COPYRIGHT
Editors’
Note and Compilation copyright © 2009
by
Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci
“Once
You’re a Jedi, You’re a Jedi All the Way” copyright © 2009 by Holly Black and
Cecil
Castellucci
“One
of Us” copyright © 2009 by Tracy Lynn
“Defi
nitional Chaos” copyright © 2009 by Scott Westerfeld
“I
Never” copyright © 2009 by Cassandra Clare, LLC
“The
King of Pelinesse” copyright © 2009 by M. T. Anderson
“The
Wrath of Dawn” copyright © 2009 by Cynthia and Greg Leitich Smith
“Quiz
Bowl Antichrist” copyright © 2009 by David Levithan
“The
Quiet Knight” copyright © 2009 by Garth Nix
“Everyone
But You” copyright © 2009 by Lisa Yee
“Secret
Identity” copyright © 2009 by Kelly Link
“Freak
the Geek” copyright © 2009 by John Green
“The
Truth About Dino Girl” copyright © 2009 by Barry Lyga
“This
Is My Audition Monologue” copyright © 2009 by Sara Zarr
“The
Stars at the Finish Line” copyright © 2009 by Wendy Mass
“It’s
Just a Jump to the Left” copyright © 2009 by Libba Bray
“How
to Tell If Your Dice Are Lucky or Unlucky”
“I
Totally Shouldn’t Post This, But . . .”
“The
Best Ways to Stay Awake for Gaming”
“How
to Identify . . .”
“What
to Remember When Going to a Convention”
“How
to Look Cool and Not Drool in Front of Your Favorite Author”
“What
Kind of Geek Are You?”
Illustrations
copyright © 2009 by Hope Larson
Text
copyright © 2009 by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci
“Top
Five Words or Phrases You Need to Know in Klingon”
“How
to Cheat Like a Nerd”
“How
to Cosplay with Common Household Objects”
“What
Your Instrument Says About You”
“What
Your Lunch Table Status Means”
“How
to Hook Up at the Science Fair”
“Theater
Types”
Illustrations
copyright © 2009 by Bryan Lee O’Malley
Text
copyright © 2009 by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci
All
rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no
part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any
form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the
prior written permission of the publisher.
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Brown and Company
Hachette
Book Group
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Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017
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our website at www.HachetteBookGroup.com.
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Little,
Brown and Company is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc.
The
Little, Brown name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.
First
eBook Edition: August 2009
The
characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to
real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
ISBN:
978-0-316-05262-7
“The
Song of the Stars” quotation in “The Stars at the Finish Line” on pages 352–353,
Stars of the First People: Native American Star Myths and Constellations
by –Dorcas S. Miller, published in 1997 by Pruett Publishing Company, PO Box
2140, Boulder, Colorado, 80306, p. 43, reprinted from The Algonquin
Legends of New England; or, Myths and Folk Lore of the Micmac, Passamaquoddy,
and Penobscot Tribes by Charles Godfrey Leland, p. 379.
Contents
Copyright
Editors’
Note
Once
You’re a Jedi, You’re a Jedi All the Way
Comic:
Top Five Words or Phrases You Need to Know in Klingon
One
of Us
Comic:
How to Tell If Your Dice Are Lucky or Unlucky
Definitional
Chaos
Comic:
I Totally Shouldn't Post This, But . . .
I
Never
Comic:
How to Look Cool and Not Drool in Front of Your Favorite Author
The
King of Pelinesse
Comic:
How to Identify . . .
The
Wrath of Dawn
Comic:
How to Cheat Like a Nerd
Quiz
Bowl Antichrist
Comic:
How to Cosplay with Common Household Objects
The
Quiet Knight
Comic:
What Your Instrument Says About You
Everyone
But You
Comic:
What to Remember When Going to a Convention
Secret
Identity
Comic:
What Your Lunch Table Status Means
Freak
the Geek
Comic:
How to Hook Up at the Science Fair
The
Truth About Dino Girl
Comic:
Theater Types
This
Is My Audition Monologue
Comic:
The Best Ways to Stay Awake for Gaming
The
Stars At The Finish Line
Comic:
What Kind of Geek Are You?
It’s
Just a Jump to the Left
About
the Illustrators
All
text for comic interstitials by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Comics
marked byillustrated
by Bryan Lee O’Malley, comics marked by
illustrated
by Hope Larson.
EDITORS’ NOTE
It
didn’t matter which one of us had married a rival Dungeon Master (that would be
Holly) or lived for six weeks in the line for Star Wars (that would be
Cecil), the moment that we met one another, we knew instantly that we were of
the same tribe.
And
so, while hanging out at Comic-Con in 2007, or as Cecil likes to call it, “the
nerd prom,” waiting in line for what we were promised was “the best burrito in
San Diego,” we spoke giddily of the amazing costumes we’d seen, books we’d
read, comics we picked up.
Cecil
told Holly about breakfast, where while eating eggs, she noticed that the table
next to her was filled with a bunch of Jedi in full Jedi outfits. We remarked
how we had noticed a lot of Jedi. And we had noticed a lot of Klingons.
Personally, we’d been looking for Slave Leias, because we’d been told there
would be a bunch, but actually there weren’t that many. There were just a lot
of Jedi and Klingons.
Holly
mentioned that she had noticed that there was a panel on how to live your
day-to-day life as a Klingon. We kind of wanted to go to that. We thought it
sounded kind of cool. We wondered what kind of domestic clues we could get from
learning to live Klingon.
So
there we were, in line for this burrito. The line was really long. We stood
there swapping Comic-Con stories while we waited, because probably we’d been
waiting for a table for about an hour already. And we both kind of said at the
same time, “What would happen if you were a Jedi and you woke up with a Klingon
in your bed?” “Would it be like Romeo and Juliet?” “Could you even tell your
friends?”
We
decided then and there that we needed to write that story. The story of a Jedi
and a Klingon and true love. We thought we could write it and sell it and it
would be awesome.
Only
then we realized that no one would publish that story.
Later,
while Cecil was walking the floor looking for Gama-go T-shirts, standing
between Wonder Woman and Phoenix and getting a crush on Scott Pilgrim, Holly
called and left this message:
“Cecil!
No one will publish our story! That is why we need to create an anthology that
is geektastic so that we can have a home for our story.”
“Oh!
And we have the geekiest friends!” Cecil said.
“Yes!
An anthology about the geek and the geek observed,” Holly said.
And
thus an idea was born.
We
hope that you enjoy the stories within.
They
sing to our geek heart.
AMHERST,
June 4, 2008
a
cognizant original v5 release october 10 2010
ONCE YOU’RE A JEDI, YOU’RE A JEDI
ALL THE WAY
by
holly black and cecil castellucci
I.
Klingon
I
awake tangled up in scratchy sheets with my head pounding and the taste of
cheap alcohol and Tabasco still in my mouth. The spirit gum I used to attach my
nose ridge and eyebrows sticks to the sheets as I roll over. Immediately, a
wave of nausea makes me regret moving and I try to lie as still as I can until
it passes.
The
thing about advancing in the Klingon ranks is that you have to be badass. So
when Kadi and D’ghor decided last night that we had to make blood wine with
Everclear instead of tequila, and twice as much Tabasco as the recipe called
for, I had to drink it or be a wimp.
I
open my eyes and reason with myself that if I can crawl into the hotel
bathroom, I can get some ibuprofen from my bag and stop my head from hurting
quite so much. Also, water. Water would definitely help.
Pushing
off the sheets, I realize that I’m still wearing my uniform and that my bra is
still on. My pants and boots are missing.
“Arizhel?”
someone says from the other side of the bed as I stagger toward a door I hope isn’t
a closet. The voice has an accent that might be Irish. I don’t know anyone
Irish.
I
also don’t know this room. It must be in the same hotel, but none of my stuff
is here and there is only one single big bed instead of the two doubles that
Kadi, D’ghor, and Noggra were sharing with me. The only thing that’s familiar
is my bat’leH leaning against the wall, the curved blade gleaming in the
little bit of sun sneaking through the drawn shades. The glare hurts my eyes.
In
the bathroom, I turn the lock and go over the night before. I think back on how
we sang rousing battle songs in our hotel room, accompanied by swigs of that
horrible blood wine. Then we rode the escalator, raising our weapons in the air
with a single shout, to the party that was happening on the main floor. A party
seething with costumed people for us to growl at: Peacekeepers, Cobra Command,
Stormtroopers, Browncoats.
I
splash water on my face and chew up a couple of aspirins. Whoever is in the
bedroom is really tidy; his toiletries are still in a little bag. There’s even
aftershave. I don’t see any pots of makeup or prosthetics, so I figure he’s not
a Klingon.
Maybe
he’s a member of Starfleet. There were a couple of cute guys with really proper
costumes and phasers that glowed a little bit when they were fired. I remember
arm-wrestling a cadet, but I can’t believe I would have gone back to his room.
For one thing, I won way too easily. For another, he had a Vulcan girlfriend
who was watching us both like she wanted to have some kind of pon-farr excuse
to kick my ass.
I
remember hoping she was going to try.
Maybe
it was that guy. I groan and rub my face.
I
pull off the braided wig that’s twisted around anyway, peel off my ridge and
bald cap, and wash off as much of the makeup and adhesive as I can without cold
cream or Bond-Off. Blinking at my own face in the mirror, I realize how
different I look. Tame. Like I used to be.
“Are
you okay?” comes a voice from beyond the door. He definitely has an accent.
“Yeah,”
I yell.
“I
ordered coffees and some food,” he says. “Grease will fix us right up.”
I’ve
never ordered room service. Only rich people order room service.
“Uh,
thanks.” I fill a water glass from the sink and guzzle it. I feel better, like
the aspirin is kicking in, and I take a deep breath.
I
wish I had my pants, but I pull down my pleather tunic as low as it can go and
walk out of the bathroom.
There,
sitting on the bed, is a thin guy with blond hair and a cute, lopsided smile.
He’s still wearing his uniform, too. His Jedi uniform.
I
know I look completely stupid, but I just stand there in the doorway. The
buzzer on the door rings, but I’m still staring. Tall riding boots, outer
tunic, tabard, obi. Jedi.
No.
I couldn’t have. Not with an Ewok-cuddling, Force-feeling, Padawan-braid-wearing,
lightsaber-rammed-up-his-ass Jedi.
He
gets up and I fumble around in the covers until I discover my pants. Pulling
them up and shoving my feet into my boots, I turn around as he opens the door.
He signs something and comes back with the tray of dishes in metal domes.
“I
feel totally thrashed,” he says as though we haven’t committed a terrible
crime. As though we haven’t totally betrayed the stupid uniforms we’re standing
around in. Everyone knows that trekkers and whatever starwarsians call
themselves aren’t supposed to have anything to do with one another.
He
pours coffee into two cups and asks me how I take it.
“Black,”
I say.
He
smirks. “I should have guessed that, shouldn’t I?”
“And
you take your raktajino with milk and sugar.”
“Ouch,”
he says, but he’s laughing. Maybe at what I said, maybe at the Klingon word. I
want to know how we met, but I don’t want him to know that I don’t remember. I
don’t even know his name.
It
turns out he does take his coffee with milk and sugar. “Makes it more like tea,”
he says.
I
eat some toast with raspberry jelly and a sausage. After that and three cups of
coffee, I start to feel a lot better. I feel good enough to realize that the
room service receipt has his name on it. Leaning over, I take a quick glance.
There it is. Thomas.
He
sees me looking. “Thomas,” I say.
“I
told you it was my real name. Unlike Arizhel.”
At
least he didn’t seem to realize that I don’t remember him at all.
“So,”
I say, “are you here at the con with a lot of other…,” I hesitate on the word, “…Jedi?”
“Yeah,
yeah,” he says, holding up his hands in a gesture of surrender. “I already know
what you think about Star Wars.”
“Oh,
you mean that it’s lame that Star Wars worships monarchical, secretive,
and monastic systems and tries to tell you that anger is evil?”
“It’s
pretty funny that a tough, angry girl like you is all about a goody-goody
idealistic show like Star Trek.”
“It’s
pretty funny that you find that kind of girl attractive.” I can’t help smiling.
I take another sausage.
“Oh,
come on!” he says. “Like your attraction to me is any less screwed up?”
“I’m
a Klingon,” I say. “Of course I’m attracted to my enemy.”
II.
Jedi
A
Jedi is never supposed to give over to his passions; he is always supposed to
be in control. But last night, at some point between Coke Pluses, Master Sven
must have spiked mine with a little bit of rum. My being such a lightweight
might be a contributing factor in the mess I find myself in this morning.
I
know that most of my Order don’t go for anything outside of the Star Wars
universe. It’s all Star Wars all the time with them. Which is cool. I
get it.
There
is something about the Jedi in Star Wars that feels more right to me
than any other made-up alien life code. It’s the Force, really. I have this
thing inside of me that is light and wants to do good, but I struggle with my
own dark side. I try to keep it in balance, but it’s hard. I like the idea of
there being something larger than yourself that guides you. The Jedi code.
I
am not adverse to liking a bit of this and that from other universes, though.
Heck, I like Star Trek. I even own all the original series on DVD. And
this Klingon girl, Arizhel, whose real name I still don’t know, isn’t like any
girl I’ve met before.
“Careful
there, you might break something,” I say.
I’m
watching her wolf down some breakfast and I’m trying to act all cool and all
that in front of her, because she’s witty.
“You
are in more danger of being broken,” she says. “I am a Klingon. I could break
you with a roar.”
And
funny. God, she’s funny. That’s what I liked about her at the party last night,
the way she made me laugh when she came over to my Master and me.
“So
you’re a Jedi Knight,” she said, brandishing her scary sword. I lifted my
lightsaber and parried with her.
“Apprentice,”
I said. “An honorable start, for a human,” she said.
“I’ve
mastered many levels since I’ve started my training,” I said.
“Have
you done battle?” she asked.
“Well,
we do fight exhibitions,” I said.
“So
you are a dancer,” she said. “No wonder you wear a skirt.”
“It’s
a tunic,” I said.
And
then I blushed and felt embarrassed. I was worried that she wouldn’t think much
of a Jedi Apprentice.
Master
Sven just handed me another Coke Plus with rum and left me alone with her. He
told me he’d find another place to crash, and I took that as encouragement that
I was doing well.
“Every
dog has his day,” Master Sven said.
I
make sure my clip-on braid is in place while she pushes the button to call the
elevator. I am wearing my Jedi uniform and she is wearing her Klingon costume,
but not her ridges or wig piece, nor her makeup. She’s very different from what
I remember about last night.
I’m
watching her out of the corner of my eye as we enter the hotel elevator.
First
off, she’s Asian. And not dark and orange. She’s tried washing off most of her
makeup but it’s still a little streaky. Still, she’s pretty. She also looks
soft, almost shy for someone who seems so commanding. She’s got a great body.
Really curvy and she’s an inch or two smaller than me, but I notice that she
walks with a swagger that makes her seem taller. Her walk makes me want to get
a little attitude in my step.
It
makes the idea of turning to the dark side a little bit sexier.
I
can’t believe I just thought that. Annakin went to the dark side for love and
look what happened to him. I don’t care how cool this girl is. I’m not about to
let that happen to me.
I’m
a Jedi.
To
become a Jedi requires a serious mind and a deep commitment, and here I am,
feeling kind of giddy standing next to a Klingon.
She
turns to face me.
“I
didn’t hurt you or anything, right?” she asks. “Klingon mating rituals can be
violent. It’s not unknown for there to be bruises, or broken bones.”
“Oh,
no!” I say. “We Jedi are tough. I just used the Force.”
“Oh,
yeah,” she says. “Good.”
“Yep.”
“So,
you know, I hope you don’t take this the wrong way, but when we get downstairs,
I’m going to pretend that we don’t know each other,” she says.
“Right,”
I say. “Of course.”
But
secretly I’m crushed because I thought maybe I could ask her to meet me for
lunch between the Lightsaber Demonstration I’m attending and the Darth Maul
signing I’m going to later.
“Good,”
she says. “’Cause you know…”
“Yeah,”
I say. “I mean, we were. Whew!”
I
make a little hand gesture that is supposed to mean “drunk” but probably looks
more like “I’m a loser.”
“And
no matter what you’ve heard about Klingons,” she says, “it doesn’t mean anything.
We don’t have to mate for life.”
“Good
to know,” I say, and now I am just embarrassed. I don’t know how to tell her
that we didn’t even mate at all. I wanted to. Oh, God, I wanted to. She is so
hot. And we’d been talking at the con mixer all night and we had everything in
common. Well, except for the whole Jedi / Klingon thing. And then I invited her
back to my room, and I have never done something like that before! It was like
the best night of my whole life! And Master Sven even gave me the thumbs-up.
And then there was a hot girl in my room! And she wanted me. I could tell—she
sniffed me! I was all set to lose my virginity. I even had a condom ready. But
sleeping with drunk Klingon girls, even if they’re ravishing you, seems wrong.
So
does defying the Jedi code.
Jedi
are monastic. Celibate.
We’re
quiet for a few seconds and I think our awkward conversation is over. And I’m
glad, because I feel a little sad. So far, this was the best time I’ve ever had
at a convention. And I think I liked talking to her last night way more than I
did to my own Jedi Council.
So,
I’m kind of looking down at my feet ’cause I don’t want her to see that it kind
of meant something to me. Not mate-for-life something. But maybe
get-her-real-name something.
And
that’s when she does it again. Just like she did last night. She sniffs my arm,
and pushes me into the corner of the elevator and growls. And then she kisses
me and I feel weak in the knees. I give in to the dark side. I grab her. I kiss
her right back.
She
pushes me away right before the elevator door opens and she walks out of the
elevator and away from me.
I
still don’t know her name.
And
I only have twenty minutes to get to the convention center for the Jedi
Lightsaber Demonstration.
“Hey!
Thomas!” Master Sven waves me over to where he’s sitting onstage before the
demonstration. He’s cleaning his lightsaber and he’s smiling big, like he
thinks he knows how it all went down.
“Thanks,
Master Sven, for finding a place to crash last night,” I say.
I
don’t want to tell him that I didn’t score, so I just let him keep smiling.
“No
sweat, my little Padawan,” he says. “Besides, I had no idea the Battlestar
people could party so hard! I ended up crashing with five Boomers last night!”
“We’re
about to start,” one of the other Jedi, Padawan Pete, snaps. “Could you guys
focus?”
“Careful,
Master Sven,” I say. “Don’t defy the Council again.”
“I
will do what I must,” he says.
The
music begins and we start our choreographed lightsaber routine. Master Sven is
the star of the show. That’s why no matter how much of a rebel and sort of
code-breaking Jedi he is, our Council won’t ever kick him out.
I’m
just learning my lightsaber technique, so I just have one little fight. But I
do well enough that people clap.
When
we’re done, it’s always the same. The people swarm us and want to take our
pictures.
While
we’re posing, Padawan Pete starts laying into me.
“I
heard you guys were mixing a little too hard last night,” he says. He’s got a
green lightsaber that won’t stay on, so he keeps shaking it. “We have an image
to maintain and it’s a Jedi image.”
“Leave
me alone, Pete,” I say. He is really bugging me.
“Figures
with a Master like Sven that you would get funny ideas,” Master Doug says.
“Give
me a break, Doug,” Master Sven says. “All Thomas did was meet a girl.”
“She
was a Klingon,” Padawan Pete says.
“When
was the last time you hooked up with a girl, Pete?” Master Sven asks.
“That’s
not the point,” Padawan Pete says.
But
my anger is rising and I can’t take it anymore.
“Okay,”
I say. “That’s it. I challenge you.”
“What?”
Padawan Pete says. “You can’t challenge me.”
“Right
here, right now. Lightsaber fight.”
“You
are totally going dark side,” Padawan Pete says.
“Trust
your feelings, Thomas,” Master Sven says.
“What
kind of Master are you for encouraging your Padawan like that, Sven?” Master
Doug asks.
“Better
than you,” I say, which is exactly what gets Padawan Pete to whip his cape up
and pull out his lightsaber to fight me.
A
ring of people form around us and I start to use my lightsaber technique to
wipe that smugness off Padawan Pete’s face.
And
just as I am getting into my rhythm, I see a bunch of Klingons walk by.
Including Arizhel, in full makeup again. She stops. She looks at me. I smile at
her, wanting to say hello, and I get sliced right in the stomach.
“Gotcha!”
Padawan Pete says just as she’s stopped for a second and is watching me fight.
I’ve
been killed. There is nothing I can do.
By
the rules of the lightsaber fight, I have to fall.
III.
Klingon
My
plan is to go back to the room and sleep for pretty much the rest of the day,
but when I get there, Kadi, D’ghor, and Noggra are dressed up and waiting
around for me. Noggra smooshes my cheek against her leather breastplate in a
bruising hug.
“Oh,
honey,” she says. “I feel so guilty for losing track of you.” She gives Kadi
and D’ghor a frown, more severe because she’s got her ridges on. “And those two
should never have let you drink so much.”
“I’m
fine,” I say, even though I know I look like a hot mess.
“You’re
underage.”
I
hate when Noggra gets like this. She’s D’ghor’s mother, but she’s been a
Klingon for her entire adult life. She basically raised him Klingon. Most of
the time she just acts like our totlh, but sometimes she forgets and
acts like a mom.
“Where
were you last night?” Kadi asks. “We called your cell, but it turned out that
you’d left it here.”
“I
need a shower,” I say.
“Was
it that cadet guy?” D’ghor asks. “I’m going to kick his ass.”
“My
honor is mine to defend,” I say, and growl to show how serious I am. “I’m a
warrior and I can take care of myself.”
“Let
her be,” Noggra says, and I nearly flop down on the bed with relief because
there’s no way I can explain where I actually was. I’m the youngest Klingon in
our group, so I’m always struggling to be tough enough. I figure that if I
match the others swig for swig, blow for blow, they’ll forget how young I am.
Unless
I do something really dumb, like, say, spend the night with a Jedi.
Under
the hot spray, though, I can’t help thinking about Thomas. About his soft and
lilting voice and the fierce way he kissed. When we were in the elevator, he
kissed me so hard he bit my lip. Of course, hot girls in Star Wars are always
princesses and queens with elaborate looping hair, so maybe he figured he didn’t
have to be so careful with a girl like me.
I
used to be a good girl. Everyone expected me to be quiet and studious and I was
good at fulfilling expectations. Chung Ae, perfect lab partner. Princess.
But
inside, I knew I was a Klingon. I could feel the growl in the back of my throat
when I spoke, itching for me to give it a voice. Honoring my parents and
grandparents was a big deal in my house, but Klingons allowed for a different
kind of honor. One that didn’t make you small and quiet. One that venerated you
for belching the loudest, louder even than your brothers. When I met D’ghor in
debate club, it was only a matter of time before I was attending a dipping
party and having a life cast made so I could sculpt my first ridge.
It
doesn’t take me that long to get cleaned up and ready. Kadi comes in and helps
me blend my base and disguise the edges of the latex. Then we’re back on the
floor, stomping in our big black boots, frowning and growling and prowling.
“Hey,
look.” D’ghor smirks and gestures with his beard.
I
turn and there he is. Thomas is holding a lightsaber and he’s swinging it in an
elegant arc. He might be a Jedi, but he’s beautiful. A warrior.
Our
eyes meet and at that moment, a plastic saber slams into his chest. He turns
his head toward the blow and, stunned and furious, he looks at me again right
before he falls on his knees.
“Ha!”
D’ghor says, lifting up his bat’leH. “You call that fighting? Those are
oversized cocktail picks you’re swinging.”
I
groan. I know he’s just looking for an excuse to do some chest pounding, but
the Jedi are staring at me like they’re waiting for something. All I do is get
really hot in the face and hope no one can see me blushing under a ton of
orange base.
Kadi
rests one of her hands on her metal-studded hip. “Cocktail picks being swung
around by a bunch of toothpicks.”
“Let’s
go,” I say, and Noggra gives me a weird look because normally I would have been
egging them on.
One
of the older Jedi pulls Thomas to his feet. He’s younger than Noggra, but not
really young, with the top part of his hair pulled back into a ponytail. After
Thomas gets up, the Jedi puts both his hands on his shoulders and gives him a
shove in my direction. I scowl at them both.
“That’s
your girlfriend?” says another Jedi, the one that beat Thomas. “Talk about beer
goggles.”
For
a moment, everything stops. D’ghor’s laugh dies and I feel cold all over.
Frozen. Then Noggra gives a horrible roar and grabs that skinny Jedi Apprentice
by the throat. She might be in her forties, but she pushes him against the wall
of the escalator and bares her teeth against his throat.
IV.
Jedi
As
the Klingons and the Jedi rush toward each other, the spectators start
clapping. They must think it’s part of our show. But as the hits begin to
actually land and people begin to get hurt, they kind of look confused and
start getting out of the way of danger. They make a kaleidoscope of colors as
they run. Brown shirts and people of all sizes wearing flowing capes, alien
masks, and spandex.
“Go!
Go! Go!” Jedi yell all around me as they let out their battle cry and we rush
forward to meet the enemy.
What
I really want to do is find Arizhel.
The
Klingons seem to have multiplied, but really it’s that other Star Trek people
have joined in. Non-Jedi Star Wars people have joined our side as well. I fly
past a Queen Amidala, her dress ripped, her makeup smudged, grappling with an
Original Series Chekov. Even Emperor Palpatine is kicking some Vulcan ass. It
is now a full-on Star Trek vs. Star Wars battle. It is as though we have been
moving toward this moment for years and now it is finally on.
No
one looks scared. Everyone looks happy.
“Watch
your back!” Master Sven says as he pushes a Jean-Luc Picard away from me. Master
Sven then starts parrying blows from a Jadazia Dax. I can tell he is fighting
and flirting at the same time. I hear him try to get her cell phone number.
In
the distance, over by the elevators, and near the coffee cart, I see Arizhel. I
make a beeline for her, dodging swings and weaving in and out of the crowded
arena. On my left, I see Padawan Pete.
“This
is your fault,” he cries.
He
comes after me again.
“Brother!”
I say, trying to fight the dark feelings that are rising inside of me. Or maybe
more like my Irish temper. “Let us not fight each other when we are at battle.”
But
he keeps coming at me. He’s got a mean look in his eye. He’s already killed me
once today and this time he is going down.
I
use a three-move combination of my own design, one that I haven’t even shown
the Council yet, and when I finish, Padawan Pete is on the floor, his nose
bloodied. I can’t say that I am sorry.
“I’m
reporting you to the Jedi Council and getting your ass kicked out.”
I
hear his voice trailing me, but I’ve moved on. I am doing my best to fend off
attacks from every imaginable kind of character from the Star Trek universe. At
this point, his threats don’t slow me down.
I
have an anger inside of me. I have turned to the dark side. And I don’t mind at
all.
To
my right, Master Doug is putting on a show. He is trying out his best
lightsaber moves, trying to outdo anything he’s ever seen Master Sven do by
ending each basic stance with a flourish. It doesn’t look effective, but it
looks good.
Someone
grabs my tunic and spins me around.
I
put my lightsaber up, ready to hit my mark.
It
is Arizhel.
“Thomas,”
she says. Her makeup is running a little bit from being sweaty from the fight.
She looks like she wants to say more, but she leans over and puts her hands on her
thighs to steady herself.
When
she looks up, she smiles.
Then
she punches me in the face.
“Ow!”
I say. “Why’d you do that?”
“It
is my way,” she says.
I
see stars. My face really hurts. I bet I get a black eye. “I
feel.…This
whole thing is silly.”
“This
is not the time to talk of our feelings,” she says. “This is the time to fight.”
She
scrambles out of my reach and shoves me up against a pillar. I hear the roar of
Klingons near me.
“Fight
me,” she growls.
And
then I get it. I think maybe what she is really saying is please help me
save face in front of my friends; they’re watching.
She
does like me.
I
shove her, hard, but not too hard. I shove her to show her that I like her.
I
want to tell her how I feel, but I know she likes action and not words, and
besides, I see something out of the corner of my eye, but I ignore it. I’m too
into fighting her. It’s as though we are really in the moment, as if we are
really together. Every time a blow connects, I feel a thrill.
But
after a few minutes I can’t ignore what I’m seeing. I stop fighting.
“What
are you doing?” she asks. “The battle is not over.”
“Stormtroopers,”
I say.
The
501st Legion of Stormtroopers arrives and within minutes they have all of us,
the Jedi and the Klingons, surrounded, separated, and under control.
“Surrender
your weapons,” the stormtrooper who has us says. His voice sounds just like in
the movies. He must have a microphone under his helmet.
“There
is no glory in surrender,” Arizhel says.
“Yeah,
besides, some of those Jedi deserve to get kicked out of the con just for being
dicks,” I say.
“You
guys can choose. If you don’t settle down, I’m going to have to escort you out
of the convention area,” the stormtrooper says.
“Lead
on,” I say.
Arizhel
takes my hand.
The
stormtrooper talks into his little walkie-talkies and ejects us from the
building. Others are already outside, among them Master Sven, Master Doug,
Padawan Pete, and Arizhel’s friends. They are all too busy yelling and trying
to blame each other for not being able to get back into the convention to
notice that we are there and that we’re still holding hands.
“Battle
always makes me hungry,” I say. “Want to go get something to eat?”
“With
you?”
I
nod.
We
head away from our arguing friends and leave the convention center and head
toward a coffee shop.
I
realize as we sit down at an empty table with our cheeseburger special and bowl
of chili that I still don’t know her real name.
“I
have something to tell you,” I say.
A
little kid walks by our table and Arizhel growls at her because she’s staring.
The kid starts crying and her mom whisks her away, muttering “freaks” under her
breath.
“About
last night,” I say.
“Look,
I have something to say, too.”
She
looks so good to me. Like a moonset on Naboo. Like the colors on an X-wing
fighter. Like a costume that Queen Amidala would wear.
“Nothing
happened between us last night,” I say.
“I
don’t remember anything about last night,” Arizhel says.
“Really?”
we both say at the same time.
Tell
me your name, I think.
“So,
just so you know,” she says. “My name is Chung Ae. It’s nice to meet you,
Thomas.”
Damn!
That
Jedi Mind Trick does work.
Holly
Black is the bestselling author of several contemporary fantasy novels for
younger and older readers, including Tithe, Valiant, Ironside,
The Spiderwick Chronicles, and the graphic novel series, The Good
Neighbors. She is an unrepentant geek, having met her husband when they were
rival Dungeon Masters and currently living in a house with a secret library
hidden behind a bookshelf.
Cecil
Castellucci is the author of three young adult novels— Boy Proof, The
Queen of Cool, and Beige—and the Plain Janes graphic novel series.
Her books have received starred reviews and been on the American Library Association’s
Best Books for Young Adults (BBYA), Quick Pick for Reluctant Readers, Great
Graphic Novels for Teens, and the Amelia Bloomer lists. Cecil waves her geek
flag high. She waited on the Star Wars Episode One line on Hollywood
Boulevard for six weeks, she invited Batman to her fourth birthday party, and
she has a collection of broken action figures.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Bryan Lee O’Malley.
*
Klingon translation by Dr. Lawrence M. Schoen
ONE OF US
by
tracy lynn
THE
SETUP
Montgomery
K. Bushnell, captain of the varsity cheerleading squad, could almost hear
her entrance being narrated in the freakish minds of those she approached.
Something involving “damsel in distress” and her blond hair being like a “sack
of gold coins” or something. In her own head it would have sounded more like
the voice-over in an old detective film—the only kind of movie she and Ryan
could both watch without fighting.
She
slapped a wad of bills down on the desk in front of Ezra. Three pairs of eyes
in the room went to the money. And then to her shapely legs. And then back to
the money.
“I
want to hire your services,” she said, biting back each word with a little
disgust. She didn’t want to be there. And it was no surprise.
Sprawled
around the media room like it was their personal cave were the four most
prominent members of SPRInGfield High’s Genre and Nonsense club (SPRIGGAN).
Ezra, David, Mica, and Ellen (she was the only member whose eyes stayed on the
money the whole time).
They
looked at her with a wide range of emotion: from almost anthropological
surprise that someone like her even knew where the media room was (David,
Mica), to wondering with lustful disbelief if all of their wishes were about to
be granted (Ezra), to hatred so intense it bordered on audible snarling
(Ellen).
“You,
um, what?” Ezra said, hypnotically caught between Montgomery’s blue-sky eyes
and her money.
“I
want you to teach me about your…stuff….” She waved her hand impatiently around
the room, at the Star Wars posters, the action figures glued to the
ceiling, the cans of Mountain Dew and bags of cheese puffs. She retracted her
hand a little at the last. “I have a hundred bucks here. I need you to tell me
everything about, you know, video games and science fiction shows and movies.”
“Thank
you…dear Lord…,” Ezra whispered.
“Why?”
Mica asked, not looking up from the handheld game he was furiously stabbing at
with his thumbs. His tongue came out once in a while, as if hoping it could
help. It curled and wavered in the air a little before he finally sucked it
back into his mouth.
Montgomery
tried not to gag at the sight. “My boyfriend’s all into that stuff. You know—Ryan?”
“Yeah,
we all know who Ryan is,” Ellen snapped. “‘Quarterback.’ Dating ‘the
cheerleader.’”
Montgomery
ignored her. “He’s really into it and I don’t get it at all. Any of it. We
fight about it all the time. I thought maybe if I actually learned something
about…this…we would communicate better.”
Ezra
blinked at her. She could see into his head: a muscled and manly football
player was tackling his dreams to the ground. Assuming he knew it was football
where tackling was done, and not basketball.
“You’re
paying us a hundred bucks so we can teach you to speak geek so you can
communicate with your boyfriend better?” Mica asked, making sure he understood
properly.
“Yes,”
Montgomery said, trying to sound sure of herself. Trying to convince herself
that this wasn’t the absolute worst idea she’d ever had.
“Works
for me,” Mica said, going back to his game.
“Awww,
the little cheerleader is looking for some personal growth,” Ellen cooed.
“Okay,
not helpful,” Ezra said, shaking his finger at her. Then he composed himself
and turned to Montgomery with what he obviously hoped was a professional smile.
“Now. What…um…areas of our expertise did you have in mind?”
“Well,
Ryan likes Star Trek….”
“Really?”
Ezra said in disbelief before he could stop himself.
“Quarterback’s
a Trekker!” David laughed.
“How
old-school,” Mica snorted.
“Which
series?” Ellen asked.
Montgomery
looked confusedly from one to the other as they fired off their remarks. She
tried to respond calmly, and in order.
“Um,
yes; I thought it was Trekkie. What do you mean old-school? He
watches…the one with the Klingon. And the other one with the doggie. Plus he
likes the really, really old one.”
“True
Trek?” Ellen asked gleefully.
“There
are two with a Klingon as a main character,” Ezra pointed out.
“‘Doggie,’”
Mica snorted. “Well, actually, it was a nice doggie. Beagle, right?”
Then:
“HA, TAKE THAT, YOU BRICK WALL!” Probably to his video game.
The
cheerleader took a deep breath and decided to just continue, hoping that if she
braved it out, maybe it would all make sense eventually.
“And-he-also-likes-playing-on-his-Xbox-and-all-of-those-big-dorky-movies-like-Star-Wars-and-the-one-with-the-little-guys?—”
“Xbox
or Xbox 360?” Mica asked, suddenly sitting up and paying attention.
“‘Dorky?’”
Ezra demanded, a little insulted.
“‘Little
guys,’” David snorted. “Hobbits suck….”
“You
know, it was a book, too,” Ellen said snottily.
“Oh
my gosh, this was a terrible idea,” Montgomery realized forlornly.
“No,
wait, we can do this,” Ezra said, leaping up, ready to physically stop her from
leaving the media room if he had to. “We’ll be organized. So he likes Star
Trek, and all of the… great major motion pictures, and video games.
We have experts on all three right here. Mica is a total vidiot. He knows
everything about every computer and video game ever made. His name’s on half of
the machines down at the arcade. Plus he’s a real fantasy freak. If it’s got
dragons, he’s read it. My specialty is science fiction, genre and cult films. I’ll
handle that.”
He
gave her what was obviously supposed to be a smooth smile. Even David rolled
his eyes.
“And
Ellen is,” Ezra added as delicately as he could, “our book and sci-fi TV
expert.”
Ellen
might have actually hissed.
“Ryan
doesn’t read…a lot of books…,” the cheerleader said slowly, realizing just how
awful that sounded.
“Quelle
surprise,” Mica muttered.
“Well…what
about books with pictures? We’ll throw in comic books for free.”
“Thanks,”
David said, waving his hand without looking up from the latest Captain
America.
“We’ll
come up with a syllabus and a class schedule,” Ezra continued, growing excited.
“Also, we’ll give you reading assignments. And we’ll put it all on Google
Calendar so we can arrange class time with, um, minimum interaction.”
“That’s
perfect. The part where the interacting is all minimum-y,” Montgomery said
eagerly.
“That
was almost a Buffyism,” Mica pointed out to Ellen.
“Almost,”
Ellen admitted grudgingly.
“And
for a final, we could take her to Locacon,” Mica suggested, smirking.
“What’s
that?” the cheerleader asked. She liked the idea of a final and assignments. She
was good at standardized education. “It sounds familiar. I think Ryan talked
about it….”
“It’s
Springfield’s answer to World Con,” Ezra said proudly.
“It’s
a sci-ence fiction and fan-ta-sy con-ven-tion,” Mica explained, slowly and
carefully.
“It’s
incredible,” Ellen said.
“It’s
got a great dealer’s room,” David pointed out. “I got the Jimmy Olsen ‘giant’
Number Ninety-Five—from the sixties, yeah?—for like twenty-five bucks.”
“Huh,”
Montgomery said, nodding. “My final exam. That’s a great idea. So by the end of
this little course I’ll be able to fit in and talk with everyone and completely
impress Ryan? And maybe not be completely bored?”
The
four geeks looked at each other uncomfortably.
“Ah,
I think, that might be, uh, blue-skying it,” Ezra said carefully, coughing a
little. “Er, really ambitious. We’re looking at just getting you through the
day without losing your patience. Or saying anything too insulting.”
“Yes,
that’s probably a more workable end goal,” the cheerleader agreed, thinking
about it.
“Sports
metaphors,” Ellen said, rolling her eyes. “How typical.”
Trek
101
“All
right, let’s start with the basics,” Ellen said, marching back and forth in
front of the blackboard. She clasped a yardstick behind her back like a nun or
a commandant, just waiting for a chance to strike.
Montgomery
sat in Mrs. Tiegwold’s English classroom, all alone in the front row. The clock
ticked sadly past two thirty: school was out for everyone else who didn’t need
special help in the area of high geekery. She really was trying: she had her
little bobbly feather-topped pen poised over her favorite pink notebook, legs
crossed studiously.
Unfortunately,
she wasn’t able to do much about removing the look of boredom and disdain fixed
on her face.
Why
they were doing this at school was a mystery. Montgomery could understand Ellen’s
embarrassment at maybe taking a field trip to a coffee shop (the poor girl
often had dribbles of something—milk, juice, coffee—on her shirt collars), but
why not at least at her own house? She probably had tons of backup material.
Dolls, action figures, fun props…
“We
need to get you to the point where you can at least tell the difference between
the Star Treks,” Ellen continued. “We’ll start with a good mnemonic device. THE
FIVE RULES OF GIRLS.”
She
suddenly lashed out with the yardstick and thwacked a pull-down Shakespeare
character chart. The chart rolled up violently, revealing the five carefully
chalked-in rules. Ellen smiled smugly at her trick. Not that she had obviously
practiced a bunch of times the day before.
“Rule
one.”
THWACK!
She hit the board.
“Kirk
always gets the girl.”
“Kirk,
he’s the captain of the old one,” Montgomery said, remembering. “With the short
skirts and stuff and the funky music.”
“True
Trek,” Ellen corrected. “But you should probably just refer to it as the
Original Series. Good for you for recognizing it, though.”
(Mica
may have taken her aside earlier and pointed out the value of positive
feedback; a grumpy cheerleader wasn’t likely to fork over more money if
instructed by a constantly insulting Trekspert.)
The
smile on Ellen’s face was forced, just like the cheerleader’s interest, but
Montgomery took the compliment anyway and grinned, drawing a little
congratulatory smiley face for herself.
Then
she realized something.
“Hey,
Ellen—you know, that shirt looks good on you. You should really wear light
colors more often. With, um, better shoes.”
The
yardstick almost broke in Ellen’s hands.
Almost.
Star
Wars and the world of Lucas (not including A Very Wookiee Christmas or Willow)
“Ah,
welcome to Château Ezra.”
He
was wearing what he probably thought was a nice shirt, a colorful Hawaiian
number whose coconut buttons weren’t too badly chipped. It looked freshly
pressed.
In
fact, Montgomery was pretty sure she could detect a whiff of starch and burnt
cotton in the air. There was even…product in his hair, something that made it
shiny, spiky, and not very twenty-first century.
Someday
he would make a perfect mid-level manager at some sort of computer company: he
already had the nondescript build, a slight tub at the tummy, and a sneeringly
curved nose made shiny by the wrong use of cleansing products.
She
rolled her eyes.
“Your
parents are home, right?” she demanded, not coming through the invitingly open
door.
“Mais
non,” he answered with a bow. No doubt he had made darn sure of that.
“Let’s
get this over with,” the cheerleader muttered, stomping in. Ezra went to take
her coat, then realized it was spring and she wasn’t wearing one. Without
pausing she followed what looked like the most likely route to the living room.
“All right, I—whoa, that’s a big TV,” she said, struck despite herself.
It
was the largest, flattest, high-def-ist one she had ever seen. And it almost
distracted her from the low lighting, stinky candles, artfully arranged bowl of
popcorn, and what looked a lot like a fake fur throw.
“Can
I get you anything to drink? A diet soda, maybe?” he offered.
“‘Diet
soda, maybe?’ What are you, a waiter in training? Get me a Coke if you’ve got
one,” she said brusquely, settling down into the incredibly comfortable,
overstuffed leather couch. Too bad this wasn’t the house of any other person
in the universe. Even Ellen’s. Movie night would have almost been fun.
She
didn’t hear Ezra leave or come back. He proffered her a can of Coke and a glass
of ice—on a tray—then sat down. Right next to her. Almost on top of her.
“Um,”
she said, using her best glare.
Ezra
happily ignored her, picking up an incredibly sleek and shiny black remote. A
veritable stealth plane of a remote. “What you are about to see is what some
may consider the absolute pinnacle of human artistic achievement, the peak of
cinematic experiences.”
“I’ve
seen Star Wars,” she snapped, sliding over and putting her purse in
between them.
“Yes,
but have you really watched it?” Ezra asked dramatically. A couple of
clicks on the remote lowered the lights even more and turned the great glowing
box on. There was a pause as the DVD booted up, and the darkness was complete.
A
muffled creaking of leather indicated movement on the couch.
“Touch
me and I’ll kick your ass,” Montgomery warned. “And then I’ll have Ryan kick
your ass, and then everyone else on the football team kick your ass, and then
Eddie the towel boy kick your ass.”
(Eddie
was an enthusiastic nine-year-old with autism who always wore a Steelers
football helmet that the cheerleaders had pitched in to get him—he even wore it
to sleep.)
But
then the movie music came on, and everything changed.
He
completely ignored her!
The
cheerleader watched Ezra curiously. His eyes grew extra wide, drinking in every
second of screen action. His breathing slowed (easy to tell; his mouth was open
most of the time). His lips moved a little when people spoke. At mysteriously
critical moments he would choose to pause the action and explain to her—eyes
still on the screen—why this line was important, or what this meant in terms of
character development, or how this was inspired directly from basic human
archetypes à la Campbell’s Hero of a Thousand Faces.
Most
of the time, he didn’t even look at her.
It
was kind of weird.
There
they were, in a dark room, sitting on a couch together, all alone…but when the
screen was on, she might as well not have been there at all.
Of
course, during the inevitable pee or phone break, everything changed. He
accidentally rubbed up against her when sitting down or getting up, and reached
directly across her chest for the popcorn—until she wordlessly dumped the
entire bucket into his lap.
THE
SMACKDOWN: MANGA, ANIME, AND COMICS
“Um.
So this might be easy for you to start with. Ranma 1/2. It’s a classic,”
David said, handing her a bootleg DVD.
They
were sitting on a bench outside the local comic shop. He had just taken her on
a tour of the store, which she genuinely appreciated. It was almost like a
shopping spree. She walked out with Batman: The Killing Joke; Sandman:
Dream Country; X -Men Visionaries: Chris Claremont; and an action
figure she thought was “kind of cute” and “might look good on my dashboard.”
David hadn’t laughed at her; he had merely smiled.
Too
bad he was so overweight. With his shy little smile—and maybe a slightly
cleaner red T-shirt—he would have been almost cute.
A
haircut wouldn’t have hurt, either.
“And,
um, this is Negima. It’s a good intro to manga. Very popular. Um, there’s
a little weirdness, with girls—it’s called ‘fan service,’ but it’s pretty light
compared to other ones. We’ll start reading it together—I know that totally
sounds retarded, but Japanese comics read a lot different from American ones.
Like, you start on this side of the book.” He turned it to show her how it
opened from the back.
“I’m
sorry if this is totally rude,” the cheerleader said as politely as she could, “but
are you interested in this because of your background?”
“Um,
my grandparents are from Singapore. Not, uh, Japan. I just like it…’cause, you
know, it’s like comics. But they can be about anything. Mythology or
history or regular life—but with art, you know? It’s not words with pictures.
It’s art. It’s a whole different way of…experiencing a book.”
“Hmm,”
Montgomery said, swinging her legs on the bench, thinking about it.
Susan
walked by with a couple of football players. With her long black hair and dark
eyes, she was the perfect cheerleadery complement to Montgomery. Of course they
had been friends forever.
The
three waved and gave her a questioning look, pointing at David behind his back.
Montgomery shrugged. Susan said something and the two other boys laughed.
Meanly.
David
turned to look.
“Oh,
friends of yours,” he said, more of a statement than a question. “You want to
take off?”
“No,”
she said, a little sadly. The answer was yes; they were probably meeting Ryan
at Café Not-Tea, to gossip and talk and have general fun. Not read comic books.
But
Locacon was coming up.
She
steeled her shoulders.
“Okay.
So it reads backwards. What else?”
LOTR,
PART I
“But
Rings is an epic movie; it falls under my jurisdiction!” Ezra
whined.
Mica
shrugged. “I would argue that movies not based on a book fall under your
jurisdiction. High fantasy literature is clearly mine. Besides, according to
the schedule, you’ve sort of…um…monopolized most of the classes this week,” he
pointed out, tapping at the Montgomery Calendar they had taped to the door of
the media center.
“He’s
got a point,” David said, nose buried in Johnny the Homicidal Maniac.
Just a refresher; he was going to talk the cheerleader through it next week.
The
student in question walked in as the two boys began to shout at each other.
Ellen frowned into her book, trying to shut everyone out.
“What’s
up with them?” Montgomery asked. She didn’t think members of Team Geek ever had
anything to fight about.
Ellen
made a face. “They’re arguing about who gets to watch The Fellowship of the
Ring. With you,” she added a little spitefully.
“I
am not spending another evening with Ezra,” the other girl insisted. “Not
alone.”
Ellen’s
look changed, becoming something like understanding. “I don’t blame you,” she
agreed.
LOTR,
PART II
Hanging
out with Mica in his bedroom fell somewhere between David-on-a-bench and
Ezra-in-his-gigantoid-living-room. While it was weird to be by herself with
this boy, it didn’t necessarily reek of danger. In fact, she was impressed that
it didn’t really reek much of anything, except for maybe the slight musty scent
of hundreds of paperbacks that lined the walls. A small TV sat on a wooden
crate in a corner; the home-theater experience was completed by a neatly folded
Mexican blanket on the floor and a child’s stool (it said ‘Mica’ in big bright
hand-painted letters).
Tall,
short, and occasionally pretty people droned nonsense on the tiny screen.
Montgomery found herself losing interest almost immediately.
“Hang
on, this is an important bit,” Mica said, with the tiniest bit of an affected
British accent. But he did it without thinking, so it was almost excusable.
“What?
They going to get on miniature ponies and ride off into the sunset?” the
cheerleader asked, pulling out a book and blowing dust off it.
“No,
they’re—come on, this is serious.” He didn’t turn his head from the TV, his
lips slightly parted around his surprisingly cute, slightly bucky front teeth.
His dirty blond hair was tousled into his eyes—but unlike she’d assumed, it
wasn’t actually dirty. It might even have had some gel or something in it.
“This
is no mere ranger. He is Aragorn, son of Arathorn. You owe him your allegiance….”
The
serious one, blondie with the ears, the elf, was getting all self-important.
She remembered that from the first time her boyfriend made her watch it. It
would continue like this for the next two movies.
“Ugh,
would you listen to them?” Montgomery sighed, rolling her eyes and
shoving the book back onto the shelf. It had looked intriguing at first, but
none of the characters mentioned on the back had any vowels in their names;
only a lot of ws and ys and far too many double ls. “It’s ridiculous the
way they talk!”
“It’s
supposed to be epic and therefore archaic,” Mica explained patiently. But there
was an edge to his voice. “Like…well, you take French. Think of the formality
of their speech like vouvoiement versus tutoiement.”
“I
didn’t know you took French,” Montgomery said, impressed. “Wait, you’re not in
my or Shaniqa’s class….”
“I
take French Five with the seniors,” the boy said dismissively. Not bragging.
Like he wanted to get over it and back to the subject at hand. He pressed play.
“Anyway, think of it as trying to sound like an English version of romantic, archaic
French.”
“It
sounds retarded,” she said tartly.
“Montgomery.”
Mica was the very picture of barely controlled exasperation. “Not only are you
paying us to show things like this to you and explain them to you, but this— this
movie, is one of my Favorite. Things. In. The. World. If you don’t like it,
could you at least keep the comments to yourself? How would you like it if I
made fun of…”
He
paused. He could have suggested any one of a thousand nasty things, from
nighttime soaps to the worst sort of trashy romances.
But
he didn’t.
“…whatever
it is you like?”
They
locked eyes for a moment. She bit her lip.
Whenever
it was her turn to watch something she liked, Ryan wouldn’t stop making
awful comments. Like the reality show where young designers had to sew things
quickly. She didn’t even bother trying to watch it with him anymore. Hence the
noir after noir after noir…
“Sorry,”
she finally said. Grudgingly. She flopped down on his bed.
“Why
are you doing this, anyway? I don’t really get it,” Mica admitted, crossing his
legs and relaxing a little.
“Ryan
likes all of this sort of…stuff,” she said as she waved her hand around. “I
mean, a little. Not like you guys like it. And I don’t get it at all. I thought
maybe if I did, I would get him more. I really like him, you know.”
“That’s…”
Mica thought carefully. “Kind of generous.”
“Um,
yeah,” Montgomery said, picking at his Star Wars quilt.
The
obvious question was finally spoken.
“Is
he doing the same thing for you?” Mica finally asked.
“What
is this, Geek 101 or the Dr. Phil show?” the cheerleader snapped. “When
I want relationship advice, trust me, I won’t be paying the dysfunctional club.”
He
made a face. “Touché.”
“What
about you?” she relented. “Like…you and Ellen seem perfect for each other. How
come you never dated?”
“Who
said we didn’t?” Mica said quickly, turning back to the TV and groping for the
remote.
“Really?”
Montgomery’s eyes widened at the new information. Gossip—even here, among these
people—was juicy.
“Look,
it just didn’t work out, okay?” he muttered, pretending to fix the screen
format.
“Oh
my gosh—did you guys do it? Is that what happened?”
“Hey.
Monty. Shut your freaking trap and watch the elf, okay?” the geek growled,
hitting play. “You’re watching a movie you hate to impress your
football-playing BF. Ix-nay on the relationship advice-ay. When I want pom-pom
advice, trust me, I’ll go straight to you.”
“‘Monty,’”
the cheerleader said, giggling a little. “I kind of like that.”
LUNCH
BREAK
“So,
how’s your…secret project going?” Susan stage-whispered across the
table. Montgomery kicked her under it. Her best friend was sitting right
next to Ryan, who, breaking convention, was not as dumb as a football
player could be. He had already questioned the unmarked bootleg in her purse—something
she didn’t usually carry with her cell phone, makeup, and tampons.
Ryan
wasn’t paying attention, though; he was shoveling the second of a trio of
cheeseburgers into his mouth, the juices dribbling around to his chin. It would
stain his white shirt with permanent greasy smears.
“It’s
going well,” she said casually, as if it was about something for history class.
She studied her limp salad. Then she cleared her throat and got Ryan’s
attention by tapping him with her fork. “Hey, there’s a making of Star Wars
special on tonight, on the History Channel.”
“Yeah?”
Ryan said, surprised. He swallowed quickly. “For real? How’d you hear about it?”
“I
don’t know…. Maybe you could come over and we could do our homework and watch
it.” Which was really a way of saying “do our homework and make out while we
‘watch it.’” It certainly got his attention.
“Oh,
you can’t,” Susan said, pouting. “There’s Reese’s party tonight. You two have
to come.”
“I
don’t know….” Montgomery said unenthusiastically.
“Well,”
Ryan said, torn.
“Come
on! I’m going to wear my new top, the one with the zip-down,” Susan said
flirtily, wheedling Ryan.
“Hey,”
Montgomery warned, surprised at her friend’s forwardness.
“You
know I’m just kidding,” Susan said, backing down immediately. “I was just
giving some added incentive.”
“Hmm.”
Montgomery reached over and stole one of Ryan’s fries, biting it in half, hard.
SF
TV: THE SCIFI CHANNEL VS. PBS AND THE MAJOR NETWORKS
After
practice Montgomery took the bus over to Ellen’s house for what would be,
barring some wonderfully cataclysmic event, an incredibly boring afternoon.
The
lone female member of Team Geek promised she would start slowly, beginning with
socially acceptable nerd TV (Lost, Heroes, Smallville, BuffytheVampireSlayer),
then easing into the more commonly known serious sci-fi with a series of old-
and new-school matchups ( Dr. Who 1–8 vs. Dr. Who 9
and 10, StargateSG1 vs. Atlantis, old Battlestar vs. new Battlestar),
ending with a very brief foray into the hardcore geek-but-not-forgotten ( MaxHeadroom,
MisfitsofScience, FridaytheThirteenth, plus some sort of Canadian–Luxembourgian
Dracula series).
Despite
herself, the cheerleader was a little intrigued to see Ellen’s house. She had
to admit that this little extracurricular project was interesting at least in
how it revealed the personal lives of people she hadn’t really given a wet slap
about before.
She
could hear the shouting before she even rang the bell.
“Oh,
they’re upstairs,” Mrs. Ellen’s-Mom said with a smile, as if nothing was wrong,
or she was deaf.
Montgomery
mounted the very-normal, very-family wooden staircase with a growing sense of
dread. At the top, at the end of the hall, inside a door covered with pictures
of stars and space things (and very old stickers of unicorns), was
exactly the sort of scene she was afraid she was walking into.
Mr.
Ellen’s-Dad was yelling. Ellen was standing as calmly as she could, a thin
trickle of a tear along the outside of her cheek. She was obviously trying not
to see the cheerleader standing there, but quickly wiped her face, embarrassed.
“Oh,
and there you go, crying again,” her father screamed, noticing her
gesture. “For heaven’s sake, why can’t you be more like your hero—what’s his
name? Schmock? Spock? Something stupid? The one with no emotions. Why do you
have to be so emotional about everything? You’re just like your freaking
grandmother…crying over everything. Are you going to cry when an
employer yells at you?”
Montgomery
looked down at the floor and gave a small cough.
“What?
Oh, you must be Montgomery,” he said, calming down immediately.
But
whatever small token he was paying to social decency failed against an urge he
just couldn’t resist. He immediately turned back to his daughter.
“Look
at her—why can’t you be more together, like her? She looks like someone
who’s going to college! Not wasting her time with stupid online games! Nice to
meet you,” he added, striding angrily down the hall.
“Hey,”
the cheerleader said after a moment, with a twisted, understanding little
smile.
“Hey,”
Ellen said back, sniffling, wiping her nose with the back of her hand.
Everything was silent in the house. Dust fell; it was hard to tell where Ellen’s
father had gone. Montgomery could tell that though they were from opposite
worlds, at that one moment the two girls understood each other completely: What
had just occurred totally sucked.
The
cheerleader noticed Ellen’s outfit with sadness: the tucked-in T-shirt printed
with a weird, garish logo, the boy jeans that were actually cut for a boy, the
cracked leather belt, the sneakers with duct tape and pins. Not slobby or
punk enough to make any statement other than “lame.” Oh, Ellen was going to
college. She was super-smart.
She
just wasn’t going to interview well.
“Um.
I don’t really feel like watching TV. Here,” Ellen finally said.
“No
problem,” Montgomery said easily. But she found herself a little disappointed.
Weird.
Here
was just the sort of wonderful act of God she was hoping to preempt the
afternoon of très boring geekery—she could be at Ryan’s in forty-five
minutes if she raced—and now she sort of felt cheated.
She
stole a quick glance around and behind Ellen, trying to take in as much of the
room as she could before she left. It was similar to Mica’s, but different in a
few key, girly areas. A box of tampons. Some stuffed animals. Paisley
bedclothes.
A
constellation of plastic painted spaceships—starships—drifting from the
ceiling.
On
her desk was an explosion of things incongruous to the rest of the room: piles
of neatly-folded cloth, measuring tape, diaphanous fluff, cones of thread.
There wasn’t a sewing machine or anything else crafty in sight save a neatly
organized set of model paints.
“Sorry
you came over,” Ellen muttered, kicking her toe.
“We
could go see a movie or something,” Montgomery found herself suggesting. “Is
there anything science fictiony out? You could coach me through it.”
“Nothing
good,” Ellen sighed. “But…I’ll see anything. Bad comedy. Crapulent thriller.
Explody spies. Anything except for something dumb and chicky.”
“The
Sweet Smell of Success is playing at the Art House,” the cheerleader
suggested hesitantly.
Ellen
gave her a look somewhere between surprise and respect. “A classic, huh? Okay.
Yeah. Sure. That’d be great.”
The
two girls regarded each other for a second, suddenly realizing that they had
somehow just agreed to go see an (almost) normal movie together, almost
normally. Almost like friends.
“All
right. We’re outta here,” Ellen said, grabbing her wallet, fleeing the touching
moment.
“And
maybe we could go to the mall afterwards,” Montgomery suggested with a grin.
“What,
is this the cheerleader-turns-the-geek-into-a-beauty montage?” Ellen growled.
“No,”
Montgomery retorted, “this is the surprising
cheerleader-picks-up-her-asthma-prescription expositional scene…
“…and
maybe we’ll just pick you out a new pair of pants. Just one,” she added
mischievously.
ALL
TOGETHER NOW
Technically,
it was video-game night. Which meant Mica. But it was hosted at Ezra’s, because
he had the aforementioned biggest-baddest TV and greatest number of game
systems. Taught by Mica, because he was the expert. Section-led by
David, because he was also pretty qualified, and more importantly, wanted to
play.
Chaperoned
by Ellen because Montgomery refused to go to Ezra’s ever again unless she was
along.
The
Trekspert was downstairs getting snacks out of the pantry with the host while
David, Mica, and Montgomery lounged around Ezra’s bedroom. David sat sort of
upside down on the—king-sized—bed, legs up on the wall as if the extra blood
rushing to his brain would help. Mica was upright at the computer, logged into
the massive multiplayer fantasy rpg of the moment. There were bowls of M&M’s
and pizza bagels everywhere.
It
was…surprisingly pleasant. Low-key.
Montgomery
perched on a stool next to Mica, trying to pretend to care as he made a
character for her, then showed her how to bash a level-one goblin.
“See,
look! Now you’re level two!” he said proudly, indicating the willowy elf-thing
on the screen that had hair and eyes sort of like the cheerleader.
“Yay,”
she stated flatly. “What now?”
“Now
we go get you some new armor, because you can wear light leather. And a helm,
and some boots…”
“Wait,
what? We’re going shopping for new clothes? In this game? Are you serious? Can
I choose different kinds?” She leaned closer into the screen, putting her hand
on Mica’s shoulder to get a better look. If he noticed, or enjoyed it, he didn’t
let on.
“Dig
the cheerleader loving the virtual shopping. Too much.” David cracked up, his
last laugh sounding unfortunately very porcine.
“Oh
my gosh,” the cheerleader said, turning around slowly in her stool. “You
snorted. You actually snorted.”
“I’m
a geek, whatever, like you’re always calling us,” he said, shrugging.
“Hey,
Pom-Pom, you were just getting excited about buying a pink shield for
your game character,” Mica pointed out.
“Okay,
okay, phasers down, everyone,” she said, putting her hands up. “Let’s just get
back to work.”
Ezra
and Ellen were just entering the doorway, mini-eggrolls and drinks in hand.
“Did
she just say what I thought she said?” Ezra asked, amazed.
“By
George, I think she’s got it,” Ellen said with a smile.
FINALS
“What
are you so stressed out about?” Ryan asked, not looking up from his phone. He
was deeply texting.
“I
want to be completely prepared for the conven—uh, this big test, and oh…never
mind.” Montgomery wore her big comfy sweatshirt and fat jeans, which were
normally great for studying in but for the fact that her boyfriend found the
outfit unbearably sexy. Tonight, however, he didn’t even seem to notice.
Unusual for him, but lucky for her.
“Mmm,”
Ryan chuckled at something someone sent him. For a while there were no sounds
other than the tapping of his keypad and the turning of notebook pages.
“I’m
really glad you’re going to Locacon with me,” Ryan mentioned, not looking up
from his phone. “That’s awesome of you.”
“Really?”
Montgomery glowed in the praise. She squeezed his arm and lay her head back on
his shoulder. He patted her knee.
“Hey,
what do you call the vampire who makes someone a vampire? Like, the vampire
daddy?” she asked dreamily.
“Sire,”
Ryan answered without looking up.
Then
he looked up.
“Wait,
what?”
“Nothing,”
the cheerleader said quickly.
THE
GRADUATION
“Um,
I don’t know what to say,” Montgomery said honestly.
David,
Ellen, Ezra, and Mica stood before her—accidentally in descending order of
height—dressed in, well, what she supposed they thought was formal. Ezra wore a
jacket and tie, both of which were flashy, expensive, and ridiculously out of
place in high school. David wore a jean jacket with all of his pins on it. All
of them.
(They
made, Montgomery was sort of delighted to realize she knew, a kind of
scale-mail armor over his chest.)
Mica
wore a vintage T-shirt that was printed to look like a tuxedo, but had a real
carnation pinned to the fake lapel. Ellen wore a skirt. And a sweater. And what
looked like Ferengi ears. For someone who apparently didn’t know the first
thing about makeup, she had done a spectacular job blending the prosthetic into
her own skin.
Ezra
cleared his throat. Pompously, of course. “On this day we would like to
formally congratulate you on achieving the rank of graduate proto-geek….”
“Sub-lieutenant
commander,” Ellen corrected.
“Monty
the Grey,” Mica suggested with a grin.
“Level
Four Cleric,” David stated matter-of-factly.
“Why
cleric?” Ellen asked, surprised.
“It
seemed like the most scholarly, least violent of all the other kinds of
classes. Think of her as a student-monk,” David explained.
“Makes
sense,” Mica nodded.
“PEOPLE!”
Ezra said, exasperated. “As I was saying. Today we are gathered here to
formally congratulate you. Your hard work and near-endless toil have finally
accomplished what you set out to do….”
“Good
job, Monty,” Mica said, ignoring him. He stepped out of line and kissed the
cheerleader on her cheek. She was surprised by the casualness of his
socially-appropriate action; he neither blushed nor tried to turn it into
something else.
And
then he handed her a little figurine of an elf. Blond hair. Legolas, probably.
Maybe Haldir.
No,
it definitely looked a little Orlando Bloomy.
“You
can put it on the shelf next to your American Idol posters,” Mica
suggested with a mischievous smile.
“Nice
paintwork,” David said enviously. “Um, this is from me. It’s like a diploma.”
He
handed her a scroll with a lot of calligraphy on it, and a bright, big-eyed
picture of herself. As kind of a blond Japanese cheerleader.
“Did
you draw this yourself?” Montgomery asked, trying not to sound like a mom. It
was actually quite good. Maybe she would even frame it.
“Yeah,
and inked and colored it, too,” he pointed out.
“And
from me, something to inspire you,” Ezra said grandly, holding his hand
out with a flourish.
Montgomery
was expecting something ridiculous, expensive, and shiny, an embarrassingly
lavish gesture.
What
she got was a ball of fluff.
“A
tribble?” she asked, confused.
“Don’t
girls love them?” Ezra asked, also confused.
“Thirty
years ago, maybe,” Ellen snorted, rolling her eyes. “Here, this is from me.
For all of the thousands of bad guys in your life.” She gave a meaningful look
to Ezra. Then she smugly held up a case.
Montgomery
popped the catches and opened the top.
“Oh,
my gosh,” she said.
Inside
was a single piece of sharpened wood.
“MR.
POINTY!” she screamed in delight.
“You
gave Buffy’s weapon…her stake…to the cheerleader,” David said with a
whistle. “Sheer genius.”
“Ohhhhh,
sweet,” Mica said with admiration.
“Nice,”
Ezra said grudgingly.
“I
win,” Ellen said happily.
“Thanks,
you guys, all of you,” Montgomery said, clutching the stake to her heart. She
felt an actual tear forming. “I thought this was going to be horrible. But it
wasn’t. Much. Sort of. You guys made it a lot of fun. I’m going to miss you.
You most of all, Scarecrow,” she sniffed loudly, pointing at Ellen.
But
her eyes darted over to Mica.
He
smiled quietly back.
THE
CON
“Where
is she? Do you see her yet?” David whispered. He was crouched down behind Mica
and Ezra, who were sharing a pair of binoculars. All three were hiding behind a
shelf of books at The Neverending Story’s booth. Mica wore a pith helmet.
“No—wait,
there’s Ryan and Reese…there she is!” Ezra said excitedly.
“What’s
she doing?” David whined.
“They’re
by the Knight’s Arms. She’s…she’s picking up a d’k tahg.”
“Let
me see!” Mica grabbed the glasses. “No, it’s too small, you moron. That’s
totally a Klingon throwing knife, or maybe B’Etor’s….”
“Oh,
come on, look at the blood gutter….”
David
tapped them on the shoulders. “Guys, where’d she go?”
“Hey,
Montgomery.”
“Oh
my gosh, Ellen!”
The
cheerleader’s eyes popped out of her head. So did Ryan’s.
The
geek girl was in a yellow and black iridescent catsuit, holding a mask with
what looked like giant pointy ears. An iridescent red-black cape hung from her
shoulders, matching her boots.
She
looked, in a word, great.
“Ellen
Epstein?” Ryan said, backing up to get a better look. He was grinning in shock.
“Really? You look hot.”
Montgomery
gave him a quick frown.
“Ellen,
you really do look great,” she said honestly. “You should…”
“What,
wear this more often?” Ellen said with a giggle. “Have you seen the guys
around? They promised to escort me to the masquerade.”
“Oh,
yes. Dumb, dumber, and dumbest are ‘hiding’ over there,” Montgomery said dryly,
pointing at the bookseller’s stall. Three awkward shadows ducked down. “Who are
you supposed to be, anyway?”
“Who
cares?” Ryan said.
“Um,
Kathy Kane? Batwoman? From the sixties? I’d better put the mask back on before
Kim sees me without it. She spent weeks working on it. She’ll kill me,”
Ellen said, fitting the unwieldy thing on. Ryan kept staring.
It
should have been a little triumph for the geek. The quarterback was obviously
drooling over her, and ignoring his pretty little cheerleading
girlfriend.
But
Batwoman hopped nervously from one foot to the other, obviously looking for an
escape.
“You
should totally do spandex more often,” Ryan said, circling around her to
get a better look.
“RYAN!”
Montgomery growled.
“Hey,
guys!” a perky voice said. A completely inappropriately cheery and busty
vampire skipped up to them, tossing her raven-black hair and cheap capelet over
her shoulders.
“Susan?!”
Montgomery demanded.
The
other cheerleader gave her a pouty smile that was not at all impeded by fangs. “My
idiot brother loves this stuff. I told Mom and Dad I’d chaperone.”
She
batted glittery eyelashes at Ryan, whose eyeballs couldn’t decide which
costumed girl to look at.
THE
INEVITABLE CLIMAX
When
you’re a cheerleader, even an unusual cheerleader who seeks knowledge beyond
her normal ken, you’re still bound by cheerleader laws. One of which is that
everyone in the school knows gossip about you and yours before or exactly
at the same time as you.
So
in a high school of less than five hundred students, if a “celebrity”—say, a
quarterback—and another “celebrity”—say, a cheerleader not his
girlfriend—hook up at a party, someone is going to notice.
