تسجيل الدخولWRENLEY
His name is Jerry.
That's all I got at the party before Tess dragged me to the snack table and started narrating the social standing of everyone in the room like I'd asked.
I remember leaving there feeling things I never thought was possible. Meanwhile, Aurel has been trying to talk to me all week but I avoid him.
The thought of Jerry fills my head until I can't think of anything else which is a problem, because I have several actual problems that deserve the attention more.
"How do you get a guy to like you?" I blurt out to Tess one afternoon. The second the words leave my mouth, I consider throwing myself through the nearest window.
"Oh my, look at you having your first crush," she teased, bringing her chair closer to mine.
"I regret asking already." I muttered with a hand over my face. We had just finished class for today. "Who is he? Is it Aurel?" She gave me a light shove. "I saw the way he looked at you at that party."
"Ewww, no. I'd rather be married to a dog than him. I'm talking about that grad student from the aquarium. The one who's always around when I go to clear my head."
"Oh," her happy expression changes. "Well I guess the best people to ask are the guys."
"What are you talking about?"
"They are guys. If anyone knows about winning guys, it's the guys on the hockey team."
Yeah right. As if I can just walk up to one of them to ask for dating advice.
"Why can't you advise me?" I asked.
"Me? What does my single ass know? I've been single ever since I was born so I know nothing."
"Fair point," I replied.
As luck would have it, I overheard Aurel and his coach discussing his poor grade in law and the possibility of him not playing if he doesn't get it back on track.
An hour later, I find Aurel in the basement of the athletic complex, at a long table with a textbook open in front of him that he is very clearly not reading.
He has the look of someone who's been on the same page for twenty minutes and has started to take it personally.
I sit down across from him without being asked.
He glances up. "Red? What are you doing here?"
"Don't you dare!" I glared at him.
"What? It's a really catchy name."
"I hear you're failing." I say it flat, and his eyes go wide.
"Where did you hear that from?" he asked, and his right hand twitched on the table before he stopped it.
People don't shake like that over a bad grade. They shake over what happens after the bad grade.
"Elise complains about it like it's something you're doing to her personally." I lied, hiding the fact that I totally eavesdropped the conversation he had with his coach. It's not like she's going to find out anyway.
"And here I thought you came down here for my company," he said with a sad face.
"I came down here to make you a deal." I put my hands flat on the table. "I'll tutor you for free. As much as you need, until the grade's fixed and you keep your spot."
He leans back. Now he's interested, and trying not to look like it. I look at his hands that are no longer shaking while he asks. "What's the catch?"
"You help me with something." The words cost me more than they should have. "Unfortunately, it requires talking to you."
I never thought a day would come where I would ask him for help not to talk of dating advice.
"Okay, that shouldn't be hard, what's that?"
This is the part I rehearsed and it still comes out wrong.
"There's someone I want. A guy. I don't..." I stop and start over, plainer. " I don't know how this works, the talking, the... whatever you people do before you decide you like someone. But you do. You're good at it, everyone says so, it's apparently your entire personality. So you teach me that, and I teach you Con Law, and we both get what we want."
For a long moment he doesn't say anything.
"Who's the guy," he says finally.
"Does it matter?"
"It might. If it's somebody I know I can tell you if you're wasting your time."
"Jerry?" he blurts out halfway through my description.
I stop. "You know him?"
"Sure, uhm Jerry is a great guy. I can totally help you." He tries to sound cheerful but his furrowed brows give him away.
"You don't sound like you want to." I pitched in.
"I want to pass Con Law." He pulls his textbook closed and looks at me, with a smile on his face.
"Deal. You teach me the commerce clause, I teach you how to get the guy. When do we start?"
"Now. Or else you're going to fail before we finish negotiating."
In the last two hours of our study session, I've come to realise that he's not so stupid after all. Everyone talks about Aurel Castell like he's a nice golden retriever who happens to be good at hockey, and he lets them, but when I make him explain the cases back to me in his own words instead of reading them, he gets there fast.
He just couldn't make the course stick to his memory.
It's almost ten pm when my phone buzzes. I almost don't look.
It's an email, forwarded from the property manager, and I read the subject line twice before the words go in.
NOTICE OF UNIT ENTRY; LOCKS TO BE CHANGED 6:00 AM.
"Hey." Aurel snaps his fingers in front of me. "You went somewhere. What's wrong?"
"Nothing." I lock the phone and stand up too fast, gathering my things, my notebook, my one good pen. "Same time Thursday. Read the next chapter before you come or I'm not explaining it twice."
"Wrenley."
It's the first time he's used my actual name. It stops me for half a second, which I hate.
"I'm fine," I say. "I'll see you Thursday."
I leave before he asks me another question.
I have until six in the morning to figure out where I'm going to live, with three trash bags' worth of a life I built out of nothing, and no one on this entire continent I can call.
I have never once, in any world, been this alone with a clock running.
