Read Perfect Chemistry 1 Online
Authors: Simone Elkeles
But he doesn't. He's silent as he winds my car through unknown
towns and deserted roads, just like people do in the movies when they
drive to meet dangerous drug dealers.
Great. I'm going on my first drug deal. If I get arrested, will my
parents come bail me out? I wonder how my mom's going to explain
that one to her friends. Maybe they'll send me away to some military
boot camp for delinquents. I bet they'd like that. . . making Shelley go
to a facility and me to boot camp.
My life would suck even more.
I will not be a part of anything illegal. I am the ruler of my destiny,
not Alex. I grab the handle to the door.
"Let me out of here or I swear I'm jumping out."
"You're wearin' a seatbelt." He rolls his eyes. "Relax. We'll be
there in two minutes." He shifts into a lower gear and slows the car as
we enter an old, deserted airport. "Okay, we're here," he says as he
pulls up the parking brake.
"Yeah, okay. But where is here? I hate to tell you but the last
inhabited place was, like, three miles back. I'm not getting out of the
car, Alex. You can do your drug deals on your own."
"If I had any doubts you were a true blond, you've squelched
them," he says. "As if I'd take you on a drug deal. Get out of the car."
"Give me one good reason why I should?"
"Because if you don't, I'm gonna drag you out. Trust me, mujer."
He puts my keys in his back pocket and steps out of my car. Seeing
no other options, I follow him. "Listen, if you wanted to discuss our
hand warmers we could have done it over the phone."
He meets me around the back of my car. We're standing, toe to
toe, in the middle of nowhere.
There's been something nagging at me all day. As long as I'm here
with him, I might as well ask. "Did we kiss last night?"
"Yes."
"Well, it wasn't memorable because I have no recollection of it."
He laughs. "I was kiddin'. We didn't kiss." He leans in. "When we
kiss you'll remember it. Forever."
Oh, God. I wish his words didn't leave my knees weak. I know I
should be scared, alone with a gang member in a deserted place talking
about kissing. But I'm not. Deep in my soul I know he wouldn't
intentionally hurt me or force me to do anything.
"Why did you kidnap me?" I ask.
He grabs my hand and leads me to the driver's side. "Get in."
"Why?"
"I'm teachin' you how to drive this car properly, before the engine
falls out from abuse."
"I thought you were mad at me. Why are you helping me?"
"Because I want to."
Oh. I wasn't expecting that at all. My heart is starting to thaw,
because it's been a long time since someone cared enough to do
something just to help me. Although . . . "This isn't because you want
me to pay you back with favors, is it?"
He shakes his head.
"For real?"
"For real."
"And you're not mad at me because of anything I said or did?"
"I'm frustrated, Brittany. About you. About my brother. About a
lot of shit."
"Then why take me here?"
"Don't ask questions you're not ready to hear the answer to. Cool?"
"Cool." I slide into the driver's seat and wait for him to sit beside
me.
"You ready?" he asks when he's settled and buckled in the
passenger seat.
"Yep."
He leans over and puts the keys in the ignition. When I release the
parking brake and start the car, it dies.
"You didn't put it in neutral. If you don't have your foot on the
clutch, it's gonna die if you're in gear."
"I knew that," I say, feeling totally stupid. "You're just making me
nervous."
He puts the stick into neutral for me. "Put your left foot on the
clutch, your right foot on the brake, and go into first," he instructs.
Putting my foot on the gas and letting up on the clutch, the car
jerks forward.
He braces himself with his hand on the dash. "Stop."
I stop the car and put it in neutral.
"You've got to find the sweet spot."
I look at him. "The sweet spot?"
"Yeah. You know, when the clutch catches." He's using his hands
when he talks, pretending his hands are the pedals. "You release it too
fast. Get that balance and stay there . . . feel it out. Try again."
I put the car in first again and let up on the clutch as I press on
the gas.
