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Sometimes It Happens
Sometimes It Happens
Sometimes It Happens
Ebook278 pages4 hours

Sometimes It Happens

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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About this ebook

Cheating has consequences in this sparkly and humorous romance from the author of Two-Way Street and One Night That Changes Everything.

Hannah’s about to start her senior year, and she’s never been so scared. That’s because she’s going to have to face:
     1. Sebastian: the guy who dumped her on the last day of junior year.
     2. Noah: the guy she’s totally fallen for.
     3. Ava: Noah’s girlfriend...and Hannah’s best friend.
     As Hannah tries to figure out how she got herself into this colossal mess, one thing becomes crystal clear: there’s absolutely no way she’s going to make it through this day in one piece.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 12, 2011
ISBN9781442413160
Sometimes It Happens
Author

Lauren Barnholdt

Lauren Barnholdt is the author of the teen novels The Thing About the Truth, Sometimes It Happens, One Night That Changes Everything, Two-way Street, Right of Way, and Watch Me. She is also the author of the middle grade novels The Secret Identity of Devon Delaney, Devon Delaney Should Totally Know Better, Four Truths and a Lie, Rules for Secret-Keeping, Fake Me a Match, and the Girl Meets Ghost series. She lives in Waltham, Massachusetts. Visit her at LaurenBarnholdt.com.

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Rating: 3.8166666555555557 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    It was a great book.. I loved the characters and there were a lot of secrets and I liked how their relationships went from perfect to bad it seemed realistic
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A beach read. Nothing major happens but it was nice light entertainment.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I've had this one sitting on my ereader for a bit now... Wasn't sure I was ready to pick up another teen drama, but while I'm glad to have read it.. i feel a little let down.. Maybe it's because I have been reading books geared more towards adults, or it's because I'm still in a YA reading slump.. i couldn't really get into the story or connect with the characters.

    Hannah, Ava, Noah, Sebastian, and Lacey all seemed one dimensional and not really all that likable. The plot was one that I have read a million times and there wasn't a whole lot of drama. It's good for a quick summer read.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    great and amazing

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Great book we o spend the summer with. You almost want to crawl inside and just hold Hannah through the entire thing. Beautifully written and great characters.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I love this book :)

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Magnific

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    awesome

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I really wanted to like it, I really did but well I'm sorry I think the fact that she lost her virginity that night should've been a MUCH bigger deal and it wasn't the fact that they had sex was barely even mentioned.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book was really good. I borrowed it from the library and read it in a whole day! The book kept my interest the whole time. I loved the characters.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book moved too slowly for me. By the end of the first chapter, I knew basically what was going on and what was going to happen, but I thought there might be a twist. There kinda was, but it wasn't really worth reading the rest of the book to find it.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I picked up Sometimes it Happens just to see what Lauren Barnholdt's writing style was, and three hours later I was done with the book. This was my very first novel by Barnholdt, and definitely won't be my last. Especially if she writes all her books the way she did this one.Ava and Hannah are best friends and just finished their sophomore year. After everything that just went down with Hannah and her ex-cheating-boyfriend Sebastian, she is ready to move on and enjoy her summer with her best friend. But then Ava decides to break the news to Hannah that she is going away for the summer and getting a summer job, leaving Hannah behind with Ava's boyfriend Noah.Noah and Hannah get really close over the summer, and I mean REALLY close. Neither one expected it or even thought about it. It just happened between them and it leaves Hannah pretty much in a box of nerves the first day of her senior year.Barnholdt did an excellent job developing Noah and Hannah's relationship. It wasn't an immediate thing that happened, but you can almost feel the chemistry coming off the pages whenever they were together. Their relationship made me laugh, Hannah is such a funny character and was so blind about everything. Noah was obvious, but Hannah never once picked up on his feelings. What she did know was that she just couldn't stop thinking about Noah.I think that Barnholdt also did an excellent job writing this story. She pieced it together perfectly and it wasn't over dramatic or exaggerated. The chapters go from present to past. You learn how everything started between Noah and Hannah, then you jump into the present.Obviously I found nothing wrong with Sometimes It Happens. I opened it just for a peek and then was done. It's definitely a very entertaining story and so fast paced, you can take it to the beach this summer and finish it in one sitting. A must read!

