Hmmm. I watch Noah as he carves off the tip of his pie and slides it between his lips. He no longer is the arrogant, aristocratic king. The desert has stripped him of his crown – his wavy hair rumpled and plastered to his scalp with sweat, his skin dry and patched with grazes, his eyes red and bloodshot. And yet, to me, he’s never appeared more noble.
“Why are you being so nice to me?” I blurt out.
Noah turns away, hiding his face. “Eat your ridiculous cake.”
“Answer me, Marlowe.”
He sighs. “I’m not being nice. No matter how much I fucking hate you, I’m not going to rape you in the middle of the desert. What Alec tried to do was sick. End of.”
I’m dying to ask him about the party the other night where his hard cock ground into my hip. But I can’t deal with thinking about cock right now, so instead I carve off another corner of the cake with my fork and shove it into my mouth.
“Okay, this is amazing. You have to try it.” I wave my spoon at him.
“I have my own.”
“Not for long.” I reach across and swipe a decent chunk off the side of his pie.
“What are you doing?”
“Enjoying the spoils of war.” I grin as I shove the pie into my mouth. Something about the sugar and about being here with Noah and the relief at not being a corpse roasting under the desert sun turns me giddy.
Noah watches me out of the corner of his eye, and I notice that the fire on the edge of his coal-black irises has dimmed. The hatred that usually burns for me alone is now the warmth that dragged me from the desert. He swipes his cake away from me. “Are you high?”
“No, I’m hungry. And these cakes are amazing.”
“See, I don’t get it – you’re not supposed to be impressed by cake. Especially not a cake purchased from a gas station. Every girl at our school is a hundred pounds of pure bitchy hummus, and you’re supposed to be Queen of them all.”
I poke my tongue out at him, showing him the half-chewed cake on the end of it. “Maybe I’m not like other girls. Also, when we get back, I’m trademarking ‘bitchy hummus’ – it would make a great health-food company name. Maybe it will supply snacks to Stonehurst vending machines.”
Noah snorts. We finish our cakes in silence. Maybe I’m delirious from heat and trauma, but hatred doesn’t seem to roll off his body any longer. Now it’s more of a low-level annoyance that buzzes in the air around us like an annoying fly.
“I meant what I said at the party.” I don’t know why I say this. “I used to crush on you hard. It must’ve been your superior cake-purchasing abilities.”
Noah throws his head back and laughs. It’s a real laugh, devoid of that hard edge. “Yeah, well… I had a crush on you, too.”
“Don’t lie. You acted like I didn’t exist.” I remember those weepy words in my diary, how Noah would avoid me at school and refuse to be in group projects or playground teams with me.
“Only because you were Eli’s girl.” Noah looks away again.
“I was thirteen. I was nobody’s girl.”
Noah shook his head. “You and Eli were written in the stars. That was obvious even to me, even when I wasn’t supposed to know you guys were hanging out. Eli’s my best friend, and when you disappeared, it nearly destroyed him. I hated you for that as much as for my brother.”
“I can’t imagine Eli destroyed by anything. He’s so… steady.”
Noah rolls his eyes, and for a moment, just a moment, I catch a glimmer of something like amusement in them before they return to their calm, dark state. “Oh yeah, Eli was wretched. He only spoke in sighs. For a whole year, he did no better than a B on any exam or test, which for Eli is like flunking out. He listened to that playlist you made him on constant repeat, and he even threw himself off his balcony like a character in a Shakespeare play.”
“He did not throw himself off a balcony,” I scoff.
“He did. He landed in his mother’s prize rose bushes. Broke his arm in two places. He was pulling thorns out of his ass for weeks. The only thing that seemed to help him was getting his