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The First Last Boy(11)

By:Sonya Weiss


Shelby and I were going to be roommates at Bayside in the fall. Brooklyn  wasn't sure yet what she wanted to do with her life. Her family owned a  small restaurant near the high school and only took in enough profit to  live on. The rest of it they used to help feed the city's homeless and  families who struggled to put food on the table. Less than thrilled with  the idea, Brooklyn had talked about having to take that over someday  when her parents retired if she didn't do anything else. Her family  wanted her to attend Bayside and room with Shelby and me, but Brooklyn  wasn't sure that college was for her.

"I brought you something," Shelby said, handing Mark a bag.

He opened it and pulled out the latest video game. It was expensive and I  knew Mom wouldn't like Shelby spending that kind of money on a gift.  His face lit up. "Thanks!"

"We're running late. Let's go, Mark." Mom came out of her bedroom  carrying her shoes. She searched the coffee table for her keys, they  grimaced when she realized she had them in her pocket.

Mark stuffed the game back into the bag and stuck it between the sofa  and side table so he wouldn't have to explain where it came from. In the  past, Mom had made him return some of the expensive things Shelby had  given him.

"I'll play a game with you later and beat you at it," Shelby volunteered.

Mark rolled his eyes and whispered back. "You wish." He threw himself at  my legs, winding his arms around me in a tight hug and I ruffled his  hair and leaned down to kiss the side of his cheek.

As soon as he dashed out the door in Mom's wake, Brooklyn said, "I  brought beer." She darted back outside to her car. Brooklyn always  brought the beer. She had fake IDs from four different states.

"Ryan's coming right?" Shelby raised her eyebrows and gave me a smug  smile when I nodded yes. "I knew it. I told you Ryan would go to the  party for you."

"He's my friend. It's not like we've never gone to parties together  before. This doesn't mean anything." The words sounded empty even to my  own ears. I'd never known a guy like Ryan. Someone who was my friend, my  shoulder to cry on, my challenger, my rock, and my hiding place when my  life was too much to deal with. Despite how close we were though, there  was a part of Ryan he kept walled off as if he was protecting himself.         

     



 

"You're not fooling me, Tana. You're way more into Ryan than you ever  were Tristan and Tristan was never even remotely a friend."

I didn't want to think about my mixed up feelings for Ryan. In the  friendship zone was where he'd clearly stashed us and that was that  despite the heat that simmered, threatening to boil over between us.

The front door swung in. "I broke up with Three," Brooklyn announced.  She dumped a bag on the coffee table and handed out the light beers.  Whenever a boyfriend pissed her off and she dumped him, in her eyes, the  guy lost the worthiness to be called by name.

I took a sip of the beer, not planning on drinking much since I figured I'd have some at the party. "What did he do?"

"He started talking about moving in together." She shook her head. "He  doesn't even have a job anymore and doesn't have plans to get one. Like I  was going to support his ass."

"I don't blame you for kicking him to the curb, but you've been through  three boyfriends this year alone. Maybe you're choosing guys who aren't  good for you and you don't recognize that."

"I know." Brooklyn winced at Shelby's observation. "I'm a magnet for the wrong kind of guy."

"You draw guys to you and I seem to repel them. I haven't had a boyfriend since Adam and I broke up last summer," Shelby said.

Brooklyn traced the rim of the bottle with her fingertip. "That's  because you're scared. You find these button down shirt, vanilla living  type guys and you settle for that."

"I'm scared?" Shelby asked slowly, furrowing her brow.

"She's right, Shel." I gave her a smile, hoping to lessen the sting.  "You always play it safe. Look at Adam. Didn't your mom hand pick him  for you to date?"

"She introduced us," Shelby said.

"And strongly suggested you date him." Brooklyn glanced at her phone  when it rang, then rolled her eyes and silenced it. "Three. Again."

Shelby flicked her hair back. "Adam's a nice guy."

"But was he what you wanted?" I asked.

