“A bare hand is a much better instrument than a paddle for spankings anyway.”
“An instrument of what? Pleasure? Or pain?”
Tell smirked at her. “You’ll just have to wait and see which one you like better, won’t you?”
The dancing was in full swing when they returned to the gym.
“What’s shaking, kids? Where you been?” Stephanie asked.
“We toured the school. You know, reliving old memories.” He grinned when Georgia smacked his knee under the table. “Why? What’d we miss?”
“A f**king limbo contest, if you can believe it,” Roxanne grumbled. “Who did the planning for this event? Chuck E. Cheese?”
Georgia choked on her drink.
“No wonder no one wanted to help Sally. And can you believe she tried to assign us seats?”
Stephanie leaned across the table. “I had a run-in with Sally. I told her if she pulled a bitch move and tried to get you and Deck to dance together as the class couple, I would make myself projectile barf all over her.”
“Thanks for having my back, Stephanie.”
“Always.”
The dancing ended and Sally took the stage to hand out the decade awards.
And just like high school, the awards were stupid, dragged on way too long and were handed to the popular crowd. With the exception of Georgia. Her face was a blank mask so Tell had no idea what she was thinking.
“The award for most changed goes to…Tell McKay.”
“Christ. Really?” he muttered.
“Tell, you have to go up there,” Georgia said.
He drained his beer before heading to the podium.
Sally gave him a hug and the small trophy. He started toward the stairs, but someone yelled, “Speech!”
Fuck. He hated talking in front of people. “I, ah, think everyone in this room deserves a trophy, because it’d be a sad freakin’ thing if we all stayed the same people we were in high school.” He walked off to meager applause.
“Now we look back on the classmates we lost.” The first picture on the screen behind the stage was of Matt Wilson, who’d died in combat in Iraq.
Sally went on about all that Matt had accomplished before his death. She called Matt’s widow to the stage for a memorial plaque from the class.
The second picture on the screen was of RJ Hotchkiss.
Georgia tensed, but there wasn’t a perceptible change in her expression. When Tell noticed everyone in the room looked for her, he reached under the table and set his hand on her knee.
Sally talked briefly about RJ, mostly about his life because his death wasn’t noble. Then she called Georgia to accept the memorial plaque.
She didn’t budge.
Tell squeezed her leg. “Georgia. You have to go up there.”
“I can’t.”
“Yes, you can. Go on now. I’ll be right here when you’re done.”
Georgia walked toward the stage like she was facing an executioner. She let Sally give her a stiff hug and she read the plaque before she glanced up at the crowd.
“It’ll be nine years on August third since I lost my twin brother, my best friend, the person who meant the most to me in the world. I know you all remember RJ as the guy with the perpetual smile. The guy who lived for a dare. The guy with a larger-than-life personality. I remember him as all those things too. But he was so much more. I miss him every day and I wish…” Georgia looked at the plaque, her hair falling forward to obscure her face.
When her shoulders started to shake and Sally made no move to comfort her like she had Matt Wilson’s widow, Tell was on his feet, his heart in his throat. He couldn’t stomach seeing her standing up there alone, forced into public grief.
He scaled the steps, sidestepped Sally and stood in front of Georgia, blocking her from the room. “Georgia. Come on, sweetness, I gotcha.”
Georgia peered up at him. “Please get me out of here.”
He tucked her into the side of his body as they left the stage. Stephanie intercepted them with Georgia’s purse and they made their way out the door.
Tell didn’t stop until he reached his pickup. He dropped the tailgate and lifted her into his arms. Then he sat, holding her tightly as her body shook.
Her voice was whisper-thin when she finally spoke. “I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be.” He kissed the top of her head. “Let’s go.”
Chapter Fifteen
She’d cried. In front of a room full of people.
Most of them had probably been happy to see her break down. They probably thought she deserved misery in her life after leading such a supposedly charmed existence.
The memory of RJ complaining he never won anything had hit her as she’d accepted the award. There was no irony in that, only sadness.
And then Tell had been there. Rescuing her. Going above and beyond. Showing her yet another facet of his personality—a protective side. She’d only scratched the surface in getting to know the man he’d become and she wanted so much more than the small glimpse she’d had the past two weeks.
Before he started the truck, he said, “You okay?” and brought her hand to his mouth for a gentle kiss.
“Yes. Thank you for…” She cleared her throat. “It’s weird to think back on the awards they gave out senior year right before graduation. RJ was so bummed he hadn’t won class troublemaker.”
“It wasn’t for lack of tryin’,” Tell muttered.
The hair on the back of her neck prickled. “What is that supposed to mean?”
Tell shifted in his seat.
What was up with his guilty look? “Something you wanna share with the class, Mr. McKay?”
“Not really, but I’m sure you won’t let it go now.”
“You’d be right about that, especially if it has something to do with my brother.”
“It does.” He ran his hand through his hair. “You know me’n RJ had shop together senior year? We were partnered during the sheet metal unit. RJ came up with the idea to make an animal trap. We worked on that sucker for a week and grumpy Mr. Krystanski gave us a D on it, citing a design flaw. So RJ decided we should prove Mr. K wrong by trapping an animal in our new, improved cage and showing him that it did work.”
Georgia stared at him. “You and my brother were responsible for letting the skunks loose in the school?”
“That’s the thing. The mama skunk and her four babies were in the cage the night we snuck it into the classroom. So when we saw the cage was empty the next morning…we had no idea what’d happened. Mr. K never said a word and me’n RJ chalked it up to a failed prank…until a few days later—”