The International Kissing Club

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The International Kissing Club Page 1

by Ivy Adams




  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter 1 Piper

  Chapter 2 Cassidy

  Chapter 3 Izzy

  Chapter 4 Mei

  Chapter 5 Piper

  Chapter 6 Cassidy

  Chapter 7 Izzy

  Chapter 8 Mei

  Chapter 9 Piper

  Chapter 10 Cassidy

  Chapter 11 Izzy

  Chapter 12 Mei

  Chapter 13 Piper

  Chapter 14 Cassidy

  Chapter 15 Izzy

  Chapter 16 Mei

  Chapter 17 Piper

  Chapter 18 Cassidy

  Chapter 19 Izzy

  Chapter 20 Mei

  Chapter 21 Piper

  Chapter 22 Cassidy

  Chapter 23 Izzy

  Chapter 24 Mei

  Chapter 25 Piper

  Chapter 26 Cassidy

  Chapter 27 Izzy

  Chapter 28 Mei

  Chapter 29 Piper

  Chapter 30 Cassidy

  Chapter 31 Izzy

  Chapter 32 Mei

  Acknowledgments

  Also by the Author

  Imprint

  For Deanne Hutcherson: your wit and warmth and,

  especially, your friendship are deeply missed

  Prologue

  She couldn’t believe she was doing this.

  Seriously. Couldn’t. Believe. She. Was. Doing. This.

  Had she completely lost her mind? God knew her friends certainly seemed to think so.

  Cassidy had teased her, had asked if she was wearing a dress or a peach lace parachute.

  Izzy had wondered aloud how many children had labored in sweatshops to sew on the thousands of crystal beads and sequins.

  And Mei, Mei hadn’t said anything. She’d simply bitten the inside of her cheeks so hard she looked like a fish that had just had liposuction. Somehow, Mei having to work so hard not to laugh only made standing here in this ridiculous designer dress that much worse. Her nose itched and she gave the dress a discreet sniff. How many perfume sprayers had her mother walked by at Neiman Marcus when carrying the thing, anyway? And when had vanilla gotten so popular?

  As the Cotton Princess float—a pink-and-white monstrosity that was the biggest in Cotton Festival history—pulled up in front of the town-square gazebo, Piper Douglas lined up along the front of it, next to Germaine Stewart and her posse of Cotton Queen wannabes. Though Piper smiled and waved at the crowd just like the others, all she really wanted to do was run, or, barring that, beat her head against the ground until she slipped into blessed unconsciousness.

  Because if she passed out, then she wouldn’t have to go through with this whole ridiculous farce. Right? Right.

  As the Cotton Festival noise rose to a deafening crescendo—one that meant the band, and the rest of the parade, had finally made it back to the town square after their tour through the streets of downtown—it was a measure of her desperation that Piper really did consider knocking herself out, despite the ugly bruise it was sure to cause.

  But in the end, she just couldn’t do it. Not because she was afraid of a little pain, but because every time she closed her eyes to psych herself up, she saw her mother’s glowing face.

  For the first time since she’d been born, practically, Piper was doing something to make her mother proud.

  So what if it was making her miserable? If it kept her mom sober for a few days—and softened her up enough to get Piper the new oil paints she wanted—then it was all worth it. Even this ridiculous, stinky excuse for a dress.

  Besides, after years of being an embarrassment to her parents, who ruled her with an iron fist in an effort to keep her from doing things they considered bizarre, it was kind of nice to have her mother look at her like she wasn’t a total waste of space. It was even nicer to be the focus of positive attention for once, instead of standing by and watching her mother praise her thirteen-year-old sister, Savannah, before heaping a bunch of criticism on Piper.

  Sure, she knew it was stupid to be this concerned with making her mother happy. After all, they were two totally different people, and being a Cotton Princess wasn’t going to change that. But at the same time, it was kind of cool that one weekend could so completely change the dynamics in her house. Suddenly, her mom was listening to her instead of reaching for the bottle of vodka whenever Piper walked into the room. For once, she didn’t feel like an alien someone had dropped on her parents’ doorstep shortly after birth.

