“Let’s watch a movie,” he said as he left the kitchen.
I popped my head up. A movie?
“And grab a couple of waters before you come,” he shouted from the hallway.
I cocked an eyebrow. The only time Michael and I had ever watched movies together was when Trevor was in the room, too. Otherwise I was too scared to invade Michael’s space.
I exhaled a sigh and turned around, taking two bottles of water out of the fridge. Grabbing the rest of my food, I left the kitchen, my arms full.
The media room was dark, lit only by the light of the seventy-inch flat screen hanging on the rock wall ahead of me.
As beautiful as the house was, it was this room I liked best.
There were no windows, as it was buried in the center of the house, and all the walls were made of stacked stone. It gave the room a cave-like feel, and it was usually the one Michael and his friends hung out in when he lived here.
In the center of the room sat a three-sided brown suede couch. Huge and comfortable, it had throw pillows and a large matching ottoman sitting in the empty space in the middle.
Michael carried his plate to the couch and tossed the remote down, sitting down with his back to me.
My blood started to heat, and my hand with the plate shook. It almost felt easy. Like just a relaxing night watching TV.
Too easy. I couldn’t relax around him. I knew better.
I walked into the room and rounded the couch, tossing his bottle of water on the seat next to him and taking the right side of the sofa, perpendicular to him.
I sat cross-legged, facing the television and eating while he surfed.
“That looks good,” I spoke up, seeing Alien vs. Predator.
“That looks good?” he mocked in my voice, and I turned my head toward him.
He was slouched back on the couch with his left arm tucked behind his head and his long, tight torso looking so smooth and beautiful. I once saw a girl straddle him as he sat like that, and I turned away, feeling the ever-present longing I wished would go away.
“You’ve already seen it, Rika,” he argued. “I saw you in here watching that movie back in high school. At least twice.”
Twenty-one times, actually.
I liked horror movies, but I also enjoyed sci-fi, so the Alien and Predator franchises were a big hit for me.
And then when they combined them and made Alien vs. Predator? Holy shit.
“Fine by me,” Michael allowed, clicking on the channel, the movie starting just as the team of archeologists had gotten to Antarctica.
The hair on my arms stood up, and my toes curled. I held the sandwich with both hands, taking small bites as I watched the screen. I could hear Michael biting into his sandwich and uncapping his water, and by the time the Alien queen had started laying eggs, I had spread out on my stomach, leaning up on my elbows as I held the sandwich and chewed.
My stomach tightened, hearing the alien queen’s heavy breathing. Her hissing echoed through the surround sound, and when the team of scientists entered the sacrificial chamber, unaware of all the alien eggs in the room that were about to hatch, I put down my sandwich and pushed it away. Grabbing a throw pillow, I crouched down behind it, peeking over the top.
And locking my ankles in the air, I winced as the eggs began to open.
Long legs crawled out of the opening, the music got faster, and the creature lurched, flying through the air toward a woman’s face.
I shot my head down, burying it in the pillow as the shot cut to a new scene.
I twisted my face to the side, laughing as I peeked over at him. “That part always freaks me out.”
But he wasn’t paying attention to the TV. His eyes were on my legs.
I immediately warmed. Had he been watching the movie at all?