finished and caught him using his phone. âNo fair!â I said.
âWhy not? You text all the time.â
âYeah, but Iâm not getting paid to be here.â
âIâm not getting paid enough .â
âReally? How much are you getting?â
âThatâs between your mother and me.â
âShe paid my driving instructor a hundred and fifty dollars an hour.â
âLetâs look at your work,â he said, sitting and pulling the laptop toward him.
âYouâre not getting anywhere near that much, are you?â
âIâm not letting you drag me into a conversation about this.â
âAnything less than a hundred and youâre being robbed.â
âJust shut up, will you, and let me read?â
âOn the other hand, that driving instructor never once told me to shut up.â
âHe or she must have been a saint. Or deaf.â
I watched him reading through my answers, his grayish-greenish eyes darting swiftly across each line. Something buzzed. âYou got another text.â
He didnât respond.
âIt might be important.â I peeked at his phone. âIs Carson a girl or a boy?â
âIâm trying to think of how that might be your business and I just canât.â
âYou kept asking me about Skyler! Exact same thing.â
He shrugged and looked up. âYou got all of the questions right.â
âOf course I did. And I already know that Carsonâs a girl. First of all, most Carsons are girls, and second of all, she wrote âCanât wait,â and no boy would ever writethat to another boy, even if they were both gay and in love.â
âDo you ever stop talking?â
âYou took my phone away,â I said. âWhat am I supposed to do? Just sit here and watch you read? As riveting as that might beââ
âReflect on your flaws,â he said. âResolve to be a better person.â
âItâs not possible. Iâm already perfect.â
âAre you though?â
âHow about Carson?â I said. âIs she a good person? Or a flawed one?â I was only teasing, but my curiosity was genuine. If George was in love, I wanted to know about it. I felt a little proprietary after all the time weâd spent together this summer, like I should get a chance to review and approve anyone he dated. Besides, talking about his personal life was a lot more interesting than studying for the SATs. âDo we like her?â
âSheâs a goddess among women,â he said. âIf I give you back your phone, will you stop talking long enough for me to actually read your essay?â
âIf you give me back my phone, Iâll leave you alone for the rest of the afternoon,â I said. âMaybe even the rest of the decade.â
âYou get ten minutes with it.â He pulled it out of his back pocket and handed it to me, then bent over the screen again.
I sent a couple of texts and checked my Instagram feed. Aaron had posted a selfie with Mia. She was tiny and adorable in his well-muscled arms.
âOkay, done,â George said, looking up. âWhy are you smiling?â
I showed him the photo.
âRight,â he said. âLetâs talk about your essay.â He swung the laptop around and hitched his chair closer to mine so we could both see the screen. âSo you got the format rightâeverythingâs there, from the introduction to the conclusion. And itâs a good lengthâyou got a lot of words down on the page. You even made some decent points. Itâs just the way you supported them that Iâm not sure about. Youâre a little glib.â
âGlib?â I repeated.
âSlick. Easy.â
âI know what glib means. Iâm just hurt you think of me that way.â
âLook at this.â He pointed to a sentence. âYouâre essentially making fun of the topic.â
âJust trying
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