And
immediately tell, text, and generally spill to everyone he or she knows.
Montgomery’s
posse of ponytailed cheerleaders were obviously trying to protect her from something
the next day, escorting her from class to class even more closely—and nervously—than
usual.
Or
maybe they were trying to protect someone else.
“Oh,
dude,” David said sympathetically in passing, waving to Montgomery from the
other side of the hall. “I’m so sorry. After all that, all the stuff you went
through. What a jerk.”
“What?”
she asked, stopping. A crowd began to gather. Murmured voices rose: why were
these two talking to each other? And about something besides science homework?
Ryan
was coming from the other way.
The
cheerleaders tried to get her walking again.
“Um?
Ryan and Susan?” David said, thinking she might just be confused. If he knew,
surely every other person at the school knew. Someone must have told her. “At
the party at Shaniqa’s place? Wow, did I get it wrong?”
“WHAT?!”
Montgomery spun around to face Ryan.
Everyone
in the hallway was silent, waiting.
“YOU!”
she screamed, near-incoherent with rage. “YOU?—”
What
Montgomery said next was unimportant. It could have been a thousand different
things. She could have called him a “tin-plated dictator with delusions of
godhood!” She could have gone with the classic “scruffy-looking nerf-herder!”
She might have chosen, appropriate to the situation, “gods-cursed TOASTER
frakker!”
But
in the end it was unimportant what exactly she said.
Because
the entire population of Springfield High heard Montgomery K. Bushnell use an
insult so geeky, so extreme, that there was no doubt in any other stealth geek’s
mind what she was.
One
of them.
She
pushed David out of the way.
“Excuse
me, I’ve got a vampire to slay,” she growled, looking for Susan and Mr. Pointy.
THE
DÉNOUEMENT
She
managed to make it all the way through school, the drive home, and up to her
room before crying. It began messily: a chin shake, a couple of coughs, several
quick sniffs. She didn’t want to cry. She wanted to stay angry, or
forget about it entirely.
Like
an addict looking for a fix, she pawed through her neat shelves for something
that would stop the pain.
Breakfast
at Tiffany’s. Casablanca. Doctor Zhivago. Sabrina.…
Montgomery
chose Sabrina (the Audrey Hepburn one, of course), figuring the scene
with the eggs would at least make her smile.
She
delicately opened the DVD and snapped out the disk, holding it by the edges as
if it were glass. She took it into her brother’s room (he had the upstairs TV)
and put it in, then sat on the floor, hugging her knees.
Tears
coursed down her cheeks. Her lips moved silently as the story began:
“Once
upon a time…on the North Shore of Long Island, some thirty miles from New York…”
The
sobbing began for real. She took a deep gulp of air—
—and
then realized something.
“Oh
my gosh.” Her eyes went beautifully wide with cheerleadery surprise.
She
jumped up and grabbed her phone, stabbing at numbers. Not even bothering to
pause the movie.
“Hello?”
A grumpy female voice picked up from the other end.
“I
GET IT!!!” Montgomery shouted. “I GET IT!”
“Um,
what?” Ellen asked, obviously holding the phone away from her ear.
Montgomery
paced back and forth, excited. “I get it! The spaceships and the quoting lines
and memorizing stupid details about High Elvish and arguing over
pronunciations! Before I thought you were all weird for the sake of, you know,
just being weird.
“But
I GET IT NOW! You just really love it. It’s where you go to. Who you
turn to. It’s your…your home.”
“Ah,”
Ellen paused, obviously torn between a sarcastic response and a grown-up one. “Yes,”
she decided.
There
was a moment’s silence as the cheerleader wiped her nose, reveling in her
revelation.
“Wait,
‘you’” Ellen suddenly asked. “‘You’ just really love it? Not ‘we’”
“What?”
Montgomery asked, confused. “Oh. Right. Yes. Not we. I mean, me. I mean, I don’t
love it, the elves and stuff, no.”
“Even
after all this time? We didn’t convince you at all?”
Montgomery
sighed. “I…appreciate your passion. Now. And I think I can even
appreciate some of the more…easily accessible…aspects of science fiction and
fantasy. But I don’t love it the way you guys do. I just don’t hate it anymore.”
“Oh,”
Ellen said, thinking about it.
“But
I like you guys,” the cheerleader pointed out. “Just not the stuff you
like.”
“Well,
I guess that’s something,” Ellen decided. She paused. “Um. I heard about Ryan…and,
uh, David and what happened in the hallway, and you finding out, and…um,
everything that was sucky. Um, sorry.”
“Thanks.
It was. Sucky.” Montgomery sniffed. She was quiet for a moment, sad. And
then she thought of something. “Hey. The girls are going to come over tonight
and, you know, just hang with me for a while. Support circle. I’d…I’d really
like it if you came, too.”
“You
want me to come over and hang out with a bunch of cheerleaders?” Ellen asked
carefully, making sure she heard right.
“With
my friends,” the cheerleader corrected. “My other friends.”
Ellen
paused, letting the significance of the statement sink in.
“I
don’t know,” she finally said. “I appreciate the offer, but your other
friends might not.”
Montgomery
thought about it. Ellen was right; it was a little early for such a sudden
culture clash. At least half her “other friends” had tormented Ellen and her
friends at some point in their twelve long years of going to school together.
“But,
um, if you want to go to the mall or something, maybe, Saturday, I could let
you pick out some makeup for me,” Ellen offered. It obviously took a lot out of
her.
“Okay,
it’s a date,” Montgomery paused. “Hey, do you think you could invite Mica
along?”
“What?
Oh, no,” the other girl groaned. “No. No, no, no, no…”
“Jealous
much?” the cheerleader quipped.
“Horrified,
more. On a level I can’t even put into words. Like—cosmic horror. I don’t
suppose you’ve read The Call of Cthulhu, have you?”
“Yes,”
Montgomery answered proudly. “Yes, I have.”
Tracy
Lynn is the pseudonym for Elizabeth J. Braswell. Elizabeth was born in the
United Kingdom, to her great surprise. When her parents returned to the United
States, she stowed away in their baggage (mega geek points if you know who I
stole this from). She is the author of Snow and Rx, and The
Nine Lives of Chloe King as Celia Thomson, as well as numerous Disney
Pirates of the Caribbean books.
Geek
creds, in no particular order:
Favorite
SF: old school. Favorite authors: Sturgeon, Bradbury, Clarke, Moore, Ian
McDonald. Favorite movie: Blade Runner. Favorite Doctor: Fifth. Growing
to love the Tenth. Favorite quote: “Where are we going? Planet 10!”
Knows
pi to 12 digits. Majored in Egyptology. Met husband at Star Trek convention.
They were there as professionals: he published the Star Trek books, she
produced Star Trek video games. Produced video games for ten years. Was on the
math team, debate team, and in the Latin club…first story ever published was in
Amazing Stories magazine. Can recite most of the Hitchhiker’s Guide
to the Galaxy by heart.
You
can find the rest of the Five Rules of Girls at www.themessydesk.com and
write her at tracy@tracy-lynn.com.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Hope Larson.
DEFINITIONAL CHAOS
by
scott westerfeld
I
wanted a mission, and for my sins the ConCom gave me one.
It
was the usual chaos: everyone on the Convention Committee thought someone had
wired the money. Nobody had. Eighty-four thousand dollars, due to the
convention hotel two weeks ago. The owner was threatening cancellation, which
really would be a problem: seventeen thousand stormtroopers, Browncoats,
pirates, quidditch players, and Dr. Who sidekicks wandering the streets,
plotting revenge on whomever had left them roomless.
The
money was ready to go, but the hotel owner demanded cash now, delivered to her
winter home in forty-eight hours. A crazy thing to want, but maybe the money
was headed straight into drugs or political contributions—she was down in
Florida, after all. That’s what you get for dealing with family-owned hotels
instead of the soulless Sheratons and Marriotts of this world: personality,
chaos.
But
I wasn’t complaining. Like I said, I needed a mission. Even if it meant missing
that weekend’s Stargate SG-1 marathon, I was ready to go.
The
call came at noon; my berth on Amtrak’s Silver Star was booked for 3:25. An
hour later I’d digested a handful of aspirin, showered, and packed, and was
pulling my Walther PPK/S 380ACP (of German manufacture, not the post-war
Manurhin production run) from its original cardboard box. I set to work with
the (also original) finger-looped cleaning rod, bringing both the Walther and
my Taurus PT138 to a dull shine. I decided that the Luger my dad gave me for
acing my SATs was overkill, but I cleaned it, too, just for luck.
Let’s
get one thing clear: my gun collection wasn’t the only reason the Convention
Committee had chosen me. Just as important was my alignment, consistent across
every system known to gamingkind. Whatever the common good needed, lawful or not,
I was willing to do it. I was the only person for the job.
Or
so I thought, until I saw Lexia Tollman waiting with the ConCom, bright-eyed,
green-haired, and grinning like the devil. She was wearing the leather
Peacekeeper jacket I remembered her always wanting, and it looked good on her.
“What’s
she doing here?”
The
ConCom shuffled their feet, staring at the floor. One ventured, “We figured you’d
need some company.”
“Hey,
Temptress Moon,” Lexia said. “How’s it going?”
I
flinched at the sound of my old Mayhem name. Stats spilled across my mind:
Temptress Moon had been a neutral good Paladin of Balance, Fourteenth Echelon,
with a Voice of Barding and a persistent aetheric life-link. Practically
divine, almost unkillable.
Almost…except
for an obscure resurrection-blocking poison distilled from the bark of the Tree
of Vile Tidings. Administered by my then girlfriend. For fun.
“You’ve
got to be kidding,” I said.
The
ConCom collectively hemmed and hawed, pretending they hadn’t expected any
unpleasantness. As if Lexia’s betrayal of me wasn’t legendary on the Mayhem
boards.
“We
can’t have you going alone,” one said. “Not with that much money. We know it’s
a little…awkward, but Lexia’s the only one who could go on such short notice.”
I
nodded slowly. She’d always hated Stargate.
“You’re
armed, after all,” another spoke up. “And she’s not.”
“You’re
sure of that?” I said.
They
all turned to stare at her.
I
sighed. “Let me guess, she said she wasn’t.”
Lexia
rolled her eyes, but pulled off the Peacekeeper jacket, its plastic snaps
clicking between her fingers. She tossed it to me, kicked a small backpack
across the floor in my direction, then turned slowly in place. All she wore now
was a black T-shirt and a pair of jeans, too tight to hide a weapon. She’d been
working out, I noticed.
I
rifled the backpack: wallet, cell phone, another black T-shirt, and a bottle of
my favorite vodka. The bottle made my mouth dry for a moment; I’d promised the
ConCom to stay sober on the way down.
Then
I saw the pair of handcuffs labeled: Remember these, T-Moon?
My
stomach flipped, but I didn’t let anything show on my face, just zipped the
backpack up and searched the jacket. Nothing but two Amtrak tickets and pocket
lint.
The
public address crackled and screeched, then told us that the Silver Star was
pulling up on Track One.
I
could have told the ConCom no right then, gone back to my apartment for
forty-eight solid hours of jonesing Jaffas and dodgy Dial-Home Devices. But
suddenly my own DHD was out of order. Maybe it was just the chance to break out
some +2 firepower in the real world. Or maybe something twisted inside me
wanted to be trapped on a train with the woman who had killed me.
Lexia
saw me hesitate. She smiled and yanked a black leather briefcase from one of
the ConCom.
“I’ll
carry the treasure.” Her tongue flickered across her lower lip. “Just like old
times.”
I
gave the ConCom one last glare, then followed her to the platform, preparing
myself for twenty-seven hours of angst and nerves and the dredging of
long-buried anger. Not the mission I’d expected, not at all. But at least this
way one worry was gone….
No
way would I fall asleep on the way down to Florida.
Our
roomette aboard the Silver Star was not Amtrak’s finest. The size of two London
phone booths stuck together, it smelled bluely antiseptic, like the water in an
airplane toilet.
We
settled into the two seats, facing each other, our ankles almost touching.
Lexia instantly rebelled against the small space, flicking on and off the
lights, discovering cup holders and coat hangers concealed in the walls. She
fiddled with the small table beside her until it unfolded, astonishingly, into
a toilet. Hence the blue smell.
I
set the briefcase on the floor and rested my feet on it. When the station
outside began to slide away I relaxed a little, feeling safer in motion. But
Lexia was hovering now, fussing with her backpack up on the luggage rack.
“Sit
down,” I said.
“And
fasten my seatbelt? This isn’t a plane, T-Moon.”
“Lucky
thing, too.” I breathed deep to feel the reassuring pressure of the PPK’s
holster against my chest, the Taurus strapped to my ankle. Guns and planes don’t
mix, so when carrying briefcases full of cash, slow and steady wins the race.
As
long as slow and steady stays locked and loaded.
The
conductor knocked on the door, asking for our tickets, and Lexia started
fucking with him. She asked how long till New York City, and he sputtered until
she laughed and admitted we were on the right train, headed down to Miami. She
chattered as he punched and tore along perforations: asking questions about the
“sleeping arrangements,” half-flirting, pretending she and I were lovers who’d
just been in a fight, sowing confusion.
Once
he was gone, Lexia slid the roomette’s door shut, locked it, and drew the blind
that hid us from the corridor. She finally settled in the seat across from me,
staring out the window.
But
twenty seconds later she was bored, nudging the briefcase with one foot. “Maybe
we should look inside.”
“Forget
it.”
“Don’t
you want to see what fifty-seven thousand dollars looks like?”
“Eighty-four.”
“Whoa,
that’s a lot. Thanks for telling me.”
I
cleared my throat. Score one for Lexia.
“What
if it’s not all there?” she said. “What if one of the ConCom borrowed some?
Shouldn’t we count it?”
She
reached for the case, and I lashed out with one steel-toed boot. She jerked
back her hand, nursing two fingers between her lips. “Ow.”
“I
didn’t touch you.”
“It’s
the thought that counts.” She played dejected for another moment, then her eyes
brightened again. “Seriously, though, the case felt too light. It made a
clunking noise, like there’s a brick inside. Pick it up yourself.”
“We’re
not. Opening. The briefcase.”
“They
didn’t say we couldn’t. So why not?”
“Because
I can’t imagine anything worse than being stuck in a tiny roomette with you and
piles of someone else’s cash!”
I
shouted the last three words, which seemed to still the train noise for a
moment, and her eyes grew manga-sized. Tears flickered with the shadows of
passing trees. “You don’t trust me, Temptress Moon?”
“Well
spotted. You are, in fact, the last person I’d trust.”
“Really?
Why?”
“Because
you’re vain and self-centered and you do pointless, destructive things for fun.
You’re chaos personified.”
She
smiled. “Flattery this early in the journey, Temptress Moon?”
“Quit
calling me that.”
Lexia
leaned back, propping her feet up on the briefcase. “Oh, so that’s what this is
about? You miss your little paladin girl?”
“Miss
her? It took me two years to level her up, then gather all the artifacts I
needed for that life-link!”
“But
immortal is boring, T-Moon, and anyway, you enjoy grinding.” She nudged the
briefcase again. “Did you hear that? There’s a brick in there, I swear.”
“Quit
fucking with the case. Quit looking at it. I’m not letting you do to the
ConCom what you did to me, okay?”
“A
blatantly false comparison,” she said. “I quite like the ConCom, and I hated
little miss Temptress Moon.”
I
turned away and stared out the window. The backyards of people poor enough to
live next to train tracks flashed past—weedy lawns and broken cars. “It was the
Voice of Barding, right? Because it gave her a higher charisma than you?”
“I
didn’t give a shit about that crappy Voice of Barding,” Lexia said. “It was
your tepid alignment.”
I
hissed out a slow breath through clenched teeth, feeling the dull twinge of old
wounds. Here it was, said aloud at last: the underlying conflict of those last
months of our relationship, in game and out.
“Neutral
good is not tepid,” I said. “It’s the only real good, beyond the rigidity of
law or the self-indulgence of chaos.”
She
rolled her eyes. “Beyond relevance, you mean. Goodness all alone is just an
abstraction. Where’s the story in neutral good?”
“Ever
heard of Robin Hood? There’s a story for you.”
“Not
this farko again.” She sighed. “Dude steals from the rich and gives to the
poor. That’s definitional chaotic good.”
I
shook my head, the old arguments rising inside me, one hand scrawling on an
invisible whiteboard as I spoke, drawing an alignment matrix in the air….
“Robin
Hood isn’t chaotic at all,” I said. “The Merry Men aren’t a bunch of fuckwits—they’re
an organized group with a strict internal code. And when King Richard, the lawful
frickin’ leader, comes back from the Crusades, Robin Hood restates his loyalty
to the crown! He’s for the greater social good, whether achieved lawfully or
chaotically. That’s definitional neutrality.”
Lexia
leaned forward, crashing through the invisible whiteboard. “But when King
Richard comes back, the story ends! Robin Hood becomes just another
monarchist suck-up. It’s only when he’s embracing his inner chaos that he’s
worth putting in a story. He’s probably waiting for the next evil sheriff to
take over so he can start up another guerilla campaign.”
“Um,
citation needed. In the actual, not-made-up-by-you story, Robin Hood isn’t
pining for chaos at the end. He gets elevated to the nobility and lives happily
ever after.” I raised my hands, balancing left palm and right. “And that’s
because he’s neutral good: happy inside or outside the system.”
She
grabbed my wrists and pulled them out of balance. “Cite this: All that Earl of
Huntington crap doesn’t appear until the late fifteen hundreds, after a century
of proto-Disneyfication. In the early tales, Robin Hood’s a frakking May Day
character.”
I
rolled my eyes. “Oh, great. Are we back to that semester you got all Marxist in
AP History?”
“Not
that May Day, the chaotic pagan one where they dance around the phallus.
And however you try to neuter him, Robin Hood still robs from the rich—not the
tax-hiking rich or the sheriff-aligned rich, any rich will do—and gives
to the poor. And that is some pretty fucking chaotic social engineering.” She
paused and frowned, her face only inches from mine. “Hey, are we in kissing
frame?”
I
pulled away from her grasp, sinking back into my seat, my gaze dropping from
hers. I saw fresh Celtic squiggles on her arms, and more muscles than I
remembered. But despite tattoos, workouts, and green-streaked hair, Lexia hadn’t
changed much in the last year. This close, she still smelled the same.
I
turned to the scenery blurring past. “Nice time to glorify stealing, when we’re
babysitting eighty-four grand of someone else’s money.”
“Nice
time to change the subject.” Lexia stood up, stretching. “Shit, I need a drink.”
One
hand on my shoulder, she pulled her backpack down from the luggage rack, its
straps flailing around my head. I heard the top of the vodka bottle spin—a
sharp sweetness spread across the roomette’s antiseptic smell.
She
took a long drink, then sat and offered me the bottle. The liquid sloshed
languidly with the train’s motion, and the glass frosted with condensation; she
must have packed it straight from the freezer. Tempting, but I shook my head.
Everything
she’d said so far made me trust her even less.
“You
think you’re Robin Hood, don’t you?”
She
shrugged. “We share an alignment, him and me. Delicious chaotic goodness.”
“Hardly,”
I said. “He’s neutral good. And you, my dear, are chaotic neutral.”
She
turned to watch the scenery, shaking her head. “You still don’t know why I
killed you, do you?”
“To
bring chaos to the established order?” I said. Back then, almost unkillable,
Temptress Moon had ruled in Mayhem. A cold, pale queen whom all had
feared, even as they loved her. “And for fun, I suppose. Not much good
came of it, certainly. From the message boards I’ve read, Mayhem’s been a
slaughterfest since she died.”
“Mayhem
a slaughterfest. What a tragedy.” Lexia took another drink. “Perhaps we’re
laboring under different definitions of good.”
I
shook my head. “Don’t take the easy way out, Lexia. Murdering your boyfriend doesn’t
count as good under any moral framework. And neither does stealing this money.”
She
looked down at the case, a smile forming on her lips. “Well, that’s one way to
illuminate the issues under discussion.”
“What
is?”
“Why
not define our alignments in terms of this mission.” She kicked the briefcase. “For
example, why did the ConCom call upon you, Mr. Famously Neutral Good, instead
of getting someone lawful?”
“That’s
obvious,” I said. “Lawful good also takes the money to its rightful owner, but
he won’t bring a gun across state lines. He follows the laws of the land, even
if that risks getting robbed.”
“Fair
enough. So what does lawful evil do?”
I
leaned my head against the window. The glass was cool, pulsing with the rhythm
of the tracks. “That one’s trickier. If I’m lawful evil, I can’t break my word,
but I don’t want any good to come of my actions.” I chewed my lip for a
moment, in no hurry to answer—we had about twenty-six hours to go, after all. “So
I promise to take the money down to Miami, but in ambiguous terms, like one of
those contracts with the devil. So I steal it and use the proceeds to start an
evil cabal—a well-organized one with a strict internal code.”
Lexia
shook her head. “Two problems. One: eighty-four grand doesn’t buy a lot of
minions these days, so your cabal is small and lame. Two: the ConCom is
composed entirely of aspies with level-twenty powers of nitpicking. Before they
hand over any money, they make your lawful-evil ass swear to an ironclad
agreement to deliver it.”
I
shrugged. “So I deliver the money, but then convince the hotel owner to use it
in a scheme to foreclose on several orphanages. All very legal.”
“Much
better.”
I
closed my eyes for a moment, seeing the invisible whiteboard again. “Okay,
Lexia, you do true neutral.”
“That’s
easy: true neutral takes the money to Tijuana, has a draz of a time on someone
else’s dime.” She raised a hand to ward off my protest. “Unless, of course, we’re
talking druidic neutrality. In which case she steals the money and gives
it to the Florida Marlins.” She snorted. “Because balance is everything.”
“You
always did find balance boring, didn’t you?”
“Except
when it’s falling apart, T-Moon. Chaotic neutral goes to you.”
“No
way,” I said, “I did the first two, and you’re the chaotic neutral one in this
roomette.”
“I’m
chaotic good, you fuckwit.” She took a drink. “But were I chaotic
neutral, I’d start by taking this train in the wrong direction. And when I get
to New York, I take the briefcase to Grand Central Station at rush hour, pop
the latches, and fling it all oh-so-high into the air.” She gestured with the
vodka bottle, which sloshed with delight. “Then I watch that lovely dance
ensue.”
I
closed my eyes for a moment, visualizing it. The afternoon light flickered
through the trees like a movie projector on my eyelids. “Wow, not bad. And you
say that’s not your natural alignment?”
“Of
course not.” She smiled. “I’m all about the greater good.”
“Yeah,
right.” I opened my eyes and looked at the vodka bottle. “No poison in that
bottle, I assume?”
She
took a long drink, then held it up for me to check: The level had definitely
gone down.
I
reached for the bottle, which was as cold in my hand as a can of frozen orange
juice. I took a sip, then a real drink. A little was okay, as long as I didn’t
get too far ahead of her.
“You
do chaotic evil,” she said.
“Whoa.
So many choices.” I took another drink. “Steal the money, obviously…and then go
through the Miami phone book and pick eighty-four random names, hiring a hit
man to kill each one.”
“For
a thousand bucks apiece?” She laughed and pulled the bottle away. “Those are
some pretty cheap hit men.”
“All
the better. Think how many innocents my cut-rate hit men will kill in their
chaotic, unprofessional way.” I pulled the bottle back and took Swig Number
Three, having decided to count my drinks. “So do chaotic good, if that is your
real alignment. You steal the ConCom’s money and give it to the poor?”
She
shrugged. “That’s a bit bland.”
“But
you said Robin Hood was full of story!”
“Story
is sticking a cocked arrow in some rich bastard’s face. So what’s the modern
equivalent of that? How about I borrow the money and buy a couple of Stinger
missiles, then shoot them at Rupert Murdoch’s Learjet.” Lexia sighed. “But I’m
probably getting too sane for that, now that I’m all graduated and shit.
Helping the ConCom fill downtown with seventeen thousand costumed geeks seems
chaotic enough for me.”
She
stared past me at the speed-blurred trees, her voice falling off a bit, and
pulled the bottle back from me.
I
frowned. Maybe Lexia did look a little saner, staring out the window like that,
her hand tight around the vodka bottle’s neck. Almost philosophical.
I
drank, counting Swig Number Four. The dining car was opening in an hour, and
food would clear my head. But no more swigs after this one. It was going to be
a long night of staying awake and watchful. Even if Lexia had grown too sane
for shoulder-fired missiles, this was still the girl who had poisoned me….
I
frowned, looking down at the bottle in my hand.
“What’s
the matter?” she said.
“I
just realized: You haven’t had any since I took my first drink. What’s up with
that?”
“Not
thirsty anymore.”
I
tried to hold her gaze, but my eyes dropped to the bottle again. My stomach
flipped. “Quit fucking with me.”
“I’m
not fucking with you, Temptress Moon. You’re being paranoid.”
“With
you around, paranoia is an entirely reasonable state of mind.”
She
sighed. “Well…maybe I did sneak something into that bottle just before I
handed it to you. And that’s why I haven’t drunk any since.”
I
swallowed, my throat suddenly dry.
“That’s
why your head’s muzzy,” Lexia went on. “And that dizziness creeping up on you?
A precursor of worse things.”
I
swallowed again, glaring at the bottle. The view was shooting past at top speed
now, but the ride felt as smooth as if we’d stopped moving, the train resting
on the track like a turntable needle on a spinning disk.
“Maybe
the slightest hint of disassociation?” she said, leaning closer. “As if none of
this is real?”
I
shook the bottle. “What the fuck did you put in here?”
“Sucker!”
Lexia leaned back, laughing. “You feel dizzy, T-Moon, because we’re drinking
eighty-proof liquor on an empty stomach in a speeding train. And you feel
disassociated because you’re a frakking geek, and we always feel
disassociated.”
I
clenched the bottle neck as tight as a club, then sighed. “Don’t do that
shit, Lexia.” My mouth was insanely dry, so I took another drink. “I might
shoot you.”
“You
need to relax.” She held out her hand. “I’ll make you a deal. One more swig
each, then we’ll go get microwave pizzas from the café car.”
I
gave her the bottle, and Lexia held it steady for a moment, marking the level
with one finger. Then she drank hard and measured it for me again—she’d knocked
half an inch off. She handed it back. “Come on, wimp.”
“Okay.
But pizza next.” I drank deeply.
When
I was done, I capped the bottle and put it on the floor. The rattle of the
train had settled into me, melding into my dizziness. I could feel the vodka in
my veins, taking the edge off everything. Suddenly the briefcase full of cash
under my feet didn’t seem so unnerving—it was just an object I had to take
somewhere—and Lexia didn’t seem so dangerous.
I
breathed out a slow sigh.
But
she was staring at me.
“What?”
“That
should be enough to put you down,” she said quietly.
I
rolled my eyes. “Didn’t we already play this game?”
She
stared out the window. “Yes, but I cheated last year. This time we both drank
the same poison.”
“Fuck
off,” I said. But her words were making my head spin again. I needed pizza.
She
kept talking. “I put the roofies in there the moment the ConCom called. Figured
you’d join me for a drink sooner or later.”
The
train lurched, and both of us grabbed our armrests. Shit, I really was
feeling disassociated now. But only because Lexia was fucking with me.
“You
drank a lot more than I did,” I insisted. “Plus, I outweigh you by ten pounds.”
“Yeah,
but I use those things to get to sleep these days.” She yawned. “So I have at
least an even chance of waking up first.”
I
shook my head, trying to clear it. But red spots were drifting into the roomette
now, hovering at the edges of my vision.
Shit.
She’d really done it.
I
reached for my Walther. “You won’t wake up if I shoot you.”
Lexia
laughed. “But you’re about to pass out, T-Moon. Not a good time to commit
murder.”
The
roomette was really spinning now. I gritted my teeth and pulled the pistol out.
“Maybe, but if you’re dead you can’t take the money.”
She
stared down the barrel and smiled. “And when my conductor pal finds my body in
here, that briefcase full of cash just might be considered evidence. The ConCom’s
screwed, even if they eventually prove it’s theirs.”
I
blinked away spots, trying to think. But the rattle of the train was tangling
the situation. How had I been so stupid. Poisoned twice by the same
woman!
Finally
the gears in my brain caught, and I waved the Walther at her. “Your handcuffs,
put them on.”
“Ah,
yes, the handcuffs.” She shook her head, her words slurring now. “I have other
plans for those.”
“Get
them out or I’ll shoot you!”
“We
already covered that.” She settled back into her seat. “Why not take a
fifty-fifty chance of waking up before me? You might get the money and save the
con. Flip of the coin, roll of the die. I think that’s the properly neutral
good thing to do. Me? I’m going to sleep.”
I
watched in horror as she made a pillow of her Peacekeeper jacket, settling in
for a long night. My brain was shutting down fast now, the red dots spreading
into a roomette-filling haze, my fingers going numb around the Walther’s grip.
The rattle of the train grew louder, crowding the worry, fear, and anger from
my mind….
I
got my gun back in its holster just before the darkness came.
Temptress
Moon rose up the wall of the Keep, her cloak of weirding blending with the
shadows. Her fingers slipped into cracks and crannies, her split-toed boots
tickling the ancient stones as she climbed. Iron watch-birds flitted past
unseeing, their clockwork insides rasping like a potter’s wheel.
She
reached a window, slipped through. Inside should have been utter darkness after
a sky crowded with two full red moons, but set in Temptress Moon’s eyes were
jewels of persistent vision, and the room sprang to life, every corner
sharpened with their facets.
She
stared at her victim on the bed, pausing to listen to his breath, slow and
steady. He was naked, his arms ribboned with tattoos, hair streaked with green,
the bedclothes coiled around him.
The
jewels in her eyes revealed hexes of protection scattered on the floor, and she
danced closer, like a child making a game of not stepping on cracks and
discolored tiles.
Beside
his bed, Temptress Moon hesitated. They’d built this Keep together, having
slain the glass dragon whose teeth made the rose window of its chapel.
Bare-handed they’d strangled the dire wolf whose skull lay in its flagstone,
and carpeted the great hall with their bear-killing expeditions in the north.
Uncountable creatures fought side by side; it was a shame it had to end like
this.
But
she drew the long knife anyway.
She
raised it high, the marks of old magic shining on its blade. But suddenly the
room splintered, her vision fracturing like a spun kaleidoscope, the floor
rolling underfoot. Waves of nausea and dizziness pounded against the walls of
the world, a roar filling her head like the rumble of a train.
Her
victim rolled over and smiled up at her.
“Shouldn’t
have drunk that vodka,” he said. “What were you thinking, Temptress
Moon?”
She
tried to answer, but her mouth was full of ashes.
Waking
up was slow and winding. My head pounded, and my tongue seemed to have expanded
to the size of a turkey leg. Something was kicking me, and I grunted at it.
“There
you are.” Lexia’s voice.
I
forced my eyes open and she came into focus, my Walther PPK/S in one hand, the
briefcase in the other.
“Crap,”
I murmured. The sun flickered through the trees outside—in the east, morning
already. I’d been out for more than twelve hours.
My
arms and legs were tingling, the life squished out of them. As I tried to sit
up, metal bit into my left wrist. Lexia’s handcuffs rattled, attached to the
armrest.
“Crap!”
I cried.
“No
yelling, now. I don’t want to have to shoot you.”
I
glared at her, considering screaming for help. But Lexia had been willing to
drug me last night, even to drug herself. Risking a bullet to test that chaotic
resolve didn’t seem like a great bet.
Besides,
with my head throbbing like this, yelling was a painful prospect.
“Why
are you still here?” I said. “Why aren’t you at Grand Central throwing money at
people?”
She
pushed stray hairs away from her face. “Just woke up. Haven’t had a chance to
get off, but we’ll be in Jacksonville in a few minutes. Besides, we never did
get a last kiss the first time I poisoned you.”
Lexia
was holding the Walther too casually; I considered making a grab for it. But
the pins and needles in my legs were fading, and suddenly I felt the Taurus
PT138 holster strapped to my ankle….
My
expression must have changed.
“What?”
she said. “Those handcuffs bringing back fond memories?”
I
shook my head slowly. “No, it’s just that I finally won the argument.”
“In
what sense?”
“This
proves you’re not chaotic good. You’re not anything but self-interested.”
She
squeezed the handle of the briefcase. “You don’t know what I have planned for
this money, T-Moon.”
“Alms
for the poor?” I made a fist with my right hand, trying to wake it up. The
outskirts of a small town were flitting past the window—Jacksonville getting
closer.
“More
interesting than that.” Lexia smiled. “A little social experiment. You’ll find
out sooner than you think.”
“Can’t
wait.” I shook my right hand, forcing blood back into the fingers.
The
train began to brake, and more tracks sprang into being alongside ours,
coursing like serpents around us. We were almost at the station.
Lexia
stood, keeping the Walther leveled at me. She lifted the briefcase. “No
shouting till the train pulls out, or someone might get hurt.”
“I’d
rather catch you myself, which I will.” I narrowed my eyes, flexing my fingers.
“Sooner than you think.”
She
smiled, pushing the gun into one jacket pocket, her hand still closed around
it. “We’ll see who catches what, T-Moon.”
The
train had almost stopped, the platform empty outside. Lexia probably could have
gotten away, even if I’d started yelling.
But
it wasn’t going to come to that. The moment she turned to slide the door open,
I reached down and drew the Taurus.
“Don’t
go, Lexia.”
“Sorry,
but I—” Her voice caught when she saw the gun.
She
let the door slide shut behind her and leaned against it. I could see the
Walther pointed at me from inside her jacket pocket.
“Now
this,” she said with a smile, “is getting chaotic.”
We
sat there, face-to-face in our roomette, northern Florida passing by.
“I
keep telling you,” she said. “I don’t have the key. I left it at home.”
“Bullshit,
Lexia.” I yanked at the handcuff. “Where is it?”
“But
I wasn’t planning to let you go. And obviously it’s to my tactical advantage
not to have the key. Didn’t you search me?”
I
frowned. I didn’t remember seeing any key, but wouldn’t it have been stuck in
the handcuffs?
“And
anyway,” she said. “Why would I let you have it?”
“Because
otherwise I’ll shoot you!”
“Bang,
bang, bang,” she retorted. “Just shot you back before I died. And my gun’s way
bigger.”
“They’re
both my guns, I’d like to point out. I bet you don’t even know how to
flick the safety off.”
“Bet
you I do,” she sing-songed, then glanced out the window. “Listen, we’ll be
pulling into Palatka, Florida, at 8:18. We need to get this squared away before
then.”
“Squared
away?”
“Like,
what do you want?” She thumped the briefcase. “Forty percent?”
“No,
I want all one hundred percent of it—delivered to the rightful owner!”
She
sighed. “Yeah, like that’s going to happen.”
We
glared at each other for a while. Adrenaline had taken the edge off my
roofie-and-vodka hangover, but I needed desperately to piss. I couldn’t help
but wonder if Lexia’s handcuffs would let me close enough to the squalid
folding toilet. Maybe the threat of an attempt would make her produce the key.
But
I needed to hold on to my last shreds of dignity.
We
sat there for long minutes, staring at each other. Either one of us could have
started shooting, and the other would’ve been too late to retaliate. But that’s
the reality of standoffs with guns, I suppose. If anybody really wants to pull
the trigger, it happens right at the beginning.
And
there was something elegant in the balance about this situation, something I
didn’t want to break.
Finally,
southern swamp-Gothic houses began to whip by: the outskirts of Palatka.
“Unlock
this handcuff,” I pleaded. “Hand me back the gun, and that’ll be it. We can
even take the money down together, if you want.”
“No,”
she said.
“Why
do you keep doing this stuff to me?” I said.
She
leaned back into her chair and sighed. “You mean, why did I kill poor Temptress
Moon?”
I
nodded. In a funny way, that first betrayal mystified me more than this one.
There hadn’t been eighty-four thousand dollars at stake back then.
“That’s
simple,” she said. “Everyone asked me to.”
“What?”
She
leaned closer, her chest a foot from the barrel of my Taurus. “The game’s
called Mayhem, T-Moon! But with you controlling everything, there were
never any atrocities to avenge! Your meddling goodness made it boring, sucked
all the mayhem out of it. In that narrative framework, killing you was
the greater good. Boyfriend or not.”
My
jaw dropped open. “But nobody ever said?—”
“Everyone
hated Temptress Moon,” she shouted. “People were begging me to kill you
for months! I tried arguing with you, wiping out your minions, anything to get
you unstuck from that lame alignment.” She shook her head sadly. “I’m still
trying.”
I
sat there, the gun in my hand wavering for the first time.
“But
you just can’t let the balance go, can you? Maybe if I make it easy on you.”
She stood and dropped the Walther on her seat. “This is my stop. Give my
regards to Miami.”
She
took a step toward the door, briefcase in hand.
I
blinked, looking at the discarded Walther on the empty seat across from me,
then at the gun in my own hand. Why had she…?
“Wait,”
I said softly.
Lexia
shook her head, put her hand on the latch.
I
raised the gun. “Stop!”
She
rolled her eyes. “Or you’ll shoot me?”
“Yes!”
“An
interesting possibility,” she said, and slid the door open.
She
was really walking out with eighty-four thousand dollars of the ConCom’s money—the
community’s collective good faith in currency form. I couldn’t let this happen.
I
pointed the pistol at her leg….
Click.
Lexia
turned back to me, smiling now. “Thought I wouldn’t remember your ankle
holster, T-Moon? I remember every one of your stupid guns.”
I
flung myself forward as far as the handcuff allowed, grabbing the discarded
Walther from Lexia’s seat and pointing it at her.
“Click,
click, click,” she said.
I
wavered for a moment, the gun right in her face, then sighed. Didn’t bother
pulling the trigger, just dropped the gun on the floor.
“So
this whole standoff thing,” I said. “It was just so I wouldn’t yell for help?”
The
train was braking hard now, a ragged concrete platform sliding past. Not a cab
in sight in this tiny station. How did she plan on getting away? I could call
for the conductor now, but somehow the screams didn’t come to my throat.
Lexia
sat down across from me, reached a hand into her pocket. “Don’t be silly,
T-Moon.” She pulled out a handcuff key. “Like I said, it was an experiment.”
The
cuff snapped open, and she took my wrist and began to massage it.
“But
it’s all over now.”
I
blinked. “So the money…?”
“Goes
to Miami. Like I said: chaotic good really wants those seventeen thousand
costumed geeks gathering downtown. I just needed a little quality time with my
old boyfriend.”
I
coughed. “Quality time? You drugged me, handcuffed me, forced me to
decide whether to shoot you or not!”
She
shrugged. “Chaotic quality time. But it’s all for the good.”
So…yes,
we took the eighty-four grand down to the hotel owner, who turned out to be
more pleasant in person. Just a big fan of punctuality. She served us tea on
her veranda, wearing a floral sundress that was all the colors of linoleum.
The
convention went on as scheduled, the downtown streets full of stormtroopers,
Browncoats, pirates, quidditch players, and Dr. Who sidekicks, along with fresh
new ranks of unkillable cheerleaders and Guitar Hero characters.
Not
to worry, chaos marches on.
And…no,
we didn’t get back together, if you thought that’s where this was going. Are
you nuts? Lexia’s fucking crazy.
In
any case, her scheme had never been about rekindling our love. It was simply
her own very chaotic version of that goodbye kiss we’d never shared.
But
one old flame was relit by the trip: I started playing Mayhem again.
Anonymously, for now, long hours of grinding every day. And I’m not some
lame-ass neutral good paladin this time, but a creature much more interesting.
A chaotic evil assassin of the Iron Clan with a cloak of weirding, jeweled
sight, and two specialties in climbing. I’m currently questing for the
legendary Knife of No Doubt.
You
see, my assassin doesn’t want to stay anonymous forever. One day she plans to
visit the keep that Lexia and I built together, climb in through that window,
and reintroduce herself to an astonished world.
Frakk
neutrality. Revenge will be mine.
Scott
Westerfeld still owns the original trio of staple-bound D&D rulebooks,
purchased when he was twelve, roughly the same time he went to his first
fannish event: a Famous Monsters convention in New York City. Since then he’s
designed computer games, composed twelve-tone music, learned Esperanto, and
ridden in a zeppelin. The geekiest thing he’s done lately was to devise a
tactical combat system for steampunk ironclads played with Lego miniatures.
He
is the author of the Uglies and Midnighters series, and the novels So
Yesterday, Peeps, and The Last Days. But his next trilogy
will be far geekier: Leviathan, an alternate-history, Edwardian-biotech,
living-airship extravaganza set in 1914, coming Fall 2009.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Hope Larson.
I NEVER
by
cassandra clare
The
moment Lisle walks up to the front door, swinging her duffel bag determinedly
over her arm, I have the strangest urge to grab her arm and tell her to get
back in the car with me, that we should drive home and not come back. That this
whole meetup thing is a bad idea. That I want to go home.
But
the moment is brief and passes, and besides, Lisle would never listen to me
anyway. She’s already ringing the doorbell of the condo, over and over, a manic
grin on her face. I can hear the harsh buzz of the bell as it echoes over and
over inside. I glance around. The condominium is one of several dozen fake
chalet-style structures scattered up and down the side of a grassy hill. A lake
sparkles distantly under the gray winter sun. The air is cold and I shiver,
wondering what the hell I’m doing here.
At
last, the door is opened by a middle-aged woman with curling brown hair streaked
with gray. She is stocky, wearing jeans and a baggy sweatshirt with the face of
a wolf airbrushed onto the front. She drips silver pendants: pentagrams, Hands
of Fatimah, Stars of David, and ankhs dangling from her neck, a sort of
decorative spiritual grab bag.
“Well,
hello there,” she says, putting her hands on her hips. She has a distinct
British accent. “And you are…?”
“Jane,”
I say, and then when Lisle’s elbow jams into my ribs, “Catherine Earnshaw.”
“Oh,
right, you’re one of the book people.” She smiles, extends a hand. “Xena,
Warrior Princess. This is my place.”
Xena,
Warrior Princess? The kickass chick with the breastplates? This woman resembles
someone’s weirdo aunt, or an elementary school art teacher, the kind who’s
always telling you to “feel” the paintings.
Lisle
is grinning. “I’m Faith,” she says. “The Slayer.”
“Then
I’d better let you in before you start slaying!” The woman laughs like she’s
said something uproariously funny, and stands aside. “You can drop your bags in
the first bedroom on the left. Everyone’s in the living room.”
We
drop our bags as ordered in a small, plain bedroom with a king-size bed. The
bed is covered in bags; I balance my duffel gingerly on top of a backpack
covered in Invader Zim buttons. Lisle is already stripping off her sweater to
reveal her black halter top and studded belt. She looks hot, enough to get me
worried. I didn’t really bring any special clothes, just jeans and T-shirts.
But then, all that Ben has seen of me so far is my left eye, my hands, and my
feet in sandals. It’s hard to live up to that sort of mystery.
Lisle
grabs my hand. “Come on.”
The
hum of voices hits us before we reach the living room. It’s as big as promised,
with a balcony overlooking a green lawn that slopes down to the lake. There’s a
granite island separating the living room from the kitchen, and lined up on it
are all sorts of bottles—all sorts of booze, and some soda-pop mixers. Xena,
Warrior Princess, is behind the island, mixing drinks into plastic cups.
Everyone else is sprawled out all over the living room, and of course I
recognize no one. One thing I can say: no one looks like their online icons.
There are two skinny girls seated uncomfortably on a couch, staring at each
other, and a bunch of college-age-looking boys sprawled around a low table on
the floor, rolling dice and arguing in loud voices. There are older people,
too: a woman with glasses, knitting in a chair. She’s wearing a T-shirt that
says THE HAMSTER OF DOOM RAINS COCONUTS ON YOUR PITIFUL CITY. Some teenage
girls with long hair are playing cards at a round table. They look up as Lisle
and I come into the room, then look down again, obviously uninterested.
I
feel suddenly so uncomfortable that I’m almost dizzy. It’s like I crashed a
party where I don’t know anyone, a party I shouldn’t have been invited to in
the first place. Everyone’s wearing these long, color-blocked scarves, too,
even inside. I rack my brain. Was I supposed to bring one? Is it a Game thing?
“Huh,”
says Lisle, looking around. She has that expression, an expression I know. It’s
“Where are the cute guys?” I’m briefly, meanly pleased that she feels
uncomfortable, too, before I realize that Lisle’s never uncomfortable. She just
feels cheated of the cute guys that are her due. “Well, everyone’s not here
yet,” she says to no one in particular. Then she grabs my hand, and hisses in a
stage whisper: “Is one of these guys Ben?”
“I
have no idea,” I say with a jolt of shock, realizing that of course I don’t
know. The image of Ben I carry around in my head is just that, an image in my
head. He could look like anything at all. He could be one of the bearded guys
at the table. I stare at them in horror.
“Like
some welcome drinks?” Xena, Warrior Princess, is standing at our elbows,
holding two red plastic cups. She frowns at me and Lisle. “You are eighteen,
right?”
“Yep,”
Lisle agrees cheerfully. I wonder if anyone’s going to tell Xena, Warrior
Princess, that the legal drinking age in the U.S. is twenty-one, not eighteen.
But no one says anything. I take one of the cups and stare down at the murky
brown mixture.
“It’s
vodka and diet chocolate soda,” explains Xena. “Sorry I don’t have any real
soda—I’m on Atkins. But I sent some of the guys out to get mixers, so we should
have them soon.”
I
nod and drink some of the brown mixture. It’s the worst thing I’ve ever tasted.
Xena
claps her hands together. “Okay, everybody! Roll call. Faith and Catherine,
everyone. Everyone, Catherine and Faith.” In quick succession we are introduced
to Sherlock Holmes, Neo and Trinity from The Matrix, Luke Skywalker, G’Kar,
Starbuck (the boy), Starbuck (the girl), Edward Elric, Dracula, Lana Lang,
Kenshin, Modesty Blaise, and Hazel, who is apparently a rabbit from Watership
Down. I breathe a little sigh of relief—no Heathcliff yet.
The
two girls on the couch introduce themselves to us belatedly as Jack and Ennis
from Brokeback Mountain, which makes Lisle snort. I remember their
torrid journal posts and passionate online protestations of love. They don’t
look so torrid now—they’re sitting as far as they can get from each other on
the couch, wearing identical panicked expressions.
The
doorbell rings and Xena goes to answer it. When she returns, she’s trailed by
two teenage boys carrying grocery bags. Both are about the same height, both
have dark hair.
But
I know Ben immediately. When we were first getting acquainted online, we sent
flirty photos of ourselves to each other—I’d take a picture of my elbow and
send it to him, and he’d respond with a photo of just his left eye, or the
curve of his ear. I couldn’t have put a picture of his face together in my
mind, but I knew he had a scar on his right thumb, and a spray of freckles
across one cheek, light as powder dust. Looking at him now, I know him by the
curling hair at his temples, like ivy curling up at the corners, just like in
the photos he sent me. I recognize the shape of his hands, the blue of his
eyes. Now that the rest of him is filled in around the edges I am amazed—he
looks just like I thought he would.
I
barely notice the boy who’s with him. He has dark hair, too, and glasses, and
is skinnier than Ben, more what I imagine a nerdy online role-player to look
like. He hoists his bag. “Snacks and mixers,” he says. “Where should we put
them?”
Ben
starts to look over in my direction. And that’s it—I’m out of the room, my feet
carrying me down the hallway, so fast that I’m practically running. Running
from what? I have no idea. I duck into a bathroom, almost slamming the door
behind me. I turn the sink on and grab handfuls of icy water, splashing them up
over my burning face. The bathroom is gross, too—the floor is sticky, and
powder from burned incense covers the counter, though the air still smells like
mold.
“Jane?
Jane!” Lisle bangs on the door, her voice filled with anxiety. “Jane, are you
okay?”
I
suppose I should appreciate that she’s come to find me, but instead I just feel
more humiliated than ever. I slide down the wall until I’m sitting on the
sticky, wet linoleum, and put my face in my hands.
I
should take this moment to point out that me playing Catherine Earnshaw in a
massive online multiplayer game was Lisle’s idea in the first place. It would
never have occurred to me, mostly because I don’t use the computer that much—or
at least, I didn’t. It was Lisle who was crazy about the Game. Lisle and I had
been friends for so many years that I’d forgotten when we’d met. She lived next
door to me and was just always there, like a sister more than a friend. She
annoyed me like a sister might, too. Especially since she’d become completely
addicted to her online journal. She had a fair number of people logging on to
read the rambling thoughts and massive multi-chaptered Buffy fanfiction she
posted on her site, Pretty When You Blog. To be totally honest, Lisle isn’t
that great a writer. She never seems to be able to streamline her thoughts into
any sort of logical shape, and she doesn’t care about spelling or
capitalization either. But she has a really cute icon of herself in a black
corset top up on the page, which on the Internet is better than being able to
spell.
It
was because of her other blogger friends that she wound up being in the Game.
There are lots of role-playing games online, but the Game is the most famous
because it’s so huge. The idea behind the Game is that every player picks a
character from a book, TV show, movie, video game—anything, as long as it’s a
character a fair number of people can be expected to recognize. Every character
gets a journal, and the ability to message other characters. The idea is that
everyone in the Game is trapped in a huge castle together, where they live and
eat and sleep and interact with each other. In theory, they’re trying to get
out of the castle, but nobody pays much attention to that part of the Game.
Mostly they flirt and fight. And you’re not supposed to interact exclusively
with people from your own fictional “universe,” which is why you get Alice in
Wonderland hanging out with Indiana Jones and Lolita hooking up with Conan the
Barbarian.
“It’s
a total mindfuck,” Lisle explained when she first joined it. She was into the
Game fairly early and got to pick the character she wanted—Faith, in her case.
She’d been obsessed with Buffy the Vampire Slayer since we were about
ten years old and first watched it together and she’d declared that she was
Buffy. Later she decided she was Faith, because Faith had the dark hair. Lisle
had been a crazed fan of a lot of things since, but nothing else seemed to have
the staying power of Buffy.
Lisle
quickly struck up an online love triangle with the brothers from Supernatural.
(Lisle likes it when boys fight over her.) She never seemed to take it too
seriously, but she was online constantly, messaging them, exchanging photos,
and giggling. She got caught up in all the backstage dramas of the Game, always
telling me who’d deleted their journal recently in a fit of pique, who was
trolling who, and who had hooked up with who behind who’s back.
It
drove me crazy. For years, every day after school and on the weekends I’d gone
by Lisle’s house and hung out with her in her bedroom. We used to sprawl on the
floor and watch movies together. (Lisle wanted to watch Legend and Alien
and I wanted to watch black-and-white classics. We compromised on Merchant
Ivory costume dramas, because she liked the boys with the English accents.)
Once the Game started, all I did was lie on Lisle’s bed and watch while she
typed on her computer. She could sit there for hours, literally, without ever
looking up. Every few seconds I’d hear that “pong” noise that meant someone was
sending her an online message. After a while I felt like every time I heard it
was another punch in the face.
Finally,
I cracked. I joined the Game because it was either that or move and find a new
best friend. Lisle was so excited that I was going to play in the Game with
her, she practically cried. “I’ll play if I can be Catherine Earnshaw,” I told
her, thinking of my favorite fictional character in my favorite book of all
time, WutheringHeights. I didn’t think I’d get her—Cathy is such a great
character, and her love story with Heathcliff is so intense, someone was sure
to be playing her already.
But
no one was. Lisle was practically dancing while she set up my journal for me
and showed me how to message other players within the game interface. But there
was one big problem: no one was playing Heathcliff, and a Cathy with no
Heathcliff is like a bike with no wheels. I made a few journal entries about
how life on the moors was dull and how I wished something exciting would happen
and about how the heather was growing plentifully this season. I figured I must
have the most boring Game journal ever.
Sometimes
other characters would come into my journal and try to interact with me. Lisle
bopped by occasionally and pinged me with messages; Draco Malfoy tried to start
up a chat, and when I wasn’t responsive, left some nasty comments in my journal
and departed. Sherlock Holmes pinged to ask if I’d seen an enormous dog on the
moors, and since I do love The Hound of the Baskervilles I considered
e-mailing him back, but wound up being too shy. Lisle was disgusted with me and
declared me a failure at the Game—and, it was strongly implied, at life.
And
then there was Ben. He didn’t tell me his real name at first, of course. I
logged into my Game account one day and there it was: a note that I’d been
added by a new character: Heathcliff. And a message in my inbox. I opened it,
expecting it to be of the “What up UR kewl and Kute!” variety, but it wasn’t.
It was a love letter from Heathcliff to Cathy. And it was beautiful.
Even
though it was addressed to Cathy, and not to me, and was from someone I’d never
met, it made me cry. I sat there crying while I read it and feeling stupid but
sort of not caring that I felt stupid. It was a letter about that sort of
amazing, total love you always hope someone will feel for you someday, that
obliterating passion that makes everything else in the world not matter. It
didn’t use any of the words from the book, but it still sounded like the
Heathcliff who said about Cathy: I cannot live without my life! I cannot die
without my soul. The letter talked about how his soul would wander the dark
moors forever, in purgatory until I—or Cathy, really—came down to speak with
him once again.
I
wrote back. How could I not write back to that? It felt like someone had
reached right into my chest and zapped it with forty-thousand volts. When he
messaged me, I stayed up all night, fingers flying over the keyboard. When I
was messaging Ben, I was Cathy. He was Heathcliff. I could smell the air out on
the moors, feel the cold, the loneliness, the excitement.
It
was weeks before Ben even told me his real name, and then I was sort of
shocked, a little bit, that he had one and that it was so ordinary. I felt a
sort of terror—what if he was just completely ordinary in every way? But then,
no one ordinary could write those letters, those messages. I asked him for a
photo of himself, and he sent me elliptical pictures he took with his phone
camera, just a piece of himself at a time: an eye here, a hand there, the side
of his chin. I sent the same sort of pictures back, standing in the quad at
school taking pictures of my painted toes in sandals. And the weird thing is
that I felt like Cathy when I was doing it, even though Cathy lived hundreds of
years before cell phones and text messaging. But I felt wild and flirty and free,
just like her.
I
thought Lisle would be pleased, but she seemed sort of annoyed about it. After
all, she kept telling me, the point of the Game was to interact with everyone,
and I only interacted with Ben. I didn’t know any of the gossip she knew, and I
still stared at her blankly when she talked about who was a drama queen and who
was a sock puppet and who had deleted whose journal. Plus I’d been mean to
Draco Malfoy, who was a friend of hers. Still, she told me she “shipped” me and
Ben together, whatever that meant, and she kept trying to think of ways for me
to meet him. Which, since he lived like two states away, didn’t seem very
likely.
But
then Xena suggested the meetup. She had a condo out by a lake, she said, with a
timeshare, and nobody was ever there in the winter. Why shouldn’t she host a
party for the East Coast members of the Game? Anyone who wanted could come and
crash on the floor, as long as they were eighteen years old. “We’re going,”
Lisle told me, with a manic gleam in her eye.
“But
we’re not eighteen.”
“That’s
what the Internet is for. Lying about your age,” she said, punching out a YES
WE ARE GOING message into her AIM messenger box. “Besides. Ben’s going to be
there.”
I
sank down on her bed, gripping a pillow between my hands, which had gone
suddenly numb. “He is?”
Lisle
turned around and grinned at me. After that, it was just a matter of lying to
our parents about visiting Lisle’s older sister Alice at college, and we were
gone. We drove up in Lisle’s yellow Datsun with the radio on, Lisle singing her
head off and me quietly freaking out with every mile marker we passed. I’m
going to see him, my mind said, over and over. I heard his name in the soft
grind of the wheels on the asphalt, the crunch of old snow. Heathcliff.
Heathcliff. Then we were at the condo and Lisle was jumping out of the car,
slamming the door behind her with a short, decided bang.
Ben.
“Jane!”
The door thuds under my back. Lisle must be kicking at it with her feet. “Jane,
open the goddamned door!”
“FINE!”
I yell back. I get to my feet and yank the door open and there’s Lisle, looking
actually pretty Faith-like since her face is screwed up in rage and her hair’s
sticking up.
“Jesus
Christ, Jane.” She grabs me by the shoulders. “I thought you were trying to
drown yourself in the bathtub in there. What’s wrong with you?”
“Nothing.
I’m fine.”
She
glances toward the living room. “Is it Ben? But—he’s cute. Hot, even.”
“I
know.”
She
smirks a little. “So now you’re freaked out.”
“Yeah.
I mean—I don’t know.” I shrug angrily. “I wish you hadn’t run out after me. It
makes it look like something’s really wrong.”
Lisle
takes my arm. “We’ll tell everyone you got carsick,” she says, “and you totally
had to puke. How’s that?”
I
pull away, brushing past her and into the living room. The energy in the room
has gone up, maybe thanks to Xena’s disgusting drinks. People are laughing and
chatting, sitting on the floor and on the arms of chairs. There are bags of
chips and snacks all over the floor, torn open, with people passing them around
and munching, crumbs flying while they talk.
Ben’s
in the kitchen, a row of bottles lined up in front of him, a cocktail shaker in
one hand. Jack and Ennis are leaning on the counter while he mixes them drinks,
giggling and flirty. Now that they’re both standing up I can see how tall and
skinny they are. They almost look alike.
Ben’s
friend has taken my place on the couch. He has a fat book open on his lap—a
graphic novel, probably. I can see the brightly colored drawings from here.
“What
is he doing?” I whisper to Lisle, my eyes on Ben.
“Xena
said he promised to be bartender, so—he’s bartending.” She shrugs. “Look, I’ll
go see what’s going on with him. You wait here.”
I
perch on the edge of the couch while Lisle edges into the kitchen past the gay
cowboy girls. I’m sitting next to a group of some of the kids I got introduced
to earlier. I can’t help but listen in on their conversation, since they’re
practically shouting—arguing about who makes a better starship captain, Captain
Kirk or Captain Picard. Kirk, says the guy who introduced himself as John
Connor, is clearly the better captain, because he was the youngest captain ever
in Starfleet and Picard wasn’t. Besides, Kirk is more virile and “manly.”
“Oh,
please. He shouldn’t get points for being a horndog,” snaps Trinity. “Kirk was
sexist and misogynistic.”
“He
was a product of his time,” points out G’Kar mildly.
“What
time is that? The future?” Trinity hoots, and everyone else joins in. Hazel
leans forward in her chair, her knitting dangling.
“I
think you’re all forgetting that both of them pale in comparison to the
greatest captain of all time,” she announces. “Captain Adama.”
“Whoa,
a BSG throwdown.” Neo nods respectfully. He looks nothing like Keanu Reeves, of
course, but is instead a chunky boy with slicked-back hair and a bright
polyester shirt; I can’t be sure if he’s wearing it ironically or not. “Intense,
intense.”
I
stare at them, mystified. I have no idea what they’re talking about or how I
could possibly join in. And I can’t help the feeling that if I tried to, I’d be
about as welcome as ants at a picnic. There’s a whole language here and I don’t
speak it.
“It’s
a dorkument,” says a voice at my elbow. “Your first?”
I
turn and stare. The boy who came in with Ben has put his book aside and is
looking at me curiously. He has what I’ve always thought of as a “sharp” face:
bony, slightly angular, with high cheekbones. His eyes, a warm hazel, soften
the harshness. He is cute, though not in an obvious way like Ben is. Maybe he’d
be good for Lisle? I glance over at her, but she’s still in the kitchen,
showing Ben and the others how to make pie.
“A
dorkument?” I echo. “What’s that?”
“It’s
an argument between dorks meant to clarify some finer point of geek culture,”
the boy explains. “They’ve sort of grown out of the long-held comics tradition
of arguing about which superhero could beat up which other superhero. You know:
who would win in a fight, Batman or Superman? Alien or Predator? They made a
whole movie about that last one.”
“I
think I missed it.”
“I
think you did.” His hazel eyes spark as he holds out his hand: “By the way, I’m
Noah.”
Noah
what? I wonder. I shuffle rapidly through the journals I’m familiar with; I don’t
know a Noah, but that doesn’t mean he—or his character—doesn’t exist. As Lisle
already pointed out, I’m not good at paying attention.
“I’m
Cathy.” I shake his hand.
“I
know who you are. Ben talks about you all the time.”
My
heart flips. “He does?”
“Sure.
I’ve seen those pictures of you. I’d have recognized your left eye anywhere.”
He smiles. It’s a nice smile. “Hey, I’m getting cabin fever—do you want to come
for a walk outside? I wanted to check out the lake before it gets too dark.”
“A
walk?” Part of me would love to get out of this close, stuffy room; the other
part can’t help looking over at Ben in the kitchen. He’s stirring something in
a bowl; he’s got flour on his face; it’s adorable. “I…”
“Uh-huh.”
Noah looks from me to Ben, and grins crookedly. “It’ll be at least half an hour
before they’re done in there. We can be back by then.”
There’s
something about the way he’s looking at me, like a dare. I can tell that if I
stay here, not wanting to be away from Ben, he’ll know that’s why I’m staying
and think I’m pathetic. Because I will be.
I
stand up. “I’ll get my coat.”
No
one seems to notice us leaving, grabbing our jackets from the hooks by the
front door. Noah’s is a dark blue toggled peacoat that makes his eyes sparkle.
The sky is grayish, the air cold and clear. The path runs from the condo down
to the lake and around its edges; leaves crunch under our feet as we walk. It’s
good to be outside, in the clear, cold air.
Noah
is silent as we walk. He bends down sometimes to pick up rocks, juggle them in
his hand, and toss them toward the lake water. They fall with tiny splashes
like tinkling crystal. “So,” I say, realizing finally that he’s never going to
say anything. “I have a question.”
He
looks over at me. “Shoot.”
“What’s
with the scarves?” I ask him.
“The
scarves?”
“The
color-blocked scarves everyone’s wearing. It’s like a uniform. I don’t get it.”
“The
scarf is from DoctorWho,” he explains.
“Oh.”
I try to sound like this makes sense to me. “DoctorWho.”
“I
take it you’re not familiar with the good Doctor?”
“I
have no idea who he is,” I say, giving up.
Noah
smiles. “He’s a character from a long-running BBC science fiction show. He’s an
alien.”
“I
thought he was a doctor.”
“You
can be both. Anyway, it was a cult classic, that show, and they recently remade
it, which explains the scarves. Everyone’s excited about watching the new show.”
“Well,”
I say, “not everyone.”
Noah
doesn’t say anything, just tosses another rock at the lake.
“Why
did you ask me to come for a walk with you?” I ask. I’m not usually so blunt,
especially with boys, but there’s something about this particular boy—I feel
like if I’m not blunt, all I’ll get in return is that strange soft smile.
Besides, there’s no reason to be nervous around him, I tell myself. He’s not
Ben, just Ben’s friend.
“You
looked so miserable,” he says. Which is not what I expected to hear. “Everyone
else was having fun, but not you.”
“It’s
just—it’s not my world.”
“Not
your world,” he says after a pause. “But you’re in the Game, aren’t you?”
“Well,
yeah, but I’m not one of these people. I’m not?—”
“Not
a geek?”
“Right,”
I say, and then realize I’ve said the wrong thing. His eyebrows go sproinging
up like rubber bands.
“Not
a geek?” he says. “I know how much time you’ve spent messaging with Ben online.
Not a geek?”
“There’s
nothing geeky about messaging people,” I protest. “It’s just a form of
communication. That’s like saying telephone calls are geeky.”
“It’s
geeky when you’re pretending to be a fictional character while you’re doing it,”
he says. “There’s nothing about being someone from a book, even a classic book,
that makes you less geeky than someone from a movie. Or a TV show. Or whatever.”
“Or
whatever?” I’m starting to get mad, which hardly ever happens. “So what are
you, then? Who do you play?”
“Mr.
Kool-Aid,” he says without missing a beat.
“Mr.
Kool-Aid? You mean the big red pitcher from the old commercials? The one who
bursts through the wall and says ‘Hey kids, who wants Kool-Aid’”
“Yep.”
“Wow.”
I’m not even trying to keep the sarcasm out of my voice. “So what drew you to that
character particularly? Were you just really thirsty one day?”
“Mr.
Kool-Aid spreads happiness and joy through the world. He’s a party guy. I like
that.”
I
snort. “No offense, but you don’t really seem like a party guy.”
“And
you don’t really seem like a geek,” he says, “and yet you are one.” So we’re
back to that. “Besides,” he adds, “people aren’t always like the characters
they play online.”
“Do
you mean me?” I blink at him, and then, suddenly, realize what he actually
means. I feel my face flush. “Or do you mean Ben? Are you saying he’s not like
his online character?”
Noah
holds his hands up. “Look, I’m not saying anything like?—”
“I
want to go back to the house,” I say, and turn around abruptly. I can hear Noah
calling my name but I’m already hurrying up the path to the condo, the cold
wind stinging my eyes.
After
the fresh air, the smell in the living room hits me even more intensely. It’s
equal parts booze and BO. Everyone’s sprawled on the floor in groups—Ben is in
the middle of a crowd of girls, one of them Lisle. There are bags of chips open
on the floor and someone’s torn open a packet of M&M’s and scattered them
everywhere. M&M’s sit melting on the coffee table in bright green, red, and
blue pools of spilled booze. The effect is pretty and gross at the same time.
Ben
doesn’t seem to see me come in, so I go over and sit back down on the couch
next to Jack and Ennis, who still aren’t talking to each other. The boys who were
arguing about Captain Kirk before are now arguing about some particular point
of their role-play game. “But you can’t be an anthropomorphic bat,” Luke
Skywalker is explaining patiently to Sherlock Holmes. “This isn’t a monster
campaign.”
Xena,
Warrior Princess, claps her hands together loudly, silencing the room. “Okay,
we’re all here now, so how about some icebreaking games? Charades?”
Oddly,
the idea appeals to me. In Victorian times, before there were TV and video
games and the Internet, people were always doing things like playing charades
and putting on amateur theatricals to amuse themselves. I figure nobody else
will be into the idea and get ready to look like I’m not interested either,
when Jack pipes up that we should act out scenes from movies and TV shows and
see if everyone can guess what they are.
“And
books,” I say before I can stop myself.
Jack
blinks at me. “What?”
“And
scenes from books,” I say, and add, “You know, BrokebackMountain was a
book. Before it was a movie.”
“Actually,”
says Noah, coming in through the door, “it was a short story.” Cold has
reddened his cheeks and his eyes are bright behind the glasses. He grins at me
while he hangs up his jacket, but I don’t smile back.
“I
know that!” Jack looks furious.
“I
think charades are a good idea,” Lisle says hurriedly, standing up and brushing
crumbs off the legs of her skinny jeans. “I’ll go first.”
Lisle
hurries up to the front of the room and starts acting out a scene I know
perfectly well is from Buffy. Big shock there. I slink lower in the
sofa, then feel a tap on my shoulder. It’s Ben.
“Come
on,” he says, jerking his head toward the hallway. “No one will notice.”
Like
I care if they do notice. I’m up and off the couch so fast I feel like I ought
to leave smoking tracks behind, like the Road Runner. Lisle is acting out Buffy’s
death from the fifth season of the show, toppling into the void as I follow Ben
down the corridor and into one of the beige bedrooms off it. I close the door
behind me and turn to face him. I have to lean against the door a little
because I feel weak in my knees. He’s so handsome right now, his eyes
startlingly blue under all that dark hair.
“You
all right?” Ben asks. “You looked a little weird in there, like maybe you felt
sick.”
“No,”
I say. “No, I’m all right.”
He
looks at me more closely. “You’re not upset with me, are you?”
“No,
it’s just—” I swallow hard. I can’t believe I’m even going to say this. I would
never normally say this to a boy. But Cathy would. Cathy always said exactly
what she thought. “I thought we’d get to talk alone, just you and me.”
“I
know. I told you, I promised—” He gives a shrug, a lopsided smile. “Anyway, I’m
here now.” He moves over to me, puts his hands on my shoulders. “I know, I’m
the reason you came here, right?”
“Well…”
His cockiness is unbelievable; but then again, it’s just like Heathcliff to be
that way. Online, that arrogance he could imitate so perfectly made me laugh,
made my heart race. In person, it’s sort of—annoying. Maybe because I’m not so
sure he’s just imitating someone else anymore. “Lisle’s the reason I came.”
“Right,
sure.” He has his face in my hair, is nuzzling my cheek through it, my neck.
His hands slide down to my waist, then back up again. I don’t want to do this
right now—I want to talk, the way we talked online, the way we could talk about
anything and everything. My mind races, trying to think of a topic to distract
him, and meanwhile his hands race up my shirt, his fingers clamping down on the
clasp of my bra.
“Stop
that.” I push him away.
“Cathy?—”
I
suddenly wish he wouldn’t call me that. But that seems unfair—I never minded
him calling me Cathy online. I liked it, even. But it’s weird to have him look
me right in the face and say it. Like he’s looking at me, but not seeing me. He
presses up against me, harder. He says her name again, in a breathy voice. “Cathy.”
