the housemates make the house fancy for the party. The building itself had a certain shabby, bohemian-Bauhaus chic. But inside, the walls were pretty bland. Heâd bought a pile of papel picado paper decorations from a Mexican supermarket that Maya recommended and strung them along the ceiling, together with whatever colorful, slightly random decorations heâd been able to find. Silver foil paper chains, leftover Day of the Dead papel picado , Chinese lanterns in red tissue paper. It was kind of an eclectic mix, he realized, now that he was able to enjoy it without the stress of getting everything done on time. Somehow, it worked.
He moved through the throng of teenagers. To judge from the raised, excited voices, the buzz and general energy levels, this was going down as something a little bit special. Not every day you got invited to a party with no sign of parents, not even in the furnishings or bedrooms. This place was every inch theirs.
Heâd recognize someone from school, watch their faces crease with momentary puzzlement to find him at such a hip party, and then give them a tiny wave as he sauntered over. Then heâd very casually slip in a reminder that yeah, he lived here and yeah, heâd made the snacks, well not all of them, not the tacos, obviously, but the teeny little cheesecakes, the jam tarts, and chocolate chip cookies, heâd done all those. Then heâd watch the expressions of sheer respect form on their faces.
And: âDude. This is the sweetest setup ever. Seriously. Who do I have to kill to live here?â
John-Michael merely smiled a Sphinxlike smile and floated along to the kitchen, borne on a cloud of praise.
A girl was by the fridge, petite and with long, very straight chestnut-brown hair. She had large, light brown eyes lined with dark kohl. She was smoking a skinny, hand-rolled cigarette, or at least trying.
âHey, got a light?â she asked John-Michael.
âThereâs no smoking in the house. Sorry. Our landlady would kill us.â
âLandlady?â She laughed. âGood one. I should call my mom that, too.â
âYou know Candaceâs mom?â
âNo, seriously, Candaceâs mom is actually your landlady?â
He looked at her sideways. The girl didnât look stoned. But she seemed to have difficulty following what he was telling her. âCandaceâs mom is our actual landlady, yes.â
âOh. Gosh! I only know Candace vaguely. Sheâs a friend of my girlfriendâs ex.â
âWho invited you?â
The girlâs expression fell immediately. âWasnât this, like, an open thing? I just heard there was gonna be this killer party at Venice Beach. Jeez. How embarrassing.â
âNo, itâs fineâyouâre welcome. Iâm glad you came,â he said as gallantly as he could. âYou want a drink? Lucy just made a pitcher of Sea Breeze.â
The girl followed him to the punch bowl in the living room. He poured her a glass, enjoying what was rare for himâsome unalloyed female attention.
Girls could usually tell he was gay and didnât look at him the way she was looking at him. It wasnât that he wanted to string her along, but just that it was nice not to be dismissed. Any minute now sheâd catch sight of Paolo, or one of the other tennis players whoâd come to the party. Then sheâd be gone and heâd be alone. The only gay guy in the house to judge by the total lack of interesting-looking boys.
âIâm gay,â he said, lifting a glass to hers. âJust thought Iâd get that out there. Youâre very cute and I like talking to you, though. So please donât go away.â
She grinned, mischievous. âI knew you were gay. And Iâm not going anywhere.â
âSeriously, you knew? Huh. I thought Iâd at least have a shot with you.â
âAre you bi?â
âBi? I wish.â
âWhy?â
âMore