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For my sister,
who inspired me to
even write this book
without you, I may be somewhere else.
The
most important thing is that we have each other. Because we're all
in this together.
-
Newt, Maze Runner
Chapter
One
MELANIE
I
don't understand
why you're so obsessed with this game. What's the point in even
going?" Alek snapped her pencil lead as she spoke, letting out an
inaudible scoff, and threw the piece of lead elsewhere. She looked up
to her, her eyes peering around for a moment before settling. Melanie
gave a stiff shrug, unsure.
"Well, I don't know--why are
you so nosy?" Melanie said, her mouth tightening in a thin line.
Alek snickered.
"Because you've been non-stop talking about this bum game for a
week. Literally, that's all I've heard out of your lips. Are you
even going to go?" She exclaimed in a tired, mocking tone as she
slumped against her desk, her eyes lowering to reveal her exhaustion.
Melanie scoffed,
opening her mouth to reply, but Roscoe beat her to it.
"Alek, you don't
even go outside," Roscoe said from his own corner of the table,
laser-focused on his work in front of him, as if Alek wasn't worth
looking at.
Alek clenched the
pencil in her hand. "Who the hell are you talking to right now!?"
She barked, shoving herself out of her seat and moving to where
Roscoe was sitting, planting her hands firmly against the desk as she
let out instigating remarks towards him.
Oh My God.
"Can you shut up?"
Melanie hissed through her teeth to the two of them, who, at this
point, were now at one another's necks.
"Tell him to stop
being an ass," Alek demanded, eyes narrowing.
"Tell her to quit
being lazy." He retorted coolly.
Alek's teeth
ground together; her hand twitching upward, her fingers curling as if
she wanted to reach for his throat-
But the sharp ring
of the bell cut through, snapping the tension and saving Roscoe from
his doom.
"I know where you
live." She whispered, her eyes narrowed, backing away to her desk
and retrieving her bag, throwing all her belongings into it with
careless force.
Melanie exhaled
heavily, swinging her bag over her shoulders and shoving her seat in
with her foot. The three of them flooded out of the room-Alek
ranting beside her about something she didn't remember, but Melanie
nodded nonetheless, and Roscoe trailed behind quietly.
The hallway was
flooded with voices and lockers slamming shut, bodies pressed so
close together that it was oddly uncomfortable and warm. Melanie
tightened her bag straps, dodging and swerving through the crowd,
Alek pushing through ahead of her with her large build.
"Move out the
way!" She beckoned to a poor freshman, who squeaked and cowered out
of the way.
"Don't be an
asshole." Roscoe couldn't help but say from behind, shaking his
head disapprovingly.
Alek shot her head
around, glaring daggers right at Roscoe, who hid behind Melanie and
continued to walk.
"I swear if I hear
your voice again-" She angrily said, jabbing a finger toward
Roscoe, who held an unreadable gaze. "I might actually kill you.
Like, really kill you. None of that "Oh, I'm sorry, officer, I
didn't mean to' shit."
Melanie pressed her
lips together, eyes flicking to Alek and the floor so as not to trip.
"Alek, oh my god-"
"Don't give me
that! Look at his damn face. All smug and shit, like he thinks he's
immune to my fist punching his face. Ugh, why do you even talk,
Ross?" She said, whirling around mid-step, almost making a freshman
run into her bag.
"You're doing
enough talking for everyone in this school." He snarkily said,
shrugging his shoulders as he clicked his locker open, grabbing his
belongings, and neatly placing them into his organized bag.
Alek let out a
strangled noise, somewhere between a laugh and a groan, her hands
clenching her jacket at her sides.
Melanie opened her
mouth, getting a partial word out, before she closed her mouth. Her
heart started to race rapidly, suddenly feeling like she was on the
edge of a cliff. Her cheeks felt hot all the sudden. Every word she
wanted to let out became stuck in her mouth like a dam. She wanted to
say something, but nothing came out except air.