There’s
a loud banging on the door. Ben jumps, banging me in the chin with his
shoulder, and we move apart. I’m pulling my shirt down as the door opens. It’s
Noah, framed in the hallway light. “Xena wanted to know where you were,” he
says. “She wants everyone in the living room. We’re playing I Never.”
Ben
raises an eyebrow at Noah; he’s giving him that look, that look boys give each
other when they’re trying to communicate that they just got some action. Noah
doesn’t look very happy. “Duty calls, I guess.”
Everyone
in the living room is sitting in a big circle now, with bottles of booze in the
middle, and shot glasses lined up. I squeeze in next to Lisle as Xena explains
that I Never is a drinking game. We go around the circle and each person makes
a true statement starting with the words ‘I never,’ like ‘I never have been to
the Ice Capades.’” Then everyone who has been to the Ice Capades has to drink.
That way you find out what everyone in the room has done. “It’s an icebreaker,”
Xena explains. “Now, who wants to start?”
The
statements start off pretty tame—“I’ve never flown in an airplane”—“I’ve never
broken the speed limit”—and practically everyone has to drink to those. I’m
happy to find out that whatever’s in my shot glass doesn’t contain diet
chocolate soda. When it’s Lisle’s turn, she grins wickedly. I can tell she’s
pretty drunk already—she’s listing to the side like a damaged sailboat, her
hair extensions trailing. “I’ve never worn a rubber chicken suit,” she
announces, and takes a big swig from her glass. She’s such a show-off—just
because she once spent the summer working as the mascot at El Pollo Loco.
After
a second, everyone else breaks up laughing, too. Suddenly people are yelling
out I Nevers. I never kissed someone in a moving car. Made out on a plane. Had
sex in a plane bathroom. Fooled around in public. All the statements are about
sex now, and I hold my drink nervously, twirling the stem of the glass between
my fingers. I have hardly anything I’d drink for, and even if I did I
wouldn’t do it in front of all these people, these strangers.
I’m
watching Ben out of the corner of my eye, seeing when he drinks. It’s a lot of
times. He has his hand on Lisle’s knee. After a few minutes she brushes it
aside.
“I’ve
never slept with two guys at once,” announces Xena, chortling, and takes a big
drink. Everyone’s suddenly quiet. Only the thoughtful-looking woman with the
knitting gazes serenely into the distance and takes a small sip from her cup. I
wonder what that means? Maybe she slept with two guys, but she only did it
once? Xena seems to notice everyone staring at her, and shrugs. “What? I’m
polyamorous!”
Noah
is looking down at the ground, clearly trying not to laugh. It’s Lisle who
speaks into the silence, as usual. “I’ve never,” she says slowly, “gotten
turned on while I was role-playing online with someone.”
She
drinks, slowly and deliberately. She’s looking around the circle as she does
it, like she’s flirting with everyone at once. There’s a low rustle of nervous
giggles. Then Jack, looking across the circle at Ennis, drops her chin and
takes a drink. And now the others are drinking, tipping their cups back, and I
look over at Ben and he’s drinking, but not looking at me while he’s doing it.
Lisle nudges my side and I know she wants me to drink, but I’m frozen, holding
my stupid plastic cup and thinking: Turned on? Really? Is that what was going
on with us, with me and Ben? Here I thought we had this amazing thing, this
connection where we could talk about anything, this connection that was
special. But maybe we were just like all the other billion jerks online using
the Internet and anonymity to get their rocks off.
I
wobble to my feet, feeling dizzy and sick. In the bathroom, I splash water on
my face—my cheeks are bright red, my hair escaping out of its ponytail and
sticking to my cheeks. I’d like to think I look wild and untamed, like Cathy,
but I know I don’t. I just look sweaty and a little insane. I tell myself I
have to get back in there and sit next to Ben. Claim my place.
I
push my way back into the living room, where the I Never game is still in full
flow. People are hooting and screaming with laughter while they drink, and the
room stinks like vodka. I look around for Ben, but he isn’t there. My gaze
lights on Lisle instead. Her eyes dart away from mine, quickly, toward the
hallway. Lisle can never help herself. She’s a terrible liar; her body language
always gives her away.
Halfway
down the hall Jack is standing in front of a closed door, her face puffy. She’s
pounding on it. “Ennis,” she says. “Ennis, open up.”
“You
know,” I say, “I bet her name isn’t actually Ennis.”
Jack
scowls at me. “They’re in there together, you know,” she says, and there’s real
spite in it. I guess she doesn’t like me much, but then why would she? I reach
past her, twiddle the doorknob. “It’s just stuck,” I say, and without thinking,
I push it open, hard.
Light
floods into the bedroom, where Ben and the girl whose name I only know as Ennis
are sitting on the bed, their arms around each other, their faces mashed
together. Seeing people kiss in real life is never like it is in movies, is my
first thought. My second thought is that I feel like I’m going to throw up.
Again.
“Ennis!”
cries Jack dramatically. Her eyes are huge, but I have the feeling she’s not so
much upset as enjoying the drama of the moment.
Ben
and the girl jump away from each other guiltily, but their hands are still
touching. The girl—I can’t think of her as Ennis—shakes her head. “Oh, Jack,”
she says. “Really.”
Jack
makes a snuffling noise, but I don’t stick around to see what she says to her
friend—if they are even friends anymore. I’m heading out of the bedroom as fast
as I can go.
Halfway
down the hall something clamps around my wrist. I’m spun around to face Ben,
who’s glowering down at me, not looking very sorry at all. “Look, Cathy,” he
says. “Sorry if you’re upset, but it’s a game. It’s the Game. We’re just
having fun.”
But
that’s just it. I’m not having fun. “Let go of my wrist, Ben.”
He
lets go, a scowl passing across his handsome face. “Look, I’m sorry if I’m not
exactly like some character in a book?—”
“See,
that’s just it,” I say, realizing the truth while I’m speaking it. “You are
just like Heathcliff.” And he is. Heathcliff was a selfish, rotten bastard,
really. He didn’t care about anyone but himself, and maybe Cathy. And I’m not
Cathy, which doesn’t leave anyone for Ben to care about, except, maybe,
himself.
My
bags are still in a huge pile on the bed, tangled up with a dozen other people’s
belongings. I grab the bright green strap of my duffel and start hauling it
free. I have no idea where Lisle is or what she’s doing, or how I’m going to
get out of here without her or her car. Maybe I’ll take a taxi. Maybe I’ll walk
to the nearby highway and hitchhike.
“Jane.”
It’s Noah in the doorway, looking rumpled and worried. “What are you doing?”
“What
does it look like? I’m leaving. I’m out of here.” I jerk hard on the strap. It
breaks off in my hand. “Shit.”
“You
don’t have to go.” He comes up beside me and puts his hand on my back, his
fingers tracing circles between my shoulder blades. It’s not at all the way Ben
touched me: this is gentle, reassuring. My nausea starts to ebb, at least to
the point where I can glance over at Noah without feeling like my stomach is
about to shoot up into my throat. He’s looking at me with concern.
“I
don’t have to. I want to. I don’t belong here.”
“Look,
these people—” he gestures toward the door “—the people in the living room, you
might not feel like you have a lot in common with them, but they’re nice
people. Who cares if they like science fiction and fantasy and you don’t? The
main reason they’re here is because they love a character enough to want to be
that person sometimes. Isn’t that true for you, too?”
“It
wasn’t Cathy I loved,” I said, throwing the broken strap down on the bed. “It
was—oh, never mind. He’s your friend; you’ll just defend him.”
“Ben
might be my friend,” Noah says carefully, “but he’s not perfect. I know that.”
A
light flicks on in the back of my mind. “You were trying to warn me about him,”
I said. “Earlier, out by the lake—weren’t you?”
“Er.”
Noah looks like a trapped rat. “I was just saying that maybe he wasn’t exactly
like you thought. People are sometimes—different—than they seem online.”
“Why
would he even come to this?” I whisper. I know I shouldn’t ask, but I can’t
help it. “If he didn’t even want to see me?”
Noah
looks at the floor, the wall, anywhere but at me. “I can tell you what he told
me. He said meetups like this were always full of lonely, geeky girls who go
online looking to hook up. He said he was certain to score with someone.
Probably you, but if not you…someone.”
“Probably
me?” My voice is still a whisper and even the whisper hurts. In books, no one
ever says “It’s probably you.” It’s always “It’s only you” or “It’s always been
you.” Not “It’s probably you.”
“I’m
sorry.” And Noah does look sorry, truly.
“I
don’t get it.” I shake my head. “The things he wrote me, online, in e-mail—how
could the kind of guy who goes to a party to take advantage of girls he thinks
are lonely and pathetic be the same kind of guy who writes things like that?”
“Because,”
Noah says, very slowly, “he didn’t write those things. I did.”
“You
wrote them?” I stare at him. “All those letters—those messages—everything?”
“Not
the messages. That was Ben. Just the letters.”
I
want to not believe it, but I can’t help thinking about how I always thought
the messages sounded like they were in a different voice than the letters, that
it was never quite the same, that Ben would never say the same amazing things
in IM or chat as he would in the letters he sent. But I always thought that it
was just because his prose required time and polish. Now I know better.
“So
you lied to me,” I say. “You knew Ben never wrote those letters and you didn’t
say anything about it. Probably because you knew that if you did, you’d be screwing
him out of his chance to score with some lonely, geeky girl.” My eyes are
burning.
“I
didn’t lie to you,” Noah protests. “I just—” He breaks off. “Okay, fine. I lied
to you. But I didn’t mean to.”
I
suddenly feel very tired. “Just go away, Noah.”
He
looks as if he wants to say something else, but he doesn’t. With a sigh, he
turns and leaves, shutting the door gently behind him.
I
look down at my bag, the broken strap, and even my bones feel aching and
exhausted. I want to creep into a hole and die, but since I know that’s not
going to happen, I do the next best thing. I get onto the bed and burrow in
among the bags, pushing them up and aside until I’ve made a little crawl space
for myself, a hidden cave where no one can find me. I curl up under the bags
and fall asleep.
A
loud banging wakes me up. I pop up from among the bags to see that the doorknob
is jerking back and forth like someone’s yanking on it desperately. Before I
can get to my feet the door bursts open and G’Kar staggers in. He takes one
look at me and streaks past me into the bathroom, where I can hear him throwing
up.
Light
is streaming in through the windows and I realize with some surprise that it’s
morning. Strange that no one came in at any point during the night looking for
their bags. Or maybe they did and I slept right through it. My head is aching
and I wonder if I’m hungover. I’ve never been hungover before.
I
fight my way out from among the bags and go looking for Lisle. Once I’m in the
living room I realize why nobody came looking for their bags last night.
Everyone’s sprawled out asleep on chairs, on the sofas, or on the floor. I don’t
see Ben or Noah or Lisle anywhere, but standing there in the doorway looking at
the passed-out crowd I realize that I’m not thinking about what a bunch of
weirdos these people are. What I’m thinking is that this looks like the morning
after a party where people had fun.
I
find Lisle eventually in the bathroom, asleep on the floor. She’s not alone,
either. Neo and Trinity are both with her, Neo’s arms around her waist. She has
her hand on Trinity’s shoulder. Looks like Lisle will be drinking a lot more at
the next I Never game.
Back
in the living room, I pick my way across the sprawled bodies to the kitchen.
Doritos are melting into soggy puddles in pools of spilled soda. The whole room
smells sour. I grab a towel and a shiny green bottle of Comet and go to town on
the mess.
Cleaning
always helps me clear my mind. I’m humming under my breath and scrubbing when
Jack comes into the room, red-eyed and with her hair in a tangled mess. She
eyes me like I’m a bomb that might go off. “Is there anything to eat?”
I
think about snapping at her, telling her off for asking me, like I would know.
But for some reason Noah’s voice is in my head, saying, These are nice
people. You might even like them.
I
put the sponge down and turn to face her. “I was thinking about making
pancakes,” I say. “But it depends if we have the ingredients.”
She
pulls open the refrigerator door and nods. “There’s actually a lot of food
here. Milk, eggs…”
“Great.”
I wipe my soapy hands on a towel. “Do you want to help?”
She
hesitates a moment, and then smiles. “Sure.”
Cooking
is the other thing that helps me clear my mind. I’m a whirlwind, cracking eggs,
mixing batter, throwing the towel over my shoulder. Jack is laughing as she
watches me. She looks pretty when she laughs, less sullen and scary. She’s
wearing a pair of tiny hoop earrings with zigzag patterns etched into the
metal, and I realize with a funny jolt that I have the same earrings at home.
“Pancakes.
Awesome.” Lisle appears, draping herself over one of the bar stools. She
reaches out and sticks a finger in the batter. “Yum.”
“Ew.
Unsanitary!” I swat her away with the corner of the towel.
Jack
hands her a bag of the chocolate chips I was about to dump into the batter. “Here.
Eat these.” She gives me a conspiratorial grin.
The
kitchen is filling with good, warm smells, the smell of comfort and breakfast.
I feel weirdly fine, even though I ought to be miserable. I see Ben file into
the room, rumpling his hair, a scowl on his face. Ennis trails in behind him,
looking vaguely embarrassed. I glance over at Jack, who’s blushing, so I hand
her a bowl of batter and a spatula. “Mix!”
She
mixes, looking grateful to have something to do. Ben looks over at me and then
away, sauntering toward the patio doors, Ennis following him like a puppy. I
know I ought to feel jealous, heartbroken, all those other things. But I don’t.
I never really liked Ben. I just liked the person I thought he was.
I
liked the person who wrote those letters.
As
if on cue, Noah comes in. He doesn’t saunter, just gives me a look through his
hair and ambles over to the couch, where he parks himself behind his graphic novel.
I don’t have time to think about him, though, because Xena’s suddenly here,
clanking her jewelry and clapping her hands. “Pancakes! Fantastic! Thanks so
much, Cathy!”
I
don’t bother to correct her about my name when she reaches out and hugs me. It’s
a squishy hug, but kind of nice. The kitchen is half-full of people now,
chattering, grabbing glasses, setting the table. Everyone seems appreciative of
the pancakes. I realize Noah was right. These are nice people. I look over at
him on the sofa, but he’s hiding behind the pages of his book like they are a
curtain.
I
even have fun at breakfast, with everyone laughing and chattering. We don’t
have maple syrup, so people sprinkle sugar and smear jam on their pancakes—“Like
they do in France!” Lisle announces, scattering sugar everywhere.
When
the meal is over, I start carrying stacks of plates into the kitchen. Everyone’s
in there, bumping, jostling, and pushing, but it’s a friendly sort of crowding.
Jack is over by the sink, running hot water, wrist-deep in soap suds. “Oh, no
you don’t,” she says, taking the plates from me with a soapy hand. “You shouldn’t
have to clean. You cooked, you set the table, you didn’t even have a mimosa….”
“You
cooked, too,” I point out. ”And I already have a hangover.”
“This
will be the best thing for you, then,” she says, picking up a glass filled with
champagne and orange juice. “Besides—you have somewhere else you should be. Don’t
you?”
She’s
looking out toward the deck, through the big glass doors. Noah is out there,
sitting on the wooden railing, staring out toward the lake. I look back at
Jack, who is smiling.
“Go
on,” she says, handing me the glass, which I take without thinking. “We can
wash up without you.”
I
mouth “thanks” at her, and go. The air out on the porch is cold and sharp as an
ice sliver. Noah has his feet braced against the lower railings and is looking
at me warily, as if I might be about to throw my drink in his face. His hair is
messy, his eyes bright hazel behind his glasses. “Look,” he says, before I can
open my mouth, “if you came out here to ask me why I’m still here, it’s because
Ben wanted to stay for breakfast. But we’re leaving right after.”
“That’s
not why I came out here.” I stare down at my drink, which is the pale orange
color I associate with Tang and orange candies. “I want to know why you wrote
those letters. In the first place. Did Ben ask you to?”
Noah
glanced up toward the sky, the heavy clouds overhead. “He didn’t ask me to. I
wrote them for a class project. Write in the voice of a literary character. I
left them out on my desk and Ben must have found them. It wasn’t until a while
later that I found out he was using them online—with you.”
“How
did you find out?”
“He
told me. Ben’s never ashamed of anything he does. It’s just his way.” Noah
shrugged. “He thought I’d think it was funny.”
“And
did you?” Something cold hits my cheek and slides down my neck; it’s starting
to rain. “Think it was funny?”
“No,”
Noah says shortly. “He showed me all the e-mails between him and you, and trust
me, I didn’t think what he was doing was funny. But I did really like your
letters, Jane. I liked the way you wrote. I liked the things you wrote.” He
still isn’t looking at me. “I know. Stupid. But I started looking forward to
your letters. Ben would forward them to me and I’d write the responses. And
because you were responding to my letters, I felt sort of like you were writing
to me. That was why I wanted you to walk down to the lake with me. Because I
felt like I knew you.”
My
head is spinning. “So you never were Mr. Kool-Aid?”
He
shrugs. “Ben gave me an account on the Game eventually. I just wanted it so I
could read your journal entries. I picked Mr. Kool-Aid because I figured I’d
never actually have to do anything. No one wants to interact with Mr. Kool-Aid,
trust me.”
I
know I should be mad, but I’m not. I feel strangely relieved. It all makes
sense now—why Ben’s letters didn’t sound anything like his instant messages.
Why when I met him, I felt absolutely nothing, no connection at all, but when I
met Noah—
“You
should have told me,” I say.
Rain
is pattering down on the deck, turning the wood dark brown. Noah’s hair is
stuck to his cheeks and forehead in black swipes. “Why? It wasn’t me you came
here to see. It was Ben.”
“That’s
not true.” I take a step forward. “The person I wanted to meet was the one who
wrote those letters. That was all I ever cared about.”
I’m
vaguely aware that there are faces pressed to the glass doors behind me,
watching us, but I realize I don’t care. Noah is shivering inside his wet
jacket, rain running down his face. He looks at me like he doesn’t believe me.
I
look down at the glass in my hand. Rain is mixing with the alcohol, diluting
the orange color. “I never,” I say, very carefully, “yelled at someone because
they told me something I didn’t want to hear, even though it was the truth.”
I
lift the glass and take a drink out of it. Rainwater and oranges and champagne.
When I lower the glass, Noah is staring at me.
“I
never,” I say again, “made a totally stupid mistake about who it was I really
liked, and only realized it when it was too late.”
I
drink again. I feel a little dizzy, but it isn’t from the mimosa. The rain has
diluted the alcohol so I hardly taste it. He’s sitting completely still, just watching
me. I can feel my heart pounding, wondering if I have the nerve to say it, the
last thing I want to say to him.
I
do. “And I never,” I say, “wanted you to kiss me, right now.”
I
lift the glass and drink the rest of it, fast. A second later Noah jumps down
off the railing, his boots splashing up water from the deck. He comes over and
puts his hands on my shoulders. I can see Lisle behind the glass doors, giving
me the V for victory sign with her fingers. Ben is standing beside her,
scowling.
“You
mean it?” Noah says, water running off his eyelashes. “You want me to kiss you?”
“Cathy
never says anything she doesn’t mean,” I tell him. “And neither do I.”
His
kiss tastes like rain. When he lets me go, he’s grinning. “I’d tell you I’ve
never kissed anyone like that before,” he says, “but I think we’re out of
drinks.”
He
tightens his arms around me as I laugh. Someone behind the glass door whistles—I
think it’s Jack—and I know they’re laughing and cheering for us, and I don’t
even mind that I just met all these people and don’t even know their real
names. It’s nice. I know they’re cheering because it just feels right—however
strange it might seem—Catherine Earnshaw and Mr. Kool-Aid, kissing in the rain.
Cassandra
Clare is the New York Times bestselling author of City of Bones,
City of Ashes, and City of Glass.City of Bones was a 2007 Locus
Award finalist for Best First Novel. She is also the author of the upcoming YA
fantasy trilogy The Infernal Devices. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her
boyfriend and two cats. She is also the author of the extremely geeky online
Lord of the Rings parody The Very Secret Diaries.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Hope Larson.
THE KING OF PELINESSE
by
m. t. anderson
It
was not until the final moon had risen over Brondevoult, lighting the carnage
with its spectral dweomer, that Caelwin, called the Skull-Reaver, saw that the
battle was won, the anthrophidians defeated, so he could at last lower his
incarnadined blade and cease his work of destruction. The enemy was vanquished;
Caelwin and his hired barbarian swords might at long last storm the basalt
citadel. They rushed through the obsidian gates, shrieking with beserker rage,
the white knights of Pelinesse behind them, bearing up the oriflamme of the
swan and scythe, and the bus reached Portland, and Caelwin stormed up the stone
steps and found the Princess of Yabtúb chained beside a cauldron, prepared for
some fell thaumaturgic distortion, and he said, “I am Caelwin, called the
Skull-Reaver, and I have been sent by the King of Pelinesse to bear you hence,”
and she regarded him with astonishment, and I got off the bus and went into the
station in the dark of the night to wait until the 6 AM up Route 1.
I
lay down on one of the benches with my bag under my head and Tales of Marvel
open on my stomach. I closed my eyes hard and tried to doze. I knew my mom was
looking for me, and I felt real bad, but I couldn’t call her until I reached
Boothbay Harbor. If I called too soon, the police at home could call the
operators and trace the call back up the coast and then next thing I knew, they
would be showing up to have a little talk with me, you know, saying, “Jim? You
must be Jim. Jim, why don’t you come with me. Your parents are real worried
about you, Jim,” saying stuff like that, but walking toward me with their hands
out. So I couldn’t call my parents. I tried not to think about it. I just
curled up right there on the bench and rolled up the magazine in both hands and
held onto it and I wondered what thaumaturgic meant and I guess I
finally fell asleep.
Just
after six I caught the first bus of the day to Boothbay Harbor and I sat with
my knees up against the back of the seat in front of me, and an eldritch beast,
a-glitter with the ichor of Acheronian pits, strayed into the ceremonial
chamber, the Princess meeped in her wyvern-wing corset, and Caelwin, called the
Skull-Reaver, unsheathed again his mighty broadsword, so fatal to foes, and
hacked at the monster’s serpentine coils while the goring tail whipped around
him, spiked like caltrops. The pines went by the windows, and I looked out, and
my face haunted the woods. There were purple salt marshes and lots of mist.
“The
Baron’s Ambuscade,” Tales of Marvel, vol. 3, no. 6 (June 1937). “The
Weird of Caelwin, Skull-Reaver,” TalesofMarvel, vol. 4, no. 2 (February
1938). Both uncollected. “Gloom Comes to Parrusfunt,” TalesofMarvel,
vol. 4, no. 8 (August 1938), the first Caelwin yarn with all the mythology
worked out, the gods of Ur-Earth, etc. SongoftheSkull-Reaver by R. P.
Flint, 1945, collecting all the stories that appeared in TalesofMarvel
and Utter Tales from 1938 to 1944, with an alternative version of “Lords
of Pain” (originally from UtterTales #6), in which the gem doesn’t fall
into the chasm and the Visigoths have a stronger German accent.
“The
Serpent-Men of Brondevoult,” Tales of Marvel, vol. 15, no. 10 (October
1949). The latest in the saga. “You are a brute,” murmured the Princess,
putting her small hand upon his oiled arm, “but yet you are strangely to my
taste.” Caelwin, called the Skull-Reaver, pulled her to him, and drew aside her
velvet loincloth to reveal, as it said, the gem of her womanhood, and
she yielded to him, melting in his clay-red arms. I was half-asleep and it was
like I could see her, and she looked real good, with her wyvern corset ripped
open and “the pale parentheses pressed into soft breasts by the iron brassiere,
now cast aside” (and there were dark nipples—she groans and beckons—the clank
of mail), and the bus stopped and I looked up and saw Wiscasset out the window
but I realized I couldn’t shift my knees off the back of the seat in front of
me because one leg had gotten embarrassing. I hoped we wouldn’t reach Boothbay
Harbor very soon.
“Kid?
Can you get your knees out of my back?”
No.
No, I couldn’t.
“They’re
trash,” said my mother, and she dumped them into the garbage. She said, “You
know who reads these things? Soldiers. And prisoners in the state pen.”
I
shouted at her to stop and I couldn’t believe she was just wrecking them, and I
wanted to grab her hand to stop her but I knew she’d smack me. She was pouring
bacon grease all over my collection. I told her no but she just kept going.
“Do
you see this grease? I don’t want to hear anything else about R. P. Flint or
his god-damned barbarian.”
I
told her it was ten dollars’ worth. I said, “I been collecting those all over!”
“I’m
telling you, Jimbo. Prisoners in the state pen. You know why they’re in there?
Robbing little bakeries and groping the Campfire Girls.”
I
kept on yelling at her and she stood there with her stupid arms folded and
said, “That’s the kind of company you’re keeping.”
I
got off the bus in Boothbay Harbor. I looked around the bluffs and out toward
the sea. It was a little town with old captains’ houses and lobster fishermen.
I put my hands in my pockets and went to find breakfast. I was real hungry. I
read two more pages of the R. P. Flint story while I ate toast and eggs. I
spread the pages real neatly so I didn’t get jelly on them.
I
realized there was no way my mom and pop could stop me now, so I found a phone
and told the operator my town and my number, and they connected me, with all
the clicks going down the coast. My mom answered and she’d been crying, I could
tell, and I felt kind of sorry, but I thought I shouldn’t feel sorry, and she
asked me, “Are you all right? Where are you? Are you all right, sugar?” I said
I was okay, and I told her I was in Boothbay Harbor. I thought that would
really get her.
She
didn’t understand at first. She just said, “Where?”
So
I said, “In Boothbay Harbor,” again, and “Maine,” and then she figured out what
I was talking about and realized what I was doing and started to say I was
being stupid, and not to make a fool out of—so I hung up and walked out.
I
had looked up the address on a map, and I had drawn a little version of it on a
piece of school paper. It didn’t look like it was far. I walked out of the town
center, and along a road that led past ridges of some kind of needly tree, like
pines or firs or spruce. I don’t know the difference between them. A couple of
years ago, I tried to find out the differences from a book, but all the
pictures looked exactly the same. The seagulls were crying out over the
islands.
It
took me forty-five minutes to walk to the house. It wasn’t near the ocean. It
was in an ugly, uneven field, and the bushes around it had grown up with
elbows. It wasn’t a very big house, but the name on the mailbox was Flint,
painted in yellow, so I went up on the porch and knocked. There was no sound
for a while, and I thought maybe no one was home, which would be stupid, but
then someone moved. Whoever it was only moved a little. Then they said, “Who is
it?” and I didn’t know what to say, so I didn’t answer.
“Who
is it?” called R. P. Flint.
“I’m,”
I said, “I’m a person knocking on your door.”
There
were footsteps inside the house, and the door opened.
R.
P. Flint was not as tall as I thought he would be. He was kind of short, but he
was wiry of limb like the thieves of Mortmoor. He had a little mustache,
and his hair was finger-combed and clutched. He was dressed kind of like a
writer, in a silk bathrobe, but also just in his boxer shorts, which kind of
made me embarrassed. He had a lot of black hair on his chest, which also hadn’t
been combed.
“Hi,”
he said. “You have a package or something?”
I
shook my head. I didn’t know what to tell him. A car drove by on the dirt road
below.
R.
P. Flint nodded. He said, “You are a disciple of the Skull-Reaver.”
I
said, “I have the. I have all the issues. I had them.”
“Come
inside,” said R. P. Flint.
I
went in. I was real nervous. There wasn’t much in the house, just a few lamps
and a desk and a sofa that someone had slept on, and some tin dishes. There was
a map of the Age of Caelwin tacked up to the wall. It was done in blue pen on
typing paper. The cover from UtterTales no. 15 was pinned beside the
window, showing Caelwin, called the Skull-Reaver, stomping on ooze.
“Welcome
to my lair. This is where it all begins,” said R. P. Flint, knocking on the
desk. “It’s just a little desk, made of wood, but boats are just little things
made of wood, and they can transport you to foreign lands.”
I
stared at him and at the map of the Age of Caelwin, and I felt completely
stupid, just like my mother’d said.
“You
may wonder about me,” said Flint. “I’m from Ohio. I write out my first drafts
in blue pen—always blue—then I type them. I roll up my sleeves when I write,
because I really dive into my world. I’m up to my elbows in sediment.”
I
was feeling real confused. He was right in front of me. He was looking at my
face.
I
pointed my foot at a wicker chair, and I asked if I could please sit down.
He
said, “Kid, I’ve got Caelwin tied to a pillar, with a pterodactyl shrieking and
coming to feast its unholy beak upon his numbles.”
I
went over to the wicker chair anyway and sat. I stared at the floor. I felt
very weak.
There
he was, right in front of me.
“Hey,
pal,” said R. P. Flint. “I’ve really got to get back to the typing.” I didn’t
stand up. R. P. Flint smiled and he said, “I’m thinking maybe instead of a
pterodactyl, a giant vampire bat. Which one do you think would be better? Here’s
your chance, pal. Prehistory in the making.”
I
told him, “You’re having an affair with my mother.”
For
a long time after that, neither Mr. Flint or I moved any. I was sitting there
with my hands on my legs. Mr Flint picked up a root beer bottle from his desk
and rolled it between his hands.
“Or
had,” I said.
R.
P. Flint scratched at the stubble on his lower lip with his teeth. He asked, “What’s
your, you know, name?”
I
told him, “Jim Hucker.”
R.
P. Flint nodded. He stuck his finger into the neck of the bottle and popped it
back out. “Swell,” he said.
I
said apologetically, “You used a vampire bat in ‘The Worm-Born of Malufrax.’”
Slowly,
Mr. Flint swung the bottle back and forth, his finger trapped in its mouth.
Finally, he admitted, “Sure. But that was a normal-sized vampire bat. This
would be huge.”
Two
months before, I found a letter in our mailbox. It was from “R. P. Flint,
Author,” and the address was in West Boothbay Harbor, Maine. The envelope was
handwritten.
I
ran into my parents’ bedroom, where my mother was smoking, and I said, “Mom,
you got a letter.”
“Great,”
she said, and she took it.
“Who’s
it from?” I asked, knowing.
She
looked at the return address. “Oh, Jesus,” she said.
“It’s
from Maine,” I said. I knew there couldn’t be two R. P. Flint, Authors, of West
Boothbay Harbor, Maine. “Who’s it from?” I asked.
“No
one.”
“Is
it someone you know?”
“It’s
someone I went to high school with.”
“You
went to school with R. P. Flint?”
“Yes.”
She started to leave the room.
I
said, “He’s the most amazing writer. I read him all the time. Everyone thinks
he’s the best. You know him? Actually?”
“Sure.
I know him. Never mind.”
“You
know R. P. Flint?”
“I
went to high school with him. He was called Dickie.”
“I
can’t believe you really went to school with him.”
“Someone
had to.”
I
asked, “What’s he like?”
“Can
we not talk about this?”
“Can
I meet him?”
“No.”
“Can
you get him to sign an autograph?”
“Forget
it.”
“Can
I see the letter?”
“No.”
“Mom,
he’s my favorite.”
“You’re
never meeting him.”
“You
don’t understand.”
She
yelled, “No, Jim. You don’t understand, see?” She whacked the
door frame so hard I jumped. She stared at me, real angry. She said, “I never
want to hear his name again.” She walked out of the room, slamming the door
after her.
Then
there I was, stuck alone in my parents’ room, like it was my room.
The
next day, I sat on the sofa reading the tales of Caelwin, called the
Skull-Reaver. I held up the cover of the magazine clearly. My mom watched me
but she didn’t say anything. At dinner I brought up an interesting question
from one of the R. P. Flint stories—if you were falling down a bottomless pit,
would you die by some kind of altitude sickness or by starving to death? —and
my mother said she didn’t want to hear another word about those stupid
codpiece-and-saber stories, and my dad frowned, real uncomfortable, like he
knew the name R. P. Flint, Author, better than he should, but he didn’t want to
talk about it.
I
left the magazines and the book around the house so that no one could ever
forget about R. P. Flint, but the arguments between my mother and father were
never about that, they were always about the car or the rug or the weekend.
Watching my parents closely like a gumshoe, I noticed how my mother always said
angry, mean things about everything my father did and how my father came home
from work as late as possible and looked hurt into his soup. I tried bringing
up R. P. Flint one more time at dinner, and my mother told me his stories were
for perverts, and asked me whether I’d ever noticed that all of those serpents
rearing up and dragons to be ridden and those huge swords wielded in battle
perhaps were kind of symbolic, and whether they might be the kind of thing that
men who were worried about themselves would read to make themselves feel
better. That made me angry because she knows R. P. Flint is one of my favorites
so I said that he was the greatest author I had ever read, and she went up to
my room and grabbed all my issues of UtterTales and SongoftheSkull-Reaver
and she poured bacon grease all over them.
What
I didn’t think about until later was that she knew a lot about R. P. Flint’s
stories—about the swords and the dragons—and she knew where I kept my copies.
Not
too long after, I found another letter from R. P. Flint, recently arrived, this
one torn up in eighths and in the living room wastepaper basket. I took it up
to my room and put it on my desk and I fit it together. Then I read it all.
Dick
Flint said he was glad he and my mom had met again and how beautiful she was.
He talked about the rhapsody of entry and my fingers felt numb on the
paper. Mr. Flint talked about how doing that with her made him feel young
again, and we can’t let a good thing die, honey, and then a lot about her
breasts in the hotel room and lying naked while the evening fell, before she
had to skedaddle like a nymph, I’m telling you, viewed by some burly hunter
espying her through a thicket in the gloaming. O, the radiant copse, etc.
I
just stared at the letter for a long time. It told a story of a world in which
even the falling light on telephone wires was beautiful, and a man and a woman
were in love, and it had sat torn up in eighths in a wastepaper basket in a
room with two plants and three vases and a painting of horses.
I
went downstairs.
My
mother was polishing in the kitchen.
I
went in and sat down.
My
mother kept on polishing.
Finally
she looked at me. “What’s wrong?” she asked.
I
couldn’t say anything. I shrugged.
“Well,
why have you been crying?” she asked.
“You’re
cheating,” I said.
“What
am I doing?”
I
didn’t want to repeat it so I kept quiet.
“Don’t
twizzle up your legs like that,” she said. “It’s just like your father. Don’t
twizzle them up. It’s pathetic.”
I
said, “You had an affair.”
She
was surprised. She stopped polishing for a minute. “Who told you that?” she
asked me. “Have people been talking?”
I
didn’t say anything. She kept asking me questions. I didn’t tell her a word.
Finally,
she said, “All right. Fine. That’s the past.”
“When?”
“During
the war. And your father’s no saint. Don’t twizzle up your legs.”
“I’m
not twizzling up my legs.”
“I
mean when you wrap them around each other,” she said. “You have to claim the
chair as your own. Spread out a little. You sit like nothing in the world
belongs to you.”
“Well,
you threw away all my magazines.”
“Forget
the stupid magazines.”
“Tell
me about the, you know, affair.”
“I
will not tell you a word. Neither your father or me wants to talk about it.”
“I
want to know about the affair. Tell me what happened in the affair.”
“Stop
saying ‘affair.’”
She
wouldn’t talk about it. My dad came home pretty soon after that. At dinner, my
mother started crying. She slammed the salad across the table and walked out.
My
father tried not to move, like he was terrified.
I
watched them both.
My
dad, he watched the table.
A
few days later, without telling anyone, I got on the bus for Maine.
“They’re
stuck inside their little houses,” said R. P. Flint as we walked past cottages
on the bay. Mr. Flint and I were going for some grub and a man-to-man. Mr.
Flint cupped his hands around his mouth and repeated loudly, “STUCK INSIDE
THEIR LITTLE HOUSES.” He told me, “When people say, ‘I don’t get out much
anymore,’ they don’t just mean out the door. They mean outside their own skin.
They’re sewed up in their hides. They’re trapped in there. Kid, they need to go
out on the town. They need to take their spirit out on a date.” He cupped his
hands around his mouth again. “YOU NEED TO GO STEADY WITH YOUR SOUL.”
He
was wearing a normal white shirt and a plain suit and I wondered whether that
was what he had been wearing when he espied my mother through a thicket in the
gloaming and they went to a hotel.
Flint
asked, “Is she coming up?”
“Who?
Mom?”
“Sure,
your mom.”
“I
don’t think so. I didn’t tell her I was coming. I just called before I walked
to your house. She only just found out I was here.”
“I
haven’t seen her in a while. Is she still the fairest vixen to ever sweep across
a glade?”
I
shrugged, thinking: the gem of her womanhood.
“Let
me tell you something that won’t cost you a nickel. A great love is necessary
for a great art,” Mr. Flint explained.
I
told him I didn’t write or anything.
“But
you have a lyrical soul,” he said. “I can see it. People don’t understand you.
But that’s because you haven’t spoken yet. I mean, spoken in the voice that
echoes off cliffs and mountaintops.” He grabbed my arm and stopped the two of
us from walking. He said, like a prophet, “You will speak in that voice, ere
long.”
I
didn’t know what he was talking about, and I didn’t want to look at his eyes. I
wanted to keep walking. But Mr. Flint wasn’t letting go. I figured he was
waiting for something but I didn’t know what he wanted. Maybe thanks or
something. So I said, “Thanks.”
Mr.
Flint let go of my arm and smiled and we kept walking toward the village. The
water was real quiet in the bay. Some lobster boats drifted out between the
isles. It was a bright day, and the wind blew over the church steeples and the
warehouses on the docks.
I
asked Mr. Flint whether he ever got lonely up in Maine.
“Why’s
that?”
“I
thought writers lived in New York or Hollywood. And they had all kinds of
friends who are other writers and movie stars.”
“I’ve
stripped my life down,” he told me. “I don’t need much. I have all the company
I want to keep right in here.” He shot himself in the head with his fingers. “People
don’t understand about the need to live simply. They make appointments all day.
They even schedule their own deaths. The first time they’ll have freedom to
really be themselves is when they no longer exist. But up here, there’s nothing
but me and the sky. A million billion stars.”
I
looked out where the sun glanced along the harbor and I could kind of see what
Mr. Flint meant. It looked heroic, with all the ocean and the coves and their
pines. Everything seemed big.
That’s
one of the things I love about R. P. Flint’s stories: They make the land feel
huge. Even though they’re set on an ancient, strange Earth, there’s the feeling
of a huge America in them. They have the pioneer spirit. The sea with the
fishermen, and the fields of wheat to the west. The frigid north, where
roams the wolf, and the sands of the desert south. The white marble cities
and the little farms lost in the hills.
Looking
out at the sea, I felt something cosmic in the nation and older than the
settlers.
And
I guess maybe that’s what he’d made my mother see, how huge everything was, and
I pictured them standing in some high place, and for a moment they looked out
on the world together, the height of space, and maybe they felt like they were
falling through it, but holding each other.
A
lobster boat was puttering near to the shore. Men in rubber pants pulled up
their traps. There was wood smoke in the air, which is a smell I like. We kept
walking. I scuffed the dirt in streaks with my heels. I looked at Mr. Flint and
I thought, the rhapsody of entry, and then I didn’t say any more.
A
few minutes later, we reached the luncheonette. We got a table.
“I’m
buying,” said Mr. Flint. “It’s a celebration.”
I
got fried chicken. Mr. Flint got the Reuben sandwich. I picked the skin off the
fried chicken. I like the breading, but not the skin. The skin is too wet and
bumpy. I stacked little pieces of the broken breading on top of the meat. That
way I could eat just the breading.
Mr.
Flint announced, “The white knights, formerly Caelwin’s allies, catch him and
try to mate him with the inferior, watery beauties of Pelinesse. Those are no
women for Caelwin—fine ladies taken up with needlepoint and the gentle arts.
Weaving. Giggling in their snoods. He will not go to stud to improve the
bloodlines of those anemic decadents.”
“In
the new story?”
“The
wizard Arok-Plin, thirsty for the blood of the young nations of the north,
seeks him, too, riding out of the desolate lands of Vnokk. He wishes to use
Caelwin’s life-strength in an amulet that will give him the power to melt metal
with his very gaze. How do you like that? Would you like to have such an
amulet?”
I
shrugged. “I don’t know what I’d really do with it. I mean, you can bust metal
with stuff now and I never need to.”
“Ah.
Right.” He nodded.
I
was just trying to answer truthfully, but now I could see Mr. Flint was a
little hurt about me not liking his amulet. So I said, “I have about every
Caelwin story you ever wrote.” He still didn’t say anything, so I asked him, “How
did you get such a big imagination?”
“By
never ordering from the menu of life, except à la carte. By letting my own
heart beat so strong that my body jumps to its rhythms. Do you understand?”
I
nodded. But then I thought about it and I said, “You ordered a lunch special.”
“I
like the pickle.”
“I
mean, you didn’t order a separate side. You just got the Reuben basket.”
“I
don’t have anything against fries. What’s got into you?”
“I
thought à la carte meant you ordered everything separate.”
“I
wasn’t talking literally. Don’t be a chump. Anyway, why are you stacking up all
your fried on your chicken after you just pulled it off?”
“I
just like the fried.”
“That’s
disgusting.”
“I
don’t think so.”
“I’m
the one who has to watch it.”
I
said, “Tell me about my mother.”
R.
P. Flint got a look on his face that was either worried or angry, and he chewed
real slow and hard, chops full.
Now
I couldn’t bear to look at him, so I played with the paper placemat instead. I
rolled a corner of it around the handle of my fork.
“How
are you boys doing here?” the waitress said. “Still working?”
“I
am always working, kindly Ruby,” said Flint. “So long as breath and mind
persevere.”
“You
were going to write a sonnet about me on my apron,” she said.
“Sure.
I’m a couplet short of a quatrain. Think of something that rhymes with ‘carbonation.’”
“This
should be good.”
I
offered, “Inflammation.”
“Real
cute,” said Ruby about me.
“Ain’t
he the bee’s knees?” said Flint, wriggling a finger.
“Your
nephew?”
“Sort
of.”
I
explained, “He had an affair with my mother.”
The
waitress looked at Mr. Flint with a friendly kind of disgust and then said, “Prince
Charming. Excuse me. I have a date with a side of mashed.”
When
she was gone, Mr. Flint told me, “I wish you hadn’t said that. You can’t just
say things like that.”
“It’s
true. If you didn’t want people to say it, you shouldn’t have done it.”
Mr.
Flint chewed again.
I
said, “So?”
“So
what?”
“So
you knew her in high school.”
Mr.
Flint took another bite of his Rueben. He wiped pink sauce off his lips with
his napkin. He half-shrugged and said, “Okay. We knew each other in high
school.”
“Did
you date her then?”
“Did
I…? No, not really. Not what you could call ‘date.’ You know, this is a
colliding of worlds. You here. One world runs into another one.” He sucked at
his teeth. “Think about this: I could have Caelwin stumble on an electrical
citadel. With a field of static energy like a veil of light and a buzzing
sound. And in the citadel could be some creatures from another planet with
ray-guns and all. But I’m worried how it would be, with a sword yarn mixing
with a space yarn. What do you think?”
“You’re…You
aren’t answering.”
“You
haven’t asked any question.”
“When
did you see her again?”
He
shook his head. “I don’t want to talk about this, pal.”
“But
now I asked a question.”
“She’s
a gorgeous woman, your mother. You must know that. If she’s ever in the dumps,
you’ve got to tell her that. Tell her people think she’s gorgeous. You’ve got
to make a woman realize how they delight men’s eyes. Because otherwise they all
think they have lousy figures or bad hair.”
“You’re
not answering.”
“I
don’t have to answer a thing. Your mother is a delicious woman. That’s all you’ve
got to know. Do you have to go to the john?”
“No.
Why?”
“Because
you have your legs all screwed up like that.”
“Sorry,”
I said, and unwound them. I told him that my mother always says I need to sit
like I’m willing to take up more room.
“She’s
not wrong,” he said. “She’s a smart woman, your mother. Smart as well as
beautiful. It’s one of the great mysteries that people take up different
amounts of room. I mean, you think of, for example, a guy like me, normal
sized, and a short little guy, let’s say he’s five two or something. We both
have these thoughts and these feelings, but mine extend through more of the
universe. More of the universe is made up of me. No matter how big his thoughts
are, when it comes down to it, more of space is not him—and more of it is
boiling with R. P. Flint. It’s a question of how much you fill. Isn’t that
funny?”
“Where
was the hotel?”
“You
don’t let up.”
“I
read your letter.”
“You
read my goddamn letter.”
“She
tore it up.”
Mr.
Flint wiped his mouth with his napkin, creased it into a square, and threw it
down on his plate. “Look, kid, you’ve met me. Here we are. That’s it. Now you
know me. You’re done. We’re right in town. Let me give you change for the bus.
You go back home and tell your mother I’m here whenever she wants to come up
and see me.” He stood up. “Get up. I’m paying. You need to use the john.”
“I
don’t. That’s just my legs.”
“You
have a long trip ahead of you.”
“I’m
not leaving.”
“Why?
What do you want to learn?”
That
stumped me. I didn’t answer.
“What
do you want to learn?”
I
didn’t have anything to say.
Mr.
Flint took his coat from the hook on our booth and he put it on and the moment
was passing. He said, “I’ve got to go. Our hero is tied to a pillar, about to
be gored by a pterodactyl.”
“You
said it might be a bat.”
“I
just said that to make conversation. That’s the stupidest goddamn idea I’ve
ever heard in my life.”
“No
stupider than a pterodactyl.”
“A
pterodactyl has a beak. It can rend, like the heaven-sent eagle that
disemboweled Prometheus. A vampire bat would just crawl all over him and, I don’t
know, nibble.”
“Things
that crawl can be awful.”
“Are
you getting cute?”
I
didn’t understand him. He was trying to get past me to the door.
I
tried to say something, but Mr. Flint held out his hand and interrupted me. “It
was nice meeting you. Real nice. A pleasure.”
I
shook his hand.
I
said, “I’m not going.”
“What
do you want?”
“I
want to know what it was like.”
“Laying
your mother?”
“Don’t
you say that.”
“I
can’t tell you anything.”
“Why
not? Where did you meet? What did she say to you? What did she tell you about
my pop?” I asked him. “What did she say about me?”
Mr.
Flint looked stumped. He pressed his thumbs hard against the table edge and
watched them whiten. He lifted his hands and put them in his pockets.
“Jesus,”
he said. “I need a beer.”
“What
did she tell you?”
Mr.
Flint picked up the bill and took out his wallet and thumbed through it until
he had enough money. He put the money down on top of the bill. “You have a
quarter?” he asked me.
I
wasn’t giving him any change.
“Look,”
said Mr. Flint, in a different kind of voice, “I haven’t seen your mother since
high school.”
I
put my hands in my underarms. I didn’t say a word. Mr. Flint snorted and
frowned.
“It’s
true,” he said. “That’s how it really is. I write her letters, she never writes
back.”
“I
read the letter. You said that you met her in a hotel.”
“I
didn’t.”
“I
read it.”
“I
know I wrote that. Okay? But I didn’t meet her.”
“You
said in a hotel. At least once. Maybe more.”
“Can
we get out of here?” he asked, looking around quickly. “These people aren’t
really that interested in their meatloaf.”
We
went outside. A few cars drove past. I had my coat on.
“You
said in a hotel,” I pressed.
“Christ.”
“I’m
just telling you what you wrote in ink.”
“Women”—Mr.
Flint looked gray—“women like some romance in their life. They like it when a
man talks to them from outside the wee world of lawns, you know what I mean?
The little china tea-set world. So I wrote your mother some letters.”
I
said, “They weren’t true. The letters.”
I
think Mr. Flint started to shake his head, but then he stopped. His head was
getting lower on his shoulders. He was staring at the metal railing. He looked
up quickly at my mouth, and he explained, “Women need some romance. I know how
to lavish romance. It’s what they love.”
“You
haven’t seen her in twenty years.”
He
said, “I knew her in high school. She was the most beautiful…She was…You know
how it is. I couldn’t get her out of my head. So a few years ago I found out
where she was and I wrote to her and asked what she was doing. She never wrote
back, so I wrote again, and it just became this sort of—you can think of it
like a novel. Okay? It became a story I was telling her.”
“She
said it was true.”
“Then
she’s nuts.”
“She
said you had an affair during the war.”
“Maybe
she did.”
“So?”
“With
another man. At least, not with me. I don’t know. But I can promise you: not
with me. I’d be dancing to the moon in gingerbread slippers if it was me.”
“So
you never went to a hotel and there was never an evening on the telephone wires
and the rhapsody of entry.”
“Jesus.
Some things you write don’t sound so good when they’re read back to you.” He
squinted in the sun and his mustache slanted. He said, “No. Really. I made it
all up.”
I
didn’t know what to believe. I asked him, “She was beautiful in high school?”
“There
was no girl like her. Cross my heart.” R. P. Flint kept ducking his head. He
said, “Kid, you can be proud.” He punched me on the arm, and it was like a
little brother pretending to be an uncle. “Okay?”
I
nodded. I guessed there was nothing else to know. More cars went past. I couldn’t
think of any more questions.
“Let’s
go down to the docks,” said R. P. Flint, “and watch the boats come in.”
We
went down the street, which was steep, to the pier. Fishermen were carrying
crates up ramps. They yelled things to each other. For a while, R. P. Flint and
me sat there side by side.
We
couldn’t see the ocean from where we were sitting—just the harbor—but the
swells drew up and lay down the seaweed. The sky was as blue as a stupid
postcard, and the islands were as green as islands. Mr. Flint smoked a
cigarette like he wished it was a pipe.
I
said, “So you just write her letters?”
Flint
blew a stream of smoke, which wavered as he nodded.
“How
long have you been writing her?”
“Can
we not, you know, talk about this?”
I
stopped talking so I wouldn’t bother him. He was the one who kept talking.
“You
think I’m a drip,” he said.
I
told him I didn’t.
He
said, “People might say so, but I’ve got…I told you: A man needs a great
passion for a great art. For me, it happens to be your mother. I worship her as
the paragon of women. The paragon. It doesn’t matter whether she cares. You
know what? I’m like the knights in the old medieval stories. She’s my courtly
lady. I ride into battle with her favor on my crest, okay, and it doesn’t
matter whether she ever even stoops to kiss me. I remain faithful until the
end. Whatever may come.”
“She
tears the letters up,” I said.
He
hardly moved his head.
I
faced back forward. On one of the boats, some men were playing cards. There was
a breeze sometimes, and they held down the discards with their fists.
Mr.
Flint was blushing and he kept staring out at the islands.
He
was thinking about awful things. Just watching the seagulls. I felt bad, so I
told him, “I liked the pun on Boothbay.”
“Hm?”
said Mr. Flint.
“Yabtúb,”
I said. “The Princess of Yabtúb.”
“Oh,”
said Mr. Flint. “Yeah. That’s not a pun. It’s just backwards.”
“In
the story, is the place Yabtúb supposed to be like Boothbay Harbor?”
“No.”
“The
opposite of Boothbay?”
“No.”
“Like
Boothbay backwards?”
“No.
It’s nothing like Boothbay.”
I
nodded. We sat for a minute. I told him, “You could have called it Robrah Yabtúb.”
He
nodded. “Sure. I could’ve.”
He
stood up and kicked at the pier. He told me, “I’m going back to my house now. I’ve
got some writing to do.”
Ten
feet under my shoes, the sea grew and shrank.
“All
right?” said Mr. Flint. “It was really nice to meet you.” He smiled at me, even
though I could tell it wasn’t a real smile. Mr. Flint held out his hand again
like he had in the luncheonette. “It’s been a pleasure. A real pleasure.”
I
stood up and I dusted off my pants and I shook R. P. Flint’s hand. I said
politely that it was good to meet him.
“I’m
sorry,” he said. “I know this isn’t what you were expecting.”
I
shrugged. “It’s not what you were expecting, either,” I said.
R.
P. Flint nodded. “You’re a great kid, pal.” He smiled, and this time it was for
real. I smiled back. The sun was bright and we were both squinting. He said, “What’s
your name again?”
I
told him, “Jim.”
“Jim
what?”
I
stared at him. For a second he didn’t realize what he’d said.
I
said, “The same as my mother’s. You write to her.”
“Oh,
sure,” he said.
“So.”
“So,
it’s…”
“Hucker.”
“Of
course, Jim. I know.” He fumbled with the air. “All right. Great. Good-bye,” he
said quickly, and walked away as fast as he could.
I
watched him. He moved as fast as a crab on the beach.
He
hadn’t known her name. He had no idea. None. He walked up the hill.
I
just stared at him. I stood there and watched him go up the road and I wondered
how many women Mr. Flint was writing to. I bet there was a list. Probably a
monthly calendar, and he went through them all by date. Maybe Mr. Flint wrote
to a lot of the women who were girls at his high school. I pictured their legs,
their arms in front of Dickie Flint still, white hands sorting cards, writing “DANCE”
in block letters, slim fingers held up to answer questions about Uruguay, pale
socks twirling past his pimpled face, his slack, stupid mouth where he sat at
his desk, scratching his lower lip with his upper—and maybe there were others,
too, other women he thought about alone—the teller at Mr. Flint’s bank, the
typists at Utter Tales, Ruby at the luncheonette, who knows?—and he
wrote his dirty letters in which he loved each one like no one else had ever
loved him before, and in each envelope, the future was just beginning, a new
future with just him and this girl, and she and he were going to meet in some
courtyard with a fountain and wine and flutes, and Mr. Flint was never alone.
That
was all. He walked away, trying not to look back at me, because he knew what I
was thinking. Then he was gone, around a corner, and I went up and waited for
three hours for the next bus back to Portland.
On
the bus, Caelwin, called the Skull-Reaver, returned to do battle with his
erstwhile ally, the King of Pelinesse, that he might seize the scepter of that
benighted realm, but I couldn’t fix my eyes on the page because the darkness
was starting to fall over the salt marshes and towns.
Mr.
Flint, I guess, was back at his house. Hunched over, drinking root beer,
sleeves rolled up, one lamp. Doing his evening’s work. I pictured him reading
out the best passages to himself in a voice as swollen as opera, about the
breasts and the thighs; and there they were; all of them, like women in a
sunken kingdom, sitting in his garden with seaweed waving around them, there in
his undersea court, his consorts, yielding up thegemof etc., and
etc., and etc.
I
decided I would have to phone my mother from Portland. I would have to tell her
I was okay and I guess I’d have to ask her who she really’d had the affair
with, and probably there’d be more stories after that. All the stories of
parents that I couldn’t even hardly imagine, all the things that happened to
people in houses and hotels in this world, on this Earth, on this stupid Earth.
Caelwin
was riding to the north, his demesne expanding; and on the bus, I stared at my
own reflection in the window, my own twined legs, until evening came, and all
that was left was specks; and then my traces grew so tiny I could not even be
seen.
M.
T. Anderson’s satirical science fiction novel Feed was a finalist
for the National Book Award and winner of the LA Times Book Award; his
Gothic historical novel The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Volume One,
won the National Book Award and the Boston Globe/Horn Book Award. He has
also written music criticism, picture books, and stories for adults. For many
years, he was fiction editor of 3rd bed, a journal of experimental
poetry and prose.
As
this story suggests, Anderson was (and continues to be) a fan of old fantasy
pulp: Robert E. Howard, H. P. Lovecraft, Jack Vance, and Clark Ashton Smith.
Acting as a Dungeon Master for a D&D campaign in his early teen years
taught him most of what he knows about creating narratives. As he sees it, an
interest in fantasy drives right to the heart of what it means to be a geek:
someone who admires barbarians, but who has to avoid swordplay due to really
bad asthma.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Hope Larson.
THE WRATH OF DAWN
by
cynthia and greg leitich smith
“Where’s
the dry cleaning?” Mom demands as she opens my bedroom door. “You know your
father?—”
“Stepfather,”
I say. My mom married him eleven months, two weeks, and four days ago. Worse,
he came with a prissy daughter who’s a couple of years older than me and two
obnoxious sons who’re a few years younger. I’m outnumbered, and, as if that’s
not bad enough, we also had to move to their house.
“—needs
his gray suit for a client meeting tomorrow morning.”
I
notice the Colonel himself hasn’t deigned to grace me with his presence (no, he
doesn’t sell fried chicken—he’s a retired Marine who works as a security
consultant).
As
Mom’s rant goes on, I minimize the Web page on my PC so she won’t catch a
glimpse of the bare-assed fan art beside the Underworld fic I’m reading.
“You
know, Dawn, your sister?—”
“Stepsister,”
I put in. Megan. The athletic one. She of the chemical blondness. The one whose
boyfriends have heavy brow-ridges and square jaws. “Megan took the car before I
could run errands.”
“You
should have told her you needed it,” Mom replies, because it’s important that
everything be my fault.
I
don’t point out that I tried but Megan ignored me. I don’t point out that even
if I hadn’t told her, she could’ve asked me before taking off.
Mom
crosses her arms. “You know, it wouldn’t hurt you to give her a chance. This
adjustment hasn’t been easy for Megan, either.”
I
don’t say it, but it bothers me when Mom takes her side. The thing is, I did
try in the beginning. When our parents announced their engagement at the Olive
Garden, I told Megan in the ladies’ restroom that it was hard for me, too. Out
of nowhere, she starts yelling at me that I don’t know anything and that my
visiting my dad at his apartment in Round Rock is totally different from her
visiting her mom’s grave in Smithville.
Of
course it’s different. I get that—I got it then—but Megan’s treated me
like a lesser species ever since. Like how she always calls my room “the guest
room.” And how she always foists little-brother-babysitting duty on me because
I have “no life.”
I
offer up a theatrical sigh. “Poor Megan!”
“You’re
grounded,” Mom says as she exits.
I
don’t bother to shrug. To Mom, “grounded” means not going out, but doesn’t
include ’net, cell, or DVD restrictions. By this weekend, she’ll have moved on
to another of my allegedly fatal flaws, and it’s not like I’ve got plans on the
average Tuesday night.
When
Mom leaves, I shut the door behind her. Then I bring my browser back up on
screen and begin checking RSS feeds. I read this story about a sixth grader in
Wyoming who’s trying to get a new word accepted into The Unauthorized
Dictionary of the Klingon Language. It’s kind of cute, so I comment Qapla!
Then I happily spend the next hour on the readergirlz boards at MySpace.
My
mood is ruined again when Megan bursts into the room.
“You
could knock,” I say without turning around.
“Sorry,”
Megan replies. Then she says the most shocking thing imaginable: “Want to come
with me tonight to the Buffy Sing-Along?”
Megan
knows I want to go. I’ve been talking about it for weeks. And she’s just come
from speaking to Mom. She’s clearly toying with me.
I
shake my head. “Thanks to you, I’m grounded.” I swivel in my desk chair. “Wait.
You’re going?”
Megan
is not into anything remotely interesting. Her tastes are simple. She watches “reality”
television. Worse, she wants to be on reality television. Last week, the
Colonel practically pissed a kidney stone when she mentioned driving to San
Antonio to audition for So You Want to Marry a Movie Star?
“Ryan’s
working the sing-along tonight,” Megan replies. “We’re going out after.”
Ah,
Ryan. The second and blander of her great loves. Like her, he rows a skinny
boat backward and is into other sports that involve grunting and spandex.
I
do have to admit, though, that he’s pretty much gorgeousness personified. His
only physical defect is the beginning of what promises to be a severe case of
male-pattern baldness.
“He’ll
be bald by twenty-two,” I say.
“Who
cares what he’ll look like at twenty-two?” She winks like we just shared a
moment, which we did. But I don’t think we got the same thing out of it.
“This
involves me…why?” I ask, getting back to the Slayer.
Megan’s
smile turns brittle. “For reasons I don’t understand, Ryan’s cousin Eric will
be joining us, and we need someone to keep him out of our way.”
I’m
in no mood to babysit again. “Waterloo doesn’t allow kids under ten.”
Megan
steps daintily through the maze of paperbacks and graphic novels on my floor,
brushes imaginary lint from my black comforter, and sits, addressing me in the
same tone she might use with a cocker spaniel. “I’m not asking you to babysit,
Dawn. I’m setting you up on a blind date.”
I
make a half-laugh, half-barfing noise. “No.”
Megan
lifts her French-manicured nails, examining them. “It won’t kill you. He’s not
a troll, and he’s into the same geeky stuff you are.”
I
minimize the screen again. “Like?”
“Like,
like Buffy!” she replies, glancing at my posters. “ Star Trek!
Batman! Comic books, and…” Her gaze lingers appreciatively on Hugh Jackman’s
Wolverine.
Despite
myself, I’m tempted. I adore Buffy. Well, actually, I like Buffy. I adore
Willow and Tara, and I think their love ballad is the most romantic…Wait. Even
if Eric is cool and it didn’t mean spending a whole evening with Megan…“I’m
still grounded.”
“Carol
says it’s okay so long as you’re with us,” Megan replies, standing.
I
hate it when she calls my mom “Carol,” and I’m positive the “date” aspect is
going to suck. Still, it is Buffy. “Fine, I’m in,” I say. Then I add, “But
you’re paying for everything.”
The
doorbell rings at seven sharp. I rush to the door. Fortunately, the twins don’t
realize a world exists beyond their latest video game, and the Colonel isn’t
here to indulge in his usual tactic when a boy comes over (giving him the third
degree while ostentatiously cleaning his Winchester thirty-ought-six on the
living room coffee table).
“Um,
hi,” Eric says.
He’s
a little over six feet tall, skinny, generally symmetrical, has fewer than the
average number of pimples and a full head of hair. He’s also wearing blue jeans
and a green button-down oxford shirt, which is kind of boring and does nothing
to set off my black sleeveless T, black tiered knit skirt, and combat boots.
Still,
I’ve seen worse.
“Told
you he was borderline cute,” Megan murmurs as she comes down the hall. Brushing
by, she adds, “I asked Daddy to lay off his whole intimidation-by-firearms
shtick.”
I
take that in as she leads me out the front door to a minivan with fake wood
paneling. We live in Austin, so I walk around to look at the bumper stickers:
THE WHEATGRASS PRESERVATION SOCIETY. SAVE OUR SPRINGS. Number three is the
universal negative symbol crossing out the name Wesley.
I
take shotgun (Megan for once is happy to ride by herself, lower profile, in
back). And as Eric backs out of the driveway, I ask, “Wesley Wyndham-Price or
Wesley Crusher?”
Eric
hits the brake and glances at me. “Oh, Crusher. I’m sure you’ll agree that
Wesley Wyndham-Price was less than outstanding in his early Buffy
appearances?—”
“Though
he made Giles seem more buff?—”
“Granted,
but in any case, he dramatically improved on Angel, whereas Wesley
Crusher started out bad and went downhill. No redeeming qualities whatsoever.”
“Sure
there were,” I say, undaunted. “Redeeming qualities, that is.” I try to recall
if there’s a single episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation in which
Wesley Crusher is not annoying. Okay, maybe I’m a tad daunted.
I
have to admit it, though. Megan was right. Eric’s not a troll.
Glancing
at his MapQuest printout, Eric begins reverse engineering his way out of the
neighborhood. A moment later, he shoots me that supercilious look of the über-geeky.
“Well?”
An
instant later I have the answer. I take a breath to ensure there’s no smugness
in my voice. “He’s not Dr. Z.”
“Who?”
“Starbuck’s
kid. You know, Starbuck from BattlestarGallactica.”
“She?—”
“He,”
I interrupt. “ He has a kid. In the original series.” Which I used to
watch with my dad on the only surviving Betamax videotape player this side of
eBay. “Actually, it was Galactica1980.”
Eric
looks at me like I’ve turned into a Fyarl demon and swerves just in time to
avoid a bicyclist.
I’ve
established enormous geek cred.
“A
spin-off,” I say. “Probably the single worst example of the child-genius motif
in science fiction history. Much worse than Wesley Crusher.” I’m
actually enjoying myself now. “Dr. Z always had this weird white glow about
him, practically an aura, which I suppose was how people could tell he was a
genius.” I fiddle with my seat belt. “Well, that and the fact that Commander
Adama genuflected every time he saw him.”
“La,
la, la,” Megan sings from the back, sounding bored but amused.
I’d
half forgotten she was back there.
Eric
does the smart thing and ignores her. “Yeah, the kid-genius thing is bad, but
it pales next to the previously unknown, never-mentioned pseudo-sibling who
appears suddenly out of nowhere.”
“Fascinating,”
Megan mutters, checking her lipstick.
“Most
prevalent on family sitcoms,” Eric adds, “but also frequent and problematic in
speculative fiction.”
“Well,
yes, there’s Dawn,” I say, trying to keep the irritation out of my voice. As we
slow, stuck in traffic, I add, “Believe me, I know. I bear the burden of her
name.”
A
lot of people have issues with Buffy’s sister. But kleptomania aside, Dawn
always tried to be one of the good guys. And every once in a while she was
really brave.
“Are
you familiar with the usenet group alt.dawn.die.die.die?” Eric asks. At my nod,
he announces, “I founded it.”
I
give him a long, considering glare and try to decide if he’s trying to piss me
off or whether he just doesn’t have any social skills.
“Look,
Dawn Summers was thematic,” I tell him. “Summers blood. Saving the world,
again. It made sense. Besides, it’s not like those monks asked Dawn if she
wanted to be transformed from a ball of energy into Buffy’s little sister.”
“Oh,
my God!” Megan interrupts with a bark of laughter. “No wonder neither of you
can get dates by yourselves.”
“Honestly,”
I say, “was Dawn really all that bad?”
“She
whines,” Eric replies. “All of the pseudo-siblings whine.”
“Not
Tim Drake Robin,” I shoot back, although, to be fair, he didn’t start out as
Dick Grayson’s sibling (or Bruce Wayne’s son) per se.
“Jason
Todd Robin?”
“He
deserved to die,” I admit. I hold my breath, worried Eric will counter with the
abomination that was Spock’s half-brother, Sybok. Even I don’t have a defense
for that.
A
light changes, and we’re moving again.
“Why
do you two know all this?” Megan asks.
I
glance over my shoulder. “Who won the third American Idol?”
As
we turn into the parking lot, she says, “That’s different. It’s popular.”
Waterloo
Cinema isn’t like other movie theaters. The auditoriums have great stadium
seats with long tables secured in front of each row. Even better, they have
actual waiters who serve food and drink during the film itself.
We
take in the crowd and settle into our seats about five minutes before the show
starts. I’m oddly pleased by how packed the theater is. How popular the
show is, even after all this time.
As
we sit down, we’re given bottles of soap bubbles, plastic vampire teeth, and
cigarette lighters.
Megan
examines hers like they’re the unclean symbols of a mysterious, foreign, and
possibly dangerous culture.
She
gives up when her boyfriend Ryan takes our orders—Greek salad with chicken for
Megan, burger and fries for Eric, a flaming chocolate bomb for me.
I
ignore my stepsister’s look of horror as a cheer rises and the overture begins.
It’s
an interactive show. When Tara serenades Willow, we blow magic bubbles. When
Buffy walks through the fire, we raise our lighters high.
And
we sing. We sing along.
Except
when Dawn appears on screen. At the urging of the host, the audience boos,
hisses, and glories in attacking her (even though it was Xander who summoned
the tap-dancing demon in the first place). You can’t even hear the soundtrack.
Megan
looks baffled.
Eric,
though, has to be the loudest person in the building. “Go away, Dawn!” he
shouts, cupping his hands over his mouth like a megaphone. “Loser!”
Very
mature. He’s definitely trying to piss me off. Who the hell does he think he
is? What makes him think he’s so cool, anyway?
Besides,
it’s not just my name he’s jeering. It’s every newbie, every little
sister who wasn’t there before. It’s the lesser sibling…the one blamed for
everything…my God, it’s me.
Not
that anyone else seems to care.
“Get
off the screen!” shouts the guy behind me.
“Screw
you, Dawn!” screams a girl down in front.
“Die,
Dawn, die!” someone yells from down the aisle.
At
that, I decide I’ve had it. I’ve had it with Eric. I’ve had it with Megan. I’ve
had it with everything. I’m frustrated. I’m furious. And I’m wired on sugar.
I
drop my spoon and wipe chocolate from my lips.
I
duck beneath the long table in front of my row and run to the stage, snatching
the wireless microphone from the host on my way.
“You
can’t do that!” Ryan exclaims, snagging my arm.
“Get
the hell out of my way,” I say, enunciating carefully, “or I’ll tell Colonel
Green you deflowered his daughter in the backseat of your Volvo last fall after
the A&M game.”
Ryan
turns pale—brow ridge, square jaw and all, and for the first time, he really
sees me. “Okay.”
“I
need the stage.”
“Okay,”
he says again, backing away.
As
I block the screen, the hisses and boos grow louder, and for a moment, I’m
blinded by the projector light. Then I’m in the spotlight.
“My
name is Dawn!” I shout into the microphone, and my voice sounds loud, louder
than I expected. Loud enough to be heard over the soundtrack.
“Your
name is Dawn.” I go on, in an only slightly more sane tone, realizing as I say
it that metaphor isn’t my best hope.
