| Copyright © 2012,
Linda Kage
Published by Whiskey Creek
Press LLC
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by Linda Kage
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Sample Chapter For THE COLOR
OF GRACE by Linda Kage
Through the lens of my camera, I zoomed in on the
flood of purple and white blanketing Southeast High School’s
fan club as they swarmed my home school’s bleachers on the visitors’ side.
Their mascot, a violet dragon, danced and pranced past the Southeast
cheerleaders, flipping up the skirt of one girl as he went. She chased
him a few steps, swatting him away from her, giggling the whole time.
I groaned, cringing as I watched the Barney wannabe wiggle his backside,
inviting the cheerleader to spank him for his misdeed. Yeah, yeah.
I know. Barney’s a dinosaur and their mascot was a dragon. Big
diff.
But, come on. “Who in their right mind has a dragon for a mascot?” I
muttered aloud. Honestly.
An arm came around my shoulder and Bridget, my best friend in the entire
world, tilted her head sympathetically to rest her temple against mine. “You
will…soon.”
Too right she was. The massive pretzel with cheese I’d just gorged
down roiled in my stomach; I thought I might toss it back up. I let
out another moan and lowered my face. Those would be my people over
there, and I didn’t know one of them. They’d be my classmates,
and to me, they looked like total morons.
Why, oh why, had my mother married a man from Osage, home of the Southeast
Dragons?
Worse yet, one of the last home basketball games my school hosted before
I had to become a purple and white dragon just had to be against them.
They were having a good ball season. We were not.
Let me rephrase.
Hillsburg hadn’t had a good basketball team for going on about,
oh, five years now, while Southeast was blooming. Frankly, they were
undefeated. Both boys and girls.
Their team was going to flatten ours and stomp our remains into dust.
And I had doomed myself with the task of immortalizing the event with
pictures. Since I was on the yearbook staff, I’d signed up to
shoot all the home games with Bridget.
Next to me, she patted my back dolefully. “So, are you packed
and ready to move yet?”
I drew in a deep, fortifying breath and sat up to once again catch
sight of the dragon’s progress. He was flirting with some other
girl now, sitting five rows up in the Southeast fan section.
Bridge waited quietly for my answer.
She and I were part of the nerd herd, as her older brother Joel liked
to call us. A total of four, we nerders had banded together years ago
and bridged a friendship I knew would be unbreakable no matter how
far away I had to move. But leaving them was still going to be the
hardest thing I’d ever done.
I stole a quick glance her way.
“
Some,” I said.
Okay, I’d packed hardly anything at all. But I just couldn’t
do it. How could I go? How could I leave the people I’d grown
up with since kindergarten and known my entire life? And how could
I admit to her how hard this was for me? Seeing my dejection would
only multiply her gloom and make everything ten times more miserable
for both of us.
So, I lied. “Mostly.”
She nodded and straightened her shoulders as if she was relieved I
wasn’t suffering.
The buzzer went off, making me jump and worry the entire building was
ousting my fib with its strident screech. Glancing toward the record-keeper’s
desk where the scoreboard controls sat, I spotted Hillsburg’s
janitor, Mr. Velter, cringing. He bowed his shoulders like a kid who
knew he’d just been caught stealing cookies and glanced around
to realize he’d gained the entire gymnasium’s attention.
Giving a half wave and a rueful grin, he set the scoreboard time to
let both teams know they had ten minutes to warm up.
Relieved the buzzer had interrupted my conversation with Bridge, I
hefted the camera bag onto my shoulder. “I’m going to scout
out a good spot on the end line to take pictures. Maybe I’ll
catch a few dunk shots while our guys warm up.”
She snorted. “As if anyone on our team could make a slam dunk.”
I agreed wholeheartedly but started off anyway.
