Seth & Greyson (The Coincidence #7)

He lowers the cup, crunches it in his hand, and chucks it into a nearby trashcan. When he locks his eyes on me again, I know what’s coming and prepare myself for the impact.

“So, I haven’t seen or heard from you pretty much since the carnival.” He stuffs his hands into the back pockets of his jeans and rocks back on his heels. “At first I thought maybe it was because you were avoiding me, but then I realized how self-centered believing you’d actually cut class over me seemed.” He studies me closely and I try not to get all wiggly. “Is everything okay?”

I don’t know how to respond to him. My first thought is to feed him some hyped up, overdramatic excuse because I’m good at giving those. But then I remember my revelation in the campus yard about how I need to start taking my own advice.

“Actually, I was avoiding you,” I shamefully admit.

His lips part in shock. “Wow, I didn’t expect you to be so honest.”

“Usually, I’m an honest person. Too honest sometimes. But I get where you’re coming from. I haven’t really been myself around you. Not completely, anyway.”

He swallows hard. “Is it something I’ve done or said? Because I know I can get a little weird—”

“No, it’s not you at all,” I cut him off, feeling like the biggest asshole. “It’s me.” He looks befuddled, so I add, “Some stuff happened to me in my past that makes me…” The scars on my hand throb. I feel so vulnerable standing there in front of him, trying to explain the secret I’ve kept locked inside me. “Hesitate.”

His gaze flicks to the scars on my arm. “Do you want to talk about it?”

“Maybe in the future.” Once I say it, I realize how much I mean it. One day, I hope I can tell him what happened without being terrified out of my mind. “But tonight was supposed to be about fun.”

“So, you want to have fun, then?” he asks with a dare in his eyes.

I feel like I might be getting in over my head, but I’m too drunk to back down. “That all depends. What did you have in mind?”

Lust fills his eyes and the look instantly fills my thoughts with lots and lots of dirty images of the fun things we could do. He stands up straight and motions for me to follow him through the dancing crowd. I trail at his heels and note every single person that so much as glances in our direction, wondering what they’re thinking or if they’re thinking anything. I really wish my mind was calm, but it’s racing a zillion miles a minute.

My adrenaline goes up a thousand notches when Greyson makes a right and turns down a hallway lined with a few open doors, all of which lead to bedrooms. I start to get so turned on just thinking about going in one of them. But the last time I was with someone intimately was with Braiden. Since I can’t even talk about what happened yet, I don’t think I’m ready to go down that road, despite how much my body wants to.

I open my mouth to tell Greyson I need to leave, but close my trap when he enters a room with a heavy game of poker going on.

“You’re into cards?” I question, staring at the table covered with poker chips and cards.

“It’s okay. It can be really fun when you’re drunk.”

“Are you drunk?”

“Are you?”

I mentally try to calculate a problem using the quadratic formula I learned in Pre-Cal, but then realize I couldn’t even figure out the answer sober.

“What are you thinking about?” Greyson's gaze zeros in on my lips and desire fills his eyes.

“You really want to know?” I ask and he nods. “The quadratic formula.”

The desire deflates like a balloon. “What?”

“Never mind.” I nod at the table five guys and three girls are seated around. “So, are we going to play?”

“Do you know how?”

“Of course.”

A thoughtful look crosses his face. “Okay, good, because I want to make a wager.”

“A wager?”

“Yeah, if I win more than you, you have to go to this art show with me.”

I hesitate. “And if I win?”

He shrugs. “You can have anything you want.”

My skin warms as thousands of very vivid images of what I want flash through my mind.

“All right, you have a deal.” I stick out my hand to shake on it.

He wraps his hand around mine, grips tightly and slides his finger along the inside of my wrist as he pulls away.

“Can I just say again that I seriously don’t understand why you think you’re awkward,” I tell him. “You’re kind of the exact opposite.”

“Well, I’m kind of a little drunk right now, so the alcohol puts the weirdo inside me to sleep.”

I shake my head, laughing under my breath. “Okay, let’s get this over with.”

“Wait, aren’t you going to tell me what you want if you win?” he asks, rolling his tongue along the inside of his mouth to stop himself from grinning.

I shake my head. “Nope. You’re just going to have to wait until after I win.”

His eyes glimmer with amusement as I hedge around him and take a seat at the table. He sits down beside me, we both buy a fair amount of chips, and the game begins. We’re not really playing against everyone else, so Greyson and I keep our own little tally as hand after hand is dealt. I’m a pretty decent player, but Greyson seems to be a bit better. He keeps smirking in my direction, like he’s sure he’s going to kick my ass.

Two hours later, I’ve gotten lost in the game and the worry about everyone watching me has dissipated. The downside, I’ve lost all my chips and the wager we made. My stomach churns as we leave the table and the party, knowing that I have no excuse not to go with him to the art show. Whether I’m over my fear or not, I have to go out on a date with him.

“A penny for your thoughts?” he asks as we stroll up the sidewalk toward the campus that’s a few blocks away.

“I was just thinking about how much I hate to lose.” I fake a pout. “I’m an extremely sore loser.”

“And I’m kind of an arrogant winner.” He forces a smirk, but then busts up laughing. “Okay, actually I’m not. In fact, I kind of feel bad that you lost.”

“Enough to let me win, perhaps?”

“No way. I’m holding you to our deal. Besides, I hate going to these art shows by myself. The room is always so stuffy and so are most of the people.”

“But you’re an art major.”

“Yeah, but it doesn’t mean I fit the mold of art gallery people.”

We pause at the corner, checking for traffic before stepping off the curb to cross the street. My head is still spinning a bit, and I’m not sure if it’s the alcohol or Greyson. The streets are mostly deserted at this hour and it’s so quiet I can almost pretend that Greyson and I are the only two people who exist. If only I could feel that way all the time. Life would be so much easier.

“I’ll tell you what.” Greyson walks backwards so he’s facing me. “How about we consider both of us winners? You go to the art show with me and you get one thing of your choice.”

“You know, you’re putting a lot of trust in me right now,” I say as I hop up onto the sidewalk. “Giving me free reign to do whatever I want, especially when I have such a wild imagination.”

He stops walking and I almost run into him. “Okay, now you’ve got me wondering what the hell you’re going to pick.”

I flash him a wicked smirk. “Oh, no. I’m not going to pick something right away. I’m going to wait until the perfect moment and spring it on you.”

He restrains a grin as we start walking again. “Fine. But you still have to go to the art show with me. That’s the deal.”

I nod, shaking, terrified to death. “It’s next Friday night, right?”

He nods, slowing down as we reach the front of my lofty dorm building. Most of the lights are off and the air carries a stillness to it.

“So, this is me,” I tell him, digging my keycard out of my pocket.

I’m not sure what exactly I’m supposed to do. Invite him in? Yeah, I’m sure my roommate would love that. Then again, he’s never there.