FINNRoselyn brings food this time, which is how I know she's in a good mood.She's got a paper bag of something from the place two towns over that she likes, the one nobody we know would ever drive to, and she's sitting cross-legged on the hood of her car when I pull into the boathouse lot, already unpacking it onto the windshield like a picnic. Fries. Two of those terrible gas-station coffees she pretends are good. A single donut she's clearly going to make me split."You're early," she grins. "That's because you're bribing me with fries." I give her a peck on the cheek which makes her face red. "I'm bribing you with half a donut. The fries are mine. You can look at them."I climb up onto the hood next to her and she hands me a coffee anyway, and the fries, all of them, because she's a liar who talks tough and then gives you everything. The lake's current is not so fast so it's just whooshing gently in front of us and the only sound is the crickets and the tick of her engine cooli
WRENLEYIt’s almost two in the morning and I’m crying over a zipper, which feels less like a life choice and more like the universe personally finding new ways to mock me.It's not even about the zipper anymore. The zipper is just the thing that broke last after having to redo the fourth seam which puckered again all in one night, the fabric fighting me the way everything's been fighting me for two weeks. But it's two a.m. and I'm running on no sleep and the showcase is in twelve days. I bombed a time trial this morning that Coach wrote down with that face, the face that tells me his patience is being stretched thin. I had rushed home soon after in a bid to get a head start at this but hours down the line, the zipper won't sit flat. Somewhere in there my eyes just started leaking without asking me.I'm not a crier,that I'm sure of. Heck, I didn't cry when I got evicted or after my confrontation with Elise but here I'm sitting on the floor of this borrowed room surrounded by pins and
WRENLEYI'm twelve minutes late to morning practice, which has never happened, because I was up until two sewing a piece I've now redone four times and still hate.“Shit, shit,” I keep cursing because I know what's coming for me as soon as I open those doors. The last time I came late, Diaz had pulled me aside and given me the pep talk. The one adult gives as ‘our parents’. Yes, I'm talking about the one that starts with ‘You know I see you as my son or daughter.’ Yep, that's the one. I can already tell how late I am by the way the building's already loud, the noises from the splashing, the whistle, and voices of people cheering on. Half-jogging onto the deck still pulling my cap on, Coach Diaz looks up from his clipboard and doesn't say anything for the first few seconds. His mouth twitched like he wanted to say something and thought better of it. "Sorry," I say. "I'm so sorry. It won't happen again."He sighs, taking a quick look at the stop watch. "Get in the water, Vale." Then
AURELMy dad doesn't call.For the rest of the week after the hockey match, nothing has been interesting to me. I tell myself all morning that he will, and that he just needs time to process what had happened that day and that any minute now my phone's going to light up with his name while I'll have to sit through whatever speech he's been writing in his head since he walked out of that rink. I keep the phone face-up on the kitchen counter on purpose to avoid increasing my already racing heart while I pretend to eat, while still checking it more times than I'd admit to anyone.At this point, Finn has tried so many times to get me out of the house to party and have fun but all his pleas fall on deaf ears. “Come on man,” he asked for the third time this week. “Bills on me if cash is what you're worried about. I've got a couple change to spare.”“I just wish my only problems were money related but sadly they aren't. You don't know what it's like for your dad to show up to your game af
WRENLEYSqueezing past a row of knees with two sodas, Tess settled into her seat. "I still don't get why you wanted to come to this.” she hands me one of the soda in her hand. "You hate sports. I mean you yourself told me and I quote “Hockey is basically an excuse for attractive idiots to launch themselves into walls."But isn't that right?” I replied pointing to the rink. “It's just men with sticks chasing a puck," I take the soda I didn't ask for. "You wanted company. I'm being a good friend. Don't make it weird."Deep down, I know that’s a lie because Tess didn't drag me. I told Tess I'd come before she even finished asking, which surprised both of us.Now here I am acting like the reason I came here isn’t probably crashing into bodies and chasing the puck.He told me his dad was coming and I haven't been able to stop thinking about the look on his face when he said it.“I know you're here for him, I just can't prove it yet,” Tess teases me before nudging me lightly on the arm.“Do
AUREL“Hey man, wake up, today's the day.” Finn bangs at my door like it offended him.How can I forget what today is? This was supposed to be my chance to show the scouts who would be in games like this to show them what I was made of.But now, I dread leaving here.“Yo, Aurel, you awake sleepy head?”“No,” I groaned. “Go away. I’m not coming. Going to call in sick.”“Absoluetly not, not on my watch. If you don't get your ass up this instant, I'm telling Wrenly.” He threatened.“Fuck you man,” I sighed but I could hear his laugh from behind the door.“That's more like it. See you in ten.” He added before leaving.A few minutes later, I had showered and was ready to go. Coincidentally, Finn was out of his room at the exact same moment I stepped out.“Hey man,” I pulled him in a hug. “Good luck to you. Make me proud.” I forced the words out of my mouth while patting his back.“Thanks. I spoke to Coach about letting you play even if it's for the first half.”“Really?” I could barely hid







