Music floods the room, and people are shouting and cheering. I am not sure if I'm imagining the confetti. Even Valentine is ecstatic with celebration, seemingly having forgotten that he'd rooted against us the entire time. Something slots onto my head, which I deduce must be a plastic crown when I see Cindy throwing one on Lyra's head as well. Lyra's grey eyes are big, and she won't stop looking at me. And me, I can't look at her. If I did, I would probably kiss her again.
"Here it is, the extent of our budget spending!" Valentine cheers, indicating the crowns on our heads.
Someone shoves a cup at me, and I move a hand from its spot, splayed on Lyra's back, to take it. Everything feels oddly dreamlike. I, for once, don't want a drink right now. At a loss, I offer it to Lyra.
"I'm good," I hear her say. Her expression is unreadable.
Okay, so maybe I could do with one.
I swallow the shot.
Or two. Or alcohol poisoning.
"Capo!" Duke calls, excited and beckoning me over. "Capo! C'mere!"
I reluctantly move away from Lyra to shift towards Duke, but we don't separate completely; Lyra and I untangle slowly, arms touching until just our hands are linked, fingers wrapped around each other's so we're holding hands.
But the welcome pressure of Lyra's hand leaves me after a minute, and when I turn around to see what happened, Lyra is gone. Dissolved into the crowds already riding out the high of the competition.
I try looking for Kathy but find that she had left early with Prince and so had Diana and Hye-Rin.
"Hey," I asks Cindy, who's standing nearby, "Have you seen Lyra?"
Cindy hasn't. Neither have Missy or Nick. I pull off my crown and start to go searching for her.
I zero on Lyra, of all places, standing outside in the cold. She's almost hidden away in the building's shadow, wrapped up in her coat and scarf huddled in on herself. I throw on my own coat to go outside too, closing the sliding door quietly behind me. Almost immediately the sounds are gone. And it's so, so quiet.
"Hey," I say. The steam from my breath creates a little cloud in front of my face. "What happened to your crown?"
Lyra reveals the crown, clasped in one of her hands.
I didn't want to stand in front of her, make her feel cornered so I wait until she turns around to look at me.
She doesn't.
"Lyra?" I ask softly.
"Why aren't we together?"
I nearly do a double take. "What?"
"Why aren't we together? Like a couple?" Lyra repeats turning around. Now I can hear the slight stuffiness in her voice. "Why not?"
"Is—is that a real question?" I ask laughing a little. It's almost like a joke, but not funny at all. "Because..."
Lyra just stares at me.
"Because we're just friends, Lyra," I conclude. And this is the first time I called us that in a serious voice; and it's not even genuine. I can hear my own question mark.
"That's it?" Lyra asks. I don't think I can get used to her voice like this, soft, breathy and hushed. Lyra Donovan is never quieted. It just doesn't happen. "Just friends? Like that was just kissing?"
"I," I don't really understand what's going on right now. I'm so confused, and I feel strangely emotional out of nowhere and perhaps it has something to do with how I can see tear tracks down Lyra's face. Why are you crying? "I don't know."
YOU ARE READING
Growing Up and Other Tall Tales
RomanceSometimes the best love stories begin with, "Who the fuck are you?" *** Lyra Donovan has been through enough hell and then some; so she enjoys the more predictable things in life. A good cup of coffee, sunsets and the fact that she hates math. Love...