Trade Me (Cyclone #1)

“But you do,” I say to reassure myself.

For a long moment, he looks at me. Then he sighs. “Yeah.” He swallows. “Peter Georgiacodis—I don’t know if Blake’s told you about Peter. But Peter felt very strongly about it. And there was a point, when we first started data collection a few years ago, when Peter told me if I ever used any logs we collected to satisfy my own curiosity, he’d make Blake hack into the server and post my logs for the public, just so I could see how it felt. Peter’s…not here anymore, but I think Blake would do it. Just on principle.”

“And that’s enough to scare you? What would your logs tell us about you?” I ask.

He fixes me with a steely stare. “They’d tell you I have a fucking cold,” he says. And then he cuts the connection.

13.

TINA

“I need another word for devour.” Maria is sitting on a stool at the kitchen island, chewing her lip and staring at her laptop.

“Eat?” I suggest.

She waves her hand. “Used it already.”

“Bolt? Chew?”

“Something that suggests more carnage.”

“Swallow whole?”

She looks up at me. “These are zombies,” she says with a toss of her hair. “They don’t swallow whole. They tear. They rend—oh, hey, that’s it. Rending. Thanks!”

“You’re welcome,” I say in amusement. “But I thought you were trying to avoid zombies.”

She adjusts the glasses that she only uses for reading. “I’ve given in. I couldn’t resist. The math is strained, but at least it’s funny. Asteroids next week.”

My roommate—housemate, I suppose I should say now that we’re no longer sharing rooms—has a secret blog. I have a secret life. Funny how that works out.

“Adam Reynolds called me last night,” I say.

She looks up. “Seriously?”

“He thinks I’m dating his son.”

“Whoop-te-doo.” She rolls her eyes. “I think you’re dating his son.”

I point a finger at her. “Et tu, Maria?”

“I’m just saying. If you’re trying not to get hurt, you’re doing it wrong. You’re still friends. You still care about him. You still do things for each other, and you’re still going to hurt when you walk away. It’s just that the way you’re doing it, you have fewer orgasms.”

She raises an eyebrow at me. I have to admit that she has something like a point. Blake isn’t less under my skin right now because I’ve managed to keep from kissing him.

“He wanted to know what was going on with Blake.”

“Did you tell him to join the club?”

I don’t answer this. I keep trying not to wonder. The thing is, I know everything’s not right. I mean, I’m here, in this house, and he is, at the present moment, washing dishes. He hasn’t told me what he’s looking for, and I suspect he hasn’t found it.

But this is ending. At this point, I’ve written the script for how our relationship will come to an end—literally. I know that a little bit less than three weeks from now, there will no longer be early afternoons spent together going over launch details. There will be no hours where I talk to my mother and try not to worry, no time when he listens to me fret and takes care of things.

“I don’t want to talk about Blake,” I say. “And you’re one to talk about orgasms anyway. You didn’t give Hot Tattoo Guy your number.”

“Irrelevant.” Maria absently types in a sentence. “That has not made him any less instrumental a figure in my orgasms.”

There is that. I could respond in kind. I could tell her that I’ve thought of Blake a little too often, a little too much. But my own fantasies are not ones I want to examine. I imagine myself touching him. Taking off his clothing. I imagine myself going down on him, feeling the hard length of him in my mouth.

It’s easier to imagine myself giving than receiving. If I’m giving, I’m still in charge. I’m not vulnerable. If I’m giving, he won’t have the chance to break me down the way I know he could. I can’t let him in that much, not even in my fantasies.

I shake my head. “I’m going down to see my parents this weekend. I’m going to be leaving Thursday afternoon.”

She looks over at me and raises an eyebrow. “Wow. You might not see Blake for three whole days. How will you manage?”

My cheeks flush. She lets out a guffaw.

“He’s coming?”

“It’s complicated.”

“Well. That will convince everyone he’s not your boyfriend.”

“I… It’s…” I shake my head. “It will help, actually. You know what my parents are like. They could drive anyone away. It’s all complicated now. I just need to remember…”

Maria is watching me with a flat expression on her face. And that’s when I realize what I said.

My parents could drive anyone away.