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Hannah and Ava have been best friends for a long time. So when Ava leaves to be a summer camp counselor during the summer before their senior year, after Hannah is cheated on by her boyfriend Sebastian, Hannah is lost without a clue how to live normally. Then Ava's boyfriend Noah forces her out of her pajamas and self-pity, and into a job at the diner he and their friend Lacey work at, Cooley's. Slowly as the summer goes on, Hannah finds herself getting over Sebastian. This would be great, except for her and Noah's growing feelings for one another. Then on the last day before school starts they do the unthinkable - they sleep together, before he breaks up with Ava. Can Hannah get the guy, salvage all her broken friendships and survive the first day of senior year? This book alternates between the start of the summer all the way through the end of it and the first day of school, beginning to end. I do give Lauren Barnholdt credit for making me read all the way to the end. Which I regretted, because it was an enormous waste of time. Ava was a complete and total bitch, Hannah was wimp who couldn't even really defend her decision to cheat, Noah and Sebastian were total d-bags who don't deserve air or space and Lacey was an overwrought hypochondriac who made me roll my eyes a lot. I did not care for this book AT ALL. I liked Hannah at the beginning, but that didn't last folks. The synopsis also gives the false impression that the ending won't be quite so predictable. It was totally predictable which did nothing to save it's honor in my eyes. Cheating is NEVER justified people, and it's not romantic. NOT EVER. You want a book with self respect? Read Anna and the French Kiss, not this complete and utter trash. Recommended only as an overly pricey chew-toy for pet owners.VERDICT: 1.5/5 Stars and a good, swift drop-kick from my window (not really, but I wanted to...and that's being KIND!)*No money or favors were exchanged for this review. This book is now available in stores and online.*

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I read this book as an advanced readers copy, and immediately from the first few pages I was intrigued. And the more I read, the more I became engrossed.This book flicks between the current situation which was the first day back at school (senior year), and alternates by taking us back to the Summer before and what happened that Summer that leads us up to the first day back at school. I actually thought this was a brilliant idea by the author, because by writing the way she did with this book, she actually takes away a lot of the blame that gets pointed at people when they are cheating on someone. Instead, she told the story from an emotional view point. No one was meant to get hurt. Hannah didn’t want to hurt Ava and Noah certainly didn’t want to hurt Ava either. Because we get fed a little bit of the story at a time before coming back to the current situation, we get an overall sense of the picture and can look it as a whole rather than to get fixated on the small details and cast judgement on the characters.It illustrates as the title suggests, that sometimes… it does happen. And sometimes there is no bad guy. We actually are shown a number of examples of cheating throughout the book through that are seperate from the Hannah/Noah/Ava situation. In particular Sebastian when he originally cheats on Hannah with the freshman. We feel a real sense of anger towards him for doing to that to her. But we don’t really feel the same type of anger towards Hannah or Noah for doing that to Ava? At least I didn’t when I read the story. It made me question why I felt that way, when really everyone was all involved in cheating. I think it made me realise that every situation is different, and whilst there is no endorsement from the author (and I have never been involved in cheating before either), it made me think of it all in a different light.The characters were so real, they stood out to me and spoke to me, and even though I am a fair bit older than the characters themselves, I know I could see myself in a few of those characters and they were relatable.The story was so solid, and the way she interwove the story to have it all fit together the way she did was amazing. It was such an enjoyable read, highly recommend this book, it is a page turner!

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book took me back to the ever dramatic years of high school where a girl finds herself in the sticky predicament of having slept with her best friend's boyfriend while her best friend was away at summer camp. The characters and dialogue are authentic and will appeal to present day teens, and while being a story of high school love, it is more the story of the realization that true friendship and love means more than just hanging out with someone you like.This book is sure to appeal to teenage girls and is recommended to those who are looking to read a young adult novel that is more akin to the literary fiction genre.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    As the summary says, Hannah gets wrapped up in feelings beyond friendship for Noah, her best friend’s boyfriend. Now, I’ve read Emily Giffin novels, including Something Borrowed and Something Blue, so I’m familiar with cheating storylines. The thing I was curious about, though, was how Hannah would come across — would I be sympathetic about her situation? Or would I side with Ava, her best friend? As it turned out, it was a little of both.I enjoyed Hannah as a narrator. She’s a little dramatic post-breakup with Sebastian, but I found that, and a lot of her internal monologue, amusing. What I liked best about her, though, was that she didn’t try to make excuses for herself regarding the situation with Noah. Sure, she is understandably nervous and hesitant to come clean to Ava, but she doesn’t place the blame on anyone else. Noah, questionable music taste aside (my eye twitched when I saw Paramore alongside The Beatles and Sting in his early recs to Hannah), was a decent guy. He was sweet and attentive and he did try to do the right thing in his situation with the girls. I liked that he and Hannah became friends first and that Barnholdt didn’t overemphasize the cheating stuff.The back and forth switch between the past and the present really made this a fast paced read. I was eager to see the progression between Noah and Hannah during their summer together, as well as the consequences of their actions in the present. I couldn’t say which chapters I preferred because both had me glued to their pages.This might have been a four star read if not for the ending. It wasn’t bad or out of character, but I was left flipping through the last pages going, “Where’s the rest?!” I don’t know what I was expecting, but I felt that the conclusion was fairly abrupt. That said, Sometimes It Happens was an addictive and fun summer read and a great introduction to Lauren Barnholdt’s works. I’m very excited to check out her other novels soon!

