Home > The Lion's Den(7)

The Lion's Den(7)
Author: Katherine St. John

“Summer Sanderson, I remember.” He shifted his gaze to me. “And you’re—wait, don’t tell me—Isabella Carter?”

I smiled. “Isabelle. Nice to meet you. Your class was great.”

Your class was great? I was an idiot.

Summer fixed him with those verdant green eyes. “Anymore?”

“What?” he asked.

“You said you weren’t good at tennis anymore?” she clarified.

“Oh. I used to play in high school.”

“And when was that?” she asked.

“Five, six years ago.”

She smiled. “Well, I’ll have to challenge you to a game if I run into you at the club, see if you’ve still got what it takes.”

He laughed, but behind his smile I thought I could see him considering the propriety of playing tennis with a leggy blond sixteen-year-old student. Summer gave him a little wave as she sashayed out the door, and I scrambled to catch up.

Once we were safely in the privacy of the station wagon, I burst out laughing.

“What?” Summer asked, feigning innocence.

“You flirted with that teacher like he was our age!”

“Think he liked it?”

“Oh, come on. Of course he did. You should’ve seen the look on his face as you walked away. Pure gold.”

“Turn there.” She indicated a strip mall up ahead. “We’re getting our nails done. We can’t be walking around looking a mess.”

The rest of the week flew by in a haze of French conjugations and afternoons by the pool, my dripping manicured fingers riffling the pages of the book Summer loaned me.

On the Friday before the Fourth of July holiday, I joined Summer for a sunset game of tennis at River Run. The afternoon was bone-melting hot and an hour in I’d soaked through my gym shorts and T-shirt, yet somehow Summer still looked fresh in her tennis whites.

I batted the ball over the net. “How are you not soaked?”

“It’s this fabric. It dries it out or something.” She whacked the ball to the other side of the court, and I didn’t quite make it.

“I’m beat,” I said, “and I’ve gotta go over to Grannie’s for dinner.”

“I got this outfit in the club store,” she remarked as we zipped up our rackets. “Just charged it to Three’s card.”

“That’s nice of him.”

“Oh, please. He doesn’t know. He never so much as checks the balance. It just comes out of his account every month. We could get you an outfit,” she suggested.

“No, that’s okay.”

“Seriously, he’ll never know the difference.”

“I wouldn’t feel right,” I demurred.

“Suit yourself.” She slung her racket over her shoulder and squinted past me a few courts away. “Is that Ryan?”

“Who’s Ryan?” I turned to look. “That looks like Mr. Stokes.”

Mr. Stokes and another good-looking guy his age were just breaking for water a few courts away. Summer was already walking in their direction, her tennis racket slung over her shoulder.

I hustled to catch up. “So you’re on a first-name basis with our teacher now?”

“Act like you don’t see him,” she whispered.

As we approached, she turned her head toward me, actively not looking in his direction. I laughed nervously.

“Isabelle, Summer,” he called out.

Summer feigned surprise, while I tried unsuccessfully not to act awkward. “Oh, hi!” she exclaimed blithely. “I knew I’d seen you playing here before.”

The cute friend extended his hand to me. He had floppy light-brown hair and broad shoulders. “Hi. I’m Tyler.”

“Isabelle.” He looked me in the eye and smiled as I shook his hand. Was that an interested smile? An electric shock ran through me as I realized he thought we were college girls.

“I’m Summer,” Summer said.

“You gals know Ryan from class?” Tyler asked.

“Something like that,” Summer eluded. She nodded at the court. “He claims not to be any good. How about you?

“Maybe we should play a round of doubles and you can find out for yourself,” Tyler suggested.

“Sounds fun,” Summer agreed. “Monday?”

“Around five?” Tyler asked.

“We’ll see you then.”

Summer gave a little wave as she sauntered away, her skirt flouncing. I followed her up the steps to the clubhouse. “Are you actually going to play with them?” I whispered after the door closed behind us.

“Of course.” She shrugged, browsing through the bikinis on the swimsuit rack. “And you are, too.”

“He’s our teacher. I’m pretty sure we’d get in trouble if the school found out.”

“It’s just a game of tennis. And they’re not that much older than us. Come on.” She batted her eyes at me cartoonishly. “Pretty please? Be my partner in crime. It’ll be fun.”

I couldn’t help but laugh. Tyler was cute, and she was right. They were only a couple of years older than us. It could be fun. “I’ll think about it,” I said.

She grabbed my elbow and nodded toward the cash register, where a curvy blonde was paying for an armful of merchandise with a black Amex. A rock the size of Texas glistened on her ring finger as she put her wallet back in her designer tote, then gathered her shopping bags and breezed out the door, sliding a pair of dark sunglasses over her eyes.

“Haley Youngblood,” Summer breathed. “That was the latest Dior bag, and did you see those sunglasses? They’re the new Chanel ones with real diamonds on the hinges.”

We watched through the window as the girl fired up a white Range Rover with dealer tags.

“Makes sense,” I said. “Her dad owns, like, half the city.”

“Her husband,” Summer corrected me.

“Ew! No! Seriously?”

She nodded. “She’s from some Podunk town where he has a farm. Apparently she was his waitress. Lucky bitch.”

I pictured her husband’s ample frame. “Define lucky.”

“She can have whatever she wants whenever she wants it.”

“Except love,” I said.

She tilted her head, considering. “There’s different kinds of love, Belle. And after a while, any dick gets old.”

“Literally,” I conceded.

The designated Monday rolled around sultry and hot. As Summer and I pulled out of her driveway in her mom’s red Mitsubishi, the sun slipped behind dark thunderheads gathering on the horizon. I peered up at the sky, praying for thunder. “We should cancel. It’s gonna storm.”

“Too late.” She turned up the hill that led away from the club.

“Where are you going?”

“Silver Creek.”

“Why?” I asked. “I thought we were playing at River Run.”

She shrugged. “Ryan changed it. Probably didn’t want to be seen with us. They live there, and the courts are pretty nice.”

A knot tightened in my stomach. “Oh,” I said.

She looked at me, as though reading my thoughts. “I swear I told you when I dropped off the outfit yesterday, and you totally said you were fine with it, or I wouldn’t have said yes.”

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)
» The War of Two Queens (Blood and Ash #4)