The Fix

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The Fix Page 1

by Natasha Sinel




  Copyright © 2015 by Natasha Sinel

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief excerpts in critical reviews or articles. All inquiries should be addressed to Sky Pony Press, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously.

  Sky Pony Press books may be purchased in bulk at special discounts for sales promotion, corporate gifts, fund-raising, or educational purposes. Special editions can also be created to specifications. For details, contact the Special Sales Department, Sky Pony Press, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018 or [email protected].

  Sky Pony® is a registered trademark of Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.®, a Delaware corporation.

  Visit our website at www.skyponypress.com.

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available on file.

  ISBN: 978-1-63450-167-5

  Ebook ISBN: 978-1-5107-0028-4

  Cover design by Sarah Brody

  Cover image by Trevillion Images/Elisabeth Ansley

  For Mom and Dad

  CHAPTER ONE

  Sebastian Ruiz got me thinking about things I’d wanted to forget forever. And then he disappeared.

  Rumors were flying in the junior hallway. Even though Sebastian was a loner, his name suddenly took on celebrity status. He’d tried to kill himself. He’d OD’d. He’d been shipped off to military school. He’d been kidnapped. If it had been anyone else, I would have thrown an alien abduction theory into the mix.

  But it wasn’t someone else.

  It was Sebastian Ruiz—who only a few days earlier had come to Rebecca’s party and had shaken me up like a long-forgotten snow globe and then walked away, leaving me to the impossible task of catching all the fluttering bits of false snow.

  I hadn’t even wanted to go to Rebecca’s party. Hours before, I’d been sitting under the oak tree, flipping through my well-worn copy of UC Berkeley’s architecture program brochure. I stared at my favorite photo—six students enraptured by a professor with wild white hair and bushy eyebrows. If I squinted, the girl on the left with blondish-brown hair could be me.

  Then Rebecca called.

  “Don’t bail on me,” she said immediately.

  I hesitated, trying to think of a good reason why I couldn’t go to her party. Every other Saturday, Rebecca’s mom worked the double-shift at the radio station. And that’s when we’d break out the sex, drugs, and good ol’ rock ’n’ roll. But that night, I just wasn’t in the mood.

  Apparently, I’d hesitated too long, because Rebecca jumped on the silence.

  “Listen, I can hear you wracking your brain for an excuse. You don’t have one. This is bullshit.”

  “I’m—”

  “Seriously,” she said. “Jasmine can’t come, and there’s another guy coming, so it would be me and like seven guys.”

  “What guy?” I asked. Fresh blood was rare. It was always the same group of eight to ten of us. The drama club stoners and me.

  “He’s not a drama guy. Chris ran into him at the diner this morning and invited him.”

  Chris—my best friend with benefits, boyfriend, whatever.

  “Name?”

  “Sebastian,” she said. “Tall, skinny, glasses. Kinda cute. You know who I’m talking about?”

  “Yeah,” I said, making sure my voice sounded normal. “He’s in my English class.”

  I didn’t tell Rebecca that for the last few weeks during class, I’d been making eye contact with Sebastian more frequently and longer than was probably acceptable for someone with a boyfriend. I didn’t know what it meant. Nothing, probably. Just that we were both bored and happened to be looking up at the same moment. Or maybe not.

  “So?” Rebecca said. “I need you to come.”

  Mom poked her head out between the sliding doors, her face flushed from yet another marathon on the treadmill.

  “Are you having dinner here?” Mom shouted across the yard.

  “No,” I yelled back. “I’m going to Rebecca’s.”

  She closed the door quickly, lest any air-conditioning escape.

  “Oh, thank god for small miracles,” Rebecca said. “Come over soon.”

  “Okay.” I rolled up the Berkeley catalog and went around the house to the garage so I wouldn’t have to see Mom.

  Hours later, I was on Rebecca’s porch with the regulars. Ryan and Tyler sat on the floor, their backs against the railing. They hooked up occasionally, and lately Tyler wanted more, but Ryan insisted he wasn’t gay. Tyler was holding back tears.

