I grabbed my purse from the table beside my bed and fumbled inside the hidden pocket until my fingers closed around the small foil packet.

I’d bought condoms when I was in New Orleans. My cheeks burned at the thought—I still couldn’t believe I’d had enough balls to do it. It had been hard, slipping away from Gram, and then, well, who knew there were so many different kinds? Ribbed. Glow in the dark. Stuff that vibrated.

God, there were different sizes!

I’d bought the plainest, smallest box I could find and prayed that Gram wouldn’t be able to tell. You know, in case there was some invisible sign on my forehead that said, “Monroe is going to have sex and she has a box of condoms in her bag.”

I’d been thinking about this for days. No. Weeks. I’d been thinking about it ever since Nathan had kissed me at Baker’s Landing. And tonight was my last chance. My last chance to be with Nathan. Really be with Nathan.

Outside, there in the maze that was ours, we’d spent most nights under the stars until he had to go home. We’d kissed. A lot. And we’d touched. I’d explored his hard, muscled body that was so different from mine, and he’d kissed his way down my chest, but he’d always held back, didn’t go further. And when I wanted to do more, he stopped us.

Said we needed to move slow. That he needed to move slow.

So I hadn’t touched him. Or seen him there.

Even though I’d wanted to.

I knew that Nate had had sex before. I’d asked him and he’d been honest with me. He’d told me that he and Rachel had been doing it since the tenth grade. When I pushed him, he’d admitted that there had been others.

Of course there had been others. Nathan Everets was hot. And it wasn’t just that physically he was smoking. He was the deepest, sweetest guy I’d ever met. Who wouldn’t want to be with him?

So why didn’t he want me?

I shoved the condom into the front pocket of my jeans and glanced at myself in the mirror. For a moment, I didn’t recognize the face that stared back at me.

Who was this girl with eyes that sparkled and skin that glowed? This girl who looked…happy. Excited. And scared.

“Monroe, Nathan is here!”

Gram’s voice made me jump, and I grabbed my jean jacket. I shut the door and didn’t stop until I was at the front door when I nearly tripped over my feet.

Holy. Hell.

Nathan smiled, a slow, soft grin that could seriously melt anyone’s heart. His eyes were soft and I noticed that he’d shaved. I loved it when he didn’t shave—it gave him that edge that I really liked—but tonight, with that smile? My hands were itching to touch all that smooth, tanned skin.

He wore a plain white Henley, his golden skin and burnished hair a contrast that could make any girl lose her head and—I smiled—he wore my favorite jeans. They were old and faded, but they looked amazing on him, and I exhaled shakily as I snuck a look at my mom.

She leaned against the staircase, and I could tell that Nate’s charm was working overtime because she smiled at him. She smiled at him in a way I recognized. God, he was good.

“So,” she cleared her throat. “You kids won’t be too late?”

“Mom, it’s my last night here, and I promise I won’t be out all night, but can I stay out later than midnight?”

I saw the indecision in her eyes.

“I mean, I just haven’t felt so good about things in so long, I kinda want to hold on to it as long as I can, you know?”

Okay, that was low, but I didn’t care. I was willing to work any angle in order to spend as much time with Nathan as I could.

“I promise, I’ll be good.”

Gram and Dad walked up from the kitchen. “You take care of my granddaughter, Nathan.”

“Yes, ma’am,” he answered.

I gave my mom a quick hug, but she held me for a second longer. “Roe,” she said shakily. “I…”

There were so many words between us. Simple words. Hard words.

It’s the in-between words that are easy to get out. I guess, somehow, they don’t really matter. They fill in the spaces between the simple ones that carry so much weight and the hard ones that hold everything together.

But the ones that do matter, those ones are the hardest to get out. They get stuck, or buried, and sometimes they get forgotten. But I knew they were there inside my mom, because the same ones were buried deep in me.

Mom shuddered and I whispered, “I know.”

She paused. “You look beautiful.”

I smiled at my dad and kissed Gram on the cheek. She grabbed my hands, her eyes suddenly serious as she bent forward. “Be careful,” she whispered, so low only I could hear, her eyes full of meaning.

God. It’s as if she knew what I was planning.

I nodded, my throat tight, and then followed Nate out into the hot Louisiana night.

