Home > The Boy on the Bridge(5)

The Boy on the Bridge(5)
Author: Sam Mariano

I sigh heavily, dread washing over me at the mere thought of the book. “I finished it.”

His eyebrows rise. “Already?”

I nod miserably. “I stayed up all night reading.”

“And?”

“It was terrible,” I enthuse. “Nothing went the way it was supposed to. I’m so mad!”

Hunter smirks. “Perfect. Now you won’t try to make me read it.”

“You should still read it, that way you can be mad with me. Right now you don’t understand my anger. You need to experience the story yourself, then you can join me in my suffering.”

“I guarantee I wouldn’t care as much as you do,” he assures me.

Rather than take his word for it, I sling my new backpack off my shoulder and unzip it while I walk. Drawing out my black paperback copy of Hunger Games, I lovingly pass a hand over it, then I offer it to him. “I brought you book one.”

“I never agreed to this,” he reminds me, looking at the book, but not taking it.

“Come on. My best friend doesn’t read and I need someone to talk about it with.”

“Hard pass.” I wrinkle up my nose at him, but before I can further pester him about it, he takes me off guard by asking, “You want to come over?”

I miss a step and nearly trip, but I try to recover as smoothly as possible. “Come over?”

He nods, walking gracefully. “To my house.”

Every thought in my head seems to explode, leaving nothing left but confused thought-shrapnel. I forget how to make sounds. I forget how to do anything but stare at him and blink in a sort of awed confusion.

He wants me to come over to his house?

“I’m gonna take your silence as a yes,” he tells me.

Finally finding my words, I offer, “That’s a dangerous precedent.”

Hunter smirks over at me. “Tell me no, then.”

“Well, I don’t…” I sigh, unsure what to say. I want to say yes, but seeing how weird Mom got over the backpack, I probably shouldn’t. “My mom gets off work in an hour, so I wouldn’t be able to stay long.”

He shrugs. “That’s all right. I’ve got drama homework you can help me with.”

Cocking an eyebrow at him, I ask, “Oh, so you’re just inviting me over to use me for my homework-doing abilities?”

“Obviously,” he says lightly, knocking into me with his shoulder in a teasing gesture. “Why else would I invite you to my house?”

I roll my eyes at him like he’s annoying me, but he’s definitely not. I don’t know why I’m excited to spend time with him or why I’m so preoccupied by him today, but I can’t deny that I am.

When we make it to his place, I see he was definitely underselling the size of his house when he said it was a “little bit” bigger than mine.

Hunter lives in a mansion with a huge back yard. We cut through the woods to get here so I don’t see the view from the road, but four of my house could comfortably fit in his back yard alone.

While I look around in mild awe, Hunter casually fishes his key out of his backpack and leads me up the steps of their back deck. He unlocks a sliding door that opens up right behind their dinner table.

That seems like a good place to do homework, so I stop and start to drop my backpack on top. Hunter keeps going, though, so I follow him instead.

Seeming to remember his manners, he stops before we leave the kitchen and looks back at me. “Want anything to drink?”

I shake my head no.

“You sure?” he asks, walking over and opening the stainless steel refrigerator. “I’m gonna grab water. You want one?”

I shrug. “Okay.”

Hunter grabs two bottles of water out of the fridge, but keeps his slightly narrowed eyes on me. “Are you getting shy on me?”

My cheeks warm and I drop my gaze, embarrassed that he’s calling me out on it. “No.”

“You sure?” he prods, his tone lightly playful. “You’re starting to turn pink.”

“I’ll leave if you’re just gonna make fun of me,” I inform him, planting a hand on my hip.

“Not until you do my homework, you’re not,” he jokes.

“A minute ago I was helping, now I’m doing the homework?”

“By the time you leave, you’ll be showing up in my place to all my classes. I bet you’re excited.”

“I can’t find the words to adequately express my excitement.”

Handing me a cold bottle of water, he asks, “You know any Greek plays?”

“Greek plays? Sure, I know of a couple. I’ve never actually read any, but... Why?”

“That’s the first part of the assignment. We have to find a Greek play for me to read. It doesn’t sound like a good time.”

“They tend to be tragic,” I agree. “Oedipus Rex is the first one that comes to mind, but it’s probably the first one that comes to everyone’s mind. This isn’t a group project?”

“Nope.”

I give him a perfunctory nod. “We’ll go with something less obvious, then. How about Medea? It’s dark, but there’s probably a decent chance no one else will pick it.”

He leads me toward the staircase at the front of the house, then we head upstairs. “I thought you said you hadn’t read any.”

“I haven’t, but I know what it’s about. It’s a story of vengeance.”

That seems to pique his interest. “Oh, yeah, that sounds good. Why’s this dude want vengeance?”

“It’s actually not the dude who wants vengeance. The main character is this woman who has basically given everything to lift up the dude, Jason. And then the dude decides to leave her for another woman, and boy, does she not appreciate that.”

Hunter cracks a smile. “I bet she doesn’t.”

“Are you acting the play out, or…?”

“Right now we just have to read the play and get a feel for the character we want to make a mask for. We’re making these Greek half-masks though, so I guess we’ll probably have to do some enactment next.”

“Hmm. Well, you could be Jason.”

“I don’t think I want to be Jason. Sounds like he’s gonna get his ass beat.”

“We can try to find one with a less douchey leading man,” I offer as Hunter stops in front of a closed door. “Is this your bedroom?”

“It is,” he verifies, twisting the knob and pushing the door open.

My eyes widen. I’m glad he’s in front of me so he doesn’t see the look on my face. “We’re doing homework in your bedroom? Where is your mom? Is this allowed?”

“My mom is out with friends, and yes, this is allowed. God, you’ve gotta learn to relax. Is your mom super protective or something?”

“No, she’s a normal amount of protective, but she would definitely discourage me having boys in my bedroom.”

“Guess we won’t be doing homework at your house then,” he says lightly.

“I don’t think I would be allowed in your room alone with you, either,” I tell him, despite the heat rushing to my face.

Looking back at me over his shoulder, he asks, “Don’t you ever do anything you’re not allowed to do?”

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