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Authors: Joy Preble

The A-Word (8 page)

BOOK: The A-Word
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IN THE NEXT half hour, I learned the following:

1. We were going to Chateau Hills Subdivision to Terry the lab guy’s house.

2. Terry the lab guy
was
her boyfriend. I knew it! The guy she’d lived with in Austin. The guy who didn’t know his girlfriend had come back from the dead as an angel. “I moved out the next morning,” Amber said. “Bo thought it would be for the best.” (
But what about you?
I wondered.
Did you think it was for the best?
Casey hadn’t moved out like that. On the other hand, Amber had not been sent back for Terry.)

3. Those Management folks had emotional flaws in their system. If I ever met them, I would tell them so.

4. Bryce happened to live near Terry. (I learned this after my brother went off about how Amber should have told us the truth about Terry considering she’d trusted him with our mother’s blood sample.) Bryce was the assistant manager at BJ’s BBQ where Casey waited tables—the chubby guy with the dorky sense of humor and an alphabetized collection of comic books, Dark Horse being his favorite. He lived in a double-wide on his parents’ property. It was Bryce who had hooked us up with his pinball wizard pal Zeke at Manny’s Real Tex Mex. Zeke was one of the last people to see our father before he disappeared and it was because of him that we had found some clues to help us solve the whole mystery last year. In short: there were coincidences piling up, and I couldn’t tell what mattered and what didn’t. Which stank.

5. Additionally Amber told us, her voice firm, her East Texas twang pitching high: Under NO f-ing circumstances—Amber used the actual word, by the way—were we going to let any angel stuff slip out. Or anything personal, for that matter. She had broken up with him five years ago. He didn’t know what she was now. End of story.

“MOUTH ZIPPED,” AMBER said as we pulled up to a one-story ranch house. “Or I will tell Ryan Sloboda that you are planning your damn wedding already.”

This was a bit over-the-top for her. But she didn’t have to tell me twice. Also, this made me decide to change into my new outfit once we got home. No sense waiting until Ryan asked me out. I would wear it to make
sure
he asked me out.

“So how come this Terry guy’s so desperate to see you all of a sudden?” My brother asked. Silence filled the Merc. We idled. We waited.

“He said he missed me,” she admitted.

“You believe that?” My brother drummed his fingers on the steering wheel.

“No.”

“Ah,” said Casey. “Well, good.”

Amber primped at her hair.

My brother turned off the ignition. “Don’t worry,” he told her. “You look like an angel.”

T
erry McClain had curly dark brown hair and pale skin and a dusting of freckles on a nicely straight nose. He was medium tall and lanky, like that Mark Zuckerberg Facebook guy. Or at least like Jesse What’s-his-face, the actor who played him in the movie. Only cuter. He wore thin, black glasses, the square hipster type. And his smile—at least when he opened the door and saw Amber, before he registered that she had a posse with her—struck me as genuine.

Maybe she was wrong. Maybe he really had missed her.

“Hey,” he said tentatively, eyeballing Casey and me. “I’m Terry.”

“Hey,” we both said.

Amber flashed an apologetic smile. “This is Casey and Jenna. Casey’s, um, shadowing me at work. Jenna’s his sister.”

“Want to be an EMT, huh?” Terry asked. “Or you want to go pre-med? You’re what? A senior? Good move. Internships look good on a résumé.”

Casey shrugged. I could see Amber being in love with
Terry, I supposed. Yeah, I could. He was kind of geeky but smart—he had to be if he worked at the lab and could figure out if people were being poisoned by crazy idiots. Amber would have to be with a smart guy. She was closemouthed, but there was a lot going on in her head. She’d wanted to be a doctor. So of course she’d go out with someone into science.

I didn’t officially have a boyfriend yet—although maybe by tonight—but I knew I wanted someone I had things in common with. Not that I was opposed to making out like Casey and Lanie. Just that eventually you had to come up for air, and it was best if you had something to talk about when you did. But Lanie
was
Casey’s type. She was what he wanted even without the angel pheromones: blonde and pretty and girlie and willing to laugh at his stupid jokes and maybe actually think he was funny. Was Ryan my type? He was sturdy and athletic and funny and smart. And cute. More than cute. His face. His eyes. How he swaggered—just the right amount—when he walked. The way his thumbs crooked into the pockets of his jeans. His … everything. When I thought about him, my knees turned to jelly and my stomach went quivery. I wondered what it would be like when he finally kissed me.

“Y’all want coffee?” Terry gestured toward the kitchen. “I got this new machine. Makes like a million different types of coffee. Tea, even.”

Terry’s house was small, or maybe it felt that way because Bo’s loft had been so roomy. But a nice-sized Ikea-type desk sat against the far wall of the family room, with a new-looking Apple desktop set up—one of those big ass monitors with a normal-sized keyboard. A fancy printer, too. And a top-of-the line iPad sitting next to it. Terry liked his tech stuff up-to-date, I guess. Made sense.

I’m not a big coffee fan, so I chose one with vanilla to mask the taste. Amber picked an espresso. My brother decided on amaretto, whatever that was. Terry made them for us one by one, popping the little containers into the top of the coffee maker and smooshing it down so it could pee out into our mugs. Quite the setup.

“So,” Terry said once we were all sipping politely. He traced a finger over the top rim of his hipster glasses. “How’s that lady doing whose blood I tested for you? That was the craziest thing, Amber. I’d never seen anything like it. What ever happened with all that?”

The vanilla coffee lodged in my esophagus. I realized that he had no idea who Casey and I were other than our names. He did not connect us to “that lady”—our mother. Why would he? Even with what had been reported in the papers after Renfroe’s arrest, it would be impossible to put it all together. We had not charged Renfroe with trying to destroy our family. We had our own secrets to deal with now.

