to let my voice go all gooey-girlie. âHeâs really good. And his arms are just . . . yeah.â
âHuh,â Andy says. âSo heâs a good-looking young chappie.â
âYeah,â I say. âHe is. Itâs true.â
âBut what else?â
âWhat else, what?â
âWhat else do you like about him? Please donât tell me itâs all about his looks or the fact that heâs some sporto hero.â
âI just . . . like him,â I say. And it sounds stupid. I can hear it in my own voice.
âIâm disappointed,â Andy says. âIâd expect you to go after someone who believed in truth, justice, the American way, all that stuff. But heâs just a pretty face, huh?â
I squeeze my eyelids shut for a long moment to try to get some moisture back into them.
âMaybe,â I say. But what I think is, I donât know. Is he? I mean, when Iâve gone out with that group, like up to the lake, I felt like more of an initiate than a member. The JV team, sort of. Like they were trying me out. Iâm not blind; Iâve seen how Lucas is around the other girls, even my teammates. But they didnât get invited to the lake, or to Lucas and Marlyâs table for lunch. Thatâs not my fault. And Iâm pretty sure that if I was to throw myself at himâyou know, open wide âhe wouldnât hesitate to take it.
I donât want that. I want everything: talking and laughing and hanging out, plus kissing and all the rest of it.
âWell, you should tell him,â Andy says. âIf heâs just eye candy, you got nothing to lose.â
âYeah, I guess. I donât know.â I hate that Iâm even thinking about this. My whole life is going to change tomorrow. Lucas Mulcahy should be the last thing Iâm worried about. But then, shouldnât that be true for Andy, too?
âTori, let me tell you something, as I sit up here looking at the stars above this back-asswards little town and into the gloom of certain death just down the highway from me,â Andy says, and for some reason, I visualize his eyes closing, not open.
âOkay?â I say.
âLife is short,â Andy says. âAm I right?â
I answer cautiously, âYes . . .â
âYou should make a move. As soon as possible. You never know what tomorrowâs going to bring.â
âYeah. Guess so.â
âYou sound tired, Tori.â
âListen,â I say, âplease donât get upset or anything, okay? But why are you doing this? I donât want anything to happen to you, okay? I really donât. But if you sincerely did just call me at random, how come? Because Iâm really confused about what the hell it is weâre talking about here. Why are you asking me about Lucas?â
Andy is quiet for a second. When he speaks, his voice is all business again. Firm. The fun-loving tone he had while asking about Lucas has evaporated into nothing.
âAll right,â he says. âThis fine evening, after pulling off to the side of the road, I was just about to shove the gas pedal down as hard as I could, and instead, I got this idea that ifâand this is a big if , all right?âif there is a God, or even a Flying Spaghetti Monster, and he didnât want me to die, then Iâd just dial a number, and if someone answered, someone who then bothered to give a single, solitary droplet of shit about me, then maybe I wouldnât do it. Thatâs pretty much it, sweetheart. So youâre the lucky girl, and so fucking help me, Iâm happy to get off this phone any time you want and finish the job.â
His tone is so bitter and harsh that it chokes me like a mouthful of baseline chalk.
âOkay,â I cough. âCan I ask you something else?â
âSure.â It comes out like a bark, teeth bared.
âWhy this way? I mean, why not take pills or
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