Page 86 of The Wrong Exit Strategy

Page List
Font Size:

“Define skipping.”

“If you say pass, I get to ask you something worse.”

He glances at me. “That seems like a system designed to punish me specifically.”

“You threw my notebook.”

He’s quiet for a second. “Fine. You go first.”

I look at the road ahead. “I had a crush on you when I was a teenager.”

The car doesn’t swerve this time. He’s getting better at receiving information.

“How old?” he asks.

“Sixteen. Maybe seventeen. You were twenty-two or twenty-three. You were doing all this grown-up stuff, going places, and you’d show up at the house and—” I shrug. “I don’t know. You were just very you. Even then.”

“I had no idea,” he says.

“I know you didn’t.” I smile at the glass. “You looked right through me for about two years.”

“I didn’t look through you.”

“You called me kid.”

“Youwerea kid.”

“I was seventeen.”

“Which is a kid,” he says. “Which is why I correctly did not notice.”

“You called me kid until I was twenty-one.”

He opens his mouth, then closes it. “That one I’ll give you.”

I laugh. He’s almost smiling. Almost.

“Your turn,” I say.

He thinks for a moment. “I cried watching a film in Montana,” he says. “Alone. In my apartment.”

“What film?”

“I’m not telling you.”

“That’s a skip.”

“I told you the rest of it.”

“The film is the whole point.”

“Absolutely not.”

“Griffin—”

“Moving on.”

“You need to give me another one.”