Love Blind

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Love Blind Page 1

by C. Desir




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  For those we’ve lost. And for those we’ve found.

  Hailey’s Fear List

  Grocery shopping

  Painting

  Taking BLIND PEOPLE classes

  Needing a service dog because animals are kind of gross

  Swimming

  Spiders

  Setting up/working in pottery shop

  Walking down my street with my eyes closed

  Playing in a band

  Playing guitar solo in front of a crowd

  Cooking (for the moms)

  Being on the radio

  Being recorded in a studio

  Tongue-kissing

  Sex

  Wardrobe switch

  Bungee jumping or skydiving—either is acceptable

  Finding my way around an unknown place

  Going blind

  Chapter One: Kyle

  Joining our high school radio station when I hated to talk was probably one of the worst decisions I’d ever made. Until I met Hailey Bosler.

  Not that she was responsible for the state of my shitty life, but she certainly wasn’t making it easier. Okay, that wasn’t true. The bubblegum twin radio deejay talents of Lindsey and Lucy Latni weren’t making it easier. It wasn’t Hailey’s fault said deejays were gushing about her band’s arrival as if some pop star had autographed their not-insubstantial chests.

  It also wasn’t her fault the twins were ordering me around like a lackey, instead of respecting that I was the only one in the room actually certified to use the control board. And it wasn’t her fault my head was pounding not only from girl squeals but also because I’d had a near panic attack earlier, forcing me to skip the minefield of lunch in our cafeteria.

  Still, my afternoon was being sucked up by these girls, and I couldn’t squelch my crap attitude toward Hailey and the rest of Blinders On.

  Blinders On. Stupid name. Although I had to admit after hearing their GarageBand mix that as far as local bands went, they didn’t suck like most of the usual talentless hacks the Latni twins frothed over.

  “They’re here,” Lindsey squealed. Or maybe it was Lucy. “Girl band in the hoooussse.”

  A strange shimmy dance ensued wherein the twins proved yet again their astounding ability to derail the musical integrity of a band until it was the equivalent of a bowl of glitter-covered kibble.

  I didn’t say this, of course. Like I didn’t say most things that popped in my head. Too many words. Out loud.

  I looked down at the control board and bit the inside of my cheek, letting the high-decibel vapidity of the twins drown out my racing thoughts. I took a deep breath and pushed away the anxiety of meeting unknown people. Disappear. Fade into the background. Blend. Then I peeked at Hailey.

  Holy shit.

  Worn jeans, soft stretchy shirt, her blond hair pulled into a loose braid. Damn. She was exactly my type: hot in this really normal way, not done up, just casual, either too aware of her own beauty to care or not aware enough to realize the amount of space she filled in the room. Which was considerable.

  My brain grabbed hold of an image of the two of us alone in the darkened radio studio, me actually being suave for once in my life and her drawn in by all my moves. Then, because it’s my brain, it continued on to play the entire scenario out to its slightly inappropriate conclusion. God, what would that be like? I inched forward in my chair, more than a little aware of the semihard state of my junk. What was wrong with me? Three quick breaths, then I peeked at her again.

  She eyed the girls dancing around her, brunette ponytails whipping in some sort of coordinated twin ritual, and crossed her arms as if she were observing animals at a zoo. Her nose scrunched and flared enough for me to read a hint of disgust.

  I hid a smirk when I caught her slight head shake. She was hot and understood irony. I liked her already. Damn.

  “Hey, guys,” she said in a scratchy, low voice. I loved that kind of voice in girls. Equal parts Avril Lavigne, Elle King, and Melissa Etheridge. Classic. “Thanks for having us in.”

  “Of course,” a twin chirped. “You all are so amazing.” Then the Latnis clapped their hands and Hailey adjusted her braid as if she was well aware how damn awkward all this fangirling was, and was not in any way impressed.