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Sometimes It Happens is the very first book I’ve read from author Lauren Barnholdt. And let me tell you, I am officially a fangirl. Her realistic teenage characters and voices make the story so authentic and entertaining. Pair that with dizzying romance drama and you’ve got one hell of a summer read.There are quite a few books out there with the “girl falls for best friend’s boyfriend” plot. I tend to avoid them because I know I‘ll end up rolling my eyes and putting it down halfway through. I went into this book with the firm idea that I’d end up hating Hannah because I knew she was going to hurt Ava by messing with Noah. (Admittedly, I’ve been on the “best friend” side of this kind of drama before and I know how much it sucks) But surprisingly, I didn’t want to punch Hannah in the face. Ava wasn’t written to be evil, but she was definitely irritating. And the relationship between her and Hannah was flawed. Of course, that’s no excuse. But the title for this book is spot on: Sometimes It Happens. Hannah and Noah don’t just decide they went to mess around behind Ava’s back. Their feelings develop over the summer, slowly, and even that relationship is flawed. It just seemed really believable without all of the sugarcoating.Overall, I loved this book. And if I was able to set aside my preconceived notions and judgments and actually love the book, it was a successful reading experience. Told in alternating chapters between the summer and the first day of school, Sometimes It Happens is romantic and emotional and authentic and gah! I just have way too many good things to say.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The story of this book is told through a series of flashbacks, all leading up to the first day of school. The summer starts out with Hannah discovering her boyfriend kissing another girl at a party. Things soon go from bad to worse as Hannah's best friend Ava tells her she's leaving town all summer to go be a camp counselor. However, Ava leaves her boyfriend Noah in charge of taking care of Hannah. With Noah's help Hannah soon has a new job, a new friend, and a new perspective on life. When Hannah makes a huge mistake, will she ruin everything?I actually enjoyed this book, which kind of surprised me. I'm not usually a huge romance fan, but this book was fun and fast-paced. From the cover I thought it was going to be serious and angsty, but it was actually the opposite. I felt like the relationships were fairly realistic and not too rushed. Mistakes were made and owned up to. It was shown that there are always multiple sides to stories, and sometimes the only thing we can control is our actions. However, the book was never preachy.It really did feel like a summer book. In the end, you could sense not only the change of some relationships but also the change into a new school year and new phase of life even. I think a lot of people, both young and older adults, will be able to feel for the different characters. This book kept me interested until the very end, and I had a great time reading it.Galley provided by publisher for review.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Sometimes It Happens was one of my favorite books that I've read this year, because it was so real, relatable, and the character's were strong and very well developed. I think Barnholdt did a phenomenal job of tackling the cheating issue, while still keeping all the character's true to the story being told. It was also a very smart idea to flip between the summer before and the first day of school, so the reader could get a sense of what happened versus what's about to happen. Sometimes It Happens, was an easy book for me to read. Once I started, I just didn't want to stop until I was finished reading the last page. I'm not usually a fan of novels that involve cheating as a main plot, but the author made it almost incredibly hard not to want to see Hannah and Noah end up together. While, Hannah might have done a crappy thing by cheating with Noah behind Ava's back, I still very much enjoyed the character. She was highly intelligent, relatable, witty, and the perfect blend of sarcastic. It made me realize that we're all human and we're all capable of doing crappy things to one another, sometimes we do them because we mean them and sometimes we don't and it just happens. This novel does a really great job of illustrating the "sometimes we don't and it just happens," and because of that I can't really be too hard on Hannah all that much, because she did feel bad for what she'd done. Of course she did have her moments, where she was completely blind to some things. Noah proved to be a good friend to her, during the summer. He was able to pull Hannah out of her slump and manage to have a little bit of fun. I really liked him, because he was such a nice guy and it was very easy to see how they developed a friendship that slowly, became something more - something very real and meaningful to them. But, it was hard too, because neither one of them really wanted to hurt Ava, even though they both knew in the long run that it would. So, they did their best to ignore the feelings they had until they just couldn't deny them or hold back any longer. I also found