“So
what if she’s awkward? So what if she whines about her sister? Are you honestly
telling me that you have never whined?”
The
crowd’s reply? More jeers, laughter, and a possible death threat from a man
wielding a quesadilla.
“Come
on!” I try again. “A lot of people didn’t like Wesley in the beginning. A lot
of people didn’t like Tara in the beginning.”
I
scan the crowd again. The hardcore Angel fans are listening now. The
Willow–Tara ’shippers, too.
“We’ve
all been like Dawn,” I argue. “We’ve all felt out of place. Sure, here, here,
you belong. Here you’re among your own. But what about out there?”
“Out
there, people like her”—I point to Megan—“look down on you, judge you, and
scorn you. She isn’t even here for Buffy! She’s here for her
waiter-boyfriend!”
Is
it working? It’s not working. Is it? No. Only a few heads are nodding.
I’m
not sure what I was expecting. I don’t know what I was thinking. My sugar high
has worn off.
“We
must stand together!” I raise my fist, defiant. It’s my last, best shot to
convince them. “We must embrace our inner Dawn!”
Silence.
Gaping, lonely silence.
It
feels like the end of the world.
Just
as I’m ready to hand off the mic and slink away, Megan stands and begins to
clap. Slowly at first, but loud. Really loud. She looks me in the eye, then
gives a small nod and a knowing, appreciative smile.
Like
we’re sisters or something.
In
the next moment, Eric is standing beside her. And he’s cheering, too.
Then
Megan offers up this amazing two-fingers-in-her-mouth piercing whistle. I didn’t
even know she could do that. It’s gloriously non-prissy. It’s fantastic!
That’s
when it happens. Maybe it was my argument. Maybe it was my scary zeal. Whatever
the reason, as soon as Megan whistles, the crowd is on its feet.
They’re
blowing bubbles. They’re raising their lighters high.
They’re
cheering through their fangs…
For
Dawn Summers, for themselves and each other, for every sibling who got tossed
into a situation beyond her control.
For
me.
And
for my sister, who whistles again…
Once
more with feeling.
Greg
Leitich Smith channeled his student days at a math-science magnet high
school into the Peshtigo School novels Ninjas, Piranhas, and Galileo,
which won a Parents’ Choice Gold Award, and Tofu and T. rex, both
published by Little, Brown. Greg has long been a fan of Star Trek,
although he was disappointed as a child when he found out it was fiction and
that we had only recently made it to the moon. The starship Enterprise
(NCC-1701E) adorned his wedding cake. (The actual ceremony, alas, was not
performed in Klingon.) His Web site is www.gregleitichsmith.com.
Cynthia
Leitich Smith is the author of Tantalize, which was a Borders
Original Voices selection and a New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age,
and its companion novel, Eternal. Blessed, a third book set in
the universe, and a Tantalize graphic-novel adaptation are in the works.
Cynthia also has written several YA short stories and award-winning books for
younger readers. She teaches in the MFA program in Writing for Children and
Young Adults at Vermont College. Back in the day, Cynthia and her husband Greg
made a twice-weekly ritual out of each all-new Buffy: The Vampire Slayer
or Angel episode and are now addicted to the comic adaptations. They
both speak fluent “Scooby.” Her Web site is www.cynthialeitichsmith.com.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Bryan Lee O’Malley.
QUIZ BOWL ANTICHRIST
by
david levithan
I
am haunted at times by Sung Kim’s varsity jacket.
He
had to lobby hard to get it. Nobody denied that he had talent—in fact, he was
the star of our team. But for a member of our team to get a jacket was
unprecedented. Our coach backed him completely, while the other coaches in the
school nearly choked on their whistles when they first heard the plan. The
principal had to be called in, and it wasn’t until our team made Nationals that
Sung’s request was finally heeded. Four weeks before we left for Indianapolis,
he became the first person in our school’s history to have a varsity jacket for
quiz bowl.
I,
for one, was mortified.
This
mortification was a complete betrayal of our team, but if anyone was going to
betray the quiz bowl team from the inside, it was going to be me. I was the
alternate.
I
had been drafted by the coach, who also happened to be my physics teacher,
because while the four other members of the team could tell you the square root
of the circumference of Saturn’s orbit around the sun in the year 2033, not a
single one of them could tell you how many Brontë sisters there’d been. In
fact, the only British writer they seemed familiar with was Monty Python—and
there weren’t many quiz bowl questions about Monty Python. There was a gaping
hole in their knowledge, and I was the best lit-boy plug the school had to
offer. While I hadn’t read that many of the classics, I was extraordinarily
aware of them. I was a walking CliffsNotes version of the CliffsNotes versions;
even if I’d never touched Remembrance of Things Past or Cry, the
Beloved Country or Middlemarch, I knew what they were about and who
had written them. I could only name about ten elements on the periodic table,
but that hardly mattered—my teammates had the whole thing memorized. They told
jokes where “her neutrino!” was the punch line.
Sung
was our fearless leader—fearless, that is, within the context of our practices
and competitions. Put him back into the general population and he became just
another math geek, too bland to be teased, too awkward to be resented. As soon
as he got the varsity jacket, there was little question that it would never
leave his back. All the varsity jackets in our school looked the same on the
front—burgundy body, white sleeves, white R. But the backs were different—a
picture of two guys wrestling for the wrestlers, a football for the football
players, a breast-stroker for the swimmers. For quiz bowl, they initially chose
a faceless white kid at a podium, probably a leftover design from another
school’s speech-and-debate team. It looked as if the symbol from the men’s room
door was giving an inaugural address. Sung didn’t feel this conveyed the team
aspect of quiz bowl, so he made them add four other faceless white kids at
podiums. I was, presumably, one of those five. Because even though I was an
alternate, they always rotated me in.
I
had agreed to join the quiz bowl team for four reasons.
(1)
I needed it for my college applications.
(2)
I needed a good grade in Mr. Phillips’s physics class for my college
applications, and I wasn’t going to get it from ordinary studying.
(3)
I did get a perverse pleasure from being the only person in a competitive
situation who knew that Jane Eyre was a character, while Jane Austen was a
writer.
(4)
I had an unarticulated crush on Damien Bloom.
An
unarticulated crush is very different from an unrequited one, because at least
with an unrequited crush you know what the hell you’re doing, even if the other
person isn’t doing it back. An unarticulated crush is harder to grapple with,
because it’s a crush that you haven’t even admitted to yourself. The romantic
forces are all there—you want to see him, you always notice him, you treat
every word from him as if it weighs more than anyone else’s. But you don’t know
why. You don’t know that you’re doing it. You’d follow him to the end of the
earth without ever admitting that your feet were moving.
Damien
was track-team popular and hung with the cross-country crowd. If he didn’t have
a problem with Sung’s varsity jacket, it was probably because none of the other
kids in our school defined him as a quiz bowl geek. If anything, his membership
on the team was seen as a fluke. Whereas I presumably belonged there, along
with Sung and Frances Oh (perfect SATs, tragic skin) and Wes Ward (250 IQ, 250
lbs) and Gordon White (calculator watch, matching glasses). My social status
was about the same as a water fountain in the hall—people were happy enough I
was there when they needed me, but otherwise they walked on by. I wish I could
say I was fine with this, and that I found what I needed in books or food or
drugs or quiz bowl or other water-fountain kids. But it sucked. I didn’t have
the disposition to be slavishly devoted to popularity and the popular kids. And
at the same time, I was pretty sure my friends were losers, and barely even
friends.
When
we won the States, Sung, Damien, Frances, Wes, and Gordon celebrated like they’d
just gotten full scholarships to MIT. Mr. Phillips was in tears when he called
his wife at home to tell her. A photographer from the local paper came to take
our picture and I tried to hide behind Wes as much as possible. Sung had his
jacket by that time, its white sleeves glistening like they’d been made from
unicorn horns. After the article appeared, a couple of people congratulated me
in the hall. But most kids snickered or didn’t really care. We had a
crash-course candy sale to pay for our trip to Indianapolis, and I stole money
from my parents’ wallets and dipped into my savings in order to buy my whole
portion outright, shoving the crap candy bars in our basement instead of having
to ask my fellow students to pony up for such a pathetic cause.
Sung,
of course, wanted all of us to get matching varsity jackets to wear to
Nationals. Damien already had a varsity jacket for cross country that he never
wore, so he was out. Frances, Wes, and Gordon said they were using all their
money on the tickets and other things for Indianapolis. I simply said no. And
when Sung asked me if I was sure, I said, “You can’t possibly expect me to wear
that.” Everybody got quiet for a second, but Sung didn’t seem fazed. He just
launched us into yet another practice.
If
there were four reasons that I’d joined the quiz bowl team, there were two
reasons that I stayed on:
I
had an unarticulated crush on Damien Bloom. (These things don’t change.)
I
really, really liked beating people.
Note:
I am not saying I really, really liked winning. Winning is a more
abstract concept, and in quiz bowl, winning usually meant having to come back
in the next round and do it all again. No, I liked beating people. I
liked seeing the look on the other team’s faces when I got a question they
couldn’t answer. I loved their geektastic disappointment when they realized
they weren’t good enough to rank up. I loved using trivia to make people doubt
themselves. I never, ever missed an English question—I was a fucking juggernaut
of authors and oeuvres. And I never, ever attempted to answer any of the math,
science, or history questions. Nobody expected me to. Thus, I would always win.
The
hardest were the scrimmages, where we would split into teams of three and take
each other on. I didn’t have any problem answering the questions correctly—I
just had to make sure not to gloat. The only thing keeping me in check was
Damien. Because around him, I wanted to be the good guy.
If
I had any enthusiasm for Indianapolis, it was because I assumed Damien and I
would be rooming together. I imagined us talking all night, me finding out all
about him, bonding to the point of knowledge. I could see us laughing together
about the quiz bowl kids from other states who were surrounding us in their
quiz bowl varsity jackets. We’d smuggle in some beers, watch bad TV, and become
so comfortable with each other that I would finally feel the world was
comfortable, too. This was strictly a separate-beds fantasy…but it was a
separate-from-the-world fantasy, too. That was what I wanted.
The
closer we got to Indianapolis, the more I found myself looking forward to it,
and the more Sung became a quiz bowl dictator. If I’d thought he was serious
about it before, he was beyond all frame of reference now. He wanted to
practice every day after school for six hours—pizza was brought in—and even
when he saw us in the halls, he threw questions our way. At first I tried to
ignore him, but that only made him YELL HIS QUESTIONS IN A LOUD, OVERLY
ARTICULATED VOICE. Now anyone within four hallways of our own could hear the
guy in the quiz bowl varsity jacket shout, “WHO WAS THE LAST AMERICAN TO WIN
THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE?”
And
I’d say, much lower, “James Patterson.”
Sung
would blanch and whisper, “Wrong.”
“Toni
Morrison,” I’d correct. “I’m just playing with ya.”
“That’s
not funny,” he said. And I’d run for class.
It
did, at least, give me something to talk to Damien about at lunch. I
accidentally-on-purpose ended up behind him on the cafeteria line.
“Is
Sung driving you crazy, too?” I asked. “With his pop quizzes?”
Damien
smiled. “Nah. It’s just Sung being Sung. You’ve gotta respect that.”
As
far as I could tell, the only reason to respect that was because Damien was
respecting it. Which, at that moment, was reason enough.
The
afternoon, though, wore me down. Sung got increasingly angry as I was
increasingly unable to give him a straight answer.
“WHAT
WAS JANE AUSTEN’S LAST FINISHED NOVEL?”
“Vaginas
and Virginity.”
“WHO
IS THE LAST PERSON IAGO KILLS IN OTHELLO?”
“His
manservant Retardio, for forgetting to change the Brita filter!”
“WHAT
HAPPENS TO THE LITTLE MERMAID AT THE END OF HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN’S THE
LITTLE MERMAID?”
“She
turns into a fish and marries Nemo!”
“Fuck
you!”
These
were remarkable words to hear coming from Sung’s mouth.
He
went on.
“Are
you trying to sabotage us? Do you WANT to LOSE?”
The
other kids in the hall were loving this—a full-blown quiz bowl spat.
“Are
you breaking up with me?” I joked.
Sung
turned bright, bright red. Which is not easy for an Asian American math geek to
do.
“I’ll
see you at practice!” he managed to get out. Then he turned around and I could
see the five quiz bowlers on the back of his jacket, their blank faces not
quite glaring at me as he stormed away.
When
I arrived ten minutes late to our final pre-Indianapolis practice, Mr. Phillips
looked concerned, Damien looked indifferent, Sung looked both flustered and
angry, Frances looked flustered, Gordon looked angry, and Wes looked hungry.
“Everyone
needs to take this very seriously,” Mr. Phillips pronounced.
“Because
there are small, defenseless ponies who will be killed if we don’t make the
final four!” I added.
“Do
you not want to go?” Sung asked, looking like I’d just stuck a magnet in his
hard drive. “Is that what this is about?”
“No,”
I said calmly, “I’m just joking. If you can’t joke about quiz bowl, what can
you joke about? It’s like mime in that respect.”
“C’mon,
Alec,” Damien said. “Sung just wants us to win.”
“No,”
I said. “Sung only wants us to win. There’s a difference.”
Damien
and the others looked at me blankly. This was not, I remembered, a word-choice
crowd.
Still,
Damien had gotten the message across: Lay off. So I did for the rest of
the practice. And I didn’t get a single question wrong. I even could name four
Pearl S. Buck books besides The Good Earth—which is the English-geek
equivalent of knowing how to make an atomic bomb, in that it’s both difficult
and totally uncool.
And
how was I rewarded for this display of extraneous knowledge? At the end of the
practice, as we were leaving, Mr. Phillips offhandedly told us our room
assignments. Sung would be the one who got to room with Damien. And I would
have to share the room with Wes, the gargantuan hobbit.
On
the way out, I swear Sung was gloating.
If
it had been up to Sung, we would have had the cheerleading squad seeing us off
at the airport. I could see it now:
Two-four-six-eight,
how do mollusks procreate?
One-two-three-four,
name the birthplace of Niels Bohr!
Then
before we left, as a special treat, Sung would calculate the mass and volume of
their pompoms. Each one of the girls would dream of being the one to wear Sung’s
letter jacket when he came back home, because that would make her the most
popular girl in the entire sch—
“Alec,
we’re boarding,” Damien interrupted my sarcastic reverie. The karma gods had at
least seated us next to each other on the plane. Unfortunately, they then swung
around (as karma gods tend to do, the bastards) and made him fall asleep the
moment after takeoff. It wasn’t until we were well into our descent that he
opened his eyes and looked at me.
“Nervous?”
he asked.
“It
hadn’t even occurred to me to be nervous,” I answered honestly. “I mean, we don’t
have to win for it to look good on our transcripts. I’m already concocting this
story where I overcome a bad case of consumption, the disapproval of my
parents, a terrifying history of crashing in small planes, and a
twenty-four-hour speech impediment in order to compete in this tournament. As
long as you overcome adversity, they don’t really care if you win. Unless it’s,
like, a real sport.”
“Dude,”
he said, “you read way too much.”
“But
clearly you don’t know your science enough to move across the aisle the minute
I reveal my consumptive state.”
“Oh,”
he said, leaning a little closer, “I can catch consumption just from sitting
next to you?”
“Again,”
I said, not leaning away, “medicine is your area of expertise. In novels, you
damn well can catch consumption from sitting next to someone. You were doomed
from the moment you met me this morning.”
“I’ll
say.”
I
wasn’t quick enough to keep the conversation going. Damien bent down to take an
issue of Men’s Health out of his bag. And he wasn’t even reading it for
the pictures.
I
pretended to have a hacking cough for the remaining ten minutes of the flight.
The other people around me were annoyed, but I could tell that Damien was
amused. It was our joke.
We
were staying at the Westin in Indianapolis, home to the HeavenlyTM
bed and the Heavenly TM shower.
“How
the hell can you trademark the word heavenly?” I asked Wes as we dumped out our
stuff. We were only staying two nights, so it hardly seemed necessary to hang
anything up.
“I
dunno,” he answered.
“And
what’s up with the HeavenlyTM shower? Am I really going to have to
take showers in heaven? It hardly seems worth the trouble of being good now if
you’re going to have to wear deodorant in the afterlife.”
“I
wouldn’t know,” Wes said, making an even stack of the comics he’d brought on
the bedside table.
“What,
you’ve never been dead?”
He
sighed.
“It’s
time to meet the team,” he said.
Before
we left, he made sure every single light in the room was off.
He
even unplugged the clock.
The
competition didn’t start until the next morning, so the evening was devoted to
the Quiz Bowl Social.
“Having
a social at a quiz bowl tournament is like having all-you-can-eat ribs and
inviting a bunch of vegetarians over,” I told Damien as the rest of us waited
for Sung and Mr. Phillips to come down to the lobby.
“I’m
sure there are some cool kids here,” he said.
“Yeah.
And they’re all in their rooms, drinking.”
Some
people had dressed up for the social—meaning that some girls had worn dresses
and some boys had worn ties, although none of them could muster enough strength
to also wear a jacket. Unless, of course, it was a varsity quiz bowl jacket. I
saw at least five of them in the lobby.
“Hey,
Sung, you’re not so unique anymore,” I pointed out when he finally showed up,
his own jacket looking newly polished.
“I
don’t need to be unique,” he scoffed. “I just need to win.”
I
pretended to wave a tiny flag. “Go, team.”
“All
right, guys,” Gordon said. “Are we ready to rumble?”
I
thought he was being sarcastic, but I wasn’t entirely sure. I looked at our
group—Sung’s hair was plastered into perfect place, Frances had put on some
makeup, Gordon was wearing bright red socks that had nothing to do with
anything else he was wearing, Damien looked casually handsome, and Wes looked
like he wanted to be back in our room, reading Y: The Last Man.
“Let’s
rumble!” Mr. Phillips chimed in, a little too enthusiastically for someone over
the age of eleven.
“Our
first match is against the team from North Dakota,” Sung reminded us. “If you
meet them, scope out their intelligences.”
“If
we see them on the dance floor, I’ll be sure to mosey over and ask them to
quote Virginia Woolf,” I assured him.
The
social was in one of the Westin’s ballrooms. There was a semi-big dance floor
at the center, which nobody was coming close to. The punch was as unspiked as
the haircuts, the lights dim to hide everyone’s embarrassment.
“Wow,”
I said to Damien as we walked in and scoped it out. “This is hot.”
I
almost laughed, because Damien had such a look of social distress on his face.
I could imagine him reassuring himself that none of his other friends from home
were ever going to see this.
“The
adults are worse than the kids,” Wes observed from over my shoulder.
“You’re
right,” I said. Because while the quiz bowlers were mawkish and awkward, the
faculty advisors were downright weird, wearing their best suits from 1970 and
beaming like they’d finally gone from zero to hero in their own massively
revised high school years.
Either
out of cruelty or obliviousness (probably the former), the DJ decided to unpack
Gwen Stefani’s “Hollaback Girl.” A lot of the quiz bowlers looked like they
were hearing it for the first time. From the moment the beat started, it was
only a question of whose resolve would dissolve first. Would the team captain
from Montana start break dancing? Would the alternate from Connecticut let down
her hair and flail it around?
In
the end, it was a whole squad that took the floor. (Later I would learn it was
the home-state Indiana team, who may have felt more comfortable at the Westin.)
As a group, they started to bust out the moves—something I could never imagine
our team doing. They laughed at themselves while they danced, and it was clear
they were having a good time. Other kids started to join them. And then Sung,
Frances, and Gordon plunged in.
“Check
it out,” Wes mumbled.
Gordon
was doing a strut that looked like something he’d practiced at home; I had no
doubt it went over better in his bedroom mirror than it did in public. Frances
did a slight sway, which was in keeping with her personality. And Sung—well, Sung
looked like someone’s grandfather trying to dance to “Hollaback Girl.”
“This
shit really is bananas,” I said to Damien. “B-A-N-A-N-A-S. Look at that
varsity jacket go!”
“Enough
with the jacket,” Damien replied. “Let him have his fun. He’s stressed enough
as it is. I want a drink. You want to get a drink?”
At
first I thought he meant breaking into the nearest minibar. But, no, he just
wanted to head over to the punch bowl. The punch was übersweet—like Kool-Aid
that had been cut with Sprite—and as I drank glass after glass, it almost gave
me a Robitussin high.
“Do
you see anyone who looks like he’s from North Dakota?” I asked. “Tall hat?
Presence of cattle? If so, we can go spy. If you distract them, I’ll steal the
laminated copies of their SAT scores from their fanny packs.”
But
he wasn’t into it. He kept checking texts on his phone.
“Who’s
texting?” I finally asked.
“Just
Julie,” he said. “I wish she’d stop.”
I
assumed Just Julie was Julie Swain, who was also on cross-country. I didn’t
think they’d been going out. Maybe she’d wanted to and he hadn’t. That would
explain why he wasn’t texting back.
Clearly,
Damien and I weren’t ever going to get into the social part of the social. He
had something on his mind and I had nothing but him on my own. We’d lost Wes,
and Sung, Frances, and Gordon were still on the dance floor. Sung looked like
it was a job being there, while Gordon was in his own little world. It was
Frances who fascinated me the most.
“She
almost looks happy,” I said. “I don’t know if I’ve ever seen her happy.”
Damien
nodded and drank some more punch. “She’s always so serious,” he agreed.
The
punch was turning our lips cherry-red.
“Let’s
get out of here,” I said.
“Okay.”
We
were alone together in an unknown hotel in an unknown city. So we did the
natural thing.
We
went to his room.
And
we watched TV.
It
was his room, so he got to choose. We ended up watching The Departed on
basic cable. It was, I realized, the most time we had ever spent alone
together. He lay back on his bed and I sat on Sung’s, making sure the angle was
such that I could watch Damien as much as I watched the TV.
During
the first commercial break, I asked, “Is something wrong?”
He
looked at me strangely. “No. Does it seem like something’s wrong?”
I
shook my head. “No. Just asking.”
During
the second commercial break, I asked, “Were you and Julie going out?”
He
put his head back on his pillow and closed his eyes.
“No.”
And then, about a minute later, right before the movie started again, “It wasn’t
anything, really.”
During
the third commercial break, I asked, “Does she know that?”
“What?”
“Does
Julie know it wasn’t anything?”
“No,”
he said. “It looks like she doesn’t know that.”
This
was it, I was sure—the point where he’d ask for my advice. I could help him. I
could prove myself worthy of his company.
But
he let it drop. He didn’t want to talk about it. He wanted to watch the movie.
I
realized he needed to reveal himself to me in his own time. I couldn’t rush it.
I had to be patient. For the remaining commercial breaks, I made North Dakota
jokes. He laughed at some of them, and even threw in a few of his own.
Sung
came back when there were about fifteen minutes left in the movie. I could tell
he wasn’t thrilled about me sitting on his bed, but I wasn’t about to move.
“Sung,”
I told him, “if this whole quiz bowl thing doesn’t work out for you, I think
you have a future in disco.”
“Shut
up,” he grumbled, taking off the famous jacket and hanging it in the closet.
We
watched the rest of the movie in silence, with Sung sitting on the edge of
Damien’s bed. As soon as the credits were rolling, Sung announced it was time
to go to sleep.
“But
where are you sleeping?” I asked, spreading out on his sheets.
“That’s
my bed,” he said.
I
wanted to offer Sung a swap—he could stay with Wes and talk about polynomials
all night, while I could stay with Damien. But clearly that wasn’t a real
option.
Damien
walked me to the door.
“Lay
off the minibar,” he said. “We need you sober tomorrow.”
“I’ll
try,” I replied. “But those little bottles are just so pretty.”
He
chuckled and hit me lightly on the shoulder.
“Resist,”
he commanded.
Again,
I told him I’d try.
Wes
was in bed and the lights were off when I got to my room, so I very quietly
changed into my pajamas and brushed my teeth.
I
was about to nod off in my bed when Wes’s voice asked, “Did you have fun?”
“Yeah,”
I said. “Damien and I went to his room and watched The Departed. It was
a good time. We looked for you, but you were already gone.”
“That
social sucked.”
“It
most certainly did.”
I
closed my eyes.
“Good
night,” Wes said softly, making it sound like a true wish. Nobody besides my
parents had ever said it to me like this before.
“Good
night,” I said back. Then I made sure he’d plugged the clock back in, and went
to sleep.
The
next morning, we kicked North Dakota’s ass. Then, for good measure, we erased
Maryland from the boards and made Oklahoma cry.
It
felt good.
“Don’t
get too cocky,” Sung warned us, which was pretty precious, since Sung was the
cockiest of us all. I half expected “We Are the Champions” to come blaring out
of his ears every time we won a round.
Our
fourth and last match of the day—the quarterfinals—was against the team from
Clearwater, Florida, which had made it to the finals for each of the past ten
years, winning four of those times. They were legendary, insofar as people like
Sung had heard about them and studied their strategies, with some tapes Mr.
Phillips had managed to get off Clearwater local access.
As
usual, even though I was the alternate, I was put on the starting lineup.
Because Clearwater was especially known for treating the canon like a cannon to
demolish the other team.
“Bring
it on,” I said.
It
soon became clear who my counterpart on the Clearwater team was—a wispy girl
with straight brown hair who could barely bother to put down her Muriel Spark
in order to start playing. The first time she opened her mouth, she revealed
their secret weapon:
She
was British.
Frances
looked momentarily frightened by this, but I took it in stride. When the girl
lunged with Byron, I parried with Asimov. When she volleyed with Burgess, I
pounced with Roth. Neither of us missed a question, so it became a test of
buzzer willpower. I started to ring in a split-second before I knew the answer.
And I always knew the answer.
Until
I did the unthinkable.
I
buzzed in for a science question.
Which
Nobel prize winner later went on to write The Double Helix and Avoid
Boring People ?
I
realized immediately it wasn’t Saul Bellow or Kenzaburo Oe.
As
the judge said, “Do you have an answer?” the phrase TheDoubleHelix hit
in my head.
“Crick!”
I exclaimed.
The
judge looked at me for a moment, then down at his card.
“That
is incorrect. Clearwater, which Nobel prize winner later went on to write The
Double Helix and Avoid Boring People?”
It
was not the lit girl who buzzed in.
“James
D. Watson,” one of the math boys answered snottily, the D sent as a
particular fuck you to me.
“Sorry,”
I whispered to my team.
“It’s
okay,” Damien said.
“No
worries,” Wes said.
Sung,
I knew, wouldn’t be as forgiving.
I
was now off my game and more cautious with the buzzer, so Brit girl got the
best of me on Caliban and Vivienne Haigh-Wood. I managed to stick One
Hundred Years of Solitude in edgewise, but that was scant comfort. I mean,
who didn’t know One Hundred Years of Solitude?
Clearwater
had a one-question lead with three questions left. And it ended up that the
last questions were about math, history, and geography. So I sat back while
Sung rocked the relative areas of a rhombus and a circle, Wes sent a little
love General Omar Bradley’s way, and Frances wrapped it up with Tashkent, which
I had not known to be the capital of Uzbekistan, its name translating as “Stone
City.”
Usually
we burst out of our chairs when we won, but this match had been so exhausting
that we could only feel relieved. We shook the other team’s hands—Brit girl’s
hand felt like it was made of paper, which I found weird.
After
Clearwater had left the room, Sung called an emergency team meeting.
“That
was too close,” he said. Not “congratulations” or “nice work.”
No,
Sung was pissed.
He
talked about the need to be more aggressive on the buzzer, but also to exercise
care. He said we should always play to our strengths. To make a blunder
was to destroy the fabric of our entire team.
“I
get it, I get it,” I said.
“No,”
Sung told me, “I don’t think you do.”
“Sung,”
Mr. Phillips cautioned.
“I
think he needs to hear this,” Sung insisted. “From the very start of the year,
he has refused to be a team player. And what we saw today was nothing short of
an insurrection. He broke the unwritten rules.”
“He
is standing right here,” I pointed out. “Just come right out and say it.”
“YOU
ARE NOT TO ANSWER SCIENCE QUESTIONS!” Sung yelled. “WHAT WERE YOU THINKING?”
“Hey—”
Damien started to interrupt.
I
held up my hand. “No, it’s okay. Sung needs to get this out of his system.”
“You
are the alternate,” Sung went on.
“You
don’t seem to mind it when I’m answering questions, Sung.”
“We
only have you here because we have to!”
“That’s
enough,” Mr. Phillips said decisively.
“No,
it’s not enough,” I said. “I’m sick of you all acting like I’m this English
freak raining on your little math–science parade. Sung seems to think my
contribution to this team is a little less than everyone else’s.”
“Anyone
can memorize book titles!” Sung shouted.
“Oh,
please. Like I care what you think? You don’t even know the difference between
Keats and Byron.”
“The
difference between Keats and Byron doesn’t matter!”
“None
of this matters!” I shouted back. “Don’t you get it, Sung? NONE OF THIS
MATTERS. Yes, you have knowledge—but you’re not doing anything with it. You’re reciting
it. You’re not out curing cancer—you’re listing the names of the people who’ve
tried to cure cancer. This whole thing is a joke, Captain. It’s trivial.
Which is why everyone laughs at us.”
“You
think we’re all trivial?” Sung challenged.
“No,”
I said. “I think you’re trivial with your quiz bowl obsession. The rest
of us have other things going on. We have lives.”
“You’re
the one who’s not a part of our team! You’re the outcast!”
“If
that’s so true, Sung, then why are you the only one of us wearing a fucking
varsity jacket? Why don’t you think anyone else wanted to be seen in one? It’s
not just me, Sung. It’s all of us.”
“Enough!”
Mr. Phillips yelled.
Sung
looked like he wanted to kill me. And at the same time, I knew he’d never look
at that damn jacket the same way again.
“Why
don’t we all take a break over dinner,” Mr. Phillips went on, “then regroup in
my room at eight for a scrimmage before the semifinals tomorrow morning. I don’t
know who we’re facing, but we’re going to need to be a team to face them.”
What
we did next wasn’t very teamlike: Mr. Phillips, a brooding Sung, Frances, and
Gordon went one way for dinner, while Wes, Damien, and I went another way.
“There’s
a Steak ’n Shake a few blocks away,” Wes told us. Clearly, he’d done his
research.
“Sounds
good,” Damien said.
I,
brooding as well, followed.
“It
was a question about books,” I said once we’d left the hotel. “I didn’t realize
it was a science question.”
“Crick
wasn’t that far off,” Wes pointed out.
“Yeah,
but I still fucked it up.”
“And
we still won,” Damien said.
Yeah,
I knew that.
But
I wasn’t feeling it.
Damien
and Wes saw I was down and tried to cheer me up. Not just by getting my burger
and shake for me, but by sitting across from me and treating me like a friend.
“God,
there are a lot of fat people in Indiana!” Wes exclaimed.
“They’re
probably looking at you and saying the same thing,” Damien replied.
Wes
smiled and shook his head. “I know, I know.” Then he ate his three
cheeseburgers.
“So
how does it feel to be the Quiz Bowl Antichrist?” Damien asked in a
mock-sportscaster voice, holding an invisible microphone out for my reply.
“Well,
as James D. Watson said, I’m the motherfuckin’ princess. All other quiz
bowlers shall bow down to me. Because you know what?”
“What?”
Damien and Wes both asked.
“One
of these days, I’m going to be the goddamn answer to a quiz bowl
question.”
“Yeah,”
Wes said. “‘What quiz bowl alternate murdered his team captain in the
semifinals and later wrote a book, Among Boring People?’”
Damien
shook his head. “Not funny. There will be no murder tonight or tomorrow.”
“Do
you realize, if we win this thing, it’s going to come up on Google Search for
the rest of our lives?” I said.
“Let’s
wear masks in the photo,” Wes suggested.
“I’ll
be Michelangelo. You can be Donatello.”
And
it went on like this for a while. Damien stopped talking and just watched me
and Wes going back and forth. I was talking, but mostly I was watching him
back. The green-blue of his eyes. The side of his neck. The curl of hair that
dangled over the left corner of his forehead. No matter where I looked, there
was something to see.
I
didn’t have any control over it. Something inside of me was shifting.
Everything I’d refused to articulate was starting to spell itself out. Not as
knowledge, but as the impulse beneath the knowledge. I knew I wanted to be with
him, and I was also starting to feel why. He was a reason I was here. He was a
reason it mattered.
I
was talking to Wes, but really I was talking to Damien through what I was
saying to Wes. I wanted him to find me entertaining. I wanted him to find me
interesting. I wanted him to find me.
We
were done pretty quickly, and before I knew it we were walking back to the
Westin. Once we got to the lobby, Wes magically decided to head back to our
room until the “scrimmage” at eight. That left Damien and me with two hours and
nothing to do.
“Why
don’t we go to my room?” Damien suggested.
I
didn’t argue. I started to feel nervous—unreasonably nervous. We were just two
friends going to a room. There wasn’t anything else to it. And yet…he hadn’t
mentioned watching TV, and last time he’d said, “Why don’t we go to my room to
watch TV?”
“I’m
glad it’s just the two of us,” I ventured.
“Yeah,
me, too,” Damien said.
We
rode the elevator in silence and walked down the hallway in silence. When we
got to the door, he swiped his electronic key in the lock and got a green light
on the first try. I could never manage to do that.
“After
you,” he said, opening the door and gesturing me in.
I
walked forward, down the small hallway, turning toward the beds. And that’s
when I realized—there was someone in the room. And it was Sung. And he was on
his bed. And he wasn’t wearing his jacket. Or a shirt. And he was moaning a
little.
I
thought we’d caught him jerking off. I couldn’t help it—I burst out laughing.
And that’s what made him notice we were in the room. He jumped and turned
around, and I realized Frances was in the bed with him, shirt also off, but bra
still on.
It
was all so messed up that I couldn’t stop laughing. Tears were coming to my
eyes.
“Get
out!” Sung yelled.
“I’m
sorry, Frances,” I said between laughing fits. “I’m so sorry.”
“GET
OUT!” Sung screamed again, standing up now. Thank god he still had his pants
on. “YOU ARE THE DEVIL. THE DEVIL!”
“I
prefer Antichrist,” I told him.
“THE
DEVIL!”
“THE
DEVIL!” I mimicked back.
I
felt Damien’s hand on my shoulder. “Let’s go,” he whispered.
“This
is so pathetic,” I said. “Sung, man, you’re pathetic.”
Sung
lunged forward then, and Damien stepped in between us.
“Go,”
Damien told me. “Now.”
I
was laughing again, so I apologized to Frances again, then I pulled myself into
the hallway, where I doubled over with more laughter.
Damien
came out a few seconds later and closed the door behind us.
“Holy
shit!” I said. “That was hysterical!”
“Stop
it,” Damien said. “Enough.”
“Enough?”
I laughed again. “I haven’t even started.”
Damien
shook his head.
“You’re
cold, man,” he said. “I can’t believe how cold you are.”
“What?”
I asked. “You don’t find this funny?”
“You
have no heart.”
This
sobered me up pretty quickly. “How can you say that?” I asked. It made no sense
to me. “How can you, of all people, say that?”
“What
does that mean? Me, of all people?”
He’d
gotten me.
“Alec?”
“I
don’t know!” I shouted. “Okay? I don’t know.”
This
sounded like the truth, but it was feeling less than that. I knew. Or I was
starting to know.
“I
do have a heart,” I said. But I stopped there. I couldn’t tell him what was
inside it. Because I still wasn’t sure of myself. The only thing I was sure of
was that he wouldn’t want to hear it.
I
could feel it all coming apart. The collapse of all those invisible plans, the
appearance of all those hidden thoughts. I couldn’t let him see it. I had to
get out of there.
I
bolted. I left him right there in the hallway. I didn’t wait for the elevator—I
hit the emergency stairs. I ran like I was the one on the cross-country team,
even when I heard him following me.
“Don’t!”
I yelled back at him.
I
got to my floor and ran to my room. The card wouldn’t work the first time, and
I nervously looked at the stairway exit, waiting for him to show up. But he
must’ve stopped. He must’ve heard. I got the key through the second time.
Wes
was on his bed, reading a comic.
“You’re
back early,” he said, not looking up.
I
couldn’t say a thing. There was a knock on the door. Damien calling out my
name.
“Don’t
answer it,” I said. “Please, don’t answer it.”
I
locked myself in the bathroom. I stared at the mirror.
I
heard Wes murmur something to Damien through the door without opening it. Then
he was at my door.
“Alec?
Are you okay?”
“I’m
fine,” I said, but my voice was soggy coming out of my throat.
“Open
up.”
I
couldn’t. I sat on the lip of the tub, breathing in, breathing out. I
remembered the look on Sung’s face and started to laugh. Then I thought of
Frances lying there and felt sad. I wondered if I really didn’t have a heart.
“Alec,”
Wes said again, gently. “Come on.”
I
waited until he walked off again. Then I opened the door and went into the
bedroom. He was back on his bed, but he hadn’t picked up the comic. He was
sitting on the edge, waiting for me.
I
told him what had happened. Not the part about Damien at first, but the part
about Sung and Frances. He didn’t laugh, and neither did I. Then I told him
Damien’s reaction to my reaction, without going into what was underneath.
“Do
you think I’m cold?” I asked him. “Really—am I?”
“You’re
not cold,” he said. “You’re just so angry.”
I
must’ve looked surprised by this. He went on.
“You
can be a total prick, Alec. There’s nothing wrong with that—all of us can be
total pricks. We like to think that just because we’re geeks, that means we can’t
be assholes. But we can be. Most of the time, though, it’s not coming from
meanness or coldness. It’s coming from anger. Or sadness. I mean, I see fat
people, and I just want to rip them apart.”
“But
why do I want to rip Sung apart?”
“I
don’t know. Because he’s a prick, too. And maybe you feel if you rip apart the
quiz bowl geek, no one will think of you as a quiz bowl geek.”
“But
I’m not a quiz bowl geek!”
“Haven’t
you figured it out yet?” Wes asked. “Nobody’s a quiz bowl geek. We’re all just
people. And you’re right, what we do here has no redeeming social value
whatsoever. But it can be an interesting way to pass the time.”
I
sat down on my bed, facing Wes so that our knees almost touched.
“I’m
not a very happy person,” I told him. “But sometimes I can trick myself into
thinking I am.”
“And
where does Damien fit into all this, if I may ask?”
I
shook my head. “I really have no idea. I’m still figuring it out.”
“You
know he likes girls?”
“I
said, I’m still figuring it out.”
“Fair
enough.”
I
paused, realizing what had just been said.
“Is
it that obvious?” I asked Wes.
“Only
to me,” he said.
It
would take me another three months to understand why.
“Meanwhile,”
he went on, “Sung and Frances.”
“Holy
shit, right?”
“Yeah,
holy shit. And you know the worst part?”
“I
can’t imagine what’s worse than seeing it with my own eyes.”
“Gordon
is totally in love with Frances.”
“No!”
“Yup.
I wouldn’t miss practice tonight for all the money in the world.”
We
all showed up. Mr. Phillips could sense there was some tension in the room, but
he truly had no idea.
Frances
was wearing Sung’s varsity jacket. And suddenly I didn’t mind it so much.
Gordon
glared at Sung.
Sung
glared at me.
I
avoided Damien’s eye.
When
I looked at Wes, he made me feel like I might be worth saving.
Amazingly
enough, during practice we were back in fighting form, as if nothing had
happened. I felt like I could admit to myself how much I wanted to win. And,
not just that, how much I wanted our team to win. More for Wes and Frances and
Gordon and Damien than anything else.
After
we were done, Damien asked me if we could talk for a minute. Everyone else
headed back to their rooms and we went down to the lobby. Other quiz bowl
groups were swarming around; those that hadn’t made the semifinals were taking it
for what it was—a night where, for a brief pause in their high school lives,
they were free from any pressure or care.
“I’m
sorry,” Damien said to me. “I was completely off base.”
“It’s
okay. I shouldn’t have been so mean to Sung and Frances. I should’ve just left.”
We
just sat there.
“I
don’t know why I did that,” he said. “Reacted that way.”
It
would take him another four months to figure it out. It would be a little too
late, but he’d figure it out anyway.
We
lost in the semifinals to the Des Moines School for the Blind. I knew from the
look Sung gave me afterward that he would blame me for the loss for the rest of
his life. Not because I missed the questions—and I did get two wrong this time.
But for destroying his own invisible plans.
Looking
back, I don’t think I’ve ever hated any piece of clothing as much as I hated
Sung’s varsity jacket for those few weeks. You can’t hate something that much
unless you hate yourself equally as much. Not in that kind of way.
It
was, I guess, Wes who taught me that. Later, when we were back home and trying
to articulate ourselves better, I asked him how he’d known so much more than I
had.
“Because
I read, stupid,” was his answer.
We
lost in the semifinals, but the local paper took our picture anyway. Sung looks
serious and aggrieved. Gordon looks awkward. Frances looks calm. Damien looks
oblivious. And Wes and me?
We
look like we’re in on our own joke.
In
other words, happy.
All
of the science facts in David Levithan’s story had to be found and/or checked
on the Internet. The English facts came from his head. Take out the Internet
part, and you pretty much have a summation of his academic career from
kindergarten through college.
David’s
books include Boy Meets Boy, The Realm of Possibility, Are We There Yet?,
Marly’s Ghost, Wide Awake, Love is the Higher Law, and (with Rachel Cohn)
Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist and Naomi & Ely’s No Kiss List.
His next book is a collaboration with John Green, entitled Will Grayson,
Will Grayson.
He
still remembers who wrote Cry, the Beloved Country, but has completely
forgotten how to work a sine or a cosine.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Bryan Lee O’Malley.
THE QUIET KNIGHT
by
garth nix
“No
going out till you’ve split that wood, Tony. All two tons, you hear?”
Tony
looked up from lacing his outdoor boots and made a gesture to indicate he’d
already done the job. His father understood the sign, but he still went outside
to check, returning a few minutes later as Tony was finishing winding the lace
around the top of his left boot.
“When
did you do it?”
Tony
held up five fingers and curled back his forefinger, to make it four and a
half.
“Four
thirty? This morning before school?” his father exclaimed. “You’re crazy, son.
But good for you. You must have chopped like crazy.”
Tony
nodded. He had chopped like crazy. He’d enjoyed it though, crossing the lawn to
the shed, the frost cracking under his boots. It had been cold to start with,
and quite dark under the single lightbulb swaying on its lead high above his
head. But as he’d swung the blockbuster, split the wood and stacked it, he’d
gotten hot very quickly, and the sun had come up bright and strong.
“What
is it tonight? Basketball practice?”
Tony
nodded again, and shrugged on his backpack. It was a full-on hiker’s backpack,
not a school satchel or day bag. He carried it everywhere outside school,
notionally for all his sporting equipment, and his father had gotten used to it
long ago and didn’t inquire about what was actually inside.
“Considering
how much practice you do it’s a wonder you guys never win a game,” said his
father. He’d been an all-round athlete in his youth, and he couldn’t help but
needle Tony a little about his lack of sporting success. He didn’t come to the
games, either, not for the last few years. He didn’t like being with the other
dads when Tony’s team didn’t win. He was also too busy. Though they lived on a
farm on the outskirts of the city, it was a hobby farm, a tax deduction and
sideline interest for his dad, who was a senior executive in some shadowy
government intelligence outfit. Tony’s mother and younger sister lived on the
other side of the city, almost an hour’s drive away. He spent some time with
them, but not much. He preferred the farm, even though it took him forty
minutes to get to school on the bus.
Tony
settled his pack, then mimed turning a car key to his dad.
“You
want to borrow the monster again?”
Tony
nodded.
“You
know, it wouldn’t hurt you to talk to me.”
“Sorry,”
mumbled Tony. His voice was low and scratchy. It sounded like a rough scrubbing
brush being drawn across broken stones. He’d accidentally drunk some bathroom
cleaner when he was little, and it had burned his throat and larynx. His mother
had blamed his father for it, and his father still blamed himself. “Can I
borrow the car?”
“Of
course. Be careful. No drinking after practice. None at all, you hear?”
Tony
nodded. He looked old enough that he could easily pass for legal drinking age.
He stood six foot four in bare feet, and took after his father in both his
heavy build and an early onset of dark stubble on his face. He didn’t plan on
drinking and he wasn’t going to basketball practice anyway.
He
took the keys to the farm truck. His father moved as if to hug him, but didn’t
follow through. Tony waited stolidly, ready to hug if that was what was
required to get the keys.
“Okay.
I’ll see you later. I’ll be in my study, working till late. Check in when you
get home.”
Tony
nodded and walked out into the cool, near-freezing air of the night.
The
backpack held his armor, belt, helmet, and mask. His foam-wrapped PVC pipe
boffer sword was in a sack in the tray of the truck. Tony checked to make sure
it was still there. His dad hardly ever used the truck and practically never
looked in the back, but a good knight always checks his weapons before
venturing to battle.
That
night’s game was being held in the usual place, the old wool shed and farm
buildings on Dave Nash’s family property. Dave was a big mover and shaker in
LARP circles; he’d been involved in live-action role-playing for more than
twenty years. He was in his forties, heavier and slower than in the old
pictures and videos Tony had seen. He was still a tough fighter, though he
mostly ran the games rather than participating in them.
Tony
parked the truck off the road a half mile from the Nash property, edging it
well behind a fringe of trees. It was a rural road, and not much traveled, but
there would be other LARP gamers heading along it later and he didn’t want them
to spot him or the vehicle.
It
took him ten minutes to get his armor on. First there was the athletic
supporter and the padded undergarment, which were easy enough. It was the
thigh-length hauberk made of thousands of steel rings that was the hassle. It
was a lot easier if you had help to lace the back up, but he’d worked out a
method using a long leather strap and a lot of wriggling about.
He
didn’t change his boots, but tied on a pair of gaiters that disguised them so
they looked more medieval. The hauberk was long enough to protect his thighs,
but he strapped on converted ice-hockey armor to his knees and shins. It was
painted black and looked okay, at least it would in the partially lit game that
would occur tonight.
Tony’s
helmet was fairly basic. Unlike the hauberk, which he’d bought with the unwitting
assistance of his mother, he’d made it himself in Dave’s workshop with a lot of
help. It was modeled on a classic Norman nasal-bar helmet and went on over a
padded lining and a mail coif, which also protected his neck.
With
almost everything on, Tony added the final unique touch: a half-mask of beaten
gold (actually gold paint over tough plastic) that covered his face from his
chin to just below his eyes. It locked onto the nasal bar and the sides of the
helmet and was perforated so he could breathe. And talk, if he wanted to do
that.
All
armored up, Tony tested his movement, jumping, springing, lunging and stepping
back. Everything was on right and tight, so he strapped on his belt and put on
his leather gauntlets. Last of all he took up his sword, practiced a few test
swings and cuts, then laid it at rest on his shoulder.
There
was a beaten track made by the sheep along the inside of the barbed wire fence
that paralleled the road some ten yards in. Tony had made a rough stile when he
first started going to the LARP sessions a few years before, just a log up
against a corner post that he could run up and jump down on the other side. He
checked that, too, before he went over. It would be very embarrassing to break
a leg out here alone, in full armor….
As
he always did, Tony stopped at the edge of the roadside trees to observe who
was waiting outside the woolshed, before he went on. The woolshed itself was
huge, a vast barnlike relic of bygone days when two hundred shearers had worked
inside, shearing several thousand sheep a day. Dave Nash had partitioned it up
inside with moveable walls and scenery like a theater so he could arrange all
kinds of different scenarios. The LARP group used the paddocks outside as well
as the smaller buildings. For evening games like this one, they always chose a
night when the moon was full. It wasn’t up yet, so all the exterior lights were
on, including the big floodlights at the front of the woolshed. They lit up the
bare dirt field in front that was used as a car park.
There
were half a dozen cars there now, parked as far from the woolshed as possible,
in the half-dark so they wouldn’t detract from the atmosphere. Tony recognized
all but one of them. Seeing a strange car made him cautious, so he carefully
scanned the group around the front steps of the woolshed.
Dave
Nash was standing there, wearing his wizard’s robes, which meant he would be
the gamemaster and not an active participant. Next to him were the twins, Jubal
and Jirah, equipped and dressed as elven scouts in green and tan leather, with
their boffer long swords at their sides. They didn’t have their bows. Dave didn’t
allow even boffered bows, since he’d nearly lost an eye a few years before.
Other groups did use them, and Jubal and Jirah were fine archers, even with the
very light draw bows used in LARP.
Besides
Jubal and Jirah, there were five regulars Tony knew, all of them already geared
up in armor from Dave’s Orc armory, with an array of foam-core axes, halberds,
and other polearms. Their latex masks and helmets were stacked on the steps. No
one put them on until they had to. It got very hot and sweaty very quickly
fighting in a latex mask. But it looked good.
That
meant the strange car belonged to the two people Tony didn’t know. A girl he
guessed was around his age, who wasn’t wearing armor, but a serviceable dress
of red and gold, square-cut around the neck. She had a lute on her back and a
reed pipe through the gold cloth belt she wore, so she was clearly a bard.
The
boy at her side was younger and had the same dark but slightly strange good
looks as the girl, so Tony guessed they were brother and sister. He wore
leather trousers, a leather brigandine coat and a leather cap that was a bit
like a WWI aviator’s helmet. Two long daggers were thrust through broad loops
on his belt. Boffer weapons didn’t scabbard very easily. The foam cladding made
them bulky but was of course essential to not getting hurt.
Dave
walked up to the top step, tapping his way with his six-foot oaken staff that
was tipped with a Cyalume chemical light. He turned at the top and spread his
arms wide.
“Are
all who would essay tonight’s adventure present?”
“Aye!”
called the people around the steps.
Tony
hesitated, then strode forward toward the light, stamping his feet as he walked
so he made more noise.
“Ah,
the Quiet Knight approaches!” declaimed Dave, a smile flitting across his face.
He was the only one who knew who Tony actually was, and he respected the
confidence. “You are welcome, as always, Sir Silent.”
Tony
saluted with his sword, and went to stand off to one side, near but not close
to Jubal and Jirah.
“We
have two newcomers, recently moved to our fair realm,” said Dave. “Sorayah the
Bard, and Horace the Halfling Rogue. Welcome, Sorayah and Horace.”
Sorayah
was cute, Tony thought, and she and Horace were definitely sister and brother.
They had the same nose and eyes, and probably the same ears, though it was hard
to tell, as Horace had stuck artificial hairy ears over his own.
“Tonight
we seek to find a passage through the ancient tunnels of Harukn-Dzhur,” said
Dave. He nodded at the orcs, who picked up their masks and helmets and walked
off to one of the entrances around the side of the woolshed. “If we can but
find a way, we may escape those who have pursued us from the wilds….”
Tony
listened carefully as Dave set up the scene. “Tunnels” meant that Dave would
have spent the last week rearranging the walls and lowering the temporary
ceilings inside the woolshed, and there would be lots of close combat, with
only enough light for safety. Dave liked strobe lights, too, and color effects
for magic, and he had a lot to work with, since he’d bought all the old
lighting gear, sets, and props when the city had condemned the Alder Street
Theater.
“We
begin with the long crawl through the zigzag way,” intoned Dave. “Horace, will
you scout a little way ahead? Not too far, mind. Ten feet, no more.”
“Aye,”
said Horace. He drew his daggers and moved to the door.
“Sir
Silent, if you would follow, and Sorayah behind you,” said Dave. “I task you
with protecting the Bard, for she wears no armor, and we will need her magic
and her song in times to come. I will follow, and Jubal and Jirah will guard
our rear.”
Sorayah
came over to Tony and curtsied, inadvertently giving him a good look down the
front of her dress.
Tony
bowed back. He was glad she couldn’t see him blush.
“I
thank you for your protection, gallant knight,” she said. He liked her voice.
It sounded cool and pure, and she had the trace of some foreign accent that
sounded real, not like it was put on for the game.
He
bowed again, and led the way up the steps. Horace was lying on his stomach,
listening at the gap in the bottom of the door. As Tony approached, he stood up
and slowly opened it. There was darkness within, but slowly a weak red light
blossomed, revealing a narrow passage no more than three feet high.
“The
long crawl!” hissed Dave. “Let the adventure begin!”
Tony
didn’t get home till just before midnight, his curfew time. It had been a great
game, one of the best, and the others had stayed behind to have a drink and
chat around the fire, wrapped in the cloaks from a long-ago Alder Street
production of Henry V.
Tony
had wanted to stay too, to talk to Sorayah, and it wasn’t the curfew that
stopped him. It was his inability to talk. He knew that as soon as he opened
his mouth and she heard his hoarse crow-voice her face would show scorn, or
even worse, pity. He didn’t want that. She respected him as the Quiet Knight;
they had enjoyed playing their parts; it was best to keep whatever they had in
the game.
Tony
laughed at himself for thinking such stupid thoughts. Whatever they had! They
didn’t have anything. He’d protected her in the game, sure enough, and had
taken bruises enough to show for it, including the one across the back of his
left hand that was coming up purple and brown. But that didn’t mean anything in
real life. He didn’t even know her real name, or where she lived, or anything.
Tony
was sore and his arms and legs were very stiff the next morning. Splitting two
tons of wood for the potbelly stove and later fighting for four hours was way
too much, too much even for a blindingly hot shower to totally remedy. His
bruises had come up as well, on his hand and forearms and the back of one leg.
He applied anti-inflammatory cream to the worst of them, but didn’t take a
painkiller.
The
bus trip to school was normal. Tony sat two-thirds of the way to the back,
alone as always, with the hood of his sweatshirt pulled up over his head. He
was big and mean-looking enough that the bullies and the petty annoyers left
him alone, but since he didn’t talk, no one else interacted with him, either.
In fact, most of them, including the bullies, were afraid of his dark, hooded
presence, though he didn’t know that.
He
spent the time looking out the window, wondering what the hell he was doing
with his life. There was one more year of school to get through, which he could
do. His grades were good, better than anyone ever expected from a silent ox.
But he had no friends. Not real friends. Dave was the closest to a real friend
that he had, but Dave had a family and a job and was just being kind to a kid.
Tony
supposed he could be friends with Jubal and Jirah. They went to the same
school, though they were a year behind. They had lots of friends, too, gamers
and fantasy freaks and alternative drama types. That was the trouble. Tony
already felt he was an outcast. A disguised outcast, to be sure. He looked
normal enough. No one in the street would ever know he that he had a weird
voice and liked to dress up and play pretend fighting.
If
he revealed himself to Jubal and Jirah as the Quiet Knight, they probably would
welcome him as a friend, and he could hang out with their friends. But everyone
would know he was a real weirdo. Besides, if he had friends they’d expect him
to talk….
What
would the Quiet Knight do? Tony asked himself. Not talk, that’s for
sure. He’d just get on with things, in his own quiet way….
The
bus stopped outside the school. Tony waited for everyone to get out, then
slowly followed, steeling himself for another day of trying to minimally answer
questions. The teachers usually didn’t push him too much now, not after a long
trial with one particular English teacher a few years before, which had ended
with Tony still stubbornly refusing to deliver a speech, his father raging in
the principal’s office, and the teacher requesting a job transfer to another
school.
The
usual stream of student foot traffic filled the front drive, most of them
heading for the main doors, with knots of people here and there delaying the
inevitable. Tony strode through them, his mind on last night’s game. Younger
students scattered out of his way without him noticing. He didn’t know that he
was a legend to the lower years, his reluctance to talk transformed into a
story of backwoods tongue mutilation and bloody revenge. Even if the backwoods
in question were only ten miles past the outer suburbs.
There
was a small commotion just before the doors, to the left of the front steps in
the blind spot that was hidden from the security cameras out front and the gaze
of the teacher on door duty. There often was something going on there; it was a
favorite spot for some casual bullying or lunch money shakedowns. Tony never
paid much attention to this kind of thing. It never happened to him.
This
time, he stopped. Two students were being terrorized by five of the spoiled
brat girls, the ones who liked to think they were rough and tough and had some
kind of gang readily identifiable by infected eyebrow piercings without the
studs (since the school wouldn’t allow it) and expensive leather jackets bought
by their daddies and driven over to rough them up.
The
two students being tormented were Soraya and Horace. Soraya was wearing another
medieval-style dress, this time in dark yellow. She looked good, but totally
out of place at school. Horace, though in jeans and a T-shirt, still had on the
stupid hairy ears. Two of the self-proclaimed bad girls were holding Soraya
back with difficulty; two more were holding Horace, and the
five-eyebrow-piercings leader, whose name was Ellen, was trying to tear the
ears off Horace.
“They’re
stuck on; he can’t get them off!” Soraya shouted. She shook off one of the
girls and swung at Ellen, but there were too many of them and she was dragged
back.
“Stop!
Let him go!”
A
baseball cap was shoved in Soraya’s mouth, muffling her shouts. She kept
struggling, kicking back at her captors’ knees. Horace was trying to bite his
enemies, tears of pain welling up as his real ears were twisted every which
way.
Tony
saw Soraya’s frantic gaze as she looked every which way for help. But her gaze
swept across him and then she was bundled farther back into the shadow of the
stairs.
He’d
been invisible to her. Just another student who wasn’t going to help, who didn’t
want to get involved, or cross Ellen and her gang. It wasn’t just her and her
half-dozen girls. There were their boyfriends as well, most of whom were
bad-tempered second-string jocks who weren’t good enough to focus all their
energy on sports.
Tony
stopped for what felt like ages, but could not have been longer than a second.
Then he continued on up the steps, crashing through several slower students.
I
can’t intervene, he thought. She’s in a medieval dress. He’s got hobbit ears
on. They won’t really hurt her….
He
stopped before the doors as another thought struck him like a blow to the
heart.
What
would the Quiet Knight do?
Tony
turned about and pulled back his hood before taking a very deep breath. The
students coming up the stairs parted like the red sea as he stood there, taking
another breath, sucking in the air as if he were taking in strength.
I
must do it, he thought. And I will talk to her, even if she does laugh.
He
ran down the stairs. Students sprang aside and dragged their friends out of his
path and turned to watch as Tony picked Ellen up and lifted her over his head
and then gently but very firmly deposited her on the steps.
“Sit,”
he ordered. Ellen gulped and sat on the step, and Tony turned to the other
girls.
“Let
them go.”
His
voice was as peculiar and scratchy and variably pitched as ever, but coming
immediately after lifting their leader above his head, incredibly effective.
The bad girls released Soraya and Horace and backed away.
“They
are under my protection,” rasped Tony. “You will never even talk to them again,
understand?”
The
bad girls nodded.
“Go
to class,” added Tony. He stabbed a finger at Ellen. “You, too. And keep your
mouths shut.”
Ellen
stood, and for a moment Tony thought she might do something. But she turned
away and went up the stairs, with her minions hurrying after her.
Tony
turned back to Soraya, and the words that had so gloriously issued from his
mouth failed him. She smiled and curtsied. He looked up and blushed and averted
his gaze to Horace, who shrugged and rubbed his ears.
“Super
glue, all right?” said Horace. “So it was a bad idea. It goes with being called
Horace in the first place. Stupid parents. They can’t organize laundry either
or my sister?—”
“Thank
you again, Sir Silent,” interrupted Soraya, with a quelling glance at her
brother. She stepped closer to Tony, and looked up at him. He thought that it
would be very easy to rest his chin upon her silky head and draw her close.
Tony
tried to ask her how she knew who he was. No sound came out, but his puzzled
frown was clear enough.
“Your
eyes are very distinctive,” said Soraya. “And the bruise on your arm.”
Tony
nodded slowly, and gulped again. He was making a fool of himself, he knew, and
he felt an incredibly strong compulsion to back away, to pull his hood up and
just disappear.
But
he wanted to stay, he wanted to talk, and so he fought against the urge to run.
“My
name really is Soraya, by the way.”
Tony
cleared his throat. Soraya waited patiently, smiling, looking straight into his
eyes. The world faded away around them as Tony gulped at the air again and
searched for the words that he knew he had to say.
“Tony,”
said the Quiet Knight at last. “My name is Tony.”
Garth
Nix is the bestselling and award-winning author of more than seventeen
novels, several role-playing magazine articles and scenarios, and an
unpublished journal of the five-year Dungeons and Dragons campaign he ran
between the ages of 11 and 16. A keen role-player in his student years, Garth
was involved in running very large “free-form” role-playing events in the late
1970s and early 1980s in Australia, including the creation of a starport for
250 role-players in a school assembly hall. Long ago he also used to fight
duels with PVC pipe swords while wearing a motorcycle helmet and several old
leather coats that didn’t provide much protection but did slow everything down.
Garth is also deeply interested in computers, the weather, military history,
strategy and role-playing games, fantasy and science fiction, and many other
highly geektastic subjects. Garth is married, with two children, and lives near
a beach in Sydney, Australia.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Bryan Lee O’Malley.
EVERYONE BUT YOU
by
lisa yee
I
had never seen the ocean, Ohio being a landlocked state, when suddenly I found
myself adrift on an island. My mother was terrified of water, but even more
scared of being poor. That’s why she agreed to marry Mr. Hunter. He was the
answer to her prayers—although he didn’t look like an angel or Jesus, or any of
the assorted saints she was constantly making deals with. No, Mr. Hunter looked
like an old man on the verge of dying, which was exactly what he was.
“Felicity,
you’re nuts not to be thrilled,” Natalie Catrine kept screaming. “To leave Ohio
for Hawaii—that’s like living a dream!”
I
was thrilled, at first. Yet the closer our move date, the more unsure I became.
Leaving my friends would be hard. Everyone in Asher (population 5,728) knew my
name and who I was. There, it didn’t matter that I was poor. Lots of kids were
poor, so it was no big deal. Like having hazel eyes, or bleached blond hair
from a box, or a brother who was mentally ill, it was just part of who you
were.
Known
for my indomitable school spirit, I was voted Asher High Miss Pep for two years
in a row and on track to snag it again. But it was my baton twirling skills
that got me in the local newspaper almost as often as Mrs. Harvey’s
tree-climbing English setter. As head majorette, I lead our well-rehearsed team
of eight twirlers. I even designed our red spangled uniforms.
We
debuted our new look on Nigel Franklin Day. He was the star of that cheesy
cable TV reality show, Nigel, Nigel, Are You Listening? When the City
Council learned he’d be passing through Asher on his way to Columbus, they
decided to give him the key to the city. The whole town turned out. If anyone
was disappointed when Nigel Franklin failed to materialize, the mood changed
the minute I kicked off the parade with the Asher High Band behind me.
Twirling
meant the world to me. From my pointed toes, all the way up to my straight arms
and proper free hands, my form was flawless. Plus, my vertical and horizontal
two-spin was legendary. Every football and basketball half-time finale ended
with me tossing the baton in the air as the crowd would yell, “Whoooooooooooa.”
This continued until my baton made its downward descent and I reclaimed it,
whereupon the crowd would shout “Nelly!” and a cheer would erupt.
On
my first day at Kahanamoku Academy I woke up early. I was excited to make new
friends. Maui’s tropical weather made my perm frizzier than it already was, so
I elected to wear my hair in French braids and adorned them with blue and
yellow ribbons (my new school colors). To complement this, I wore matching
sky-blue eye shadow. I considered wearing my Miss Pep sweater, but didn’t want
to appear boastful, so instead I brought my lucky baton to school. That baton
won me more twirling awards than I could count. It was the baton I was holding
when I was named Miss Pep, and it was the baton I gripped every time Mom and I
got kicked out of our apartments for not paying the rent.
At
Asher, the majorettes were never without their batons. Carrying one was the
sort of status symbol girls could aspire to. Mrs. Smith, our principal, once
likened them to security blankets. Though it was true that my baton did make me
feel better, I also had ulterior motives for bringing it to Kahanamoku. Even
though it was mid-semester, I hoped to talk to the band director about securing
a spot as a majorette. My twirling skills were a surefire way to propel me into
the popular group.
“There’s
no band?” My mouth hung open. I had specifically made an appointment to see
Headmaster Field to discuss band.
He
ran his hand though his unruly gray hair and offered me a sad smile. “Not this
year, Francis,” he said apologetically.
“Felicity,”
I corrected him. Headmaster Field’s office was full of photos of him shaking
hands with well-coiffed people wearing nice suits. My father was fond of nice
suits, which was probably why he never had enough money for child support. “Was
there a band last year?” I sputtered.
Headmaster
Field shook his head again. “We’re more of an academic school than a sports
one. Our sports program was, er, cancelled last year ago due to the, er, well,
the abuse of—” I followed his gaze as he looked out at a blue jay that had
alighted on the windowsill. Finally, Headmaster Field turned his attention back
to me. “The University of Hawaii gives a full athletic scholarship to one high
school baton twirler each year!”
We
both brightened at the idea of this, but our smiles soon faded when I pointed
out, “I won’t be a high school twirler since Kahanamoku Academy doesn’t have a
band. Besides, I don’t need a scholarship. My stepfather can pay for college.”
“True,
true.” Headmaster Field nodded and absentmindedly began to twirl his pen. “You’re
paying full tuition here. We like that. Well, perhaps you can practice baton on
your own? You know, sort of like independent study, except without grades or
the credit.” This idea seemed to please him. As he made note of it in my file,
the blue jay and I studied each other from opposites sides of the glass.
“What
about clubs?” I finally asked. I had been president of the French club (mais
oui!) back at home.
“Clubs?”
Headmaster Field asked, raising his bushy eyebrows.
“Yes,
clubs,” I said again. I wondered if he was hard of hearing. Mr. Hunter wore a
hearing aid. “I’d like to know about the clubs here.”
Headmaster
Field tapped his pen on the desk, then said, “We don’t have a lot of clubs, but
Felicity, why don’t you start one?” His eyes lit up. “Yes, you could start one
and I would be your sponsor. What club should we have? Do you play backgammon?”
“No.”
“Pity,”
he said, letting out a sad sigh. “Well, is there anything else I can help you
with?”
I
hesitated. “Um, this may sound weird, but I am having trouble understanding
some of the other kids.”
He
laughed, murmured something about teenagers being so confusing, then admitted
that he himself was often flummoxed by his students.
“No,
no,” I tried again. “I mean I can’t understand their speech. It’s like they
speak another language. You know, like Portuguese.”
“Ah!”
Headmaster Field cried. “That’s not Portuguese, that’s pigeon.” He went on to
explain that Hawaiians often slipped into what was called “pidgin” English, a
very casual way of talking that set the locals apart from the tourists. For
example, “How is it?” would be “howzit?” And “would you like to go to dinner”
would be “wanna goda dinna, huh?”
Great.
As if moving from Asher to Maui weren’t hard enough. Now there was a language
barrier.
Before
we met Mr. Hunter, we lived in what seemed to be an endless series of dark,
cramped apartments. Because of my brother, there was never enough money. Carl
was expensive. We were always looking for ways to save a dollar or two.
Sometimes, like when my mother had to perm my hair at home or when we ate
spaghetti for a week, I’d blame Carl. Afterward, I always felt bad and would
apologize to my brother and Henry, the stuffed monkey who was his constant
companion.
Our
minister once told me, “Felicity, it’s not Carl’s fault, or your parents’. You
must not blame them.”
Okay.
So, if it wasn’t Carl’s fault, and it wasn’t my mother’s or my father’s, then
whose fault was it? One time, when Mom was pregnant, I ran to give her a hug.
Only I was going so fast I knocked her down. Maybe I hurt the baby. Maybe that’s
why his brain was damaged. Maybe all our family’s sorrows were because of me.
My
mother became a nurse so she could look after my brother. But as he got older,
it got harder. Carl would spit out food. He’d wail and cry, and so would she.
Even though he had the IQ of a one-year-old, my brother was bigger than both of
us. After Carl broke Mom’s nose for the second time, he went to live in a
special needs home. I remember his first night. At my mother’s urging, I kissed
him and then waved good-bye. Carl, thinking it was a game, gave me one of his
big sloppy kisses and made Henry wave back to me. He didn’t know he wouldn’t be
coming home.
Even
with Carl safely tucked away, my father couldn’t deal with my brother. It
troubled him that his son would never be the man he was. So Dad left us for
some woman he met at Rotary. That’s how Mom and I came to be poor and on the
run from landlords.
I’d
love to say that Mom and Mr. Hunter “met cute” like those romantic comedies she
is so fond of. Only, that’s not quite how it happened. During a first-class
flight back from New York, Mr. Hunter had a stroke and the plane was forced to
land. An emergency room nurse was credited with saving his life. On the day he
checked out, Mr. Hunter proposed to her and Mom accepted.
Mr.
Hunter’s house was unlike anything I had ever seen before. In the bathroom,
metal grip bars were next to the toilet. A plastic chair sat in the master
bedroom shower. All the light switches were down low, so Mr. Hunter wouldn’t
have to get out of his wheelchair to reach them.
The
house was sprawling and flat with smooth blond wood floors. Sliding glass doors
opened silently onto lushly landscaped grounds, where blue jays, something rare
in Asher, adorned the trees. There was a view of the ocean from almost every
room. The house was gorgeous and it didn’t cost us anything. Well, it didn’t
cost any money.
