as youâd guess.â He stopped and studied me. âWhy is it so easy to talk to you? I donât normally tell people private stuff like this.â
âI feel the same way,â I said. âMaybe itâs just that we have such similar situations. Not many people get it. And if I told anyone else something private about my parents, Iâd be terrified of seeing it in the tabloids thenext day. Letâs make a pact to just unload all this stuff on each other.â
âItâs a deal.â He held out his hand and we shook and then he leaned forward and kissed me gently on the cheek. âI am very glad I came back to LA for this year,â he said softly.
thirteen
T he school activity fair was that Tuesday. Ben and I manned a booth to get people to sign up for the Holiday-Giving Program. Riley and Skyler circulated around the crowded gym with flyers and pointed people in our direction.
Arianna came over and asked if she could help. Ben suggested she reach out to the juniors she knew and encourage them to come talk to us, and she obediently ran off.
Things were quiet at our post, so I was idly watching the crowd when I spotted Arianna targeting two girls from her class and walking them toward us. They were staring at me, and as they got nearer, I heard one of them say, âLuke Weston? Oh my God!â
They signed up to help at the Christmas party, and after they left, I said to Arianna, âPlease donât tell people Luke will come to the party. He might not andIâd rather people signed up because they actually want to be involved.â
âOh, Iâm not!â she said with a wave of her hand. âDonât worry! Everyoneâs just really excited about helping out.â And she went running off to collar some more people . . . who all stared at me as she whispered something to them.
And I was pretty sure I could guess what she was whispering.
Heather couldnât join me for tutoring that Wednesday night. She had a drill team practice. I didnât get drill teamâit wasnât cheerleading and it wasnât dance and in all honesty, the videos Iâd seen of her doing it were pretty lameâbut she loved it and Iâm guessing it appeased her motherâs thirst for extracurriculars to put on her college app.
Anyway, it was just me and George that night. As soon as we sat down in the kitchen, he asked me why I hadnât emailed him any of the work Iâd said I would.
âAbout that . . .â I said. âThe dog ate my homework?â
âNo dog,â he pointed out. âAnd it was all on the computer.â
âIf I had a dog, Iâm pretty sure it would have eaten my homework. Speaking of which, Iâd really like to get a pug. Donât you like pugs? Theyâre so cute with their old faces and sad eyes. Whatâs your favorite breed?â
âNice try,â he said. âBut since you didnât do the work this week, youâll do it right now, while Iâm here.â He brought it up on my computer and then stood behind me.
âYouâre looming over me,â I said, glancing up at him. âThat can feel very threatening, you know.â
âReally? Good. Consider yourself threatened.â He pointed at the screen. âGet it done, Ellie. Oh, and Iâm taking your phone.â He scooped it up and stuck it in his back pocket. âI canât compete with it.â
âDamn right you canât,â I said, but I let him keep it.
It took me about ten minutes to answer all the questions heâd assigned and another fifteen to write a five-paragraph essay on the subject âDoes social media affect our interpersonal relationships for better or worse?â The writing section of the SATs was theoretically optional now, but the counselor at my school had said anyone who wanted to go to a decent college had to take it.
I looked up from the computer to tell George Iâd
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