Pushing the Limits

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Authors: Katie McGarry
Tags: General, Family, Juvenile Fiction, Social Issues, Runaways
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if Luke remembered nothing else about me, he’d recall I was a package deal.
    “I waited for you,” he said.
    “It’s my fault,” Lila blurted. “She didn’t have time to dance with you because I wanted to go home. I drank too much.”
    Both Luke and I stared at her and then at each other. One Mississippi of awkward silence. Two Mississippi of awkward silence. Three Mississippi of awkward silence.
    “Can I walk you to class, Echo?” he finally asked.
    “Sure.” I glanced at Lila and Natalie over my shoulder as I accompanied Luke down the hallway. Both flashed quick thumbs-ups. I sucked in a deep breath and smiled when I noticed Luke grinning at me. Wow—normal. Maybe it really was possible.
    That is, if normal meant hiding Noah Hutchins’s jacket in my locker … and pretending that I wasn’t thinking about how close he’d come to kissing me.

NOAH
    “Hold this.” Mrs. Collins shoved a steaming to-go cup at me and went back to war with the school’s locked doors. We could barely see in the pale morning light, making it hard for her to find the right key on the overloaded chain. I considered giving her crap about her lack of organizational skills, but decided not to. It took some major balls to be alone with a punk like me.
    The warmth of the coffee reminded me how cold it was outside. Goose bumps pricked my exposed arms. I owned one long-sleeved shirt and only wore that for my brothers. Being jacket-less sucked.
    Her eyes settled on the tattoo on my biceps and her forever smile fell a centimeter. “Where’s your jacket, Noah? It’s cold.”
    “I gave it to someone.”
    A relieved sigh escaped her mouth when the third key she tried unlocked the door. She waved for me to go in. Instead, I held the door and nodded for her to go first. It would be my luck that a security guard would see me, shoot, then ask questions.
    Our footsteps echoed down the empty hallway. Thanks to our school’s new green policy, the lights flashed on as we approached. It put me on edge. On top of the system that stalked my every movement, now the building did, too.
    “Who did you give your jacket to?” Mrs. Collins entered the main office and unlocked her office door on the first try.
    “A girl.” A girl who’d ignored me all day Monday and had yet to return said jacket.
    “A girlfriend or a friend that’s a girl?”
    “Neither.”
    Mrs. Collins gave me the pity look then busied herself with her purse. “Do you need a coat?”
    I hated the pity look. After my parents died, everyone I knew wore that look. Eyes slightly rounded. The ends of their mouths curved up slightly while their lips pulled down. The entire time they fought to look normal, but they only came across as uncomfortable.
    “No. I’m getting it back today.”
    “Good.” She flipped open my file. “How are your tutoring sessions with Echo?”
    “We’re starting today.” Only Echo didn’t know that yet.
    “Glorious.” She opened her mouth to ask another asinine question, but I had my own.
    “What do you know about my brothers?”
    She picked up a pen and tapped it against the desk, keeping time with the second hand on the clock. “Keesha and I had a chat regarding your visit this weekend. What happened to Tyler was an accident.”
    What the hell? “You’re a school counselor. What are you doing talking to my social worker? And what are you doing talking to her about Tyler?”
    “I already told you. I’m a clinical social worker, and I’m the guinea pig for the pilot program. My job isn’t to handle a part of you, but to handle all of you. That means I have access to your brothers. I’ll be communicating with their foster parents and sometimes I’ll be talking to Jacob and Tyler as well.
    “As for where I fit in here at Eastwick, Mrs. Branch handles the typical guidance counselor issues and I handle …” She bobbed her head. “The more enlightening students. School fills your mind with knowledge, but we tend to ignore the emotional. I’m

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