Alek stared
curiously, a smug look on her face as she snapped her head around, a
confused look replacing it in an instant.
Him.
Him being Eduardo
Morien.
"Oh?" Alek
whispered under her breath as she wiped her head back around to
Melanie, pressing her eyes into a thin line.
Roscoe coughed,
clearing his throat, "Someone's got a crush."
"Shut up, Roscoe!"
Alek yelled at him, lifting her fist to smack him upside his head.
Melanie didn't
care. She tuned the two of them out as hard as she could, her eyes
staring at nothing else except Eduardo. He'd been her long-time
crush since she could remember clearly. Maybe since the fourth grade,
when he helped her pick up her pencils after Lewis Sargent shoved her
like the asshole he was. It was like love at first sight for her when
she locked eyes with those blue eyes that never seemed to escape her
mind. Was it a little ridiculous? Maybe. Eduardo had no clue who she
was, let alone what her name was. He'd been Mr. Popular since he
could practically walk; everyone looked up to him like he was some
Greek god straight from the book.
She would have
stared longer if she could've, but the bell ringing snapped her
away from her dream world, causing her to jump a little. She let out
a small, inaudible gasp as she looked to Roscoe and Alek, then back
to Eduardo-
The hallway seemed
to stretch out in a blur of movement-students bobbing and weaving
in and out, the slam of lockers like thunder cracking. To Melanie, it
all dissolved into background noise the second her gaze caught his
own: Eduardo.
He was standing on
the far side of the wall, his shoulder casually against the cool
metal of the locker, hand at his side, his head bent as he spoke to
someone-Kansas, his closest friend-but that didn't matter to
her. His hair fell perfectly into his face, catching the
late-afternoon sunlight slanting through the windows in the hall. It
made him look sharper, almost unreal to the human eye, like he'd
been cut from the purest of purest apples.
Melanie's pulse
quickened, every thump sending a pressure against her ribcage as if
her body was going to implode on its own.
The glance was
quick, his eyes just barely lifting and absently grazing over her, as
though he were scanning the entire hallway just for a moment, but
then they stayed. For a split second, she forgot how to breathe
correctly. His eyes were hard yet warm in a way that seemed out of
place in the crowded, fluorescent hallway. They didn't just dart
away like they usually did; No, they lingered. It was as if he was
actually seeing her, not just glancing at her. He was seeing
her.
The sounds of the
hallway only dulled more than before; her whole body had tunneled in
on the connection she felt at that second. She felt her stomach knot
with nervous heat, her throat tightening, as if she were caught
between a laugh and a scream of pure joy. Her hands turned white as
they tightened around her bag strap, pulling it any tighter, and her
bag may rip in half right there.
Eduardo's
expression shifted-just barely, but she caught it. His mouth
opened, a hint of words begging to escape. Still, nothing happened.
He'd somehow noticed the flush rising in her face, or maybe that
she was stiff in terror, or perhaps that she was blatantly staring at
him like she was witnessing God be resurrected right in front of her
eyes. He knew something. Her heart burned.
Inevitably, she tore
her eyes away, heart hammering so hard it almost pained her. She
looked down at the tiled floor, at her laced shoes, at anything that
wasn't him. But even as she did that, she could still feel
his eyes burning into her, like they were about to laser through her.
Alek's monotone
voice finally stabbed through the fog. "Why the fuck are you
staring into space like some psychoward patient? What's wrong with
you?"
Melanie shook her
head instantly, forcing a scoff at Alek's remark and turning to her
now. "It's nothing." It was more than nothing, but that's all
she needed to know at the moment.
"If nothing means
Eduardo, then sure." Alek retorted.
She turned on her
heel to walk to her next class, ducking her head, arms crossed. Alek
obviously knew; she knew everything about Melanie. Why wouldn't
she? Roscoe knew more than anyone else. He was too smart not to know.
She never needed to tell him things because he already knew.
But all she knew was
that she felt something. But she didn't know what it was. It burned
inside of her, though; it sent fireworks through her entire body like
the Fourth of July.