"I don't know. He treated me like I was perfect for him." She took a  swallow of her beer. "Granted, it was a little dull, but there were no  waves, no issues. Being with him was drama free."

"Waves and issues aren't necessarily a bad thing if they're part of a  healthy relationship. Take a walk on the wild side before you settle for  another Mr. Boring Nice Guy." Brooklyn finished off her beer and set  the empty bottle aside. "That way, when you're neck deep in your pearls  and society functions, you'll have the memories of Mr. Wild to make you  feel alive."

"I know that you two think my life is one big bore, but I have  responsibilities and expectations. I can't just walk away from them."

I exchanged a look with Brooklyn. "Shelby, you're eighteen years old.  Your life is your own." Shelby's mother was a real Franken-mom and had  structured every moment of her daughter's life from the time Shelby was a  toddler.

"Next week, I have a date with the son of one of my mother's garden club  friends. He's rich and handsome. I'm quiet and decorative. Together  we're picture perfect according to my family. My life is my own. Sure."  She looked sad.

Shelby had spent her life trying hard to be the perfect daughter in  order to win her mother's approval but she had a better chance at  turning into a rainbow than she did of that happening.

Popping her lightly on the leg, I jumped up. "C'mon. We need to get  ready." The three of us went into my room to put on makeup and style our  hair.

Leaning closer to the mirror, Brooklyn slicked lipstick across her full  lips. "I don't miss Three at all, but I already miss the sex."

"I haven't had sex since Adam and I broke up." Shelby sat on the bed and  leaned back to look at the ceiling. "But I don't miss the sex." She  glanced at Brooklyn. "It was vanilla." The three of us laughed.

"I'm going to have sex with Ryan," I blurted out when the laughter died  down. Saying the words out loud whirled my emotions together like  someone turned on a blender inside of me.

Brooklyn froze with a mascara brush halfway to her eyelashes. She  lowered it slowly and raised her eyebrows. "Ryan." She drew his name  out.

"Why do you say his name like that?" I asked, a little embarrassed I'd spilled the information so abruptly.

"I'm surprised, that's all." Brooklyn turned and leaned back against my  dresser, her dark eyes worried. "And concerned. Trust fund guys like  Adam are boring but at least they're safe. Guys like Ryan are anything  but safe."         

     



 

I scoffed at that. "Ryan would never hurt me."

She bit her lip. "Not physically."

"Then what?"

"Guys like him have an allure that reels in a girl. Causes her to lose  her head and then her heart because he's good looking and knows how to  play her. They have sex and before you know it, the girl is thinking  about the future while he's thinking about the next girl. Ryan could  easily destroy you and you know it. I don't want to see you broken by  him, Tana."

I couldn't understand where Brooklyn's fears were coming from. Ryan  wasn't playing me. I was the one who'd asked him to have sex. "I  appreciate the love, but Ryan isn't going to break me. It's just sex and  we're both clear on that."

"It's never "just sex" when the heart's involved."

I sighed. "My heart isn't involved and neither is Ryan's."

"I don't know that I believe that about you but maybe for Ryan. I would  believe his heart isn't involved because I have heard he doesn't have a  heart. Maybe he's too damaged." Brooklyn whipped around to finish  applying her makeup. "A man can be crushed by the darkness only so many  times before he can't find his way back out. And the stuff I've heard  about him is some pretty dark shit."

I knew Ryan's past had been bad based on his reaction when I'd asked him  about it. We'd been hanging at my house about a year ago and curious,  I'd pushed him hard for answers. He'd shut me down and walked away. That  had hurt because I felt like he couldn't trust me with whatever it was  that had hurt him. But I knew Ryan and whatever was in his past hadn't  destroyed the good that was in him. "He's not a bad person."

Shelby got up to search my closet. "I have to agree with her, Brook.  Though I don't know Ryan that well, I get the vibe that underneath all  that steamy hot exterior, he's not a bad guy."

"Steamy hot?" I laughed when Shelby wiggled her eyebrows and mouthed "oh yeah."