Fallen Crest High

Read Online Fallen Crest High by Tijan - Free Book Online Page A

Book: Fallen Crest High by Tijan Read Free Book Online
Authors: Tijan
Tags: Fiction, General, Romance
Ads: Link
had a friend to distract me. Too bad it wouldn't keep. I wanted something to keep.

    CHAPTER EIGHT

    Becky was bouncing off the wall when I got to her house the next afternoon. I was dressed in see-through white summer dress that tied behind my neck. My black bikini was visible underneath and I had on simple black flip flops. While I was going for comfort, Becky wanted sexy.
    She let out a dramatic groan and collapsed on her bed when I went to her room. One of her arms had been pulled through a black tube top, or that's what it looked like. A blinding rainbow colored bikini top had been pushed up. When she rolled over, she cried out, "I can't fit into anything."
    "What are you talking about?"
    "I have nothing, nothing! I'm so fat, Sam."
    I frowned and grabbed her hand to pull her up. When she looked at me, I shrugged. "What do you want me to say? If you're trying to be a model, you need to lose weight. I think you're fine just how you are."
    "Thanks a lot," she grumbled.
    "I thought friends were honest." I flashed a grin.
    She stood back up and struggled to pull the rest of her tube top over her left boob. Then she started to hop around. "Yeah, but it'd be easier to take if you didn't look how you did."
    I scowled and crossed my arms over my chest.
    She paused mid-hop. "That's a compliment."
    "Oh." I loosened my arms. "My mom's always on me about my weight."
    "You could gain some. You want mine?"
    I chuckled and watched as she continued to hop around, sometimes skip around the room. After an hour, when Becky stopped to pant with beads of sweat on her forehead, I gestured to a dress in her closet. "Why don't you just wear that?"
    "Ugh." She let out another drawn-out groan. "That makes me look like a tan marshmallow."
    "It does not. You wore it to the first day of school. I thought you looked nice."
    Her eyebrows arched high. "I didn't know you knew who I was back then?"
    I shrugged. "I didn't, but I still thought you looked nice."
    "Your besty Jessica called me fatso that day."
    I rolled my eyes. "If she went out of her way to call you a name that meant you looked good. And I bet some guy she wanted to flirt with was looking at you instead."
    "You think?"
    "I know so."
    "It's my last option anyway. I need to lose weight, or buy new clothes and I refuse to buy new clothes." She grimaced. "My bank account won't allow it and I can't live down the fact that I'm a size larger since last year."
    "You could go running with me."
    She shot me a dark look. "I'm not that desperate. I'll try walking first."
    When she pulled on the black dress, it fit her. It was snug in places it was supposed to be and loose in places that she was embarrassed about. After a few twirls in the mirror, I gave her the thumbs up and waited until she finished her make-up.
    I called to her in the bathroom, "This is a beach party, right?"
    "Hmmm mmm ." Her voice was muffled from the bathroom.
    "So why are you putting make-up on?"
    Then she came into the room. "Because it's waterproof and because Adam's taking us."
    I frowned at that logic. "He's picking us up?"
    "Yeah, in thirty minutes."
    "Why'd you have me come over two hours earlier?"
    She posed with an arm on her hip and rolled her eyes. "Are you serious? You're my girlfriend. Aren't we supposed to get ready together?"
    "I'm ready."
    "Yeah, well, I needed the moral support. And besides," she flashed me a smile and a wink. "My mom has wine. I thought we could raid her cabinet."
    "Oh." I surged upright on the bed. "Why didn't you say so in the beginning?"
    Becky giggled as she led me downstairs and we both had a glass. We'd had our second when her phone vibrated and she continued to giggle as she knocked over her mother's lamp. "Adam's outside."
    When she stood, her knees buckled and I caught her arm. "Are you okay?"
    She gave me a weak wave. "Oh, no worries. This has more to do with Adam than the wine, but I didn't eat all day. Oops." She giggled again and her face was lobster red.
    When we got outside, the

Similar Books

A Highlander Christmas

Sophie Renwick Cindy Miles Dawn Halliday

Open File

Peter Corris

Love Scars

Lark Lane

The Devil in the Flesh

Raymond Radiguet

My Extraordinary Ordinary Life

Sissy Spacek, Maryanne Vollers

Face of Fear

Dean Koontz