After I give him the rundown, I expect him to shake his head in sheer disbelief of my genius, clap me on the shoulder for a job well done, and say, Sherlock, you’ve done it again!
Instead he says, “So far you’re the only miscreant in the bunch. I saw you pilfer that tiramisu at dinner.”
Singular—good. He doesn’t know I stole two.
“Are you coming or do I have to do everything myself?”
I turn and head down the hall, and he heaves a deep sigh. He wishes he could chuck me off the roof, but we’re in this together. Co-chaperones whether we like it or not.
A moment later, his door slams, and with his long strides, he catches me.
“So obviously we’re going for stealth,” I say, raising a brow pointedly at his feet.
“Just worry about yourself, Nancy Drew.”
Side by side, we walk, me taking two steps for every one of his.
We’re about to round the corner toward the kids’ dorms when I reach out and yank him back. Well…that’s what I try to do, but my strength is no match for Noah’s size. His momentum drags me forward and my face smashes into his exquisitely toned arm.
“What are you doing?” he asks.
Not Are you okay?
“I’m trying to make sure you don’t give away our element of surprise,” I hiss, working overtime to push away from him and put distance between us.
“Have you considered—”
“Yes I’ve considered everything, now be quiet.”
I butt him out of the way, scoot in front of him, and oh-so-carefully peer around the corner toward the dark hallway.
He steps up behind me, unnecessarily close. His chest presses against my back.
“Well? What do you see? Are they committing all the heinous acts you were imagining? Having an orgy? Shooting up drugs? Learning TikTok choreography?”
Words gurgle up in my throat, but nothing makes it off my tongue because I’m acutely aware of what it feels like to be cocooned by Noah’s body. To my utter horror, it’s not…awful. First of all, he smells like…and his muscles are…and the way he…
I need to force a restart on my brain.
Then, I see it: tendrils of smoke drifting out from a cracked door halfway down the hall.
Those little shitheads! How’d they get cigarettes without me noticing?!
I leap into action, sprint down the hall, and slam the door open before they have a chance to hide the drugs. Obviously, I immediately regret not taking the opportunity to kick the door open with my foot for added finesse. There’re so few chances in life to do that. You have to seize every one fate affords you.
My triumphant “Aha!” is drowned out by Kylie screaming at the top of her lungs.
She drops her steamer—the one she was using to get the wrinkles out of her clothes—and it clatters to the ground. The smoke cuts off.
I have exactly half a second to come up with an explanation and I settle on, “So you see, Noah? These doors are so flimsy! This one just flew open on its own. We need to call Lorenzo right now and have the school replace every last one—”
Noah takes me by the shoulders and drags me back out into the hall.
“Good night, Kylie. Sorry about that,” he tells her before gently shutting the door. “Proud of yourself?” he asks me.
I shrug him off. “Every good detective gets it wrong now and then.”
“You’re a maniac.”
He starts to head back toward the teachers’ hall, and I have no choice but to run to catch up to him.
“And you’re far too trusting. These are middle schoolers we’re talking about! What were you doing in middle school?! Wait, wait—don’t tell me. Practicing tongue kissing on your sweaty fist,” I guess.
“Close.”
“Googling ‘boobs’ then desperately deleting every trace of your search history off the family computer,” I guess again.
He plays like he’s truly concerned. “Were you spying on me?”
“I bet you were the worst.”
He shrugs. “I was a quiet kid.”
I grunt in disbelief. “Oh. Okay. There’s no way you’re going to convince me you didn’t torment every female within a sixty-mile radius. Some things never change.”
We’re back in our hall now. Noah, likely worried I’ll make a break for it and run right back to continue where I left off with my mission, deposits me inside my room. “Not every female, Audrey. Just you.”
We all survive the first night in Rome, no thanks to Noah.
Apparently, the security guard did a few rounds to ensure the kids were all where they were supposed to be. There were no reports of mischief, which Noah gloats about in the dining hall the next morning. I take my muffin and coffee as far from him as possible and stake out a table all to myself.