What Happens Now Read Online Free Page B

What Happens Now
Book: What Happens Now Read Online Free
Author: Jennifer Castle
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going where I wanted them to go, trying and failing to get away from my own mortifying self.
    Once I got back to my blanket, I waved at Madison’s mom and she waved back. The two girls were swimming nearby. I grabbed my phone and texted Kendall with quivering thumbs.
Just saw Camden Armstrong at the lake. Went into the men’s restroom by accident. Call me.
    Those days, I was always looking for things to connect over with Kendall. Our friendship was like the drawstring in a pair of sweatpants, always slipping out of sight and out of reach. We always knew it was there. One of us merely had to retrieve it with that safety-pin trick until next time.
    I waited for a reply, looking out at the lake so I wouldn’t have to watch Camden come out of the restroom, so maybe he wouldn’t see me back. He was here. I had spoken to him. I wasn’t sure what I felt other than an overwhelming urge to dive into the lake, swim past the far boundary rope, then keep going and never come back.
    My phone chirped with a message from Kendall.
Bad reception here, can only text. But now very intrigued.
    I was in the middle of typing out more details when Dani bolted up the beach from the water, full-body shivering, lips nearly blue.
    “Make me a burrito,” she demanded, as if she knew I needed something else in my brain that moment. I put my phone down, grabbed her towel and wrapped it tight around her body and arms, tucking in the end corner at her neck so only her head and feet stuck out. Then I pulled her into my lap as she giggled.
    “Mmmm. I’m so hungry. And look at this delicious lunch!” I pretended to take a bite of her belly.
    My mother never pretended Danielle was a burrito. If she had, it would have had to be a whole-wheat one, with no sour cream because that adds too much fat and dairy. I loved giving Danielle these moments she never got from Mom. That I never got from Mom. It was like I was giving them to both of us.
    I heard a noise on the diving board, a loud whoop, and looked up to see Camden backflipping into the water.
    As if the last year had never happened. As if someone had rewound the tape, and here we were, in the exact places we’d been exactly twelve months before.
    But I’d become a different person since last May, and a switch inside me flicked on. There was a blinking YES in neon lights.
    Oh God those green eyes and those shoulders and the shaggy straight hair, and oh God.
    And that thing that took place in the restroom, that ridiculous and horrifying thing we shall not talk about ever again, did that count as a conversation?
    They say, there are no do-overs in life.
    I say, anything is Possible.

3
    “What are you thinking about, ducky?” asked Richard the next day.
    I was kneeling in Aisle 2 of Millie’s Art Supply, staring off into space.
    “I’m thinking there are way, way too many colors of craft sand in the world,” I said.
    My stepdad didn’t bat an eye. “Yes, I agree. War, poverty, climate change, and craft sand. Times are bleak.”
    I really loved him a lot.
    “Look,” I said, pointing to the bottom shelf and the bags I’d already arranged in official rainbow order. “I went all ROY G. BIV, and then I opened the last box and found this. Turquoise !”
    Richard sighed. “I’ll help you make a space between the green and the blue,” he simply said, and sat down beside me on the linoleum floor.
    Working together like that, stacking bags of craft sand in swift, efficient movements, it was easy to feel that what we were doing was important. Like an aesthetically perfect shelf display could change someone’s life. (And who says it couldn’t? It totally could.) It was these microscopic here-and-now moments that had helped me the most. I had a lot of them in my job at Millie’s, which Richard owned. Three afternoons a week and all day on Sundays.
    Which of course was going to make it that much harder to quit.
    Finally, we got down to the last two bags of turquoise. “If there’s a box we

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