  I stared too long at her, barely even noticing the two girls behind her. Emo girls. All black clothes. Too much makeup. Too many piercings. Hailey was a wildflower in the midst of skunk-weed. Sunny and warm and stupid sexy. Completely oblivious to my presence at the board. Which was probably best.

  I likely would’ve stared even longer, enough to really embarrass myself, but my phone buzzed in my pocket. I jerked it out with so much impatience it half slipped from my grasp before my fingers closed around it. Only two people texted me, and one of them was at soccer practice.

  Mom: Scrips are ready to pick up. Don’t forget the rest of your to-do list.

  As if I’d ever forget. My jaw tensed, and I typed a quick reply.

  Kyle: Got it.

  I shoved the phone back in my pocket and checked out the girls again.

  Hailey’s eyes moved back and forth, almost twitching as they searched the room. Beautiful eyes, blue green with big pupils, but something was wrong with them. They moved too much. Like she was on something, but that didn’t match up with the rest of her.

  She stepped deeper into the control room and scanned the space for a place to sit. Her eyes darted, darted. I sat up half an inch to help her, but then slumped down. What was I doing? The space wasn’t that big. Not much to look at, and maybe a little dark, but she clearly had other people to help. Her eyes landed on me for less than a second. My hands shook a little as I watched her grope for the plastic seat. Not blindly grope, but sort of tipsy-drunk I hope I’m not sitting in vomit grope.

  She planted herself slightly off center on the chair and laughed as she adjusted her position. “Sorry.”

  The vulnerability of it all damn near killed me. Those eyes. She was somehow broken. Crap. Crap. Crap. Beautiful, confident, and broken—the girl triple threat. She wasn’t broken like me, but enough that I wanted to know her. I imagined a whole conversation between us.

  “What’s wrong with your eyes?”

  “Why don’t you speak?”

  “I don’t see so well.”

  “I don’t talk so well.”

  And then I would ask her if she wanted to be the third person who texted me. One more name in my pathetic contact list. And she wouldn’t even hesitate in saying yes.

  For a second I allowed my thoughts to linger on the fantasy, our imagined conversation so real in my head I almost spoke. Almost introduced myself. But then, what the hell for? A third person who texted would be a third person I disappointed.

  Instead, I turned back to the control board and cued up the next song. I let the voices of the twins swirl around me. They pointed Hailey’s friends to the other chairs and started gossiping about the people from their last few interviews. I ignored it, pretended I didn’t care. She was just another girl. High school was full of them, and they were all equally hard to deal with. Equally scary.

  “Kyle,” Lucy snapped. Or maybe it was Lindsey. “Are you ready?”

  “Yeah,” I mumbled.

  “Well, what do we do?”

  Speak into the microphone and try not to sound like an idiot.

  I pointed to the two micro
phones set up in front of them, one for Hailey and her emo backup girls, one for Team Latni. “At the end of the song, start talking.”

  Lindsey clucked at me. Or maybe it was Lucy. Then she turned back to Hailey. Hailey’s eyes narrowed, and she leaned forward slightly, peering at me. Peering like I wasn’t another part of the equipment in the room. The feeling came back, the ache to connect with her, but just as quickly, panic took over my brain, spinning through the millions of reasons why connecting would be a terrible idea.

  Nothing to see here. Move along. I didn’t have it in me to get interested in a girl like Hailey, or any girl, really. I was too intrigued by her already and she’d barely said three words. I faded the song and engaged the microphones.

  Chapter Two: Hailey

  It was like he wanted to be invisible.

  Wanted to be.

  And he was doing a damn good job of it too, all hunched over the soundboard. Long arms and fast hands adjusting volume levels. Too fast for me to focus. His jet-black hair covered so much of his face I almost didn’t notice him. Though it was hard to notice anything past the squeals of our school’s most annoying deejays. At that moment, without my glasses, in weird lighting, with the Barbie twins gushing over our average music, I completely understood why he’d want to disappear, and I would have envied him, but I was about to play.