  “That doesn’t even make sense,” he said. I knew what would happen next. Ryan would feel bad for hurting Tyler, he’d put his arm around him, and take him somewhere to “talk.”

  Cody, Rebecca, and Salim sat on folding chairs at the small table in the corner, playing Never Have I Ever with shots of vodka. Matt straddled the beer cooler, drumming it with his hands to the beat of the music—something by some Broadway diva they were all obsessed with who’d recently gone solo.

  Chris sat on the porch swing next to me, his arm stretched over my shoulders. He held a can of beer; I nursed a vodka cranberry. He waved a gnat away from us. Because I’d known Chris since birth, we didn’t have to talk much.

  “Never have I ever been in a threesome!” Rebecca called out. Cody raised his hand proudly and took a shot of vodka.

  “Really?” Rebecca frowned at him. Cody was her ice cream, her spaghetti and meatballs, her wish upon a star. And every now and then, Cody would decide that she was his too.

  Rebecca came over to the porch swing and squished herself between Chris and me. She put her hands in Chris’s thick blond hair and kissed him loudly on the cheek and turned to me and licked the side of my face.

  “Gross!” I yelled.

  “My two best friends. Together. Include me, please,” she said. “Come on—Cody’s done it. Let’s do it.”

  Chris choked on his beer.

  “You’re wasted,” I said, wiping my cheek.

  “But I love you guys,” she whined.

  “And we love you,” I said as she stretched her body across us, her head in my lap and her legs on Chris’s.

  She yawned, which made me yawn. It seemed like Sebastian wasn’t coming, and I didn’t want to admit to myself that I was waiting for him, so I began preparing an excuse to leave.

  But right then Sebastian turned the corner onto Rebecca’s street, his hands deep in his jeans pockets.

  The way his shoulders slouched reminded me of the first time I ever saw him, a few days before the start of fourth grade. I’d been fighting with my mom, and I needed to get out of the house, which felt toxic with our screams. I ran toward my oak tree, making my way past the pool to the back of our property. But there was a boy sitting in my spot. A skinny boy with glasses and big feet. I felt anger burning up inside me. Who the hell was this kid, and what was he doing under my oak tree?

  I stomped right up to him.

  “Who are you?” I demanded.

  The boy quickly closed his book. It was thick with glossy pictures of planets and stars on the front—wispy rings circling one of the planets. Sunlight reflected off his wire-rimmed glasses, and when he squinted, he revealed white teeth that contrasted with his light brown skin. He put his hand up to shade his eyes, which were dark brown and fringed with the longest black eyelashes I’d ever seen. A smooth, white scar cut through his left eyebrow, making a gap where the hair didn’t grow.

  “I’m Sebastian,” he said.

  “What are you doing here?”

  �
��Uh, my stepfather is here.” He pointed at the house. “He meets with your father. He builds a room maybe.” English was definitely not his first language.

  Dad was thinking of doing an addition on the family room—making a sunroom.

  I was annoyed. This boy was in my space. But he wasn’t taking the hint to get up, so finally, I sat next to him. He showed me his book about the solar system.

  “It’s a new book,” he said, pointing at the shiny binding, “but it is already out of date.”

  “What do you mean?” I asked.

  “The International Astronomical Union is changing what means planet. And Pluto becomes a dwarf planet instead of a planet.”

  “So, they can just do that?” I asked. “Change what’s always been just because a few old guys say so?”

  Sebastian shrugged. “A planet clears the area of its orbital path. A dwarf planet does not do this. Pluto does not, so it is a dwarf planet.”

  “Whatever that means,” I said.

  “It means that it appears the same, but it does not do the same, so it is different.”

  For a second, my mind swam with planets and dwarf planets, the way things look versus the way things are. I tried to digest the meaning of what he’d said, and perhaps even a deeper meaning, when my sixteen-year-old cousin Scott jumped out from the other side of the tree, scaring the hell out of me.

