“Hey.” Kennedy’s eyes looked blue today
under her knitted cap. A matching scarf ringed her neck and her cheeks and lips
were rosy.
The sight of her, with the fresh snow
drifting down around us, looked like something off a postcard and caught me off
guard. She looked so damn normal—prettier than most girls, but normal. “Hey.
Enjoying your final runs?”
“Yeah. Headed up top for a few more.
You?”
Her change in attitude from the other
night left me feeling a little unmoored, but my default setting of polite
kicked into gear. “Me, too. Shall we?”
Kennedy hesitated for the briefest of
seconds, a flicker of indecision in her eyes, before nodding and giving me a
smile that could have lit half of St. Moritz. “Let’s do it.”
We poled over to the lift and waited our
turn, then settled onto the cold metal chair together and got situated for the
fifteen-minute ride. The higher we went, the more astounding the view. The sun
dipped toward the horizon, coloring Switzerland with her own personal halo.
“I’m sorry about the other night. When I
was rude to you at the bar. And for showing you my ass.”
I snorted. “I have to tell you, I didn’t
mind the latter. And it’s fine.”
She scooted almost imperceptibly closer,
then scooted again, until the heat from her body founds its way inside my ski
clothes. She smelled like shampoo and snow, fresh like the world around us and
I breathed deep. It doused my brain like some kind of drug.
When she reached out and slid her arm
through mine, though, it snapped me to attention. The about-face was too much.
“What are you doing?”
“Boys belong in boxes, Wright. Anyone
ever tell you that?”
“I have no idea what you’re talking
about. Are you nuts?”
She shot me a conspiratorial smile and
leaned closer, lowering her voice to a whisper even though no one could
possible overhear. “I’ve seen you at Dr. Porter’s. Are you nuts?”
Embarrassment flooded my cheeks with
heat, stinging in the face of the chilly wind, and I fought the instinct to
pull away from her. So I saw a psychologist. So did eighty percent of Whitman.
“Not most of the time,” I replied,
keeping my chin up.
“I’m fucking bats,” she said,
cheerfulness oozing from every pore.
The other morning, Kennedy had
seemed…not depressed, exactly, but not happy. Not like this. It made me wonder
if she was bi-polar, but the real reason probably had more to do with her state
of sobriety. Or maybe how honest she felt like being.
Those things might even be connected.
“Anyway, boxes. Boys fit in them so
nicely—in a ‘too nice’ box, or one labeled ‘good fuck’ or maybe ‘run for the
hills he has no idea what to do with his penis’.” She cocked her head. “I
suppose there are teeny, tiny boxes for the ones that girls might actually be
able to stand for more than a night at a time, but I’ve never used them.”
I didn’t tell her that I’d never found a
use for the last box, either. “Why are you telling me this?”
“Because I want to put you in one, but I
can’t decide which.”
Heat spilled down into my groin as she
looked up into my face, pure suggestion burning in her bright eyes. Her hand
snuck over and rested between my legs, and even through ski pants there was no
way she missed what she’d set to life with the simplest of comments.
Through the foggy desire gumming up my
brain, I tried to remember this was Kennedy Gilbert. Whitman’s resident hot
mess. I was pretty sure whatever she’d smoked or drank for breakfast was
rubbing my crotch right now, not her.
Get a grip, Wright. And for Christ sakes
get laid when you get home.
It took every ounce of willpower to
reach down and slide her hand away, back into her own lap. “Not that one.”
“Which one? The ‘likes to get off in
public’ box? Noted. We’ll throw that one away. Bunch of fucking weirdos.”
“You really are odd.”
She nodded, settling back on her side of
the chair and pulling her poles loose. Our lift neared the top of the mountain
and I did the same, still struggling to shake loose the lust. When she looked
at me again, the proposition had disappeared from her gaze, leaving cool
detachment in its place. Her stare left me feeling abandoned, cast away, which
was silly but still true.
“You have to get in a box, Wright.” She
swallowed hard. “I can’t deal if you don’t.”
My skis hit the packed snow at the top
and training took over, propelling me off the seat and out of the way of the
people coming behind us. Kennedy was graceful on her skis, gliding at my side
until we reached the summit and looked down at the run waiting for us. I
wondered what she meant, or why it mattered to her if she couldn’t figure me
out.
“Wanna race?” She tipped her chin my
direction, her whole body radiating mischievousness, the moment of desperate
vulnerability I’d glimpsed on the chair lift long gone.
“If you’re into losing,” I shrugged,
puffing out my chest like an idiot.
Without warning she switched both of her
poles to one hand, grabbed the front of my jacket, and planted a kiss on my
mouth. Her soft lips tasted like strawberries and lingered, her tongue flicking
over my bottom lip for the briefest of seconds before she pulled away.
I couldn’t
come up with one single response before she turned and headed down the slope.
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