The Lovely Reckless Page 23


“You don’t have to agree with me to avoid an awkward moment. I can deal with awkward. It’s bullshit I can’t handle.”

“I’m not that nice anymore.”

She sizes me up and watches the activity in the hallway at the same time. She would make a good cop. “Now that we’ve established this is a bullshit-free zone, there’s really nothing going on with you and Marco?”

“He’s not my type, and I’m probably not his, either.” I sound like my six-year-old cousin when he can’t have something and he says, Then I don’t want it anyway. “I’m not going to jump in bed with him just because he’s hot.”

“Most girls do.” It sounds like she’s stating a fact. “But you think he’s hot?”

“That’s not what I meant.” Especially now that I know Lex wasn’t exaggerating about his reputation.

“It’s what you said.”

“I’m not going to be Marco Leone’s flavor of the week, and I don’t want a relationship with anyone.”

She flashes a smug smile when I say the word relationship.

“Not that I think Marco is relationship material.”

Cruz’s smile fades. “You would be surprised.”

 

 

CHAPTER 13

ONE-EYED CAT

When Lex drops me off at the rec center after school, the three shirtless basketball players are already standing against the wall. They’re wearing different nylon basketball shorts and leather high-tops, but otherwise they look exactly the same.

“Hey, princess. You’re back.”

“Come on over here and say hi.”

One of them flicks his tongue at me. “We missed you.”

Gross.

They blow me kisses and I ignore them, taking the steps two at a time.

Inside, Sofia sits perched on Miss Lorraine’s chair behind the counter. Miss Lorraine is busy lecturing a boy about how low his jeans are riding.

Sofia notices me watching Miss Lorraine. “She’s really nice when you get to know her. I stay at her house when Marco works late. She’s just sad. Her daughter, Kira, died five years ago, and they were really close.”

I think of Miss Lorraine as the tough woman in charge of the rec center and my unofficial probation officer (aside from my actual probation officer, who I have to meet with every six weeks)—someone watching and waiting for me to screw up. I never imagined the kind of life she had when she left the rec center.

“How did her daughter die?” I whisper.

Sofia twists, and the seat moves from side to side. “A drive-by. The guy who lived next door to them sold meth. He cheated some bad guys. They were trying to kill him, but they got the address wrong.”

“I remember the story. It was all over the news when I was in middle school.”

“Miss Lorraine says we’re all her kids now.” Sofia hops down from the chair, and we walk toward the room where my group meets. “So how did you do in Shop?”

“Better. I actually know the difference between the engine block and the cylinders, I think. Now Chief has moved on to five-speed transmissions.”

She sits next to Daniel, and he kicks his backpack under the chair to make space for hers on the floor between them. He runs his hands over the curls sticking up around his face, like he’s worried about impressing her. I don’t blame him.

Sofia is beautiful, inside and out. Two clips hold back her curly hair, exposing the brutal scars on her face and neck. The fearless way Sofia allows the world to see what most people would hide makes me uncomfortable. I’d never willingly reveal the scars from my past to anyone. My own mind won’t even let me remember them.

Today everyone settles down easily, but there’s less chatter and more whispering.

When most of the kids in my after-school group filter out around six thirty, the whispers increase. Kumiko moves her book closer to my table—and Sofia, Daniel, and Carlos.

“Frankie, can I ask you something?” Kumiko shifts in her seat.

“Sure.” Please don’t let it be about birth control.

“We heard some stuff at school and want to know if it’s true.”

“What kind of stuff?” I ask, dreading the answer.

Kumiko squirms a little more. “The guy from the Heights who got killed last June … he was your boyfriend, right?”

I’m never prepared when people ask about Noah’s death. Usually, I see the question coming, which gives me time to deflect it. But Kumiko caught me off guard. Worse, there’s nowhere to run. And what does it say about me if I dodge their questions?

Sofia watches me from across the table. If she’s brave enough to let the world see her scars, I can answer their questions about Noah.

“Yeah. He was.” I fight to keep my voice steady.

The kids exchange glances, and Daniel clears his throat. I guess he’s up next. “Is it true you were there but you can’t remember what happened?”

“I remember some things, but not others.” Like the face of the guy who killed my boyfriend.

“At least you don’t have amnesia.” Kumiko tosses her glossy black hair over her shoulder and turns her attention back to her homework.

“That’s true.” I force a weak smile.

In the days that followed Noah’s death, I would have given anything to forget. Now all I want to do is remember. I owe it to Noah.

We grew up together, and our friendship always mattered more to me than dating him. It’s hard to admit now that he’s gone. People expect me to pretend Noah and I were soul mates, destined to walk down the aisle five minutes after college graduation. But we didn’t have a forever, I-can’t-live-without-you kind of love. It was more like the I’ll-never-forget-you kind.

The kind of love you have for a boy who said you were beautiful before it was actually true. A boy who knew you couldn’t ride a bike until seventh grade but never told anyone. It’s a love born from knowing someone for so long that most of your memories include him.

Admitting that Noah was anything less than my dream guy makes me feel like an awful person. But I’m determined to do something more than idealize our relationship.

I’m going to figure out who killed him—one memory at a time.

* * *

Sofia and I are the only ones in the room again when Marco shows up to get her.

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