I often expect too much, set my sights a little too high. I know this, so I always prepare myself in case nothing goes according to plan.

For example: I had hoped this second annual break-into-the-hotel-pool activity would be easy, that everyone would come willingly, and we would have fun before the tournament tomorrow. Still, I prepared myself for a few bumps. For example, if Peter refused, if the entire thing flopped because everyone was worried about getting enough sleep, or if someone in the hotel caught us and reported it to Mr. Harrington, I was prepared.

Strangely enough, everyone crept out on time and Peter barely hesitated at all. Well, Michelle did force him from the start and head off his first protest too quickly for him to find another: "Dude, just say you've been working out. Nobody's going to get suspicious because you're jacked. Even Flash can't turn that," she motioned to Peter's entire body, "into a joke."

Yet I'm more uneasy now than if everything had gone wrong. I'm not even concerned about getting caught. Mr. Harrington is watching Jurassic Park in his room and checking the hallway at ten-minute intervals and I'm almost certain the hotel staff knows we're here, but doesn't care.

Nevertheless, I'm just… anxious.

It might have to do with how the boys are stacked upon one another in the shallow end for Chicken and, given the small area of the pool, injuries are on the table. It might have to do with Flash's new habit of winking at me and being, in general, maddeningly obnoxious. It might also have to do with the fact that my friends are being abnormally secretive. (I hate to use Flash's words, but he's sort of right. It's the best description. Even once I got back in my room, MJ and Ned kept sending texts - I have no idea who to, though I would guess between them and Peter.)

Admittedly, my nerves might also be connected to Liz, whose face I can see across the water. As our Captain, Michelle thought it would be nice to Facetime her, ask about college, and show her that her pool idea has become a tradition.

Liz's dorm room is beautiful, from what I can make out. She has calendars and planners neatly pinned up with Christmas lights to outline them. Photos hang from mini clothespins on a string and she even has a little library set up on her windowsill with a porcelain cat-shaped bookend. It's like a freaking Pinterest photo. I've always been somewhat jealous of her, but I know that outside of some old disagreement and my envy for her style and Peter's (old? current?) crush on her, I am glad she seems happy. Everyone knows how much she's been going through.

As Abe and Peter pretend to duke it out on Flash and Ned's shoulders, the light of Liz from Michelle's phone skips through the ripples, illuminating them just so. I keep zoning out and staring at the pattern. I feel weird staying on the other side of the pool with her there, but I don't know Liz that well outside of the team and truth be told, she always intimidated me. She just… has things together. Even now. She's wonderful and precise and good in every way a person can be. I feel minuscule by comparison.

Then again, it might be the overwhelming smell of chlorine that's getting into my head and putting me off. Plus, all the glints of light swimming across the glass walls - making them reflect further like a hall of mirrors - are beginning to strain my eyes. Part of me just wants to sleep. To climb out from the water, change into some pajamas, and go to bed and forget this.

But I can't. So I tread water alone in the corner, watching and listening and feeling like an idiot for isolating myself.

Does anyone want you here in the first place?

Stop thinking like that.

I try to listen to Liz's voice as a distraction. It's muffled with echo, but it's audible.

"With my AP scores, a bunch of my gen ed credits are already taken care of. But I want to take my other gen eds seriously. I have Global Ethics, Statistics, and World Journalism on Mondays and Wednesdays, then Into to Biological Chemistry and Public Relations on Tuesdays and Thursdays."

The words bounce from wall to wall, shadowing splashes and voices and little bright doses of laughter from the boys. I close my eyes for three seconds as if to catalog the moment. I have to admit, it's pretty much perfect.

Then why do I feel so nervous?

In the same way that some days just feel so good, some nights just really, reallydon't.

Flash catches my eye. God, here we go. He's smirking.

"Hey!" he calls. "Y/N, you should join in! Hold on, let me clear you a spot."

He jerks his body back to make Abe fall from his shoulders, hitting the water with a hard splash.

"There, now you have a place to sit," Flash says, patting his own shoulders.

Abe stands up, shaking water from his ears before shoving Flash underwater. Ned laughs as Flash comes back up sputtering. Peter, on Ned's shoulders, has little reaction. Michelle rolls her eyes and turns back to the girls' conversation.

"It's more fun watching, trust me." Watching Peter shirtless, my brain adds.

Stop thinking about him. Despite his smile this morning (it was idiotic of me to think it meant anything significant), Peter has remained pretty cold to me today. Just like everyone else.

Michelle looks back our way again.

"Y/N and I will play," she decides.

If I had more energy, if I weren't feeling so despondent, and if it wasn't her this-is-happening-don't-argue voice, I might put up a better fight. Instead, I give a quiet defeated groan and make my way over to the shallow end. Most times it's easier to do as she says.

"Michelle in a chicken fight?" Liz laughs, her voice reverberating on all sides of my head. "I can't wait to see this."

