《Keeping You A Secret •CHAENNIE•》Part 8
Advertisement
“Did you finish your essays on those two applications?” Mom asked at dinner. “They have to go out next week.”
“Yes,” I said.
Mom eyed me. Rosie was right, I was a terrible liar. “I’ll do them tomorrow.”
“You keep saying that.” Mom passed the bowl of creamed corn to Woo Bin. “You’re running out of tomorrows.”
Running out of tomorrows, I repeated to myself in my room, sprawling across my bed to begin another midnight marathon of homework. Sometimes I felt as if there were no tomorrows, that everything, my whole life, was crammed into one long day. A continuous stretch of meaningless time. Sometimes I even wished there was no tomorrow, if this was all I had to look forward to.
I opened my econ text, then shut it. I scrounged in my pack for my sketchbook instead. So far it included a full-page, cross-hatched drawing of Rosie’s head, a side shot of her ear, a drawing of her right hand on the art table with the assortment of rings she always wore. I wasn’t close enough to get details of the patterns in the rings.
On the next page was a picture of the light switch – wow, that was exciting. I flipped to a blank page. With a half-moon shadow from my study lamp, the basement rafters would make a stunning still-life. Ugh. I needed inspiration. What was it Mackel said? “Let it come. Don’t force it. Just free-draw.” Which, to me, meant free fall. It was at times like this I wished I did drugs.
Okay. I got up and searched through my CDs. Didn’t get too far. I cranked up the volume on Dixie Chicks and lay back, closing my eyes, to “let it come.”
What came was her. The way one side of her mouth cricked up a little higher than the other when she smiled. That freckle, or mole, right above her lip. The sparkle in her eyes, the warmth. The fire, too, when she was pissed. Her skin, how it seemed to glow. I positioned my pencil and began to transfer the image of her from my mind to paper.
The CD ended and I focused on what I’d drawn. Her head, sporting a baseball cap, not a bad likeness. Her face was wrong, though. Out of symmetry. I could see her so clearly in my mind’s eye, hear her laughing. That sound, the music in her voice.
The sensation was stirring. It aroused me in a was… almost as if…
As if I was falling for her.
Okay, that didn’t shock me. I’d had crushes on girls before. I mean, who hadn’t? I’d see a girl in the mall or at swim meets and think, Wow, would I ever like to meet her. I wouldn’t act on the impulse or anything. I’d stop myself.
That’s what it was with Rosie. An innocent crush. I admired her. She was strong, self-confident. So damn cool. Attractive in a way only another girl would see.
What did I see? I didn’t know exactly. Couldn’t capture it on paper. It – she – wouldn’t stay still.
I lay the sketchbook aside and scrambled to my feet, ejecting the CD and tossing it in my bag. At the top of the stairs, I ran into Mom and Woo Bin in the kitchen, necking. “Ooh, caught ya,” I said, waggling an accusatory finger.
Mom actually blushed. Removing my parka from the coat rack, I informed them, “I’m going out for a while.”
“In this weather?” Mom looked aghast.
Advertisement
“I’m wearing clean underwear. Just in case.”
***
Seoul Central was farther than it seemed. I printed out an Internet map at the computer lab during study hall today. The legend was misleading; it had to be more than twenty-five miles away, and the streets were sheer ice. A stoplight changed unexpectedly and I slammed on the brakes, skidding through the intersection. Horns blared and an SUV narrowly missed me.
Shit. My heart hammered against my ribs. What was I doing?
Had to see her. Talk to her. Apologize about the locker incident. About the assholes in our school. Try to make it right. Even though the janitors had painted over the lockers by the end of the day – covered up the crime so we could all pretend it never happened – she had to be freaked. I wanted to quell her fears.
Depressing the gas pedal slightly and swerving away from the curb, I inched along toward town. After circling the block a couple of times, I spotted it: Hott ’N Tott Donuts.
Ten minutes later I was still huddled in the parking lot, shivering from the cold. Not only from the cold. “This is stupid,” I muttered. “Get out already.” What was I afraid of?
Her, that’s what. This had nothing to do with the locker incident. I wanted her to like me. Wanted to find out if she did. Was that important enough to risk my life over? Apparently.
So cold. I started the engine again and cranked up the heater.
She wasn’t even here. I hadn’t caught a glimpse of her through the plate glass window in the year I’d been stalling, freezing my butt off. I was safe. Just came to check the place out, buy a cup of coffee. Reasonable, rational. Only one customer had braved the weather – a cab driver who was hunched over one of the tables, nursing a cup of coffee while thumbing through the newspaper.