"Hold it . . . ," he says. "Feel the sweet spot. Linger there."
I let out the clutch and hold down the gas pedal but don't push
down on it all the way. "I think I got it."
"Let go of the clutch now, but don't gun the gas."
I try, but the car jerks, then stalls.
"You popped the clutch. Don't release the clutch too fast. Try
again," he says, totally unfazed. He's not upset, frustrated, or itching
to give up. "You needed to give it more gas. Don't gun it, but give it
enough juice to start movin'."
I do the same steps, but this time the car moves forward without
jerking. We're on the runway, moving up to ten miles an hour.
"Press in the clutch," he instructs, then puts his hand over mine on
the stick and helps me shift into second. I try to ignore his gentle
touch and the warmth of his hand, so contradictory to his personality,
and attempt to focus on the task.
He's very patient as he instructs in detail how to downshift until
we've come to a stop at the end of the runway. His fingers are still
wrapped around mine.
"Lesson over?" I ask.
Alex clears his throat. "Um, yeah." He takes his hand off mine,
then weaves his fingers through his black mane, strands falling loosely
across his forehead.
"Thanks," I say.
"Yeah, well, my ears were bleedin' every time I heard your engine
rev in the lot at school. I didn't do it to be a good guy."
I cock my head to the side and try and get him to look at me. He
doesn't. "Why is it so important that you're perceived as a bad boy,
huh? Tell me."
TWENTY-FOUR : Alex
For the first time we're having a civilized discussion. Now I've got
to come up with something to break that defensive wall of hers.
Oh, man. I need to reveal something that makes me vulnerable. If
she sees me as vulnerable instead of an asshole, maybe I can make
some headway with her. And somehow I know she'll be able to tell if
I'm bullshitting.
I'm not sure if I'm doing this for the bet, for the chemistry
project, or for me. In fact, I'm totally cool with not analyzing that
part of what's happening here.
"My dad was murdered in front of me when I was six," I tell her.
Her eyes go wide. "Really?"
I nod. I don't like talking about it, not sure I can even if I want to.
Her manicured hands cover her mouth. "I didn't know that. Oh,
God, I'm so sorry. That must have been horrible."
"Yep." It feels good to let it out, to make myself talk about it out
loud. My dad's nervous smile turning into shock right before he was
shot.
Wow, I can't believe I remembered the expression on his face.
Why would his smile be replaced by shock?
That detail was totally forgotten until now. I'm still confused as I
turn to Brittany. "If I care too much about shit and it's taken away,
I'll feel like I did the day my dad died. I never want to feel that way,
so instead I make myself care about nothin'."
Her face is full of regret, sorrow, and sympathy. I can tell it's not
an act.
Her brow is still furrowed when she says, "Thanks for, you know,
telling me. But I can't imagine you can actually make yourself care
about nothing. You can't program yourself like that."
"Wanna bet?" Suddenly I'm desperate to change the subject. "Your
turn to share."
She looks away. I don't push her to say anything for fear she'll
come to her senses and want to leave.
Could it be harder for her to share even a glimpse into her world?
My life has been so fucked up, it's damn hard to believe her life could
possibly be any worse. I watch as a lone tear escapes from her eye and
she quickly wipes it away.
"My sister--," she starts. "My sister has cerebral palsy. And is
mentally delayed. 'Retarded' is the term most people use. She can't
walk, she uses what's called verbal approximations and nonverbal cues
instead of words because she can't talk. . . ." With that, another tear
escapes. This time she lets it fall without wiping it away. I have the
urge to wipe them for her but sense she needs to be left untouched.
She takes a deep breath. "And she's been angry about something, but I
don't know what. She started pulling hair, and yesterday she pulled
mine so hard a clump came out. My head was bleeding and my mom was
freaking out on me."
So that's where the mysterious patch of baldness came from. Not
a drug test.
