Kalliope 2015 | Page 191

times I’d find a traitor tear slipping down my cheek as I moved my brush methodically in the drab green paint. He said nothing. My Thursday evenings quickly transformed from a time of blushing and butterflies to an awkward obligation. My mother was so proud of the progress that I had been making with him—our walls were covered in my various creations that she bragged about whenever my aunts and uncles visited—and I couldn’t possibly tell her that I didn’t want to go to the lessons anymore, that Dylan and I had had a… a what? What did we have? What had we had? I told no one. She was beautiful in the way that airbrushed models on magazines could only dream of; judging by the angle at which she held her head, she hadn’t the faintest idea. Her hair, a shade of blonde I didn’t know the name of, was tied loosely at the base of her slender neck, allowing the remaining stragglers to frame her face. Light freckles painted her cheekbones and small, red nose. Two perfect dimples lay on either side of her pale lips. She wore a large maroon sweater that hid her figure and I caught myself wondering about the curved shapes beneath the big folds. The dark leggings that she wore left less to the imagination, and my eyes may have lingered on the long lines of her thighs more than they should. Her large hazel eyes held mine briefly as she placed her items on the belt, and her face flushed a violent pink when a sharp cough escaped her lungs. “Find everything alright?” I said. “Sure did. No problems,” she said. I scanned everything in and placed her items—three bags of cough drops, a carton of eggs, and some orange juice—in bags, for the first time following the rules I had learned about bagging during orientation. She handed her money over to me—exact change—in soft, uncalloused hands. When I finished printing the receipt, cleverly sneaking glances out of the corner of my eye, I handed the three bags to her and added a travel pack of tissues with a shy grin. “Let’s be honest. You need these more than we do.” Then she smiled, and her entire being lit up as that careful control broke for just a second. I locked the image into a dusty corner of my mind. 191