  It was a good feeling.

  True, her nomination to the court had seriously pissed off Germaine, which was never a good thing. Piper had had years to learn that an angry Germaine was a dangerous Germaine. But Piper’s mother, a former Cotton Queen herself, had called in a ton of favors to get her on the float, and Piper was determined to make her proud.

  As she and the other princesses descended from the float, the music waned and so did the cheers, which meant it was almost time.

  Almost time to hear her name announced for the entire town to hear.

  Almost time for her to walk to the dais set up in the center of the town square and get the silly little tiara she was supposed to wear to this afternoon’s barbecue and tonight’s square dance.

  Almost time for her to curtsy and join the rest of the court for copious pictures.

  And then this whole thing would be over and she would have a little breathing room, at least until the barbecue.

  Nervous, and more than a little freaked out, she scanned the crowd for her best friends’ familiar faces. It took her a minute, but she finally found them at the top of the bleachers set up across from the dais, and they were all looking straight at her.

  Cassidy shot her a thumbs-up sign, Izzy gagged at the blatant dumb-assery, and Mei smiled an encouraging you-can-do-it grin that helped put Piper at ease like nothing else could. No matter what happened today—no matter how ridiculous she looked in the pale peach atrocity her mother had bought for her in Dallas—her friends would still be there. They might be propping themselves up as they laughed hysterically, but they would be there.

  As the court was introduced, the first person called was Germaine, who was Cotton Queen for the second year in a row, despite being only a junior. And yes, even here in Paris, Texas, everyone knew that the Cotton Queen was supposed to be a senior, but Germaine’s mother ruled the town the same way Germaine ruled Paris High School, and neither of them was willing to let Germaine take second place to anyone.

  After Germaine was crowned queen, and her boyfriend, Tanner Colt—who she so didn’t deserve—had been crowned Cotton King, the announcements began for the rest of the court. There were four princesses, and Piper waited impatiently for her name to be called. She was the last on the court and the sooner she got up there, the sooner this whole debacle would be over and she could get out of this stupid dress. Which she couldn’t wait to do, as it was really starting to itch. Not to mention that the funky vanilla scent seemed to be getting stronger the longer she wore the thing.

  Finally, her name came over the loudspeaker and she began the long trek up the red carpet. As she headed toward the center of the square, where the rest of the Cotton Court was waiting, she scanned the crowd for Jackson Grosbeck, center for the football team and a total jerk. Much to her disgust, she’d gotten stuck with him as her escort onto the makeshift stage.

  She finally spotted him, but he wasn’t walking down the stretch of red carpet opposite her, as they’d practiced earlier that morning. Instead, he was coming from the side of the town square closest to the parade route, and he was pulling something behind him.

  Unsure of what to do, Piper kept walk
ing—no way was she going to be the first princess in the history of the Cotton Festival to screw this up and thus earn everlasting shame—but the closer Jackson got, the more uneasy she became. And as the crowd parted, she finally figured out what he was dragging behind him. It was a very large, very ugly, very agitated pig. And it was dressed in a swine-sized version of the same tuxedo Jackson was currently wearing.

  Piper stopped uncertainly, not wanting to get any closer to the angry-looking thing than was absolutely necessary, Cotton Court or no Cotton Court. It wasn’t the first pig she’d seen up close by any means—this was farm country, after all. But it must have been one of the 4-H kids’ pigs, because while it wasn’t fully grown, it was still big enough that Jackson could barely control it.

  She didn’t want the drooling, seething animal anywhere near her.

  What is Jackson doing, anyway? she wondered frantically. Germaine would kill him for destroying the ceremony, and if she didn’t, the festival director, Mrs. Rand, certainly would. She’d been in charge of the festival for fifteen years. It was her life. No one had ever before risked her wrath, and Piper couldn’t believe Jackson was going to be the first.