“She’s fine,” Amber said.

“Good to hear.” Then he said, “I’ll be right back. Y’all enjoy.” His gaze lingered on Amber for a few extra seconds until he turned and disappeared down the hallway to the other part of the house.

“Guess he wants you caffeinated before he jumps your bones,” my brother loud-whispered.

I’d have thrown in my two cents, but Terry was back in a rush, a wrapped box in his hand—blue paper, bow, ribbon, the whole shebang.

“Can we talk for a second?” he asked Amber.

“I’m right here,” Amber told him firmly, but there was something in her voice that made me take notice. Something that said that a part of her maybe still wanted to be
alone with him. And the way he kept looking at her like she was a princess—well, I could see how that would be hard to give up.

Terry hesitated some, clutching the box like maybe if he stood there long enough Casey and I would disappear. When that didn’t happen, he handed it over. “I know we’re not … well, you know … But ever since you asked me to help you last year with that blood sample, well, I … I saw this and I wanted you to have it. It looked like something you would … it looked like you.”

When Amber didn’t make a move, he added, “Open it. Go ahead.”

Her face was serious, and I could tell she was torn, but she ripped off the paper and bow and opened the box. Out came a pretty silver and turquoise cross, hanging on a sizeable silver chain. Terry had given some thought to Amber’s signature style. I was impressed.

“Terry,” she said softly. “It’s beautiful. Thank you.” She hooked the necklace around her neck, but even though she smiled at Terry, her expression was unreadable.

In my pocket, my cell vibrated loudly. While Amber and Terry ogled each other and my brother rolled his eyes, I sneaked a peek at the phone. A text from Ryan. My heart thumped.

Coming over in an hr. K?

“We need to go soon.” I tugged on Casey’s arm.

He gave me the stink eye when he saw the name. “Pissant can wait.”

“No. He. Can’t.”

We’d have sniped at each other some more, but suddenly Amber announced, “We’re going.”

We set our coffee cups on the kitchen counter and said our
goodbyes. Terry looked like he wanted to hug Amber, but she made no move to let him do so, which was hugely awkward and took up a minute or so with the bobbing and weaving.

Why had we stopped here, anyway? This Terry guy could have mailed her the damn gift. But if there was one thing I’d learned lately, it was that nothing is ever what it seems. People have agendas. Even if it takes them a while to spit them out.
My
agenda was to get home before Ryan landed on my doorstep so I could change into my new blingy jeans. I guess you can only lie to someone’s face for so long before it gets uncomfortable. Here was this nice, kind-of-cute guy with a fancy-ass computer and a sophisticated coffee machine and money to buy jewelry. She used to be with him, and now he was calling again and offering her a gift. And she had to blow him off because she was an angel, and he didn’t know it. Hadn’t known when she broke up with him five years ago right after she died. Didn’t know a damn thing.

That had to suck. For both of them.

I watched Terry look at the necklace on Amber’s neck and I thought about types again: Terry and Amber. Casey and Lanie. Me and Ryan. (I hoped.) Not that you had to have someone like animals in the ark, but the world was a crazy place. It was easier to pair up than go it alone.

I thought about Bo Shivers in that penthouse loft.

Mostly I thought:
Let’s go. We’re done here
.

“I’m still at Texicon,” he said to Amber at the door. “Head of research now.”

“That’s great,” Amber said, but she was on autopilot.

Back in the Merc, I wanted to text Maggie and tell her everything that was going on because that’s what friends do, but I couldn’t. Too many secrets. I did text her: Ryan’s coming over! To which she responded: I want details. Followed by a
series of red hearts. Maggie sometimes went overboard with the emoticons.

IT WAS GETTING dark by the time we got home, but our cul-de-sac was nice and lit up because of the Gilroys’ bright orange Halloween lights. She hadn’t gotten much further with the tombstones, though. She finished the one:
REST IN PEACE
, bubba. Guess they were going for a Southern atmosphere.

That was when I saw him riding up the street on his bicycle. (Ryan was also not old enough to drive yet. His birthday wasn’t until November, I knew, so he didn’t have a learner’s permit, either. Yes, this made me the older woman in our relationship. But only by less than a month. So not quite cougar territory.) My heart pumped hard.
You are being such a girl, Jenna Samuels
, I told myself.
Stop it
. But even the buzz cut he’d gotten for football made me happy, and I was not typically a fan of the buzz cut.

I opened the back door even before we were fully stopped. Ryan was pedaling closer now.

Amber whipped around. “You want to kill yourself? Wait till the damn car isn’t moving.” She scowled as Casey cut the ignition. “Why don’t you
both
try not to do anything stupid while I’m at work?” She boot-smacked the door and stomped to her Camaro without so much as a “Happy birthday, Jenna.” Not that she hadn’t already said it and given me my gift. But now I couldn’t change into it. Ryan was
here
.

“Go on,” my brother said quietly. “Just try not to look so damn obvious. Guys like it when you play hard to get.”

It was good advice.

I took my time sashaying over.

“Y
ou want to come inside?” I asked Ryan, heart thumping. What if he said no?

But he nodded and parked his bike, readjusted his backpack on one shoulder, and in we went. Mom was in the kitchen drinking coffee.

“Mom, Ryan; Ryan, Mom,” I said, then grabbed his arm and hustled him up to my room before Casey could get a word in. This was both bold and risky: I had never had a boy in my room before. Was my room even
presentable?
I was not one to leave underwear and such lying around, but that possibility seemed preferable to sitting in the kitchen with my mother and brother while Ryan and I attempted awkward small talk.

BOOK: The A-Word
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ads

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