She ended up dancing with Gwen, of all people. Gwen might not have hated Cassie, but they weren’t anything like friends. Back when Cassie was a sophomore, her ambition may have gotten the best of her in a game of capture the flag, and there may have been an explosion as Gwen and her friend neared Cassie’s team’s flag. It had been more smoke and loud noises than anything that would’ve hurt anyone, but it certainly hadn’t endeared Cassie to her then-RA. Yet here they were, at the same party even though Gwen had started at the grad school this fall—getting her master’s in social work, Cassie was pretty sure. Here they were, dancing together, Cassie’s hands wandering a little too much.
When Gwen took Cassie’s hand off her ass and led her outside, Cassie thought she was getting lucky. She did not expect Gwen to dodge her attempt at a kiss.
“Gimme your phone,” Gwen said.
Cassie unlocked it and handed it over, not sure why she wanted it but still hoping they were going to make out.
“Which of your friends has a car and is most likely to be sober on a Friday night?”
“Parker,” Cassie answered without a thought. She was working on a painting due Monday.
Gwen scrolled through Cassie’s contacts. Before Cassie could get her shit together enough to figure out what was happening, Gwen was giving Parker the address to the party and telling her she’d wait outside with Cassie until she arrived.
“What the fuck?” Cassie snapped when Gwen handed back her phone.
Gwen’s gaze was flat, unimpressed. “You obviously need someone to take care of you, and it’s not going to be me.”
Cassie sputtered. She didn’t need anyone to take care of her, hadn’t for a long time. She just wanted to hook up with someone. It didn’t even have to be Gwen; she was just pretty and older and seemed to have her shit together. Cassie refused to think too hard about why she was attracted to that sort of thing right now.
“Fuck you,” she said, turning to go back inside and find someone else to make her night interesting.
Gwen put herself between Cassie and the house.
“Your friend is coming to pick you up.”
Cassie practically growled. “Get out of my way.”
“No.”
Cassie didn’t bother trying to maneuver around her. She considered walking away—heading toward campus on her own—but she was drunk and the idea of Parker chasing her down, catching her on the side of the road, was a lot more humiliating than waiting for her.
Parker thought it was funny and teased her the whole way to campus. At least that saved Cassie from having an obnoxiously sincere heart-to-heart about why she was getting drunk and hitting on older girls. She really didn’t want to talk about it.
Except she must have, because the first weekend in November she talked Acacia into a nostalgic movie night where they watched How to Train Your Dragon, just the two of them. Right before the battle against the Red Death, Cassie paused the movie.
“I have to tell you something.”
Acacia picked the last of the popcorn from the bowl in her lap. “Shoot.”
Cassie sighed. “Kaysh. It’s like. A thing.”
They’d gone through too much vodka for her to better communicate how important this was. Acacia seemed to get it anyway; she set the bowl on the coffee table and turned to sit cross-legged on the couch, devoting her full attention to Cassie.
“What is it?”
Cassie ran her fingers through her hair. “No, you know what, it’s not a big deal, don’t even worry about it.”
“Klein,” Acacia said, and it was a command.
“Okay, but like—” Cassie took another swallow of her vodka tonic. “You can’t tell anyone. Or judge me. Or hate me.”
“Cassie, you know I’m never gonna hate you.”
Cassie did—for the most part. Her mom wasn’t around, and her dad had never been around, and most of her friends had left her for Seth even though he’d cheated, but Kaysh—she was the only one who had always been there. So Cassie knew Acacia wouldn’t hate her, but she also knew that Acacia and Parker were best friends—not Acacia and Cassie–level best friends, but best friends nonetheless. But Cassie needed to tell someone, and it wasn’t like she could tell Parker.
“Okay, but no one,” she repeated. “Not Emerson, not Donovan, not Parker.”
They were the only three she might’ve told—brother, boyfriend, best friend—but she couldn’t. Acacia nodded solemnly.
“Before I knew who she was,” Cassie started, because that was absolutely critical information for Acacia to have. She let the rest come out all in one rushed breath. “I kinda accidentally slept with Parker’s mom.”
Acacia was silent.
Then she laughed. She laughed and laughed and reached over to throw unpopped popcorn kernels at Cassie.
“You’re so dumb,” she said. “I thought you had something real going on.”
Cassie stared at her, helpless. She finished her drink.
“Babe…” Acacia’s smile slowly dropped off her face. “Wait, are you not kidding?”
Cassie could only muster a tight-lipped shake of her head.
“Holy shit, Cassie.”
If Cassie had been anyone else, that was when she would’ve started to cry. But she wasn’t crying over some woman she’d slept with once. That wasn’t why she’d told Acacia. She just needed to not keep the secret anymore.
“You slept with Parker’s mom?”
Cassie swallowed. “I didn’t know she was her mom at the time.”
Acacia took a deep breath. She looked toward the ceiling, like she was trying to figure out the details without having to ask.
“When?” she finally said.
“Family Weekend,” Cassie answered. “Friday.”
Acacia’s eyes went wide. “Friday? Friday like the day before you went out to breakfast with her and Parker? The day before you sat next to her at the a cappella concert?”
Cassie nodded.
“Fuck, Cass,” Acacia said. “How did you even sit next to her? God—you didn’t do anything then, did you?”
“No,” she said immediately. “I mean—we just, like a little, in the bathroom—”
“What the fuck, Cassie?”
Cassie wasn’t going to cry over some woman she’d slept with once, but she might over how angry her best friend was with her. Well, she wouldn’t, obviously, but she was drunk and Acacia had her hands balled into fists, her mouth turned sharply down. Cassie had thought she’d be shocked, yeah, but not mad.
“Why would you tell me this? What am I supposed to do with this information?”
“I don’t know, Kaysh. Nothing. You’re not supposed to do anything with it. I just needed to tell someone.”
“Oh, you needed to tell someone you fucked Parker’s mom before you knew her, then did it again at her daughter’s a cappella concert?”
“No! God, we didn’t do it at the concert,” Cassie said. “We just made out and I felt her up, Jesus.”
“Because that’s so much better?”
“Yeah, actually, it is,” Cassie snapped.
Acacia stared at her. Cassie saw the exact moment her glare started to soften, and it wasn’t long until she was cracking up like she had when she thought Cassie was joking.
“Oh my God,” she wheezed, could barely breathe from laughing so hard. “Oh my God, you fucked Parker’s mom and now you’re hung up on her. This is hilarious.”
Cassie got up. She needed another drink if she was going to deal with this.
“I am not hung up on Erin,” she said, setting her glass down a little too hard on the kitchen counter.
Acacia laughed some more. “You so are, though!”
Cassie left the tonic out and threw back some vodka from the bottle.
“You’re so hung up on her, you had to tell me about it weeks later. Have you been thinking of her this whole time?”
“No,” Cassie bit out the lie immediately.