Page 25 of Another Day (Every Day 2)
Apparently, Steve doesn’t have a cousin Nathan, and none of his cousins were at his party. Care to explain?
Rhiannon
Almost immediately, I get a reply.
Rhiannon,
I can, indeed, explain. Can we meet up? It’s the kind of explanation that needs to be done in person.
Love,
Nathan
That “Love” hits me. I know it could be a taunt or a tease. And I also know it isn’t a taunt or a tease.
Rebecca is calling me over to decide who gets the dress. Ben is pulling himself farther into the background, not wanting to get involved. Steve is holding up a Led Zeppelin record and asking Stephanie if he already has it.
I don’t reply to the email. Not yet. I need to think.
—
Rebecca gets the dress. Steve gets the record. Stephanie finds another dress that she says she likes more than the one Rebecca has. Ben spots a dictionary and starts talking about whether or not dictionaries, physical dictionaries, will exist in twenty years.
When everyone’s done shopping, they make some noises about hanging out more and eventually getting dinner.
I tell them I have to go home.
Chapter Seven
I don’t owe Nathan anything. He lied to me. Because of this, I should let it go.
But even if I don’t owe him anything, I feel I owe myself the explanation. I want to know.
I stay awake half the night, trying to figure it out. Then I get up and write him back.
Nathan,
This better be a good explanation. I’ll meet you in the coffee shop at the Clover Bookstore at 5.
Rhiannon
The bookstore seems like a good, safe place to meet. It’s in public, but it’s also a place Justin would never, ever go.
I already know I’m not going to tell him about this.
—
If I spent most of the night awake with my thoughts, Justin seems to have gotten plenty of sleep. It’s almost a good morning with him. When I see him, he doesn’t look like he wants to run away. He asks me how hanging out with Rebecca and the others went; I’m impressed because I didn’t expect him to remember what I was doing. He even listens to my response for about a minute. Then he grows bored—but I don’t blame him, because it’s pretty boring. It’s not what’s really playing in my mind. It’s not what I’m really thinking about.
Waiting. I can’t stand the feeling of waiting. Knowing I’m stranded for a few hours in the boring parts.
I check my email at lunch and find something new from Nathan.
Rhiannon,
I’ll be there. Although not in a way you might expect. Bear with me and hear me out.
A
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