myself really enjoying the friendship that Hannah and Lacey cultivated over the summer, by bonding through similar experiences and making a pact with each other. It just felt more healthy and natural, than Hannah's and Ava's. That might be due to the fact, that we got to see a little more of Lacey and Hannah's friendship, rather than just being told through Hannah's point of view what her and Ava's friendship was like and how much it meant to Hannah. Lacey was a lovable hypochondriac breath of fresh air and one of the bright spots of this novel for me. She was so much fun and provided pitch perfect comedy that only enhanced the novel a great deal. I truly enjoyed her a great deal and it was easy to see how her reaction to finding out about Hannah and Noah was one of the most realistic, not because she didn't want Hannah to be happy, but because she was more or less hurt that Hannah wasn't honest with her about it when she had called her to leave school and come pick her up. In the end, I'm glad that these two were able to remain friends.I don't really want to say that I disliked Ava, but she wasn't my favorite either. At times, she could come off as a mean bitch, but that doesn't mean I think she deserved this either. Actually no one deserves this, I just hope that she was able to realize that neither Hannah nor Noah really wanted to hurt her. Barnholdt very cleverly wrote this novel in such a way, that the reader was either meant to know or question that each situation was different. When Sebastian cheated on Hannah at the beginning of the book, it was almost expected that the reader feel anger and frustration towards him. Yet, when Hannah and Noah cheated, it was a bit different as it was a situation that just sort of happened where no one was really intended to get hurt. It was as much of a surprise to the two of them as it was the reader.I really enjoyed reading this book, despite the fact that it involved cheating, which is usually something that I don't particularly care for. In this instance, though, it actually worked because I think it was unexpected in a sense. So, I have no problems recommending this book to anyone who enjoys the Contemps and giving it four stars, as well. I will definitely be picking up more Barnholdt novels in the future, as I enjoyed this one very much.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I really enjoyed reading this book. I like the feel of reading it and really diving into the characters feelings. SO much happen in this book that it is hard not to get caught up in the feelings that are swirling around.So the story line of this book is the best. As the reader, you fall into the story fast seeing everything that happen. What I like was the switches from the past summer to the present. The switches were easy to follow and very intense. The pacing of the story flowed really well along with the build up of the story. Chapter by chapter the build up continue till is explodes. I think my heart was racing so fast, even I was nervous about the secret that was about to be spilled.The characters were a whole other element. The main character Hannah is so innocent. She had no intentions of hurting or planning what happen but I liked her cause she worried about everyone else and not herself. You can tell right off that all of this was really hurting her and that she was sorry. Ava on the other hand I felt was selfish. She held on to some secrets as well, so let's not go there girlfriend! My only gripe was the ending. I am not totally satisfied with it. I felt like maybe it could of ended a little more complete.This is a great book with loads of drama in it. It is filled with secrets, betrayals, and a love that no one could imagine that would happen. It will make your heart race and you will gasp!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Lauren Barnholdt is a clear voice in YA literature. Her writing style is easy and concise. I liked the way she alternated time periods and that the present day was only one day. The past began with the last day of school and ended yesterday. Through the protagonist's thoughts, I easily saw her point of view of changed with her thought processes.The best part about this book is that, although it takes the reader through the teenage drama and angst of high school, ultimately the message is one worth repeating. Get over it and move on. It's different than the message of redemption and forgiveness. It's much more simple and concise. The world is bigger than this moment and after a good cry, let it go. So not worth ruining your summer or senior year over. Not worth ruining a friendship over. A mistake does not define who you are.Sometimes It Happens is about cheating. Being rather old fashioned, I thought the amount of casual sex in the book was excessive. On the other hand, if taken out of high school drama context, there really is a deep and meaningful message. Although the title sounds like the behavior can be dismissed as out of the person's control, I didn't get that message out of it.Sometimes you screw up. Sometimes other people screw up. Sometimes your heart gets broken. Pick it up, put back together. Get over yourself. Get over the grudge. Figure it out and keep the long term objectives in mind.Three and half stars.