“Just go get a donut. What’s the big deal?”
Okay. I bolstered my courage. Opened the Jeep door and got out.
“Evening, Help ya?” the older man behind the counter asked. He smiled kindly. Was this Rosie’s uncle?
I smiled back. “I’ll, um, have one of those.” I pointed to a glazed
cinnamon twist. “And… Do you have hot chocolate?”
“Sure do. What size?”
I skimmed the cup display. “Medium, I guess.”
“For here or to go?” He stoked up the cocoa machine.
My eyes searched the interior. No sign of her. “To go,” I answered.
He finished my order and rang it up. “Is Rosie her?” I asked, handing him a five.
“Chaeyoung-ahhh!” he shouted through a rear door.
“What?” she shouted back.
My heart raced. Exploded.
“You got company.”
Rosie appeared out of nowhere, wiping her floured hands on an apron. The top of her head was covered in a blue bandanna, tied gypsy style. When she saw me, she stopped dead in the doorway.
Well, finally, I’d managed to shock her. “Hey.” I hitched my chin. “I was in the neighbourhood.”
The hint of a smile crooked her lips. “Unc, okay if she comes back?”
He eyed me up and down. “Sure, I guess.” He opened the counter top, which was hinged on one side. “No funny business.” He pointed at Rosie.
She blew out a puff of air at him.
What did he mean by that? No funny business.
Rosie walked across the room to a long butcher block table. I followed. “You can pull up a stool if you want,” she said over her shoulder.
Advertisement
I set down my cocoa and twist on the table, then dragged over a high-backed stool and climbed aboard.
Rosie lifted a rolling pin and ran it over a circle of dough. “What are you doing here really?” she asked.
“Like I said –”
“In the neighbourhood.” Her eyes cut to me and she grinned. “Let me just get these in the proofer. It’ll only take a minute.” She sprinkled cinnamon and sugar on the dough, rolled it into a snake, and sliced it into identically sized wedges, as if she’d been doing this all her life.
“I’m sorry about what happened today,” I said.
“Forget it. It’s not your fault. Grab me that pan.” She pointed.
I flinched at her sudden movement. I pulled out a large, aluminium tray from the rack behind me and handed it to her. With a spatula, she flipped the wedges onto the tray, then carried it to a glassed-in case where racks of similar pans were resting. Proofing, I surmised. I’d never seen the inner workings of a donut shop. It was all shiny metal and spicy smells. Sparkling and sweet and warm. So why was I trembling?
Rosie returned, exhaling a weary breath, and leaned against the cutting table, arms folded.
“What?” I said.
She smiled and shook her head at the floor. “Nothing.”
“You work here every night?” I sipped my cocoa.
“Why don’t you drop by and find out.” She lifted her eyes and held mine.
Two could play at this game. “You’d like that, wouldn’t you?”
She set down the spatula. “What do you think?” she said.
I think I couldn’t breathe.
“Chaeng-ah, when you’re done with the rolls would you mix a batch of egg batter for the morning?” her uncle called through the door.
“Slave driver,” she called back.
I liked that, the banter. I liked everything about her.
“What?” She zeroed in on me again.
I blinked away, realizing I’d been staring at her. “I don’t know.” My eyes skimmed the floor tiles. Checkerboard.
“If you don’t know, then I can’t help you.” Rosie moved past me, almost grazing my arm. Almost.
“Okay, so I’ll just help myself,” I quipped, retrieving my cinnamon twist off the table and chomping off the end.
She disappeared into a back room. A few seconds later she stepped out, lugging a bag of flour. “Look,” she said, dumping the bag on the table. “I really have a lot to do, okay? And I don’t like playing games.”
Heat fried my face. “I’m sorry.” I slid off the stool; stumbled. Dropped my twist on the floor. “I’ll go.” I picked it up. As I staggered for the open doorway to flee, escape, I heard her curse and pound the table with a fist.
She hated me, I thought. What have I done? Oh, God. She hated me.
***
For the first time in my life, I didn’t get all my homework finished. I set my alarm for five A.M., but instead of hitting the books, I went swimming.
The lights were still off in the pool area when I got there and it was so quiet my bare feet echoed. I dove in.
The cold surged through my veins – a welcome relief. I concentrated on my muscles contracting, my arms slicing through the water. Soon the rhythm of my breathing and stroking and breathing and stroking drowned out my thoughts. Banished my feelings to a dark recess in my mind, where they should be banished.