  “Who’s he?” Scott asked.

  “Sebastian,” I said, when I could breathe again. Sebastian nodded at him.

  “What’cha reading?” Scott asked.

  “Nothing,” I said.

  “I’m going in the pool,” he said. “Let’s hang out after he leaves.”

  Scott walked over to the pool and dove in, making a loud splash.

  “Want to swim?” I asked Sebastian, even though Scott had implied that he was not invited.

  “I don’t know how.”

  I looked at him like he was crazy. “Then what do you do in the summer?”

  “I read,” he said. “I study.”

  “Well, if you’re gonna live here, you need to swim. Nobody studies in the summer.”

  We watched Scott swimming laps, his strokes perfect. I felt the pull to go to the pool, the pathetic need to do what Scott wanted, like I always did.

  “Well, I’d better go,” I said.

  Sebastian picked up his book and walked toward the driveway where his stepfather’s truck was parked. He turned around and waved, and I felt a sudden pang of loneliness. I went inside to put on my bathing suit—the orange one that made me feel brave like a lifeguard.

  Dad didn’t ever build that sunroom.

  I didn’t see Sebastian again until ninth grade when all the area schools combined into one high school. And even then, he wasn’t on my radar.

  Until now.

  Sebastian still had the same features he had at nine years old—light brown skin, dark brown hair buzzed short, impossibly long eyelashes behind wire-rimmed glasses, and a long, straight nose. But now he was tall. Really tall.

  Chris called out to Sebastian. “Hey, you showed! Nice.”

  Sebastian pulled his earbuds out and stuffed them in his pocket.

  “Hey,” he said, taking the porch steps two at a time.

  A couple of the guys reached out to him for a dude handshake-bump thing. Rebecca got up and gave him a Euro double kiss—one on each cheek. Then he turned to me.

  “Hey, Macy,” he said, his voice quiet and deep.

  “Hi.” I hoped he wasn’t expecting me to do the double-kiss thing. While Rebecca could pull something like that off, I definitely couldn’t.

  After Chris handed him a beer from the cooler, Sebastian appeared to be listening to him and the other guys speculate about who else in the junior class might have had a threesome. I stayed on the porch swing with Rebecca. She analyzed major celebrities who’d gotten their start on Disney TV shows, and I tried not to be aware of Sebastian standing just a few feet away from me.

  A little while later, Sebastian headed upstairs with everyone to get high. He looked at me like he was waiting for me to come too, but I didn’t.

  The second time everyone went in, Sebastian stayed behind with me, and for a split second, I felt uneasy. If his dark eyes made me feel the way they did in a classroom full of people, what would happen when we were alone, the moths flitting in and out of the dim porch light our only witnesses? He perched on the railing in front of me and cracked another beer.

  “That looks comfortable,” he said. He no longer had even a hint of an accent.

  “Sure is,” I said, plumping up the flowered pillow behind my back.

  He stood up to his full, lanky six-foot-many-inches.

  “Room for me?” he asked as he walked toward me.

  I nodded.

  The old rusty chains creaked as he sat next to me. We pushed our feet against the peeling gray porch floor, swaying back and forth. I wondered if Sebastian could feel the wisps of hair that had escaped from my yellow bandana and were dancing in the spring breeze toward his face.

  I stared at his giant sneakers—orange, unlaced high-tops. Graffiti covered the sides of the soles. There were pictures of eyes—some with huge teardrops—lips, trees, a bird.

  “That’s cool,” I said, pointing at one of the eyes on his left shoe. He held it up so I could see better.

  “That’s my ‘eye of the world’ eye,” he said. “It watches over everything.” He pointed two fingers at his eyes and then at mine, back and forth—the I’ve got my eye on you gesture. Then, with exaggerated seriousness, he locked his gaze on mine. My pulse raced.

  We both laughed uncomfortably.

  We looked at the street and continued swinging back and forth, back and forth. My heart finally slowed to its normal rhythm.

