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“What’s funny?” Nathan asked. “Can I get up yet?”

“Wait until we get out of Sunnyvale,” Kota said as he shifted the car into reverse.

“Erica took a picture,” I said.

“Holy shit,” Nathan said. “I want to see.”

“Later. It’s on her camera. Knowing her, she’ll probably get it framed.”

“We need a picture, Peanut,” Nathan said. “We need a Honey and Peanut picture. We need a camera. Let’s stop and get one.”

“You’ve got a phone,” Kota said.

“Oh yeah. We’ll do pictures tonight.”

Kota glanced out his rearview mirror. He sighed. “Looks like we have a friend following us.”

I glanced back, spotting a car sliding out of Sunnyvale. There was a car between us but as Kota turned onto another road, the car followed. “Kota...”

“This is getting annoying,” Nathan said. He sat up, scooting into the back seat. “Doesn’t this guy have something better to do?”

“It’s no big deal,” Kota said. “We’re on our way to the football game. If he wants to follow us, he’ll have to sit through the whole game. Although if he starts to follow us to this party, we may have to cancel.”

My eyes stayed on the side mirrors. At a particular turn, I caught the tint of the paint on the car. “It’s not the same car as before.”

Kota checked his rearview. “It looks the same.”

“This one’s a dark gray. The other car was like a really deep blue, almost black. It’s the same model but not the same color.”

“Are you sure?” Nathan asked. “It was getting dark yesterday.”

I turned in my seat, glancing out the back window to see it with my own eyes instead of through the mirror. Sure enough, the color was off. “Yeah. It’s a different color.”

Kota flicked his eyes back and forth from the rearview mirror to the road. “She might be right. The tires are a little different.”

Nathan groaned, and slipped a hand through his reddish-brown hair. “So there’s two guys or one guy with two of the exact same car?”

“It might be how he’s been able to stay up all night several nights in a row,” Kota said. “Because there’s two people keeping tabs on our street.”

“So Mr. Hendricks has more than one person trying to follow you guys?”

Kota flicked his eyes back and forth again. He started to relax, sitting back a little and a soft smile started to emerge. “Good.”

My eyebrows shot up in surprise. “Good? How can you say that?”

“The more people he has, it’s more than likely someone will screw up. We’ll be able to figure out who Mr. Hendricks hires, and why, and maybe they know something about why Mr. Hendricks is eager to get us out of his school.”

I kept an eye on the car, not willing to share his enthusiasm.

DOUBLE DATE

At the school, the parking lot was already starting to fill up with cars. Our tail passed us when Kota turned into the parking lot. He wasn’t going to join us for a football game. It would have been too easy for us to get close in a crowd.

Kota spotted Silas’s blue sedan in the lot and parked next to it. When we got out, the sun was already starting to set beyond the tree line. I could feel the coolness Kota had mentioned settling in and almost wished I had brought a jacket.

“Come on, Peanut,” Nathan said, finding my hand to hold. “Let’s go get a seat.”

“We’ll have to buy tickets,” Kota said.

This surprised me. I’d never been to a school event but I didn’t imagine having to pay for a ticket. For some reason I assumed it would be free.

We followed the crowd flowing toward the football stadium on the other side of the school grounds. It was odd seeing Ashley Waters in the near dark. The place, surprisingly, looked even more gloomy than it did during the day, which didn’t seem possible. The school almost appeared asleep, with only a handful of lights on inside.

When we made it to the sidewalk that guided the way to the stadium, Nathan held my hand and walked on my left, and Kota stood arm to arm with me on my right. I was tempted to reach for his hand, too, but felt awkward doing it while Nathan was holding my hand already.

Still, I didn’t want to leave him alone. Kota was my friend, too.

In the darkness between overhead lighting while we walked the path, I slipped a pinkie toward his, brushing against it.

It seemed to be all he needed. He hooked his pinkie with mine, holding strong to me next to him.