Forget her. Force her out of your head, get her out of you.
I don’t know how long I swam, lap after lap after mind-numbing lap. My lungs and muscles collapsed simultaneously, and I let my final kick propel me to the edge.
Where she was sitting, elbows on knees. She looked me in the eye and said, “I was in the neighbourhood.”
I wrenched off the shower faucets, but wasn’t about to go gallivanting through the locker room half naked. Although…
She likes me. I smiled to myself. I wonder what she’d do if –
My phone rang. Before I could think, Rosie called, “I’ll get it.”
Towelling my head, I heard her say, “Who? No, sorry. What number did you dial?”
I gave my prickled body a once over and wrapped the towel around me. A little lower than usual. Grabbing my wet swimsuit off the floor, I padded to the benches, asking, “Who was it? My mother?”
“Wrong number.” Rosie scanned me up and down, then let out a breath. She stood abruptly and said, “I need coffee. Gotta fly.”
I sank to the bench, feeling embarrassed, exposed. Stupid. I quickly got dressed.
***
On the way to my Jeep at lunch to head for McDonald’s, Nayeon said, “Oh, by the way, Jennie, Kai. Saturday night’s off. Jackson dumped me.”
I skidded to a stop on the icy parking lot. “Nayeon, oh no. What happened?”
“The funniest thing. His mother doesn’t approve of me. Says I’m too old for her little Trevie. I guess word got back to her that I was a slut.” Her glare sliced through me.
What? I never – “Oh, excuse me,” she added. “A player.”
“Nayeon,” I protested, then said more gently, “I’m really sorry.” I was. She looked miserable. She wasn’t even wearing makeup today, her face was all pale and blotchy.
She gazed off into the distance. “I can never keep anything good.” Her eyes pooled with tears. I reached to hug her, but she climbed into the back of the Jeep, scooting over to the far side and staring straight ahead.
Chu and I exchanged glances. I think Jisoo already knew. She crawled beside Nayeon and patted her knee. Felt her pain, I suppose, more than me.
“Saturday night?” Kai said at my side. “What was Saturday night?”
Oops. Guess I forgot to tell him. “Nothing. Doesn’t matter now.” He was going to say something else, but I cut him off by handing him the keys. “You drive.” Normally Kai rode shotgun, but today he’d brought along Coop, so I figured he’d appreciate the opportunity to amp up the testosterone.
McD’s was jammed with little kids squealing and chasing each other around Playland. As the five of us claimed a booth in back, I said to Nayeon, “Do you want me to come over tonight? Talk about it?”
“No. I’m all right. He’s a momma’s boy. So what? He was getting on my nerves, anyway.” She stuck a straw through the lid of her diet Coke. “So is your lezzie friend going to reapply for a Gay Straight Alliance?” she asked.
“No,” I answered, a slow burn spreading through my gut. “Don’t call her that, okay? Her name is Rosie.” I lifted my Big Mac to my mouth. “She doesn’t want a GSA. Just a gay club.” I took a bite.
“See?” Nayeon bent over to sip her soda.
“Agenda.”
I chewed and swallowed fast. “There is no gay agenda.” I tried to control my voice, my temper.
“Could I have some ketchup?” Jisoo interrupted.
Around in front of me, Kai passed her a handful of packets.
Nayeon said, “Did you see the shirt she was wearing yesterday? That OUT! AND PROUD!?” She curled her lip.
“What’s wrong with it?” I said.
Nayeon shook her head. “She’s just so obvious. Look at me, I’m gay. I’m special,” she mocked.
My jaw clenched. I set down my burger, deliberately.
Jisoo piped up, “I don’t think that’s what she’s doing. She’s just being who she is.”
I sent Jisoo a silent thank you.
Jisoo added, “I imagine it’s pretty lonely being the only out person in school. I think she’s incredibly brave. I don’t know how they find each other if they’re not out.”
Coop said, “They list their phone numbers in the john. ‘For a good time, call Bruce. +82-800-222 –’”
Nayeon snorted. Coop smirked. He said, “You know what gay means, don’t you? Got AIDS Yet?”
Kai pre-empted my explosion. “Shut up, Coop. That isn’t funny. You going to eat that?” He indicated my Big Mac.
I shoved it over to him.
Nayeon dipped a Chicken McNugget into a cup of barbecue sauce and popped it into her mouth. “She’s just trolling for meat,” she said with her mouth full. Turning to Coop, she added, “And not the Oscar Mayer weiner variety.”
