Deep down, I know she wouldn’t be okay with it. But if Mike is okay with it, why should that matter? We’re just friends. He knows we’re just friends. Even if he wasn’t with Danica, we’d still be just friends—because Mike likes girls like Danica, and I am so not her.
Only . . . standing here breathing the same air as him, I don’t feel like Mike and I are friends at all. This Mike is someone I can’t talk to. This Mike belongs to Danica, and the other Mike is someone else. Someone who texts me to wish me sweet dreams.
I wonder if he does that for Danica . . .
“Hailey got stuck in a thorn bush,” my gorgeous older cousin teases, finally dropping my arm to go and sit on her boyfriend’s lap. He makes room for her but doesn’t take his eyes off of me.
“Are you okay?” he asks, and the genuine, open concern in his voice makes my cheeks heat with embarrassment. The two Mikes I know come together in those three little words—the gamer I spend my nights with, and the rock star dating my cousin. The guy my little brother idolizes, and the man who commands venues full of screaming girls.
“Yeah.” I attempt a laugh, but it sounds so awkward, I try to transition it into a cough instead, earning me confused looks from everyone who hears it.
“Are you getting sick too?” Shawn asks, referring to the plague that seems to be spreading within the group. His nose is red from wiping it with his sleeve all day, and Patient Zero—aka Kit—still looks like she could just lie down and die right where she’s standing. Joel is fighting a cough, Adam has exhausted Rowan’s entire supply of travel tissues, and even Dee looks like she had to put on extra makeup today to accomplish her normally effortless Covergirl glow.
“No,” I hurriedly answer, willing my cheeks to return to their normal pale color.
“Are you sure?” Shawn presses, his brow crinkled with worry. “You look kind of flushed.”
“You do look really red,” Mike agrees, and I consider jumping into the pond and living at the bottom forever and ever and ever.
Why did I have to laugh like that? What kind of loser pretends to cough?!
“Are you running a fever?” Rowan asks, pressing the back of her hand against my forehead while everyone watches me turn from blush red to beet red to really freaking just-kill-me-now red.
And just when I think things can’t get any worse, Danica proves me wrong. “Was that a fake cough?” she accuses, and I’m sure the look on my face must be something akin to a slow loris about to be obliterated by a steamroller.
“What?” I squeak, scraping at a cover that’s about to be blown to bits. “What the hell kind of question is that! Of course it wasn’t a fake cough. Why would I fake cough? Why would anyone pretend to cough? God, Danica! Who would do that?”
Me. I would do that. Me me me me meee, oh God.
“I’m fine,” I insist when everyone just stares at me—including Mike, with his concerned brown eyes, his frowning lips, and a perfect layer of scruff on his jaw that might make a smarter girl try not to act so stupid. “I just, I mean, I’m, it was—” Oh my God. I’ve forgotten how to use words. I’ve forgotten how to sentence! “It was a really strenuous walk,” I finally manage, wiping nonexistent sweat from my brow simply because I need something to do with my hands that doesn’t involve hiding behind them.
I don’t know why I can’t speak or laugh or cough or even breathe like a normal person right now, but the suspicious look on Dee’s face doesn’t help.
“Do you want to sit down?” Mike asks, gesturing to a spot beside him on the blanket that Rowan spread out earlier. My eyes flit to Danica, who watches me from his lap with just as much bewilderment as everyone else.
“Uh, yeah,” I say, taking Mike up on his offer simply because I don’t trust my knees to keep doing their job of holding me up if I don’t sit down soon. “Okay.”
I plop down cross-legged next to him, feeling like the biggest idiot in the history of idiocy. Why did I fake a cough? What the hell was that even supposed to accomplish? Like a weird fake cough is any better than a weird fake laugh? Why am I so freaking weird?!
“Water?” Mike asks, holding his half-finished bottle of water out for me, and I shake my head while trying to figure out some way to get everyone’s attention off of my nonexistent, delirium-inducing fever.
Luckily, Danica rises to the occasion. “So Hailey and I were in the woods talking about your video, and—”
“Motherfucker!” I interrupt, my pointer finger wiggling inside the hole I just found while nervously fiddling with the sleeve of my hoodie. I don’t know why I have the worst luck with clothes lately, but I was counting on this hoodie to be one of my go-to jackets for fall. And now it has a freaking hole in it. A goddamn hole. A mother—
“What?” Mike asks while I mutter enough curse words to make my mom disown me, and I angrily wiggle my finger at him.
“That damn thorn bush murdered my hoodie!”
Mike captures my pointer with his calloused fingertips and lifts my hand over my head, inspecting my sleeve and then sticking his finger in yet another tiny rip. “Here’s another one.”
I pull my arm away and crane my neck to see the underside of my sleeve. “Dammit.”
“It’s not too bad,” Mike lies. “Give it to me when we leave, and I’ll get my mom to patch it up for you.”
My first instinct urges me to tell him that his mom has already done enough for me, but since I never told Danica about Mike’s mom helping with my stained hoodie and I’m guessing she’d read a whole lot more into it than she should, I don’t. “Your mom would be able to fix this?”