Sophia
"Sophia!?"
A-a-a-and.. I saw this coming.
Wait. No. I knew LUCAS would be stumped.
I didn't expect Bryce, his twin, to be here, too.
The De Los Reyes brothers shared the same slack-jawed stare.
Behind me, Stacy was laughing so hard, clutching her stomach.
It was her idea not to tell anyone from school yet, emphatically, them.
Lifting my right hand, I waved awkwardly at the two tall teenagers..
..who were holding up the line. Some of the people were getting antsy.
"Hey, guys," I greeted them with a small smile. I was weary but I hid it.
Lucas kept staring at me, his mouth open, as he walked slowly to my table.
He wore a dark green unbuttoned polo thrown over a white shirt and jeans.
A lot of people in line were sporting something in green: shirt, dress, pants, shoes.
I guess it was because of my namesake? S. Green, because it was my favorite color.
"YOU? Y-you're.. You're S. Green, my favorite author?" Lucas asked in disbelief.
"To my knowledge.. yes?" I answered with uncertainty, rubbing the side of my neck.
"Hey! What's the hold up over there? Hurry up!" hollered a guy from the line.
Lucas craned his neck to flash the line-waiters an apologetic smile. Then he brought his brown eyes back on mine, and, with the clothed table sandwiching us both, he proffered his two books to me.
I quickly flipped them open to the first page and scribbled my autograph with a smiley face. I always put smiley faces on my signatures.
Before clapping the novels closed, I wrote: To Lucas, Thank You for Reading my books!
And in the second book, I cleverly scribbled in small letters: Thanks for the midnight talks
As I handed him back his copies, Lucas stared at me with dilated brown eyes and whispered: "You never told me you were a published author."
I whispered back: "You never asked. And it felt like bragging, so why bother?"
Seeing the impatient frowns on the people in the line, Lucas scurried away, outside the red ropes.
With a mirthful smile, I greeted Bryce: "I didn't know you read my books, Bryce."
The tall, brown-haired, blue-eyed 18-year-old wore a pale gray shirt and shamrock-green pants.
His face was stoic but I could see the gleam of surprise in his dark blue eyes. "Just one of them."
I took the inky-blue-coated novel from his hand and I flipped it open to the first page. He must be fascinated by British murder mystery-thrillers since he favored "Scarlet Thread" of the two.
While I signed my name on the yellowish-white page, I heard someone yell: "I love you, S. Green!"
I raised my chin and caught sight of a young brunette in a green tank top and skinny jeans. She must be around fourteen or fifteen years old, and she was waving her arm to get my attention.
"I love you, too!" I called out to her, and she squealed.
"You sure are reckless, saying that to a complete stranger," Bryce remarked as I shut his book.
YOU ARE READING
Twice The Trouble
Teen FictionMeet the Sta. Ana Sisters: Sophia is labeled as the Goody two shoes-Twin. She lives by the rules in and out of campus, and drowns herself in work almost everyday, not entertaining any guy who shows any interest in her. Stacy is known as the typical...