Book preview

Sometimes It Happens - Lauren Barnholdt

sometimes

it happens

ALSO BY

LAUREN BARNHOLDT

Two-way Street

Watch Me

One Night That Changes Everything

For Jennifer Klonsky, for being smart, savvy, and amazing

Acknowledgments

A million thank-yous to:

My agent, Alyssa Eisner Henkin, for being the hardest-working, smartest, most enthusiastic agent in the business. Alyssa, I cannot thank you enough for everything you’ve done for me.

My sister, Kelsey, for being Ally’s favorite, our Wednesday sleepovers, and for reading all my work.

My sister, Krissi, for her tattoo, our Old Navy trips, and always being there when I need her.

My mom, for her covert Facebook page, being my biggest inspiration, and always believing in me.

The best friends ever: Kevin Cregg, Scott Neumyer, Jessica Burkart, and Erin Dionne.

And of course, my husband, Aaron, for everything. Aaron, you came into my life and changed it one hundred percent for the better. I am so lucky to have you, and I love you with all my heart.

sometimes

it happens

The First Day of Senior Year

I really should not be so scared. I mean, I’ve done this millions of times before. Okay, maybe not millions. But for the last twelve years, on every weekday minus summers and vacations, I’ve gone to school. And I’ve never been afraid before. (Well, except for maybe a little bit in kindergarten, but isn’t everyone a little afraid in kindergarten? And besides, even then I wasn’t freaking out or anything. Not like Layna Hodge, who threw up all over the play box in the corner.)

Today, the first day of senior year, I’m terrified. This is because there is a very good chance that at some point today I will:

a. lose the love of my life,

b. lose my best friend, or

c. have an awkward encounter with the boy who broke my heart last year. (Note: This is a different boy than the previously mentioned love of my life. [See a.])

I take a deep breath and grip the steering wheel of my new car, then pull into a spot in the visitor lot of my high school. I’m technically not supposed to be parked here, but the visitor lot is way closer to my homeroom than the student lot, and since it’s the first day of school, I’m pretty sure I can get away with it. Plus it won’t be as obvious if I have to peel out of here and make an escape. Okay, I tell myself, you can do this. You are invincible; nothing can rattle you. You have nerves of steel; you are a confident, strong woman; you—

There’s a knock on the passenger side window and I scream, then immediately hit the automatic door locks.

I look over. Oh. It’s only Lacey.

She knocks on the window again, and I reluctantly unlock the doors.

She slides into the passenger seat, her long, red curly hair pooling around her shoulders. She smells like coffee and strawberry-mango shampoo.

Hey, she says, What’s wrong? Why’d you freak out when I knocked on your window? And why are you parked in the visitor lot? It took me forever to find you.

Nothing’s wrong, I say. Which is a lie, of course. But I can’t tell Lacey that. She knows nothing about what went on this summer. She knows nothing of the fact that my best friend Ava is coming back today, that everything is different, and that everything is horrible. That I’m going to see Noah, that I’m going to see Sebastian, that I’m going to maybe end up in a mental institution by the end of the day. Although, a mental institution actually might be preferable to going to school, so that might not be such a bad thing, now that I think about it.

Just normal first day of school nerves, I say brightly.

First day of school nerves? Lacey says, like she’s never heard of them. Which kind of makes no sense, since Lacey is one of the most nervous people I know. You need caffeine then, she says. It will fix you right up. She holds out the cardboard carrier that’s in her hand. It’s filled with three cups from Starbucks, and one’s marked with my fave: a large vanilla latte with Splenda and extra cream.

Thanks. I accept the huge coffee and take a sip. I don’t really buy into her reasoning that I need the caffeine, since it definitely isn’t going to calm me down. But maybe it’ll give me a shot of energy that will make me so buzzed I’ll be all excited to go into school. On the other hand, it’s only caffeine, not magic.

Where’s Noah? she asks. I brought him one, too. Of course she did. Coffee with a shot of espresso, extra sugar, extra cream. The same drink he had every single day this summer, when the three of us worked together at Cooley’s Diner, but we always brought in our own coffee because the stuff at Cooley’s tastes disgusting. (Cooley’s Diner coffee = mud, only, like, more bitter and tinged with the taste of a dirty cup.)

Noah? I ask, trying to keep my voice light. My hands tighten around my coffee, and I almost spill the whole thing all over myself. I dunno. I shrug, like Noah hasn’t even crossed my mind, when, of course, he’s the only thing I’ve been thinking about.

Didn’t you guys drive to school together?

No.

Why not? You guys drove to work together every day over the summer.

