amazing,â he gushed. âI canât wait to go back.â
âAnd itâs really expensive, right?â a boy named Dexter who played the piano said. âI heard, like, a pack of gum costs five bucks.â
âYeah, but the energy makes up for it,â Mac piped up. Sheâd been to New Yorkâfor an orchestra camp with Claire, actually. She shoved aside the memories of them running around Times Square in matching I-Heart-NY T-shirts, eating bags of candy at Dylanâs Candy Bar, sneaking onto the stage at Carnegie Hall to see what it felt like, and being chased away by the security guard. âAlthough you have to ignore the rumors. Not everyone there is amugger or a pickpocket. And alligators do not live in the sewers.â
Dexter snorted and rolled his eyes. âYeah, but huge rats live in the subways.â
âTrue.â Mac grimaced. âAnd they are pretty gross.â
Everyone made disgusted noises. Mac could feel Claireâs gaze burning into her, but she refused to turn around. She was going to have fun tonight, damn it. And that meant not dragging the past into the present.
A tall, blond boy with broad shoulders and a dimple sauntered over. Mac checked his blazer, but he wasnât wearing a name tag. âThis looks like the fun group,â he said enthusiastically.
Lucien took a sip of his drink. âWe were just talking about subway rats. Standard getting-to-know-you conversation.â
The new boyâs eyes immediately locked on Mac. âSubway rats? Ick.â
Mac giggled and resisted the nerdy urge to shove her glasses up her nose. âYou afraid?â
The boy grinned. âOf rats? Nah. I grew up on a farm. But I have heard the rodent population in New York City is supersmart. Like, they can do tricks. Fetch, roll over. Speak several languages.â
âArgue with cab drivers?â Mac chimed in.
The guy grinned. âHaggle with the guys who sell fake Gucci bags on Canal Street.â
âGet past the red ropes at clubs,â Mac joked, enjoying herself.
The guy held out his hand. âIâm Oliver. I play piano.â
His palms were velvety soft, but with slight calluses at the fingertips. His touch sent a head-to-toe charge through Mac. âMackenzie. Cello. Nice to meet you.â
âNice to meet you, too, Mackenzie Cello.â He held her gaze steadily. âIâm always impressed by the way you cellists fling that thing all over the place like itâs nothing. You make it look so easy.â
âWe learn that first,â Mac teased. âCello Flinging 101. Before we even play a note.â She couldnât believe the words were flying out of her mouth so effortlessly. Sheâd never been able to flirt this way with Blake. Maybe because sheâd always put so much pressure on herself around Blake.
âAha. So now I know. I always wondered.â He had a nice laugh, Mac thoughtâfull and open, warm. But then, annoyingly, she felt a sad little pull in her chest. Heâs not Blake , a tiny voice said in her ear.
She flinched. So what? she thought fiercely. Blake had hurt her. No, she correctedâBlake had screwed her over .
She struggled to refocus on Oliver. He was telling some story about another cellist he knew from his school, a tiny Japanese girl whose instrument was nearly as big as her but who completely dominated the instrument. âAnd howabout you piano guys?â she asked when he finished. âIt must take a lot of training to learn to move a piano.â
âDo I look like the kind of guy who would actually move his own piano? There are people who do that for me.â His green eyes twinkled. âThatâs why I chose it in the first placeâso I could have my minions do all the heavy lifting.â
Mac tried to keep a straight face. âI see. Does Juilliard know? That youâre such a prima donna, I mean.â
Oliver leaned toward her. âNo. And