  But Jackson didn’t seem to care, as he kept dragging the reluctant pig through the now-hushed crowd. At the last minute—when he was only a few yards from Piper—he let go of the rope wrapped around the pig’s neck. The thing headed straight for Piper at a dead run.

  For one excruciatingly long moment she was frozen in shock and fear. And then instincts she didn’t even know she had took over and she started to run. She didn’t get far, however, before her high heels got tangled in the hem of her dress and she went down hard.

  Within seconds, the pig was on her, squealing loudly as it snuffled its snout all over her dress and face. And in that strange, surreal moment, she finally figured out what the weird scent from her dress was: vanilla wafers.

  They’d learned last year in biology that the sweet cookies were pigs’ favorite treats.

  Someone had obviously hidden them somewhere on her dress, because the beast was going crazy looking for them, nudging her with its snout and even licking her wherever it could. Piper tried desperately to shove it away, even grabbed onto its minituxedo and tugged, but the thing outweighed her by a good thirty pounds, and it was as determined to find its treat as she was to get out from under it.

  As Piper scrambled backward, she heard her dress rip but didn’t pay any attention to it. All her focus was on eluding the vanilla wafer–crazed pig.

  Clambering toward safety, with the pig following her every move, Piper became aware that the entire crowd was staring at her with mouths wide open. Except Mrs. Rand, who stood on the dais, screaming, as she took in the fiasco her beloved cotton crowning had become.

  Even worse, a chant had started among the football players, one that was growing louder with every second that passed.

  Kiss the pig.

  Kiss the pig.

  Kiss the pig.

  Piper’s cheeks flamed and her heart felt like it would burst right out of her chest. This can’t be happening, she told herself. No way had she gone through with this whole Cotton Festival thing just to be humiliated by a giant pig.

  Only it was happening, the chant growing louder with each second that passed. And then, as if it understood what the words meant, the pig chose that moment to run its cold, wet, disgusting snout down one of her cheeks, across her mouth, and over her chin.

  Piper clamped her hands on her face in a meager attempt at protection that was too little, too late and prayed for the ground to open up and swallow her whole. She prayed for an earthquake, for a five-alarm fire, for anything that would make this nightmare end.

  Finally, someone managed to pry the pig away from her—she glanced up and realized Tanner had grabbed the rope and was wrestling the animal back across the square—and Piper scrambled to her feet.

  It took a minute, but the entire gathering fell silent once again. As she looked up at the bleachers and wondered half-hysterically what she was supposed to do now, she realized Mei, Izzy, and Cassidy had been frantically making their way down the crowded stands to reach her. As they got to the bottom, Izzy looked up, straight at Piper, and her already pale face drained of color. Then she started to run, directly toward Piper.

  Following Izzy’s horrified gaze, Piper looked down and realized her struggle with the pig had ripped the front of her dress clear off.

  She was standing in front of Tanner, her classmates, and a large percentage of Paris, Texas, bare from the waist down except for the ridiculous pair of Spanx her mother had forced her, under duress, to wear.

  Laughter once again replaced the football players’ silence, though Piper realized a number of adults were crowding into the square—including the high school principal, Mr. Callahan, and the town’s mayor, Mr. Hunter. But they were too late. The damage had been done.

  She looked around for her mother, finally spotted her on the ground about thirty feet away. Her father and sister were crowded around her mom, fanning her with their Cotton Festival programs, but she wasn’t stirring. For one fleeting second, Piper wondered if she’d finally done it. If she’d finally embarrassed her mother so badly that her mom had done what she’d always threatened to do: died of shame.

  It was the last straw.

  As her world caved in, Piper turned to flee and ran straight into Germaine, who was grinning widely as she used her iPhone to click picture after picture of Piper’s humiliation.

  The last thing Piper saw before she made a beeline for her car was Cassidy’s fist connecting with Germaine’s face.

