, Mark’s legs seem almost comically skinny. He’s always been gangly, but he seems even thinner now, maybe going through a late growth spurt. We sit there as clouds gather over the sun, watching people walk by with shopping bags and cameras.

“Thanks for picking me up,” I say finally. “I had kind of a rough day. Actually,” I say, pushing my hair behind my ears, “I’ve had kind of a rough summer.”

“Yeah.” Mark nods. “I know what you mean.”

I shoot him a questioning look, but he doesn’t elaborate. “Why has it been rough for you?” I ask.

He shrugs and fiddles with his sports watch. The leather bracelet, I notice, is gone. “It’s weird at work without you. Everyone kept asking me why we broke up.” He rubs the back of his neck. “I don’t know. I guess I’m just worried about college, wondering if I made the right choices.”

I snort. “Don’t talk to me about bad choices.” Mark shifts uncomfortably. “I know what Gabriel and Ryan told you,” I say, staring straight ahead. “And I know what people are saying. Most of it isn’t true.”

“I know,” Mark says quickly. “Ryan told me later it was all a big joke. But I never believed it anyway. I know you better than that.”

I nod. “Thanks.”

There are so many things I wanted to say to Mark, things I rehearsed over and over in my head during the first week after our breakup. I had four or five different conversations all mapped out, each crafted to first make Mark understand what a terrible person he was for breaking up with me and then convince him that all he wanted was for us to get back together. Now I can’t remember how a single one of those conversations was supposed to go.

“I’m sorry for breaking up with you,” Mark says, reaching over and laying a hand on my knee. “I thought it was going to make me feel less nervous about leaving for college, but it didn’t.”

“Oh,” I say. I wish he had said he was sure he made the right choice, that he was excited to head to college in a few weeks and leave Butterfield—and everyone in it—behind. Has everything I’ve gone through this summer just been a waste? “It’s okay. I mean, it was really hard, but I’m fine now.”

“That’s good.” A dark cloud passes over the sun, throwing the bustling downtown scene rushing past us into shade. I wipe my hands on my shorts and am about to stand up and suggest we get going when Mark clears his throat.

“Can I say something?” he says.

I look at him, puzzled. “Sure.”

He bites his lip. “I don’t want you to get mad.”

I shrug and look away, bracing myself for the day I always knew was coming—the day Mark got a new girlfriend.

“It’s just . . . I still miss you,” Mark says quietly. “Do you miss me?”

I turn back to stare at him. My mouth opens, but I can’t seem to make any words come out. And before I can react to what is happening, Mark slips his arm around my waist and pulls me to him, hesitating for just a moment before bringing his lips to mine.

Kissing Mark is simultaneously the most natural and the most bizarre thing I’ve ever done. I’ve kissed him a million times before, and nothing has changed except the fact that there have been several kisses with different guys in between then and now. Nothing, except the most important thing of all—
I
have changed.

I jerk away and scramble to my feet, scraping my palms on the library steps in my haste.

“Whoa,” I say, backing away from him. “What the hell, Mark?”

He doesn’t answer and looks down at his feet, cradling his head in his hands. “Sorry,” he says, his voice so soft, I can barely hear him. “I shouldn’t have done that.”

“No,” I say, the confusion in his eyes almost more than I can take. “You shouldn’t have.”

And I walk away.

By the time I get home, it’s past noon and my feet are sore from walking more than a mile in sandals. The house is empty and I pound upstairs to my room, pulling my dress over my head as I walk down the hallway, unhooking my bra without bothering to close my bedroom door. I grab a dirty sports bra from the laundry basket, pull a T-shirt and running shorts out of my dresser, and slap a couple Band-Aids over the new blisters on my feet. I barely have enough patience to stretch before I launch off the front porch and start running. I don’t care that I’m still hungover, or that my knees are screaming in protest as I hit the ten-mile mark and keep going. I run and run and run until I’m too far out to ever have a hope of running back, and I have to call my mom to pick me up and bail me out of the mess I’ve gotten myself into.

Grandpa Phillip

Family reunion

l/l0

Mark

On the library steps

–l0/l0

When Dad drops Jeffrey off later that afternoon, he comes inside to talk to Mom about my “embarrassing behavior” at the reunion. I lie on my bed and listen to my own father make it very clear he doesn’t particularly like me.

“Veda’s nearly an adult,” Dad says, his voice tight. “She needs to start acting like one.”

Mom murmurs something unintelligible and then says, “Kaylee, sweetheart, would you like some juice?”

Kaylee’s squeaky voice tugs at my heart, but I stay where I am. What will happen when Dad and Lila move to California? Will Kaylee even remember me when I come to visit?

“Jeffrey, take your sister outside,” Mom instructs. The screen door slams, and I peek out my window to see Jeffrey carrying Kaylee around our small, bare yard, letting her ride on his back like he’s a horse.

“Veda told me about your little surprise today,” Mom tells Dad, her voice like ice. “I can’t believe you sprang it on them like that, Barry. How could you?”

He clears his throat, and I can imagine the way he’s leaning away from Mom, getting defensive. “We were going to tell them in the car on the way over,” he says. “But then Lila decided not to come, and I just didn’t know what to do. I wasn’t sure they’d care.”

Mom sighs. “Of course they care, Barry.”

I roll over and shove my pillow on top of my head, holding it tight to my ears so I can’t hear anything else. I stay under the pillow until I feel the vibrations of Jeffrey’s feet going to his room, and then the hard slam of his door.

My phone buzzes with a text from Killian.
i know you’re busy today, but i’ve been saving this to show you, and i can’t wait any longer.
I click on the link embedded in the text and am transported to a Pinterest page (why does it not surprise me that Killian uses Pinterest?) dedicated entirely to George Bernard Shaw. I scroll through the pictures and quotes, smiling every time I spot something Killian has clearly created himself in a gesture of fandom to a dead Irish playwright.

One of the quotes in particular catches my eye: “Life isn’t about finding yourself. Life is about creating yourself.”

I must have read this quote before at some point, but now the words sink in and knock the breath out of me. I send Killian back a quick smiley face and set my phone down. I sit up and look at myself in the mirror across from my bed. I stare at my reflection for a long time, trying to understand what everyone around me sees—the things that might make people believe I’m nothing more than a debate team nerd, or a huge slut.

I walk over to the bulletin board and touch the ragged edge of the Twenty-Six Kisses Challenge, meeting my own gaze in the mirror. It doesn’t matter how sad I was at the beginning of the summer, or what people may be saying about me now. All I can do is look ahead and figure out what the hell should happen next.

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

Killian bounds into work the next day like a puppy, his face breaking into a huge smile as soon as he sees me.

“Vee!” He holds his hand up for a high five and then pulls me to him, squeezing me tight for a second before letting me go.

I can barely look at him, nearly overcome by the butterflies that wing their way through my stomach when I remember our kiss at the dunes.

“Hey,” I say, grabbing the clipboard and shoving it into his hands. “We’d better get going.”

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