Fast beat hip-hop filled the speakers, and the Hillsburg players made
their big entrance, causing the home side of the gymnasium to roar
with applause and the Southeast stands to boo. I shuffled my way to
the end line where my team was warming up and crouched down directly
behind the basket, lifting my camera and taking aim.
On the other side of the arena, the Southeast fans stood and cheered.
I figured their team had finally made their way to the floor. Little
did I know they’d entered the gym on the Hillsburg end until
I heard, “Hey, get out of the way!”
I looked up just in time to see a dozen purple and white uniforms charging
straight toward me.
To say the least, I didn’t get out of the way in time.
Losing my grip on my camera, I tumbled backward against the padded
wall mat, landing on my rump. The camera fell and skidded across the
hardwood floor with a sickening thud.
“
Oh, no!” I gasped and began crawling on hands and knees toward
it as the visiting team streamed by, dodging around me. One size fourteen
shoe tried to pulverize my fingers; I snatched my hand back just in
time to save all five digits.
Only a single player paused. “Are you okay?”
“
The camera,” was all I could croak. The yearbook teacher would
kill me if I broke a piece of school property.
The Southeast player crouched next to me and picked it up since he
blocked my way of reaching for it myself. I caught sight of his purple
and white jersey out of the corner of my eye, but the rest was pretty
much a blur because I focused all my attention on the Nikon.
“
Thanks.” I snatched it from his outstretched hand and made cooing
noises as I turned the lens this way and that, checking for cracks,
scratches, and bruises.
Lingering at my side, the boy asked, “Is it broken?”
I was finally able to let out a relieved breath. “No. Thank God.” Thank
God, thank God, thank God.
His hand, the same that had rescued my camera from the floor, flooded
my field of vision as two fingers reached for the camera’s neck
strap and gave it a wiggle to get my attention. “You know, this
thingy here,” he said, “that’s to put around your
neck so you don’t drop your camera when you get jostled.”
He was teasing me. I could hear it in the timbre of his voice. The
jerk was trying to make light of my near camera-death experience.
The nerve.
I frowned and muttered back, “Really? And here I thought that
was its carrying handle.”
Instead of turning as huffy as I had, he laughed. And, sweet mercy,
that laugh went straight through me, tingling up the back of my spine
and running along my nervous system to come out the ends of my fingers
and toes. Its tone, its mere melodic quality, had me lifting my head
so I could see its owner’s face.
As soon as I saw him, I jerked back and landed on my butt. Yeah, again.
His beauty was unreal. I had to blink repeatedly to make sure my fall
hadn’t jostled my eyesight. But every time my lashes flickered
open, I saw the boy clearly, in faultless, spectacular detail.
Perfection.
Still grinning over my sarcastic crack, he pushed to his feet and held
out his hand to help me up. I glanced at his fingers, gaped as if I
had no idea what they were, then shifted my gaze up to his face again
because, well really, I couldn’t stop gawking at those stunning
features.
He had the greenest eyes I’d ever seen, a pale, sparkly, jewel-kind
of green, like the birthstone for August. Peridot. Yeah, he had peridot
green eyes. And his smile was absolute flawlessness—flawless
full lips, flawless teeth, flawless laugh line wrinkling the corner
of his flawless mouth, which was framed in wider cheekbones with a
slimmer jaw. He had the longest lashes known to humankind and fixed
his silky-straight, sandy-colored hair in a fashionable manner with
the shaggy bangs pushed to the side just far enough to see out from
under them. His eyebrows were a shade darker, which only seemed to
highlight his peridot eyes with a vivid intensity instead of detracting
from his overall looks. He had to be flawless inside and out.
He was all things handsome and unattainable.
And way out of my nerdy league.
“
Need some help up?” he asked, reminding me he was still waiting
for me to take his hand.
I glanced at his fingers again, finally inspecting them in detail.
A scratch ran across his knuckles from his pinkie to his middle finger.
The thumbnail had a bruise under it, as if he might’ve hit it
with a hammer. They were one hundred percent boy hands. Nothing girly
or feminine about them.
