Spark. Brigid Kemmerer
too,” he said.
“I shouldn’t have slammed the door in your face.”
“I much prefer it to getting hit.” He looked up, past her, at the bedroom. Finally, a break to the white—but this wasn’t much better. Pink carpeting, princess border along the ceiling, white walls, and a gold canopy bed.
“What,” he said, “no Barbie dream castle?”
Layne flushed. “Shut up.”
She moved to push past him and shut the door, but he slid into her room instead. She had a bookcase, white trimmed with pink, packed double and triple with paperbacks. No shocker there. It looked like she still had every book she’d ever read. Her bedspread wasn’t childish, though, just a simple pink, white, and yellow checked quilt. More books threatened to fall from a pile on the nightstand.
He’d been kidding about the Barbie dolls, but a row of model horses marched across the top of the bookcase, with a framed picture of a girl on a horse at the corner.
He touched a gray horse on the nose, and she was beside him immediately.
“Horses, Layne?” he said.
“Isn’t that what rich little girls do?” she said, her voice vaguely mocking. “Ride horses?”
The girl in the photo wore a helmet, so he couldn’t be sure who it was. “Is that you?”
“Yeah. Last year.” She hesitated, and something about it felt personal.
He withdrew his hand and made his own voice vaguely mocking. “I didn’t mean to make you talk about it.”
She bit at her lip. “No one knows I do it anymore.” Then she blushed and rubbed the gray horse on the nose where he’d touched it. “I mean, my parents know. They pay the bills and all. Just . . . no one at school.”
“What a crazy thing to keep secret.” He leaned closer to the picture. The horse was clearing a jump, with Layne crouched close to the animal’s neck. “That’s a big jump.”
“Nah. Only three and a half feet.”
He glanced back at her. “Aren’t you afraid you’ll fall?”
A little shrug. “Sometimes. I think that’s why I like it. No matter how good you are, you’re never completely in control. The horse has a mind of its own. You can’t force it.”
“So how good are you?”
She met his eyes, and he liked the spark of challenge he found there. “Good enough.” She paused. “When I was younger, I used to compete all the time. We went to New York, Devon, Washington, all the big ones. My mother loved it. She couldn’t wait to have another blue ribbon to hang on the wall, to brag about at the next benefit. Her perfect daughter.”
Like flipping a switch, Layne’s voice went from tentative to furious. “I hated the competition, I hated the pressure, I hated how something I loved had turned into something else my mother could use against me.”
She reminded him of the fire in the woods, under control one minute, then blazing.
“But still you do it,” he said.
“I don’t compete,” she said. “I just ride. Horses don’t care that I have—” Her voice broke off suddenly, and he studied her, waiting. But she didn’t say anything else, and she was staring at that picture, her shoulders tense.
The horses didn’t care that she had what?
She didn’t want him to ask—that much was clear from her posture. “You ride after school?”
She shook her head. “In the mornings. If I cut through the woods, I can walk to the farm in ten minutes.”
They had to be at school by seven forty-five. “You must get up early.”
She shrugged. “I like being the first one up. I can forget everyone else exists, and it’s just me and the elements.”
Gabriel smiled. “I know what you mean.”
She gave him a wry glance. “Please. I bet your alarm goes off at seven-forty.”
“You’d lose that bet.” He looked at the horses again, touching the next one in the row. It wasn’t his first time in a girl’s bedroom, but usually, the only talking they did was to shut him up before a parent heard. Here, alone with Layne, simply talking suddenly felt more intimate than anything he’d ever done with any random girl.
“I wouldn’t figure you for a morning person,” she said.
He brought his eyes back to hers. “I usually go for a run before the sun comes up.”
He liked running in the dark, before sunrise, when the sun couldn’t feed him energy. That always felt like cheating. It was one of the few things he did without Nick.
She tucked a strand of hair behind one ear. He wanted to reach out and undo the elastic at the end of her braid, to let her hair come loose, to see what she looked like when she wasn’t hiding behind this wall of I don’t care.
Layne was looking at him expectantly.
Crap. She’d said something.
This was ridiculous. He cleared his throat. “What?”
Her cheeks sparked with pink. “I . . . ah . . . asked if you wanted to go back to the kitchen to work on the trig stuff.”
He really wanted to stay right here and figure her out.
But this wasn’t why she’d asked him in. She wasn’t flirting with him. She hadn’t even asked him up here—he’d asked for the tour and had practically strong-armed his way into her bedroom.
He was being an idiot, standing here thinking about her hair.
Gabriel stepped back. “Sure. Whatever.”
The air in the hallway felt cooler, fed by the new distance between them. It reminded him of Nick.
He didn’t like that.
Gabriel touched her arm. “Hey.” He paused. “Thanks. For trying to help.”
She looked up at him, her eyes shadowed in the darkened hallway. “Thanks for helping Simon.”
He could hear her breath, as quick as his own.
Then he could hear a key in the front door.
He instinctively jerked back—not like he’d been doing anything.
Layne’s eyes went wide. “Crap. It’s my dad. Come on.” She grabbed Gabriel’s hand and tugged.
He jogged down the steps behind her, but there was no way they’d make it to the kitchen before her dad came through the door.
“Layne,” he said. “Christ, just relax. We weren’t—”
“You don’t understand.” The door started to open and she stopped short, turning, like maybe they should run back upstairs.
God, it was like being dragged by a panicked bird. Gabriel almost ran into her. One hand caught the banister, and he grabbed Layne around the waist to keep from knocking her down the stairs.
And that’s exactly how her father found them.
If Layne hadn’t told Gabriel that her dad was a lawyer, he would have guessed. The guy could have played one on television, what with the long camel coat over a black suit, the dark hair threaded with gray, the calculating eyes and angled jawline.
Eyes that narrowed on seeing them.
Gabriel let go of Layne and straightened. Nick was way better at doing the parent thing, and this guy didn’t look like the kind of dad to ignore their predicament, crack open a beer, and ask how Gabriel felt about the Ravens’ defensive line.
Layne’s face was