Lovestruck Summer Melissa Walker (top 100 books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Melissa Walker
Book online «Lovestruck Summer Melissa Walker (top 100 books to read .TXT) đ». Author Melissa Walker
97 âSorry,âI say to her. âCan we have fi ve more minutes?âShe smiles and walks back to the kitchen. Sebastian pauses his story, but he looks annoyed. âAre you mad or something?âhe asks, sud- denly tuning into me. âYouâre not even listening.ââYou didnât call,âI say. I believe in being direct about these things. âI texted you this morning,âhe says. âYou said âover the weekend,ââI remind him, feeling frustrated with myself for sound- ing like a nag. But really, when a person says heâll call after a kiss like that, you expect him to call. I even considered opening Pennyâs copy of Heâs Just Not That Into You on Sunday night, but thankfully, I restrained myself. âI had shows,âsays Sebastian. âI didnât mean to let you down or anything.âI glance up and see his sexy dark hair fall over his eyes. He looks sorry. âItâs okay,âI say. âItâs not a big deal.âIt isnât, right? Iâm just being needy. It must be the Tri-Pi vibes at the condo getting to me. I am cool, I am not going to be nitpicky about when he calls. So
98 I encourage him to go on. âTell me more about your show,âI say. And he does. He shares the set list, the infl u- ences he considered mixing, the still-unreleased Long Armed Stapler album he worked on, how he spun Pauper Palace, the Flaming Squirrels, and Courtship in a gloriously underground compilation that fi nished off with âLove That Redâby Art Girls Gone Bad. After dinner, we hit an outdoor venue, where the band is set up next to a rickety picket fence, and we keep talking songs. Sebastian tells me that country music isnât all badâjust mostlyâand I tell him about the Top 40 world, which claims the lives of great indie bands all too often. âI hate hearing silly girls prattle on about how much they love one of my favorite under- ground bands after they hear one song on an epi- sode of some lame CW series,âI say. He nods in agreement. âRight on.âSebastian hasnât ever listened to Top 40, he says, and he doesnât even own a TV. Which is probably why he doesnât get it when I describe the girl in front of us as âsomeone youâd see on
99 The Bachelor.âBut I donât mind. I love listening to him, and this is the type of indie-music-nerd conversation Iâve dreamed of having with someone other than Raina. . . . With a hot guy, perhaps. And here he is. Right in front of me. When he hits the bathroom, though, I real- ize Iâm humming to myself. Ugh! Why canât I get âCanât Help Falling in Loveâout of my mind? I blame it on my lack of iron todayânext time Iâll ask Sebastian to take me to a place that serves both steak and tofu. When he drops me off at home after mid- night, we share a long kiss, and I imagine how cool we must look, making out on a Vespa in the moonlight. Who cares what Russ said? I love this Euro bike. When I get inside, I sneak into the half bathroom and dial Raina. I donât want to wake up Penny, because I remember that she has some crazy bonding excursion with soror- ity membersâsorry, sistersâearly tomorrow morning. A ropes course or a trust-fall trip or something like that. Is it bad that I only half listen to her? âRaina,âI loud-whisper. âSebastian just left.â
100 âAnd?âshe squeals excitedly, not unlike the girls on The Bachelor. âHeâs brilliant,âI say. âHe knows everything about musicâtons of songs that I donât even know yet but canât wait to downloadâhe took me to a fantastic outdoor show tonight by this band called The Page Jumpers, and he seems really into me.ââHow are the kisses?âshe asks, getting right down to business. âStill hot?ââYes,âI say, thinking about the ten-minute make-out session we had outside the condo. âToo bad Miss Tiara would crowd my sleepover!âWe both laugh. âIt sounds so perfect, Quinn,âsays Raina. âIs there anything remotely unper- fect about your summer?ââJust Pennyâs sorority obsession,âI say. âOh, and this neighbor cowboy-wannabe who thinks heâs really cool. He wonât stop calling me Priscilla.ââDrag,âsays Raina. âBut still, deal-able if youâve got Sebastian to play with.âI laugh. âWhatâs going on there?âI ask, not wanting to be that self-involved friend. âIâm just stuck working at the movie theater
101 and wishing theyâd change the âI Love 1983âCD,âsays Raina. âHey, that CD has Toto on it,âI say, half jokingly. âDonât knock it!ââYouâre right,âshe says. ââAfricaâis a classic song. Oh, and thereâs this new guy who started, but heâs nerd city. Nasal and slouchy and way into science fiction.ââSounds like a dream,âI say. âYouâre the one living the dream,âsays Raina. âBut Iâll be here when you get back to reality.ââThanks,âI say. When we hang up, I crawl into bed and open my laptop. I feel like downloading some songs that Sebastian mentioned tonight.
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