Cool for the Summer Dahlia Adler (korean novels in english TXT) đ
- Author: Dahlia Adler
Book online «Cool for the Summer Dahlia Adler (korean novels in english TXT) đ». Author Dahlia Adler
I listen silently as my three best friends break down everything from Jasmineâs wardrobe (expensive) to her hair (too long, Gia thinks, and I shove three fries in my mouth at once so I donât say a word about how she wouldnât think that if sheâd ever wrapped it around her fingers) to her flawless French (which I can attest is panty-droppingly good).
Jasmine was supposed to be my secret, and in one morning, sheâs become the worldâs top news story.
I really need to change the subject.
âI canât believe weâre still talking about this girl when Chase Harding has been hitting on me all morning,â I say with an aggrieved sigh, and though I meant it as a subject-changer, Iâm also a little disappointed. Iâve made these three girls sit through hours upon hours of Chase obsession, and the morning he returns the slightest bit of interest, thereâs no parade in my honor? What the hell, ladies? How am I supposed to process this on my own?
âI thought we were playing it cool,â says Shannon, smirking like sheâs trapped me in something. âSo much for that, I guess.â
âWhat does that mean?â
âHe told Alex youâre playing hard to get,â says Kiki, helping herself to my fries. âSaid you gave him a big olâ âmaybeâ about the game Friday night.â
âBut you are going, right?â Gia asks, starting to follow Kikiâs lead with my fries before yanking her hand back as she presumably remembers itâs cheer season. âYou guys promised youâd come watch me.â
We did? Shit. So much for playing hard to get. âOf course weâre going,â Shannon says before I can get in a word. âRiss is just making Chase sweat.â
âWeâll be there,â I promise Gia, and Kiki nods in agreement.
âAnd after, weâll all go to New Girlâs party,â Kiki adds. Like that, the conversation returns to Jasmine, and I contemplate whether one can literally drown herself in ketchup.
It isnât until last periodâEnglish, because of course it would be our shared favorite subjectâthat I finally have a Jasmine sighting. She slips in right as the bell rings, giving me no chance to make eye contact. I donât even know if she sees me. But itâs unmistakably her and her jangling bracelets and her smoky voice saying âHereâ and God, I canât even remember what class this is anymore.
She doesnât say another word for the rest of it, and neither do I, but I pack up slowly, sure sheâll saunter over on her way outâmaybe with a âHey, Tinkerbell.â Heat rises in my cheeks as I imagine it, and I take my sweet time getting my stuff into my bag, waiting for the scent of her favorite peach body lotion to reach me. When I finally canât take it anymore, I look up ⊠and the room is empty.
Okay, what the fuck? Even if she didnât see me when she came in, she has to have heard me respond to âBogdan, Larissaâ during roll call. Iâm not letting her ignore me. A few weeks ago, we were staying up all night watching movies with our legs intertwined in the dark, tasting the salty-sweet of popcorn mixed with M&Ms on each otherâs lips, and now ⊠this? What even is this?
I have to storm all the way outside before I catch up to her, but there she is, getting into the Jeep I know better than my momâs old Toyota. âJasmine!â
She pauses. Steps out of the car. Slowly. Like she knew this was coming and has been dreading it all day. She doesnât say a word, just waits. Itâs her thingâsheâs chased, never chases. Iâd thought I was exempt. âJasmine,â I repeat when Iâm standing a few feet away, like I still need to confirm.
âLarissa.â
Not Tinkerbell, not a sing-song accented âLarotchkaâ to affectionately mimic my mom. Just ⊠Larissa.
âWhat are you doing here? Why didnât you tell me you were moving?â I feel silly asking the most basic questions, but I donât know what else to say.
She shrugs. âWe werenât really talking anymore when my parents decided, so.â
âOkay, but we werenât talking becauseââ The words burst from my lips and stop. We werenât talking because it was too damn hard after the intensity of that summer. I tried so many times, but my hands would always shake as I typed and erased, typed and erased. It was too impossible to reduce our communication to texts or even phone calls, and I didnât know what to say, how to start. So, I didnât, and neither did she.
âBut youâre hereâ is all I manage. Donât you want to be friends? hangs in the air in front of my lips. But I canât seem to give it voice, because âfriendsâ doesnât feel like the right word for what we were. Being something else here, in Stratford, away from the magic of the Carolina coast, around Shannon and Chase and real life ⊠none of it makes sense.
âRight, I am, and Iâm the one who has to meet new people and shit, so.â She tugs on the familiar gold necklace hanging at her throat, the hamsah and six-pointed star charms clinking against each other quietly. âRole reversal.â
âYou already know one person,â I point out. âThatâs one more than I knew.â
âWell, when I walked in, the one person I know was otherwise occupied,â she says casually, and I realize sheâs talking about watching me flirt with Chase in the hallway. It feels like a little punch to the gut, knowing that was her âwelcomeâ
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