  I had no idea how the hell to talk to two girls who were so obviously in love with music but still didn’t get it. And even though I normally carried a spare pair of glasses with me everywhere, I was stuck without them after my graceful trip up the stairs. It made a place that already had crap for lighting even worse.

  Nothing like being in a new situation, without being able to see, to put me in a foul mood. All I knew was that the room was dim, simple, and I hadn’t tripped on anything getting to my plastic chair.

  I pulled my guitar onto my lap and let everyone else fade away for a bit. The Les Paul ’50s Tribute had been a present from my moms when I turned fourteen. I played for hours every day, and I loved the fifties vibe it held in the black lacquer. It felt like a true rock guitar.

  Tucking a few loose strands of blond back into my braid, I started letting my fingers slide over the strings to tune up.

  And when the guy whispered, “Anytime,” I was already in the zone. I loved to sing, even though it always made me nervous, and neither of the other girls in the band were up to doing more than minimal backup vocals. Once we were a few bars in, it didn’t matter. Didn’t matter that I could barely see. Didn’t matter that the three non–band members in here probably didn’t get a tenth of the lyrics. It mattered that I hit every note. Every chord. And that I was brave enough to actually feel it. Even in this small room.

  A hundred people were easier to block out than three. And I’d played for that many more than once. The radio station gig probably had more to do with being a “girl band” who played actual rock music than our talent, but playing for anyone was a rush. Besides, being on the radio was on my list, and I wanted to cross it off.

  We finished to exaggerated praises and clapping from the twins. My girls, Mira and Tess, were already chatting them up—definitely better speakers for our band than me. I didn’t have enough patience for squealing.

  Besides, I wasn’t sure how to react. I thought our song came off . . . okay. Not as good as we’d done it the night before, but still. Okay. And I should’ve sounded more grateful that the radio station at my high school wanted to have us on, but I swear, people get weird when they know you’re in a band. Especially when they learn you play in places off campus.

  Shit, playing a bat mitzvah might as well have been playing the Vic as far as most people at school were concerned.

  “So, Hailey, is this what you see in your future?” one of the twins asked, tired of Mira and Tess dominating the mic, I guess. “Playing music?”

  Yes. Maybe. God, that question was way too loaded for my current state of mind. And then, like he somehow saw me floundering, the silent guy at the board made a wrap it up signal with his hand, and the twins started in on promoting their next show.

  “Sorry, that’s all we have for today, everyone. We’ve had such a great time with Blinders On and hope great things happen for them! Be sure to tune in next week when we’re doing a special show on local hip-hop artists.” The twins even finished each other’s sentences, which was obscenely clichéd and impossibly true.

  So I guess we survived the interview unscathed, aside from my ears aching a bit at Muffy and Buffy’s high-pitched voices. I needed to get to Individual Music Tutoring, which meant I was about to lock myself in a practice room in the music building for an hour and get a grade for it.

  “Crap, Hailey. I totally forgot, I have a pair of your glasses.” Tess, our drummer, and probably the only girl I’d call an actual friend, groped in her bag and slid glasses into my hands.

  “Thanks.” I owned a million pairs of glasses—all quirky enough to hopefully hide the way my eyes darted around trying to see, but I never knew where they all were.

  I wasn’t black-blind, just legally blind. Degenerative and “old-person” eyes as my ophthalmologist called it. “Legally blind” is a really professional way of saying one day I’ll probably be black-blind. In-a-cave blind. Wave-my-hand-in-front-of-my-face-and-not-see-it blind.

  Some days I shrugged that off. I could still see, and usually I could latch on to that. Besides, playing the campus radio station was supposed to be a good day.

  Instead, as I slid on my glasses, I hated my eyes. The interview was officially over, but the twins, Mira, and Tess were still chatting. Screw patience—I’d pretty much run out of nice. When I glanced around again, the fuzzy blur of the silent guy was gone.