"Not every day, I say. And besides, I have a car now. I run my hand over the steering wheel of my new car, the car that took me all summer to save up to buy. It’s red (perfect), four doors (perfect), a 2005 (adequate) and has 120K miles on it (not so perfect, but beggars can’t be choosers, especially when it comes to transportation.) And besides, I add, Noah drives to school with Ava usually."

Oh, right. Lacey wrinkles up her nose. "I forgot that Ava’s back. She says Ava like it’s a dirty word. Sorry, she says. I know she’s your friend."

That’s okay. If Lacey thinks I’m acting weird, she doesn’t say anything, which is a good sign. If Lacey doesn’t realize anything’s going on, maybe Ava won’t either. And if Ava doesn’t, maybe Noah won’t. And that way we can just forget everything that happened this summer, especially what happened last night. Just push it all under the rug and start fresh. La, la, la, there it goes, like some kind of garbage being taken out to the curb, poof! I start to feel a little better. Maybe everything is going to work out after all. Of course, I don’t want to be the kind of girl with a scandalous secret, but sometimes you have to take what you can get and just—

Suddenly, something slams into the back of my car, and my whole body flies forward, my chest hitting the steering wheel.

Shit! Lacey says. Her fingers tighten around her coffee and the lid goes flying off, her cappuccino sloshing over the sides of the cup and splattering the front of the glittery silver tank top she’s wearing. Shit, shit, shit! She swivels her head around, strands of her hair whipping against her face.

I look in the rearview mirror. A red car (something expensive—maybe a Lexus?) has backed into me, and the driver, a girl wearing camouflage capris (doesn’t she know those are so five years ago?), comes rushing out of the driver’s side, and then peers down at my bumper. She looks like she’s about to burst into tears.

I close my eyes for a moment, and then open my door and climb out, Lacey hot on my heels.

What the hell is wrong with you? Lacey demands. She pulls the sunglasses she’s wearing down off the top of her head and slides them over her eyes.

Oh my God, I’m like sooo sorry, the girl says. She’s younger than us (probably a sophomore?) and she twists her hands into a knot in front of her. Her face is getting all scrunchy, like she really might be about to start crying.

It’s okay, I say, kneeling down and inspecting my bumper. There’s a tiny scratch, about two inches long, running down one side of it. It looks like it’s just a small scratch.

"A small scratch? Lacey yells. She bends down and looks at the car. You know how much small scratches cost to get fixed, Hannah? Like thousands of dollars!"

I’m so sorry, the girl says again. She’s wearing Converse sneakers, a black tank top, and about three million pounds of black eyeliner.

It’s okay, I say. She’s obviously one of those gothy girls who, like, pretends she’s over everything, but inside is about five seconds away from crying constantly. Seriously, goth girls cannot handle anything.

My dad is going to flip, Goth Girl says. He just got me this car. For a birthday present.

Oh, God, Lacey says. I’ll bet she’s rolling her eyes under the sunglasses, thinking of the hours and hours we spent this summer behind the counter at Cooley’s, sweating under the broken air conditioner and serving bottomless cups of coffee to the old men who would come in every day, sit for hours, and then tip us a dollar.

Look, I say to the girl, before Lacey can tear into her again, Can you just give me your insurance information? I guess that’s what you’re supposed to do in these situations. I mean, I’m not completely sure, since I’ve never actually been in a car accident. Until a few days ago, I never even had a car.

Right, the girl says. She heads to her car, rummages around in her glove compartment, and comes back. She carefully copies everything down onto a sheet of paper from a brand new black binder that’s covered with stickers of bands I’ve never heard of, then rips it out and gives it to me.

Thanks, Jemima, I say, glancing down at her name on the paper. Jemima? No wonder she looks so nervous. With a name like that you’re probably used to bad things happening to you. Starting, of course, with your parents naming you Jemima.

Why were you pulling out of a space, anyway? Lacey asks. "School’s about to start. Shouldn’t you have been pulling into a space? She looks down at the coffee stain on her tank top. Does your insurance cover clothing? Because this tank top was extremely expensive." It’s a lie, of course. Lacey got that tank top for $12.99 at Old Navy.

I forgot something, Jemima says, chewing on her bottom lip. At home. So I was going back to get it. And I’ll pay for your tank top. How much did it cost?

I hope your dad’s, like, a lawyer or something, being able to afford that fancy car. Because, honestly, if I get whiplash or some kind of neck affliction . . . Lacey rubs her neck, ignoring Jemima’s tank top offer.