The party was huge. It was held in the bush out back at some guy Chad’s farm, and there must have been at least two hundred kids there when we arrived.

That was over two hours ago, and I’d bet there was close to three hundred by now.

A bonfire burned brightly, tunes blared from large speakers set on top of a mud-splattered redneck truck, and everyone seemed to be either high on life or high on weed, but sometimes it was hard to figure out the difference.

“Hey,” Nate slid his arms around me and I leaned back against him, watching Brent chat up yet another girl.

“Is he, like, the biggest ho around?”

Nate laughed, his breath warm against my neck. “He’s leaning that way.”

Warm tingles spread down my body and that restless feeling was back. “Can we get out of here?” I asked softly, turning so that I could see him.

Nate’s eyes were intense as he gazed down at me, and in that moment, if felt like we were the only ones around for miles. The music, the noise, and the kids—they all disappeared into the dark. There was just us.

“It’s our last night and I just…I want to be alone with you.”

Nate pulled me close and rested his chin on top of my head. His heart beat fast beneath my fingers, and I knew he was in the same place I was. It wasn’t a place of in-between. It was hot and edgy.

I squeezed my eyes shut and burrowed deeper into his embrace. God, I wanted to crawl inside him. I’d never felt like this before, but then again, I’d never loved. Not like this.

“My parents,” he said haltingly. “They’re gone overnight. A friend’s houseboat on the river.”

My eyes flew open and I whispered, “So there’s no one at your house?”

A pause.

“No.”

I yanked my head back. “Let’s go,” I whispered, my hand falling to his.

He smiled then, a soft sort of thing that would make anyone fall harder. “I can’t drive.”

“But I can.” I tugged him again, and this time he laughed out loud. Which, I gotta say, kind of pissed me off.

“You didn’t drive to the party.”

“I know.” I let his hand drop. “Hold on.”

“Where are you going?”

“You’ll see.”

My insides were on fire. No. No, they weren’t. They were cold and shivery, and I kind of felt sick and excited all at once. I spotted Brent on the other side of the bonfire, his hand in some girl’s hair, his mouth on hers.

I walked around a large group of kids and was nearly to him when Rachel stepped in front of me. I’d seen her earlier; it was hard not to—she was dressed in the skimpiest pair of shorts I’d ever seen and a bikini top that barely covered her impressive boobs. There were hickeys on her neck, her makeup was smudged, and she smelled like cigarettes.

She was a mess. I wasn’t sure if she was drunk or high or both, but something was going on.

I wanted to hate her, but there was something almost desperate in her eyes, and the way she stared at Nathan told me a lot. She still loved him. She still wanted him.

“Can I talk to you?” she asked, unsteady on her feet as she jerked her head to the left.

I was surprised. Other than when she’d shoved a mental knife in my back that night at the Coffee House, we’d not said one word to each other.

“I…”

Shit. Brent was making his move and melting into the shadows. I needed to get his keys before—

“Please?”

I glanced back toward Nathan, but he was talking up some huge guy with massive shoulders. Football was written all over him.

Rachel took a sip of the beer in her hand and then tossed it, but her eyes never left me. What did she want? Did I want to know?

“Sure,” I said and followed Rachel past the line of trees on this side of the clearing. She stopped a few feet in, her back to me, and it took a few seconds for me to realize that she was crying. Her shoulders shook and a sob echoed into the night.

I wasn’t sure what to do and, honestly, was about to take off, when she turned around so fast, she nearly fell.

Feeling weird about all of this, I took a step back.

She sniffled loudly. “Nathan’s a good guy.” Her voice broke and she wiped her hand under her nose, shoulders hunched as she looked at me from behind her raccoon-like eyes.

I didn’t know what to say so I stayed silent.

“I miss him, you know? But it’s over between us.” She wrapped her arms around her body and shook her head. “I think it was over before that night.”

I didn’t get it. “Why are you telling me this?”

Rachel smiled, a sad sort of smile that never reached her eyes. She shrugged. “I don’t know why.” She looked down at the ground. “He was going to break up with me that night. Bailey told me. So I kept feeding him beers whenever I got the chance. Anything to keep him from telling me we were over.”

When she glanced back at me, I saw the same pain in her eyes that I saw in Nathan’s.