sky is a black blanket above us, and the stars are so bright, it feels like I could reach up and grab oneâas easily as picking an apple off a tree. Kennedy spins in quick circles, her long brown hair fanning out. âYou were righ tâthis is the best!â
Sheâs smiling, and the metal line of her retainer shines in the moonlight.
I grin backâuntil she gets too close to the edge of the roof. I grab her hand and pull her back. âWatch out!â
We sit down close to one of the five chimneys, to block the wind. When Kennedyâs teeth start to chatter, I put my arm around her. She snuggles against me, warming us both up a little. We talk while we wait for the show to start.
â. . . So they let me quit fencing and start lacrosse instead,â I tell her. âItâs awesome.â
âYouâre so lucky!â Kennedy cries. âMother said I couldnât stop ballet even if my leg was broken. She said Iâm going to marry a prince, and no prince wants a princess who doesnât know how to dance.â
Music floats up from the band downstairs. âI wonder if Claire is dancing with your cousin Louis,â Kennedy tells me. âShe said sheâs going to kiss him at midnight.â
I feel my face scrunch. âWhy?â
âShe said thatâs what you do at midnight. Kiss the boy you like.â
My face stays scrunchedâbecause I canât imagine anyone liking Louisâlet alone kissing him.
Then a chorus of voices surge from the veranda below. â10, 9, 8 . . .â
A few seconds later, the band begins âOld Lang Syneâ and the sky explodes with color. Bursts of reds and blues, slashes of silvery purples and swaths of sparkling greens light up the night and reflect on the riverâs surface.
While I watch the fireworks, Kennedy turns under my arm. And then she kisses me on the cheek.
âHappy New Year, Brent,â she whispers.
I look at her and smile.
âHappy New Year, Kennedy.â
As I shake off the memory I scan the yard, searching for that red dress. But when I find her, itâs not just relief I feelâitâs something else. Something rougher, hotter, hungrier.
Because Kennedy is staring at me.
She doesnât notice that Iâve noticed. Her gaze is too busy trailing over my chest, my arms, my ass. Her eyes are eager and her cheeks are flushed pinkâand I donât think it has anything to do with the afternoon sun. I turn her way, holding my arms out, so she can get the full viewing pleasureâand her eyes snap up to mine.
I smirk and lift an eyebrow.
Her lips part and her cheeks go from pink to red.
I lift my hand and wave.
She lifts her nose and turns away from me.
And you know something? I think this is going to be fun.
5
A week and a half later, I walk into court for the first day of the Longhorn trial, wearing my best navy suit and lucky silver cuff links. Ready to rumble.
Little Miss I-donât-make-plea-deals-ever made it pretty clear sheâs looking for a fight. And if thatâs how she wants it, thatâs how Iâll give it to her. But when I fight in court, I fight to win. If sheâs not going to play niceâIâm down for playing dirty. That applies to outside the courtroom too.
I set my briefcase on the defense table. Justin is already here, looking very young and respectable in a gray jacket and burgundy tie. He was understandably freaked when I told him thereâd been a change in plansâthat he was going to be seeing the inside of a courtroom. His fatherâs here today, sitting behind his son in the front row of the galley, staring at his phone, barely sparing his kid a glance. Weâve worked out an attendance plan for his parents with alternating days. I just hope they stick to it, because the last thing I need to worry about is the two of them keeping their shit together.
Kennedy strolls in, dressed to