For the first time, though, I feel sorry for her. I imagined her life
as a fairy tale; the worst thing that could possibly happen would be a
pea under her mattress keeping her up at night.
I guess that's not the case.
Something is happening. I sense a change in the wind . . a mutual
understanding of each other. I haven't felt this way in forever. I clear
my throat, then say, "Your mom probably blows up at you the most
because she knows you can take it."
"Yeah. You're probably right. Better me than my sister."
"It's no excuse, though." I'm being real now, and hope she is, too.
"Listen, I don't want to be an asshole to you," I say. So much for the
Alex Fuentes Show.
"I know. It's your image, what Alex Fuentes is all about. It's your
brand, your logo . . . dangerous, deadly, hot and sexy Mexican. I wrote
the book on creating an image. I wasn't exactly aiming for the blond
bimbo look, though. More like the perfect, untouchable look."
Whoa. Rewind. Brittany called me hot and sexy. I was not expecting
that at all. Maybe I have a chance of winning that stupid bet. "You do
realize you called me hot."
"As if you didn't know."
I didn't know Brittany Ellis considered me hot. "For the record, I
thought you were untouchable. But now that I know you think I'm a
hot, sexy, Mexican god . ."
"I never said the word 'god.'"
I put my finger to my lips. "Shh, let me enjoy the fantasy for one
minute." I close my eyes. Brittany laughs, this sweet sound that echoes
in my ears.
"In some deranged way, Alex, I think I understand you. Although
I'm really pissed off at you for being such a Neanderthal." When I
open my eyes, I find her watching me. "Don't tell anyone about my
sister," she says. "I don't like people knowing anything about me."
"We're actors in our lives, pretendin' to be who we want people to
think we are."
"So you understand why I'd freak out if my parents find out we're
. . . friends."
"You'd get in trouble? Shit, you're eighteen. Don't you think you
can be friends with who you want to by now? The umbilical cord's been
cut, you know."
"You don't understand."
"Try me."
"Why do you want to know so much?"
"Aren't chem partners supposed to know a lot about each other?"
She gives a short laugh. "I hope not."
Truth is, this girl isn't what I thought she'd be. From the moment
I told her about my dad, it was as if her entire body sighed in relief.
As if someone else's misery comforted her, made her feel as if she
wasn't alone. I still can't understand why she cares so much, why she
chooses the Tam-flawless facade to show the world.
Looming over my head is The Bet. I have to get this girl to fall for
me. And while my body says go for it, the rest of me is thinking You're
a complete bastard because she's vulnerable.
"I want the same things out of life you do," I admit. "I just go
about them in a different way. You adapt to your environment, I adapt
to mine." I put my hand back on hers. "Let me show you I'm different.
Oye, would you ever date a guy who couldn't afford to take you to
expensive restaurants and buy you gold and diamonds?"
"Absolutely." She slips her hand out from under mine. "But I have a
boyfriend."
"If you didn't, would you give this Mexicano a chance?"
Her face turns a deep shade of pink. I wonder if Colin ever makes
her blush like that. "I'm not answering that," she says.
"Why not? It's a simple question."
"Oh, please. Nothing about you is simple, Alex. Let's not even go
there." She puts the car in first gear. "Can we go now?"
"Si, if you want. Are we cool?"
"I think so."
I hold my hand out for her to shake. She eyes the tattoos on my
fingers, then extends her hand toward mine and shakes it, her
enthusiasm apparent. "To hand warmers," she says with a smile on her
lips.
"To hand warmers," I agree. And sex, I add silently.
"Do you want to drive back? I don't know the way."
I drive her back in comfortable silence while the sun sets. Our
truce brings me closer to my goals: graduating, the bet. . . and
something else I'm not ready to admit.
As I pull her kick-ass car into the dark library parking lot, I say,
"Thanks for, you know, lettin' me kidnap you. I guess I'll see you
around." Taking my keys out of my front pocket, I wonder if I'll ever