Repressing a shiver of interest, I cleared my throat. “Thank
you,” I said and gingerly took his fingers.
At the contact of skin against skin, a sharp, prickling sensation sprouted
out the center of my palm, spreading through my wrist and arm, tickling
my elbow and every sensitive nerve ending I possessed.
I gave an inward sigh.
He began to help me upright, so I pushed with my legs to assist, except
we both put a little too much oomph into our efforts because momentum
kept me going until he tugged me against him. Literally.
Bumping noses, we each sputtered a harried, “Sorry, sorry.”
I scurried backward just as he reached out to steady me, grasping the
side of my shoulder. Utterly embarrassed, my face flamed red so fast,
I was surprised the blush didn’t explode out the top of my scalp
through the roots of my dark hair and turn me into a carrot top. Or
maybe it had. I didn’t exactly have a mirror handy to see if
I’d flushed myself from a brunette into a redhead.
“
Are you okay?” he asked in harmony with my third apology. Then
he laughed that delightfully musical laugh of his, drawing my attention
back to his face. As our gazes caught and held, his smile dropped,
as did the chuckle in his throat.
“
Hi,” he said, his voice breathless as if staring at me affected
him the same exact bulldozing way it affected me.
“
Hi,” I wheezed back and looked away before I melted into a puddle
of adoration at his feet.
Determined to act as if nothing earth shattering had just happened,
I discreetly wiped the floor grime off my backside and then clicked
off a blind shot so it’d look like I was concentrating on my
job. Later, I learned I’d taken a picture of the free throw line
and three pair of Hillsburg players’ shoes.
“
I’m Ryder.”
Startled because he hadn’t shrugged me off for a loser and left,
I jolted and glanced up to take in his purple and white Southeast uniform.
He was number forty-two. I had no idea why that detail stuck in my
head but it seemed easier to focus on his jersey than to look back
into his too-beautiful-for-his-Southeast-jersey green eyes.
He flashed his pearly whites with a knowing grin as if he realized
exactly how awestruck I felt. “And you are…” he prompted.
My mouth opened. Then closed. Then opened again. Not a word came out.
My vocal chords had failed me. The most handsome boy I’d ever
seen wanted to know my name.
As my brain wrapped around that fact, my thoughts fizzled and spurted
out.
Run.
That was the only word to flash in bright neon lights through my head.
I needed to get out of there before he realized I was a nobody.
“
Not interested,” I blurted, more in a mummy trance than from
actually thinking my answer through, because why, oh heavens, why I
said not interested I still don’t know.
Not interested was exactly the opposite of what I really felt. But
geez. This was more than I could handle. This guy—this Ryder—was
one smooth worker. He was too much for me. Too bold, too cool, too
beautiful. If he knew I belonged to a “nerd herd,” he’d
probably smack himself in the forehead for even looking my way, then
flee as fast as his beautiful, tanned and toned legs could carry him.
But he knew nothing about me. And there he continued to stand, smiling
as if I was something special.
I floundered in his presence—his sparkling, overwhelming, gorgeous
presence. Glancing down at my camera, pretending I was trying to figure
out a setting on the control knobs, I stalled, hoping he’d give
up on me and scram.
“
Really?” Forty-two answered, sounding surprised, and not moving
on at all. “Not interested, huh? Well, that’s…interesting.” Unable
to help myself, I looked up. He grinned, unaffected by my brush off. “What
is ‘Not Interested’ anyway? A family name? Irish or something?
Hmm. It sounds…German?”
With no other witty lines left in my arsenal of comebacks, I panicked.
Tucking my camera close, I spun from Mr. Perfect and scampered off.
“
Hey, where’re you going?” His voice, confused yet curious,
called after me. “Hey. Why didn’t your mother name you
Maybe, or We’ll See, or What’s-Your-Number? That way, we
could call our first born Absolutely.”
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