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“I really want to go to Leaning Tower,” I said low, trying to motion behind me by tilting my head toward Grayson.

Eben squinted a moment until a lightbulb finally came on. “Oh, wow. Wren . . .”

“. . . so you see I’m not taking no for an answer . . .” Mads said, tugging on my arm to face a tall boy with chestnut hair. Whoa. This guy wasn’t one of Zach’s soccer dudes. I took a step back, suddenly self-conscious in my work clothes. He smiled, almost apologetically, and chuckled through his nose. His only apparent flaw? He wasn’t Grayson.

“Caleb, this is Wren. Wren, Caleb,” Zach said. He and Maddie were beaming, as if Caleb and I were getting betrothed in front of them.

“Hey,” we said together. Caleb pawed the dance floor with the tip of his Timberland. I turned to Grayson.

“Go. We’ll hang another time,” he said.

My heart deflated. For real? “Oh, um, okay. Sure you don’t mind if I skip out now?”

“Baby, we got this,” Eben said, stuffing the rest of the tablecloths into the laundry bag. “Go!”

Maddie linked her arm through mine, and we followed the boys to the lobby, where Zach continued to act like a five-year-old with Sir Gus. I fetched my coat and purse from the office.

“Hey, why don’t we ask Grayson to hang out too?” I asked.

Maddie frowned. “Wren,” she whispered, “it’s a party for four. And it’s Zach’s cousin. Please do this for me?”

I shrugged on my coat and looked into the ballroom. Grayson was still there, giant laundry bag slung over his shoulder. He waved. I waved back, hoping the gesture would communicate . . . what? That I wanted to stay? That I was sorry Maddie showed up unexpectedly with a boy toy for me for the evening? Did he really mean we’d hang out another time?

“Sure,” I said, committing to my decision. “But at least let me stop home to get changed first.”

EIGHT

GRAYSON

“TIMBERLANDS,” I SAID. “THE UNIVERSAL SHOE choice of complete tools. Poor Wren.”

“Jealous much?” Eben asked, stuffing the last of the tablecloths into the bag.

“Jealous? Of what?” I asked, hoisting the laundry bag over my shoulder. At that moment Wren came into view. She caught me staring. I waved. Me. The village idiot with a nut-sack-shaped thirty-pound bag of laundry on his back. Jealous couldn’t even describe what I felt when I watched the four of them disappear into the night.

“That was more about Maddie,” Eben said. “You do realize that?”

“Whatever.” What had I expected by taking this job? Of course she thought I was stalking her. Was I stalking her? No. Stalking was sinister, like I wanted to scalp her and make a sweater from her hair. I had something more, ah, mutually pleasurable in mind. I thought—well, she felt the same, didn’t she? We’d been getting along all night.

I followed Eben to the loading-dock door and slammed the laundry down.

“So we’re done?” I asked, wiping my hands off on my pants.

“Still want to go to Leaning Tower?” he asked. “I can see that Wren’s leaving has your boxers in a bunch, and I’m as hungry as hell and don’t feel like eating alone.”

“I could eat,” I offered.

“Great, see ya there.”

Eben was sitting in a front booth when I arrived. He had a couple of Corona longnecks in a bucket of ice and one opened in his hand. I slid into the cushy, red-booth seat across from him.

“Can I grab one of those?” I asked, taking off my jacket.

“They’ll card you,” he said, smiling.

“No problem,” I answered, taking one and wiping off the excess water with my cuff. The waitress came over. An older chick, probably about Eben’s age. Cute.

“I’m going to need some ID.”

“Really? C’mon,” I said, leaning back. She stiffened. Eben shifted in his seat.

“My manager is over there, and if you want me to open this for you, you’re going to have to prove you can legally drink it.”

“Sorry, just messing with you. No one’s asked for this since my birthday,” I said, reaching into my back pocket and pulling out my wallet. She grabbed my ID and held my gaze a moment before putting it up to the stained-glass lamp that hung over the table. Her light eyes scanned the important information. Satisfied, she handed it back to me.

“Do you want a lime?” she asked, cracking the cap off with a bottle opener.

“Nah,” I said. Her fingers grazed mine as she pulled away.

“Don’t mess with me, Mike. I’m not in the mood.”

I raised the beer to her before taking a sip and watching her walk away.

Eben sat bug-eyed across the table. “Mike?”

“It’s the name on my ID.”

“I get that, but I just witnessed you transform into a completely different person than you were back at the Camelot. It’s like the air around you changed,” he said, fanning his hand around.

“C’mon,” I said.

“So tell me this,” he said, leaning across the table. “Why should I be in your corner and not, say, the tool in the Timbos?”

I almost snotted my beer. “What do you mean?”

“Mike. Grayson. Whatever your name is, it’s plain to see you’re into Wren. You were heartbroken back—”

“Whoa, dude, I don’t get heartbroken.”

“Well, dude, you sure played the part back at the Camelot. And I’m right with you. Maddie means well, has been trying to hook Wren up since her jackwad of a boyfriend dumped her at the beach over the summer—but Wren’s not into it.”

“Someone dumped Wren . . . at the beach?” I sat up straight, intrigued. “Continue.”

“Then today . . . there’s something different about her. I didn’t put two and two together until the end of the night, after I egged her on to go with Maddie, and she told me she wanted to hang with us. Or more correctly . . . you.”

Hope bubbled in my chest. “She said that?”

“Yes, but not so fast—I’m not sure you’re worthy of her either.”

“Gee, thanks.”

“You appear out of nowhere. Mysterious, hair-flinging boy giving all his attention to my pretty little hothouse wallflower. My Spidey sense is up to begin with, and now this . . . Mike.”

“Hothouse wallflower?”

“Wren is all kinds of awesome; she just doesn’t know it. Being dumped really did a number on her pride. So she thinks it’s easier to hide out at the Camelot every weekend and call it work instead of putting herself out there. I want to make sure you’re not just playing her. Why are you interested?”

A question I’d tossed around myself. Eben seemed like the kind of person who might understand or who would at least listen, and considering my friends were scarce these days, I had nothing to lose.

“You know that saying, ‘One door closes, another door opens’?”

“My bullshit meter is off the charts,” he said, taking a long sip from his beer.

“Okay, Eben, I’m a total screwup. Got kicked out of school last year; my friends are gone. Any future I thought I had is on hold at the moment, and in walks Wren. . . .”

“And?”

“And I want to know her.”

“Know her how?”

Knowing Wren in every sense of the word had crossed my mind, but it wasn’t the first thing. And that was something I hadn’t experienced since, like, never. I dug the way I felt around her. I could be myself, but a new-and-improved version.

“She’s . . . sweet. Smart. I feel good around her, like it’s okay to be myself. And I think she’s the kind of person who is, you know, naturally good. Not because it’s right or anything, just because that’s who she is, like a moral compass. I want her in my life, and if that’s just as friends, well, okay. I’m down for that.”