Her eyes went as white as her cheerleading sleeves had been.
-18-
KAYLA
There wasn’t a cloud in the sky. There wasn’t a breeze, either, which meant the sun was brutal. As I slathered a new coat of sunscreen on my nose, I watched the marching band’s halftime performance on the field. A sea of white spats moved with precision, all while the powerful music flowed from their instruments. I loved our band so much. I’d been so thrilled when Chuck told me not only was he going to Ohio State, but he was going to try out for the sousaphone line.
Our game against Tulsa was going well. We were up by fourteen points at the half, and the stadium had a jovial, relaxed feel. I finished smearing on sunscreen and dug my phone out of my bag, using the camera to make sure I didn’t miss any globs of white or need to touch up my makeup.
The home screen was full of notifications, mostly score updates. But I’d also put an alert on Jay’s name, and it was like a twisted game of fantasy football, where you find yourself rooting for players on teams you don’t like. Only this was serious.
Jay was an amazing athlete. That wasn’t debatable—it was fact. These alerts were the proof. I scrolled through them, trying to get the highlights. Their opponent was scoreless, but Michigan had one touchdown. A short pass to J. Harris.
I was so engrossed in my phone, I didn’t realize until it was too late. Lisa was now sitting beside me and leaned over, her voice dipping low. “We need to chat.”
“About?” I turned off my phone and tossed it into my equipment bag, acting indifferent while unease spiked inside. Had she seen my screen? Was she wondering why I was looking at Michigan’s game summary?
“Let’s talk about your man.” She lifted one eyebrow. “And what you’re going to do to keep me quiet.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Really?” Her grin was evil and she raised her voice over the marching band. “You’ve never seen Sleeping with the Enemy? They only run that movie, like, eighty-eight times a month on Lifetime!”
Oh, shit. The cheerleaders sitting nearby turned their heads toward Lisa.
I scowled and dropped my voice low. “Who cares if I’m friends with a guy who might play for Michigan?”
“Are you insane?” She looked at me like I was wearing a yellow and blue uniform. “Well, I mean, clearly you are, given your boyfriend. But they’re going to flip out, big time.”
My voice was small, and I couldn’t even convince myself. “Not my boyfriend, and it’s not that big of a deal.”
“Not that . . .? You’re the captain.” Lisa’s gaze narrowed, as if she were evaluating me for delusions. She shrugged it off and brightened. “Okay. I need a heads-up when you’re going to tell them. I want to video with my phone. It’s going to be too much drama for me to take in all at once.”
Was Lisa right? Would the squad deem me unfit to be captain when they learned the truth? I’d worked so hard to get the spot, and I loved it. I couldn’t risk Lisa blurting it out in the most damaging way. Which she’d absolutely do.
I didn’t want to cave to her blackmail, but did I have any other option? “What do you want?”
“The travel squad. I deserve a spot.”
This wasn’t hard to sacrifice, especially because she was right. Our coach had asked me for recommendations on Friday, and I’d included Lisa. She was a great cheerleader, and a senior.
But I wasn’t going to be a pushover either. “I don’t have control over that.”
“Bull. You and I both know Samantha lets the captain set the line-up.”
I clenched my teeth. “I’ll see what I can do.”
“Great.” She smiled a big, toothy grin. “You do that.” Her tone made it clear this was just the tip of the iceberg. If I’d let her, Lisa would bleed me dry.
Two-and-oh. The crowd at the Buckeye Bar was buzzing. The first games of the season weren’t within our conference, but we typically won, since we were playing at home. Although our fans went with us everywhere, making every game feel like a home game.
“Where are you rushing off to?” my mother asked.
I’d finished my wrap in record time, but couldn’t exactly tell her a guy was driving down from Ann Arbor for a visit. Or that I needed time to get mentally ready for being near Jay again.
“Chuck invited some people over and our place is a mess,” I said.
This was only half of a lie. Our place was messy, but Chuck hadn’t invited people over. He was going to a drumline kegger, and he’d commented not to wait up for him, which worked out perfectly. And perhaps Beth would make an appearance at the party, and Chuck could have enough liquid courage to make his approach.