Old
and frail, Mr. Hunter’s face was pocked and wrinkled and the color of sand.
When he coughed, which was often, phlegm or blood, or both, stained his
handkerchief. He shook violently, and when he was not in his wheelchair he
hunched over, leaning on his carved wooden cane, or my mom, for support.
But
Mr. Hunter was good to my mother. Unlike my father, he never beat her, he never
called her a mean name or even raised his voice to her. In return, she gave him
youth and companionship and, in the end, love.
Despite
going solo at lunch, I was determined to make friends at my new school. I didn’t
let the fact that I was being ignored deter me. Sure, it was something I was
unaccustomed to, but I could understand why. No one knew what I had to offer—but
that was about to change.
I
took a deep cleansing breath, put on my best majorette smile, and, as I
strolled down the halls, I twirled. Nothing too fancy, I didn’t want to show
off. To my surprise, the more I twirled, the more people ignored me. Well, not
everyone.
With
the athletic program suspended, there was a new sport. It involved former
athletes grabbing my baton, tossing it to each other, and then hurling it over
the balcony like a javelin. After two days of this I left my lucky baton at
home.
I
need to take a moment to describe my peers at Kahanamoku Academy. At least a
third of the kids seemed to be native Hawaiians or at least some version of
Asian, and a third were white, and a third I couldn’t tell. With about two
hundred students in each grade, the school was twice the size of Asher High.
The girls had a sheen to them like they had just slipped off the pages of a
glossy fashion magazine.
In
Asher, I didn’t dare leave home without concealer, foundation, powder, blush,
liner, shadow, eyebrow pencil, mascara, lip liner and two lipsticks (to get my
signature color). Yet the strange thing about the Kahanamoku girls was that
they appeared to go without makeup, and still looked beautiful. They didn’t
seem to sweat, either. And modesty certainly wasn’t an issue with them considering
that their clothes consisted of little more than short shorts and tiny tops
that looked like underwear.
The
boys resembled ads for Sun & Surf Suntan Oil. Muscled and supremely
confident, they carried themselves like athletes without the letterman’s jackets.
One boy in particular had the looks of a movie star, the build of an Olympic
athlete, and the swagger of someone who has never doubted himself. He was so
handsome it hurt to even look at him. Kai Risdale was like the sun, with the
other planets orbiting around his fiery glow.
At
the risk of being blinded by his beauty, I stared. Everyone else stared at Kai,
too, except for the few scholarship students who mostly kept their heads down
and clutched their books tight to their chests like armor. Perhaps it was. They
couldn’t afford to get hurt. Without a scholarship, the privilege of attending
Kahanamoku was over eighteen thousand dollars a year.
If
in Asher, Ohio, I was considered pale, in Maui I was a ghost. I was peppy at a
school where the less pep you had, the more popular you were. Everything was so
confusing. The cool kids at Kahanamoku seemed to do nothing more than stand
around. Whereas at Asher, the only time people stood still was for the morning
flag salute.
At
the end of the week things finally started to look up. I was about to head home
when Kai brushed past me. With ease, he hoisted himself onto the pedestal where
the bronze statue of Duke Kahanamoku stood bare-chested and ready to surf.
Duke, the legendary Hawaiian surfer and namesake of the school, was akin to God
on the islands. As Kai leaned on the statue I could see that his biceps rivaled
Duke’s. I shut my eyes and wondered what it would be like to be held in Kai’s
arms. My eyes fluttered open when I heard Kai cry, “C’mon, everyone, party at
my house!”
A
cheer filled the air and what appeared to be the entire student body started to
follow Kai. Not to be left out, I ran to catch up. A party! This would be my
first Hawaiian party and I was intent on showing everyone how fun I could be.
In Asher, I was known for being something of a party animal. At Natalie Catrine’s
sweet sixteen, I was dared to—and did—eat three cupcakes without using my
hands.
Suddenly
Kai stopped and I almost bumped into him. He smelled like coconuts. “Where do you
think you’re going?” he asked.
I
looked around before I realized he was talking to me. “To the party?” I said,
making it sound like a question. Being this close to Kai made me feel faint.
He
smiled for the benefit of those watching and then answered, “That’s funny,
because no one invited you.”
My
face was on fire. “But,” I stammered, “you said, ‘everyone, party at my house.’”
“Yes,
I did say that,” Kai mused agreeably. He had flecks of brown in his green eyes.
“But what I meant was everyone but you.”
Laughter
filled the air, and even though it pained me, I joined in. According to the
Miss Pep mission statement, “Asher High School’s Miss Pep is always peppy, even
in the face of adversity.”
If
I had thought things couldn’t get any worse, I was wrong. I had tried to
befriend the scholarship students, but they eyed me with suspicion once it was
discovered that Justin Hunter of Justin Hunter Electronics was married to my
mother. Yet our newfound money wasn’t enough to buy my way into the popular
group.
In
an attempt to fit in, I toned down my blush and switched to a waterproof
mascara since the humid weather made my makeup melt. I stopped putting ribbons
in my hair, and although I didn’t wear short shorts or skimpy tank tops, I did
go sleeveless quite often. I even tried to swear like the popular kids by
throwing the occasional “damn” into my sentences. Once I even said “bitch,”
though I instantly regretted it.
One
day Kai cornered me by my locker. “Hey, you, what’s your name?”
It
didn’t matter that I had been at school for almost two months, or that the
teachers often called on me in class, or that anytime Headmaster Field saw me
he’d say, “How are you today, Felicity?”
“So
what’s your name?” Kai asked again, this time leaning in so close I could smell
cigarettes on his breath. My heart raced. His friends looked bored.
It
had occurred to me that maybe Kai was testing me. Or joking, the way the boys
at Asher High did when they were flirting. Back home, I had 1.5 boyfriends. The
first, Don Connelly, was in band. If you saw him strut and play the trumpet,
you’d understand what the attraction was. We were named His and Her Asher High
Sophomore Spirit leaders during football kickoff week last year. Don and I
dated for three months, but there was never any true spark between us. Plus, I
never liked it that he tucked in his sweaters.
The
.5 was Jeremy Hall. Since we were both major Sound of Music (Do-Re-Mi!)
and Julie Andrews fans, we started hanging out. Before we knew it, we were an
item. This came as a surprise to us, since the other thing we had in common was
that we both had a huge crush on Kyle Kincaid, the actor from that musical
where rival schools are pitted against each other in a battle of the bands on
Mars. If only Jeremy hadn’t been gay. I think we could really have had
something special.
My
name is Felicity,” I told Kai cautiously.
“What
was that?” Kai said, even though I had taken the care to enunciate clearly. “Felicity.”
“Interesting
name,” he said, toying with my hair. “Fellatio?” Kai boomed, “I’ve never met a
girl named Fellatio before.”
“It’s
FELICITY,” I said loudly, trying to mask the sound of my heart beating
furiously. “Felicity. F-e-l-i-c-i-t-y.”
“Fellatio?”
Kai repeated as his entourage howled. “Isn’t that the technical term for oral
sex?”
After
weeks of being ignored, suddenly everyone knew who I was. Only, instead of
saying, “Hi, Felicity!” or “Loved your routine, Felicity!” the Kahanamoku
students would shout, “Hellooooo, Fellatio!” Sometimes the girls would chide
their boyfriends, but then they would crack up, too.
I
had turned into one big joke.
As
the rest of the year wore on, the fellatio wordplay wore old. By then everyone
had taken to calling me BJ, the slang for blow job, which I discovered when I
looked it up in the Oxford American Dictionary, was the slang for
fellatio. Even though I would have preferred to be called Felicity, BJ was at
least a compromise I could live with.
At
home, whenever Mom asked about school, I’d just say, “It’s great!” I didn’t
want to worry her. She was having trouble adjusting, too. With Carl settling
into Celebration Residential Center, my mother now took care of Mr. Hunter, who
was falling apart even faster than I was.
I
visited my brother every day. We’d sit and talk for hours. Well, I’d sit and
talk for hours. Carl would listen, or at least I liked to think he did. It was
hard to tell how much Carl comprehended. Just when you thought you were
breaking through to him, he’d fall asleep or fling himself out of his
wheelchair, or throw his plush monkey across the room. Once he even tossed
Henry out the window. If it hadn’t been for a Good Samaritan down below, Henry
might have been lost forever.
The
six-hour time difference made it difficult to call to my friends back home—most
were busy with their twirling and school activities. And when I did talk to
Natalie Catrine and the rest, they refused to hear that I was miserable. They
were more interested in the white-sand beaches, Maui’s current temperature, and
Mr. Hunter’s big house.
“Paradise,”
Natalie Catrine would murmur. “Felicity, you’re living in paradise.”
One
day as I walked home, I spotted a tour bus near the waterfall. I didn’t believe
it at first, but sure enough, there was Mrs. Cardiff, from the dry cleaner back
in Asher! She was the last person I would ever think would travel to Maui. Mrs.
Cardiff was shading her eyes with one hand and fanning her face with the other.
I hardly recognized her—she must have put on eighty pounds.
I
raced over and before I could stop myself I was sobbing, telling Mrs. Cardiff
about my poor sad life. When I got to the Fellatio part, I could see the fear
in her eyes. That’s when a skinny pale man in shorts with a leather fanny pack
cinched tightly around his waist stepped in and said, “Beatrice, is this girl
bothering you?”
Only
then did I realize I wasn’t talking to Mrs. Cardiff at all. Instead this was
just some fat version of someone I once knew. I apologized profusely as she
scurried back to the safety of the bus.
After
school and on weekends, when most of the kids headed to the beach, I pushed
past them in the other direction. My skin burned easily, and as a rule I stayed
away from the shore except at dusk when the water looked the prettiest and the
sun was kinder. It was cool inside the library, and I would spread my homework
out under the approving eye of Mrs. Yamashiro the librarian who, like me,
looked like she rarely ventured outdoors. The musty smell of the books was the
sweet perfume I preferred to the strong sea air or the mockery of the students
who hung around Kahanamoku to socialize, score drugs, or have sex.
In
less than four months, I had morphed from golden girl to invisible girl, the
former Felicity, Fellatio, BJ, and who now was not called anything at all
because none of the other students even noticed her. Or if they knew me, it was
only as the weird girl who had tried to impress everyone with her baton. It
pained me to even think about it. Was this how my brother felt, I wondered? In
Maui, whenever I took Carl out in public, little kids gawked and all others
pretended not to see him. It wasn’t that way back home. There, the only person
who pretended that Carl didn’t exist was my father.
Occasionally,
I’d spy a fellow Kahanamoku student, but they always averted their eyes,
especially if Carl was howling or making the loud moaning sounds that signaled
he was happy. With no one to hang out with I threw myself into my studies. I
was determined to get into a good college. At Asher High I had wanted to prove
to everyone that I was someone. At Kahanamoku I needed to prove it to myself.
When
third quarter reports came, I was pleased, although not surprised, to discover
I had gotten all A’s. With several students within earshot, Headmaster Field
congratulated me with unbridled enthusiasm. My feeling of pride quickly
dissipated when he turned to congratulate Kai, whose report card apparently
mirrored mine.
I
took in a sharp breath that felt like a stab to the heart. Kai never studied,
turned in his homework, or aced any exams. “How can this be possible?” I said
out loud.
Danny,
one of the scholarship students from my AP English class, slammed his locker
shut and shook his head. For a brief moment our eyes met. Then he turned away.
At
Asher High every good grade was earned. Here at Kahanamoku Academy it seemed
that actual work didn’t factor into the GPA. I hated Kai, and hated myself even
more for not being able to stop thinking about him. Ever since I had spied him
surfing one afternoon, Kai had worked his way into my dreams. His body was the
definition of perfection, and as his surfboard cut through the water, it
appeared as if the Hawaiian sun and surf had materialized solely for his
benefit.
That
afternoon, I bypassed the library in favor of the Golden Goodness Bakery, where
I bought a big bag of malasadas, the Hawaiian version of donuts. I carried the
brown paper sack to the park that lined the shore across the street. As I bit
into a malasada, I savored the taste of the sweet balls of fried dough rolled
in sugar. Carl loved these and I made sure to save some for him. In the months
that I had lived on Maui, my skin no longer burned an angry red thanks to the
natural adjustment of my pigment and SPF 80 sunscreen. The warm weather did
wonders for my mother and brother, too. Everyone had taken on a healthy glow,
except for Mr. Hunter, who appeared to be fading.
Carl
clapped and set Henry aside when he saw me. “You do know how much I love you,
don’t you?” I asked. Carl merely smiled and moaned as he motioned for another
malasada. It was only when the bag was empty that Carl picked up Henry and
retreated into his silence.
His
doctors always said that he didn’t understand much. Yet Carl always knew when I
was leaving. “It’s okay,” I’d say, wiping away his tears. “I’ll be back
tomorrow, silly. You know that.” Then I’d kiss him and wave good-bye.
As
we entered the last quarter of my junior year, I started going to the park
every day and began twirling once more. When my baton flew high in the air, so
did I. It made me happy.
One
day when I was practicing I spotted a familiar group of boys. When they got
close, I had trouble focusing and dropped my baton. Kai and I reached for it at
the same time. “Give it to me, BJ,” he whispered in a low growl that made me
want to swear and swoon at the same time. I despised myself for that.
With
his cronies looking on, Kai tried to yank the baton from my hand, but I hung on
tight. He loosened his grip and before I could think, I grabbed the baton and
whacked him on the head.
Instantly,
the laughter stopped.
Novice
twirlers get hit on the head all the time and seldom sustain injury. Of course,
none of this mattered to Kai. His eyes narrowed as he hissed, “You’re lucky I
don’t hit girls.”
I
held my baton like a baseball bat, ready to strike again. “Shove it, Kai,” I
shot back. “You’re lucky I don’t hit girls, either.”
Kai
blinked his long eyelashes as if unsure of who or what I was. Then, he slowly
reached toward me. I stood frozen, determined not to flinch. “BJ, you’re all
right,” he said, tousling my hair.
His
laughter gave the others permission to laugh, too.
As
I watched Kai and his pals stroll away, I wasn’t sure what had just happened.
In my confusion, I hardly noticed the giant gecko standing nearby. He waddled
up to me and in a muffled voice said, “That was really something.”
“Excuse
me?” Maybe I was the one who had been hit with the baton. The gecko handed me a
brochure. “Auntie Alea’s Authentic Hawaiian Luau?” I read out loud.
The
gecko nodded and then said, “Help me get this head off, will you? It’s like
Hades in this costume.”
It
was a struggle, but finally I was face-to-face with an elderly Hawaiian
gentleman. Despite his being in a lizard costume, he had a regal bearing. His
skin was dark and smooth and his brown eyes glistened, like he knew a secret. “My
name’s Jimmy Chow and I’m Alea’s second cousin,” he said. “I’ve been watching
you. You’re amazing. Have you ever twirled fire?”
“I
can twirl anything,” I told him.
“We
could use someone like you,” Jimmy mused. He was almost as old as Mr. Hunter,
only wiry and full of energy. “Help me get my head back on; there’s a tour bus
I have to meet. But first, promise me you’ll call Alea. Be sure to say Jimmy
sent you.”
On
Jimmy’s recommendation, and three auditions later, I became the only female and
the youngest baton flame twirler at Auntie Alea’s Luau. Sure it’s a tourist
attraction, but aren’t we all tourists at some point? I was also the only
haole. Haole. That’s Hawaiian for white person. Shortly after, I had
another name change, but this time I didn’t protest. Auntie Alea christened me Kalani.
It means heaven and sky.
Auntie
Alea’s felt like home. She treated everyone like family. On my first day I was
pleasantly surprised to find Danny from my AP English class working as a
waiter. “The tips are really good,” he explained. “I’m saving up for college.”
His black hair was thick and wavy and he had freckles trekking across his nose
bridge. “Plus, Auntie Alea lets me study when it’s slow.”
Danny
and I would study together during our breaks, and later on our days off.
Eventually we’d just hang at the beach or visit Carl. Danny introduced me to
some students at Kahanamoku who I had never noticed before. I guess I had been
too busy staring at what I thought were the popular kids, when really they were
the jerks.
Not
too long ago, Kai and his friends came in for the luau waving their fake IDs.
At first they didn’t recognize me in my grass skirt and green bikini top. It
had been over a year since I had first landed on the island. I had toned down
my makeup and stopped perming and dyeing my hair, letting it go back to its
natural auburn color. It’s just easier, plus Danny thinks I look best with my
hair straight. I had also learned to chill out, something I was incapable of
doing back in Asher.
The
boys hooted and whistled when I first stepped onstage, and when Kai finally
figured out who I was he shouted, “Hey, BJ, wanna get lei-ed?”
I
was about to tell him off when my music cued up. So instead, I glared at him
and lit my batons on fire. When I heaved them into the night sky, it silenced
any snide remarks that were still floating around. Instantly, Kai and his ilk
turned into nothing more than faces in the crowd, with their necks turned
upward and their mouths hanging open, waiting to see what I would do next.
Finally, when my routine was over, they stood up and cheered with everyone else
in the audience.
After
the show, as I was downing a bottle of water, Kai strutted backstage. “BJ, you
were great!” He swayed when he spoke. Kai reached toward me and twirled my hair
as he looked deep into my eyes and whispered, “Wanna join me for a private
party at my house?” He was asking me to be with him? There was a time when this
would have meant the world to me.
For
a moment I felt flush, until the stench of whiskey and cigarettes on his breath
brought me back to reality. Then out of the corner of my eyes, I noticed Danny
coming toward us with his fists clenched. I motioned for him to stop and turned
to face Kai. “What’s my name?”
“BJ,”
he said as he blinked slowly.
“What’s
my name?” I asked again.
Kai
broke into a lazy smile and winked. “It’s Felicity. You’re Felicity. That’s who
you’ve always been.”
I
smiled back and leaned in so that my lips were practically brushing his cheek. “You
got that right, asshole,” I said. Then I emptied my water bottle over his head
and pushed him aside so I could get ready for my second show.
As
I walked toward Danny he held up his hand and without breaking my stride we
high-fived.
My
mother was able to bring Mr. Hunter and Carl to the luau one night, shortly
before Mr. Hunter died. Auntie Alea gave them the best table and Danny waited
on them like they were royalty. When I was onstage Mr. Hunter cheered so loud
that he had a coughing fit and everyone stared. Mom tenderly calmed him down,
and I could see how much they meant to each other.
Carl
clutched Henry and sat mesmerized during the entire show. If you didn’t know
his history, he almost seemed normal. Before he left each of my coworkers took
off their leis and placed them around his neck. Barely visible under all the
flowers, Carl moaned with delight and we all laughed and clapped along with
him.
“You
guys are great,” I said, choking up.
Jimmy
hugged me and said, “Kalani, your brother is our brother, too.”
Not
long after that, I went back to Asher, Ohio. I stayed with Natalie Catrine, who
proudly showed me her Miss Pep trophy. Though I had a great time, it just wasn’t
the same. Everyone had changed so much. Or maybe they hadn’t. Maybe it was me.
I never realized how hard it had been to be so peppy and that all that pep had
been weighing me down.
I
saw my father while I was in town. Was it true, he wondered, that we had come
into a fortune? I told him it was just a rumor. Not once did he ask about Carl.
I
was so happy to return to Maui.
It
was hard leaving Auntie Alea’s at the end of summer. I had been one of four
Kahanamoku Academy valedictorians, the others include Samantha Tsui, a girl I
had never heard speak until she gave a killer speech during graduation, Kai
Risdale, whose family generously donated the new auditorium, and Danny Kaleho,
my boyfriend.
Danny
earned a scholarship to NYU, and even though we both knew the time would come
when we’d go our own ways, it still hurt. He left first. Danny was eager to get
off the island and get on with the rest of his life. I, on the other hand, was
reluctant to leave.
“Felicity,
you have to go,” my mother insisted. “I’m grounded here and so is Carl, but you
can go places. Do this for us.”
Thanks
to Mr. Hunter, my education is paid for and I attend Rogers College in Southern
California. Even though they have an impressive majorette squad, I elected not
to participate. Twirling had taken up so much of my life that I wanted to see
what more there was. Besides, I left my lucky baton behind. It was a
last-minute decision.
My
mother had brought Carl to the airport to see me off. As he slumped in his
wheelchair, tourists maneuvered their suitcases around us, pretending we didn’t
exist. I knelt down on the sidewalk as I struggled to explain to Carl why I had
to leave. But he would hear none of it. He had been increasingly agitated,
having lost Henry a week earlier. As my brother began to scream and swat the
invisible demons that had been hiding, the people who had been trying so hard
to ignore us stopped and stared.
“Carl,
Carl, look!” I had to shout to get his attention. “Look at me, Carl!”
I
began to twirl my baton and Carl grew quiet. I put everything into my routine—high
kicks, trick moves, even stuff I learned from Auntie Alea’s. Everything. When I
was done, the crowd cheered and Carl moaned with delight. He held out both
hands and reached for my baton, but I held on tight. Yet he kept motioning for
it, until we were both on the verge of tears.
Finally,
I gave in.
When
I handed my baton to him, I knew I was never getting it back.
“It
belongs to you now,” I assured my brother as I held him tight. “It’s yours.”
Then
I kissed him and waved good-bye.
In
high school, Lisa Yee was a member of the varsity debate team, honor
society president, and the student rep of the California Scholarship Federation’s
State Board. In an act of total geek rebellion, Lisa would cut class to go to
the library. And once, during science, she threw her fetal pig over the balcony
to see what would happen when it landed on someone. She never got caught and
was later named Physiology Student of the Year.
Lisa’s
been a TV writer/producer, written jingles, and penned menus for Red Lobster.
The winner of the prestigious Sid Fleischman Humor Award and Thurber House
Children’s Writer-in-Residence, her books include Millicent Min, Girl Genius,
Stanford Wong Flunks Big-Time, and YA novel Absolutely Maybe.
Lisa’s Web site is www.lisayee.com, and her blog is www.lisayee.livejournal.com.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Hope Larson.
SECRET IDENTITY
by
kelly link
Dear
Paul Zell.
Dear
Paul Zell is exactly how far I’ve gotten at least a dozen times, and then I
get a little farther, and then I give up. So this time I’m going to try
something new. I’m going to pretend that I’m not writing you a letter, Paul
Zell, dear Paul Zell. I’m so sorry. And I am sorry, Paul Zell, but let’s
skip that part for now or else I won’t get any farther this time, either. And
in any case: how much does it matter whether or not I’m sorry? What difference
could it possibly make?
So.
Let’s pretend that we don’t know each other. Let’s pretend we’re meeting for
the first time, Paul Zell. We’re sitting down to have dinner in a restaurant in
a hotel in New York City. I’ve come a long way to have dinner with you. We’ve
never met face-to-face. Everything I ever told you about myself is more or less
a lie. But you don’t know that yet. We think we may be in love.
We
met in FarAway, online, except now here we are up close. I could reach out and
touch your hand. If I was brave enough. If you were really here.
Our
waiter has poured you a glass of red wine. Me? I’m drinking a Coke because I’m
not old enough to drink wine. You’re thirty-four. I’m almost sixteen.
I’m
so sorry, Paul Zell. I don’t think I can do this. (Except I have to do this.) I
have to do this. So let’s try again. (I keep trying again and again and
again.) Let’s start even farther back, before I showed up for dinner and you
didn’t. Except I think you did. Am I right?
You
don’t have to answer that. I owe you the real story, but you don’t owe me
anything at all.
Picture
the lobby of a hotel. In the lobby, a fountain with Spanish tiles in green and
yellow. A tiled floor, leather armchairs, corporate art, this bank of
glass-fronted elevators whizzing up and down, a bar. Daddy bar to all the
mini-bars in all the rooms. Sound familiar? Maybe you’ve been here before.
Now
fill up the lobby with dentists and superheroes. Men and women, oral surgeons,
eighth-dimensional entities, mutants, and freaks who want to save your teeth,
save the world, and maybe end up with a television show, too. I’ve seen a
dentist or two in my time, Paul Zell, but we don’t get many superheroes out on
the plain. We get tornadoes instead. There are two conventions going on at the
hotel, and they’re mingling around the fountain, tra la la, tipping back
drinks.
Boards
in the lobby list panels on advances in cosmetic dentistry, effective
strategies for minimizing liability in cases of bystander hazard, presentations
with titles like “Spandex or Bulletproof? What Look Is Right for You?” You
might be interested in these if you were a dentist or a superhero. Which I’m
not. As it turns out, I’m not a lot of things.
A
girl is standing in front of the registration desk. That’s me. And where are
you, Paul Zell?
The
hotel clerk behind the desk is only a few years older than me. (Than that girl,
the one who’s come to meet Paul Zell. Is it pretentious or pitiful or just
plain psychotic the way I’m talking about myself in the third person? Maybe it’s
all three. I don’t care.) The clerk’s nametag says Aliss, and she reminds the
girl that I wish wasn’t me of someone back at school. Erin Toomey, that’s who.
Erin Toomey is a hateful bitch. But never mind about Erin Toomey.
Aliss
the hotel clerk is saying something. She’s saying, “I’m not finding anything.”
It’s eleven o’clock on a Friday morning, and at that moment the girl in the
lobby is missing third-period biology. Her fetal pig is wondering where she is.
Let’s
give the girl in line in the hotel lobby a name. Everybody gets a name, even
fetal pigs. (I call mine Alfred.) And now that you’ve met Aliss and Alfred,
minor characters both, I might as well introduce our heroine. That is, me. Of
course it isn’t like FarAway. I don’t get to choose my name. If I did, it
wouldn’t be Billie Faggart. That ring any bells? No, I didn’t think it would.
Since fourth grade, which is when I farted while I was coming down the
playground slide, everyone at school has called me Smelly Fagfart. That’s
because Billie Faggart is a funny name, right? Except girls like Billie Faggart
don’t have much of a sense of humor.
There’s
another girl at school, Jennifer Groendyke. Everyone makes jokes about us.
About how we’ll move to California and marry each other. You’d think we’d be
friends, right? But we’re not. I’m not good at the friends thing. I’m like the
girl equivalent of one of those baby birds that fall out of a nest and then
some nice person picks the baby bird up and puts it back. Except that now the
baby bird smells all wrong. I think I smell wrong.
If
you’re wondering who Melinda Bowles is, the thirty-two-year-old woman you met
in FarAway, no, you’ve never really met her. Melinda Bowles has never sent
late-night e-mails to Paul Zell, not ever. Melinda Bowles would never catch a
bus to New York City to meet Paul Zell because she doesn’t know that Paul Zell
exists.
Melinda
Bowles has never been to FarAway.
Melinda
Bowles has no idea who the Enchantress Magic Eightball is. She’s never hung out
online with the master thief Boggle. I don’t think she knows what a MMORPG is.
Melinda
Bowles has never played a game of living chess in King Nermal’s Chamber in the
Endless Caverns under the Loathsome Rock. Melinda Bowles doesn’t know a rook
from a writing desk. A pawn from a prawn.
Here’s
something that you know about Melinda Bowles that is true. She used to be
married, but is now divorced and lives in her parents’ house. She teaches high
school. I used her name when I signed up for an account on FarAway. More about
my sister Melinda later.
Anyway.
Girl-liar Billie says to desk-clerk Aliss, “No message? No envelope? Mr. Zell,
Paul Zell?” (That’s you. In case you’ve forgotten.) “He’s a guest here? He said
he was leaving something for me at the front desk.”
“I’ll
look again if you want,” Aliss says. But she does nothing. Just stands there
staring malevolently past Billie as if she hates the world and everyone in it.
Billie
turns around to see who Aliss is glaring at. There’s a normal-looking guy
behind Billie; behind him, out in the lobby, there are all sorts of likely
candidates. Who doesn’t hate a dentist? Or maybe Aliss isn’t crazy about
superheroes. Maybe she’s contemplating the thing that looks like a bubble of
blood. If you were there, Paul Zell, you might stare at the bubble of blood,
too. You can just make out the silhouette of someone/something inside.
Billie
doesn’t keep up with superheroes, not really, but she feels as if she’s seen
the bloody bubble on the news. Maybe it saved the world once. It levitates
three feet above the marble floor of the atrium. It plops bloody drops like a
sink faucet in Hell. Maybe Aliss worries someone will slip on the lobby floor, break
an ankle, sue the hotel. Or maybe the bubble of blood owes her ten bucks.
The
bubble of blood drifts over to the Spanish-tiled fountain. It clears the lip,
just barely; comes to a halt two feet above the surface of the water. Now it
looks like an art installation, albeit kind of a disgusting one. But perhaps it
is seeing a heroic role for itself: scaring off the kind of children who like
to steal pennies from fountains. Future criminal masterminds might turn their
energies in a more productive direction. Perhaps some will become dentists.
Were
you a boy who stole coins from fountains, Paul Zell?
We’re
not getting very far in this story, are we? Maybe that’s because some parts of
it are so very hard to tell, Paul Zell. So here I linger, not at the beginning
and not even in the middle. Already it’s more of a muddle. Maybe you won’t even
make it this far, Paul Zell, but me, I have to keep going. I would make a joke
about superheroic efforts, but that would just be me, delaying some more.
Behind
the desk, even Aliss has gotten tired of waiting for me to get on with the
story. She’s stopped glaring, is clacking on a keyboard with her too-long
nails. There’s glitter residue around her hairline, and a half-scrubbed-off
club stamp on her right hand. She says to Billie, “Are you a guest here? What
was your name again?”
“Melinda
Bowles,” Billie says. “I’m not a guest. Paul Zell is staying here? He said he
would leave something for me behind the desk.”
“Are
you here to audition?” Aliss says. “Because maybe you should go ask over at the
convention registration.”
“Audition?”
Billie says. She has no idea what Aliss is talking about. She’s forming her
backup plan already: walk back to Port Authority and catch the next bus back to
Keokuk, Iowa. That would have been a simpler e-mail to write, I see now. Dear
Paul Zell. Sorry. I got cold feet.
“Aliss,
my love. Better lose the piercing.” The guy in line behind Billie is now up at
the counter beside her. His hand is stamped, like Aliss’s. Smudgy licks of
black eyeliner around his eyes. “Unless you want management to write you a Dear
John.”
“Oh,
shit.” Aliss’s hand goes up to her nose. She ducks down behind the counter. “Conrad,
you asshole. Where did you go last night?”
“No
idea,” Conrad says. “I was drunk. Where did you go?”
“Home.”
Aliss says it like wielding a dagger. She’s still submerged. “You want
something? Room need making up? Nightshift Darin said he saw you in the
elevator around three in the morning. With a girl.”
Girl
is another dagger.
“Entirely
possible,” Conrad says. “Like I said, drunk. Need any help down there? Taking
out the piercing? Helping this kid? Because I want to make last night up to
you. I’m sorry, okay?”
Which
would be the right thing to say, but Billie thinks this guy sounds not so
penitent. More like he’s swallowing a yawn.
“That’s
very nice of you, but I’m fine.” Aliss snaps upright. The
piercing is gone and her eyes glitter with either tears or rage. “This must be
for you,” she tells Billie in a cheery, desk-clerk robot voice. It’s not much
of an improvement on the stabby voice. “I’m so sorry about the confusion.”
There’s an envelope in her hand.
Billie
takes the envelope and goes to sit on a sofa beside a dentist. He’s wearing a
convention badge with his name on it, and where he comes from, and that’s how
she knows he isn’t a superhero and that he isn’t Paul Zell.
She
opens her envelope. There’s a room key inside and a piece of paper with a room
number written on it. Nothing else. What is this, FarAway? Billie starts to
laugh like an utter maniac. The dentist stares.
Forgive
her. She’s been on a bus for over twenty hours. Her hair is stiff with bus crud
and her clothes smell like bus, a cocktail of chemical cleaners and other
people’s breath, and the last thing she was expecting when she went off on this
quest, Paul Zell, was to find herself in a hotel full of superheroes and
dentists.
It’s
not like we get a lot of superheroes in Keokuk, Iowa. There’s the occasional
flyover or Superheroes on Ice event, and every once in a while someone in
Keokuk discovers they have the strength of two men, or can predict the sell-by
date on cans of tuna in the supermarket with 98.2 percent accuracy, but even
minor-league talents head out of town pretty quickly. They take off for
Hollywood, to try and get on a reality show. Or New York or Chicago or even
Baltimore, to form novelty rock bands or fight crime or both.
But,
here’s the thing; the thing is that, under ordinary circumstances, Billie would
have nothing better to do than to watch a woman with a raven’s head wriggling
upstream through the crowd around the lobby bar, over to the fountain and that
epic bubble of blood. The woman holds up a pink drink, she’s standing on
tiptoes, and a slick four-fingered hand emerges from the bubble of blood and
takes the glass from her. Is it a love story? How does a woman with a raven’s
beak kiss a bubble of blood? Paul Zell, how are you and me any more impossible
than that?
Maybe
it’s just two old friends having a drink. The four-fingered hand orients the
straw into the membrane or force field or whatever it is, and the glass empties
itself like a magic trick. The bubble quivers.
But:
Paul Zell. All Billie can think about is you, Paul Zell. She has the key to
Paul Zell’s hotel room. Back before she met you, way far back in FarAway,
Billie was always up for a quest. Why not? She had nothing better to do. And
the quest always went like this: Find yourself in a strange place. Encounter a
guardian. Outwit them or kill them or persuade them to give you the item they’ve
been guarding. A weapon or a spell or the envelope containing the key to room
1584.
Except
the key in Billie’s hand is a real key, and I don’t do that kind of quest much
anymore. Not since I met you, Paul Zell. Not since the Enchantress Magic
EightBall met the master thief Boggle in King Nermal’s Chamber and challenged
him to a game of chess.
While
I’m coming clean, here’s a minor confession. Why not. Why should you care that,
besides Enchantress Magic EightBall, I used to have two other avatars in
FarAway. There’s Constant Bliss, who’s an elfin healer and frankly kind of a
pill, and there’s Bearhand, who, as it turns out, was kind of valuable in terms
of accumulated points, especially weapons class. There was a period, you see,
when things were bad at school and things were worse at home, which I don’t
really want to talk about, and anyway, it was a bad period during which I liked
running around and killing things. Whatever. Last month I sold Bearhand when
you and I were planning all of this, for bus fare. It wasn’t a big deal. I’d
kind of stopped being Bearhand except for every once in a while, when you weren’t
online and I was lonely or sad or had a really, really shitty day at school.
I’m
thinking I may sell off Constant Bliss, too, if anyone wants to buy her. If
not, it will have to be Magic EightBall. Or maybe I’ll sell both of them. But
that’s part of the story I haven’t gotten to yet.
And,
yeah, I do spend a lot of time online. In FarAway. Like I said, it’s not like I
have a lot of friends, not that you should feel sorry for me, because you
shouldn’t, Paul Zell, that’s NOT why I’m telling you all of this.
My
sister? Melinda? She says wait a few years and see. Things get better. Of
course, based on her life, maybe they do get better. And then they get worse
again, and then you have to move back home and teach high school. So how
exactly is that better?
And
yes, in case you’re wondering, my sister Melinda Bowles is kind of stunning,
and all the boys in my school who despise me have crushes on her even when she
flunks them. And yes, a lot of the details I fed you about my life, Billie
Faggart’s life, are actually borrowed from Melinda’s life. Although not all of
the details. If you’re still speaking to me after you read this, I’ll be happy
to make up a spreadsheet of character traits and biographical incidents. One
column will be Melinda Bowles and the other will be Billie Faggart. There will
be little checkmarks in either column, or both, depending. But the story about
shaving off my eyebrows when I was a kid? That was true. I mean, that was me.
And so was the thing about liking reptiles. Melinda? She’s not so fond of the
reptiles. But then, maybe you don’t really have a chameleon named Moe and a
tokay gecko named Bitey. Maybe you made up some stuff, too, except yeah, okay,
why would you make up some lizards? I keep having to remind myself: Billie,
just because you’re a liar doesn’t mean the whole world is full of liars.
Except that you did lie, right? You were at the hotel. You left me the key to
your room at the hotel in an envelope addressed to Melinda Bowles. Because if
you didn’t, then who did?
Sorry.
This is supposed to be about me, apologizing. Not me, solving the big mysteries
of the universe and everything. Except, here’s the thing about Melinda, in case
you’re thinking maybe the person you fell in love with really exists. The salient
thing. Melinda has a boyfriend. He’s in Afghanistan right now. Also, she’s
super religious, like seriously born again. Which you’re not. So even if
Melinda’s boyfriend got killed, or something, which I know is something she
worries about, it would never work out between you and her.
And
one more last thing about Melinda, or maybe it’s actually about you. This is
the part where I have to thank you. Because: because of you, Paul Zell,
I think Melinda and I have kind of become friends. Because, all year I’ve been
interested in her life. I ask her how her day was, and I actually listen when
she tells me. Because, how else could I convince you that I was a
thirty-two-year-old, divorced high-school algebra teacher? And it turns out
that we actually have a lot in common, me and Melinda, and it’s like I even understand
what she thinks about. Because, she has a boyfriend who’s far away (in
Afghanistan) and she misses him and they write e-mails to each other, and she
worries about what if he loses a leg or something, and will they still love
each other when he gets back?
And
I have you. I had this thing with you, even if I couldn’t tell her about you. I
guess I still can’t tell her. Which is even weirder, I guess, than the other
thing: how for so long I couldn’t tell you the truth about me. And now I can’t
shut up about me when what I really ought to be explaining is what happened at
the hotel.
Billie
gets into an elevator with a superhero and the guy who blew off Aliss. The
superhero reeks. BO and something worse, like spoiled meat. He gets out on the
seventh floor, and Billie sucks in air. She’s thinking about all sorts of
things. For example, how it turns out she doesn’t have a fear of heights, which
is a good thing to discover in a glass elevator. She’s thinking about how she
could find a wireless café, go online and hang out in FarAway, except Paul Zell
won’t be there. She wonders if the guy who bought Bearhand is trying him out.
Now that would be weird, to run into someone who used to be you. What would she
say? She’s thinking how much she wants to take a shower, and she’s wondering if
she smells as bad as that superhero did. She’s thinking all of this and lots of
other things, too.
“Now
that’s how to fight crime,” says the other person in the elevator. (Conrad
Linthor, although Billie doesn’t know his last name yet. Maybe you’ll recognize
it, though.) “You smell it to death. Although, to be fair, to get that big you
have to eat a lot of protein and the protein makes you stinky. That’s why I’m a
vegetarian.” The smile he gives Billie is as ripe with charm as the elevator is
ripe with super stink.
Billie
prides herself on being charm resistant. (It’s like the not having a sense of
humor. A sense of humor is a weakness. I know how you’re supposed to be able to
laugh at yourself, but that’s pretty sucky advice when everyone is always
laughing at you already.) She stares at Conrad Linthor blankly. If you don’t
react, mostly other people give up and leave you alone.
Conrad
Linthor is eighteen or nineteen, or maybe a well-preserved twenty-two. He has
regular features and white teeth. He’d be good looking if he weren’t so good
looking, Billie thinks, and then wonders what she meant by that. She can tell
that he’s rich, although, again, she’s not quite sure how she knows this. Maybe
because he pressed the Penthouse floor button when he got on the elevator.
“Let
me guess,” Conrad Linthor says, as if he and Billie have been having a
conversation. “You’re here to audition.” When Billie continues to stare at him
blankly, this time because she really doesn’t know what he’s talking about and
not just because she’s faking being stupid, he elaborates: “You want to be a
sidekick. That guy who just got off? The Blue Fist? I hear his sidekicks keep
quitting for some reason.”
“I’m
here to meet a friend,” Billie says. “Why does everyone keep asking me that?
Are you? You know, a sidekick?”
“Me?”
Conrad Linthor says. “Very funny.”
The
elevator door dings open, fifteenth floor, and Billie gets off.
“See
you around,” Conrad Linthor calls after her. It sounds more mocking than
hopeful.
You
know what, Paul Zell? I never thought you would be super handsome or anything.
Don’t be insulted, okay? I never cared about what you might turn out to look
like. I know you have brown hair and brown eyes and you’re kind of skinny and
you have a big nose. I know because you told me you look like your avatar.
Boggle. Me, I was always terrified you’d ask for my photo, because then it
would really have been a lie, even more of a lie, because I would’ve sent you a
photo of Melinda.
My
dad says I look so much like Melinda did when she was a kid, it’s scary. That
we could practically be twins. But I’ve seen pictures of Melinda when she was
fifteen and I don’t look like her at all. Melinda was kind of freakish looking
when she was my age, actually. I think that’s why she’s so nice now, and not
vain, because it was a surprise to her, too, when she got awesome looking. I’m
not gorgeous, and I’m not a freak, either, and so that whole ugly duckling
thing that Melinda went through probably isn’t going to happen to me.
But
you saw me, right? You know what I look like.
Billie
knocks on the door of Paul Zell’s hotel room, just in case. Even though you
aren’t there. If you were there, she’d die on the spot of heart failure, even
though that’s why she’s there. To see you.
Maybe
you’re wondering why she came all this way, when meeting you face-to-face was
always going to be this huge problem. Honestly? She doesn’t really know. She
still doesn’t know. Except that you said: Want to meet up? See if this is real
or not?
What
was she supposed to do? Say no? Tell the truth?
There
are two double beds in room 1584, and a black suitcase on a stand. No Paul
Zell, because you’re going to be in meetings all day. The plan is to meet at
the Golden Lotus at six.
Last
night you slept in one of those beds, Paul Zell. Billie sits down on the bed
closest to the window and she even smells the pillows, but she can’t tell. It’s
a damn shame housekeeping has already made up the room, otherwise Billie could
climb into the bed you were sleeping in last night and put her head down on
your pillow.
She
goes over to the suitcase, and here’s where it starts to get kind of awful,
Paul Zell. This is why I have to write about all of this in the third person,
because maybe then I can pretend that it wasn’t really me there, doing these
things.
The
lid of your suitcase is up. You’re a tidy packer, Paul Zell. The dirty clothes
on the floor of the closet are folded. Billie lifts up the squared shirts and
khakis. Even the underwear is folded. Your pants size is 32, Paul Zell. Your
socks are just socks. There’s a velvet box, a jeweler’s box, near the bottom of
the suitcase, and Billie opens it. Then she puts the box back at the bottom of
the suitcase. I can’t really tell you what she was thinking right then, even
though I was there.
I
can’t tell you everything, Paul Zell.
Billie
didn’t pack a suitcase, because her dad and Melinda would have wondered about
that. Fortunately nobody’s ever surprised when you go off to school and your
backpack looks crammed full of things. Billie takes out the skirt she’s
planning to wear to dinner, and hangs it up in the closet. She brushes her
teeth and afterward she puts her toothbrush down on the counter beside your
toothbrush. She closes the drapes over the view, which is just another
building, glass-fronted like the elevators. As if nobody could ever get
anything done if the world wasn’t watching, or maybe because, if the world can
look in and see what you’re doing, then what you’re doing has to be valuable
and important and aboveboard. It’s a far way down to the street, so far down
that the window in Paul Zell’s hotel room doesn’t open, probably because people
like Billie can’t help imagining what it would be like to fall.
All
the little ant people down there, who don’t even know you’re standing at the
window, looking down at them. Billie looks down at them.
Billie
closes the blackout curtain over the view. She pulls the cover off the bed
closest to the window. She takes off her jeans and shirt and bra and puts on
the Boston Marathon T-shirt she found in Paul Zell’s suitcase.
She
lies down on a fresh white top sheet, falls asleep in the yellow darkness. She
dreams about you.
When
she wakes up she is drooling on an unfamiliar pillow. Her jaw is tight because
she’s forgotten to wear her mouthpiece. She’s been grinding her teeth. So, yes,
the teeth grinding, that’s me. Not Melinda.
It’s
4:30, late afternoon. Billie takes a shower. She uses Paul Zell’s herbal
conditioner. She folds the borrowed T-shirt and puts it back in Paul Zell’s
suitcase, between the dress shirts and the underwear.
The
hotel where she’s staying is on CNN. Because of the superheroes.
For
the last three weeks Billie has tried not to think too much about what will
happen at dinner when she and Paul Zell meet. But, even though she’s been
trying not to think about it, she still had to figure out what she was going to
wear. The skirt and the sweater she brought are Melinda’s. They fit okay;
Billie hopes they’ll make her look older, but not as if she is trying to
look older. She bought a lipstick at Target, but when she puts it on it looks
too Billie Goes to Clown School, and so she wipes it off again and puts on
ChapStick instead. She’s sure her lips are still redder than they ought to be;
she hopes no one will notice.
When
she goes down to the front desk to ask about Internet cafés, Aliss is still on
the front desk. “Or you could just use the business center,” Aliss tells her. “Guests
can use their room keys to access the business center. You are staying here,
right?”
Billie
asks a question of her own. “Who’s that guy, Conrad?” she says. “What’s his
deal?”
Aliss’s
eyes narrow. “His deal is he’s the biggest slut in the world. Like it’s any of
your business,” she says. “But don’t think he’s got any pull with his dad,
Little Miss Wannabe Sidekick. No matter what he says. Hook up with him and I’ll
stomp your ass. It’s not like I want this job, anyway.”
“I’ve
got a boyfriend,” Billie says. “Besides, he’s too old for me.”
Which
is an interesting thing for her to say, when I think about it now.
Here’s
the thing, Paul Zell. You’re thirty-four and I’m fifteen. That’s nineteen years’
difference. That’s a substantial gap, right? Besides the legal issue, which I
am not trying to minimize, I could be twice as old as I am now and you’d still
be older. I’ve thought about this a lot. And you know what? There’s a teacher
at school, Mrs. Christie. Melinda was talking, a few months ago, about how Mrs.
Christie just turned thirty and her husband is sixty-three. And they still fell
in love, and yeah, Melinda says everyone thinks it’s kind of repulsive, but
that’s love, and nobody really understands how it works. It just happens. And
then there’s Melinda, who married a guy exactly the same age that she was,
who then got addicted to heroin, and was, besides that, just all-around bad
news. My point? Compared to those thirty-three years between Mr. and Mrs.
Christie, eighteen years is practically nothing.
The
real problem here is timing. And, also, of course, the fact that I lied. But,
except for the lying, why couldn’t it have worked out between us in a few
years? Why do we really have to wait at all? It’s not like I’m ever going to
fall in love with anyone again.
Billie
uses Paul Zell’s hotel room key to get into the business center. There’s a
superhero at one of the PCs. The superhero is at least eight feet tall, and she’s
got frizzy red hair. You can tell she’s a superhero and not just a tall dentist
because a little electric sizzle runs along her outline, every once in a while,
as if maybe she’s being projected into her too-small seat from some other
dimension. She glances over at Billie, who nods hello. The superhero sighs and
looks at her fingernails. Which is fine with Billie. She doesn’t need rescuing,
and she isn’t auditioning for anything, either. No matter what anybody thinks.
For
some reason, Billie chooses to be Constant Bliss when she signs onto FarAway.
She’s double incognito. Paul Zell isn’t online and there’s no one in King
Nermal’s Chamber, except for the living chess pieces who are always there, and
who aren’t really alive, either. Not the ones who are still standing or
sitting, patiently, upon their squares, waiting to be deployed, knitting or
picking their noses or flirting or whatever their particular programs have been
programmed to do when they aren’t in combat. Billie’s favorite is the King’s
Rook, because he always laughs when he moves into battle, even when he must
know he’s going to be defeated.
Do
you ever feel as if they’re watching you, Paul? Sometimes I wonder if they know
that they’re just a game inside a game. When I first found King Nermal’s
Chamber, I walked all around the board and checked out what everyone was doing.
The White Queen and her pawn were playing chess, like they always do. I sat and
watched them play. After a while the White Queen asked me if I wanted a match,
and when I said yes, her little board got bigger and bigger until I was
standing on a single square of it, inside another chamber exactly the same as
the chamber I’d just been standing in, and there was another White Queen
playing chess with her pawn, and I guess I could have kept on going down and
down and down, but instead I got freaked out and quit FarAway without saving.
Bearhand
isn’t in FarAway right now. No Enchantress Magic EightBall either, of course.
Constant
Bliss is low on healing herbs, and she’s quite near the Bloody Meadows, so I
put on her invisible cloak and go out onto the battlefield. Rare and strange
plants have sprung up where the blood of men and beasts is still soaking into
the ground. I’m wearing a Shielding Hand, too, because some of the plants don’t
like being yanked out of the ground. When my collecting box is one hundred
percent full, Constant Bliss leaves the Bloody Meadows. I leave the Bloody
Meadows. Billie leaves the Bloody Meadows. Billie hasn’t quite decided what she
should do next, or where she should go, and besides it’s nearly six o’clock. So
she saves and quits.
The
superhero is watching something on YouTube, two Korean guys breakdancing to
Pachelbel’s Canon in D. Billie stands up to leave.
“Girl,”
the superhero says. Her voice hurts to listen to.
“Who,
me?” Billie says.
“You,
girl,” the superhero says. “Are you here with Miracle?”
Billie
realizes a mistake has been made. “I’m not a sidekick,” she says.
“Then
who are you?” the superhero says.
“Nobody,”
Billie says. And then, because she remembers that there’s a superhero named
Nobody, she says, “I mean, I’m not anybody.” She escapes before the superhero
can say anything else.
Billie
checks her hair in the women’s bathroom in the lobby. Nothing can be done. She
wishes her sister’s sweater wasn’t so tight. She decides it doesn’t make her
look older, it just makes her look lumpy. Melinda is always trying to get
Billie to wear something besides T-shirts and jeans, but Billie, looking in the
bathroom mirror, suddenly wishes she looked more like herself, forgetting that
what she needs is to look less like herself. To look less like a
fifteen-year-old crazy liar.
Although
apparently what she looks like is a sidekick.
Billie
doesn’t need to pee, but she pees anyway, just in case, because what if later
she really has to get up and leave the dinner table? You’d know that she was
going to the bathroom, and for some reason this seems embarrassing to her. The
fact that she’s even worrying about this right now makes Billie feel as if she
might be going crazy.
The
maître d’ asks if she has a reservation. It’s now five minutes to six. “For six
o’clock,” Billie says. “For two. Paul Zell?”
“Here
we are,” the maître d’ says. “The other member of your party isn’t here, but we
can go ahead and seat you.”
Billie
is seated. The maître d’ pushes her chair in, and Billie tries not to feel
trapped. There are other people eating dinner all around her, dentists and
superheroes and maybe ordinary people, too. Costumes are definitely
superheroes, but just because some of the hotel guests aren’t wearing costumes,
doesn’t mean they’re dentists and not superheroes. Although some of them are
definitely dentists.
Billie
hasn’t eaten since this morning, when she got a bagel at Port Authority. Her
first New York bagel. Cinnamon raisin with blueberry cream cheese. Her stomach
is growling a little, but she can’t order dinner yet, of course, because you
aren’t there yet, Paul Zell, and she doesn’t want to eat the bread sticks in
the bowl on the table, either. What if you show up, and you sit down across from
her and her mouth is full or she gets poppy seeds stuck in her teeth?
People
who aren’t Paul Zell are seated at tables, or go to the bar and sit on bar
stools. Billie studies the menu. She’s never had sushi before, but she decides
that she will order boldly. A waiter pours her a glass of water. Asks if she’d
like to order an appetizer while she’s waiting. Billie declines. The people at
the table next to her pay their bill and leave. When she looks at her watch,
she sees it’s 6:18.
You’re
late, Paul Zell.
Billie
eats a bread stick dusted with a greenish powder that makes her lips burn, just
a little. She drinks her water, and then, even though she went to the bathroom
not even a half hour ago, she needs to pee again. She gets up and goes. Maybe
when she comes back to the table, Paul Zell will be sitting there. But she
comes back and he isn’t.
Billie
thinks: Maybe she should go back to the room and see if there are any messages.
“I’ll be right back,” she tells the maître d’. The maître d’ couldn’t care less.
There are superheroes in the hotel lobby and there are dentists in the elevator
and there’s a light on the phone in room 1584 that would flash if there were
any messages. It isn’t flashing. Billie dials the number for messages just in
case. No message.
Back
in the Golden Lotus no one is sitting at the table reserved for Paul Zell, six
o’clock, party of two. Billie sits back down anyway. She waits until 7:30, and
then she leaves while the maitre d’ is escorting a party of superheroes to a
table. So far none of the superheroes are ones that Billie recognizes, which
doesn’t mean that their superpowers are lame. It’s just, there are a lot of
superheroes and knowing a lot about superheroes has never been Billie’s thing.
She
rides up the glass-fronted elevator to Paul Zell’s hotel room and orders room
service. This should be exciting, because Billie’s never ordered room service
in her life. But it’s not. She orders a hamburger, and when the woman asks if
she wants to charge it to her room, she says sure. She drinks a juice from the
minibar and watches the Cartoon Network. She waits for someone to knock on the
door. When someone does, it’s just a bellboy with her hamburger.
By
nine o’clock Billie has been down to the business center twice. She checks
Hotmail, checks FarAway, checks all the chatrooms. No Boggle. No Paul Zell.
Just chess pieces, and it isn’t her move. She writes Paul Zell an e-mail; in
the end, she doesn’t send it.
When
she goes upstairs for the last time, no one is there. Just the suitcase. She
doesn’t really expect anyone to be there. The jeweler’s box is still down at
the bottom of the suitcase.
The
office building in the window is still lit up. Maybe the lights stay on all
night long even when no one is there. Billie thinks those lights are the
loneliest things she’s ever seen. Even lonelier than the light of distant stars
that are already dead by the time their light reaches us. Down below, ant
people do their antic things, unaware that Billie is watching them.
Billie
opens up the minibar again. Inside are miniature bottles of gin, bourbon,
tequila, and rum that no one is going to drink, unless Billie drinks them. What
would Alice do, Billie thinks. Billie has always been a Lewis Carroll fan, and
not just because of the chess stuff.
There
are two beers and a jar of peanuts. Billie disdains the peanuts. She drinks all
of the miniatures and both normal-sized cans of beer. Perhaps you noticed the
charges on your hotel bill.
Here
is where details begin to be a little thin for me, Paul Zell. Perhaps you have
a better idea of what I’m describing, what I’m omitting. Then again, maybe you
don’t.
It’s
the first time Billie’s ever been drunk, and she’s not very good at it. Nothing
is happening that she can tell. She perseveres. She begins to feel okay, as if
everything is going to be okay. The okay feeling gets larger and larger until
she’s entirely swallowed up by okayness. This lasts for a while, and then she
starts to fade in and out, like she’s jumping forward in time, always just a
little bit dizzy when she arrives. Here she is, flipping through channels, not
quite brave enough to click on the pay-for-porn channels, although she thinks
about it. Then here she is, a bit later, putting that lipstick on again. This
time she kind of likes the way she looks. Here she is, lifting all of Paul Zell’s
clothes out of the suitcase. She takes the ring out of the box, puts it on her
big toe. Now there’s a gap. Then: here’s Billie, back again, she’s bent over a
toilet. She’s vomiting. She vomits over and over again. Someone is holding back
her hair. There’s a hand holding out a damp, cold facecloth. Now she’s in a
bed. The room is dark, but Billie thinks there’s someone sitting on the other
bed. He’s just sitting there.
Later
on, she thinks she hears someone moving around the room, doing things. For some
reason, she imagines that it’s the Enchantress Magic Eightball. Rummaging
around the room, looking for important, powerful, magical things. Billie thinks
she ought to get up and help. But she can’t move.
Much
later on, when Billie gets up and goes to the bathroom to throw up again, Paul
Zell’s suitcase is gone.
There’s
vomit all over the sink and the bathtub, and on her sister’s sweater. Billie’s
crotch is cold and wet; she realizes she’s pissed herself. She pulls off the
sweater and skirt and hose, and her underwear. She leaves her bra on because
she can’t figure out how to undo the straps. She drinks four glasses of water
and then crawls into the other bed, the one she hasn’t pissed in.
When
she wakes up it’s one in the afternoon. Someone has left the Do Not Disturb
sign on the door of Room 1584. Maybe Billie did this, maybe not. She won’t be
able to get the bus back to Keokuk today; it left this morning at 7:32. Paul
Zell’s suitcase is gone, even his dirty clothes are gone. There’s not even a
sock. Not even a hair on a pillow. Just the herbal conditioner. I guess you
forgot to check the bathtub.
Billie’s
head hurts so bad she wonders if she fell over when she passed out and hit it
on something. It’s possible, I guess.
Billie
is almost glad her head hurts so much. She deserves much worse. She pushes one
of the towels around the sink and the counter, mopping up crusted puke. She
runs hot water in the shower until the whole bathroom smells like puke soup.
She strips the sheets off the bed she peed in, and shoves them with Melinda’s
destroyed sweater and skirt and all of the puke-stained towels under the
counter in the bathroom. The water is only just warm when she takes her shower.
Better than she deserves. Billie turns the handle all the way to the right, and
then shrieks and turns it back. What you deserve and what you can stand aren’t
necessarily the same thing.
She
cries bitterly while she conditions her hair. She takes the elevator down to
the lobby and goes and sits in the Starbucks. The first time she’s ever been
inside a Starbucks. What she really wants is a caramel iced vanilla latte, but
instead she orders three shots of espresso. More penance.
I
know, I find all of this behavior excruciating and over the top, too. And maybe
this is a kind of over-the-top penance, too, what I’m doing here, telling you
all of this, and maybe the point of humiliating myself by relating all of this
humiliating behavior will only bring me even greater humiliation later, when I
realize what a self-obsessed, miserable, martyring little drama queen I’m
allowing myself to be right now.
Billie
is pouring little packets of sugar into her three shots of espresso when
someone sits down next to her. It isn’t you, of course. It’s that guy, Conrad.
And now we’re past the point where I owe you an apology, and yet I guess I
ought to keep going, because the story isn’t over yet. Remember how Billie
thought the room key and the bus ride seemed like FarAway, like a quest? Now is
the part where it starts seeming more like one of those games of chess, the
kind you’ve already lost and you know it, but you don’t concede. You just keep
on losing, one piece at a time, until you’re the biggest loser in the world.
Which is, I guess, how life is like chess. Because it’s not like anyone ever
wins in the end, is it?
Anyway.
Part two. In which I go on writing about myself in the third person. In which I
continue to act stupidly. Stop reading if you want.
Conrad
Linthor sits down without being asked. He’s drinking something frozen. “Sidekick
girl. You look terrible.”
All
during this conversation, picture superheroes of various descriptions. They
stroll or glide or stride purposefully past Billie’s table. They nod at the guy
sitting across from her. Billie notices this without having the strength of
character to wonder what’s going on. Every molecule of her being is otherwise
engaged, with misery, woe, self-hatred, heartbreak, shame, all-obliterating
roiling nausea and pain.
Billie
says, “So we meet again.” Which is, don’t you think, the kind of thing people
end up saying when they find themselves in a hotel full of superheroes. “I’m
not a sidekick. And my name’s Billie.”
“Whatever,”
Conrad Linthor says. “Conrad Linthor. So what happened to you?”
Billie
swigs bitter espresso. She lets her hair fall in front of her face. Baby bird,
she thinks. Wrong smell, baby bird.
But
Conrad Linthor doesn’t go away. He says, “All right, I’ll go first. Let’s swap
life stories. That girl at the desk when you were checking in? Aliss? I’ve
slept with her, a couple of times. When nothing better came along. She really
likes me. And I’m an asshole, okay? No excuses. Every time I hurt her, though,
the next time I see her I’m nice again and I apologize and I get her back.
Mostly I’m nice just to see if she’s going to fall for it this time, too. I don’t
know why. I guess I want to see where that place is, the place where she hauls
off and assaults me. Some people have ant farms. I’m more into people. So now
you know what was going on yesterday. And yeah, I know, something’s wrong with
me.”
Billie
pushes her hair back. She says, “Why are you telling me all this?”
He
shrugs. “I don’t know. You look like you’re in a world of hurt. I don’t really
care. It’s just that I get bored. And you look really terrible, and I thought
that there was probably something interesting going on. Besides, Aliss can see
us in here, from the desk, and this will drive her crazy.”
“I’m
okay,” Billie says. “Nobody hurt me. I’m the bad guy here. I’m the idiot.”
“That’s
unexpected. Also interesting. Go on,” Conrad Linthor says. “Tell me everything.”
Billie
tells him. Everything except for the part where she pees the bed.
When
her tale is told, Conrad Linthor stands up and says, “Come on. We’re going to
go see a friend of mine. You need the cure.”
“For
love?” This is Billie’s lame attempt at humor. She was wondering if telling
someone what she’s done would make her feel better. It hasn’t.
“No
cure for love,” Conrad Linthor says. “Because there’s no such thing. Your
hangover we can do something about.”
As
they navigate the lobby, there are new boards up announcing that free
teeth-whitening sessions are available in Suite 412 for qualified superheroes.
Billie looks over at the front desk and sees Aliss looking back. She draws her
finger across her throat. If looks could kill you wouldn’t be reading this
e-mail.
Conrad
Linthor goes through a door that you’re clearly not meant to go through. It’s
labeled. Billie follows anyway and they’re in a corridor, in a maze of
corridors. If this were a MMORPG, the zombies would show up any minute.
Instead, every once in a while, they pass someone who is probably hotel
cleaning staff; bellboys sneaking cigarettes. Everyone nods at Conrad Linthor,
just like the superheroes in the Starbucks in the lobby.
Billie
doesn’t want to ask, but eventually she does. “Who are you?”
“Call
me Eloise,” Conrad Linthor says.
“Sorry?”
Billie imagines that they are no longer in the hotel at all. The corridor they
are currently navigating slopes gently downward. Maybe they will end up on the
shores of a subterranean lake, or in a dungeon, or in Narnia, or King Nermal’s
Chamber, or even Keokuk, Iowa. It’s a small world after all.
“You
know, Eloise. The girl who lives in the Plaza? Has a pet turtle named
Skipperdee?”
He
waits, like Billie’s supposed to know what he’s talking about. When she doesn’t
say anything, he says, “Never mind. It’s just this book—a classic of modern
children’s literature, actually—about a girl who lives in the Plaza. Which is a
hotel. A bit nicer than this one, maybe, but never mind. I live here.”
He
keeps on talking. They keep on walking.
Billie’s
hangover is a special effect. Conrad Linthor is going on and on about
superheroes. His father is an agent. Apparently superheroes have agents.
Represents all of the big guys. Knows everyone. Agoraphobic. Never leaves the
hotel. Everyone comes to him. Big banquet tomorrow night, for his biggest
client. Tyrannosaurus Hex. Hex is retiring. Going to go live in the mountains
and breed tarantula wasps. Conrad Linthor’s father is throwing a party for Hex.
Everyone will be there.
Billie’s
legs are noodles. The ends of her hair are poison needles. Her tongue is a
bristly sponge, and her eyes are bags of bleach.
There’s
a clattering that splits Billie’s brain. Two wheeled carts come round the next
corner like comets, followed at arm’s length by hurtling busboys. They sail
down the corridor at top speed. Conrad Linthor and Billie flatten themselves
against the wall. “You have to move fast,” Conrad explains. “Or else the food
gets cold. Guests complain.”
Around
that corner, enormous doors, still swinging. Big enough to birth a Greyhound
bus bound for Keokuk. A behemoth. Billie passes through the doors onto the far
shores of what is, of course, a hotel kitchen. Far away, miles, it seems to
Billie, there are clouds of vapor and vague figures moving through them.
Clanging noises, people yelling, the thick, sweet smell of caramelized onions,
onions that will never make anyone cry again. Other savory reeks.
Conrad
Linthor steers Billie to a marble-topped table. Copper whisks, mixing bowls,
dinged pots hang down on hooks.
Billie
feels she ought to say something. “You must have a lot of money,” she
contributes. “To live in a hotel.”
“No
shit, Sherlock,” Conrad Linthor says. “Sit down. I’ll be back.”
Billie
climbs, slowly and carefully, up a laddery stool and lays her poor head down on
the dusty, funereal slab. (It’s actually a pastry station, the dust is flour,
but Billie is mentally in a bad place.) Paul Zell, Paul Zell. She stares at the
tiled wall. Billie’s heart has a crack in it. Her head is made of radiation.
The Starbucks espresso she forced down has burnt a thousand pinprick holes in
Billie’s wretched stomach.
Conrad
Linthor comes back too soon. He says, “This is her.”
There’s
a guy with him. Skinny, with serious acne scars. Big shoulders. Funny little
paper hat and a stained apron. “Ernesto, Billie,” Conrad says. “Billie,
Ernesto.”
“How
old did you say?” Ernesto says. He folds his arms, as if Billie is a bad cut of
meat Conrad Linthor is trying to pass off as prime rib.
“Fifteen,
right?”
Billie
confirms.
“She
came to the city because of some pervert she met online?”
“In
a MMORPG,” Conrad says.
“He
isn’t a pervert,” Billie says. “He thought I was my sister. I was pretending to
be my sister. She’s in her thirties.”
“What’s
your guess?” Conrad asks Ernesto. “Superhero or dentist?”
“One
more time,” Billie says. “I’m not here to audition for anything. And do I look
like a dentist?”
“You
look like trouble,” Ernesto says. “Here. Drink this.” He hands her a glass full
of something slimy and green.
“What’s
in it?” Billie says.
“Wheat
grass,” Ernesto says. “And other stuff. Secret recipe. Hold your nose and drink
it down.”
“Yuck,”
Billie says. (I won’t even try to describe the taste of Ernesto’s hangover
cure. Except, I will never drink again.) “Ew, yuck. Yuck, yuck, yuck.”
“Keep
holding your nose,” Ernesto advises Billie. To Conrad: “They met online?”
“Yeah,”
Billie says. “In FarAway.”
“Yeah,
I know that game. Dentist,” Ernesto says. “For sure.”
“Except,”
Conrad says, “it gets better. It wasn’t just a game. Inside this game, they
were playing a game. They were playing chess.”
“Ohhhh,”
Ernesto says. Now he’s grinning. They both are. “Oh as in superher-oh.”
“Superhero,”
Conrad says. They high-five each other. “The only question is who.”
“What
was the alibi again?” Ernesto asks Billie, “The name this dude gave?”
“Paul
Zell?” Billie says. “Wait, you think Paul Zell is a superhero? No way. He does
tech support for a nonprofit. Something involving endangered species.”
Conrad
Linthor and Ernesto exchange another look. “Superhero for sure,” Ernesto says.
Ernesto
says, “Or supervillain. All those freaks are into chess. It’s like a disease.”
“No
way,” Billie says again.
Conrad
Linthor says, “Because there’s no chance Paul Zell would have lied to you about
anything. Because the two of you were being completely and totally honest with
each other.” Which shuts Billie up.
Conrad
Linthor says, “I just can’t get this picture out of my head. This superhero
going out and buying a ring. And there you are. This fifteen-year-old girl.” He
laughs. He nudges Billie as if to say, I’m not laughing at you. I’m laughing
near you.
“And
there I was,” Billie says. “Sitting at the table waiting for him. Like the
biggest idiot in the world.”
Ernesto
has to gasp for air he is laughing so hard.
Billie
says, “I guess it’s kind of funny. In a horrible way.”
“So,
anyway,” Conrad says. “Since Billie’s into chess, I thought we ought to show
her your project. Have they set up the banquet room yet?”
Ernesto
stops laughing, holds his right hand out, like he’s stopping traffic. “Hey,
man. Maybe later? I’ve got prep. I’m salad station tonight. You know?”
“Ernesto’s
an artist,” Conrad says. “I keep telling him he needs to make some
appointments, take a portfolio downtown. My dad says people would pay serious
bucks for what Ernesto does.”
Billie
isn’t really paying attention to this conversation. She’s thinking about Paul
Zell. How could you be a superhero, Paul Zell? Can you miss something that big?
A secret as big as that? Sure, she thinks. Probably you can miss it by a mile.
“I
make things out of butter,” Ernesto says. “It’s no big deal. Like, sure,
someone’s going to pay me a million bucks for some thing I carved out of
butter.”
“It’s
a statement,” Conrad Linthor says, “an artistic statement about the world we
live in.”
“We
live in a world made out of butter,” Ernesto says. “Doesn’t seem like much of a
statement to me. You any good at chess?”
“What?”
Billie says.
“Chess.
You any good?”
“I’m
not bad,” Billie says. “You know, it’s just for fun. Paul Zell’s really good.”
“So
he wins most of the time?” Ernesto says.
“Yeah,”
Billie says. She thinks about it. “Wait, no. I guess I win more.”
“You
gonna be a superhero when you grow up? Because those guys are way into chess.”
Conrad
Linthor says, “It’s like the homicidal triangle. Like setting fires, hurting
small animals, and wetting the bed means a kid may grow up to be a sociopath.
For superheroes, it’s chess. Weird coincidences, that’s another one. For
example, you’re always in the wrong place at the right time. Plus you have an
ability of some kind.”
