I leaned in, my hand on his wrist and my gaze on his mouth.
Our lips touched, just the barest of brushes. We both pulled back and stared at each other for a moment.
Then Caleb lifted my hand. “Wow. So this is what marriage feels like.”
I shook my head. “I don’t feel…”
And then it hit me.
The bond. We’d be linked, him and me, by our wrists and our lips, forever. I wasn’t mad about it. I was selfishly glad that he was mine.
Mine and no one else’s. I’d fight them, and he would come back to me. Because: marriage. Even if Mom and Dad’s marriage sucked, and Caleb’s parents’ marriage was rocky, sometimes fiction and real life could be the same.
We’d be the happy couple when we got into our older years. Twenties, thirties, forties. Hell, he’d probably love me through gray hair and wrinkles. I knew it, and judging from the look in his eye, he knew it, too.
And then, two years later, our lives imploded.
14
Caleb
I meet the guys at Liam’s place. They evacuated my house shortly after I dragged Margo out. I slink into the kitchen and grab a beer, and go find them in Liam’s game room.
“That was fun,” Theo grunts from his chair.
It’s directed at me, I know. He keeps his eyes on the racing game they’re playing.
I drop into the chair next to him. It’s best that, for now, I stay the hell away from Liam. He’s on the opposite side of the couch, next to Eli. They look over at me and raise their eyebrows, but all I can do is scowl at them.
“I don’t want to talk about it.”
Liam shrugs. “Fine.”
“I just said—”
“He didn’t ask you a fucking question, man,” Eli snaps. “If you want to be a pisser and sulk in the corner, fine. We’ll leave you the fuck alone.”
“Fine,” I growl. I pick up the extra control and opt into Theo’s next game. Video games won’t release the tension I feel. The anger swirls like a fucking hurricane in my chest.
After about ten minutes, I say, “You never knew her.”
They exchange glances. “She left right before you transferred in, Eli.”
His family moved here when we were eleven. I was an angry son of a bitch then, but no worse than I am now. Eh, no, probably less angry then.
It’s grown under my skin in the years since.
“Okay,” Eli says. “We do know this part of the story. The whole school’s been talking about it.”
I’ve kept this under wraps for a reason. It’s personal shit. But I’ve got to say something to stop their squawking. “Yeah, but you don’t know my side. We weren’t just acquaintances. She didn’t just live with her family in our guest house. She was family. She was my best friend.”
“And then all the drama with her family?” That comes from Liam.
“Something like that.” I jerk the controller, smashing Theo’s character out of the way.
I don’t feel anything when I win—except for Theo’s elbow jabbed into my ribs.
“So why do you hate her?”