  “I got you with that one, right?” he said. “I’m kind of a ladies’ man.”

  I raised my eyebrows at him.

  “I’m serious! Check this out!” He held up his thin but solid arm, pushed the sleeve of his T-shirt to his shoulder, and pretended to flex his bicep; he frowned when nothing happened.

  “Ha, ha,” I said.

  “I don’t have a BMW, or any car, actually, but I do have a sweet BMX.” He paused. “If you’re nice, I’ll take you for a ride—you can sit on the handlebars while I pedal. You’re impressed, right?”

  “I didn’t know you were trying to impress me.” I smiled, vaguely aware that the classroom eye contact had moved to flirting and my boyfriend was just inside the house.

  “Well, you know,” he said. “It’s always worth a try.”

  And then his face got serious. “I’m sorry I stared at you the other day. In the hallway.”

  “Huh?”

  “Oh, never mind,” he said. “I thought you caught me looking.”

  I wanted to say, “Don’t we catch each other looking all the time lately?” But of course, I didn’t. Instead I said, “When?”

  “You were outside the art room. I’d never seen you there before. You were looking at your phone and you had this sad expression for a second. I felt like I was looking in your window with the shades up or something.”

  His honesty was both scary and refreshing. I remembered that day. Sometimes when I felt like being alone, I hung out near the art room. I liked the smell of the paint and clay.

  “So, what was up? What made you so sad?” he asked.

  “It was no big deal, really. I applied for a summer internship, so that was just the inevitable ‘thanks but no thanks’ e-mail.”

  I cleared my throat, wishing the sound could be like an eraser. I hadn’t told anyone that I’d written to a small architecture firm in town about the possibility of working there in August. Not even Rebecca or Chris.

  “Doesn’t sound like no big deal,” he said.

  “I thought it might help with college applications, but whatever, I’ll find something else.”

  “Where do you want to go?”

  “Berkeley,” I said.

  “In Californi
a?”

  I nodded.

  “Why so far?” he asked.

  “Because it’s so far.” I laughed awkwardly. And also Berkeley had one of the best undergraduate architecture programs in the country. “Where do you want to go?”

  Sebastian shrugged. “So then, what are you doing this summer, now that you don’t have the internship?” he asked.

  “In July we’re going to Nantucket. I always work at a T-shirt store while I’m there. What about you?”

  “Babysitting my half-sister, I guess. My mom’s a nurse with a crazy schedule, and my stepfather’s got his own building company, so it’s looking like Sofia will get to go to Camp Sebastian.”

  I wasn’t one of those girls who got all gushy about guys being good with kids, but I couldn’t help smiling.

  I noticed a design on the top of his shoe, between where the laces ended and his big toe.

  “What about that one?” I asked. It was so swirly and intricate; I could barely make out its shape. “Is it a key?”

  He looked surprised. “I didn’t think it was that obvious.”

  “It’s not,” I said. “I can just sort of tell. It is, right?”

  He nodded slowly. “To lock things up.”

  “Like what things?”

  “You know,” he said. “Stuff that should be locked up. Dirty magazines, money, bad guys, secrets.”

  I stared at the key on his shoe—the blue swirls and whirls. I couldn’t see where they began or ended. I squinted to see the details in the dim light.

  “What kind of secrets?” I asked.

  “Any secrets. Most embarrassing secret. Go.”

  “Oh, no,” I said. “I’m not playing this game.”

  “I’ll show you mine if you show me yours.”

  “Very funny…. Fine,” I said. “Here’s one. When I was eleven, I was dying to have this Barbie ski chalet—it seemed so cozy on the commercial. It had a pretend fireplace with logs and everything. But I was too old for Barbies, so I ordered it in secret with my mom’s credit card. When it came, I hid the box under my bed. After I finally put it together, my cousin caught me, and I never heard the end of it.”

  Sebastian looked at me. “That’s the best you can do?”

  “Yup. What about you?”

 

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