skin. Every time she looks over at Babe and me, her straight, shoulder-length, dark brown locks swish out around her face like she’s in a hair commercial. I’m already kind of jealous of her effortlessly cool style. She’s currently sporting fashion-y heeled booties withgray skinny jeans and a stylish, oversize cream sweater.
Sahra is prelaw, and hoping to Skype her boyfriend before bed later. There’s already a picture of the two of them tacked up on her wall. After initial introductions and a brief conversation, the three of us fell into a comfortable silence as we emptied our belongings into the provided cupboards.
I hang my last sweater in my now-crowdedcloset and close the door. We’re expected to be upstairs for orientation at 12:30, which is in approximately thirty minutes. I change into a cute white shirt and black jeans, walk through a perfume mist, brush my teeth, revitalize my curly, wave-ridden blond hair, and spruce up the makeup I did yesterday morning, East Coast time. I’m too tired to calculate how many hours ago that was. I pull thethick rubber bracelet I got for Christmas from my toiletry bag and tug it onto my wrist. I’ve worn it everywhere since, and I felt a little naked without it on the plane. It’s black with neon-green numbers ( 4 8 15 16 23 42 ) etched into it. It’s a Lost thing. Lost is the best TV show of all time. Carrying a physical piece of it on my wrist gives me a weird thrill. I want people in the world toask me about it, so I can spread the Lost love to all the unknowing noobs. I took it off for the flight because it felt taboo to wear it up in the air, since the whole show revolves around a plane crash.
I step in front of the full-length mirror one last time to inspect my appearance. My sometimes-blue eyes flash ice gray today, and my hair hangs in a poofy blob to my mid-back. I was a vampireshade of gray while unpacking, but a light dusting of bronzer has brought me back to a living human skin tone.
My laptop (he goes by Sawyer) is still on the table, playing music. The blinds are shut tight across the giant window. I stride across the room and turn to look at Sahra as my fingers close around the skinny, plastic blind-opener stick. She’s cramming what appears to be her five hundredthblack dress into her closet. Talk to them like you’re already friends.
I speak a little louder than necessary to ensure that both girls hear. “Guys, I wonder what our view is like in the basement. What even is this window?”
Babe leans out of the bunk to smile at me. “Right? Probably to give the illusion that we don’t live in a dungeon.”
Sahra shoves her closet closed and drops onto her bed.“Open it,” she demands with a conservative smile.
“Okay.” I twist the plastic thingy. The blinds open to reveal a courtyard. Well, courtyard is a generous word. A laugh bubbles out of me.
“Ha.” Sahra grins for a moment before opening her laptop.
Outside the window is about ten feet of concrete sidewalk and then there’s another wall with a giant window. The second window provides an incrediblyclear view into a kitchen. Maybe that’s our kitchen. This apartment—flat, British people call apartments flats —is supposed to have a shared kitchen. It would appear the kitchen has a window that peers right into our bedroom.
We have these blinds here for privacy, though, so I guess this is pretty cool. It’s kind of like we have a spy window into the kitchen. What a weird architectural decision.Who puts a giant window wall in a basement flat that looks into the shared kitchen—
A boy.
There’s a boy in the kitchen. A boy right up at the window facing me. How did I not see him immediately? He’s washing dishes with a big, fluffy, yellow sponge. The sink must be right there up against the window.
He’s a cute boy. A cute boy doing dishes. Is there anything more attractive than a boy doingdishes? I’m totally staring, and after a few moments, he looks up. We make eye contact