She wanted to feel
that again, but surely, he wouldn't reciprocate.
Chapter
Two
EDUARDO
"This is unfair!"
Kansas screamed across the gym, throwing a basketball toward his
teammate.
The
sound of sneakers rubbing against the gym floor was rhythmic to his
ears. The sound of basketballs rapidly thudding against the court,
echoing high off the barely painted walls. The basketball slamming
into his hands, Eduardo pivots, dodging a player, and shooting the
ball into the hoop, watching it glide through cleanly.
"Quit showing off, moron!" Kansas screamed from the sidelines,
his voice echoing off the walls like the basketballs.
Eduardo
grinned without even looking, catching the pass and driving it in
with a clean shot that kissed the rim and fell through, once more.
"Not my fault you can't keep up, Alaska!" He shot back.
Kansas
groaned very dramatically, yanking a ball from the rack and logging
it toward him full force. "You think being captain makes you the
king of every sport, huh?
"I
don't think," Eduardo paused, flicking the ball to Kansas, "I
know so."
"Cocky
bastard," Kansas muttered under his breath, taking his shot and
missing.
Eduardo
didn't try to hide his grin this time. "You're very consistent,
I'll give you that point."
"Consistently
cool."
"Consistently
annoying and trash."
Kansas
went to shout at him, but then the buzzard blared, and soon after,
the bell rang, signaling the end of class.
"Hit
the lockers! Let's go!" Coach yelled over the sound of everyone
grabbing their things.
Eduardo
grabbed his backpack from the bleachers, slinging it over his
shoulder. Kansas fell in step beside him, still ranting about
something random about a new girl in his class.
"You're
coming over Saturday, right? Don't tell me you got somethin'
better to do."
Eduardo
narrowed his eyes. "We'll see."
"You
say that, and then you still show up like you own my house," Kansas
retorted in a tired voice, shaking his head.
Eduardo
just shrugged, fixing his hair. "I'm just that amazing, KanKan."
"Don't
call me KanKan!"
The two
of them pushed open the heavy gym doors, the hallway noise instantly
washing over them as soon as. Eduardo winced at the sound of it all,
sighing inaudibly as he and Kansas pushed through the crowd toward
their lockers. In an instant, Kansas began to ramble on about some
incident from a while ago, but Eduardo just acted like he was
listening-when in reality he was in his own head.
"And
then she actually threw it at me, you know?" Kansas said, hands
flailing around as he spoke. "Like a cup full of ice and
everything. I had to walk to second period looking like I pissed my
pants until Theo let me borrow some clothes."
The
hallway was too loud today.
Lockers
slamming shut, voices talking over one another, shouting, the smell
of food and breakfast still lingering in the air. Eduardo opened his
locker right beside Kansas, half-listening to his boring story of his
adventures and the new girl in class, going through it and grabbing
any book he thought he was going to need for the rest of the
day.
"And,
and! Not to mention, she did all of this just because I didn't
answer her texts! Like I'm swamped! She didn't even give me a day
to respond!" He dramatically went on, gritting his teeth.
Eduardo
let out a soft, almost inaudible laugh, shaking his head to Kansas
once he finally began to pay attention. It was entertaining to listen
to him, but sometimes he wondered how he became friends with him.
He
adjusted the strap of his bag, easing the weight from his shoulder
and letting his head rest against the cold metal of the lockers
behind him. The bell was close to ringing, just a few minutes before
class. The hallway was backed up and slow, like it was slowing down
in real time, everyone shifting around and dodging elbows. Normal
day. Same noises. Same faces.
Until
someone caught his eye from the corner.
He
didn't mean to look at first; his gaze just naturally swept across
the hallway until it stopped on her.
Her
being... Melanie.
It took
him what felt like days to recognize her. She was just standing a
mere few feet away from him, caught between her friends-he
guessed-bag slung over one shoulder, her hand gripping her straps
so hard he could see the blood pooling in her knuckles. She wasn't
doing anything to stand out, just standing against the lockers like
everyone else. And yet somehow, everything around her seemed to blur
in a thin line.