  Despite her complete and total humiliation at Germaine’s hands, Piper couldn’t help smiling as she imagined blood gushing from the head cheerleader’s nose. One thing was for sure—this year’s Cotton Festival was going to be one nobody ever forgot …

  Chapter 1

  Piper

  “Are you sure this is a good idea?” Piper asked as she tentatively picked her way through the field toward the huge barn about three hundred yards away. Even from this distance she could hear the loud music and raucous laughter of her classmates. Which would normally mean she and her friends were going to have a kick-ass time. It was the biggest party of the year, after all. The say-good-bye-to-summer blast they’d been looking forward to for what seemed like forever. This year, since they were finally upperclassmen, they wouldn’t get razzed for attending.

  But that was before the Cotton Festival.

  Before the Kiss the Pig incident.

  Before she had become a YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter overnight sensation.

  God, it had gotten so bad that she could hear the oinking in her sleep.

  The thought had Piper stopping in her tracks, her feet refusing to move one step closer to the party. So what if it was at Mike Jenkins’s ranch? So what if he was Tanner Colt’s best friend, thereby guaranteeing that Tanner would be there? So what, even, if she’d had a crush on Tanner forever? Nothing was worth the humiliation of being chased around by drunken losers making pig noises. Nothing.

  “I can’t do this,” she said, her voice sounding way too high, even to her.

  “Oh, come on, Piper. It’s going to be fine.” Mei reached out and squeezed her hand, her dark, almond-shaped eyes filled with sympathy. “It’s been months since the video of the Cotton Festival hit the Internet. They’ve probably forgotten all about it by now.”

  “They’d be the only ones who forgot,” Izzy commented under her breath before saying out loud, “I can’t believe—”

  She stopped in the middle of her sentence, and from the sudden, harsh inhalation she took, Piper could only assume it was because Cassidy had stepped on her foot.

  “Even if they haven’t forgotten, you’re going to have to face them sometime,” Mei said, taking over smoothly, logical as always. “School starts on Monday.”

  Piper groaned. “Don’t remind me.”

  “Yeah,” Cassidy joined in, “and since the party’s alr
eady been going for a couple hours, everyone in there is probably too drunk to care about what happened at the beginning of the summer.”

  “I’m not so sure about that.” Piper eyed the barn doubtfully, even as she allowed her friends to drag her closer to it. “They’d have to be pretty drunk to forget that the whole world knows me as the Kiss the Pig girl.”

  “Not the whole world,” Izzy said, with a comforting pat on her shoulder.

  “Yeah. Just all of North America.” Piper’s stomach clenched as she remembered the back-to-school shopping trip to Dallas she and her mother had made a few days before. She’d been so excited to get out of Paris and away from all the strange looks and pig snorts that she hadn’t considered that her troubles could follow her.

  Ten minutes in the Neiman Marcus juniors department had disabused her of that notion as she’d been asked—three times—if she was the YouTube pig girl. By the time the fourth person approached her, she had given up trying to deny it and had shouted loud enough for the entire floor to hear that “Yes, I kissed a pig!”

  Too bad the person approaching had been the saleswoman, who’d looked at her like she was insane. Then again, she probably was. Especially since within minutes of her outburst her mother’s hand had crept into her purse for her omnipresent bottle of little white pills. If Piper had just kept her mouth shut, she wouldn’t have spent the rest of the day steering her stoned-on-Xanax mother from one store to the next and then driving her home through rush-hour traffic.

  None of that would have been so bad—after all, her mother had been so out of it that Piper had managed to cop some really hip clothes that normally she never would have had a chance to buy—but when she got home, her father had been furious with her for upsetting her mom. Again.

  Of course, she’d tried to explain that her mother got upset if Piper so much as climbed out of bed in the morning. But her father hadn’t appreciated her humor or her honesty. Especially not with Savannah, the pageant princess and perfect daughter, fanning the flames of his annoyance by acting like their mother was one step away from the grave instead of simply bombed out of her mind.

 

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