He choked on a fry.
That did it. I elbowed Kai. “Let me out.”
“What? We’re not done.”
“I am.”
He just sat there.
“Move!”
Kai scooted off the end of the bench. I pushed past him and stormed out the exit.
I hated how they talked about them. About her. Nayeon, Coop, all of them. Especially Nayeon. I understood that she hurt, she was venting, directing her pain elsewhere. Still, she should just shut up.
Advertisement
- In Serial72 Chapters
An Un-Ideal Eternity
An Un-Ideal Eternity is about a man named Desmond, who is killed, revived, and then finds himself immortal in a post-apocalyptic society. Just because it’s a society doesn’t mean that either he or “they” have to be civilized. And just because a gentleman has become immortal does not mean that he has no dangers to be wary of. The good news is that he’s been afforded some very kind and very generous ministrations from his future-self. The bad news is that all those efforts might still not be enough, to allow our hero, to live in as untroubled and as un-tumultuous a manner as he’d prefer.
8 100 - In Serial6 Chapters
Seize The Stars
In this world of vast diversity our earl of Youfu dukedom, Long Youfu, starts his journey on his path to endless strength. He is a person of vast knowledge and talents and he fights on the side of righteousness defeating tyrants and evil beings. He is outlawed and treated wrongly by the world around him yet he stands firm against all odds.
8 82 - In Serial78 Chapters
Drezo Regalia
Yami Hikari company had created a new game gear called the Embyro that are split into two different gears: the first is the deep dive gear called ‘Sense' and the second is high tech glasses called ‘Alive.' One is made to transport the players mind to a virtual world, while the other is the next generation new technology that incorporates the reality with the game. A game where it test the limits of technology and human boundaries. What is real? What is fake? Who is right or wrong? What is the Seed? Is life just a game? Three different people's destinies are intertwined: One is on a mission, One wants change in life, and One wants to be left alone. Their story converges in a Virtual Reality MMO game called Growth. This is a story of Zero, Agnis, and BlackStar. Welcome to the Beginning of the End is a Beginning. Let the Song of Infinity ring again. (My name is Jane. The original creator of Drezo Regalia, Howling, Black Moon, Mind Linker, and Valkyrie's Lament. This story is my first ever story written and it might not be the best. I am just reposting the story in Royal Road. The story can also be found on http://enlightendragons.com where the original home of the Drezo Regalia series reside. To get a faster release check out https://www.patreon.com/snowangel. Your help will be greatly appreciated.)
8 110 - In Serial44 Chapters
When Life Stands Still (bxb)
[participant in the Royal Road Writathon challenge] The world came to an end very unexpectedly. A scientific invention gone wrong. The virus spread through a being that was being modified and experimented on. Within two month the human population on the earth reduced to a mere 35%. The rest?? Cold, Unfeeling, emotionless, and dead walking corpses. This is the beginning of hell on earth. Ash Kage (20):Has a very guarded personality. He doesn't easily let others too close to his heart. Doesn't know how to really hide his expressions. Has a very valued unique ability that everyone seeks during the apocalypse. He made one mistake which turned his entire life into a living nightmare - he pushed Rhys Grant. After one life of torture he is reborn but the moment he is reborn is still after he made the mistake.Is he fated to go through the same hellish life again? Rhys Grant (23):Was part of a gang so has lots of fighting experience. Becomes one of the major figures of the northern base. The kind of person who hates you until death if you cross him but loves you to heaven and back if you are dear to him. Stubborn as a bull doesn't listen to anyone once he makes up his mind.Hates Ash Kage. Remembers his past life and still hates Ash. This story is also published on Wattpad. Disclaimer: this is a BL story that means both the main characters are boys. Its also tagged as 18+ so be warned. This might not just include sex but also violence, gore, abuse and rape because that's how a real apocalypse is. If you are uncomfortable with that I advice you not to read. And finally, I haven't decided if the ending is a happy one or not so don't expect me to change the plot just because you want a happy ending.
8 75 - In Serial22 Chapters
I am a tree
A great tree stands upon a hill overlooking a vast amount of land. The tree will always protect nature, the tree will always nurture nature, I am the tree.
8 204 - In Serial32 Chapters
Queen Crack
Se me ocurrió viendo un video jsjsjsjsjsjsjs , un lugar para descargar todas las pendejadas que se me vienen a la cabeza xd
8 118

