Page 32 of Sleepover

“Aw,” I say. “That’s awfully nice.”

Faint color rises in his cheeks, and he waves me off. “Thought about doing it a good-neighbor fence, where the pickets alternate so neither of us sees the back, but I don’t like the way those look. So I did it this way.”

“And the lattice?”

The lattice strikes me as very un-Sawyer-like. It’s beautiful, ornamental, but it doesn’t fit his no-nonsense style.

“Thought you’d like it,” he says, with another of his eloquent shrugs.

It’s hard to express exactly how that makes me feel. Warm and fuzzy, and also a little terrified. Because this is a guy who—with a few words and a throwaway gesture—can make me feel like I actually matter.

Pretty much everything that’s happened to me in the last year has made me feel like I don’t. Trevor’s actions this year have not only hurt my feelings in the short term but also made me question every time I ever believed or trusted him, every time I ever felt safe and secure in his affections. Trevor did a bang-up job of making me feel like I didn’t matter at all, and never really had.

And then Sawyer Paulson goes and builds a few lattice panels and all of a sudden I go all soft and gooey.

Hmm. I may be in trouble.

I can’t even run away, because he lives here.

“Don’t you like it?” he asks.

There is a wariness on his face that I can’t stand, like the expression of a dog that has been beaten one too many times.

I sigh. “Sawyer. I love it.”