Okay, well, bye! I say to Jemima, shooting her a look that says, get the hell out of here if you want to save yourself.

She scampers away obediently before Lacey has a chance to threaten any more litigation.

Lacey! I say. You didn’t have to scare the poor girl.

Sorry, she says. But Hannah, you have to be tougher on people. What if we were pushovers, and she decided to, like, commit insurance fraud or something so that she wouldn’t have to pay for your car.

Insurance fraud? Lacey, I don’t think that’s really—

Besides, she says, "I’m the one who should be scared. I have a bad neck now probably."

You do not have a bad neck, I say, rolling my eyes. I walk back toward the car and open the door.

What are you doing? Lacey asks. It’s almost time for homeroom. The bell’s going to ring in, like, one minute, and I need to see what Danielle Shapiro is wearing. I’ll bet she has a fake tan with one of those little heart cutout things. You know, like skanky body art?

You go ahead, I tell her. I’ll just—

Hannah! Lacey says. You are coming into school! Forget about stupid Sebastian Bukowski and his dumb friends. You are sooo over him! She crosses over to my side of the car and puts her hands on my shoulders. Hannah, you are amazing. You are gorgeous and smart and you deserve someone way better than Sebastian. He doesn’t even deserve to be a passing thought through your brain. She looks into my eyes. Now, we are going to go into school, me and you, and no matter what happens, I’m going to be right by your side, okay? Nothing to worry about.

Thanks, Lace, I say, giving her a weak smile. I don’t have the heart or the strength to tell her that Sebastian’s not even the half of it. That he’s not even the quarter of it. I don’t have the heart to tell her about Ava, or about what happened with Noah last night. And I don’t have the strength to argue with her. So when she takes my hand, I don’t protest, and when she pulls me across the parking lot, I force my feet to march in the direction of school.

Here goes nothing.

Three Months Earlier, the Last Day of Junior Year

Seniors, bitches! Ava declares, then slams her locker shut and whirls around, her shoulder-length blond hair forming a halo behind her.

Not yet, I say, shifting my bag from one shoulder to the other. I’ve just cleaned out my locker, and it weighs about a bazillion pounds. Seriously, I’m kind of afraid the strap is going to break. How have I accumulated so much stuff in just ten months? They should totally make a new show on A&E Hoarders: Locker Edition. We still have a whole summer before we’re seniors.

Ava looks at her empty locker. Goodbye, locker, she says. Goodbye, hallways. Goodbye, school! She grabs me and twirls me around the hall. We’ll miss you! And when we see you again, we’ll be SENIORS, BITCHES!

Don’t you think that’s a little dramatic? I say, but I start to laugh even though all the twirling is making me a little dizzy. We’re going to be back here in, like, two and a half months.

Yeah, she says. "But everything will be different then. We’ll be seniors." She gives me a look, like being seniors is the most important thing that’s ever happened to us. Which I guess it kind of is, since so far in my life nothing too exciting has gone on. But the truth is, I don’t really want to be a senior. I mean, I guess it’s okay, because once senior year is over, I won’t have to go to high school anymore, and let’s face it, who doesn’t want high school to be over? But on the other hand, it means change. I don’t do well with change. At all. In fact, I try to avoid it at all costs.

And besides, high school isn’t all bad. Yeah, there’s the getting up ridiculously early, and the learning things you know you’re going to have no use for, and the annoying girls who think they’re better than everyone, and the worrying about your future every time you have a math test that you don’t do so well on, and the boys who break your heart.

But I like having classes with Ava and my boyfriend, Sebastian. I like knowing that when I come to school every morning, I can get away with taking sips out of my travel coffee mug that’s filled with a vanilla latte, as long as I don’t make a big deal out of it. I like knowing how to get out of gym class (say you’re having stomach issues), how to get out of dissecting frogs in bio (ethically opposed), and what girls to steer clear of because they’ll have no problem stealing your boyfriend and/or talking behind your back (Lynn Mol and Lila Jankowitz). I don’t know any of those things about college (or, you know, the world at large), which makes it seem scary and overwhelming.

Hey, guys, Ava’s boyfriend, Noah, slides up to us in the hallway, puts his arms around Ava from behind, and nuzzles the back of her neck.

Noah! Ava rolls her eyes, but slides back into him. I swallow and try not to feel jealous. Not of Noah. I mean, he’s nice and everything, but I don’t like him like that. The jealousy is more because of just how close Noah and Ava are. Actually, I guess close isn’t really the word. It’s more like they’re comfortable together. Which is the total opposite of me and Sebastian.

