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Something in the Way(8)

By:Jessica Hawkins


He took a long drag of his cigarette. The little orange tip flared  before he dropped the butt on the street and stamped it out. "Come over  here."

I went to stand next to him. The glare of my parents' TV flashed in the  window. I still worried they'd look out and see me standing with  Manning, but not so much that I wasn't going to do it. "Is this your  car?" I asked.

"Yeah." He put his hands in his pockets. "Sorry about the smoke."

I shrugged. "I don't care."

"You should. It's bad for you. Anyone offers you one, say no. All it  takes is that first time, and you're hooked. For life. Got it?"

I nodded as if I hadn't been told so a thousand times by teachers,  parents, PSAs on TV. I didn't have the guts to try it, but that didn't  stop me from being curious. "I'll say no," I promised.

"Good. Did you finish the book?"

"I had to if I wanted to come tonight."

"Yeah? How was it?"

"Depressing. I probably should've watched the movie."

"But you pushed through? Just to go ride a Ferris wheel?"

To spend an evening with you, I wanted to say. I didn't have the guts. "No. I don't go on the Ferris wheel."

"How come?"

Something like that, you could fall off at any time, I was sure. It  probably happened all the time. I didn't want to admit I was scared,  though. "I get sick."

"You throw up?" he asked.

"No. Gross."

"What then?"

I nudged the curb with the toe of my sneaker. The ashes of his cigarette  were like silver confetti on the concrete. Big, dark Manning would've  blended right in with the night if not for his bleach-white t-shirt.

"If you're scared, it's okay to admit it."

Tiffany had snuck me onto a pendulum ride at a carnival when I was  little and I'd peed my pants, terrified. My Dad had spanked her and we'd  gone home early. "I don't think scared is the right word . . . I just  don't trust it."                       
       
           



       

He checked his watch. "What's your curfew?"

"How do you know I have one?"

He raised his eyes to mine. "You don't?"

I wished I didn't. Not that I planned to stay out all night with my  sister and him, but it bothered me that Manning might think I was  childish. "Ten," I said.

"Your parents know I'm taking you guys?"

"No."

With a grunt, he tilted his head toward the sky, but quickly looked back  at the house. Sawdust and cigarette smoke lingered in the air, but  standing close to him, I mostly smelled men's deodorant and soap.

"How about the bumper cars?" he asked.

"What?"

"Are you afraid of a little turbulence?"

I smiled. "No."

Tiffany came outside. In the porch light, her blonde hair yellowed. Her  denim shorts were a few inches shorter than mine, her ponytail and hoop  earrings swinging. For all the time and effort it took her to get ready,  she looked breezy. Confident.

Manning kept his eyes on the pavement as she approached.

"Why're you guys standing in the dark?" She was chewing gum. "Hi, Manning."

"Hey." He pushed off the side of the car, rounding the hood to open the passenger's side door. "Should we get going?"

Tiffany and I followed. There was no backseat in the truck, just one  long bench. I didn't even have a limb inside when Tiffany cut in to  climb between Manning and me. Considering his size, I wasn't even sure  all three of us would fit, but that didn't turn out to be a problem.  Tiffany slid as close to Manning as she could get without sitting in his  lap. "Oh, I want to make one stop," Tiffany said when he started the  car.

He sat back and looked over at her. "Where?"

"There's this party-"

"We're not going to a party," he said.

"But Lake's never been to one." She looked over her shoulder at me. "It's huge. I bet even your loser friends will be there."

Mona and Vicki actually looked up to Tiffany. There was no reason to  call them losers except that they were my friends, not hers. "Dad  specifically told us not to," I reminded her.

"Five minutes. I just want you to see what it's like."

Manning pulled away from the curb. "She doesn't want to."

"But she will. Soon. And it's better if she goes with me her first time  rather than her friends." She pointed to an upcoming stop sign. "Take a  right here. It's on the way."

Manning stuck his elbow on the window ledge and steered with one hand.  Tiffany's knee knocked against Manning's every time the truck bounced.  She murmured directions to him. With each turn, envy grew in me,  unwelcome and unfamiliar. I couldn't stop watching their legs. What  would it feel like, to have Manning's jeans scrape against my bare outer  thigh? The hair on my legs prickled to life. I should've shaved all the  way up my leg. I didn't always, since the hair on my thighs was fine  and blonde. But Tiffany's smooth, tan skin made me realize mine was  white and furry. I angled my offensive legs toward the car door, away  from the cozy couple.

"I can't shift," Manning said.

"Oops." Tiffany peeled her shoulder from his, but her knee stayed put.

Manning kept a strong grip on the steering wheel. His forearms were all  dark, thick hair and corded veins, his skin brown from working in the  sun.

"Turn here, on Marigold," Tiffany said. "See?"

Parked cars lined the curb all the way up and down both sides of the  block. People loitered on a lawn in an otherwise quiet neighborhood.  Tiffany said my friends might be here, but what if they weren't? What if  Tiffany ditched me as we walked in the door? I'd never been to a party  for reasons that had nothing to do with my strict dad-I had no desire to  get drunk and stupid. It was dumb how Tiffany and her friends wore  hangovers like gold medals. But that didn't mean I wanted to stand alone  in a corner drinking water.

Manning pulled in front of the driveway and put the car in park, looking  past both of us into the party. A group of seniors stood by the mailbox  with red cups in their hands.

I looked back at my sister. I didn't want to go in. Even though everyone  there would know Tiffany, they wouldn't know me. They'd try to get me  to drink. I'd be embarrassed in front of my classmates, in front of  Manning.

A varsity water polo player leaned over and puked in the street, ten  feet from the truck. His teammate picked up a cheerleader by her waist.  She squealed and squirmed as he threatened to drop her in it.                       
       
           



       

Manning watched it all and finally said, "We're not going in there."

"Why not?" Tiffany asked, sounding genuinely confused.

He shifted out of park.

Tiffany grabbed his arm. "Lake needs this. She can't study in her bedroom her whole life."

"Let go of my arm."

Tiffany pulled back. "But-"

"If you want to go inside so bad, I won't stop you. Your sister and I will go to the fair. How's that sound, Lake?"

"I don't care about some lame high school party," Tiffany said defensively. "I'm doing this for her."

He drove away. "You don't know what your sister wants."

Manning was right. Either Tiffany didn't know or care what I wanted. But he did.

Tiffany glared at Manning. I braced for an explosion. She didn't respond  well to being told no. It didn't happen often, not since our father had  learned she'd fight him tooth and nail to get what she wanted, and if  she lost, find a way to do it anyway.

She sulked, but she stayed quiet. I almost couldn't believe it. Since  when did she give in so easily? Wasn't she going to wear Manning down  until he agreed to go back to the party?

Gently, she touched Manning's bicep. "Are you mad?"

After a few tense seconds, Manning shook his head. "We can have fun without all that," he said.

She relaxed against the back of the seat. We rode in relative silence  the rest of the way, except for the low din of the radio. Manning turned  it up slightly for one song. When it ended and the DJ said the name, I  committed "Black" by Pearl Jam to memory.

Manning parked, and we walked across the street toward the entrance. The  Fun Zone at Balboa Park was one long strip with an arcade, bumper cars,  and the biggest draw-for some people-a Ferris wheel.

Tiffany stopped at the first carnival game we walked by and clasped both  hands around Manning's bicep, her fingers barely touching. "Win me a  stuffed animal," she pleaded. "I know you can."

I responded before Manning could. "I thought you said stuffed toys were childish?"

Tiffany turned to me with a slight sneer. "Not when your boyfriend wins it for you. Come talk to me when you have one of those."