“I
don’t have an ability,” Billie says. “Not even one of those really pointless
ones like always knowing the right time, or whether it’s going to rain.”
“Your
power might develop later on,” Conrad Linthor says.
“It
won’t.”
“Well,
okay. But it might, anyway,” Conrad Linthor. “It’s why I noticed you in the
first place. Probably. You stick out. She sticks out, right?”
“I
guess,” Ernesto says. He gives her that appraising a cut of meat look again.
Then nods. “Sure. She sticks out. You stick out.”
“I
stick out,” Billie says. “I stick out like what?”
“Even
Aliss noticed,” Conrad says. “She thought you were here to audition, remember?”
Ernesto
says, “Oh, yeah. Because Aliss is such a fine judge of character.”
“Shut
up, Ernesto,” Conrad says. “Look, Billie. It’s not a bad thing, okay? Some
people, you can just tell. So maybe you’re just some girl. But maybe you can do
something that you don’t even know about yet.”
“You
sound like my guidance counselor,” Billie says. “Like my sister. Why do people
always try to tell you that life gets better? Like life has a bad cold. Like,
here I am, and where is my sister right now? She drove my dad up to Peoria. To
St. Francis, because he has pancreatic cancer. And that’s the only reason I’m
here, because my dad’s dying, and so nobody is even going to notice that I’m
gone. Lucky me, right?”
Ernesto
and Conrad Linthor are both staring at her.
“I’m
a superhero,” Billie says. “Or a sidekick. Whatever you say. Paul Zell is a
superhero, too. Everybody’s a superhero. The world is made of butter. I don’t
even know what that means.”
“How’s
the hangover?” Conrad Linthor asks her.
“Better,”
Billie says. The hangover is gone. Of course she still feels terrible, but that’s
not hangover related. That’s Paul Zell related. That’s just everything else.
“Sorry
about you know, uh, your dad.” That’s Ernesto.
Billie
shrugs. Grimaces. As if on cue, there is a piercing scream somewhere far away.
Then a lot of shouting. Some laughing. Off in the distance, something seems to
be happening. “Gotta go,” Ernesto says.
“Ernesto!”
It’s a short guy in a tall hat. He says, “Hey, Mr. Linthor. What’s up?”
“Gregor,”
Conrad says. “Hope that wasn’t anything serious.”
“Nah,
man,” the short guy says. “Just Portland. Sliced off the tip of his pointer
finger. Again. Second time in six months. The guy is a master of disaster.”
“See
you, Conrad,” Ernesto says. “Nice to meet you, Billie. Stay out of trouble.”
As
Ernesto goes off with the short guy, the short guy is saying, “So who’s the
girl? She looks like somebody. Somebody’s sidekick?”
Conrad
yells after them. “Maybe we’ll see you later, okay?”
He
tells Billie, “There’s a get-together tonight up on the roof. Nothing official.
Just some people hanging out. You ought to come by. Then maybe we can go see
Ernesto’s party sculptures.”
“I
may not be here,” Billie says. “It’s Paul Zell’s room, not mine. What if he’s
checked out?”
“Then
your key won’t work,” Conrad Linthor says. “Look, if you’re locked out, just
call up to the penthouse later and tell me and I’ll see what I can do. Right
now I’ve got to get to class.”
“You’re
in school?” Billie says.
“Just
taking some classes down at the New School,” Conrad says. “Life drawing. Film
studies. I’m working on a novel, but it’s not like that’s a full-time
commitment, right?”
Billie
is almost sorry to leave the kitchen behind. It’s the first place in New York
where she’s been one hundred percent sure she doesn’t have to worry about
running into Paul Zell. It isn’t that this is a good thing, it’s just that her
spider sense isn’t tingling all the time. Not that Billie has anything that’s
the equivalent of spider sense. And maybe room 1584 can also be considered a
safe haven now. The room key still works. Someone has remade the bed, taken
away the towels and sheets in the bathroom. Melinda’s red sweater and skirt are
hanging down over the shower rod. Someone rinsed them out first.
Billie
orders room service. Then she decides to set out for Bryant Park. She’ll go
watch the chess players, which is what she and Paul Zell were going to do, what
they talked about doing online. Maybe you’ll be there, Paul Zell.
She
has a map. She walks the whole way. She doesn’t get lost. When she gets to
Bryant Park, sure enough, there are some chess games going on. Old men, college
kids, maybe even a few superheroes. Pigeons everywhere, underfoot. New Yorkers
walking their dogs. A lady yelling. No Paul Zell. Not that Billie would know
Paul Zell if she saw him.
Billie
sits on a bench beside a trashcan, and after a while someone sits down beside
her. Not Paul Zell. A superhero. The superhero from the hotel business center.
“We
meet again,” the superhero says. Which serves Billie right.
Billie
says, “Are you following me?”
“No,”
the superhero says. “Maybe. I’m Lightswitch.”
“I’ve
heard of you,” Billie says. “You’re famous.”
“Famous
is relative,” Lightswitch says. “Sure, I’ve been on Oprah. But I’m no
Tyrannosaurus Hex.”
“There’s
a comic book about you,” Billie says. “Although, uh, she doesn’t look like you.
Not really.”
“The
artist likes to draw the boobs life-sized. Just the boobs. Says it’s artistic
license.”
They
sit for a while in companionable silence. “You play chess?” Billie asks.
“Of
course,” Lightswitch says. “Doesn’t everybody? Who’s your favorite chess
player?”
“Paul
Morphy,” Billie says. “Although Koneru Humpy has the most awesome name ever.”
“Agreed,”
Lightswitch says. “So are you in town for the shindig? Shindig. What kind of
word is that? Archeological excavation of the shin. Knee surgery. Do you work
with someone?”
“Do
you mean, am I a sidekick?” Billie says. “No. I’m not a sidekick. I’m Billie
Faggart. Hi.”
“Sidekick.
There’s another one. Kick in the side. Pain in the neck. Kick in the shin.
Ignore me. I get distracted sometimes.” Lightswitch holds out a hand for Billie
to shake, and Billie does. She thinks that there will be a baby jolt maybe,
like one of those joke buzzers. But there’s nothing. It’s just an ordinary
handshake, except that Lightswitch’s completely solid hand still looks funny,
staticky, like it’s really somewhere else. Billie can’t remember if Lightswitch
is from the future or the eighth dimension. Or maybe neither of those is quite
right.
Two
little kids come up and want Lightswitch’s autograph. They look at Billie, as
if wondering whether they ought to ask for her autograph, too.
Billie
stands up, and Lightswitch says, “Wait a minute. Let me give you my card.”
“Why?”
Billie says.
“Just
in case,” Lightswitch says. “You might change your mind at some point about the
sidekick thing. It isn’t a long-term career, you know, but it’s not a bad thing
to do for a while. Mostly it’s answering fan mail, photo ops, banter practice.”
Billie
says, “Um, what happened to your last sidekick?” And then, seeing the look on
Lightswitch’s face, wonders if this is not the kind of question you’re supposed
to ask a superhero.
“Fell
off a building. Kidding! That was a joke, okay? Sold her story to the tabloids.
Used the proceeds to go to law school.” Lightswitch kicks at a can. “Bam. Damn.
Anyway. My card.”
Billie
looks, but there’s nobody around to tell her what any of this means. Maybe you’d
know, Paul Zell.
Billie
says, “Do you know somebody named Paul Zell?”
“Paul
Zell? Rings a bell. There’s another one. Ding dong. Paul Zell. But no. I don’t
think I do, after all. It’s a business card. Not an executive decision. Just
take it, okay?” Lightswitch says. So Billie does.
Billie
doesn’t intend to show for Conrad Linthor’s shindig. She walks down Broadway.
Gawks at the gawkworthy. Pleasurably ponders a present for her sister, decides
discretion is the better part of harmonious family relationships. Caped
superheroes swoop and wheel and dip around the Empire State Building. No crime
in progress. Show business. Billie walks until she has blisters. Doesn’t think
about Paul Zell. Paul Zell, Paul Zell. Doesn’t think about Lightswitch. Pays
twelve bucks to see a movie and don’t ask me what movie or if it was any good.
I don’t remember. When she comes out of the movie theater, back out onto the
street, everything sizzles with lights. It’s Fourth of July bright. Apparently
nobody in New York ever goes to bed early. Billie decides she’ll go to bed
early. Get a wake-up call and walk down to Port Authority. Catch her bus. Go
home to Keokuk and never think about New York again. Stay off FarAway. Concede
the chess game. Burn the business card. But: Paul Zell, Paul Zell.
Meanwhile,
back to the hotel, Aliss the nemesis has been lying in wait. Actually, it’s
more like standing behind a flower arrangement, but never mind. Aliss pounces.
Billie, mourning lost love, is easy prey.
“Going
to your boyfriend’s party?” Aliss hisses. There’s only one s in that particular
sentence, but Aliss knows how to make an s count.
She
links arms with Billie. Pulls her into an elevator.
“What
party?” Billie says. “What boyfriend?” Aliss gives her a look. Hits the button
marked Roof, then the emergency stop button, like she’s opening cargo doors,
one, two. Goodbye, cruel, old world. That bomb is going to drop.
“If
you mean Conrad Linthor,” Billie says, “That was nothing. In the Starbucks. He
just wanted to talk about you. In fact, he gave me this. Because he was afraid
he was going to lose it. But he’s planning on giving it to you. Tomorrow, I
think.”
She
takes out the ring that you left behind, Paul Zell.
Surely
you’ve checked the jeweler’s box by now. Seen the ring is gone. Billie found it
in the bed sheets that morning when she woke up. Remember? I was wearing it on
my big toe. All day long Billie carried it around in her pocket, just like the
business card. It didn’t fit her ring finger.
I
slipped it on and off, on and off, all day long.
Billie
and Aliss both stare at the ring. Both of them seem to find it hard to speak.
Finally:
“It’s mine?” Aliss says. She puts her hand out, like the ring’s a cute dog. Not
a ring. Like she wants to pet it. “That’s a two-carat diamond. At least.
Antique setting. Just explain one thing, please. Why did Conrad give you my
ring? You expect me to believe he let some girl carry my diamond ring around
all day?”
“Yeah,
well, you know Conrad,” Billie says.
“Yeah,”
Aliss says. She’s silent for another long moment. “Can I?”
She
takes the ring, tries it on her ring finger. It fits. There’s an inappropriate
ache in Billie’s throat. Aliss says, “Wow. Just wow. I guess I have to give it
back. Okay. I can do that.” She holds up her hand. Drags the diamond along the
glass elevator wall, then rubs at the scratch it’s left behind. Then checks the
diamond, like she might have damaged it. But diamonds are like the superheroes
of the mineral world. Diamonds cut glass. Not the other way around.
Aliss
presses the button. The elevator elevates.
“Maybe
you should go to the party and I should just go to bed,” Billie says. “I have
to catch a bus in the morning.”
“No,”
Aliss says. “Wait. Now I’m nervous. I can’t go up there by myself. You have to
come with me. Except we can’t act like we’re friends, because then Conrad will
suspect something’s up. That I know. You can’t tell him I know.”
“I
won’t. I swear,” Billie says.
“How’s
my hair?” Aliss says. “Shit. Don’t tell him, but they fired me. Just like that.
I’m not supposed to be here. I think management knew something was up with me
and Conrad. I’m not the first girl he’s gotten fired. But I’m not going to say anything
right now. I’ll tell him later.”
Billie
says, “That sucks.”
“You
have no idea,” Aliss says. “It’s such a crappy job. People are such assholes,
and you still have to say have a nice day. And smile.”
She
gives the ring back. Smiles.?
The
elevator opens on sky. There’s a sign saying Private Party. Like the whole sky
is a private party. It’s just after nine o’clock. The sky is orange. The pool
is the color the sky ought to be. There are superheroes splashing around in it.
That bubble of blood floating above it, like an oversized beach ball. Tango
music plays.
Conrad
Linthor lounges on a lounge chair. He comes over when he sees Billie and Aliss.
“Girls,” he says.
“Hey,
Conrad,” Aliss says. Her hip cocked like a gun hammer. Her hair is remarkable.
The piercing is in. “Great party.”
“Billie,”
Conrad says. “I’m so glad you came. There are some people you ought to meet.”
He takes Billie’s arm and drags her off. Maybe he’s going to throw her in the
pool.
“Is
Ernesto here?” Billie looks back, but Aliss is having a conversation now with
someone in a uniform.
“This
kind of party isn’t really for hotel staff,” Conrad says. “They get in trouble
if they socialize with the guests.”
“Don’t
worry about Aliss,” Billie says. “Apparently she got fired. But you probably
already know that.”
Conrad
smiles. They’re on the edge of a group of strangers who all look vaguely
familiar, vaguely improbable. There are scales, feathers, ridiculous outfits
designed to show off ridiculous physiques. Why does everything remind Billie of
FarAway? Except for the smell. Why do superheroes smell weird? Paul Zell.
The
tango has become something dangerous. A woman is singing. There is nobody here
that Billie wants to meet.
Conrad
Linthor is drunk. Or high. “This is Billie,” he says. “My sidekick for tonight.
Billie, this is everyone.”
“Hi,
everyone,” Billie says. “Excuse me.” She rescues her arm from Conrad Linthor.
She heads back for the elevator. Aliss has escaped the hotel employee and is
crouched down by the pool, one finger in the water. Probably the deep end. You
can tell by her slumped shoulder that she’s thinking about drowning herself. A
good move: perhaps someone here will save her. Once someone has saved your
life, they might as well fall in love with you, too. It’s just good economics.
“Wait,”
Conrad Linthor says. He’s not that old, Billie decides. He’s just a kid. He
hasn’t even done anything all that bad, yet. And yet you can see how badness
accumulates around him. Builds up like lightning on a lightning rod. If Billie
sticks around, it will build up on her, too. That spider sense she doesn’t have
is tingling. Paul Zell, Paul Zell.
“Ernesto
will be so disappointed,” Conrad Linthor says. They’re both jogging now. Billie
sees the lit stair sign, decides not to wait for an elevator. She takes the
stairs two at a time. Conrad Linthor bounds down behind her. “He really wanted
you to see what he made. For the banquet. It’s too bad you can’t stay. I wanted
to invite you to the banquet. You could meet Tyrannosaurus Hex. Get an autograph
or two. Make some good contacts. Being a sidekick is all about making the
contacts.”
“I’m
not a sidekick!” Billie yells up. “That was a dumb joke even before you made it
the first time. Even if I were a sidekick, I wouldn’t be yours. Like you’re a
superhero. Just because you know people. So what’s your secret name, superhero?
What’s your superpower?”
She
stops on the stairs so suddenly that Conrad Linthor runs into her. They both
stumble forward, smack into the wall on the twenty-second floor landing. But
they don’t fall.
Conrad
Linthor says, “My superpower is money.” The wall props him up. “The only
superpower that counts for anything. Better than invisibility. Better than
being able to fly. Much better than telekinesis or teleportation or that other
one. Telepathy. Knowing what other people are thinking. Why would you ever want
to know what other people are thinking? Did you know everyone thinks that one
day they might be a millionaire? Like that’s a lot of money. They have no idea.
They don’t want to be a superhero. They just want to be like me. They want to
be rich.”
Billie
has nothing to say to this.
“You
know what the difference is between a superhero and a supervillain?” Conrad
Linthor asks her.
Billie
waits.
“The
superhero has a really good agent,” Conrad Linthor says. “Someone like my dad.
You have no idea the kind of stuff they get away with. Fifteen-year-old girls
is nothing.”
“What
about Lightswitch?” Billie says.
“Who?
Her? She’s no big deal,” Conrad Linthor says. “She’s okay. I don’t really know
much about her. She’s kind of old school.”
“I
think I’m going to go to bed now,” Billie says.
“No,”
Conrad Linthor says. “Wait. You have to come with me and see what Ernesto did.
It’s just so cool. Everything’s carved out of butter.”
“If
I go see, will you let me go to bed?”
“Sure,”
Conrad Linthor says.
“Will
you be nice to Aliss? If she’s still up at the party when you get back?”
“I’ll
try,” Conrad Linthor says.
“Okay,”
Billie says. “I’ll go look at Ernesto’s butter. Are we going to go meet him?”
Conrad
Linthor levers himself off the wall. Pats it. “Ernesto? I don’t know where he
is. How should I know?”
They
go into the forbidden maze. Back to the kitchen, and through it, now empty and
dark and somehow like a morgue. A mausoleum.
“Ernesto’s
been doing the work in a freezer,” Conrad Linthor says. “You have to keep these
guys cold. Wait. Let me get it unlocked. Cool tool, right? Borrowed it from The
Empty Jar. He’s one of dad’s clients. They’re making a movie about him. I saw
the script. It’s crap.”
The
lock comes off. The lights go on. Before I tell you what was inside the
freezer, let me first tell you something about how big the freezer is. It will
help you visualize, later on. The freezer is plenty big. Bigger than most New
York apartments, Billie thinks, although this is just hearsay. She’s never been
in a New York apartment.
What’s
inside the supersized freezer? Supervillains. Warm Gun, Glowworm, Radical!,
Heatdeath, The Scribbler, The Ninjew, Cat Lady, Hellalujah, Shibboleth, The
Shambler, Mandroid, Manplant, The Manticle, Patty Cakes. Lots of others. Name a
famous supervillain and he or she is in the freezer. They’re life-size. They’re
not real, although at first Billie’s heart slams. She thinks: who caught all
these guys? Why are they so perfectly still? Maybe Conrad Linthor is a
superhero after all.
Conrad
Linthor touches Hellalujah’s red, bunchy bicep. Presses just a little. The
color smears. Lardy, yellow-white underneath. The supervillains are made out of
butter. “Hand-tinted,” Conrad says.
“Ernesto
made these?” Billie says. She wants to touch one, too. She walks up to Patty
Cakes. Breathes on the cold, outstretched palms. You can see Patty Cakes’s life
line. Her love line. Billie realizes something else. The butter statues are all
decorated to look like chess pieces. Their signature outfits have been changed
to black and red. Cat Lady is wearing a butter crown.
Conrad
Linthor puts his hand on Hellalujah’s shoulder. Puts his arm around Hellalujah.
Then he squeezes, hard. His arm goes through Hellalujah’s neck. Like an arm
going through butter. The head pops off.
“Be
careful!” Billie says.
“I
can’t believe it’s butter,” Conrad says. He giggles. “Come on. Can you believe
this? He made a whole chess set out of butter. And why? For some banquet for
some guy who used to fight crime? That’s just crap. This is better. Us here,
having some fun. This is spontaneous. Haven’t you always wanted to fight the
bad guy and win? Now’s your chance.”
“But
Ernesto made these!” Billie’s fists are clenched.
“You
heard him,” Conrad says. “It’s no big deal. It’s not like it’s art. There’s no
statement here. It’s just butter.”
He
has Hellalujah’s sad head in his arms. “Heavy,” he says. “Food fight. Catch.”
He throws the head at Billie. It hits her in the chest and knocks her over.
She
lies on the ice-cold floor, looking at Hellalujah’s head. One side is flat.
Half of Hellalujah’s broad nose is stuck like a slug to Billie’s chest. Her
right arm is slimy with butter and food dye.
Billie
sits up. She cradles Hellalujah’s head, hurls it back at Conrad. She misses.
Hellalujah’s head smacks into Mandroid’s shiny stomach. Hangs there, half
embedded.
“Funny,”
Conrad Linthor says. He giggles.
Billie
shrieks. She leaps at him, her hands killing claws. They both go down on top of
The Shambler. Billie brings her knee up between Conrad Linthor’s legs, drives
it up into butter. She grabs Conrad Linthor by the hair, bangs his head on The
Shambler’s head. “Ow,” Conrad Linthor says. “Ow, ow, ow.”
He
twists under her. Gets hold of her hands, pulls at them even as she tightens
her grip on his hair. His hair is slick with butter, and she can’t hold on. She
lets go. His head flops down. “Get off,” he says. “Get off.”
Billie
drives her elbow into his stomach. Her feet skid a little as she stands up. She
grabs hold of Warm Gun’s gun for balance, and it breaks off. “Sorry,” she says,
apologizing to butter. “I’m sorry. So sorry.”
Conrad
Linthor is trying to sit up. There’s spit at the corner of his mouth, or maybe
it’s butter.
Billie
runs for the door. Gets there just as Conrad Linthor realizes what she’s doing.
“Wait!” he says. “Don’t you dare! You bitch!”
Too
late. She’s got the door shut. She leans against it, smearing it with butter.
Conrad
Linthor pounds on the other side. “Billie!” It’s a faint yell. Barely audible. “Let
me out, okay? It was just fun. I was just having fun. It was fun, wasn’t it?”
Here’s
the thing, Paul Zell. It was fun. That moment when I threw Hellalujah’s head at
him? That felt good. It felt so good I’d pay a million bucks to do it again. I
can admit that now. But I don’t like that it felt good. I don’t like
that it felt fun. But I guess now I understand why supervillains do what they
do. Why they run around and destroy things. Because it feels fantastic. Someday
I’m going to buy a lot of butter and build something out of it, just so I can
tear it all to pieces again.
Billie
could leave Conrad Linthor in the freezer. Walk away. Somebody would probably
find him. Right?
But
then she thinks about what he’ll do in there. He’ll kick apart all of the other
buttervillains. Stomp them into greasy pieces. She knows he’ll do it, because
she can imagine doing the same thing.
She
lets him out.
“Not
funny,” Conrad Linthor says. He looks very funny.
Picture
him, all decked out in red and black butter. His lips are purplish-bluish. He’s
shivering with cold. So is Billie.
“Not
funny at all,” Billie agrees. “What the hell was that? What were you doing in
there? What about your friend? Ernesto? How could you do that to him?”
“He’s
not really a friend,” Conrad Linthor says. “Not like you and me. He’s just some
guy I hang out with sometimes. Friends are boring. I get bored.”
“We’re
not friends,” Billie says.
“Sure,”
Conrad Linthor says. “I know that. But I thought if I said we were, you might
fall for it. You have no idea how stupid some people are. Besides, I was doing
it for you. No, really. I was. Sometimes when a superhero is in a really bad
situation, that’s when they finally discover their ability. What they can do.
With some people it’s an amulet, or a ring, but mostly it’s just environmental.
Your adrenaline kicks in. My father is always trying stuff on me, just in case
I’ve got something that we haven’t figured out yet.”
Maybe
some of this is true, and maybe all of it is true, and maybe Conrad Linthor is
just testing Billie again. Is she that stupid? He’s watching her right now, to
see if she’s falling for any of this.
“I’m
out of here,” Billie says. She checks her pocket, just to make sure Paul Zell’s
ring is still there. She’s been doing that all day.
“Wait,”
Conrad Linthor says. “You don’t know how to get back. You need help.”
“I
made a trail,” Billie says. All the way through the corridors, this time, she
pressed the diamond along the wall. Left a thin little mark. Nothing anyone
else would even know to look for.
“Fine,”
Conrad Linthor says. “I’m going to stay down here and make some scrambled eggs.
Sure you don’t want any?”
“I’m
not hungry,” Billie says.
Even
as she’s leaving, Conrad Linthor is explaining to her that they’ll meet again.
This is like their origin story. Maybe they’re each other’s nemesis, or maybe
they’re destined to team up and save the world and make lots of—
Eventually
Billie can’t hear him anymore. She leaves a trail of butter all the way back to
the lobby. Gets onto an elevator before anyone has noticed the state she’s in,
or maybe by this point in the weekend the hotel staff are used to stranger
things.
She
takes a shower and goes to bed still smelling faintly of butter. She wakes up
early. The bubble of blood is down in the lobby again, floating over the
fountain.
Billie
thinks about going over to ask for an autograph. Pretending to be a fan. Could
you pop that bubble with a ballpoint pen? This is the kind of thought Conrad
Linthor goes around thinking, she’s pretty sure.
Billie
catches her bus. And that’s the end of the story, Paul Zell. Dear Paul Zell.
Except
for the ring. Here’s the thing about the ring. Billie wrapped it in tissue
paper and sealed it up in a hotel envelope. She wrote “Ernesto in the kitchen”
on the outside of the envelope. She wrote a note. The note says: “This ring
belongs to Paul Zell. If he comes looking for it, maybe he’ll give you a
reward. A couple hundred bucks seems fair. Tell him I’ll pay him back. But if
he doesn’t get in touch, you should keep the ring. Or sell it. I’m sorry about
Hellalujah and Mandroid and The Shambler. I didn’t know what Conrad Linthor was
going to do.”
So,
Paul Zell. That’s the whole story. Except for the part where I got home and
found the e-mail from you, the one where you explained what had happened to
you. That you had an emergency appendectomy, and never made it to New York at
all, and what happened to me? Did I make it to the hotel? Did I wonder where
you were? You say you can’t imagine how worried and/or angry I must have been.
Etc.
I’ll
be honest with you, Paul Zell. I read your e-mail and part of me thought, I’m
saved. We’ll both pretend none of this ever happened. I’ll go on being Melinda,
and Melinda will go on being the Enchantress Magic Eightball, and Paul Zell,
whoever Paul Zell is, will go on being Boggle the Master Thief. We’ll play
chess and chat online, and everything will be exactly the way that it was
before.
But
that would be crazy. I would be a fifteen-year-old liar, and you would be some
weird guy who’s so pathetic and lonely that he’s willing to settle for me. Not
even for me. To settle for the person I was pretending to be. But you’re better
than that, Paul Zell. You have to be better than that. So I wrote you this
letter.
If
you read this letter the whole way through, now you know what happened to your
ring, and a lot of other things too. I still have your conditioner. If you give
Ernesto the reward, let me know and I’ll sell Constant Bliss and the
Enchantress Magic Eightball. So I can pay you back. It’s not a big deal. I can
go be someone else, right?
Or
else, I guess, you could ignore this letter, and we could just pretend that I
never sent it. That I never came to New York to meet Paul Zell. That Paul Zell
wasn’t going to give me a ring.
We
could pretend you never discovered my secret identity. We could go on being
Boggle the Master Thief and the Enchantress Magic Eightball. We could meet up a
couple times a week in FarAway and play chess. We could even go on a quest.
Save the world. We could chat. Flirt. I could tell you about Melinda’s week,
and we could pretend that maybe someday we’re going to be brave enough to meet
face-to-face.
But
here’s the deal, Paul Zell. I’ll be older one day. I may never discover my
superpower. I don’t think I want to be a sidekick. Not even yours, Paul Zell.
Although maybe that would have been simpler. If I’d been honest. And if you’re
what or who I think you are. And maybe I’m not even being honest now. Maybe I’d
settle for sidekick. For being your sidekick. If that was all you offered.
Conrad
Linthor is crazy and dangerous and a bad person, but I think he’s right about
one thing. He’s right that sometimes people meet again. Even if we never really
truly met each other, I want to believe you and I will meet again. I want you
to know that there was a reason that I bought a bus ticket and came to New
York. The reason was that I love you. That part was really true. I really did
throw up on Santa Claus once. I can do twelve cartwheels in a row. I’m allergic
to cats. May third is my birthday, not Melinda’s. I didn’t lie to you about
everything.
When
I’m eighteen, I’m going to take the bus back to New York City. I’m going to
walk down to Bryant Park. And I’m going to bring my chess set. I’m going to do
it on my birthday. I’ll be there all day long.
Your
move, Paul Zell.
Kelly
Link is the author of the collection Pretty Monsters, as well as Stranger
Things Happen and Magic for Beginners. She lives in Northampton,
Massachusetts, with her partner, Gavin J. Grant. Together they run Small Beer
Press and produce the twice-yearly zine Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet
as well as co-edit the fantasy half of The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror.
Link’s stories have won the Nebula, the Hugo, and the World Fantasy Awards.
When
she was in third grade, Kelly read the Lord of the Rings series eight times.
Today she’s a Katamari Damacy addict, and someone (Holly Black) is finally
teaching her how to play D&D.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Bryan Lee O’Malley.
FREAK THE GEEK
by
john green
Right
after our last class, Kayley and I are walking past the only bit of stone wall
that survived the epic 1922 fire that nearly destroyed Hoover Preparatory
School for Girls. Tragically, the school was able to reopen, which led
inevitably to our matriculation at this god-awful place. The only redeemable
facet of Hoover is Kayley herself, who is about the best baof one could ask
for. (Baof meaning, of course, best and only friend; it is the final frontier
in friendship, the heady waters out past the Sea of Bff.)
So
we’re walking past the waist-high ruin of the wall, which everyone since 1922
has touched whenever walking past it—the wall has been touched so many times
that it is worn down into an almost pleasant oval. Kayley walks past, spits in
her hand, and rubs the wall. I laugh, and then don’t touch it myself, not
because I’m scared of Kayley’s germs, but because I hate traditions.
Hoover
Preparatory School for Girls has a number of profoundly stupid traditions—such
as the singing-the-alma-mater-song-every-Thursday-at-lunch tradition, and the
stand-when-your-teachers-enter-the-classroom tradition, and the
everyone-has-to-wear-the-exact-same-uniform-so-that-no-one-will-be-able-to-tell-who-the-geeks-are-except-of-course-everyone-can-tell-who-the-geeks-are-because-geek-isn’t-something-you-wear-it-is-something-you-are
tradition.
As
it happens, I think doing things solely because they were done in the past is
absolutely idiotic. I suppose it shows respect to our teachers when we stand
every time they come into the room, but you know what would show more respect?
If the insolent students who have colonized this awful place paid attention in
class. Or took notes.
Witness,
for instance, seventh period: AP Physics. In the row before me, Amber and
Nataley quietly discuss whose basically identical calf-length white socks are
cuter. (“No, yours are,” Amber whispers, when Dr. Halfrecht turns around to
draw a diagram of how one can measure the speed of light. “No,” Nataley mouths
silently in response. “Yours are adorable.”) Beside me, Amelia Lionel, the heir
to the Wonder Bread fortune (really!), pretends to sip from a can of Coke. In
fact, she is spitting tobacco juice into it. Dipping is cool here, for some
reason, particularly if you are on the field hockey team, which Amelia is. The
weirdest things get cool sometimes. This is why I have never taken a lot of
stock in ‘being’ cool (as if popularity is something that inhabits you,
permanently, a virus that overwhelms your immune system so completely that you
cease to ‘be’ you; instead you have become cool). Sometimes I like things cool
kids like. But I find it a little ridiculous to like ALL of the things that the
cool kids like. I mean, dip? Really? All the tooth-staining power of coffee
with the extra added bonus of mouth cancer? Thank you, but no.
The
bell rings. We stand and wait as poor Dr. Halfrecht, who just wants to share
the magic of physics with young people, shuffles out of the room, shoulders
slightly hunched. He perks up a little when he sees Kayley, who actually likes
physics, smiling at him, and then shuffles out the door.
So,
yes. We are awash in a sea of traditions, and I hate them all. I like going to
Hoover, because the only thing worse than having just a baof is being separated
from her. I mean, Kayley is the badass I can never be, and if you can’t be a
badass, it is at least a privilege to hang out with one. Hoover is all right.
But the incessant fetishizing of traditions? Unbearable.
And
so when, just after Kayley spitrubs the stone, someone runs past Kayley and me
and whispers “Freak the Geek,” I am doubly pissed. First, I am pissed because
Freak the Geek is a tradition. And second, I’m pissed because you only hear
those words whispered to you when you are one of the geeks who are about to get
freaked. I’m not ashamed that I love Dr. Who, or that I’ve read ten
thousand pages of HP fanfiction online. I’m not even ashamed about my Pokémon
addiction. (Okay, a little.) I like being a geek. But no one—not even the
hard-core geeks who have g-e-e-k tattooed on their knuckles—wants to be one of
THE geeks.
Kayley
and I wheel around simultaneously, trying to identify the whisperer. But she’s
already several paces away, just a narrow-hipped body with a blond ponytail
bobbing around. She could be any of us, really. And that’s the idea, I guess:
Freak the Geek is the one day each year when everybody at Hoover gets to be One
of Us—except, I suppose, for Kayley and me. I feel weirdly embarrassed, like I’ve
disappointed the universe by failing to claw far enough out of the social-caste
basement to escape whatever humiliation awaits.
We
know the drill, because we’ve seen geeks Freaked our freshman and sophomore
years. The entire class gets together—at least everyone who is willing to
participate in idiotic traditions, which is almost everyone—and on a chosen day
in the second semester of junior year, they pick two geeks to Freak. Freaking
takes various forms, of course: They might drag you by the ankles to the pond
and throw you in, or they might egg your car with three hundred eggs. The Freaking
always lacks cleverness, because—as previously noted—those doing the planning
don’t spend enough of their time engaged in academic pursuits. I mean, think of
the Freaking opportunities physics provides!
Kayley
and I don’t say anything; we just take off sprinting toward my car. I figure it’s
our best chance. But when we get within view of the parking lot, I see fifty
girls standing in concentric rings around my SUV. Each of them appears to be
holding a gun. “Jesus, Lauren,” she mumbles under her breath to me, “have they
renamed it Kill the Geek?” One of them—honestly, they all look the same from
this distance, but I think it might be this field hockey girl named Josie—raises
her weapon toward us. It’s a strange-looking gun, with a pink handle and an
exceptionally long barrel. I’m pretty sure it doesn’t shoot bullets, but even
so I dive for the ground and cover my head. Kayley just stands there, and when
I look up at her, she’s shaking her head. “Paintballs?!” she shouts. “Paintballs?!
The whole world of mischief and malfeasance is available to you and you pick
PAINTBALLS?! You disappoint me, ladies.” I cover my head up and want to
disappear, but I manage in a shaky voice to say, “You’re an f’ing folk hero, K?—”
The
sound that interrupts me is not like a gunshot; it’s just a loud puff of air. I’m
watching from the ground: Kayley doesn’t even flinch when a splatter of scarlet
red paint bursts a foot away from her head against one of our campus’s famed
live oaks. I’m inclined to stay down, but Kayley reaches down and pulls on the
collar of my school-provided itchy white blouse, and I rise. We take off
running together, away from the parking lot toward the lacrosse practice field.
I don’t hear any more paintball firings as I race across Hoover Green. I want
to run back toward the classrooms, because surely someone will help. I mean,
the administration has no official policy on Freak the Geek because they love
traditions too much to denounce any of them, but they wouldn’t let this happen
to us. But Kayley grabs me, steering me toward the woods. “We just need a
teacher,” I say. I can hear them behind me, some girl shouting, “Switch to
automatic mode, Scarlet Ballers!” Kayley swivels around and starts running
backward long enough to shout, “You call yourselves the Scarlet Ballers and we’re
the geeks?”
I
hear a series of air bursts, and I turn back long enough to see how far away
they are and the bright red explosions littering the ground behind of us.
Kayley shouts, “Lauren, come on. Fast.” We’re almost across the lacrosse field
now, a thick stand of trees before us, and the Freakers must have terrible aim
or else paintball guns are hard to shoot, because the trees are soon riddled
with abstract paintings in red, but nothing’s hit me yet. Kayley’s running just
in front of me, crouching slightly, and I say, “Stay low, stay low,” and she
says, “I know,” and then finally we’re in among the trees.
And
here is our advantage: The Freakers might be in better physical shape than us,
but no one knows these woods like Kayley and me. We’ve been walking around the
hundreds of acres of forest on Hoover’s campus for three years’ worth of lunch
periods. Both the food and the atmosphere at the cafeteria are unbearable, and
anyway, we’ve never really gotten along terribly well with the girls who eat
there—which is to say all of them. So as Kayley and I weave parallel paths
through the trees and brush, a thick blanket of rotting leaves cushioning our
every step, I can hear the voices of the Freakers grow more distant. I’m still
half-running, which makes me fully out of breath. Still, my wits have recovered
sufficiently to talk in complete sentences.
“I
never really thought about it before,” I tell Kayley as we simultaneously duck
under a low-hanging oak branch, “but just the phrase ‘Freak the Geek’ is just
hugely lame.”
“Yeah,”
Kayley says. “True. It’s almost like the name was thought up by a bunch of
mustachioed purple-hued maltworms.” Kayley likes using Shakespearean insults.
I
get down on one knee in a flash to pull up my socks—a girl has to protect
herself from poison ivy. “Richard III?” I guess.
“Henry
IV,” she says.
I
nod. I can hardly hear the girls behind us anymore; I mostly just hear our
breath coming fast and hard and the ground scrunching beneath us. “Like,
admittedly I am not an expert in slang,” I say, “but isn’t freaking
usually kind of sexual?”
Kayley
turns around to me and runs backward just long enough to say, “Example?”
“‘Madam,
I wish to freak your body.’ Or, ‘My heart desires to become freaky with you.’”
“Ha,”
says Kayley. She doesn’t laugh much, but she ha’s a fair amount. “Yeah, well,
maybe that’s what they want. Maybe that’s why they picked the cutest girls in
the junior class. Maybe they just want to slather us in paintball paint and
then do unspeakable things to us.” I laugh, but only for a syllable. I think
Kayley is beautiful—oval face and big eyes and very curvy—and I think that I am
marginally acceptable. I mean, there are no large-scale problems with me that I
can detect, except for a general lack of vroom in the bust area and a nose that
occupies a bit too much space. But no one would think of me as pretty at
Hoover. Or even Kayley. Being pretty here involves so much more than just being
pretty, and frankly I don’t have time for it.
By
the time we crest the hill, I can’t even hear the Freakers anymore, and even
though my Mary Janes are half-soaked, I feel good. I wish they hadn’t picked
us. There are plenty of unpopular people to go around—the drama kids who do the
tech work, the girl who single-handedly runs the student newspaper, the girls
who Kayley and I play Pokémon with in the student lounge during free periods—but
if they had to pick us, at least they’ve picked BOTH of us.
We
descend the other side of the hill, headed toward the cemetery where the school
founder and her family are buried. My weight is way back on my ankles as I
half-walk and half-slide down the hill, dodging boulders and trees and the
immense mounds of kudzu that have overtaken bushes twice as tall as me. We get
down the hill much quicker than we got up it, and I know we’re near the bottom
when I hear Hoover Creek.
“The
bridge,” I say.
“Yeah,
obviously,” Kayley answers without looking back at me.
“Jesus,
sorry,” I say. The land flattens out and Kayley launches into full stride, and
she gets way out in front of me, as if she feels compelled to remind me that
she’s faster than I am. But it doesn’t matter—we’re going to the same place. I
watch her reach the dirt road that leads back to the stables, run parallel to
it for a moment, and then dip her head down underneath the one-lane bridge that
crosses over the creek.
Kayley
and I had spent many lunches under the bridge—the cement outcropping lets us
sit with our legs dangling over the water, which ran loud enough to muffle our
voices to anyone walking or driving above, but quiet enough that we could
always hear each other.
I
reach the bridge a couple minutes later and sit down next to Kayley, who is
staring into the water.
She
doesn’t say anything to me, so after a while, I tell her, “I feel kinda like an
ork, hiding out under a bridge.”
“A
troll,” she says, and then sighs. “You feel kinda like a troll.”
“No,
trolls are people. I don’t feel like a person. I feel like an ork,” I insist.
She
sighs again, this time clearly annoyed. “Lauren,” she says. “You’re so stupid
sometimes. Trolls are not people. Orks are not people. Only humans are people.
Orks are from Tyrol folklore, and they live on mountains. Trolls live under
bridges. And they have really long hair and big noses, and that’s clearly what
you mean when you say ork.”
I
reach over and put my hand on her shoulder and say, “Okay. Sorry. I meant
trolls. Jeez, are you okay?”
“Yeah,
Lauren, I’m splendid. Everyone in my entire class is trying to attack me with
paintball guns, and I’ve officially been declared one of the two least-liked
people in my peer group, and my best friend doesn’t know crap about folklore,
and I’m dirty and sweaty and gross and just splendid.”
“Well,
you don’t have to be bitchy,” I say. “It’s not my fault.”
She
says nothing.
“It’s
not my fault,” I repeat, and she says nothing, and then smaller, I say, “You
think…”
She
takes that as a start. “I think that sometimes you can be a little…I don’t
know. Meek. And they prey on that. So they prey on us.”
I
just stand up and climb out from under the bridge. Maybe what bothers me so
much is the thought that Kayley might be right, but mostly I’m just furious
with her for even thinking that, let alone saying it out loud.
“Where
are you going?” she asks.
“To
the car,” I say as I walk away. I’m talking so softly she probably can’t even
hear me. “All things being equal, I would rather be paintballed.”
I’m
walking for about thirty seconds when I hear Kayley’s footfalls behind me. “I’m
sorry,” she says.
I
wheel around. “You know, you’re a total know-it-all. And it’s incredibly rude
sometimes; I mean, you’re not perfect either, and you act like it’s my fault
but it’s not my fault for being quiet or your fault for being a know-it-all. It’s
not your problem or my problem; it’s their problem. They’re the demented ones,
not us, so don’t take it out on me, because the only thing that holds anything
together for me is having someone else on the Not Demented Team.”
Kayley
just nods, and then we stand there for a second, and then she hugs me. She
says, “I’m sorry,” and I can hear her crying in her voice a little, but then
when we separate, she has her hands on my shoulders and says, “Back to the
bridge for the trolls!”
We
go back to the bridge and just listen to the water run. There is this
phenomenon that Dr. Halfrecht taught us about in physics, about particle
behavior, and I’m thinking about it while I watch the water rumble over the
pebbles in the creek bed. When particles are suspended in water, they move around
really weirdly, I guess, and one way to think of how they move around is that
every time they run into another particle, they immediately forget everything
about where they’ve been before. Fighting with Kayley is like this, thank God.
We can completely forget our fights as soon as we run into each other in a
not-fighty way, and I love that about her.
So
after a minute, I say, “I still think trolls are people.”
“They
aren’t human,” Kayley answers, friendlier now.
“Right;
I’m not saying they’re human. I’m saying they’re people.”
“Dude,”
she says, “I think you have a completely insane take on what constitutes
personhood. For starters, people are real.”
“Oh,
really? The Freakers strike me as pretty fake, but they’re still people,” I
say.
“Ha,”
she says. “Fair enough. Would they were clean enough to spit upon, as the Bard
would say, but they are people.”
“And
so are trolls.”
“No,”
Kayley says, smiling. “Trolls are trolls; elves are elves; orks are orks;
fairies are fairies.”
“I
would say that trolls and elves are definitely people. Elves have to be people,
because interspecies sex is gross, and there’s nothing gross about Aragorn
getting it on with Arwen in Lord of the Rings.”
“Is
the kind of thing someone would say,” Kayley scoffs, “if someone was basing
their analysis on the movies, not the books. Doesn’t happen in the books!”
“Wrong!”
I say. The burden of meekness has lifted. “They get married in the appendices!
It’s a total symbol for the restoration of Numenor! Pwned!”
“We
will have to continue this discussion,” Kayley says, realizing her defeat, “at
another juncture. For now, let us return to your car.”
On
the walk there, circling back around the other side of campus, we find other
debates: Do zombies bleed blood? What happens if a zombie attacks a unicorn?
How can mermaids hook up with seamen if they have no legs to spread? Princess
or Toad? Dawn or May? By the time we make it to the car, in the gray twilight,
I’ve forgotten our fight entirely in a way that the Freakers never forget their
fights, because their fights are all they have. The Freakers have gone home,
their cars all disappeared from the parking lot.
There’s
a single lipstick-red splotch of paintball goo on the front grill of my car. It
doesn’t wash off for months, but I don’t mind. It is not my scarlet letter. It’s
theirs.
John
Green is the Printz Award–winning author of the novels Looking for
Alaska, An Abundance of Katherines, and Paper Towns. He is
also an unabashed fan of underappreciated role-playing games, most particularly
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Game.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Bryan Lee O'Malley.
THE TRUTH ABOUT DINO GIRL
by
barry lyga
Okay,
follow me for a second: Guys are like dinosaurs.
We
don’t know much about dinosaurs. We know a lot, but not nearly enough. Just
like with guys.
Of
the twelve hundred or so genera suspected to exist, we’ve only discovered
around three hundred and fifty. There are huge gaps in our knowledge.
When you go to a museum or watch a movie and you see a dinosaur with a certain
color pattern on its hide, that’s just someone’s speculation. It’s informed
speculation, sure, but it’s still just guesswork. Because we don’t know.
We’re
guessing what they looked like based on patterns imprinted on petrified mud. We
conjure their motions from the interrelationships of their bones, figuring that
if they fit together this way, then they must have moved this
way.
We’re
guessing what they sounded like.
Roar.
It’s
the closest we can come to the sound.
Maybe
Grawr.
But
there’s not much difference between the two, and still that’s as close as we
can come.
We
know so much and we know nothing, absolutely nothing, nothing at all.
Again,
like with guys.
I
tried to explain this to Sooz. Sooz is my best friend.
Sooz
is my only friend, really.
We
were at Sooz’s house, doing our homework in her room. Other kids were out doing
things, but we had no after-school activities. It was early in our freshman
year and I had tried to start a Fossil-Hunters Club, but there were no takers.
Sooz wanted to join the art club because she’s all about the art, but it was
all poseurs, so she quit.
I
was on the bed, reading. She was at her desk, madly sketching away. Part of her
assignment was not using the computer. Which, to Sooz, is like saying, “Here.
Draw this with your nose.”
“First
of all,” I told her, “we know they definitely exist. We have proof of that.”
“Duh.”
“And
then, well…for guys and dinosaurs, even though we have evidence of them
and their habits, they’re still a mystery to us.”
“This
is about Jamie,” she said knowingly.
And
it was.
Jamie
Terravozza.
See,
there were certain things I knew for sure. I knew that the dinosaurs lived from
65 million to 230 million years ago. I knew that Compsognathus was the smallest
dinosaur ever discovered—about the size of a chicken. I knew that the theropods
were the only dinosaurs to survive the entire Age of Dinosaurs—first on the
scene, last to die off. I knew that predators evolved early stereoscopic vision
to aid in the hunt and that Troodon had the highest brain-to-body-mass ratio of
any dinosaur.
I
knew that they shook the earth when they walked.
I
also knew that I was in love with Jamie Terravozza.
He
was a junior and on the baseball team, while I was a mere freshman, and a geek.
But it didn’t matter.
He
sat across the aisle from me in biology. I felt out of place—it was all seniors
and juniors in there because it’s an advanced class and there I was, this
freshman girl. A Compsognathus among Carcharodontosaurs.
I
remember the moment when it happened, when I fell in love. One day Mrs. Knight
asked us why animals never evolve with three limbs instead of four or two or
six or eight. I raised my hand. I was the only one. I said, “Bilateral symmetry”
as soon as she pointed at me. Zik Lorenz—another baseball player—chuckled and
said, “What’s this about bisexual?” My cheeks burned and everyone laughed but
me. And then I noticed Jamie. He wasn’t laughing either. He just rolled his
eyes.
I
couldn’t believe it.
He
flashed me a grin, then scribbled something on his notebook and slid it to the
edge of his desk so that I could see it:
IGNORE
HIM. HE’S AN IDIOT.
I
loved him for that.
There
were no other notes after that. Every time I went to answer a question, though—the
too-smart freshman in a room of upperclassmen—he would nod his head a little
bit, like it was okay.
God.
Love.
The
problem, of course, was that he had a girlfriend already: Andi Donnelly. A
junior. Captain of the girls’ soccer team. Drop-dead gorgeous in all the ways
boys like.
Sooz
sighed and threw down her pencil. “Coprolite!” she said. “This is just one big
piece of coprolite.”
(In
second grade, I made the mistake of telling Sooz the scientific term for
petrified dung.)
“Coprolite,
coprolite, coprolite!” She crumpled up her paper. “I suck. I have coprolite for
brains. You do it.” She threw the paper at me.
“No
way. Uh-uh.” I was a decent artist—you have to be, if you want to be a
paleontologist, all of those bones and fossils to sketch while on a dig—but I
was mechanical. I could draw something right in front of me, but I couldn’t
invent. I couldn’t draw the pictures in my brain, the way Sooz could.
I
looked at the piece she’d thrown at me. It was gorgeous. Just not up to Sooz’s
impossible standards.
She
sighed again. “Who knew high school would be this hard?”
“What?
It’s not hard. We’re both doing…”
“I
mean guys,” she said. “Jamie.” She looked at me. “You know—dinosaurs.”
The
next day, sitting at lunch, Sooz read A Song Flung Up to Heaven. I read Scientific
American. That was how we rolled.
“Apatosaur
in the house,” Sooz murmured.
I
followed her gaze. Andi had sashayed into the lunchroom. Jamie followed,
carrying two lunch trays. He always did that for her. I loved the way he
balanced both trays so carefully, but casually, like it was nothing. His arms
went all taut and on days when he wore short sleeves (like that day), I could
see the tension in his biceps and their hardness.
He
had a tattoo of a flaming baseball on his left arm, just below the cuff of his
T-shirt. I saw it all the time in biology because he sat to my right and I
looked at it all the time and it was like it was tattooed on my brain.
My
bio notebook was filled with pages of me drawing that tattoo over and over
again, applying my meager art skills to it as if it were a thigh bone from a
brachiosaur found on a dig, and I was trying to capture it, pristine and
perfect, before plastering it and shipping it off to a museum.
In
the meantime, my sketches would be all the world would see.
Drawing
that baseball, over and over…
“Apatosaur,”
Sooz murmured. “Apatosaur.”
Her
nickname for Andi. Apatosaurs had a terrible brain-to-body-mass ratio.
Jamie
put Andi’s tray down in front of her. Nothing on it moved at all. He sat down
across from her after accepting a quick kiss on the lips that was gone before a
teacher could say anything.
“Ugh,”
Sooz said. “Don’t you just hate her?”
“No.
I just want to be her.”
And
it was true. If I could be Andi, I would be the world’s greatest Andi. I
adored Andi—her hair, her body, her walk. Her clothes. She wore clothes
effortlessly, like she just woke up every morning and her clothes flowed onto
her body. The right colors, the right fit, the right style. I loved everything
about her. She was perfect.
And,
of course, she had Jamie.
Sometimes
I imagined that she and Jamie weren’t going out anymore. And Jamie and I
started dating, and Andi was cool with it and we were all three great friends.
Sometimes I imagined that she had never dated Jamie, that she was just
this perfect girl without a boyfriend, and even though I had Jamie as my
boyfriend, I was still friends with her, still nice to her, and I was never
jealous if Jamie wanted to hang out with her alone because I trusted both of
them.
“You
need to get him out of your system,” Sooz went on, snapping me out of my
fantasy world. “It’s weird. As long as we’ve been friends, you’ve always been
single-minded. Dinosaurs, dinosaurs, dinosaurs, from Day One. Now you have this
new obsession and I don’t know how to deal with it. Get back to your lizards.”
“They’re
not lizards. They’re both from subclass Diapsida, but dinosaurs are archosaurs,
while lizards are lepidosaurs. Two different things.”
Sooz
grinned. “I love when you do stuff like that. I have no idea if you’re making
it up or not, but it sure sounds good.”
Of
course, I wasn’t making it up. None of it.
In
kindergarten, when they asked what we wanted to be when we grew up, I said
paleontologist. (Actually, I said, “plentyologist” because I couldn’t quite
wrap my mouth around it yet…but I could spell it.) By first grade, I had
the pronunciation down pat. Enough so that a boy once accosted me on the
playground while I was sitting off to one side, reading a dinosaur book. “You’re
not really a girl,” he said. “Girls don’t like dinosaurs.”
I
blinked. “What do you mean? Of course I’m a girl. I’m wearing pink.” I
pointed to my headband, just in case he didn’t get it.
Third
grade: A-plus for my paper on theropods. Eighth grade—just last year—won the
science fair with my project showing the difference between ornithischian and
saurischian hips. I built my models painstakingly over a month, using books and
Web sites for reference. I made Mom drive me to the museum in Washington DC two
weekends in a row so that I could talk to one of the paleontologists there. Dr.
Marbury liked me and let me e-mail him pictures of the project in progress. I
wouldn’t let him help me, though. I had to do it on my own.
Dr.
Marbury was so impressed with me that he said that—if my parents approved—he
would take me on a dig with him. He had one scheduled for the summer of my
junior year. I thought my eyes would pop right out of my skull. (Fortunately,
that’s biologically unlikely. It does happen, though.)
That
was a year ago and I still stayed in touch with him and he still wanted to take
me and, honestly, nothing else mattered. I didn’t care that the other girls
were getting into makeup and boys. I didn’t care that I only had one friend. I
didn’t care that I wasn’t glamorous or that I was what Mom called a “late
bloomer.” I didn’t care that boys didn’t think I was a girl. I didn’t care about
any of it. I saved my money and I didn’t waste it on clothes or makeup or music
from bands with hot guys in them or anything like that. Digs are expensive. I
would need equipment. I would need stuff.
I
didn’t care what it cost or what I had to sacrifice to get there. I just wanted
to go on a dig. I wanted to be there, to find the remains, to brush away the
dirt and the sand, to gently pry from the earth the bones of its past.
To
sketch them and make them immortal.
The
Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago has one of the most complete T.
rexes in existence, nicknamed Sue after the woman who found it. I just wanted a
dinosaur nicknamed Katie—or even Katya.
That
was all I wanted.
Until
high school started.
Until
Jamie.
Suddenly,
I wanted something else. And I had no idea how to get it.
At
her table, Andi got bored with food, apparently. She stood up and bounced a
hacky sack from knee to knee, occasionally flipping up a foot to kick it up
even higher. Everyone at her table watched and applauded. Even Jamie.
I
am uncoordinated. If there is a piece of furniture in the room, trust me to
stub my toe on it. I’m sort of like an allosaur or a T. rex—they could move
somewhat quickly, but only straight ahead. The saurischian hip structure isn’t
designed to swerve from side to side, so they blundered in a straight line,
sometimes changing direction by shifting their weight with their tails. But
dodging? Sidestepping something? No way. Can’t happen. It’s just a fact of
anatomy.
“Close
your mouth,” Sooz whispered to me. “You’re chewing like a theropod.” She picked
up some of the lingo just from hanging out with me. Theropods were meat-eaters.
The
lingo, but not the facts.
“Theropods
didn’t chew their food,” I told her. “They didn’t have crushing teeth like we
do. Their teeth were for tearing. Like this.” I demonstrated with my hamburger,
attacking it with my front teeth, tearing off wads of meat and bread and
growling.
Sooz
looked at me in horror.
“See?”
I told her, after I’d gotten it down. Grease and ketchup dripped down my chin.
I wiped at it with a napkin. “They would just tear off chunks and then swallow
them whole.”
“Um,
Katya, you’re really loud….”
“They
had these awesome teeth with serrated edges, called denticles?—”
“Katya…”
“Testicles?”
someone said much too loudly.
I
looked over my shoulder. At the table behind us, everyone was laughing,
mimicking the way I’d chomped my burger.
“She
said they have testicles for teeth!” one of them howled.
“No,
not testicles. Denticles. They were for?—”
“Katya.”
“What?”
I turned back to her.
“Let
it go.”
I
checked over my shoulder again. “I’m eating with my testicles!” one guy said in
a mockingly nerdy voice, holding a French fry near his crotch.
“What
am I going to do with you, Katya?” Sooz asked, and shook her head.
Only
Sooz ever called me Katya. My real name is Katherine and everyone called me
Katie, but Sooz said Katya was more exotic and claimed she would call me Katya
for the rest of my life, even during the maid of honor’s toast at my wedding.
“I’ll
never get married,” I told her. “Guys don’t like geeks.”
“You
know,” Sooz said as we left the cafeteria, “it’s okay to do the dinosaur stuff
with me. I like it, even when I don’t get it. But not everyone’s like
that.”
“But
dinosaurs are important! They ruled the earth for millions of years. When we
study them, we can understand not just them, but also the way the world was,
the way the world changed, maybe even what the world is changing into.”
She
gave me the special Sooz look, the one that meant I was talking too loud again.
Sure enough, people around us were snickering, shaking their heads, rolling
their eyes. A few junior boys tucked their arms up like velociraptors and
staggered around like drunk birds.
“Any
day,” I said, more quietly, “we could wake up and there could be a discovery
that could change everything. Right now, while we’re standing here, there are
bones, Sooz. Bones and other fossils, filed away in museums all over the world.
They’ve been in the ground for millions of years and they’ve been sitting in
the basement of some museum for ten years or more, but every single day,
someone looks at one of them for the first time. And that could be the one that
changes everything. We could hear about it on the news any moment. Isn’t that
amazing?”
“It
is,” she said, and she was sincere because she was Sooz and she got it. “It
really is.”
I
didn’t tell her the rest. The best part.
The
news could come at any moment. Or years from now.
I
could be the one to make it.
And
then everyone would notice.
Everyone
would love me and respect me.
“I
don’t get how you can like Andi,” Sooz said later that day, at her house.
“She’s so mean. She once made so much fun of another girl that she went into
the bathroom and cried for, like, an hour.”
I
filed that one away, another “mean Andi moment” brought to you courtesy of
Sooz, who has an endless supply.
“Jamie
likes her,” I explained. “So there must be something to her, right? It’s
just biology. Attractive specimens are good by definition—they reproduce and
they pass down their genes.”
“This
isn’t science,” Sooz said. “You’re in love with the guy. She’s
your arch nemesis, not a science experiment.”
But
I just couldn’t find it in me to hate Andi. I figured it had to be difficult to
be her. There were all kinds of stresses that came with being Andi, things I
couldn’t understand because I was not her. She was beautiful and funny
and athletic and popular and I was…
When
I was a kid, I had a picture book about T. rex. It talked about how juvenile T.
rexes probably hunted in packs, and there was an illustration of a bunch of
them ganging up on a lizard, probably an ancestor of the crocodile, judging by
the spine and the tail.
But
it was weird. They weren’t biting it or slashing at it or even touching
it. They just surrounded the poor thing, which was slithering along the ground
because it didn’t have the proper hip and tail alignment to stand on two feet
like the T. rexes did. And the lizard had…It had this look on its face. This
long-suffering look of Here we go again. And the T. rexes were leaning
in, almost like they were taunting the poor lizard, making fun of it.
I
knew how that lizard felt. And I hated that. I hated that I felt that way
because that made me think that maybe…Maybe I was a lizard. I didn’t want
to be a lizard. I wanted to be a dinosaur.
Andi
was definitely a dinosaur. Sooz called her the apatosaur, but at least that’s a
dinosaur.
“She
has a biological advantage,” I told Sooz. “I need to figure out how I can get a
biological advantage, make myself evolutionarily attractive.”
She
waggled her eyebrows. “Oh? Really?” Sooz was marginally more girly than me—she
actually wore makeup.
“Maybe.
I’m thinking about it.”
That
night, I went to my dad, simply because he’s a male and, therefore, would
probably have an opinion.
“Dad,
am I pretty?”
He
grinned. “Honey, you’re the prettiest girl in the whole world.”
Well,
that wasn’t helpful. He didn’t even stop to think about it. When someone
answers a question that fast, they’re never telling the truth. I couldn’t
possibly be the prettiest girl in the world. That’s just scientifically
impossible. And what did I expect my dad to say? He’s not going to look at me
and say, “Well, sweetie, your mom and I have been talking about this since you
were born and we’re just sorry that we have such an ugly daughter, but we love
you anyway and it’s what’s inside that counts.”
Right.
In
my room, I looked in the mirror. I took off my glasses. My reflection became a
big blur. How could I know what I looked like without my glasses if I couldn’t see
without my glasses?
I
squinted, scrunching up my face until I could make something out, but all I saw
was my own scrunched-up face, which looked disgusting.
I
checked my bank book. I’d been saving money forever—for the dig, for college.
They’re both way expensive. I could buy contact lenses, maybe some makeup…some
new clothes….
That
wouldn’t totally drain my bank account. I would have money left over, but I
would also have a new Katya to show off, a new, evolved Katya to attract
Jamie, maybe.
Back
to the mirror. I wished my boobs were bigger. Then it would be easy to get
Jamie to notice me. I knew how that worked. I would just wear a
button-down shirt with a couple of buttons undone and my boobs would work their
magic boy-power. Maybe I needed a new bra. I could get one with padding in it,
make everything stand up and stand out.
(Dinosaurs
didn’t have boobs. Dinosaurs didn’t need boobs. Lucky dinosaurs.)
I
thought about Andi, effortlessly juggling with her knees and feet. I thought of
her lithe form in gym. Everything physical came so easily to her. She could
head-butt a soccer ball in less time than it took me to realize there even was
a soccer ball.
And
Jamie loved her.
I
had two things I thought of: dinosaurs and Jamie. Sometimes—like that night—the
two merged in my dreams, and I was a T. rex hunting him down. Or he was hunting
me (don’t I wish!).
Predator
and prey. Prey and predator.
The
next morning, at breakfast, I guess I still looked depressed. Dad asked me what
was wrong.
“I
wish I was good at something, Dad.”
He
jerked his head like someone grabbed his hair from behind and pulled. “Honey!
Why would you say that?”
I
shrugged. “I don’t know. Like baseball. Or soccer. Or something.”
He
said what he always says when I shake him up: “Maybe we should have held
you back after all.”
I
have the dubious distinction of being the youngest freshman in school. Back
when I went into kindergarten, I missed the cut-off by two days. My parents
could have held me back and then I would have been the oldest freshman…next
year. I would have never met Sooz, though, and that’s a world I’d rather not
contemplate. My parents—Dad in particular—think all of my ills stem from that
decision they made a bunch of years ago.
“This
isn’t about that, Dad.”
Dad
said, “Everyone is good at something. Some people play baseball or football.
Some people are musicians. You’re good at dinosaurs.”
Yeah,
but dinosaurs wouldn’t make Jamie fall in love with me. I already knew
that.
You’re
not a girl, that boy said on the playground.
Dinosaurs
are neutered. Dinosaurs are sexless.
(Well,
not really. Dinosaurs were amniotes—they fertilized eggs internally, just like
human beings. I wanted to be amniotic with Jamie, and I couldn’t believe I just
thought that with my dad right across the table!)
“Honey?”
he said, because I’d drifted off.
“Nothing.”
God, what am I, a total slut or something?
But
when I got on the bus, I still thought about it. Thinking about Jamie not just
liking me or talking to me, but actually kissing me. And maybe more.
Did
being a dinosaur geek have to mean being sexless? Did T. rex discoverer Sue
have a boyfriend? Did anyone ever kiss Sue, out on a dig or down in some dark,
musty museum basement? Passion among the catalogued artifacts of a dead world.
Sigh.
On
the way to homeroom, I kept my eyes down, watching my own feet. No footprints
on school linoleum. A million years from now, if some future paleontologist
tries to retrace the steps of the geekus girlus, she’ll have no luck
because there aren’t any pathways to follow. Not like the dinosaurs. We take
the fossilized imprints of their feet and string them together into “pathways,”
which we use to reconstruct the way they moved. Along with the skeletons, this
allows us to figure out how they walked and how fast they could run. Like, T.
rex had a sort of lumbering run/walk, with its feet staggered.
I
watched my own feet and started to mimic the T. rex. They had to start slow
because they were so big—it took them some time to build up to velocity, but
then they could move at twenty-five, maybe even up to forty miles an hour.
This
is how we learn. Indirectly. We can’t observe them, so we observe what they
left behind, and even though they left behind a lot, it’s never enough. Never.
So we keep looking. We never stop. Because it matters. It’s important.
They’re extinct, yes, but they still have so much to teach us, if only we’d
listen and learn.
I
looked around me at the swarm of kids in the hallway. I felt so small in that
moment. I knew I was the only one thinking anything even remotely related to
dinosaurs or history or science. I was alone.
And
I felt like that lizard, the one being hounded by the young T. rexes. Just
little lizard me, slithering along on my belly and along comes a bunch of big,
bad dinosaurs and they’re going to take their time to eat me. They’re in no
hurry. You know why? Because I’m just a little lizard. I’m nothing. Less than
nothing.
And
I don’t want that.
I
had gym with Andi three days a week. I tried to be nice to her. I wanted her to
like me. Maybe then I could learn how to be like her.
I
thought about it this way: I knew the names of more than a hundred species of
dinosaurs. I knew the order of the periods and epochs. I spent hours reading
Gould and Barsbold and Bakker. I tried to understand both sides of the debate:
warm-blooded or cold? Feathers or not? I taught myself how to draw, for
God’s sake, endlessly tracing bone patterns out of books, sitting in the museum
for hours on end, sketching the fossils on display there. I sat in the backyard
for entire weekends, chipping away at different kinds of rocks with
three different hammers, testing them for the proper weight and hardness of
steel. (A paleontologist’s hammer is her most important tool—too heavy and you
get tired using it too soon. Too light and it won’t do you any good. Too soft
and it’ll fragment and poke your eye out. These things matter.)
I
lived in eternal frustration. I didn’t get it. I knew all of these things! I
figured them out, sometimes on my own.
So
why couldn’t I figure out the qualities in Andi that attracted Jamie? Why
couldn’t I mimic them, improve on them? I was smart. This was one more science
problem, a biology test set in real life.
Maybe
that’s crazy. But I couldn’t help myself. I was desperate. I clung to the
fantasy that—somehow—I could break up Jamie and Andi and yet be friends with
Andi and make everyone happy all at once. There was no direct evidence that
such a thing would work, but you know what? There’s no conclusive evidence as
to exactly what made the dinosaurs extinct, either. Maybe it was a comet
hitting the earth. Maybe it was disease. There’s a recent theory that bugs
killed the dinosaurs. Tiny, insignificant insects. They weakened the dinosaurs
enough that environmental factors were able to wipe them out.
Was
that it? Maybe. We don’t know. But we know it was something because they’re
definitely dead.
So
maybe there was some way to live out my fantasy. Maybe I just hadn’t
figured it out yet.
But
I had to. It was killing me.
I
never knew that being in love was a physical thing. I never knew your body
reacted. Like when I saw Jamie and my stomach felt like someone had tied lines
to it and pulled it in ten directions at once. Or the way I became suddenly
aware of myself, of my body, when I sat across the aisle from him in bio—the
way I felt my hair and my eyelashes and my lips and my nose and every motion of
my body as I breathed, hyper-conscious in every way.
But
it didn’t matter. Because one day it all became impossible.
That
day was the worst day of my life. My own personal extinction-level event, right
in the halls of high school.
I
was leaving gym, following close to Andi. I did that whenever I could. Watching
her. Listening. Trying to learn. Doing my research, like a good scientist.
But
then, suddenly, Andi turned around, as if she’d forgotten something. Maybe she
had. I don’t know. All I know is this: The worst thing that could possibly
happen, happened.
She
bumped into me. Hard.
I
dropped everything I was holding. Including my bio notebook.
Which
fell, fluttering like a wounded bird, to the floor.
And
landed spread open.
The
reproductions of Jamie’s tattoo.
That
tattoo. Over and over and over again. Meticulous. Precise. Because that’s the
only way I knew how to draw.
I
prayed that Andi wouldn’t notice it. But her eyes dipped down.
I
prayed that she wouldn’t realize what it was.
Fat
chance. Like I said—precise. It couldn’t be anything but Jamie’s tattoo.
Before
she could say anything, I started babbling. I just couldn’t stop myself. I was
terrified and embarrassed and strangely giddy all at once.
“Please
don’t say anything. Andi. Please. Please. It’s nothing. It’s really nothing. It
doesn’t mean…I would never try to take him away from you, really. Never.”
Her
eyes got wide and then she laughed. She laughed.
“Are
you serious? Do you think I’m afraid of that? He doesn’t give a
shit about you. He needs you following him around like he needs a hole in his
head.”
“Actually,
um, that can be useful.” Oh my God! What on earth? Where was that coming
from? “The theropods had holes in their skulls to make their heads more
lightweight.” Shut up, Katie! I begged myself . Shut up!
But
I couldn’t stop myself. I was on autopilot. It was like my brain and my mouth
became disconnected and my mouth just kept on going.
“It’s
something of an evolutionary advantage for a large predator to have at least
one hole in its head, as a way of reducing drag when?—”
“Hey!”
she snapped. Her eyes scrunched and her brows came together and her mouth
twisted into a scowl. Andi was suddenly the one thing I never thought she could
be—ugly. It shocked me into silence. “Shut your little prissy, geeky mouth and
listen to me, okay?
“Look,
Dino Girl. There’s, like, a natural order to things, okay? It’s the way the
world works. And girls like you do not get to go with guys like Jamie, okay?
Especially when the guy is already with a girl like me. Do you get it?
Did that get through your little lizard head?”
Dinosaurs
aren’t lizards! I wanted to shout. Just like spiders aren’t insects or rabbits
aren’t rodents, you stupid piece of coprolite!
But
I said—I shouted—nothing. I just stood there, pinned, frozen by her anger.
“Do
you get me, Dino Girl?”
I
thought about that lizard in the picture book. And wouldn’t it just shock the
living hell out of those T. rexes if it suddenly stood on up on its hind legs
and roared and bit one of their heads off?