"Oh, no," Michelle answers as she shakes her head. "Y/N is up top. I'm not getting involved in that business."

I sigh.

"Abe, mind if I fight Flash this round?" I ask.

If I have to do this, I want to be against the one person I wouldn't mind actually fighting.

"I think I'll sit this one out," Abe says. "I'm sick of him. Plus, if he has the chance, I know he'll piss on me."

Despite my exhaustion, I can't help laughing a little. It's definitely true. But if Abe sits out, there's no chance that Ned or Peter will team up with Flash.

Flash knows this too. Shrugging, he follows Abe away from the center, saying hello to Liz.

Shit.

I climb onto Michelle's shoulders, the air making me shiver, my ankles hanging just low enough to stay in the warm water. I stare blankly at the situation. It's me and Michelle, Peter and Ned. And I've barely spoken to them since they all locked me out earlier. I wouldn't want to disrupt their texting.

I do my best not to tug Michelle's hair as I steady myself.

Now what?

Everybody else is talking again, Liz included. I'm glad their attention is elsewhere.

Staring at Peter, who's staring at me, it's clear neither of us knows what to do. Things have definitely gotten stale and weird between us over the last day, and weirder still over the last few hours. I feel like an idiot. But I'd be a moron to think it's all because of that stupid hug. Something in our friendship is stuttering, I can feel it faltering and falling away.

Abruptly unstable ground - that's what it is, I realize, looking at him. And everybody has been able to see it coming but me. How else could Flash see it?

Thinking of all the shitty ways Peter has ignored me today, yesterday, and this past week, I shove him with as much force as I can muster, knowing it'll be nothing to him anyway.

Peter's legs are over his head a moment later. If it were a real fall, it would have been instant. The rippling disturbance of the water churns up more chlorine fumes. I can feel a headache germinating at the base of my skull.

"Come on, Peter," I say while he stands and pushes wet hair out of his eyes. "Don't pretend to let me win."

"You caught me off guard," he says. All of the prior playful attitude he had with Abe is gone. He's trying - I can actually see him trying - to seem blank.

What is his problem with me?

"No, I didn't. Don't lie. Get back up."

He does. Ned's expression is unreadable for once. Michelle pats my leg.

Ned and Michelle actually move around this time, both stepping to one side or the other with half steps back and forward. Peter keeps his hands on his knees, looking bored and glancing from MJ to her phone behind us. He won't even look at me.

It pisses me off.

Michelle rolls one shoulder before lunging forward - a little hint. I shove Peter again, now resenting how stiff his muscles are beneath his stupid skin. And again he falls sideways, though faster this time.

Flash is whooping and making some stupid comment. Liz gives a surprised, "Oh, wow." Sally and Cindy are talking, but I can't tell whether it's to me or someone else. Peter's splash is echoing too much to hear a lot at the moment.

He stands up. His hands go to his hair. He looks at me and shrugs like Got me again, I guess.

The chlorine scent is hanging heavily over the room now like a pillow being slowly forced into my face. My headache pulses and creeps up behind my ear, beating my bone like a thick drum.

"Peter," I say, teeth grinding, "this is going to get boring pretty quickly if you keep this up. Push back. Don't you dare 'let me win.' I'm serious."

My jaw is clenching as I try to pack my anger down into a little box between my ribs. A pressurized numbness climbs up my throat.

Shove it down.

Peter says nothing in reply but mounts Ned's shoulders again. Ned is looking at Michelle, and though I can't see her face, I know they're having a silent conversation.

I nudge Michelle with my heel and she lunges forward again. I shove Peter's left shoulder as hard as I can. Both shoulders hit the water at the same time. I know that no matter how hard I could ever hit him, it wouldn't bother him a bit, yet the fact he's clearly not even trying to play this one game that he was just playing with Flash and Abe is burning and biting at my tongue.

Peter stands lazily as if silently offering a forfeit.

Maybe he wants to get this game over with so he can talk to Liz.

"Get up, Peter," I say as frustration spreads like fire through the ligaments of my arms. My irritation has reached my hairline.

Last week, I would never have doubted my friendship with Peter. Suddenly, I'm almost certain he wants nothing to do with me anymore. It scares me. A familiar dense pain pools in my lungs, a physical weight knocking my ribs into one another.

How did everything go so wrong so quickly?

Peter doesn't move. I could kill him.

"Peter! Get up! Fight back, do something! This isn't funny anymore. Why won't you just do something?"

At last, he looks me straight in the eye.

"What?" he shoots back. "What do you want me to do?"

He's angry now too, blatantly. It's worse than last night. I can see it, a red patch of irritation growing from his chest up to his neck. Neither of us has ever gotten like this. We're not the kind of people who do. Not with one another, and certainly not in front of other people.

It's a violently refreshing change: honesty.

