the audience ahead of him. His lips were pressed together. With his far hand he adjusted his glasses and brushed some stray hair off his forehead.
“George?”
He jerked his head toward her so fast that Lane feared he might’ve hurt his neck.
“If it makes you so nervous sitting next to me, maybe you should trade places with Aaron.”
For a moment he looked hurt. Then he said, “Sure. If you want me to.”
“I don’t.”
His eyebrows lifted. “You don’t?”
“Not unless you want to.”
“Me? No. I mean...”
“You sit way in the back of the class. I don’t think we’ve ever even talked to each other.”
“No, we haven’t.”
“You’re really good in English.”
“You, too. You’re the best in the class.”
“When I don’t lose my place?”
He smiled. “Oh, that was nothing. I lose my place all the time. I get to daydreaming, and that’s all she wrote.”
“I’ll bet you want to be a writer, don’t you?”
His head tilted. He frowned. “How did you know?”
“You have that look about you.”
He wrinkled his nose, making his glasses rise slightly. “The look of the nerd.”
“Don’t let my dad hear that. He’s a writer.”
“A
“He likes to think so. You’ve probably never heard of him. Lawrence Dunbar.”
George’s frown deepened. “No. I don’t think so.”
“He writes penny dreadfuls. Or, as he likes to say, $3.95 dreadfuls.”
George laughed. “That’s a good one,” he said.
“I really liked the story you read in class. The guy whose bones dissolved?”
His face went bright red. “You did? Thanks.”
“Have you got any more?”
“Are you kidding? I’ve got piles of them. My parents think I’m doing homework all the time, but I’m actually up in my room writing stuff. Boy, would they be pissed.” He cringed. “Excuse me. That just slipped out.”
“I say it all the time.”
The theater lights went dark.
Lane leaned toward George. “I want to read some of your other stories, okay?”
“Do you mean it?”
“Sure.” The curtain started to rise. “If you want, I’ll even have Dad take a look at some of them.”
“Jeez, I don’t know.”
On the stage it was night and two sentries stood on the parapet of Elsinore, looking very cold.
George settled back in his seat. When his shoulder brushed against Lane, he leaned away to break the contact. Lane swept her elbow up past the arm of the chair and nudged him. Again he snapped his head around.
“I don’t bite,” she whispered.
She tried to pay attention to the play. But her mind kept drifting.
She felt good about her talk with George. He seemed nice. A little like Henry. Not as weird, though. Those two should really hit it off.
Awfully shy, but he would get over that once they knew each other better.
And we will, she thought.
Maybe it was fate that she ended up sitting with him. And fate that she’d broken up with Jim last night.
George would never act like Jim. He probably never even would’ve had the nerve to talk to me, she thought, much less ask me out. Probably
I never would’ve gotten anywhere with Mr. Kramer, anyway.
Thinking that, she felt a hollow ache.
He’s a teacher, she told herself. He can’t get involved with me even if he wants to.
But her mind dwelled on him, lingering on the way he looked, the things he’d said to her, the way he’d handled Riley Benson, the way he’d caught her when she fell from the stool, how his hands had felt when he touched her bare ribs and leg, when he’d accidentally touched her breast as he took the books from her yesterday.
He remembered her denim jumper, though she hadn’t worn it for nearly two weeks. He recognized her car in the lot yesterday. Didn’t those things prove that he cared for her?
Maybe he likes me as much as I like him.
She wondered how it would feel to kiss him.
The lights came up for intermission, and she realized she’d hardly paid any attention at all to the play. Not that it mattered. She’d read it a few times, and seen both the Olivier and Burton movies.
Mr. Kramer stayed in his seat and talked to Sandra. Aaron went off, probably to find a bathroom since he couldn’t be going for refreshments — the theater had no snack counter. Lane turned to George. He was looking around the auditorium, but not at her. Intentionally not at her, she suspected.
“How do you get to school?” she asked.
“Me?” Now he looked. Straight into her eyes.
“Yeah, you.”
“Oh, my mom drives me.”
“Your place is just a few blocks from Henry Peidmont. I usually give him and Betty Thompson a lift to school in the mornings.”
“Oh yeah, I know.”
She smiled. “Spying on me?”
“No! Uh-uh.”
“I was just joking.”
He kept staring into her eyes. For a few moments he was silent. Then he smiled. “Me, too. I mean, I don’t
“Really?”
“If you want to know the truth...” Grimacing, he shook his head. “Never mind.”
“No, what?”
“You’d think I’m a dork.”
“No, I wouldn’t. Come on.” She elbowed him gently. “Spill it.”
“It’s stupid. Never mind.”
“All right. Anyway, what I was going to say is you can ride with us if you’d like. I could pick you up Monday morning on my way to Henry’s. I’ve got room for one more passenger. It’d save your mother a trip, and we’d be glad to have you along.”
George looked confused. “Why?” he asked.
“Why what?”
“Why would you want me along?”
“Why wouldn’t I?”
“We don’t even know each other.”
“We do now. And I want to know you better.”
His face went crimson. “You do?”