Impossible,
of course. A physiological impossibility.
But
I wasn’t a lizard. I was a human being.
And
yet…
And
yet I stood there. And I said and I did nothing.
“I
asked you a question, lizard brain!”
“I
understand.” My voice didn’t sound like my own. It sounded like a very small
girl who has just learned how to speak and is being punished by her parents.
Andi
turned away, stepping on my notebook. She left an imprint of her shoe there,
destroying two of my sketches. A pathway for the modern dominant girlosaur.
What would a future paleontologist make of it?
I
was proud of myself: I managed to scoop up my stuff and make it to the girls’
bathroom before I burst into tears. I thought about the girl Sooz had told me
about, the one Andi made cry in the bathroom for an hour. All she had done was
make fun of her. Me? She had destroyed my soul. How long would I be in there?
Why
did she have to be so mean? Why? All I wanted was a kiss. All I wanted was for
a boy to like me. A special boy.
I
locked the door to a stall in the corner and sat down, bringing my knees up to
my chest. No one else was there, so I cried and cried and cried, but I don’t
think it would have mattered. I don’t think I could have held it in even if the
entire school had been sitting out there.
She
was mean. Yes. But the worst part was that she was honest.
Like
she said, he wouldn’t like me. He would never love me. I was just a geeky girl
who knew too much about dinosaurs.
No
threat to her. Just a little lizard. The most pathetic example of prey—not even
worth the time for a predator to hunt, much less eat.
I
spent the rest of the afternoon in the bathroom. I just couldn’t make myself
leave. And when I left at the end of the day, I felt like everyone knew. Like
Andi had texted everyone in school and sent instant messages and e-mails and
then put up a Web page, just to make sure: “DINO GIRL LOVES MY BOYFRIEND! ISN’T
THAT CUTE PATHETIC?”
Mom
and Dad could tell something was wrong when I got home. I told them I had
really bad cramps. They didn’t believe me. I’ve always been a lousy liar.
But
I stuck to my story anyway and went to bed early and lay there, replaying those
horrible moments in my mind over and over.
I
fell asleep praying for a sudden Ice Age that would just make all of us
extinct.
The
next day, I went to school prepared for the worst. I somehow anticipated
posters of my face throughout the school, with the word “LOSER!” plastered over
them in big fonts.
But
no one said anything. No one did anything. No one even looked at me funny.
Andi
hadn’t told anyone. Maybe it wouldn’t be as bad as I thought. Sure, I’d blown
any chance of being friends with Andi, but at least no one would be making fun….
And maybe I could get past it. Maybe someday it would be the kind of thing Andi
and I would laugh about. Remember the time you tried to steal my boyfriend
and I was mean to you?
But
then came biology. I panicked. Jamie. What if she told Jamie?
Somehow,
that had been the furthest thing from my mind. I had been so concerned with
Andi that I couldn’t even make the leap to her telling Jamie about my crush on
him.
Jamie
sauntered into bio just before the bell.
My
breath went out of me, entirely gone. I couldn’t find any more. I was in a
vacuum.
He
sat down.
He
was wearing a long-sleeve shirt, but he had the sleeves rolled up so that I
could see the bottom of his tattoo.
The
tattoo burned my eyes. I thought of those pages from my notebook, now carefully
torn out and left at home, where they could no longer incriminate me—too late.
And
then…
And
then he rolled his sleeve down. Slowly. Like an afterthought. Like he was
trying to be casual about it. He stared straight ahead while he did it, not
looking at me.
She
told.
She
told him.
I
wanted to die. I wanted to combust, to burn up and die right there, leaving
nothing but the smell of fried hair and a black scorch mark on the chair and
the desk and the floor.
I
heard nothing throughout bio. It was my favorite class, my best class,
but I heard nothing and when I looked at my notebook later that day, there was
nothing on the page. Just the date, printed neatly like on the rest of the
pages, and then nothing.
Same
thing with my memory. Just a white space—a blank like my notebook—in my brain
where the carbon cycle should have been.
I
stumbled out of class. Jamie knew. He knew I was in love with him. She’d told
him. I had lost everything.
She
could have just walked away from me. She didn’t have to be mean. If I wasn’t a
threat, she could have been kind and just walked away and never mentioned it to
anyone, ever.
And
that’s the thing: She could have been kind. Why wasn’t she? Why was she
so mean? If you’re not going to eat the prey, why smack it around? It just
doesn’t make sense.
I
spent the day in my own little hell, trying to figure it out. Trying to figure
out what she had to gain by it. If she was right, if Jamie would never be
interested in me (and she was right—I knew it, and I knew it all along),
then why hurt me like that? Why?
Just
because she could? Just because she was a dinosaur? Just because she was
a dinosaur and I was a lizard, predator and prey, and she could?
She
could. That’s what it came down to: She could do whatever she wanted just
because she was Andi Donnelly, and there was nothing I could do about it.
And
then…
And
then, on the bus on the way home…
It
hit me.
Like
a comet.
It
hit me:
The
dinosaurs were more powerful, but the lizards survived.
Look
around. They still exist. In forms almost identical to their dinosaur-age
forebears. I could show you a salamander from the late Triassic and you would
think, “Hmm, that looks like a salamander.” You would recognize it right away.
Because it survived and the dinosaur didn’t.
They
used to be prey, but they lived. They thrived, these lizards. Some of them are
even predators now.
It’s
scientifically, biologically impossible for a lizard to evolve into a dinosaur.
But
prey can become a predator. It happens all the time.
All
the time.
“Well,
what are you going to do about her?” Sooz asked when I finally told her
everything.
I
couldn’t believe it when I heard the words come out of my mouth:
“I’m
going to destroy her.”
Sooz
stared at me as I told her my plan. I waited. I was nervous. Had I gone too
far?
Finally,
she said, “It’s about damn time.”
And
then she said, “That bitch. I swear to God…Finally. Finally, Katya.”
I
waited for her to get it all out.
“I
hate her. Do you understand me? I hate her. And I’ve been sitting here
while you talk about how great she is and how wonderful she is
and it’s been killing me. Because she’s not great and she’s not
wonderful.”
She
took a deep breath.
“Do
you remember that one story I told you about her?”
“Which
one?” There were millions. Sooz was the editor of The Compleat Crimes of
Andi Donnelly.
“About
the girl. In the bathroom.”
“Yeah.
What about…oh.” It hit me. “Oh, God. Sooz. Why didn’t you tell me?”
“Because
you were so in love with her, that’s why! Because all you could talk
about was how great she was and I didn’t want to…I don’t know. I don’t know.”
I
hugged her. “I’m sorry. I’m really sorry, Sooz.”
“Never
mind. It’s all over.” She shuddered. “Let’s kick her perfectly rounded ass.”
So,
Sooz was on board. Good. I needed her Photoshop expertise.
I
would have to spend a little bit of the money I was saving. But if I was
willing to do that before, for makeup, shouldn’t I be willing to do it now, for
revenge?
Maybe
it was insane to take on Andi. She was bigger than me. She was more popular,
more important.
But
here’s something every good paleontologist knows: Even the biggest die. Even
the meanest get killed off by something that they can’t see coming. Like a
meteor. Or an insect.
What
it comes down to is this: In this world, you’re either predator or you’re prey.
There
are many ways that dinosaurs caught and killed their prey. Everyone
thinks that T. rex or allosaur or whatever just ran out into the open air and
chased the little guys and ate them up. But the truth is that most of the
meat-eaters were ambushers. They lay in wait very carefully and then grappled
their prey. Chasing after prey was useless—it consumed too much energy and left
too great a chance that the predator would injure itself. Besides, a high-speed
pursuit of a smaller, more agile creature isn’t to your advantage when you can
only move in a straight line.
So
the big boys learned how to be patient. And stealthy. And to attack when least
expected.
Like
me.
Like
a paleontologist.
Because
you have to be patient to study dinosaurs. There are massive advantages to
patience. On a dig, you can’t just go ahead and rip up everything in your path
in your quest for fossils. You’d just end up destroying what it is you’re
looking for. Fossils are fragile. They’ve been around for hundreds of
millions of years and they won’t react kindly to someone tearing them out of
the ground.
So
you take your time. You dig out the earth in teaspoons. You don’t gouge the
ground—you brush it away gently. You don’t pound the rocks to release
the knowledge within—you chip at them. Fragment by fragment. It’s the
patient work of centimeters.
It
takes forever.
And
once you’ve got the ground chipped and swept and brushed away, you have yet another
long wait ahead of you. Maybe you want nothing more than to pull it up and
marvel at it, but you can’t. There are procedures.
Because
once you isolate the fossil in the ground, you have to sketch it for the record
and for cataloging. You sketch and take notes and then finally pull it up, but
you can’t enjoy it. No. Because you have to wrap it in plaster of paris, for
protection. And pack it in a special crate. And send it off to a museum, where
it will sit in a basement vault somewhere. It’ll sit there for years until
someone has the time (and the grant money) to pull it out and break open the
plaster of Paris (again, carefully—patiently) and sit down to clean it and
examine it and draw more sketches and officially decide what it is and where it
belongs and everything else.
Years.
That’s
what I had waiting for me in my future. So I was ready. I was ready to be as
patient as I had to be.
Someday,
I’ll be the world’s greatest paleontologist. Because I am patient like nobody’s
business.
After
three months, I began to lose faith in the “ambush theory” of predation. There’s
no way a meat-eater could or would wait so long for its prey.
I
didn’t have a choice, though. I had to wait for soccer season.
I
had to wait for Andi to be in practice pretty much every day of the week.
So
I waited. And waited.
On
one of my gym days, I “accidentally” left my math book in the locker room after
changing. I begged Mom to take me back to school for it.
We
got there just as practice was ending. A stream of girls headed into the locker
room.
Coach
Kimball gave me an annoyed look, but Mom said, “She really needs this book. It’ll
just take a second.”
Coach
made me give her my cell phone first—cell phones aren’t allowed in the locker
room because of the cameras.
But
no one noticed my new little credit card–size camera. That’s because I hid it
in an empty blush compact, with a hole drilled through for the lens. So I could
hold it up and look like I was just looking in the mirror, but I was actually
snapping pictures.
When
I’m stressed—like I was in the locker room that day, surrounded by Andi’s
friends, all of whom just ignored me, thank God—I try to remind myself that
over ninety-nine percent of all the species that have ever lived on earth are
already extinct. So it’s not like I matter. Or any of us. But on that day, I didn’t
care that my existence was just a blink of the universe’s eye. I wanted Jamie
Terravozza. And if I couldn’t have him, well, at least I could make sure that she
couldn’t, either.
Sooz
giggled uncontrollably when she saw the pictures.
“This
is serious,” I told her. “Stop it.”
“Sorry.”
But she kept giggling. “I’m just thinking of how it’s gonna look when I’m done.”
I
had taken as many as I could, as quickly as I could. They were mostly pretty
bad—you try taking a bunch of pictures through a tiny hole in a compact
case while surrounded by girls who could notice you at any minute.
But
there were two or three that weren’t totally awful. Sooz took the best one and
massaged it in Photoshop until it looked pretty good and then she did some more
work. I watched her, impatient.
“That’s
it,” I said. “It’s done.”
“Not
yet,” she said, focused on the screen.
An
hour went by. “Come on, Sooz. It’s perfect.” I was practically dancing from
foot to foot.
“It’s
nowhere near perfect. Shut up, Katya.”
I
spun around her room. I paced. I practiced my brachiosaur walk.
“Come
on, Sooz!”
She
grumbled a little and clicked the mouse a few last times. “Fine. Fine. Here.”
I
looked at the screen over her shoulder. “It’s perfect. It’s beyond
perfect.”
Sooz
grinned. “How many should we print out?”
We
waited. To have it all come out the next day would be too suspicious. Someone
would remember me in the locker room.
So
I waited. Again. Still lying in ambush. I’ve already pegged the prey—it just
doesn’t know it yet.
After
two weeks, I pounced.
Brookdale
awakened to a new poster on its telephone poles and newspaper boxes and bulletin
boards. A new flier tossed in piles by the post office and the grocery stores
and scattered all over the entrance to the high school.
It
had taken us all night to walk around and do it. All night. Worth every last
second of it.
I
didn’t even get five minutes of sleep, but I couldn’t possibly miss school that
day. Not and miss what everyone was talking about.
The
image Sooz had mocked up.
Andi,
half-naked from the shower in the locker room, drying her hip and leg, her
torso completely revealed. Wet and gorgeous and totally unaware.
Sooz
gave it atmosphere and mood. She Photoshopped out the locker room and
Photoshopped in a sleazy hotel room we’d found online. And at the top:
DO
YOU LIKE SEX? SHE DOES!!!!!
Under
the picture: CALL ANDI! with her phone number and her address. And then:
TRUST
ME—SHE LOVES IT!!! I KNOW FROM EXPERIENCE—COUNTLESS TIMES!!!!!
The
first time I saw Andi that day, she was in tears. She was alone. She was
rushing to the bathroom.
She
probably tried to lie. She probably tried to say it wasn’t her. But she knew
it was. You can’t hide that kind of knowledge from your expression, from your
eyes. People can tell when you’re lying.
Everyone
in Brookdale knows what Andi’s boobs look like now.
It
was the talk of the school. I heard all sorts of rumors: She was a secret
prostitute. (She and her best friend had had a threesome with a college guy
from Pennsylvania.) She was an exhibitionist—she couldn’t help it. It was an ex
trying to get back at her. She was a nympho and couldn’t help cheating on
Jamie. It wasn’t really her. (Then why did it look like her? Why was her
phone number on it?)
At
lunch, I sat with my usual view of Andi’s table. By then, the real story
had spread throughout school: They were over. Period. For good. Zik Lorenz and
Michelle Jurgens had heard the whole fight near the stairwell between third and
fourth period.
What
the hell is going on? Jamie yelled. Everyone’s saying you’re a slut.
It’s
not me! she protested.
It
is you! It is! Jamie said.
Which
clinched it. For everyone. After all, Jamie would definitely know what she
looked like naked.
If
it’s not real, Jamie demanded, how did they get a naked picture of you?
What
could she say to that? With the locker room Photoshopped out, how could she
know where that picture had come from?
According
to the grapevine, Andi had just broken down into tears again at that. I wished,
oh, I wished I had been there to see it!
I
watched at lunch instead.
I
watched as Andi sat down at her table.
Jamie
didn’t sit with her.
In
fact, no one sat with Andi.
Sooz
flashed me the biggest smile I’ve ever seen. I resisted the urge to high-five
her. Too incriminating.
But
when I got up from the table, something amazing happened.
The
earth shook with my footsteps.
It
shook.
From
now on, the earth would tremble in my wake.
And
I knew. I knew what the dinosaurs sounded like.
They
sounded like me….
Barry
Lyga was a geek long before it was cool to be a geek, back when being a
geek meant getting beat up on a regular basis, as opposed to selling that cool
new Web app you wrote to a Silicon Valley start-up and retiring at twenty-five.
In his time, he’s been a comic-book geek, a role-playing geek, a computer geek,
and a sci-fi geek, though never a Trekkie, Trekker, or a Whovian, because he
has his limits.
Barry
is the author of The Astonishing Adventures of Fanboy and Goth Girl
(called a “love letter and a suicide note to comic books”), Boy Toy, and
Hero-Type. He’s still a geek.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Bryan Lee O’Malley.
THIS IS MY AUDITION MONOLOGUE
by
sara zarr
I
wrote it.
I
know we’re supposed to pick something from a quote-unquote known work such as
something by Shakespeare or Chekhov, or one of those photocopied monologues in
the drama room, but I looked at them and honestly there’s nothing that shows my
range or says anything about who I am that will be memorable in any important
way and that’s what I need: to be memorable. Because, and I’m not trying to
embarrass you, Mr. P, but you’ve had trouble remembering my name since I first
started auditioning freshman year. So obviously I need to take a new approach.
Look at the audition form and look at my face: Rachel Banks. Not Rochelle, not
Ruthie, not Melissa—I really don’t understand where you got that last one, but
you have called me Melissa at least three times in as many years.
So
my goal here is to be memorable. And anyway I thought that if Candace Gibson is
allowed to reenact a scene from Napoleon Dynamite as her audition, then
I can perform something that I wrote and is not just a total rip from a movie
every single person at this school has seen fifteen times and can recite in his
or her sleep.
We
might as well get this out of the way now: I am going to go over the time
limit. I beg you not to cut me off because I saw with my own eyes how Peter
Hantz went overtime with that Sam Shepard thing, which was not even that
brilliant. And all this introduction doesn’t count against the time. It says on
the form that your introduction doesn’t count against the time.
I’m
going to tell you a story here. One you already know, Mr. P, but I’ll be
including some facts and details for anyone in this room who may not have been
there or in case I want to use this monologue again someday when I am finally
auditioning out in the quote-unquote real world, as you are so fond of calling
it when trying to alert us to the truth that our high school shenanigans will
not be appreciated by professionals.
You
can start timing me…now.
Scotty
King got electrocuted while running the light board.
It
sounds like a joke, I know, but I’m saying that he got electrocuted.
While running the light board. I’m saying that he died, during the
second act of Miracle Worker when Julie-Ann Leskowitz had gotten so good
at playing blind, deaf, and dumb that she didn’t stop her scene, even though
the lights flashed and everyone heard the sizzling noise from up in the booth
and Annie Sullivan stopped and said, “Oh my God, Scotty,” because she knew
about the leak in the auditorium roof and Scotty’s belief that bare feet were
good luck and we were having one of those late spring storms and there were
puddles and drips everywhere, and she put it all together faster than any of
us. And we stopped the show and people filed out, a lot of them not realizing
what had happened and asking if they’d get a refund. Seriously, who asks for a
refund for a seven-dollar high school play? I’m sorry, I’m still making it
sound like a joke. You don’t know this about me, since you’ve never taken the
time to know anything about me, but I use humor that way. It relieves the
tension. Unless someone is actually dead, like Scotty, in which case it just
ends up sounding sick and insensitive.
You
know all this already, of course, as it is in our very recent history. And,
well, you were there and all. What you may not realize is that it was supposed
to be me.
Now
it doesn’t sound like a joke. Now it sounds melodramatic, like I’m trying to
get attention or turn the focus away from Scotty’s tragedy on to me, who has
suffered no tragedy other than spending the last few months walking around like
a zombie, like a ghost, like I stole someone else’s life and thinking if it had
been me, would anyone have noticed?
One
time I was at Adam Gunderson’s house looking through the sophomore yearbook,
and next to my picture someone wrote and I quote: Look up ATTENTION WHORE in
the dictionary and you’ll see this pic, and added like fifteen exclamation
points. But I’m not. One, I’m obviously not memorable. Two, a performer does
not an attention whore make. Not that I’m a performer. As you well know I’ve
never gotten a part. I audition every single freaking time and this is the
mistake I’ve made: I check the YES box.
On
the part of the audition form where it says In the event you are not cast in
the play, would you be willing to work behind the scenes on this production?
I always put a checkmark in the YES box. Every time I see that question I think
to myself:
Rachel,
don’t check yes. DO NOT CHECK IT!
And
this time, I didn’t. Because if I don’t check yes, and I make myself memorable,
maybe I’ll get a part. Chances are that part will be Onlooker #8 in the third
act or the maid who passes through the set with a feather duster twice, but I
don’t care. As I have tried over and over and over to figure out why I don’t
get even the crap parts no one wants, the only conclusion I come to is that you
see I’m willing to be backstage so you give the parts to someone else, someone
smarter who has checked NO.
This
is an aside and should not count against my time: Are you really that desperate
for backstage help? Can’t you offer the job to some D-average jock who needs
extracurriculars or community service or something?
What
happens is the part of me that would rather mop up Julie-Ann’s sweat or
de-crust the greenroom furniture than not have anything to do with the play
panics and I check YES. Yes, use me. Yes, abuse me. Yes, make me post call
times in my own blood, I will do it. I will do it. These are not the thoughts
of an attention whore. These are the thoughts of a person—me—who would do
anything, anything to be in the general vicinity of this auditorium every
single day, including weekends.
And
no, Adam Gunderson and I are not dating. As everyone knows, he is with Candace.
I simply happened to be in his bedroom looking through his yearbook on a stormy
day last fall when the raindrops were hitting the window with sharp little thaps
and we made popcorn and watched Twelve Angry Men.
Speaking
of Twelve Angry Men, now there’s a play we’ll never be doing unless we
get the asexual version of it, and Twelve Angry Jurors just doesn’t have
the same ring. The problem is there are too many girls at this school who think
they want to be actresses. Actors, I guess, is what you’re supposed to say now
whether it’s a guy or a girl. If I were a guy, I bet I’d have any part I
wanted. I could have been King Lear and crazy Duke of Cornwall because
as you will recall exactly two guys auditioned and then one dropped out because
of baseball and that is why we ended up stuck with The Glass Menagerie,
which, I’m sorry, is more than a little dated.
This
is one way to make myself memorable: I can play dudes. I’d cut my hair and
flatten myself out on top—not too challenging—and there are already people in
this school who think I like girls. You may have read about it on the second
floor bathroom wall. People make the assumption that just because I don’t let
guys grope me in the halls or dress in clubwear for school or spend fifteen
hours straightening my hair and spackling on cosmetics I’m not a real girl.
People are wrong about me, and someday soon these wrong people will know how
very wrong they are when a certain person makes his feelings for me public. Not
Adam Gunderson. He’s with Candace. The point is I would stuff a sock down there
if I had to in order to get a part. Hillary Swank did it and got an Oscar, so
wrong people can make fun of me all they want but they won’t be laughing when I’m
on E! True Hollywood Story and they are day-job-having single mothers.
Miracle
Worker was supposed to be my big break. As I mentioned and as you can see,
I do not have a lot going on in the cleavage department, which made me a
perfect candidate to play Helen Keller. Look at me. I’m small and wiry, I fit
the part. As usual, I completely blew the audition. Hence the
trying-something-new-and-memorable ploy of writing my own audition, hoping it
will help me relax (and it kind of is, now that I think about it) because I’m
telling you, when I do the lines in my room and no one is watching, I’m so, so
good and that isn’t bragging.
Of
course for Miracle Worker there were not lines per se, but I’m
saying that in general when I practice in my room I’m Sarah Bernhardt, I’m
Julie Harris, I’m Dame Judi Dench, for real. I practically made myself cry
thinking about what it would be like to not be able to see or hear. Can
you imagine? Then I get in front of you, Mr. P, and anyone else who might be in
the room and I am so bad. So truly bad. Even I know how bad I am. If you were watching
me and thinking: Does she know? Does she know how bad she is? The answer is
yes, yes, I do. When there are lines, I say the wrong ones at the wrong time,
in a total monotone, and I don’t know what to do with my hands, and one time I
drooled. I was staring at the page with my mouth sort of agape I guess, because
I lost my place, and this string of drool, sparkling in the stage lights, oozed
right out. Probably you recall.
This
is why I check the YES box.
This
is how I ended up running lights but not wanting to run lights because that’s a
job for people who are passionate about running lights, people such as Scotty
King.
When
I hand-picked Scotty to be my lighting assistant, my intent was not to kill.
Originally, he wasn’t supposed to be running the board at all. Originally, he
would have been my errand boy, my cue keeper, my clipboard peon. He was, after
all, a freshman, and I think it goes without saying that you can’t trust a
freshman with a junior’s job. Since I did lights for Our Town—and by the
way please can we agree as an entire high school drama community to never ever
do that play again?—it seemed like a good time to pass on some of my knowledge
and experience. And also I didn’t want to do the lights, I deeply and
completely did not want to do them. What I wanted was to be onstage, but since
that didn’t happen I hoped that while Scotty took care of things I could spend
a little more time with the actors and soak up some of their actory
personalities because I really think sometimes the reason you don’t cast me
comes down to that: you don’t see me as one of them. Even if I completely
nailed an audition you would still see me as a backstage kind of a personality.
It’s
okay, I know I’m not like them. And since I’m not like them but I’m here anyway,
I must be like a techie, right? Wrong! Ever since I checked my first YES box, I’ve
been stuck in this limbo between techie and performer. Unlike the techies, I do
not own seventeen different black T-shirts. I do not spend my weekends scouring
yard sales for the perfect Agatha Christie ashtray or Oscar Wilde table lamp. I
have never slept with a penlight around my neck. I do not know how to make iced
tea look like single malt scotch. At the same time I know I’ll never be one of
those sparkling, chosen, beautiful oddballs that have The Second I Turn
Eighteen I’m Moving to New York written all over them. I think too hard before
I talk. I haven’t considered how I look from all angles. I can’t break into
songs from Spring Awakening at the drop of a wool stocking. I have never
dared to wear an item of clothing that strays from my jeans-and-cardigan
comfort zone. It would never occur to me to wear a sequined tube top over a
long-sleeved T-shirt and paired with a boho skirt. This is another reason I don’t
understand the attention-whore comment in Adam’s yearbook. Maybe Candace wrote
it.
What
I’m saying is I know you don’t know what to do with me. I understand. Which is
why I put Scotty on the board and tried to spend a little more time with the
Chosen, because I thought if I want to be an actor so bad maybe I could at
least try to act like an actor acts when she’s not acting. Fake it ’til you
make it, as my brother says. I think he learned that in AA. Because most people
do not look at Rachel Banks and think: Drama Nerd. Most people do not look at
Rachel Banks and remember that Rachel Banks is her name, or even think she, I,
could be friends with someone like Adam. Or that someone like Adam could care
about me. And I’m not saying Adam, I’m saying someone like Adam. Someone
who is having a hard time knowing where I fit in his life, the way you are
having a hard time knowing where I fit in into the play. What do we do with the
plain girl in the cardigan? you are thinking. One of these kids is not like the
others, and why are we still letting her talk when she has gone way over the
time limit? The funny thing is I thought drama would be a place where being not
like the others was okay, but it turns out you have to be not like the others
in a way that is exactly like the others who are not like the others.
This
is why I’m not doing that stupid piece from Butterflies Are Free for my
audition and instead am trying to tell you who I am because let me assure you,
I will never be one of them. Not in the way you expect me to. For one thing I
don’t have that thing, that instinct that tells me about vintage tube tops and
asymmetrical hair. But I know that doesn’t matter, that someday some director,
some boy, some anybody, will like me plain and in my cardigan and not be blind
to me just because I’m not aggressively DIFFERENT and not worry what his
friends will think if they know how he feels about me and not leave me hanging
while he decides will I/won’t I/do I/don’t I for a year and a half.
If
I do this, if I leave this school and go on to study theater or go on auditions
out in the real world and start getting parts, it’s not going to be because I
am oh so delightfully quirky and wear unmatched shoes and tiaras around town.
It’s going to be because I love it, and because I have paid my dues and been
willing to check that YES box every time if only so that I can watch and learn
and get out of here and finally become the real Rachel who will then go out and
claim the parts that are out there waiting for me.
I
will tell you what I have that the rest of these girls do not. Not Candace. Not
even Julie-Ann. Passion. Passion deep down that is not just a passion for
attention or a passion for being able to decide who gets to sit at the drama
table in the cafeteria or a passion for cast parties. Do you know I’ve
memorized every play we’ve done since I got to this school? I’m not talking
about the parts I wanted. I mean the whole play. Every day I make Adam give me
a cue from one of the index cards I’ve made. I don’t even know what play it’s
from before he says it, but he gives me a cue and I know the next line. I just
know it. You can test me, if you want, when we’re done here.
Some
might say I shirked my responsibilities by putting Scotty on the board at what
you might call the last minute. But you’re so wrapped up with what’s going on
onstage and you always talk about empowerment and ownership and I figured since
you don’t remember my name you wouldn’t really care if it were me or Scotty or
the Queen of Sheba actually running the board, while the other one of us stayed
backstage on the headset. So I planned it for weeks without telling you, and
showed Scotty what to do.
And
I did give him the talk. You know the one.
Don’t
let anyone into the booth who doesn’t belong there. Keep the booth clean. Light
your own area carefully so there’s no bleed. Don’t do this, don’t do that.
Above all, do not enjoy a beverage anywhere near the board because you will get
electrocuted and die. Until now, that part has been pretty much an urban
legend. A scare tactic. The only way we’d die if we drank up there was if we
spilled and ruined a piece of seven-thousand-dollar equipment, because you
would personally kill us.
We
never thought about other means of electrocution. Like spring storms and leaky
roofs and the heretofore-unnoticed faulty wire on the board mixed with a
freshman with a no-shoes habit and who really wasn’t so skilled at multitasking
let alone remembering your basic laws of electrothermal dynamics. I know it
wasn’t my fault. I know I don’t have any real responsibility for Scotty’s
death, that it was a freak accident. But I can’t help but think if it had been
me up there things would have gone differently. I mean, I would have known that
my bare feet in a puddle of water under a mass of power cords wasn’t the best
scenario. He seemed pretty capable, though, for a freshman. So instead, I took
my place and stood in the wings, on the headset, probably looking like I was
engaged in heavy duty communication with the booth, talking some techie jargon,
when in reality my lips were moving to every line of every character in that
play, something stirring deep in the pit of my heart the way it does every time
the house lights go down and the stage lights come up and I want to be one of
them—not for the attention but to be transported and remade and to say all the
right things for a change, inside a life that has a script where you always
know who you are and what’s coming next.
And
I also can’t help but think Scotty’s death was a sign, someone up there telling
me:
Stop
checking the YES box.
Stop
being willing to stay behind the scenes when what you want is to be in
the scenes.
Stop
putting up with a boy’s cowardly self, no matter how great he seems behind
closed doors when no one is watching, because if he won’t cast you in the part
then you need to find a new play.
I’ve
only got one more year and I’ve proved my dedication.
The
fact that I’m even here auditioning after what happened and the role I played
in it just proves that I know the basic truth of plays and of life: that the
show must go on. Even when it’s hard to watch the show going on without you.
I’ll
take any part, I will, and if it’s Onlooker #8 I will be the best Onlooker #8
this town has ever seen. But if you can’t find a part for me I’m going to walk
away. I’m not going to hang around in the shadows anymore. This time you’ll
remember my name.
Sara
Zarr is the author of two critically acclaimed novels for young adults, Sweethearts
and Story of a Girl (a 2007 National Book Award finalist). She has also
contributed to the anthologies Does This Book Make Me Look Fat?: Stories
about Loving— and Loathing— Your Body, and Jesus Girls: True
Tales of Growing Up Female and Evangelical.
Sara
exploded onto the theatrical scene in the role of a greedy bad girl in Linda
Mar Elementary’s original production, Three for the Money. She continued
her career through high school as a passenger in Anything Goes,
Theodosia in Bone-Chiller!, and Mollie in The Mousetrap. As an
adult, she’s appeared in Alice in Wonderland; Oliver!; A Christmas Carol;
Look Homeward, Angel; and Judevine, and was a penlight—wearing stage
crew member for many other shows. She met her husband while working backstage
on a production of Pinocchio. Being married to him has been her favorite
role to date.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Hope Larson.
THE STARS AT THE FINISH LINE
by
wendy mass
2,563
DAYS AGO…
Three
more kids until my turn, and I had no idea what I was going to say.
“Fireman!”
Jimmy Anderson shouted.
The
class laughed. Jimmy had nearly burned down the school last year lighting
leaves with a magnifying glass.
“Race
car driver!” announced Rick Atterly from two seats in front of me.
The
class laughed again. Rick’s dad owned the biggest tractor store in town. No
wonder Rick wants to go faster than five miles an hour.
When
it was Tabitha Bell’s turn to respond, we all waited expectantly. No one knew
anything about her except that she was smart. Really smart, like scary smart,
and she had a funny name that I secretly repeated to myself when I couldn’t
fall asleep at night (Tabitha Bell…Tabitha Bell). She walked into our
fourth grade class two months ago, and suddenly I wasn’t the smartest kid in
the class anymore. For instance, I knew that Athena was Zeus’s daughter, but
Tabitha knew that Athena had sprung, fully grown, from the top of Zeus’s head.
I knew the temperature at which water boiled, and she knew the temperature at
which atoms got so cold they stopped moving. We were all waiting to hear what
someone who could be anything in the world would choose as a career.
“Astronaut,”
Tabitha Bell said quietly, but firmly. “I’m going to be an astronaut.”
“Me,
too!” I called out, surprising everyone, including myself.
“That’s
wonderful, Mr. Berman,” Miss McIntire said, jotting a note in her book. “I’m
sure you’ll both succeed.”
Tabitha
turned around in her seat. She narrowed her grass-green eyes at me, sizing up
my very soul. The youngest of six, I was not used to being noticed so intently.
I instinctively pushed myself against the back of my seat. My flinch made the
corners of Tabitha’s mouth twitch upwards. “Bring it on,” she said with one
sharp nod.
We
were nine years old, and the competition had begun.
The
sun has risen and set 2,563 times since that day, and the two of us have spoken
exactly 238 words. That’s, like, less than a five-minute conversation. And
those words were spread out over years. 224 of them were during our sixth grade
science project where we got stuck on the same team, two of them came from an
accidental brush in the hall in eighth grade that required a mumbled “Oops,
sorry,” and the rest resulted from a request to pass a beaker of liquid
hydrogen in AP Chem sophomore year. In the beginning I tried to be friendly,
but she’s never given me the time of day. Literally. I once asked her the time
because my watch had stopped and she wouldn’t tell me. Stuff like this used to
drive me crazy, but now it’s the end of our junior year and I’m used to it.
Since
we’re in every honors class together, I spend a lot of time staring at the back
of her head (even in high school we still sit alphabetically). Honors English
is about to start when Tabitha walks in and heads to her desk. It takes me a
few seconds to realize that instead of sitting down, she’s standing next to my
desk. In fact, she’s actually talking to me. This does not happen. I blink and
sit up straighter.
“How
could you not have told me about this?” she demands, waving an orange flyer in
my face. “That’s not fair!”
Okay,
so just because Tabitha and I don’t talk, that’s not to say we aren’t aware of
each other. We always know what grades the other receives, what
extracurriculars the other is involved in, what accolades or awards we earn,
how many laps around the field we can do before getting winded. Getting into
NASA requires being in peak physical condition, an advanced degree in something
like astrophysics or aeronautical engineering, and that most mysterious of
qualifications—the “Right Stuff.” Without saying a word, we push each other to
be our best in every area. We “bring it on” every day. When I sit down to a
test, I see Tabitha’s face in my mind, her eyes challenging me to beat her
score. Before, I never cared much about grades; I just enjoyed learning for its
own sake. Because of her, I now have straight A’s and am pretty sure I can get
a scholarship to college, which my family never could have afforded otherwise.
Instead of practicing quadratic equations alone in my room, I’m the treasurer
of the junior class. And I owe all that to her.
The
thing is, sometime over these same 2,563 days I probably should have told
Tabitha I don’t actually want to BE an astronaut. I get carsick on any road
that isn’t perfectly straight. I almost fainted from fear on the Care Bears
roller coaster at the county fair when I was seven. The likelihood of me
becoming an astronaut and zooming into space at thousands of miles per hour and
then floating around at Zero Gravity is zilch. I know I should tell her that
she doesn’t have to worry about me taking her spot at MIT, but honestly, our
wordless competition has made my life so much better and I don’t want it to
stop.
So
now she’s waiting for me to form words, and I can’t seem to answer. Because
here’s the thing. Even though she annoys the you-know-what out of me, I still
repeat Tabitha’s name to myself in bed at night. And it’s not because the
melody of it (Tabitha Bell…Tabitha Bell) lulls me to gentle slumber. It’s
because I’m madly in love with her.
My
feelings began in fifth grade, when she made a diorama of the Pantheon in Rome
complete with statues of all the gods modeled out of Ivory soap. Then in
seventh grade, when she constructed a wave pool in science class to show how
all matter behaves both like a wave and like a particle, my heart started to
flutter. Anyone who would try to explain quantum mechanics to seventh graders
is a special girl for sure. But then last year she won the high school speech
competition by talking for an hour about the existential meaning of Sisyphus
pushing his rock up the hill every day. And that did it. From that moment on, I
was hers. Or she was mine. Or something like that. Not that she knows, of
course, considering how, you know, we don’t talk at all.
“Peter?”
she demands, all golden eyes and honey-brown hair and tank top. How am I
supposed to ignore all that and just answer her?
I
stall by glancing at the flyer. It’s for the big Star Party the local astronomy
club is hosting out in the desert next weekend. This year they’re running an
all-night Messier Marathon. My name is listed at the bottom as the Youth
Advisor.
“I
found this on the community board at the rec center,” she says accusingly. “Why
didn’t you tell me you were involved with this?”
I
finally find my voice. “It’s not a secret,” I tell her. “You know I’m into
astronomy.”
She
stares at me like I have two heads. “No, I don’t.”
This
surprises me. Perhaps she hasn’t been paying quite as much attention to me as I’ve
been paying to her all these years. I don’t know what to say, so I stare down
at the flyer. When I look back up, she inexplicably has a tear in the corner of
her eye. It glistens on her lower lashes like a diamond. I redden and resist
the strong urge to dab at it. She blinks quickly and it’s gone. Her eyes narrow
and she asks, “Can you tell me how much hydrogen gas the sun transforms into
helium per second?”
“Um,
no.”
Tabitha
tosses her book bag around the back of her seat and sits down, still facing me.
“Well, I can. I know the exact orbits of the planets and the names of Jupiter’s
moons. But you know what?”
I
shake my head. This conversation is very weird.
She
exhales loudly and says, “I’ve never seen them. Any of them. I’ve never
looked through a telescope in my life.” She picks up the flyer and waves it at
me. “When I saw your name on this I realized how stupid I’d been to ignore
basic observational astronomy. Clearly you knew enough to study it. How
can I expect to get into NASA if I don’t know the difference between Cassiopeia
and Andromeda? If I’ve never seen the Ring Nebula with my own eyes?”
Without
waiting for an answer, she does something she’s never done before. She touches
me. Or, more accurately, she clutches my arm in a death grip. “You’re taking me
with you. I’m going to do that marathon, or whatever it is, and it’s going on
my college application.”
I
don’t want her to know the effect her touch is having so I blurt out, “You don’t
even know what the marathon is?”
Her
grip tightens in response. I can’t help but squirm. “Okay, okay, I’ll tell you.
Charles Messier was a French astronomer at the turn of the nineteenth century.
He made this list of deep-sky objects, you know, galaxies, nebula, star
clusters. He was trying to find comets, and kept coming across these other
things. So he started keeping a chart so other astronomers wouldn’t confuse
them with comets. For a few days in March each year, all 110 objects are
visible sometime between dusk and dawn. So the idea of the Marathon is to find
and identify all 110 objects on the list.”
“Fine.
Then that’s what I’ll do.”
“Um,
doing the marathon is really hard. Most people don’t get everything. A good
goal for a beginner would be a dozen or so.”
Her
grip tightens even more. “You don’t think I can do it?”
I
fear my circulation is being cut off. She’s getting harder to love. “Look,
finding deep-sky objects that are millions of light years away is hard enough.
But going from one to the other in a race against the dawn, well, that takes a
lot of practice, that’s all. I’ve never done it, and I’ve been studying the sky
since, well, for a long time.” I might not want to fly in outer space, but I
love looking at it. I recently took a picture of the Copernicus Impact Crater
on the moon that is SO COOL that I hung it up inside my locker.
Tabitha
releases my arm and I have to shake it to restore feeling in my hand.
She
blows her hair out of her eyes. “I’ll just practice then.”
I
point to the flyer. “It’s in four days.”
“Then
that gives me three nights to practice,” she replies matter-of-factly.
I
want to tell her that even if she had three months it might not be
enough time. Instead I ask, “Do you want me to help you?” Even as the words are
out of my mouth, I know they are a mistake. Tabitha and I don’t help each
other. To admit we needed help was unthinkable. She glares at me and whips
around in her seat, her long hair actually skimming my nose.
I
know she’s only talking to me now because she needs something from me, but I
can live with that.
After
all, her hair smells like strawberries.
I
gently place my telescope in the back of the purple VW van Tabitha borrowed
from her uncle for the trip. My eyes land on the big box next to it and almost
pop out of my head. “You’ve got to be kidding me! That’s what you’re
bringing?”
Tabitha
shuts the back of the van—barely missing my fingers—and puts her hands on her
hips. “What’s wrong with it? It’s a top of the line computerized telescope.”
“Exactly!”
I reply, following her around the side of the van. “You can’t do the Messier
Marathon with a GoTo! That’s cheating!”
She
climbs into the driver’s seat and closes the door. I hurry around to the other
side and slide in. I’m not sure how she became the one organizing this trip,
but I should have expected as much. The ancient van groans and sputters, but
finally starts. She pulls away from the curb in front of my house, the clutch
grinding into second gear. It’s going to be a long five hours.
“Using
a computerized telescope isn’t cheating,” she insists, reaching behind her to
pull a bag of pretzels out from the stash of healthy food she packed. She
offers me some. I shake my head and pull out a Charleston Chew instead. I had
frozen it in preparation for the drive, and it’s still cold.
“You’ll
never pass the NASA physical if you eat like that,” she says.
“That
won’t be for, like, years from now.”
She
shrugs. “Suit yourself.”
I
take a big bite off the end and take my time chewing. I don’t want to
antagonize her. But as much as the two of us have wanted to get ahead, we’ve
never cheated. At least I haven’t. I didn’t even bring my equatorial
mount because using the setting circles feels like cheating.
“Tabitha,”
I say as gently as possible, “don’t you think it’s cheating if you plug in the
coordinates of each item on the list, and then wait for your telescope to “go
to” them? Where’s the challenge in that? How are you learning your way around
the night sky?”
Instead
of answering, she empties her bag of pretzels into her mouth, which I have to
admit is impressive. Even the way she chomps on pretzels—crumbs and salt
dotting her lips—is sexy. She swallows and says, “I’ve been doing some reading.
The point of the Messier Marathon isn’t to learn the night sky; the point is
simply to see all 110 objects. How you find them doesn’t matter.”
Technically,
she’s right.
“Plus,”
she adds, “I only had three days to prepare. If someone had told me
about this earlier, I would have been able to learn the major constellations
and then maybe I’d have a chance with a regular scope. But since no one told
me, I had to rent this one.”
By
sheer force of will—and the fact that I can see the outline of her bra through
her thin white T-shirt—I don’t answer. Instead, I say, “Why don’t I just go
over how things are going to work when we get there?”
“Oh,
so now you’re going to help me?”
I
gnaw hard on my Charleston Chew so I don’t say something I’ll regret. Focus
on the bra strap, focus on the bra strap. I gulp down half of my water
bottle. “If you’d rather do it all on your own, be my guest.”
“No,
I want your help.” She glances fleetingly in my direction. Our eyes meet for a
second and even though she drives me crazy, my heart skips a beat.
So
I explain how I’ve made a chart of when each object will rise and set, and how
we have to find them in this precise order, or we’ll miss them. I explain how
the club chose this location because it has the clearest line of sight in all
directions. Some objects will be very close to the horizon, and even a small
hill could block out a whole galaxy. The fastest-setting objects—the spiral
galaxies M77, M74, and M33, will be fighting the twilight, so they’ll be really
hard to see. And in the morning M30 will be the biggest challenge because it’ll
be practically dawn and it’s only one degree above the horizon.
“We’ll
just use my scope,” she says confidently when I’ve finished my little lesson.
I
shake my head. “Nope. We can’t use yours during twilight. We’ll have to do
those early ones the old-fashioned way.”
She
glances over again. This time she looks almost impressed.
“I
got my Messier Certificate a few years ago,” I explain. “That means I’ve seen
all the objects on the list. Never in one night, though.”
“So
why do you want to do this, if you’ve already seen them all?”
Her
question takes me by surprise. “Well, to be honest, it’s the only thing I haven’t
done before.”
“Huh?
Doing the Messier Marathon is the only thing you haven’t done before?” Her
voice takes on a teasing tone, and for a second I feel naked.
I
hurry to answer before my cheeks grow any hotter. “I mean, astronomy-wise of
course. I’ve gone through all the observing programs that the Amateur Astronomy
Association offers.” I start ticking them off on my fingers. “I got my Sky
Puppy pin when I was ten, my Lunar Club pin at eleven, my?—”
She
starts laughing. “I’m sorry, your Sky Puppy pin?”
I
cross my arms over my chest. “Hey, don’t knock the Sky Puppy. It took me a year
to earn that one. You have to be able to point out fifteen constellations and
find five deep-sky objects like the ones we’ll be seeing tonight. Plus you have
to be able to tell stories—like myths—about two of the constellations and how
they got up in the sky. That’s hard when you’re just a kid.”
“I’m
sure it is,” she says in mock seriousness.
I
guzzle some more water and change the subject. “You brought everything I told
you to, right? It gets really cold out there at night. Especially when you’re
mostly standing still.”
She
pushes her sunglasses up onto her head. “I know it gets cold at night, Peter. I’ve
lived here eight years.”
“Eight
years, two months, three days.” Wait, did I say that out loud? I sink down in
my seat. Please don’t let me have said that out loud, please don’t let me
have said that out loud. For a minute I think I’ve escaped, then the van
swerves and I grab the side of the door.
“Why
would you remember that?” she asks almost suspiciously.
I
can’t look at her. “Um, I just remember how long it’s been since our, you know,
competition started.”
“Our
competition?” she repeats.
Now
I turn to stare, a tingly feeling creeping up my spine. “The whole ‘bring it on’
thing?”
Her
brows furrow. “You mean, like the movie?”
She
really doesn’t remember. My mind races to all the things I’ve done over the
past eight years because I thought I had to keep up with her. I can’t believe
it was completely one-sided. How could I have thought that someone like Tabitha
would ever really care what I was doing? I’m such an idiot! I shiver even
though it’s warm in the van. A small choking sound escapes my throat.
“Hey,
don’t choke, dude,” Tabitha says, handing me the water bottle I’d put on the
seat next to me. “I’m just busting you! Of course we’re in a competition. If it
wasn’t for you, I’d have seen that cheerleading movie. Or maybe even have been
a cheerleader. Or had a boyfriend. Or gone to parties. Or, like, done a single
thing just for fun.”
Relief
floods through me, literally warming me up again. When my heart rate returns to
normal, I say, “So just to get this straight, you’re blaming me for all the
things you didn’t get to do? And to think I’ve been crediting you for all the
things I have been able to do!”
She
shrugs. “As my dad always says, that’s what makes horse races.”
“What
does that even mean?”
“You
know, if everyone thought the same way, they’d all bet on the same horse and
where’s the fun in that? Tonight will prove which one of us really has what it
takes. Which of us belongs in the stars, and which on the ground.”
“Does
it have to be one or the other? Why can’t we both get what we want?”
“Have
you ever heard of two people from the same high school becoming astronauts?”
I
scan my memory and shake my head.
She
continues, her hands gripping the wheel so tight her knuckles whiten. “It’s
still harder for a woman. Did you know Judith Rosner got a perfect score on her
SATs? That’s what it’s going to take for me.”
This
was probably as good a time as any to tell her she didn’t have to worry about
me taking her spot since I’m not planning on being an astronaut, but she’s not
done talking.
“Hey,
listen. I only half meant it about resenting you for making me miss things.
Just knowing you were trying to achieve the same thing made me work so much
harder. It was worth missing a few stupid parties. So seriously, thank you for
always breathing down my neck.” She laughs. “And I mean that literally.
Sometimes I could actually feel your breath on my neck in class.”
I
redden again. Darn that alphabetical order!
“One
more year,” she says, her usual look of determination on her face. “Then we’ll
go our separate ways. Me to MIT, you to, well, anywhere else!” She grins at me.
I
grin back. If I tell her the truth now, she might not work so hard. I wouldn’t
want her to lose her focus senior year. So I lean back and enjoy the ride.
Two
hours later, we pull into the makeshift parking lot that is full of cars from
states as far as Illinois. Our 31 degree latitude is worth driving for. Up
north they wouldn’t get to see everything.
“Hurry,”
Tabitha says, jumping out of the van. “We need to get a good spot!”
“I
really don’t think we need to worry.” I wave my arm at the miles of open space.
But
she already has her metal cart set up and is yanking at her scope.
“Hang
on,” I tell her, reaching over to help. “You have to be really gentle with
these things. If a lens slips out of place, you’re out of luck.”
She
steps back, and I push the scope back into the van. “Let’s set up our station
first, then get the scopes, okay?”
She
salutes me. “Whatever you say.”
“That’s
what I like to hear,” I reply, swinging my backpack onto my shoulders. I stick
the waterproof blanket and my sleeping bag under one arm, the two beach chairs
under the other, and trudge after her. After making a wide circle, she plops
down her stuff. “Here looks good to me.”
We
spread out the blanket and arrange the chairs. Reaching into my backpack, I
line up a gray hooded sweatshirt, a battery-operated alarm clock, a bottle of
Tylenol, four bottles of water, four cans of Coke, long underwear, four peanut
butter/jelly/fluff sandwiches, a regular flashlight, a red-bulbed flashlight,
extra C, AA, and AAA batteries, an assortment of eyepieces, a dew cap for the
scope, a wool hat, my Marathon Observer’s Logbook, my well-worn copy of
Peterson’s Field Guide to Stars and Planets, laminated sky charts, an
extra pair of socks, my cell phone that probably wouldn’t get a signal anyway,
a foldable tripod, a pair of fingerless gloves, the digital single-lens reflex
camera I’d spent a year of lawn-mowing money on, four granola bars, four
apples, and a thermos to fill with hot chocolate later. I’m double-checking my
battery supply when I notice Tabitha watching me. Suddenly, she grabs my
now-empty backpack and starts frantically searching through it.
“Where
is it?” she says, rummaging into its depths. She makes a big show of turning it
upside down and shaking it. “It’s got to be here somewhere!”
I
snatch the knapsack. “What are you looking for?”
“The
kitchen sink! You have everything else, so I figure it’s got to be here.”
“Wow,
I didn’t know you had such an outstanding sense of humor.” I carefully replace
my supplies. “I hope you’re as prepared as I am, or you’re going to be mighty
cold and hungry tonight.”
She
grabs the Field Guide. “At least I’ll have good reading.”
I
grab it back. “Not if you don’t have a flashlight.”
“Of
course I have a flashlight.” She reaches into her bag and holds up a small
white plastic flashlight with a picture of Hello Kitty on it.
“You’re
kidding me. Do you know how dark it’s going to get out here? Darker than you’ve
ever seen in your life. That thing doesn’t look strong enough to shine more
than three feet.”
She
frowns and turns it around in her hand. Then she grabs my red-bulbed flashlight
before I can stuff it back in my bag. “I’ll just use this one, then. You don’t
need two.”
“As
a matter of fact, I do. The red one is so you don’t ruin your night vision. I’ll
use it to consult my charts once it gets dark.”
“You
mean, we’ll use that one,” she says, “to consult our charts.”
I
look up, surprised. “I thought you didn’t want my help.”
Her
eyes darken. “Fine,” she says, her voice clipped. “You’re right.” She turns on
her heel and marches toward the tent marked BREAK STATION. I watch as she
strikes up a conversation with a young couple setting up a huge coffee machine.
Well, that probably could have gone better. I didn’t say I wouldn’t help
her. I just thought she didn’t want me to. She didn’t have to storm off like
that. She can be so annoying.
I
busy myself by setting up my scope. I want to make sure it’s completely cooled
down by the time twilight arrives. I align the scope’s finder and then
calibrate my eyepiece. Tabitha still hasn’t returned by the time I’m done, so I
grab one of my sandwiches and wander around greeting people I know from the
club. A big group of kids—mostly made up of Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts—ask for
help setting up their telescopes. It’s fun seeing all the different types. The
troop leaders show me their plan of attack for the night and I make a few tweaks
to it. By the time I get back to our blanket, probably another fifty people
have arrived and their varying scopes are glinting in the last of the sun. It’s
such a big space that everyone has allowed a sizable distance between
themselves and their neighbors. Tabitha is lying on her belly reading my
Peterson’s Guide. Why does her butt have to be so cute? It’s hard to
stay annoyed at a butt like that.
I
tap her shoulder lightly. “Hey.”
“Hey,”
she replies, not glancing up from the page.
“Um,
sorry about before,” I say, plopping down into one of the chairs. “I’m happy to
help. You just never, um, asked before.” I almost add how in order to ask me,
she would have had to talk to me, but I don’t want to start another fight.
“Maybe
not,” she admits. “But I’m asking now. I may be a little out of my league here.
I mean, I don’t know M30 from M29!”
I
laugh. “That’s easy. M29 is an open cluster, while M30 is a globular?—”
She
rests her hand on my ankle and says, “I’m serious.”
I
may never wash my ankle again. “Okay, we’ll do it together,” I manage to choke
out.
Her
shoulders visibly relax and she smiles, releasing her hand. “Cool. I was afraid
you’d say no. I thought maybe you’d want to keep it off my college apps.”
I
can feel the memory of each individual finger imprinted on my leg. I wish she’d
touch me again. I clear my throat and say, “No worries. I already have those
other Observing Programs under my belt. I can share this one.”
“That’s
right,” she says with mock seriousness. “You’re already a Sky Puppy. What can
beat that?” She pops open a can of Coke (my Coke) and takes a long swig.
I
pretend to be insulted. “Hey, the Sky Puppy has a long and honored past.”
She
laughs. “Maybe I should try to get my pin.”
I
pop open another of the Cokes. “Too late. You can only do it before you’re ten
years old.”
“So
I guess this is my only chance to get a pin in anything,” she says, suddenly
serious.
“Nah,
there are lots of others.”
She
shakes her head, but doesn’t reply. I wonder again why she’s never studied
astronomy before. It just seems like a strange subject to have overlooked by
someone who wants to fly through space. I lean back to check out the sky. The
sun has turned the horizon a deep orange-pink, which normally I would stop to
admire. But now it’s time to get focused. “There it is,” I announce, eagerly
pushing myself out of the chair. I can see others around me getting down to
work, too.
“M74?
Where? You can see it already?” Tabitha cranes her neck in all directions. “That
wasn’t so hard. One down, a hundred and nine to go!”
I
laugh. “Not M74. Just the North Star. I need to use it to make the final
alignments on my scope.” A few minutes later, whoops and yelps fills the air. “Here
we go!” I call to Tabitha. “Grab the logbook!”
“M74
this time?” she asks.
“Yup!”
I swing around to the west until I find Aries. I follow it down into Pisces
until I have the general area. Then I get behind the scope. I’ve found M74
before, but not at this time of year. It’s a lot closer to the horizon now,
which makes it even harder to find than usual. “Got it! Come look!”
Tabitha
leans against my arm as she closes one eye and peers through the eyepiece. “That’s
it?” she asks, sounding a bit disappointed. “It just looks like a blob of
stars.”
I
smile, using a pencil from my pocket to make a check on the first line of my
log. “You’d look like a blob of stars at forty million light-years away.”
“Wow.
Our eyes just absorbed protons that are forty million years old. How cool is
that?”
“No
time to dwell on that now. Gotta find M77. That one’s over sixty million
light-years away. Wanna give it a try?”
She
shakes her head. “It would take me too long. We’d get too far behind.”
That’s
probably true. “Okay, I’ll find this one, but you’ll do the next one. That one’s
so easy we won’t even need the scope.” Once I find Delta Cetus, the closest
star to M77, it only takes a minute to find the spiral galaxy. I show it to
Tabitha, who admits it looks slightly less like a blob than the first one.
“At
this rate, we’ll be done before midnight,” she says, and dramatically crosses
it off on our list.
“Sorry,
doesn’t work that way.”
“I
know, I know,” she says, rolling her eyes. “As the earth rotates, different
objects come and go from view all night, blah blah blah.”
“You’re
a fast learner,” I tease.
“So
true, so true. So what’s the next one?” She looks down at the list. “M31,
Andromeda Galaxy. You expect me to find that on my own?”
I
stand as close as I dare (which is to say, close enough to smell her hair, but
not close enough to feel it), and point out the five stars that form the W
shape of Cassiopeia. Then I gently lift her arm. “Make a fist.”
She
looks doubtful, but does it. “Now move your fist so it’s directly under the
lower part of the W and hold it there.” I get distracted for a second by the
graceful way her sleeve slips down toward her shoulder, and I freeze up.
“Um,
arm getting tired here,” she says impatiently.
“Sorry.”
I hand her the binoculars. “Now look right below your fist and scan the area
for a bright blob with faint light coming off both sides.”
It
takes a while for her to coordinate looking through the binoculars without
moving her fist out of position. Standing so close to her as darkness falls all
around us is kind of making me breathless. Then I hear a sharp intake of breath
from her. “I think I found it! Does it look kinda like a flying saucer?”
I
smile, proud of her. “Yup, that’s it. Congratulations. You now know how to find
Andromeda and Cassiopeia! You’re on your way!”
She
lowers her fist and the binoculars, and beams at me. For a few long seconds
neither of us moves. My heart starts beating crazily. The stars are coming out
in full force now. I’ve never had a more romantic moment. Should I kiss her? “What
are you waiting for?” she says.
She
does want me to kiss her! What if my lips don’t line up right with hers?
What if we bang noses? She’s waiting. I hope for the best, pucker slightly, and
lean in closer. The binoculars whack me on the forehead as she lifts them to
her eyes. “Well?” she says, seemingly unaware she just wounded me. “Aren’t you
going to show me more stuff?”
Thoroughly
humiliated, I rub my forehead. What are you waiting for clearly didn’t
mean the same thing to her as it did to me. Did she know I was trying to kiss
her? Is that why she moved the binoculars? Should I be humiliated? Before I can
apologize, she cries, “Oh, no! Look at that huge cloud!”
I
follow her gaze, but the sky—almost totally dark now—looks perfectly clear to
me. “What cloud?”
“That
long one!” She waves her arm in an arc clear across the sky. “Is it going to
mess everything up?” Her eyes search mine in a panic.
I’d
laugh, but my mood is kind of low right now. “That’s not a cloud. That’s the
Milky Way. You’re looking at the edge of our galaxy.”
“Huh?”
She bends her neck back and stares. “I’m sure I would have noticed that before.”
“You
have to be somewhere like this, far away from any city lights. A few hundred
years ago everyone on Earth could see it.” I swallow my wounded pride and say, “C’mon,
we’ve got to keep moving down the list.”
“Uh-huh,”
Tabitha replies, still staring at the Milky Way. “Whatever you want.”
If
only that were true.
After
returning to the scope and finding the last few early-setting objects, we take
a break before embarking on the next round. I set up Tabitha’s GoTo while she
munches on a carrot. I’m holding my red flashlight with my teeth to free up my
hands and to give myself an excuse for not talking. I can’t believe I thought
she wanted me to kiss her. What was I thinking? I’m not the guy girls want to
kiss. I’m the guy they want to copy homework off of. My mother once told me I
would “come into my own” in college. I hope she’s right because it’s no fun
pining away for someone who would never be interested in you. And right now it
would be a whole lot easier if that someone wasn’t right next to me in the
dark. I stall a little longer by attaching my camera to my scope. Focusing on
the North Star, I set the lens to f/8, the ISO to 100, and open the shutter for
a long exposure.
The
longer we stay here not talking, the more I just want to crawl into a hole. I
need a break. I pick out a set of star charts and hand them to Tabitha. “Here’s
the information you’ll need to enter. Just type in the coordinates listed next
to each object and your scope will find them.”
She
looks down at the pages in her hand. “What are you going to be doing?”
I
glance around helplessly. “I’m going to see if anyone needs help. I’m the Youth
Advisor, after all.” She can’t argue with that.
She
waves the charts in the air. “But then you won’t be able to do the Marathon.”
I
shrug. “It’s okay. I’ll do it next year.” I turn away before she makes me
change my mind. I feel slightly guilty. It’s not Tabitha’s fault that she doesn’t
feel the same way about me as I feel about her.
She
calls after me. “I’ll be fine. Don’t worry about me!”
I
take a deep breath and keep walking. Of course she’ll be fine. She’s always
fine. She knows exactly who she is, what she wants to be, and what she needs to
do to get there. I don’t know any of those things. All I know is what I don’t
want to be, and that’s not the same thing at all. I see groups of club members
huddled behind their scopes, but instead of stopping, I walk right past them. I
walk past the break tent, and past the scouts who somehow managed to get pizza
delivered in the middle of the desert. I debate going back to get one of my
sandwiches, but I don’t want to risk a confrontation. When I get away from most
of the crowd, I lie down on the hard ground. It’s been getting progressively
colder since the sun set a few hours ago. I wish I had put my warm clothes on.
I stare up at the sky, so familiar to me. Turning to the western horizon, I
easily find Venus, the evening star, the brightest in the sky. Tabitha is like
Venus. She has this presence that’s brighter than everyone else’s. Soon Jupiter
will rise, surrounded by its moons of ice that could hold the building blocks
of life. If Tabitha is Venus, I’m like Europa, a big ball of ice that might
have a few surprises inside me if anyone bothered to look. I close my eyes and
try to imagine I can feel the turning of the earth beneath me.
“Hey,”
a voice says softly, kicking my toe. I quickly sit up. It’s Tabitha. She’s holding
the blanket, my sweatshirt, and her sleeping bag.
When
I find my voice, I say, “What are you doing here? You can’t be away from your
post for too long, or else?—”
She
shrugs. “I thought you might be cold.”
“How
did you find me?”
She
points to the binoculars around her neck, then tosses me my sweatshirt and
spreads open the blanket. “Room for one more down there?” Without waiting for a
response, she lies down. I lie next to her, barely breathing. Then she puts the
sleeping bag over both of us.
“So,”
she begins. “Tell me a story.”
“About
what?” I ask, my voice cracking.
“You
said you had to learn stories about the stars for your Sky Puppy pin, right?”
For
the first time she doesn’t laugh when she says Sky Puppy. I nod in the
dark.
“One
of those, then.”
I
notice she’s using her bunched-up sweatshirt as a pillow, so I do the same. “Well,
I only remember one of them. It’s sort of a poem. A Native American poem.” I
can’t tell if the heat radiating through my body is from the sleeping bag, or
from her nearness.
“That’s
cool,” she says. “I like poems.”
I
take a deep breath. “It’s called ‘The Song of the Stars.’ It talks about these
three hunters, and they’re the three stars in the handle of the Big Dipper. See
it up there?” I point, and a few seconds later she nods. “Okay, so the hunters
are the handle, and there’s a bear, too. He’s the cup thing at the end of the
handle. Then the Milky Way is like a road. That’s what you need to know
beforehand.”
She
nods again. I take another deep breath and can feel the heat from the side of
her body electrifying my own. Staring upward and trying to focus, I recite:
We
are the stars which sing.
We
sing with our light;
We
are the birds of fire,
We
fly over the sky.
Our
light is a voice;
We
make a road for spirits,
For
the spirits to pass over.
Among
us are three hunters
Who
chase a bear;
There
never was a time
When
they were not hunting.
We
look down on the mountains.
This
is the Song of the Stars.
She’s
so quiet for a minute I’m afraid she fell asleep. When I get up the nerve to
turn my head toward hers, I can see tears silently flowing down her face. The
poem is pretty good, but I doubt it’s worthy of tears. She hastily wipes them
away.
“Tabitha,
what’s wrong?”
She
doesn’t look at me. Finally she says, “Do you know why I want to be an
astronaut?”
Surprised
at her question, I reply, “Well, I figured it was something to do with wanting
to explore outer space, do experiments, see the Space Station.”
She
shakes her head. “When I was eight, and my parents were fighting all the time,
and we were moving again, I saw this picture from one of the space shuttles. It
was a picture of Earth, seen from space. Just a blue and white marble,
surrounded by blackness. It was that blackness that interested me, that endless
nothingness. That’s why I was never really interested in learning about the
stars. They just interrupted the dark. I thought, if I could get up there, if I
could see the Earth like those astronauts did, if I could see it as it really
is, then my problems wouldn’t matter. I’d get a true perspective of things. I’d
be above everything. But I realized something tonight. If we’re looking at
stars whose light is millions of years old, we’re not seeing those stars as
they really are. We’re seeing them as they were, millions of
years ago.”
I
nod and clear my throat. “That’s true. That’s why I love taking pictures of the
sky so much. It’s like taking a snapshot of the past, and of a past that only
exists from our exact vantage point. At any other position in time or space, it
would look different. It’s like taking pictures of ghosts.” I’ve never said
anything like that to anyone before.
“Exactly!”
she says, leaning up on her elbow to face me. “So my image of Earth isn’t real,
either.”
“Well,
it’s still real. It’s just not the whole picture. Does that matter so
much?”
She
sighs. “I’m not sure. It just means I’m going to have to look at things
differently. Maybe that’s not such a bad thing. Why do you want to be an
astronaut?”
Well,
now or never. “I don’t,” I say simply.
Her
brow wrinkles adorably. “You don’t what?”
I
meet her gaze. “I don’t want to be an astronaut.”
Her
eyes almost pop out of her head and she sits bolt upright. “Because of what I
just said? I don’t know what I’m talking about, you can’t go by?—”
I
smile, sitting up, too. “No, not because of what you said. I’ve actually never
wanted to be one. I’d much rather take pictures of outer space with my feet
planted firmly on the ground.”
She
shakes her head in bewilderment and lies back down. “Then why? Why did you work
so hard all these years?”
I
glance around us, but no one is close enough to hear. I lie back again, too.
The darkness is complete now, and without a moon, it will be this way for many
more hours. The sky is so crowded with stars that it’s dizzying. I know they’re
not the only thing making me dizzy. Under the sleeping bag Tabitha puts her
hand on my arm.
“Peter,
tell me why. Why did you say you wanted to be an astronaut?”
She
squeezes my arm a little, and I flash back to class the other day when she
gripped it so tight. That feels like so long ago now. “I said it because you
did.”
“Huh?”
I
can’t help but smile at her confusion. “If you had said you wanted to be a
chimney sweeper that day in fourth grade, we might be in a competition to see
who could sweep the most chimneys right now instead of lying here.”
She
stares at me like she’s never seen me before.
I
continue. “Don’t get me wrong, I’m really glad you said astronaut. Otherwise, I
never would have learned about the stars. Plus, I think the ash in chimneys
would be bad for my allergies.”
She
laughs. “You’re crazy.”
“Maybe.”
Then
she leans over and kisses me square on the mouth and stays there. No build-up,
no time to obsess over where my lips should go on hers, what I should do with
my tongue, if anything. No time even to close my eyes. All I can see is her
face, her beautiful hair, and thousands of stars behind her. I kiss her back,
and am surprised at how much this tops anything I could have imagined. My
fingers instinctively lace with hers and we hold on tight. We stay like this
for an hour, not talking, our bodies pressed together in the deep blackness.
Her stomach growls and mine growls in return. We both laugh.
“You
wouldn’t have any more Charleston Chews, would you?”
I
shake my head. “But I have peanut butter and fluff sandwiches.”
We
slowly untangle ourselves and get to our feet. My body misses hers already. As
we head back, she says, “It takes a secure man to admit he eats fluff sandwiches.”
I
take her hand and flick on my red flashlight with the other. “I also still
watch cartoons. And not the cool ones on at night. The Saturday morning ones.”
“I
sleep with seven stuffed animals,” she says. “And two dolls.”
“You
win. You’re the dorkiest.”
When
we reach our scopes, I go check my camera while Tabitha gets the sandwiches. I’d
set the exposure for eighty minutes, and it had just ended. Flicking on the
screen I call Tabitha over to show her the results. Hundreds of concentric
circles made of light.
“Wow,
you’re really good. How did you do that?” she asks, looking from the screen to
the sky overhead, and back again. “I don’t see anything that looks like those
streaks of light.”
“Those
are stars.”
She
looks closer, puzzled. “How can those streaks be stars? The stars aren’t moving
like that.”
“Ah,
but they are moving like that. We just don’t see it because we’re
moving, too.”
She
sighs and steps back. “Just one more way that reality tricks us.”
I
shake my head. “We’ll never have a true picture of reality; it just doesn’t
exist. But I’m real, and you’re real, and those fiery balls of gas up there are
real, and right now that’s all I need to know. That, and if we hurry, we might
be able to catch up to the Marathon. We’re two hours behind, but if we work
with both scopes we might be able to do it.”
She
looks at my camera screen again. “Or…we can go back where we were and
get under the sleeping bag again. You know, to see if we can catch the stars
streaking like that.”
“Yeah,
yeah, let’s do that one.”
I
awake at five AM to cries of M30! M30! Hurry! coming from all
directions. Tabitha is just waking up, too. My first thought is to protect her
from my morning breath. My second is that I can’t believe Tabitha Bell fell
asleep in my arms. Her smeared makeup and tousled hair look so sexy I literally
can’t bear it. If Charles Messier were alive he’d be getting the mother of all
thank-you notes from me.
A
bullhorn sounds. “C’mon, everyone! You’re almost at the finish line! Don’t give
up now!”
