Part 29 (2/2)

”Bye, Lane.”

I wait for him to leave and when he doesn't, I walk around him and toward my cla.s.s. When I glance over my shoulder, he's still following me, looking down at my shoes. I stop abruptly, turn to him. ”Luke?”

”Yeah?”

I point behind him. ”Your locker's that way.”

After school, in the Preston house, Luke and I wait for his dad in the office. It may not seem like a big deal that we're in Tom's office, but it is for me. I've walked past the room many a time and sometimes the door's even been open and I've looked inside, but it's been seven years since I first stepped foot in this house and I've never actually been in Tom's office. It feels so forbidden, so grand, so-”What's with your face, Lane?”

I side-eye Luke. ”I've never been in here before,” I whisper, checking the door to make sure Tom isn't coming. ”I feel like I've been called to the princ.i.p.al's office.” I use my jeans to wipe the sweat off my palms. ”Doesn't it feel like that to you?”

Luke shakes his head, looks at me like I'm stupid. ”We normally get our punishments in the kitchen or living room so...”

”Wow... yeah... that's true,” I whisper absentmindedly.

”I was kidding, Lane. What's going on with you?”

”I don't know.” I sigh. ”I think I'm nervous to tell your dad. What if he ends up hating me? I mean, let's be real, this is all about Cooper getting back with me.”

”With you or at you?” Lucas says, and now he looks nervous.

Tom enters the room, saving me from responding, and he sits his big frame in his big leather chair behind his big desk and smiles just as big at us. ”Hey kids, what's up?”

I'm about to ruin everything you've worked so hard to build, that's ”what's up.”

”The Kennedys are starting their own construction company in town,” Luke says, as if it's that simple, as if that's all there is to the story.

Tom's eyebrows shoot up, and he looks from Luke to me. I look down at my hands. ”I know this,” he says. ”But how do you and why did you feel the urgency to tell me?”

”You're not worried?” Luke asks.

”Should I be?”

”Sir Tom,” I start, and Luke chuckles.

”Sir Tom? Really?”

”Shut up.”

”Lane,” Tom says, ”What's wrong?”

”Cooper-my ex-”

”Your ex?” he asks. ”I wasn't aware...”

I force a smile. ”Cooper offered my dad a job.”

”Right.” Tom nods. ”And let me guess, he threw in a bunch of perks?”

”Yes, sir.”

Luke laughs. ”What? No Sir Tom?”

I kick his leg.

Tom sighs. ”You know what the good thing about our town is, kids? And I say kids because that's what you are, and you really shouldn't be worrying about this stuff. The good thing about our town is that everyone knows everyone's business, and people like to talk about that business. I've known about this since the company was created five days ago.”

”And you're not worried?” I ask.

”No.”

”How can you be so confident?”

Tom looks from me to Lucas and back again. Then he leans forward, lowers his voice. I find myself leaning into the conversation. ”Because I had Wendy in the office call Lance Kennedy, make out like she was from the newspaper and asked for an interview about his new venture into the construction trade and you know what Lance said? He said, What construction trade?'”

”So Lance doesn't know?” I mumble.

Luke says, ”So he lied to your dad?”

Tom leans back in his chair, gets more comfortable. ”I spoke to Brian today, we had a good laugh about it. He didn't mention anything about Cooper offering him a job.”

I sigh. ”Maybe I made this a bigger deal than it is.”

Tom chuckles. ”I love you both. Really, I do. But you're only this young once, and you've both been through so much in your eighteen years. And Lucas, you carry more responsibilities than most your age. But this-worrying about me and the business-it's something I never want either of you to have to be burdened with. Do me a solid? Let loose now and then, enjoy life, get into a little trouble, y'know?”

Luke smiles. ”Yes, sir.”

”Good,” Tom says. ”Now that that's out of the way, what time's your meet next weekend?”

”What meet?” I ask him. I have all of Luke's track meets scheduled in my phone, and there's no meet next weekend. ”I don't know about a meet.”

”It's not a school one,” Luke a.s.sures and then eyes his dad, shakes his head, just slightly.

”What meet?” I ask again.

Tom doesn't take Luke's hint. ”It's an independent meet in Charlotte. Not school related.”

”I want to go!” I say.

Tom says, ”He'll probably beat his PB. He's so close.”

<script>