Even after five months together, I still worry that Sebastian’s not going to call me when he says he will, and I’m still not completely sure what the rules are when it comes to kissing him in the hall or holding his hand at parties. Sebastian isn’t so into PDA. Which is fine, but it makes it kind of uncomfortable when we’re hanging out with Ava and Noah. Whenever we go on double dates, those two will be, like, practically making out, and Sebastian and I will be standing next to each other, feeling all awkward. Which would also be fine, if we could talk about it later. Like, if Sebastian would be all, Wow, Noah and Ava are crazy, I’m so glad we don’t have to be all over each other in public to know how much we care about each other. And then I would be all, I know, right? But maybe we could hold hands sometime at least. And then Sebastian would be like, Okay, anything for you. But that will never happen. Mostly because (a) Sebastian and I really don’t talk about relationship issues that much, and (b) he would never say anything for you.

Party tonight, Noah says now. At Jenna Lamacchia’s.

Ugh, over it. Ava takes a piece of gum out of her purse, chews it a couple of times, then spits it back into the wrapper. She throws the wrapper with the chewed up gum into her now-empty locker. Ava doesn’t like gum. She just chews it to make her breath smell fresh. I hate Jenna Lamacchia, and I don’t want to go to a party.

Why not? I ask, It could be fun. It’s a lie, and we all know it. The only reason Jenna Lamacchia’s house is fun is because her parents are never home. Her parties are always ridiculously loud, there’s always a bunch of people in the guest bedroom smoking pot that wafts through the whole house, and you can hardly move because the living room is so small. Plus, it’s not even that special anymore since she has a party, like, every night. Besides, I say, there’s nothing else to do. That part, at least, is true.

What’s going on? Ava asks, narrowing her blue eyes at me suspiciously. Why do you want to go to Jenna’s so bad?

I don’t, I say.

Then why did you just say you did?

I consider lying, but I know Ava will see right through it. That’s what happens when you’ve been best friends since sixth grade. Fine, I say. If you must know, Sebastian has been MIA all day, so I’m not totally sure, but I’m assuming he probably wants to go. Sebastian loves going to Jenna’s house. Mostly because of the pot in the back bedroom.

You want to go to Jenna’s because you know Sebastian wants to go? Ava asks. Hannah, that’s kind of pathetic.

Ava! Noah says. Be nice. But his tone is teasing and he’s biting on the back of her neck.

Sorry, Hans, Ava says. But you shouldn’t want to do something you hate just because Sebastian wants to get high in Jenna’s back bedroom.

Look, I say. I’m not— And then I see Sebastian, walking down the hall toward me, his long legs encased in the jeans I bought him for Christmas.

Hey, he says, like it’s totally normal we haven’t seen each other all day. Like it’s totally normal that he didn’t meet me outside by the benches before school the way he told me he would, and then never texted me to apologize and/or explain why. He slides his arm around my waist and gives me a kiss. On the top of my head. WTF? I start to freak out a little. Okay, a lot. Sebastian has never kissed me on my head before. In our whole five-month relationship, I have never gotten a kiss on the head. Mouth, cheeks, sure. But head? No. Being kissed on the head is something your parents do to you when you’re, like, seven. And I’m smart enough to know that when your sixteen-year-old boyfriend is doing it, it’s not a good sign.

Sebastian, Ava says. Would you please tell Hannah that you aren’t going to break up with her?

Ava! Noah says.

Ava! I say. I want to say more, but I can’t because then what if Sebastian thinks I really am worried that he’s going to break up with me? So I just slide my arm around his waist, look up at him, and force my face into a smile. And when he smiles back, I let myself believe it’s going to be okay.

We end up at the party, of course, because there’s nothing else to do.

You totally have to go back to the mall and get that tank top in blue, Ava says as we tromp up the sidewalk toward Jenna’s house.

Why? I glance down at the long yellow tank top I’m wearing over black leggings.

Blue just looks a lot better on you than yellow, she says. I keep trying to tell you that you’re a winter, not a warm.

I have no idea what she’s talking about. You’ve never told me that before.

Ava ignores me and steers me up the cobblestones to the front door, then walks right into Jenna’s house. There’s a cloud of smoke permeating the living room, and Belle and Sebastian is blaring from the iPod in the corner. You can hardly move because there are so many people. You’d think that, with it being the last day of school and all, someone else would be having

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