We walked together like that until we approached the booth where we had to get tickets. There, Kota let go, reaching into his pocket for his wallet and paying for three passes.

“When’s homecoming?” Nathan asked after we left the booth and started toward the gate that lead to the already lit up stadium. “When are we going to take her to that?”

“I think you have to ask her to that first before you assume she wants to go.”

Nathan laughed, shaking his head. “Let’s find out when it is. Hopefully we’re not working.”

My heart thundered. They were already planning future dates and I hadn’t been through this one yet! And this wasn’t even a date! Or was it? They were confusing.

We approached the entrance, and I fell back behind Nathan when Mr. McCoy appeared at the gate, apparently put in charge of checking tickets for the evening.

Kota positioned a soothing palm against the back of my neck, urging me to step up next to him. “You’re doing nothing wrong,” he whispered to me.

Nathan’s grip on my hand tightened, and Kota held on around my neck as we stepped closer as our turn approached. Mr. McCoy was barely glancing at faces. When we arrived at the gate though, he paused, glancing at me, and then at the boys on either side.

“Two dates tonight, Miss Sang?”

“Yup,” Nathan said, as if challenging him to say anything further about it.

Mr. McCoy’s eyes shifted over my clothes but he grunted and ripped our tickets, handing back the stubs. There was nothing he could do, I knew. My clothes fit into the regulations. He couldn’t leave his post and there were too many people.

It didn’t stop the deep shiver in my spine from escaping.

“You’re fine, Sang,” Kota said again in my ear, letting go of my neck to go back to holding my pinkie with his.

It was over with for now. At least I knew where Mr. McCoy was. It had escaped me that being a school event that Mr. Hendricks and Mr. McCoy would be here tonight.

As we got closer to the stadium seats, my own hands in the guys’ tightened. I bristled at the number of people already filling in the stands. Most were sitting as close as possible to the fifty yard line. Kota scanned the bleachers, pointing to a spot in the middle of a section closer to the scoreboard. We picked a spot in the middle. For now, our section was mostly empty.

“If it doesn’t get too crowded, they might be able to see us out here,” Kota said. He settled into the seat. I fell in next to him and Nathan slid in close to me on the other side.

My skin electrified with the crispness in the breeze and the exci

tement of being out of the house with the guys. I didn't have to worry about my stepmother finding out, and while I felt guilty about why she wasn’t able to, it felt amazing to know that for right now, I was almost normal. I was out with friends on a Friday evening.

As more people filled in the seats, I was absently staring out onto the field. I was eager to see Silas and North play. I ruffled my fingers over the blue and pink wrist band that Silas had given to me.

There were screechy announcements and people started walking over the field. The attention on our side of the stadium turned to the oncoming game.

When the football team finally entered the field, I stood up, trying to spot Silas and North. Kota and Nathan stood next to me, scanning the players.

“Right there,” Kota said, pointing.

Since they were all wearing the same uniforms, it was hard to tell even with him pointing. Eventually my eyes focused on Silas’s olive skin and dark hair, and next to him was North. If they had their helmets on, it would have been impossible to find them. I was excited for them, but we were so far away. I wasn’t sure they would know we were there.

“I wish we could get closer,” I said.

“Let them get through this beginning part,” Kota said. “When they get ready to play, we’ll see if we can’t go down and wave to them.”

The other team lined up on the field alongside the Ashley Waters team. At first, I thought maybe they were only presenting the opposing team’s star players. When no one else joined them, and no other players stood on the opposite side’s benches, it stunned me.

“How come our team has so many people?”

Nathan turned to me. “What?”

“Our team has like a hundred people out there.”

“A hundred and twelve,” Kota said quickly.

“And the opposite team has...” I started counting off.

“Fifty seven,” Kota replied before I could finish counting.

I grinned. He was quick. “But why do we have almost twice as many players?”

“Our school is bigger,” Nathan said. “More people in the school, more people on the team.”


Tags: C.L. Stone The Ghost Bird Romance