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Definitely, Maybe in Love(38)

By:Ophelia London


"Time's up," he'd said into my hair, releasing me. But I'd made the  scandalous decision to give us an extra ten seconds, by first pressing  my palms against his chest, feeling his strong, pounding heart, then  slowly sliding my arms around him. I lifted up on my toes, hooked my  chin over his shoulder, then clasped my hands behind his back, sealing  us together.

No lips, no tongues. We were hugging.

"Ahh, this is … very … " He exhaled a little moan when I'd squeezed tighter,  making our bodies a single line. "Springer." His breath hitched. "Now  you're making me purr-"

"Are we a tad sleepy this evening?"

My eyes popped open, suddenly realizing where my mind had been. Tyler  was still across from me on the couch. I could practically hear the  smirk in his voice.

"Maybe you and old Henry shouldn't have stayed up all night, hmmm?"

"This is a boring subject," I offered, tapping a yellow highlighter to my open textbook.

None of us would be getting much rest tonight either, because once Mel  hauled her fashionable behind downstairs and Henry showed up, the four  of us were heading to Portland to see a concert.

After reading the same sentence three times, I allowed my head to drop  down on my book, resting on one cheek. If I had thirty seconds of quiet,  I knew I would be out like a light.

"Sooo … " Tyler broke the silence again. I was amazed by how that single  word was laced with so much insinuation. It was a strain to lift my  head, but I managed. His big blue eyes twinkled, regarding me just as  Henry had this morning. I wondered when it was that I'd become  completely transparent.

"You and Henry, eh?"

My spine elongated indignantly. It was a natural reflex. "Me and Henry, what?"

"Hey now, I'm just shooting the breeze while we wait," he defended. "I  don't like silence. But … you know what I meant." He made slobbery kissing  sounds.

I rolled my eyes. "Nothing happened between us." But it was a  ridiculous, useless attempt. If he was anything like his cousin, Tyler  would see right through me.

I stared at the front door, fingers thumping impatiently under the  table. I couldn't wait to see him, couldn't wait to hear the Jeep  roaring up the driveway. If not for the overly interested eyes of Mel  and Tyler, I imagined myself busting out the door the second I heard the  grinding of gravel, maybe running and jumping into his arms like I'd  seen in a chick flick.                       
       
           



       

Huh. I smiled to myself. And just like that, I've become a romantic. I blame Bruno Mars.

It felt much longer than five hours since Henry had left us at Mel's to  drive back to wherever he was staying this week. Had he mentioned a  grandfather? And now, per his latest text, he was currently en route to  the house. En route to me.

Butterflies.

I stared vacantly down at my textbook, trying to keep any kind of smile  off my face, trying to not let every giddy, girly emotion show. When I  looked up at Tyler, making sure my blank expression was firmly in place  first, his smarmy grin had disappeared.

"Oh, I thought for sure." He ran his fingers up the back of his baby  blond hair. "Mel did tell me you guys were just talking last night, but I  assumed … "

I had to bite my lip to keep from hooting out loud. Tyler actually bought that load?

"Just catching up. Like I said." I confirmed my earlier fib. "Henry and I  lived across the street from each other at Stanford, remember? And we  worked on a paper together."

Tyler nodded, fully convinced. "That's cool," he said. "For you, at least."

"What do you mean?"

"You seem like a nice girl, and you're Mel's best friend."

"So?"

He took a long swig of soda, like he was preparing to tell a lengthy  story. "I didn't think Henry hooked up with chicks, all casual like  that." He wiped his mouth with the back of a hand. "Well, he usually  doesn't."

"Usually?"

He set down the soda can and linked his fingers between his knees.  "Okay, so there was this one time, the beginning of last summer, right?  Just after he graduated from Duke, Henry was about to go off to Sweden  or wherever with his family." He looked over his shoulder then back at  me. "He called it filling his canteen. Ha-ha! I guess he figured he'd be  away from American women for a while. So, anyway"-he leaned forward,  his elbows on his knees-"right before he left, he hooked up for the  weekend, just because he knew he wouldn't be getting any all summer."  Tyler sat back and crossed his legs.

"Hooked up," I repeated, not quite certain what he meant. I knew the  term, of course, but I also knew its ambiguous definition. I waited for  further explanation, also wondering if Tyler's face was about to break  into that stupid grin and he'd say he was yanking my chain.

But he went on. No stupid grin.

"Yeah," he said, smiling approvingly. "Ya know, tapped that thing."

"Oh," I said, perfectly understanding him now. I leaned an elbow on the  coffee table, feeling envious and a little jealous of some unknown girl,  just because she had been with Henry first. I looked down and couldn't  help smiling, confident in the knowledge that our time would come soon  enough. And I could wait.

"I think she was the sister of one of his buddies at Duke," Tyler  continued, pulling me from my daydream. "Oh, yeah!" He smacked his own  forehead. "She was his roommate's sister. Guess she was visiting her  brother back east, and Henry took the easy in."

Those happy little butterflies in my stomach flew up my throat and out my open mouth.

"It's kind of a mess now for him," Tyler added, lowering his voice like  we were sharing a secret. "This chick won't leave him alone. She's at  Stanford, too, I guess. You might know her."

The yellow highlighter I'd been gripping slipped from my hand and rolled  under the coffee table. "It's a big school," I deflected, while  picturing the girl in my head. Her straight, bleached out hair, her  angular features, and that scowl of loathing whenever she looked at me.

I fought the urge to run the back of my hand over my lips, rubbing off Henry's kisses.

"I don't know about you Stanford girls, anyway … " Tyler went on, but I  turned away, focusing first at the landscape painting past his shoulder,  then down at my open book, the words on the page whirling around. I  took in a long breath, held it, blew it out, reeling in my disgust.

Of course it wasn't fair of me to be pissed at Tyler; he was only the  messenger. And to be angry with Henry over this wasn't exactly fair and  impartial, either. What he did before we met had nothing to do with me.

But the thought of Henry and Lilah together did show an amazingly  low-and I'm sorry, desperate-lack of taste and judgment on Henry's part.  From out of nowhere, I felt on the brink of laughter, considering all  the years she must have pined for him. No wonder her hatred for me  reached new levels last fall. On top of my beating her out for the  internship two years ago, the girl was actually jealous.                       
       
           



       

Tyler was talking again, still droning on about the women at Stanford. I  couldn't help wondering if he and Mel had had a fight earlier, if that  was why he was suddenly so bitter toward the female population of Palo  Alto.

"Over the holidays," he continued, "I was with Henry for, like, one day.  I was kind of asking him advice about Mel." He shot me a look. "He  didn't know who I was talking about, though."

I laughed. "I'm sure your secret is safe."

"Mel and I are pretty off-and-on, you know? I was frustrated at the time  and not sure what to do. Anyway, Henry told me about this other girl he  knows, same kind of thing, I guess. She was dating one of his friends.  She … " I was only half-listening, staring down at the table, noticing the  subtle marbley veins in the wood, different levels of brown and black,  reminding me of Henry's hair. "She started blowing hot and cold, like,  mind games, hard to get and whatever," he went on. "Henry told his  friend flat-out to break up with her."

A sudden coldness wrapped around my core. "What do you mean, he told him to?"

Tyler smiled. Perhaps he and Mel did have something in common: a love of gossip.

"I don't know all the details." His voice was hushed yet excited. "But  from what I figure, Henry had to practically convince this guy, this  buddy of his, to dump her."

Whatever creature had lurched in my stomach five seconds ago, it was now  doing back flips while wearing spiky shoes and a spiky helmet. "When"-I  swallowed, trying to feign indifference-"was this?"