Teardrop

Teardrop by Lauren Kate

Book: Teardrop by Lauren Kate Read Free Book Online
Authors: Lauren Kate
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what was the point of running in circles, never getting anywhere?
    The rest of the team was already dressed out, doing stretches or warming up along the straights of the track. Coach was glaring at her clipboard, certainly wondering why she hadn’t checked Eureka’s name off the roll yet. Cat was yelling at two sophomores who’d drawn something in black Sharpie on the backs of their uniforms—something Cat and Eureka used to get yelled at for doing when they were sophomores themselves.
    She unbuckled her seat belt. Ander was sorry, for everything? He meant hitting her car, of course. Nothing more than that. Because how could he know about Diana?
    “I gotta go,” she said. “I’m late for my—”
    “Cross-country meet. I know.”
    “How did you know that? How do you
know
all these—”
    Ander pointed to the Evangeline cross-country emblem stitched into the patch on the side of her bag.
    “Oh.”
    “Also”—Ander turned off the engine—“I’m on the team at Manor.”
    He walked around the front of the truck and opened the passenger door. She slid out, dumbfounded. He handed over her bag.
    “Thanks.”
    Ander smirked and jogged off toward the side of the field where the Manor High team was gathered. He looked back over his shoulder, a mischievous gleam in his eyes. “You’re going down.”

5
STORMED OUT
    C at Estes had a particular way of arching her left eyebrow and parking one hand on her hip, which Eureka knew meant
Dish
. Her best friend had a splash of big, dark freckles across her nose, a charming gap between her two front teeth, curves in all sorts of places Eureka didn’t, and highlighted hair braided in thick pigtails.
    Cat and Eureka lived in the same neighborhood near campus. Cat’s father was a professor of African American studies at the university. Cat and her younger brother, Barney, were the only two black kids at Evangeline.
    When Cat spotted Eureka—head ducked, sprinting away from Ander’s truck in an attempt not to be noticed by Coach—she capped the tirade she’d been directing at the sophomoreuniform-violators. Eureka heard her order the girls to do fifty push-ups on their knuckles before she swiveled past them.
    “Part the seas, please!” Cat shouted as she plowed through a group of freshman boys staging a lightsaber battle with triangular paper cups. Cat was a sprinter; she caught Eureka’s arm just before Eureka ducked into the locker room. She wasn’t even out of breath.
    “You’re back on the team?”
    “I told Coach I’d run today,” Eureka said. “I don’t want to make it a big deal.”
    “Sure.” Cat nodded. “We have other things to talk about anyway.” The left eyebrow rose to an astonishing height. The hand slid up the hip.
    “You want to know about the guy in the truck,” Eureka guessed, swinging open the heavy gray door and pulling her friend inside.
    The locker room was empty, but the lingering presence of heat and hormones brought on by so many teenage girls was palpable. Half-open lockers spilled hair dryers, foundation-stained cosmetics cases, and blue sticks of deodorant onto the tan tiled floor. Various items of Evangeline’s lenient dress code lay haphazardly on every surface. Eureka hadn’t been in here yet this year, but she could easily picture how that skirt got flung across that locker door in the midst of a conversation about a horrible religion exam, or how those oxfords had been unlaced while someone whispered to a friend about a game of Spin the Bottle the Saturday before.
    Eureka used to love locker-room gossip; it was as elemental to being on the team as running. Today she was relieved to change in an empty locker room, even if it meant she had to hustle. She dropped her bag and kicked off her shoes.
    “Um,
yeah
, I want to know about the guy in the truck.”
    Cat pulled Eureka’s running shorts and polo shirt out of her bag helpfully. “And what happened to your face?” She gestured at the airbag scrapes on Eureka’s

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