"Anything! Stop messing around," I say. "Just play the fucking game."

"Maybe I'm sick of it," he says, his hands open. "This whole stupid idea! I'm not playing anymore."

What is he talking about? It's been barely a minute of this game.

"MJ," I say, "let me down."

"Alright."

She jerks back like Flash did to Abe. The water stings through my nostrils and the lining of my lungs. Is this just MJ being MJ or is she angry at me, too? And what about Ned, could he be mad at me?

What have they all been calling and texting each other about?

I wipe water from my face and open my eyes, stinging.

"Come on, Peter, play a game," I mock, moving closer to him. He just standsthere. "Play a game."

I've been playing some sort of game for at least 24 hours now, maybe over a week, maybe even longer. He can too.

Peter doesn't move a millimeter. I shove him. Nothing. His expression remains blank. He doesn't fall, he doesn't budge.

"Peter!"

I shove him again.

Nothing.

Michelle and Ned are creeping out of the water. Their waves are the only sound besides my echoing shout in the whole room. God, this is bad. I know starting some kind of fight isn't going to increase my chances of leaving D.C. with any friends, but I almost can't stop myself. I have to do something.

I move closer, face burning with an itch of fury.

"What?" he says.

Michelle and Ned, blurry reflections I can see from the glass wall behind Peter, have grabbed their towels and are walking through the door.

Damn it. Where are they going?

Something is crushing inside my chest. I can feel my eyes brimming with tears.

Shove. Them. Down. I will not angry cry in front of my classmates right now. Absolutely not. Especially not with Flash and Liz here.

My hands start shaking instead as I grapple for a reply.

"Just- just do something, Peter!"

The muscles in his jaw are working and pulsing. I wonder what words he's chewing - of course, I'll likely never know because it seems Peter is refusing to tell me anything.

"That's just it!" he shouts back. "What do you want me to do?!"

That something in my chest is spasming, collapsing.

Peter's chest is heaving and the red has reached his face. His words are fogging up my already pounding head.

That's just it. What do you want me to do?

There are too many people here and as I notice their reflections standing over Peter's shoulders with eyes glued to his face and my back, I realize I've just lost them too. In only the span of a couple minutes. The understanding hits me over the head and slices through my gut. I've ruined everything with everyone here, not just Peter and Ned and Michelle. They've never seen me like this and it's too late to pretend to reverse it. There's no way I'll leave this trip with any friends.

It takes every particle of concentration to not let my emotions get the better of me and cry; especially when I'm still staring at Peter. The brown of his eyes seems darker than I've ever seen before and his brow is knotted up, hard.

The moment is so still and static.

Without warning, Peter smacks the water in front of me with one hand. It's like a lukewarm tidal wave washing over my head, tangling my hair across my face.

My nose and lungs burn again. I gasped at the wrong second. In less than a moment though, it's doused my nerves. I suddenly feel smaller than a child, humiliated.

"Are you kidding?"

I don't know if he or anyone hears me. The question was quiet and overcome by countless echoing splashes. It's for the best: nobody can see my chin shaking at this distance so maybe if they didn't hear the crack in my voice, I can pull myself together.

Guilt and regret seep into my skin as Peter climbs out of the pool. I want to apologize, but apologize for what? And fear, fear is mixing with those other emotions. A mountain of blurred emotions coated in black dread and red fear.

I take a breath and turn around.

Fuck.

Cindy, Sally, Abe, and Flash are just… staring. Worse, Liz is too. Of course, Michelle forgets her phone this one time.

The door closes with a bang behind Peter.

His towel is slung over one shoulder and water droplets spatter across the hallway floor as he storms through it. If I could get over him, if I could stop thinking about him for one day, stop thinking about him for one minute, my heart rate wouldn't be leaping off the charts as I watch him. Actually, my heart rate might just be a result of me realizing how serious this is. The fact that four faces are still staring, now waiting for me to explode, likely doesn't help slow it down either.

"Guys," Liz's voice calls. "Come on. Don't make this weird."

Flash laughs. Hard.

"It's super weird completely on its own! Man, what was that?"

Tension loosening its hold on the room, Flash is back to himself, looking astonished and amused beyond belief.

"Flash, seriously. Let it be," Liz snaps at him. When she looks at me, her expression softens. "Don't let Peter Parker get in your head. He can… be like that sometimes. He might just be going through something."

I know what he's like, I think. I've been friends with him for longer than one Homecoming date. Liz is trying, at least, and I do appreciate the thought.

"Yeah," I say, nodding.

She mirrors the motion.

"I should go before my roommate gets back to study. And Y/N, if you ever want to talk, I'd like to hear from you again. From any of you guys. Anyway, good luck everyone! I'm sure tomorrow will be great."

The room dissolves into Goodbye!'s. I use the distraction to get my towel and phone and slip out.

What have I done?