Our
eyes meet. She narrows hers. I narrow mine. She grins. I grin back. In unspoken
agreement, we throw off the sleeping bag and take off in a run. We may have
missed most of the Marathon, but we are NOT ones to miss a challenge. I reach
my scope first, and am glad I had the foresight to put the dew cover on before
we left. Tabitha grabs for the star charts and frantically presses buttons on
her GoTo. I search for Capricornus, and then use the eyepiece to starhop down
the chain of stars off to its left. I barely have time to move the scope before
the coming dawn obliterates the pattern of stars I just left. I don’t think I’m
going to make it in time. All over the world people are looking for M30 right
now and I’m going to miss it. I risk stealing a glance at Tabitha to see her
progress. She feigns a yawn and says, “Will you hurry up, already? Some of us
are ready for breakfast.” I turn back and peer into my eyepiece again, but I
know it’s hopeless. My scope just isn’t powerful enough to cut through the
light.
I
hold up my hands in surrender. “Okay, okay, you win. You found it and I didn’t.”
“Wanna
see it?” she asks coyly.
I
hurry over and put my eye to the rubber eyepiece. Her scope is so powerful the
globular cluster glows, even in the twilight of dawn. I can even make out the
colorful double and triple stars that surround the core. “Thank you, it’s
really beautiful,” I say, not caring if that sounds corny. I might have to
change my opinion of computerized scopes. And who knows, maybe my mom was
wrong. Maybe I won’t have to wait till college to come into my own.
A
little later the man with the bullhorn comes by with a stack of certificates. “So
how’d we do?” he asks, his magic marker at the ready.
“We
made it to the finish line,” Tabitha proudly announces.
“Wonderful!”
the man booms. I shake my head at Tabitha admonishingly.
She
reaches out to stop him from handing us a certificate. “But we missed the
eighty objects before it.”
“Ah,”
he says, tucking the papers back under his arm. “Well, I’m sorry it wasn’t a
more successful night for you. You can always try again tonight if you’re not
too exhausted.”
Tabitha
whirls around to face me. “You mean it’s not just once a year? I’ve been crazed
all week when I could have done this later on when I was more prepared?”
“There’s
a block of a few days when there’s no moon out that’ll work,” I admit. “But it
wouldn’t have bought you much time. Most people chose last night because, well,
it was a Saturday night.”
“So
what do you think?” the man asks. “You up for coming tonight? A bunch of us
will be here again.”
I
look at Tabitha. “What do you think?”
She
contemplates for a minute, and then says, “Well, I never did get to see the
Ring Nebula….”
I
feel a grin spreading across my face. “We’d have to miss school on Monday. We
never miss school. But it is for a good cause….”
“Definitely
an educational pursuit,” she adds, slipping her hand in mine. “And this time we’d
actually do it though, right?” She blushes and the pink on her cheeks match the
approaching sunrise. “I mean, we’d do the Marathon this time. And not
for our college apps, but just because it’s fun?”
I
smile. “I knew what you meant. Yes, we’d really do the Marathon this time. Well,
except for between midnight and two when no new objects rise or set.”
“What
would we do during that time?” she asks teasingly.
Instead
of answering, I lean in to kiss her. I’m a few inches from her lips when I hear
the guy with the certificates clear his throat. I’d totally forgotten he was
there!
“So
you’re in, I take it?” he asks wearily.
I
quickly un-pucker and step back. “We’re in.”
“We’re
definitely in,” Tabitha confirms.
“Teenagers,”
the man mutters. He shakes his head as he walks to the next group.
We
turn to each other and laugh.
“What
should we do now?” I ask.
Tabitha
picks up my star atlas and settles into one of the beach chairs. “I’m
going to read this cover to cover so by tonight I’ll be able to teach you
something. What are you going to do?”
I
sit down across from her. “I’m going to watch you read that cover to cover.”
“I
don’t think that will be a very exciting use of your time.”
“Oh,
yes, it will,” I argue.
“Whatever
you want,” she says with a shrug, and opens the first page. For the next four
hours I watch her face as she teaches herself thousands of years of
astronomical history. I watch as the patterns of the stars take up residence
inside her head. When she turns the last page, she pushes the book into my
hands. “Thank you, Peter,” she says so earnestly I want to scoop her up and run
around the field with her.
So
I do.
In
her eighth grade yearbook, Wendy Mass was bestowed the dubious honor of Most
Likely to Solve Rubik’s Cube because she spent so much time fiddling with it
instead of paying attention in class. Always fascinated by the night sky, she
took Astronomy 101 in college. It was so complicated that she never got higher
than 45 out of 100 on any exam. Fortunately, neither did anyone else and the
professor graded on a curve. She got an A! She loves writing about astronomy
now, and tries to make it so easy to understand that the reader will fall in
love with it, too.
Wendy
is the author of eight novels for young readers, including A Mango-Shaped
Space (about a girl with synesthesia), Jeremy Fink and the Meaning of
Life, Every Soul a Star, and Heaven Looks a Lot Like the Mall.
She lives in northern New Jersey, where she can be found staring up at the sky
with her telescope, or down at the ground with her metal detector, hoping to
find gold. She can do Rubik’s Cube in less than two minutes.
Text
by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci. Illustrations by Hope Larson.
IT’S JUST A JUMP TO THE LEFT
by
libba bray
“How
did she get ahead of us?” Agnes whispered to Leta.
“I
can’t believe her. She came earlier than us on purpose,” Leta said.
Five
people up in the line, Jennifer Pomhultz, in a rabbit-fur jacket and side
ponytail, executed a perfect step-ball-change while her older sister and a
handful of others applauded.
Leta
sneered. “There’s the dance move. I knew she’d do it. Like we’re supposed to
care that she got a callback for Six Flags.”
“I
don’t care. Do you care?” Agnes asked.
“You
can’t imagine how little I care.”
If
there was anyone Leta and Agnes hated, it was Jennifer Pomhultz, and for very
good reason. For six months, Leta and Agnes had a Friday night routine: At
eight o’clock, Leta went to Agnes’s house. At nine, they started getting ready—plumping
their lips with Bonne Bell Lipsmacker, experimenting with eyeliner, torturing
their hair (Leta’s was shoulder length, stick-straight, and brown; Agnes’s,
long and blond and wavy-thick) with curling irons and Aqua Net. By
eleven-fifteen, their parents would drop them off at the Cineplex for the
midnight showing of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, and Leta and Agnes
would take their places in the long line that snaked from the box office around
the side of the Cineplex and into the back alley. Waiting in line was as much a
ritual as the movie itself, and the girls delighted in singing along to “The
Time Warp” and comparing props—toast, bags of rice, newspapers—with the other
moviegoers. Rocky Horror was their church, and they were devout. But
Jennifer Pomhultz had only been coming for a few weeks—anyone could see she
didn’t even know the lyrics to the songs—and already she was acting as if she’d
been a Rocky devotee for years. She wore a stupid hairdo and too much blusher
and a jacket made from bunnies. Maybe that’s what ninth graders did, but Leta
and Agnes didn’t have to approve.
“Look
at her! She’s trying to be Magenta. Last week, she was Janet.”
“You
just don’t do that. You don’t switch characters,” Leta agreed. “God, she is
such a fake.”
“The
fakiest of the fake,” Agnes said, and she slipped her arm through Leta’s in
solidarity.
Leta
and Agnes had been best friends since third grade when they’d both been hall
monitors and discovered a mutual love of horse models. But now, Leta and Agnes
were fourteen and in the second half of eighth grade, and that demanded certain
concessions. A deal was made, terms agreed upon and sealed with a vow said over
the Ouija board: By summer, they would give up TeenBeat magazine and
start reading Cosmopolitan, which they had only glimpsed in the
drugstore. They would buy at least one pair of cool jeans from the mall. And
before the school year was out, Leta and Agnes would each have their first
kiss.
Leta
hoped hers would be with Tom Van Dyke, who worked behind the concession stand.
Tom was a high school junior and beautiful, with shaggy brown hair and
heavy-lidded brown eyes, which reminded Leta of Tim Curry, who played
Frank-N-Furter. Tom drove a red Camaro and played drums in marching band.
Often, when she had been banished to the bench during gym class—Toni Benson
deliberately hit her in dodgeball and Coach Perry did nothing about it—Leta
consoled herself by imagining she was Tom’s girlfriend. In these fantasies,
Leta cheered him on during halftime concerts as he marched across the field in
measured beats, taking his place as part of a perfect formation—a sunburst, a
castle, or the Crocker High School mustang, which was their mascot. Sometimes
she closed her eyes and imagined Tom kissing her in the rain over at the
Frankenstein Place, and she was as beautiful as Susan Sarandon, who played
Janet.
“Is
he here? I don’t see him,” Leta said as she and Agnes pushed past the
pimply-faced door guardian who asked for tickets and checked IDs, turning away
anyone who wasn’t seventeen. Leta and Agnes had been granted a pass from the
theater manager who used to go to A.A. meetings with Agnes’s mom.
“He’s
behind the counter, same as always. Get to it,” Agnes answered, and Leta felt
her heartbeat quicken.
Tom’s
hair shone in the glow of the popcorn machine. “Can I get you something?” he
asked.
“Can
I have a Sprite, please?” Leta felt she should say something more, to keep the
conversation flowing like she’d read in a TeenBeat article, “Snag Your
Crush!” “I really want a Coke but I have an ulcer? And my doctor said I can’t
drink Coke anymore because it gives me a stomachache?”
Tom
jiggled the cup under the stream of pale, foaming soda. “Bummer.”
“It’s
the same with popcorn, bad for my ulcer,” Leta continued. “I had to have a
barium swallow. They call it a ‘delicious strawberry milkshake’ but it’s like
drinking strawberry-flavored chalk. I almost barfed it back up.”
“Hey,
Tom, I can cover for you if you want time with your girlfriend,” the other guy
at the counter snickered, and Leta’s face went lava-red.
“Shut
up, Marco. That’ll be a dollar twenty-five,” Tom said.
Quickly,
Leta dropped her change on the counter. Agnes pushed her toward Theater 2. “Smooth
move, Ex-lax. At this rate, you’ll never get kissed. Come on. I don’t wanna get
stuck in the back with the virgins.”
Leta
and Agnes settled into their seats, third row center. When the lights dimmed
and the familiar red lips and white teeth glowed on the screen, the audience
erupted into cheers, and Leta felt that surge of excitement in her belly, the
thrill of sitting in the dark with strangers sharing an experience that made
them all seem like friends. She and Agnes sang along to every lyric. They threw
toast and shouted comebacks. But once Columbia was on-screen, Leta was alert,
her feet miming the steps below her seat, her hands making small motions on her
lap. Only once did she look away, her eye drawn by a flash of gold on the front
row. There sat Jennifer Pomhultz wearing her sister’s gold-sequined baton
twirler’s outfit with fringe at the shoulders. So Jennifer hadn’t come as
Magenta at all but as Columbia, and Leta felt a surge of panic mixed with
hatred as Jennifer also imitated Columbia’s moves. Leta elbowed Agnes and
pointed.
Agnes’s
mouth hung open in disbelief. “That bitch!”
Someone
on their row—a virgin—made the mistake of starting up the battery-powered
carving knife way too early. Its electric growl disturbed the mood, and the
audience pounced with a chorus of shushing.
After
the movie, Leta and Agnes waited out front for Mr. Tatum to come pick them up.
It was brisk in the parking lot—the flatlands of Texas could be surprisingly
cold in winter. Leta crossed her arms to stay warm and brooded over Jennifer
Pomhultz. “I can’t believe her. She can have anyone else, but Columbia’s mine.”
Agnes
waved it away. “Don’t worry about it. By next week, she’ll be Riff Raff.”
But
Leta did worry. That’s why she had an ulcer. Even now, her stomach burned with
acid, and she wished she’d brought her Maalox along.
“Hey,
aren’t you Diana’s sister, Agnes?” A guy with dark hair and a Led Zeppelin
T-shirt walked up to them, tossing his cigarette in the parking lot on the way.
Leta recognized him from her brother’s high school yearbook. His name was
Roger, and he raced motocross. “I’m Roger. I’ve seen you around.”
“Yeah,
I’ve seen you, too.” Agnes said it really cool, but she was smiling in a way
Leta had never seen her smile before.
Mr.
Tatum was late as usual, and for a half hour they stood around talking and
trying to stay warm. Roger made fun of Agnes but it was really a compliment,
and when Agnes fake-punched his arm, Leta could see she wasn’t insulted at all;
she was thrilled. At last, Leta saw Mr. Tatum’s old white Buick edging into the
lot from College Drive. Mrs. Tatum had taken their new car when she left to “find
herself” on an ashram last year, leaving Agnes and her sister Diana in the
lurch with a dad who was no more than a shadow in their house.
“Your
dad’s here,” Leta warned, and Agnes moved away from Roger.
“So,
you wanna go see a movie tomorrow or something?” Roger asked Agnes.
“Sure.
Okay.”
Mr.
Tatum drove up and honked the horn. He sat in the driver’s seat staring
straight ahead. Agnes jotted her phone number on the back of an old napkin and
offered it to Roger with a smile that gave Leta an uneasy feeling in her
stomach, like the climb on a roller coaster when you’ve glimpsed the first
steep drop but there’s nothing to do but hold on till the end.
Dammit,
Janet
Two
weeks later, on a Saturday, Leta spent the night at Agnes’s house. Aggie’s
grandmother had suffered a fall, and her dad was in Kansas arguing with the
siblings about what should be done. This left Agnes’s older sister, Diana, on
duty, but she’d gone off with her friends. In exchange for the girls’ silence,
she’d promised them one monumental favor, no questions asked, to be collected
at a future date.
Leta
and Agnes enjoyed having the house to themselves. They pretended they were
stewardesses sharing an apartment in New York City, where they entertained rock
stars and heads of state. Leta said her name was Astrid Van Der Waal, and she
was also a Swedish princess. Agnes called herself Agatha Frank-N-Furter until
Leta objected, so she changed it to just Agatha, like Cher, and said she was a
spy. When they tired of that game, they cooked Tuna Helper in a small black
pan, adding in canned corn because it was a vegetable. They scooped it all up
with Doritos and washed it down with lemonade concocted from water and neon-pink
powder in a jar. They’d lost count on the spoonfuls and the lemonade was
puckery tart. It left a coating on Leta’s tongue that made everything taste
slightly off.
“You
know what you say to corn?” Leta said, giggling.
“No,
what?”
“See
you later!” Leta laughed so hard some of her Tuna Helper fell out of her mouth.
When Agnes didn’t laugh, Leta explained, “See you later? Because corn comes out
in your poop?”
Agnes
rolled her eyes. “You probably shouldn’t say that around guys. They’ll think
you’re gross.”
Leta
felt confused. They always laughed at poop jokes. Always.
“Guess
what?” Agnes said. “Roger invited me to a party.”
Leta
took a bite of Tuna Helper. It still tasted like lemonade powder. “When is it?”
“Friday
night.” Agnes did not look at Leta when she said this.
“But
that’s Rocky Horror night.”
“Yeah,
sorry. I’m not gonna be able to go this weekend.”
“But
we always go to Rocky Horror on Fridays. And Jennifer’s still dressing
as Columbia. I need you as my wingman. You have to come.”
Agnes
glared. “Oh, Leta, grow up.”
They
spent the rest of the night not speaking. As she lay in her sleeping bag, her
mind going over and over the conversation like a rosary, Leta noticed that
Agnes’s horse models weren’t on her shelves anymore. Instead there was a
dried-out rose in a vase and a new poster of some motocross champ she’d never
heard of. When Leta’s mom came for her on Sunday morning, Leta packed her stuff
and ran out to the car without even saying good-bye.
THE
SWORD OF DAMOCLES
“Who
in here has heard of the band Steely Dan?”
Leta’s
student teacher, Miss Shelton, looked out hopefully at the class. She had on
her flared jeans, feather earrings, and kimono top. Her long blond hair hung
down straight as a sheet of ice, and her magnificent boobs were pushed into a
canyon of cleavage that had every boy in class sitting at attention.
Tracy
Thomas raised her hand. “Will this be on the test, Miss Shelton?”
“No,
Tracy,” she said with a wink.
Miss
Shelton had tried to get everyone to call her Amy on the first day, but their
teacher, Mrs. Johnston, had looked up from her Texas history essays wearing an
expression like she’d just swallowed an egg. “I think Miss Shelton will be
best,” she said with a smile. But today, Mrs. Johnston was out doing teacher
in-service, and Miss Shelton was holding up an album cover that had a photo of
a red-and-white ribbon streaking down the middle, like the remnant of a torn
American flag.
“This
is Aja, the new album from Steely Dan,” Miss Shelton said, as if
speaking of gods. “I’m going to put this on, and we’re going to talk about what
you feel when you hear the music.”
Miss
Shelton dropped the needle on the record, and the record player’s ancient
speakers crackled and popped. The song sounded slightly Chinese and floaty, and
it reminded Leta of when she and her brother Stevie were kids bobbing down the
river in giant inner tubes. She closed her eyes and saw Stevie in her mind as
he was then, his head lolling back against the black rubber. He was singing
some stupid novelty song about not liking spiders and snakes, giving it an
exaggerated country twang, making her laugh. Sometimes, if she thought really
hard, she could still see Stevie the way he was before the accident. But it
never seemed to last long.
Miss
Shelton passed between the rows of desks. “What does this music make you feel?
Remember, there are no wrong answers. Anyone?”
“Horny,”
Jack Jessup whispered, and the back of the class erupted in laughter.
“Besides
horny,” Miss Shelton said, giving him a playful swat.
“It
makes me think of flying through clouds.” It was Cawley Franklin. He and Leta
had drama after school together.
“Good,
Cawley! Anyone else?” Miss Shelton stopped at Leta’s desk. “Leta, how about
you? What does this song make you feel?”
Leta’s
mind was flooded with images. Roger driving Agnes around the neighborhood on
his motorcycle. Stevie propped up on his navy bedspread in his room, watching
afternoon TV, babbling words that made no sense, his useless left arm and hand
curled against his side like a sea creature forced from its shell. Her dad
packing his shoehorn and shaving cream into a small case that fit into a larger
suitcase that fit into the trunk of the car that drove him to a job in another
state.
“Nothing,”
Leta said. “Sorry.”
Cawley
Franklin caught up to Leta in the hall after class. He was tall and rangy, with
the hunched, loping walk of someone who hadn’t completely moved into every part
of his body yet. His long, blond hair hung like two curtains on either side of
his freckled face. Cawley had transferred to Crocker Junior High last year, and
now he lived with his grandmother out past the mobile home park near the Happy
Trails Drive-In where you could watch old horror movies for a buck.
“Whad’ja
think of AAAA-ja?” he sang, imitating Donald Fagen’s nasally tone.
“I
don’t know. Kind of weird. I like Pink Floyd a lot better. What did you think?”
“Dunno.
Mostly I couldn’t stop looking at Miss Shelton’s boobs.”
Leta
rolled her eyes. “Nice. You going to the Popcorn tomorrow?”
“Indeed,”
he said, twirling a fake mustache.
“You’re
weird,” Leta said, but she was laughing.
OVER
AT THE FRANKENSTEIN PLACE
After
school, Leta let herself into the house. She could hear her mother talking on
the phone, so she slipped down the hall to Stevie’s room and knocked. He wouldn’t
answer, she knew that, so she pushed it open. Her brother sat on his bed
watching the small black-and-white TV in the corner.
Leta
took a spot on the floor beside the bed. She’d learned not to sit too close to
Stevie. Sometimes he spazzed out, his arms making uncontrolled movements. Once
he’d accidentally smacked Leta in the face, busting her lip. The seizures were
the scariest, though. He’d had four since he’d come home from the hospital.
Each one seemed to be worse than the last.
“Hey,”
Leta said. “What’s happening on Lost in Space? Dr. Smith up to his old
tricks?”
Stevie’s
left hand twitched, and Leta automatically moved back. His hair had grown back
straight and brown over the indent in his left temple where the bullet had gone
in. On a clear, cold day in October, Stevie and his best friend Miguel had been
down at the lake shooting at snapping turtles. They were just packing up to
come home when the gun discharged by accident. In an instant, the bullet
pierced Stevie’s temple and did its damage, taking a detour down into his lung
where it lived still, a bud of metal that might bloom at any moment and kill
him. Sometimes it felt like that bullet had traveled further, though. Like it
had flown right through their family, splitting them into a before-and-after
that couldn’t be put back together.
The
TV hiccupped with static.
“Adjust,”
Stevie rasped.
Sighing,
Leta trudged to the gigantic Magnavox that was so old it still had rabbit ears.
She moved the antennae back and forth, stealing glances at the snowy TV, trying
to see if the picture had sharpened.
“Better?”
Leta asked, her hands still on the antennae. Her brother’s hand twitched. “Stevie,”
Leta said slowly and firmly. “Is the picture better now?” Sometimes she had to
repeat things two or three times until Stevie understood them completely, and
even then, he might answer with the wrong words, a sentence frustratingly out
of order that you had to decipher like a secret code.
Leta
gave up. “You need anything else?”
“Yes,”
Stevie said, shaking his head no. “I’m the robot.”
“Great.
You’re the robot. Just what we need in this family.”
“Robots
in the house!” Stevie insisted.
Leta’s
stomach flared with a familiar, burning pain, and she took a deep breath. “Okay,
then. Don’t watch too much. It’s bad for your eyes.”
“You
adjust, adjust,” she heard him say as she walked away.
In
the kitchen, Leta’s mom was putting the finishing touches on a casserole. It
seemed to Leta that her mom had gotten older just since Stevie’s accident. Like
someone had let a little of the air out of her, and now her features didn’t
have enough to puff them up anymore.
“I’m
putting this in the freezer because it’s not for us,” her mother announced as
if she were answering some urgent question on Leta’s part, which she wasn’t. “It’s
for the progressive dinner at church on Friday night.”
“I’ll
call the papers.”
Her
mother turned, hands on her hips. “Was that necessary?”
Yes,
it was, Leta wanted to say. She couldn’t say why it felt so very necessary to
be angry with her mother all the time, but it did. She would walk into a room
where her mother sat reading or grading papers and be consumed with a sudden
need to wound that would be followed moments later by a terrible guilt and an
equally ferocious longing to be forgiven and comforted.
Leta
opened the fridge door and waited for something to announce itself. “Friday
night is Rocky Horror night. It’s your turn to drive.”
“Well,
I can’t take you. Get Agnes’s dad to do it. And close the refrigerator door!”
Leta
closed it hard and her mother glared. “Mr. Tatum is going to some convention.”
“Ask
her sister. Ask Diana.”
“They’re
going to camp out for concert tickets.”
“Well,
that’s just too bad,” her mother snapped.
“Mo-o-o-om!”
“Cry
me a river, young lady. You’ll just have to skip it this week.”
Leta
thought of Jennifer Pomhultz in her sequined baton twirler’s outfit dancing her
Six Flags routine onstage, silhouetted by the eight-foot-tall reflection of Columbia
as Tom Van Dyke stood clapping in the back, a look of love in his eyes.
“This
is important to me! Why can’t you just understand me for once?”
Her
mother slammed a bag of frozen peas onto the counter, turning it over and over
to break apart the icy scar tissue connecting them inside. “Oh, yeah? Well, why
is it always my job to do everything? When did I sign up to be mother of
the world? That’s what I want to know.”
“I
didn’t ask for a kidney,” Leta mumbled, fighting back tears. She reached into the
fridge and quickly grabbed a Coke.
“I
heard that. And you know you can’t have Coke with your ulcer. If you think I’m
going to pay for another barium swallow, you’ve got another think coming, young
lady.”
Leta
slammed the Coke onto the refrigerator’s top shelf. Her mother whipped around,
pointing the bag of peas at her. It sagged like one of those melting guns in a
cartoon. “Break that refrigerator and just see what happens.”
Leta
rolled her eyes. “I’m not going to break the stupid refrigerator.”
“You
bet you won’t,” her mother said. “It’s five o’clock. Drink your Maalox.”
“Fine!”
Leta took the Maalox bottle out of the cabinet above the sink. She swallowed
down the white, chalky spoonful of medicine, trying not to gag. Three times a
day, she had to drink the stuff, letting it coat her insides with a protective
film.
In
the back of the house, Stevie was shouting at the TV. Leta’s mom flinched. “Go
see what he needs, please.”
“You
do it. He’s not my kid,” Leta shouted, running for the front yard where she
stood panting, trapped on all sides. Next door, their neighbor Mrs. Jaworski
clipped at her roses with short, hard snips. Mrs. Jaworski was seventy-five and
wore a flowered housedress and frosted orange lipstick outside the lines of her
lips like a clown. She hated kids in general, teenagers specifically, and Leta
in particular. As Leta tried to sneak back in without being noticed, she was
caught by the tinny sound of Mrs. Jaworski’s voice. “You kids better stop
throwing your Coke cans in my yard, young lady.”
“Sorry?”
Leta answered.
“You’d
better be sorry. I found three of them in my yard just this morning. Look!”
With her snippers, she pointed to the grass where three crushed soda cans had
been carefully laid out like the dead. She’d actually posed them. It was
unreal.
“Those
aren’t mine,” Leta said.
“I’ll
tell your father!”
“My
dad’s not here,” Leta answered back, but Mrs. Jaworski wasn’t listening.
Leta
crept around the house to the back bedroom, which had been her father’s old
study, and let herself in quietly through the window. She never came in here,
really, and now, her mom’s decoupage supplies took up half of the room. Leta’s
dad had moved to Hartford, Connecticut, four months ago when his company
relocated, but they’d stayed behind because her parents said the housing market
was in a slump. “No sense selling until we know for sure whether this job is
going to be permanent,” her dad had explained as they sat at a table in Luby’s
Cafeteria in the mall while her mother ignored her beef Stroganoff and kept a
hand pressed to her mouth like a dam. When she finally spoke, she only said, “That
which doesn’t kill us makes us stronger, Leta,” but she looked at Leta’s dad
when she said it, and the next week, he was living in Hartford, and Leta was
helping her mom with Stevie.
At
first, Leta had really missed her dad. But now sometimes she forgot he existed.
When that happened, when she’d remember him as an afterthought while
blow-drying her hair or finding a pair of his slippers in the laundry room, she’d
be hit by a wave of guilt. She knew she should miss him more, but she didn’t,
and now that he was gone, she began to realize that he’d never really been
around much. Even her fuzziest memories were of her dad hunched over the
newspaper at breakfast or sitting in his study at night “crunching numbers.” In
these grainy memory slide shows, she saw him walking to his car in the
mornings, coming home for dinner at night an hour after Leta, Stevie, and her
mom had eaten. Later, on his way to the back of the house, he’d appear in her
doorway like an apparition.
“How
ya doin’, kiddo?”
Leta
would look up from her magazine. “Good,” she’d say.
“Whatcha
reading there?”
“TeenBeat.”
“I
thought you liked those, whatchamacallit, those Nancy Drew books?”
“Yeah.
In fourth grade.”
“Ah,
gotcha. Well, turn on a light. Reading in the dark is bad for your eyes.”
And
then he’d be gone again and Leta would be left with the impression that they’d
never really had a conversation at all.
Back
in her room, Leta dropped the needle on the Rocky Horror soundtrack. As
Tim Curry sang, “Don’t Dream It, Be It,” Leta powdered her face to a chalky
finish and drew wire-thin eyebrows above her own with a Maybelline pencil that
used to be her mom’s. She sighed as she came to her hair. It was all wrong—lank
and brown, not short and punkish-red like Columbia’s. On the other side of the
wall, Stevie moaned and shouted random words—“Robot! Fire! Adjust! Car!”—while
her mother cooed to him, but her voice still sounded angry underneath.
“Shut
up, shut up, shut up,” Leta murmured to no one. Her mother called for her, and
Leta blared the soundtrack, singing ferociously this time, twirling around her
room till she felt dizzy and sick and the glittery surface of her ceiling
seemed to move like an alien thing waiting to eat her.
TOUCH-A,
TOUCH-A, TOUCH ME
The
next afternoon, Agnes was waiting for Leta at her locker. They hadn’t spoken in
a while, and Leta found she was elated to see her friend.
Agnes
waved her over. “We need to talk. Can you ditch gym?”
“What
if I get in trouble?”
“Go
to the nurse. Say you got your period and your mom is coming to pick you up.
Then meet me in the girls’ bathroom on the first floor. Here, wrap my sweater
around your waist like you’re covering up a stain on your pants.”
It
took some doing, but Leta managed to convince the school nurse—who really did
not want to know too much information about Leta’s periods—to give her a pass.
Then Leta met Agnes in the girls’ bathroom. Agnes stuck her head under every stall
to make sure they were alone.
“What
is it?” Leta asked.
“Promise
not to tell anybody?”
“Promise.”
“Double
promise,” Agnes insisted.
“Okay,
I double promise!”
They
sank to the floor with their heads under the sinks.
“I
let Roger finger me,” Agnes said.
Leta’s
stomach made a small flip, and her head felt light and dizzy and full of white
noise, as if she’d finally taken that first plunge on the roller coaster ride. “You
what?”
“I
let him put his finger in my?—”
“I
know what fingering is, Aggie. Jesus,” Leta interrupted. Her heart beat against
her ribs. “Did it hurt?”
“Sort
of. You get used to it pretty quick, though, and then it’s not so bad.”
“Not
so bad, or good?”
Leta
could practically feel Agnes’s shrug. The doors swung open. A small girl came
in, glancing nervously from Agnes to Leta and back.
“Go
ahead,” Agnes growled, and the girl raced into a stall. In a second, they could
hear her peeing in fits and starts like she wasn’t sure she should be.
Agnes
lowered her voice to an excited whisper. “He said he really, really likes me,
that he could maybe fall in love with me.”
“Wow,”
Leta said, matching the urgent quiet of Agnes’s tone. “Did y’all do anything
else?” She wanted to know. She didn’t want to know.
“Not
yet,” Agnes giggled, and Leta felt the words like two quick gunshots. “We have
to get you a boyfriend, Leta.”
Leta
zipped her hoodie up over her mouth. “I’m working on it,” she said, her voice
sweatshirt-muffled.
The
bathroom rumbled with flushing, and the girl came out of the stall with her
head down. She rushed for the bathroom door, not even stopping to wash her
hands.
“Gross,”
Agnes said. “Seventh graders. What can you do?”
WILD
AND UNTAMED THING
Wednesday
afternoons Leta spent at the Popcorn Players Community Theater—“where the play’s
the thing!” The theater was housed in the city civic center, a big drum of a
building with an indoor walking track around the perimeter on the second floor.
When Leta walked in, Cawley was perched on a ladder in the center, attaching
papier-mâché flowers with a staple gun.
Seeing
her, he bellowed, “Juliet! Forget thy father and refuse thy name!”
“Cawley!”
Leta hissed, embarrassed. She dropped her jacket and purse on a folding chair. “What
did I miss?”
Cawley
hopped off the ladder and squinted up at the civic center’s walking track,
where two older ladies race-walked in circles, their jewelry glinting under the
harsh fluorescent lighting. “Well, those blue-hairs in the matching pink track
suits have gone around about fifteen times now. I think they’re going for the
gold. Oh, hey, look what I found in the props box.” He pulled out a gold lamé
tuxedo jacket. “I know it’s not exact, but I thought you could use it for Rocky
Horror. I mean, it’s sorta close to Columbia’s.”
Leta
slipped it on. The jacket was a man’s and too big, but it could work. “This is
great. Thanks.”
“Sure.”
Cawley pulled a package of vanilla wafer cookies out of his backpack and
offered one to Leta. “So, where’s Agnes today?”
“With
Roger at some motocross thing.” The force of the words sent wet cookie fluff
flying from her mouth to her cheek.
“She’s
into motocross now?”
“No.
She’s into Roger.” Leta thought of Agnes’s confession in the girls’ bathroom.
It made her stomach hurt. “I need some milk.”
They
took the stairs to the dark cool of the civic center’s basement where the
wheezing vending machines lived. Leta pushed A7 and a plastic carton of milk
ka-thunked its way into the tray below. She gulped it greedily, but her insides
still burned.
“I
shouldn’t tell you this,” Leta began. “Agnes let Roger finger her.”
Cawley’s
eyes widened. “Whoa.”
Leta
buried her face in her hands. “God, I shouldn’t have told you that—she’d kill
me! Don’t say anything! Promise me!”
“I
promise. Are they doing it?”
“No!
Gah, Cawley. Don’t be gross.”
“Sorry.”
Cawley tucked his hair behind his ear. “So…have you ever, you know?”
Leta
felt the blush to her toes. She laughed too loud. “No! God, no. I mean, not…I
mean, no.”
“I
wasn’t trying to say that you did or anything or, you know, I was just—well,
since you said that about Aggie…”
He
let the words die and they each took another swig of their drinks. Leta stared
hard at the sign on the wall that said MAINTENANCE. AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY.
“What
about you?” she heard herself ask. “Have you ever, you know, done that
with anybody?”
“Huh-uh,”
Cawley said, and his hair fell forward again, covering his face.
“Actually,
I’ve never been kissed.” Leta didn’t know why she said it, but she couldn’t
take it back now.
Cawley
let his hand rest on top of hers. “I’d kiss you. If you want.”
Leta
had imagined this moment. She’d imagined it with Tom. Tom breaking form in
marching band to pull her to the field, where he would gaze into her eyes,
kissing her passionately while the marching band formed a perfect heart around
them. She did not imagine this: strange, quirky Cawley with wafer cookies on
his breath offering to kiss her as some sort of charity mission, like he could
collect karma points for it to post into some little karma booklet and trade it
in for prizes later.
Leta
pulled her sweater down over the roll of softness around her middle. “Um,
thanks, but…”
The
metal stairs clanged with the arrival of the senior-citizen exercisers. Cawley
took Leta’s hand, leading her quickly into the dark of the rarely used men’s
restroom down the hall.
“The
door has a lock,” he said, and she heard it click. It occurred to Leta that she
should probably be a little scared, but it didn’t seem like this was really
happening to her.
“Okay,
here goes,” Cawley said.
In
the dark, Leta sensed Cawley’s face homing in on hers from above. He was a good
four inches taller than she was, and Leta had to angle her head up and to the
side. There was a bit of ticklish fuzz on his upper lip, and his breath was
warm and vanilla-cookie sweet. They went in for the kiss at the same time and
bumped noses hard.
“Ow!”
“Sorry,”
Cawley said.
“It’s
okay.” Leta rubbed the sting away.
Cawley
touched her arm. “Try again?”
This
time, Cawley angled her face slightly sideways, a slight adjustment that
avoided another nose collision. His lips mashed against hers. Leta held
perfectly still and wondered what she was supposed to do now. Was she supposed
to be overcome with passion? Was it supposed to come naturally or did you have
to practice? God, she should have tried Frenching her pillow like Agnes told
her to, because now, here she was in the community theater men’s bathroom
trying to kiss a boy and feeling nothing but embarrassed and slightly repulsed.
His hand found her waist and she flinched at his touch.
Cawley
pulled away. “Sorry. Did I get your boobs?”
“No!”
Leta laughed in embarrassment.
“’Cause
I wasn’t trying to, I swear.”
“No,
it’s fine if, um…it’s okay.”
Cawley’s
mouth pressed against hers again. His hand slipped back to her waist and Leta
tried sucking in her stomach but then she didn’t have enough air to actually
kiss and she had to let it go. His tongue lay on hers like a piece of fish she
hadn’t decided whether she wanted to eat or eject. Should she do something with
it? If so, what? Maybe she should dart it in and out quickly, cobra-style?
Cawley
stopped. “Not so wide,” he whispered.
“Sorry,”
Leta said. She’d opened her mouth big like going to the dentist, in order to
give his tongue room. Now, she closed it, and it was a little better. They
kissed for a few more seconds and Leta broke away. Her face was warm and her
upper lip was sweaty; she had the overwhelming desire to escape. “We should
probably get back before somebody comes in.”
“Okay.”
“I’ll
go first and you can follow. But not too closely, okay? Count to twenty. No,
count to fifty. Okay? Fifty?”
“Your
wish is my command,” Cawley joked.
While
Cawley was counting to fifty in the bathroom, Leta made a beeline for the
smoke-filled theater management office to ask if she could stuff envelopes for
the upcoming pledge drive instead of painting flats. The manager, Mr.
Weingarten, handed her a fat stack, and Leta wedged herself in a far corner
between a file cabinet and an enormous fake plant where she couldn’t be seen.
The kiss was a letdown, not at all like the kisses she saw on TV. She wasn’t
even sure she wanted to do it again. Leta spent the rest of the hour licking
away the memory of it until her tongue was dry as cotton. At five o’clock, she
bolted, but Cawley caught up with her at the civic center’s front doors.
“Sorry,”
Leta said, her words rushing out on a weak stream of breath. “Weingarten made
me stuff envelopes.”
“Drag-a-mundo.”
Cawley smiled. “Hey, thanks, you know, for earlier.”
Leta’s
face grew hot. “Sure. Well, I gotta go. My mom’s waiting.”
Cawley
leaned in, and Leta practically fell through the doors, running for the safety
of her mother’s car.
“Hey,
see you over at the Frankenstein Place,” Cawley called after her.
Leta
pretended not to hear.
HOT
PATOOTIE—BLESS MY SOUL!
“Did
he kiss you? Oh, my god—details!” Agnes squealed into the phone.
Leta
pulled the phone cord as far as it would allow onto the back patio, closing the
door to a small crack. The concrete was cold under her bare feet. Through the
window she could see her mother on the couch reading a biography of one of the
presidents, her hair in rollers and her mouth set into a hard line, as if the
book were disappointing her somehow but she was determined to read till the
end.
“Yes.
Sorta. I don’t know.”
“What
do you mean you don’t know? Did y’all kiss or not?”
“We…did?”
Agnes
screeched on the other end so that Leta had to hold the phone away from her
ear. “Oh, my god! I can’t believe you kissed Creepy Cawley!”
“He
is not creepy. He’s actually pretty funny. And nice.”
“For
a weirdo.”
“You
know what? Forget I said anything. God.”
“I’m
sorry,” Agnes said, but she was still laughing a little, and Leta wasn’t sure
she really meant it. “So, tell me—was he any good? Oh, my god, did he try to
feel you up?”
“No?—”
“Did
you know he’s adopted? Like he thought his grandma was his mom but it turns out
his Aunt Susie in Oklahoma is his real mom. She gave him up to his
grandmother so she could go to college and get on with her life. I guess he
found it out last year. He asked his mom—his real mom—if he could come live
with her in Oklahoma, and she said no.”
“Oh,”
Leta said. She didn’t like that Agnes knew something about Cawley that she didn’t.
“Jay
McCoy told me they got drunk once in a field and Cawley got quieter and
quieter, and then, all of a sudden, he stood up and started screaming at the
top of his lungs and hitting at this old oil drum. Remember last year when he
broke his hand and he said it was a botched alien probe? Well, that’s what
really happened.”
Leta
could see Cawley in her mind then—the uncooperative blond hair, the crooked
smile, the gap between his two front teeth, the secondhand-store bowling shirt
he wore that said “Eugene” on the pocket. All those things she’d always found
comforting about him now seemed turned; he’d gone from dorky-cute to
intolerable in one phone call, and she couldn’t seem to reverse it.
“Roger
and I almost did it today,” Agnes said suddenly.
Leta
sank to the ground out of sight of the window. “You what?”
“I
want to do it with him,” Agnes said as if she were planning a class trip.
“Are
you sure you want to have…” Leta lowered her voice to a whisper. “Sex
with him?”
“Who
are you on the phone with?” Leta’s mother appeared on the porch, startling her.
“The
Kremlin!” Leta snapped, her heart beating wildly.
“You
shouldn’t joke about that sort of thing. You never know who’s listening in.”
“What’s
your mother’s problem now?” Agnes snarled on the other end.
“She
thinks the FBI’s tapped our phones.”
“Sweet
Jesus,” Agnes whistled.
“Give
me the phone.” Her mother made a swipe for it, but Leta dodged her. “It’s
nearly ten o’clock, Leta Jane. Tell Agnes good night.”
“I’m
not finished.”
“It’s
late!”
“I’m
not finished!” Leta held fast to the phone.
“Well,
don’t stay on too long. It’s a school night,” her mother said. She padded
silently to her room and closed the door with a soft thwick. Leta knew
she’d won this round, but suddenly, she wished she hadn’t. It didn’t feel safe;
it was like she’d taken her first steps in space only to find that her line
wasn’t anchored to anything and she was hopelessly adrift.
“I
better go,” Agnes said. “My dad just got home.”
“We
have to talk, though,” Leta insisted. “Do you wanna go to the mall tomorrow?”
“Can’t.
I’m going to Roger’s.”
“Oh,”
Leta said. “Okay.”
“Not
for that,” Agnes scoffed. “I’m sitting in on his band’s rehearsal.”
“Wow.”
“Yeah,
I know! Isn’t that so cool?”
“Wow,”
Leta said again.
“Don’t
let your mother drive you too crazy.”
“I
won’t.” When Leta hung up, she realized they’d never finished talking about her
sort-of-maybe first kiss, and all her unasked questions settled inside her,
heavy as sand.
That
night, Leta embraced her pillow, imagining Tom’s face in the whiteness above
her. “I love you,” she said, because you were supposed to say that when you
kissed. She pressed her lips to the pillow. Her tongue ventured out, meeting
with an unwelcoming, cotton starchiness that robbed her mouth of all moisture.
With
a sigh, she flipped the pillow over, wet spot down, and stared at the wall. In
the next room, Stevie’s TV was on. She could hear the drone of it, all the
shows and commercials blurring into one another. Stevie was talking, too,
saying words that she knew didn’t match—cat when he meant house, football
instead of man. She wondered if it made any sense to him and if it mattered
that no one else understood. Was it lonely not to be able to communicate with
other human beings, or was it a relief to stop trying?
Across
the hall, soft, strangled cries came from her mom’s bedroom. It reminded Leta
of a nature show she’d seen once where a bear cub had caught its foot in a
trap. It cried for help, and when none arrived, its cries became a muted yelp
it used to comfort itself until sleep came. Leta turned away from the sounds in
her mother’s room. She pressed herself closer to the wall and let the TV’s
soft, repetitive noise lull her to sleep as if she were five and her parents
were having a dinner party, their muffled voices in the living room a soothing
wall of sound that stood between her and the rest of the world.
Leta
awoke to the sound of Stevie screaming and her mother shouting. Still dazed,
she stumbled into her brother’s room. Her mother had him pinned to the bed, but
she was no match for him. His arm caught her across the face and she flew back,
blood pooling at her lip. Stevie shook for a second and settled.
“It’s
over,” Leta said, but she was trembling.
“I
didn’t sign up for this.” Her mother stifled a sob. She held up a blood-smeared
hand. “I need to change him now.”
Leta
knew this was her cue to leave, so she turned on the little TV again, working
the rabbit ears until the image was clear, letting the soft constant sound numb
them all into a sleepful waking.
SCIENCE
FICTION/DOUBLE FEATURE
On
Friday, Leta went to Rocky Horror alone. She’d never gone without Agnes,
and as she got out of her mother’s car wearing more makeup than usual, she felt
adrift. Standing in the lobby by herself, she searched for a new tribe of Rocky
fans to join, but they all seemed complete already. Jennifer had added a red
wig to her outfit, and Leta imagined using Riff-Raff’s gun to laser it to
pieces.
“Leta?”
Leta
turned around to see Miss Shelton standing behind her with some of her friends.
“Hi,
Miss Shelton.”
“Amy,
please!” her student teacher laughed. “Hey y’all, this is one of my students,
Leta. Are you here for The Rocky Horror Picture Show?”
“Yeah,
I come every—well, most every Friday,” Leta said.
Miss
Shelton’s eyes widened, and Leta enjoyed feeling like she was part of the
secret club. “Cool. Are you here by yourself?”
“Yeah,”
Leta admitted.
“Why
don’t you come sit with us? We’ll save you a seat,” Miss Shelton said.
“Okay.
Thanks.”
“Who
is that?” It was Tom. He was talking to her. Tom. Talking. To her.
“She’s
my teacher, um, a friend,” Leta answered.
“Huh,”
Tom said, watching Miss Shelton head for Theater 2. He turned back to Leta with
a smile. “Sprite, right?”
“Yeah.”
Leta grinned. He knew her drink!
“Maybe
later I’ll come find you guys. Save me a seat.”
“Sure,”
Leta said, and it was like she’d swallowed the sun.
This
was only the second time Miss Shelton and her friends had seen the movie, and
Leta enjoyed playing Rocky Horror tour guide, showing them when to throw
things, prompting them on comebacks. She didn’t even care that Jennifer stood
up in front of her seat to dance. Miss Shelton laughed at all the right parts
and even some that Leta didn’t understand. When Leta sang along to “Sweet
Transvestite,” Miss Shelton high-fived her, and Leta couldn’t wait to tell
Agnes about it. Maybe Agnes would be jealous of her new friendship with Miss
Shelton, who was super pretty and cool and in college.
Toward
the end of the movie, during the floor show, Tom slid in next to Leta, taking
the empty seat she’d dutifully saved for him with her jacket.
“Are
those guys in makeup?” Tom whispered, and Leta felt it deep in her belly.
“Yeah,”
she whispered back, relishing the nearness of his perfect ear.
“Huh.
This is a weird movie, man.”
Leta
stared at him. “You mean you’ve never seen it before?”
“Huh-uh.
Not my thing.”
“Oh,
my god, it’s like the best movie ever. Nothing’s as good as Rocky,” Leta said.
“I
know one or two things,” Tom said and winked. “You want anything from the
concession stand?”
Leta
shook her head, and Tom reached in front of her to tap Miss Shelton on the arm.
“You want anything? Coffee, tea, me?”
Miss
Shelton laughed, and a woman with crimped hair and a maid’s outfit shushed
them. Tom made a face, and even though Leta didn’t want the lady to be mad at
her, she giggled anyway.
When
the movie had ended, and they were huddled in the harsh glare of the theater
lobby, Miss Shelton put her arm around Leta. “That beat hell out of Texas
history, huh?”
“Yeah,”
Leta said, but her eyes were on Tom.
“I
gotta close down the place,” he said. “But, hey, let’s do the Time Warp again.”
“Sure.
Okay.” Leta was still grinning. “See you next Friday for sure!”
“Yeah.
See you then. You, too,” Tom said to Miss Shelton.
At
the Popcorn on Wednesday, Cawley and Leta put the finishing touches on the set
for Our Town. In the week since their kiss, Leta had managed to avoid
him—taking a different hallway to classes, carrying all her books so as to skip
her locker, ducking into the girls’ bathroom when necessary. But now they were
at the Popcorn together, and Leta was determined to keep things strictly
professional.
“Could
you hand me those?” Leta pointed to a wad of tissue-paper flowers the size of a
tricycle.
“Jennifer
Pomhultz told Scotty West’s brother that she’s going to dance with the regulars
at Rocky Horror this weekend,” Cawley said, holding the flowers in
place.
“So?”
“So?
We gotta show up and take her down.” We. He was already making them into a
couple. “I’ve got it all figured out. My grandmother can drive me over around
nine o’clock, and drop us off at the Pizza Hut. Then we could just walk over to
the Cineplex from there later.”
“They’re
pretty strict about IDs,” Leta said, letting the staple gun rip.
“But
they let you in. Just tell ’em I’m your cousin or something. Your kissing
cousin,” he joked.
Leta’s
face went hot. It had been a mistake to kiss Cawley. She couldn’t be seen with
him, not now that she had a shot with Tom. “Actually, I-I may not be able to go
this weekend. I think my dad is coming. And, you know, we’re doing, like,
family stuff.”
“Yeah,
but the show’s not till midnight.”
“Sorry.”
“But
Jennifer Pomhultz is trying to take your spot as Columbia! You have to go!”
“You’re
not the boss of me, Cawley!”
Leta’s
finger slipped on the staple gun, nearly catching Cawley’s thumb, and Leta
thought of the gun going off, the bullet shattering her brother’s temple.
“Stupid!”
she hissed, and she wasn’t sure who or what she meant by it.
That
night, Leta’s dad called. His flat tones echoed over the phone, all the way
from Connecticut, which sounded like a state you had to put together yourself
from a kit. “Hey, kiddo, how’s eighth grade treating you?”
“Okay,”
Leta said.
“How’s
Agnes? Is she behaving?”
“I
guess. You know Aggie.”
Her
dad laughed. “Well, Stevie sounds good.” There was a pause. “Your mom getting
on okay?”
Leta
flicked a glance toward her mother, who was stirring anger into the pot of
noodles on the stove. “Yeah.”
“Good,
good. Good.”
Leta
wanted to ask her dad when he was coming home. She wanted to know if he missed
them, or if they were faint as the ghostly images on a negative. She wanted
something she couldn’t name and she hoped he’d know what it was.
“Well,
take care of yourself, kiddo. Lemme have another crack at your mom, there,
okay?”
“Sure.”
Leta handed off the receiver, ducking under the cord.
Her
mother’s voice dropped to a wounded whisper. “I just don’t think I can do this
anymore, Dean, I really don’t.”
When
her mother had gone to sleep, Leta took the picture of Columbia she’d torn from
a movie magazine and taped it to her bathroom mirror. From under the sink, she
took out a box of red dye, coating her head and setting the egg timer for
thirty minutes. Once she’d washed it out, she chopped at her lank strands,
going shorter and shorter until her hair was just below her ears. It didn’t
hang exactly even, but it wasn’t too bad. The dye was darker than she’d
imagined—a deep auburn. It made her eyes greener and her skin more sallow. But
most importantly, it made her seem older. Leta pulled on her winter cap so that
her mother wouldn’t see the new hair before Rocky Horror. After
tomorrow, it didn’t matter if she was grounded.
In
the hushed dark of the kitchen, Leta swilled antacid straight from the bottle,
wiping the gluey liquid from her mouth with the back of her hand. She tested
the locks and checked the thermostat before opening the door to Stevie’s room a
crack. He was sleeping. In the corner, the TV was all static, and the screen
was as white as the surface of the moon.
SUPERHEROES
For
the first time in nearly two months, Agnes and Leta were together on a Friday
night, but they wouldn’t be together for long.
“You
little shits better not get into trouble,” Diana said. “If I get grounded
because of you, you’re both dead.”
“If
I get in trouble, you get in bigger trouble,” Agnes said.
“Don’t
make me kill you,” Diana said. She flipped them the bird before driving off.
The
girls waited in the parking lot. From here, they could see the cars cruising
the strip, making the endless loop from the Pizza Hut at the south end to the
Sonic at the north.
Agnes
ruffled Leta’s short red bob. “Your hair looks amazing.”
“Thanks.
You look pretty. You’ve got protection, right?”
Leta
and Agnes had seen films in their sex ed class about how easy it was to get
pregnant, even if it was your first time. To Leta, watching the films seemed
like trying to imagine living in a foreign country.
Agnes
unzipped the pocket inside her purse to show Leta the small foil pouch. “All
taken care of.”
A
minute later, Roger rode up on his motorcycle. He nodded to Leta. “Hey.”
“Hey,”
Leta answered. That was usually the extent of their conversations.
Agnes
got on the back of the bike and put her arms around his waist. She rested her
head against his back. It was funny how some people just seemed to fit.
“Don’t
let Jennifer Pomhultz take your spot!” Agnes shouted. “And good luck with
you-know-who!”
For
a few minutes after Agnes left, Leta sat on the car hood, searching for Tom’s
Camaro.
“Hey,
I thought you couldn’t make it tonight!” Cawley called, startling her.
“I…it
was sort of last minute,” Leta stammered.
“Cool!
We can sit together.” Cawley slid in next to her on the car hood and put his
arm around her shoulders.
“Um,
I’m sort of meeting some friends here.”
“Okay,
so we can all sit together.” He nuzzled her neck, and Leta flinched. “What’s
wrong?”
“I’m
just not—people might see us, you know?” Leta said, swallowing hard.
“What,
are you embarrassed to be seen with me or something?” Cawley asked.
“I
didn’t say that!”
“So
what is it?” Cawley looked her in the eyes then, and she knew he wouldn’t go
until she gave him the truth.
“I’m
waiting for a guy,” Leta said at last.
Cawley
shoved his hands in his pockets. “You could’ve just told me you didn’t want me
to come.”
“I
didn’t say I didn’t want you to come, I just…” She stopped and pressed the
backs of her hands to her eyes. She was making a mess of things. Why was it
that the one person she wasn’t sure about was the only person who was sure
about her? “I just wanted to go out with somebody else, okay? I’m allowed to do
that, aren’t I? I mean, it’s still a free country and everything.”
“Yeah.
Free country.” Cawley slid off the car hood and walked away from her, toward
College Drive.
“I’ll
see you at the Popcorn,” Leta added. It was a stupid thing to say. In response,
Cawley kicked a trash can hard and it spun, nearly toppling over.
“Dammit,
Janet,” Leta said to no one but the cars.
In
the litter-strewn field behind the Cineplex, Leta finally found Tom in a tight
huddle of older kids. She approached the pack cautiously, trying not to attract
too much attention, waiting for them to notice her. When no one did, she
cleared her throat.
Tom’s
head popped up. He squinted at her.
“It’s
me, Leta,” she said, patting at her new hair.
“Oh.
Right. Hey, Lisa,” Tom said.
“Leta,”
she corrected softly.
“Wanna
party? Hey, make room for Lisa,” Tom instructed and Leta was ushered into the
fold. A joint came her way, and she passed it to the pimply ticket-taking guy
on her left.
“I
can’t. I have an ulcer,” she offered by way of explanation.
“Don’t
old men get that?” he asked, taking a hit.
“Some
people just produce more stomach acid?” Leta said and immediately wished she
hadn’t. “Anyway, it’s okay. I took my medicine.”
“How
come you’re all dressed up like that?” one of the girls asked.
“For
the movie. I’m Columbia.”
One
of the guys snickered. “You’re Columbian? Can we smoke you?”
They
all laughed then, and Leta didn’t understand why, but she wished Agnes were
here and they were sitting in the warm movie theater throwing toast and singing
like before.
“Hey,
Leta!”
Leta
turned to see Miss Shelton wobbling over on platform sandals. Her boobs quivered
like unset gelatin. Everyone stared.
“Hi,
Miss Shel—Amy.”
Miss
Shelton gave Leta a little hug, like an older sister, and Leta was overcome by
happiness. It would be okay. Everything would be okay. “I didn’t know you liked
to party.”
“There’s
a lot people don’t know about me,” Leta said, hoping it made her sound
mysterious, a spy working undercover whom everyone took to be a dork but whose
hands were actually lethal weapons.
“That
was the last joint, but if you want to get high, I’ve got some primo weed in my
car,” Tom said.
Miss
Shelton grinned. “Let’s go.”
She
hooked her arm through Leta’s and they followed Tom through the parking lot,
over potholes and broken stubs of concrete barriers meant to keep the cars from
banging into one another. Leta stole a glance behind her. A clump of fans stood
behind the rope, and Leta had a fleeting wish to be with them.
Tom’s
car smelled of cigarette smoke and new leather. Leta climbed behind the seat
into the back while Miss Shelton and Tom sat in the front.
“Got
this from a friend who was in Mexico,” Tom said, licking the rolling paper and
forming a tight white missile of weed. Leta’s stomach fluttered. She didn’t
want Tom to think she was uncool, but she didn’t want to get high, either.
“Ulcer,”
she mumbled apologetically, and Tom handed off to Miss Shelton who took a hit
and held it for a long time.
“You
go to Texas Community?” he asked her.
“Umm,”
Miss Shelton choked out. “Poly sci.”
“Cool.”
The
joint went back and forth a few times, and Leta’s head felt balloon-light from
the secondhand smoke.
“Nice
car,” Miss Shelton said, exhaling smoke.
“Yeah?
Thanks.” Tom’s eyes were glassy; his smile seemed liquid. “You like Ozzy?” He
popped Blizzard of Oz into the Camaro’s stereo. “Crazy Train” filled the
car.
“Bose
speakers,” Tom shouted over the searing guitar licks. “Just put ’em in
yesterday.”
Leta
glanced nervously at the line forming for Rocky Horror. It snaked into
the parking lot. “We should probably get in line.”
“Nah,
it’s cool. I’ll just sneak us in the back way,” Tom said, his fingers lost in
their air-drumming reverie, his eyes still on Miss Shelton.
Just
then, Leta caught sight of Jennifer, who had added a bowler hat to her
ensemble. “Are you sure we can get seats? That line looks pretty long and they’re
letting people in….”
“It’s
just a stupid movie. You’ve seen it a million times, haven’t you?”
“Yeah,
it’s just…” Leta stopped. How could she explain that it was more than a movie
to her? It was her home—the one consistent thing in her life. It didn’t matter
how many times she’d seen it, she still got that funny feeling by the end that
she’d been somewhere, that she had somewhere to go still.
Miss
Shelton sat up and turned around in the front seat. “You know what that movie’s
about, don’t you?”
Leta
nodded. “Um, it’s about this couple who gets lost and they find this castle
inhabited by aliens, and it’s a takeoff on all those 1950s horror/sci-fi movies
where…”
“Sex,”
Miss Shelton interrupted. “It’s about sex.”
“All
right!” Tom gave a laugh and a high five to Miss Shelton.
“Come
in!” Miss Shelton shouted. It was a line Leta never really got in the movie and
she didn’t get it now, but it made her uncomfortable. She wanted out of the
Camaro. She wanted to be standing in that line ahead of Jennifer Pomhultz,
Agnes by her side singing out loud. She wanted to find Cawley wherever he was
and say she was sorry.
“I’m
just gonna go get in line,” Leta said.
“Suit
yourself.” Tom opened the door, and Leta stumbled into the parking lot. In her
fishnets, gold jacket, and new short hair, she felt suddenly exposed, as if
people could see all the way through to her soul. Behind her, Tom gunned the
Camaro’s motor and drove off with Miss Shelton, leaving her alone.
The
movie was already starting when Leta sneaked in. She’d missed making a big
entrance with her new hair and outfit. The place was packed, and Leta had to
take a seat on the far left, stumbling over annoyed people on her way in. For
the first time in months, Leta didn’t sing along. Instead, she watched the
audience illuminated by the bright of the movie screen, their worshipful faces
washed in a flickering blue, the light as inconstant as everything else. They
sang, laughed, and spat back lines on cue. When the “The Time Warp” began, Leta
was too tired to get up. Instead, Jennifer Pomhultz went onstage. The crowd
urged her on, and by the end, she owned the part of Columbia. Jennifer took a
little bow to wild applause while Leta sat numbly, her hands tucked under her
sweaty thighs, feeling the fishnets bite into the skin of her palms.
When
Frank-N-Furter sang about going home, a small spot of pain flared behind Leta’s
ribs. Sitting here with everyone singing the same words, she suddenly felt lost
and small, like an alien whose spaceship had crashed on a foreign planet where
there were three moons and nothing in the sky looked right to her. The film
ground to a halt, freezing on an image of Frank-N-Furter tossing playing cards
so that the cards hung in the air. The audience booed and hissed as the lights
came up and a manager walked to the front.
“Leta
Miller? Is there a Leta Miller here?”
Leta
raised her hand shyly.
“You
have a phone call. Follow me, please. Sorry, folks. We’ll get the show going
again in a minute.”
Leta’s
cheeks burned as she moved up the aisles, past the annoyed audience members.
Behind her, the lights dimmed and the movie started up sluggishly.
In
the manager’s office, she took the call. “Hello?”
“Leta?”
Her mother’s voice sounded small and desperate. “I’m at the hospital. With
Stevie.”
“Is
he okay?”
“I
can’t leave. I called Mrs. Jaworski. She’s coming to pick you up. Wait out
front.” And she hung up.
Mrs.
Jaworski showed up in her Impala, her hair still in rollers, and they drove in
silence to the hospital. It had rained, and the asphalt shone under the street
lights.
Leta
stared out at the road and felt her heart beating faster. Was Stevie dead? She
allowed herself to imagine that moment: Her father coming home, neighbors and
church members bringing by casseroles, her friends consoling her, Cawley
forgiving her. Maybe then her mother could stop feeling so angry and pay
attention to Leta again.
Mrs.
Jaworski pulled the Impala up to the bright white lights of the hospital’s
front entrance. She kept the engine running.
“Thanks,”
Leta said.
Mrs.
Jaworski patted her leg, and when Leta looked at her face, she could see that
the old woman had taken the time to put on her orange lipstick. It lit up the
dark like a flare. “I have a brother, lives in Alaska. A real pain in the ass.
Family. They’re nothing but trouble.”
Leta
nodded numbly and went in. On the way to the ICU, Leta caught a glimpse of her
face in the mirror by the nurse’s station. She didn’t recognize anything about
herself and it was startling. Quickly, she put her hat on, tucking the ends of
her new hairdo underneath, but it didn’t help.
Her
mother sat in the waiting room on an orange vinyl chair whose stuffing was
popping out at the seams. She held fast to a white Styrofoam cup. In the corner
above their heads, a TV was on but the sound was off.
Leta
slid as quietly as possible into the seat beside her mother. “What happened?”
Her
mother’s voice was flat. “He had a seizure. I found him on the floor, coughing
up blood.”
“Is
he gonna be okay?”
“It
was a bad one. But he’s stable now. He’s stable.”
“So
he’s gonna be fine,” Leta said, and she found that she was relieved after all. “Did
you call Daddy?”
Her
mother nodded. “He was going to fly home from Hartford, but I told him it was
okay. We’re okay.”
We’re
not okay, Leta wanted to scream. “You should have let him come.”
Her
mother waved it away like she did most of what Leta had to say. “He’s working
on that big account. And besides, the flights are so expensive.”
Her
dad should be here. More than anything, she wanted him to be here. She wanted
them to sit at the kitchen table and admit that everything had changed and none
of them could stop change from happening; change was no one’s fault. They’d all
been so careful, but Leta was tired now and she wanted to come off watch. She
removed her cap, and her mother paled.
“Jesus
God Almighty, Leta Jane Miller, what did you do to your HAIR?”
Leta
put a hand to her newly shorn locks. It felt good against her skin, like
freedom. “It’s just henna. It’s not permanent.”
“Nothing
ever is.” Her mother crushed the flimsy cup and dropped it into the wastepaper
basket. “I was going to start my master’s degree, but I guess that’s gone now.
I guess I’m just not supposed to do anything. I should never make plans.”
“Stop
it,” Leta said. “Just…stop.”
They
sat in the hallway on unforgiving plastic seats under hospital lights that
bleached them into gray ghosts of themselves while orderlies moved up and down
the hallway, pushing carts stacked with laundered sheets, plastic water pitchers,
tissue boxes, cups of ice—small comforts for the sick and weary.
“I’m
sorry we’re too much for you,” Leta said, and she wished it hadn’t come out
sounding sarcastic, because she meant it sincerely.
“That’s
a terrible thing to say,” her mother answered, but she hesitated, and the pause
held the truth. Leta’s mother reached over like she was going to hug her.
Instead she picked a piece of popcorn off her sweater. “We’ve just had a scare
is all. Everything’s okay now.”
A
doctor called Leta’s mother over for a hushed conference by a gurney. Leta
stared up at the ceiling until her eyes burned. She blinked fast, but the tears
came anyway. It seemed a good time for tears. She cried for the way things had
been, the way they would never be again. She cried for Agnes in a backseat with
Roger, Agnes who had left Leta alone in a between-world of horse models and Rocky
Horror and kissing boys in bathrooms. She thought about Jennifer’s perfect
dance steps, the way she’d let that faker steal the moment from her, and she
cried harder. A nurse passing patted her shoulder and then she was gone.
Later,
Leta took a cab back to her house while her mother stayed on at the hospital.
It was late, around three in the morning, and the street was hushed. A soda can
glinted in Mrs. Jaworski’s grass. Leta picked it up and tossed it in the big
green trash can beside her garage.
“Leta?”
Leta
started at the sound of Agnes’s voice. She was sitting on the front porch,
huddled under Roger’s jacket, looking small and frail.
“I
was waiting for you. I figured you’d be home about an hour ago.”
“I
was at the hospital. Stevie had another seizure.”
“Oh,
my god! Is he okay?”
Leta
only shrugged. “For now. I thought you were at Roger’s.”
“I
was. Roger and me, we…you know. We did it,” Agnes said, and Leta couldn’t be
certain if there was pride or sadness in it.
“Oh.
Um, congratulations. I mean, was it…are you okay?”
Agnes’
bottom lip quivered. She started to cry. “I’m so stupid.”
“Aggie.
Hey. What happened? Did he do something…weird?”
“No!”
Agnes said, laughing through tears. “He was super nice to me. Look, he gave me
his motocross ribbon.” She opened the jacket so that Leta could see the red
ribbon pinned to her shirt.
“Hey,
you won first place in the Losing Your Virginity contest,” Leta joked. Agnes
burst into fresh sobs, and Leta felt a surge of panic. “Sorry. It was just a
joke….”
“It’s
not the stupid joke.” Agnes dragged her fingers over her eyes and wiped her
nose on her sleeve. “It was fine, I think. It was nice. He told me I was
pretty. I just…” She shook her head and took two deep breaths. “I’m different
now. I can’t go back. You know?”
“Yeah.
I know.”
Agnes’s
face screwed up into fresh crying. “I started thinking about my mom, how I
wished I could tell her about it. That’s totally stupid, isn’t it?”
“No,”
Leta said. “Of course not.” Her breath came out in a puff of dragon smoke. When
Leta and Agnes were kids, they’d put straws to their mouths and blow out,
pretending they were smoking like the smiling women they saw in magazines who
played tennis or lounged poolside, looking impossibly glamorous. In the yard,
the trees stood small and naked. The sky above the houses was dark and
unreadable, and Leta shivered in the cold.
“I
really do love your hair. It’s totally cool.”
“Thanks,”
Leta said. “My mom had a cow.”
“Even
better,” Agnes said with a giggle. She quieted. “If I call Diana to come pick
me up now I’ll never hear the end of it. Can I stay here?”
“Sure,”
Leta said.
The
house was full of shadows. Leta turned on a lamp that only illuminated the
emptiness of the living room. Leta gave Agnes a pair of her pajamas and they
pulled the quilt off Leta’s bed and spread it over the carpet in her room.
“Oh,
Charlie!” Agnes took Leta’s Appaloosa from its place on the horse shelf and
gave him a kiss. She tucked Roger’s jacket under her head and clutched Charlie
to her chest. The girls lay together on the floor, shoulders touching, and
talked about who was the cutest guy in TeenBeat, whether Leta should let
her hair grow out or keep it short, if it would be totally fourth grade
to stage Rocky Horror with the Barbies in the morning. As Agnes’s words
became softer and fewer, fading at last to a light snore, Leta stared at the
glittery flecks in the ceiling and imagined they were stars winking out a
message only she could understand.
Libba
Bray is the author of the New York Times bestselling Gemma Doyle
Trilogy, which includes the novels A Great and Terrible Beauty, Rebel
Angels, and The Sweet Far Thing. She is also the author of the
comedic novel, Going Bovine. Besides Geektastic, she has
contributed stories to Restless Dead, Up All Night, and Vacations
from Hell. Sometimes she tells people she’s won the National Book Award,
but then M. T. Anderson comes by and asks for his back, ’cause he’s grabby like
that.
Libba
is a longtime geek and is fluent in many geek languages including, but not
limited to, theater geek, showtunes geek (yes, they are different), music geek,
sci-fi TV geek, bad movies geek, “Rocky Horror” geek, campy geek, Hammer Horror
geek, and Valley of the Dolls geek, which deserves a category all its
own. As a teenager, she saw The Rocky Horror Picture Show every weekend
for nearly two years. Any photos that surface of her in a gold lamé top, heavy
eyeliner, and tap shoes are absolutely fabricated, especially if the subject in
question is sporting a mullet.
a
cognizant original v5 release october 10 2010
About
the Illustrators
Hope
Larson is the author and illustrator of several graphic novels, including Gray
Horses and Chiggers. Her short stories have been featured in the New
York Times and several anthologies, notably the Flight series and Image
Comics’ Tori Amos?–inspired Comic Book Tattoo. Larson has been nominated
for awards in the United States, Canada, and Europe, and is the recipient of a
2006 Ignatz Award and a 2007 Eisner Award. She holds a BFA from the School of
the Art Institute of Chicago and lives in Asheville, North Carolina, with her
husband and four cats. She used up all her geek points when she started drawing
comics professionally.
Bryan
Lee O’Malley was born in London, Ontario, Canada. In high school he joined
choir, chess club, the trivia team, and the computer programming club, got his
first job in order to purchase a Sega Genesis, attended LAN parties, played
Starcraft from dusk ’til dawn while drinking Coke and eating pizza, tried to
get his friends to read comic books that he thought were really cool, and hung
out with the theater and band geeks. The head of the arts department still
speaks of him fondly. O’Malley went on to become an award-winning cartoonist,
with a film, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, in development at Universal.
He lives in the United States.