  The familiar weight of the Les Paul on my shoulder helped me relax as I stepped back into the hall. I waved and gave what I hoped was a smile to the two deejays, whose faces were still split from their embarrassing fangirling.

  I cringed away from the light when I got outside, blinking over and over, willing my eyes to adjust. All I needed was to get to music class. From this side of our divided campus, it should have been easy.

  Until my shoulder slammed into someone.

  “Shit. Sorry.” I scanned his face to see him better.

  “Uh . . .” He held his hand between us, but no words came out.

  “Hey. Disappearing guy.” Good thing he was close or I’d have never recognized him in the bright light. Plain gray T-shirt. Jeans. Dirty white shoes. Like he was designed to blend. I breathed in, wondering why I was still standing there. Citrus tickled my nostrils. At least he was clean. For a guy, that really said something.

  “Huh?”

  “Nothing. So, thanks for putting up with the bullshit twins in there.”

  He looked down and his too-long hair hid his eyes. Nice eyes. Too bad.

  “I’m Hailey.” I thought about sticking out my hand, but that sort of sucked, and anyway, he tucked his hands deeper into his pockets.

  “ ’Kay.”

  We stood there for another beat. Me waiting for something from him and him apparently waiting for a large hole to swallow him. When nothing more happened, he shuffled his feet and darted off.

  Guess he not only liked to disappear, but wasn’t much for talking either. Kind of an odd guy. Something I could definitely appreciate.

  ◊ ◊ ◊

  I stepped into my mom’s detached garage–turned–pottery shop. Rox had replaced all the garage door panels with windows, and added shelves across the new panes.

  Every horizontal surface was lined with pottery. I squinted, but only fuzzy shadowed shapes appeared in front of the sunlight. She’d done some really great blue bowls the other day, but . . .

  I squinted again at the pottery backdropped by the windows, and could still only see shapes. No colors. When had that happened? Had I lost colors when they were backlit?

  “Hailey? Is that you?” Rox called from her workroom.

  “Yup.”

  “How did
it go?” she asked, still yelling from the back.

  Rox sold tons of pottery out here, but she made it even faster. The extras ended up in our house—on every bookshelf, storage bin, and window ledge. There were days when the house looked more like a pottery shop than the pottery shop did.

  I pulled my glasses off and set them on her sales counter, rubbing my nose and eyes. The yellow walls were supposed to be happy, but some days they were headache-inducing. “It’s high school. Exactly how was it supposed to go?” I called.

  “Oh, for goodness’ sake.” The irritation in her voice made me smile. “I was asking about the radio station.”

  “Fine.” Such a great answer for so many situations.

  Rox’s wild black hair and tattooed arms appeared around the small door behind the sales counter. She scraped at her mud-covered hands in a gesture I’d seen a million times.

  She pulled off her apron. I squinted at her jeans and black concert tee. No chance I could guess the band. My eyes were wrecked. My other mom, Lila, wore yoga gear. A lot. Ran a studio about a block away. The cliché of pottery-and-yoga lesbian moms did not go unnoticed, by basically everyone, but they always laughed about it and kept on being who they were, including being hoverers. Having one mom to smother me was a bit much, but two? Two who’d worked their asses off to adopt a little girl who’d come to them already damaged? Their smother-mothering could be a lot to take.

  Rox frowned as she stepped toward me. “Your glasses are on the counter. Bad day?”

  “No. Yes. I don’t know.” Why did she have to be so observant? It always brought out a weird, weighted feeling in my stomach, as if I was responsible for her.

  “Let me get cleaned up and we can talk for a bit, okay?” Her smooth voice didn’t match her rough exterior, but it was from Rox that I got my love of music.

  I touched the guitar, still resting in its case on my back. “I’m gonna play for a bit. And besides, the doc says it’s good for me to go without my glasses once in a while. Gives me practice.” For the day they won’t do me any good.

 

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