It was
strange how her name just came to him, like it had been waiting in
the back of his mind for years, waiting for him to see it. It had
been years since he'd seen her face, but now seeing her again, it
was as if every memory attached to her simple name rose inside of
him.
Eduardo
didn't mean to stare.
Well,
he couldn't help it.
Everything
around him seemed to dim like a stage, the spotlight on her. He
couldn't say what it was exactly-but it was there. Maybe it was
the way she had her head slightly tilted as her friends spoke, or the
curve of a half-smile that slowly faded that didn't quite reach her
eyes. Or maybe it was just her.
Why was
he acting this way all of a sudden?
He felt
a tingling sensation in his body, his heartbeat quickening, his
thoughts falling silent. Her head moved, and suddenly, he wanted to
fall as her eyes landed on him for a time. Her eyes-God, he didn't
even know what color they were from this distance, but they looked so
soft and familiar. There was something in her gaze, like she, too,
wasn't sure what to do, but she couldn't quite look away either.
He felt
it everywhere-in his pulse, his heart, his back, his arms. A rush
of something, but it was deep and warm.
And
then she looked away with pink-tinted cheeks.
And
everything around him came splashing back in like a wave.
"Are
you even listening to me, dude?" Kansas barked, nudging his arm
roughly.
Eduardo
nodded rapidly, swallowing his thoughts. The sound of lockers and
chatter finally registered with him. His heart was beating too fast
now. "Yeah. What?"
"Yeah?
What did I just say?" Kansas insisted, crossing his arms.
Eduardo
blankly stared, narrowing his eyes and furrowing his eyebrows, trying
to come up with a simple lie, but nothing came. He sighed in defeat.
"I wasn't listening."
"I
know you weren't, you're too busy ogling over some chick."
Kansas retorted finally, a tiny, yet cocky smirk forming on his face
as usual.
"I
wasn't ogling." He bit back quickly. Too quick.
"You
totally were. Who was it? Was it her?" Kansas said, proceeding to
point directly at the girl, Melanie, who-thankfully-wasn't
looking anymore.
Eduardo
scoffed at his nosiness and slapped his hand down. "None of your
business, Kan."
A smile
came across his face in return, dragging out a hum. "Definitely
her. Someone's crushing." Kansas said a little too loudly.
Eduardo
didn't respond to that. He just shoved his hands into the pocket of
his hoodie and looked away, pretending to check out a cool poster on
the school walls-looking anywhere but back at her.
He
could still feel the way her eyes lingered on his skin, the way her
eyes darted to a few parts of his face until they settled on his
eyes. It hadn't been anything. He knew it hadn't. And yet, his
heart told him a different story.
"Eddie,"
Kansas said, still using a teasing tone. "If you're going to fall
in love, at least give me front-row seats to see this go down."
Eduardo
huffed, a laugh escaping his lips involuntarily, shaking his head.
"You're such a freak."
"An
observant one, if you must." Kansas claimed.
Eduardo
just rolled his eyes as the bell rang, turning on his heel as he
began to walk down the hallway, Kansas rushing to come up to his
side, the two of them blending into the flow of students heading to
class.
As he
passed the locker she'd been standing at originally, his eyes
darted back-just this once-praying that she was there so he could
see her once more.
But she
was gone.
Still,
he found himself almost smiling, something tugging at his chest. He
didn't know what, but deep down, he probably did. It was nothing
but a quick, long, sensational glance. That's all it was-just a
glance, just a face in the crowd of thousands of others. Eduardo
could not convince himself that it was just a glance, though. The
warmth resting in his chest told him otherwise. It lingered like
sunlight that refused to fade.
And for
the first time in a long time, Eduardo realized he wanted to actually
know someone, not just remember -- so he tried to remember her.
He
wanted to feel that again, but surely, she wouldn't reciprocate.
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