“What are you doing? I asked, shocked.
“We need the room in the back,” he said, pulling the door closed.
“Why?”
He let out an aggravated sigh. “Your fucking mouth never stops, does it?”
I heard Kai snort, and I shot my eyes up, seeing him grinning as he turned the ignition.
Why had they switched seats? I could just as easily have sat in Kai’s lap.
Not that I was complaining.
I let Michael pull me in, my back against his chest, and I blinked long and slow, soaking up whatever was rushing underneath my skin.
His hand rested on my thigh while his other texted on his phone, his thumb jutting out a mile a minute.
“Let’s go,” he told Kai. “Hurry up.”
My jaw ached with a smile as Kai took off. I didn’t know what the hell was next, but all of a sudden, I was having a lot of fun.
Present
ANTHROPOLOGY OF YOUTH CULTURE.
I walked into my first class of this course, already jaded that I’d set myself up for failure. Either I’d relate to it too much or not enough.
Sure, I’d seen plenty of youth culture in my short years. The Horsemen in high school and the hierarchy they dictated. The mob mentality of the hazing events on the basketball team and whatever went on down in the catacombs.
The way the guys schemed as much as the girls, and the way we’d all been mirrors of our parents in some way. The few leaders and the many followers, and the only way you could be strong was if you weren’t alone.
And then there was Devil’s Night. The way much of our town looked the other way and let the youths have that one evening of mischief.
Youth culture in Thunder Bay was a snake pit. Tread lightly with no sudden movements or someone would strike. Unless you were a one of the Horsemen, of course.
But that didn’t mean I really knew anything of youth culture, either. My hometown population was largely wealthy and well-connected. That wasn’t the average. How much of a threat would you be without money, connections, and daddy? Was the playing field more level without those perks?
That’s what I was trying to find out. Without my family name and their money, without my connections and their protection, what was I capable of?
That’s why I’d left Brown and Trevor and the culture I’d grown accustomed to. To find out if I was a follower or a leader. And I doubted I’d stop until I’d proven it was the latter.
I walked down the carpeted stairs into the auditorium, scanning the tan seats for a place to sit. Which was difficult.
The classroom was built for at least a hundred students in staggered seating like that of a movie theater, and it was packed. When I’d registered for this class, I was told it was only offered once every two years, so it looked like a lot of people scooped it up when they could.
My eyes fell on a few empty seats scattered about, and then I stopped, seeing a brunette with long, silky hair dressed in a thin, beige cardigan. Stepping further down the steps, I glanced at her profile and stopped, recognizing her.
I hesitated, clutching the strap to my messenger bag. I didn’t particularly want to sit with her.
But I looked around, seeing places filling u
p, and there were a few empty spots in her row, so I didn’t have to be right next to her, I guess.
I walked down the row, sliding past the legs of the other students and slid into a chair, keeping an empty space between me and the guy to my right and also between me and the brunette on my left.
She glanced over and offered a small smile.
I smiled back. “Hey, you were with Michael the other night, right?” I broached. “At the elevator. We didn’t get a chance to meet.”