For Margie
Thank You
Kaitlyn, Amanda, and Andrew
Ms. Virginia Russell and Ms. Colleen Bright Ross
Maria Modugno and HarperCollins
Bonnie Nadell
Gene Marc and Frazier Malone Hurwin
CONTENTS
Michael takes the U-turn
after
the light clicks to red, screeching the tires and almost hitting some old woman in a jeep. He flips her off, leans over, and shows me his Dumb Jock face. We screech again as we almost miss the second turn. Every single person in every single car in the carpool line glares. I scrunch down in the seat and remember why I hate my brother.
“This is
it
?”
Michael has stopped in the middle of the street. Now everyone on the sidewalk is staring too.
“Move the car, butthead.”
“Do you know how much this place costs?”
“What do you careâyou're not paying
.
”
Just breathe, Katie, breathe.
Finally he moves, drives, parks. This is definitely not how I visualized my first day at a new school.
“Skates, are you sure you want to go here?”
“Do
not
call me âSkates.'” I grab my schedule and get out. If it wouldn't get more stares, I'd slam the door.
“Let me walk you. I want to see the rich kids.”
“Heyâbetter ideaâgo die somewhere, okay?”
First I run into a bench. No big deal, no one's watching. Then I go into the wrong room, with the twelfth-grade students instead of tenth. I get stuck between an Eminem look-alike and a troupe of blank-faced, black-haired maybe-females with extreme makeup. From the other side of the room, two anorexic
Vogue
model types check me out. The redhead whispers something and the blonde starts laughing, quietly, behind her hand. Eminem sneers down at me and nods once, like I care. I put them all on my list of those needing paper cuts. Then the blonde rolls her eyes and I smile.
I smile!
I miss the tenth-grade orientation talk completely, so I follow the crowd. I stand in line, get my picture taken, and follow another crowd down the alley to stand in line again. I'm paired with a fairly normal-looking girl who immediately assures me she thinks
I'm
just fine but practically every other girl in our grade is a bitch. We get our books and stand in still another line to pay for them.
I fumble for my mom's credit card and bang into the edge of a table. My plastic bags split at the seams and three million books clatter to the floor. In the nanosecond of silence that follows, someone says: “Omigod, I will never get out of here.” The whole room laughs; I am publicly revealed: Attention everyone! Stupid Kate is hereâcan't you see her
smiling
?
How I get from the book-buying place to Michael's car is not entirely clear. Of course, he's standing outside it, tall, lanky, serene,
fitting right in
. I hate him. The blonde and the redhead from twelfth grade drive by us in a little black BMW. They glance over and the redhead winks. He tips his head in their direction and the blonde almost smiles. I do not even exist. I hate him even more.
Here's the list:
I run into benches and walls and other random objects, I don't
understand
the social thing, I always think people are dissing me, and the only person I'm
able
to get pissed at is my brotherâbut only if no one's looking.
Andâmy personal favoriteâ
I smile
. Constantly. It doesn't matter how stupid, angry, depressed, or embarrassed I amâI still smile. The only time I actually
don't
smile is when I'm doing a part in a play. Oh, but waitâthat isn't real life, is it?
This morning was supposed to mark the official birth of my new identityâthe person who can cope with anything. New house, new fatherâwell, sort ofânew school
, new girl
.This one is funny and knows what to say. She has a best friend and they make plans every weekend. She gets IMed the second she goes online. She doesn't space out during daylight and has regular dreams,
not scary nightmares. She never bumps into stuff and she has an extremely cool, extremely individual way of dressing. Her boyfriend? One of the cutest guys at school.
I swear she's in here.
I just don't know how to get her out.
SoâI walk. It helps me think. Or
not
, depending on the day. It moves me forward, anyway, especially when Stupid Kate has appeared. I don't have to talk to people, not even my mom. I just say I'm exploring my new neighborhood.
It's weird. Brentwood is one of the most expensive places in California, and it reminds me of Santa Rosa, which definitely is not. Willow trees along the streets, their branches arching almost to the center. Sunlight peeking through. Breezes painting shadow dancers on the sidewalk. I like being here. Of course, in Santa Rosa, there'd be leaves rustling now, crunching under my feet. I miss that. But in Santa Rosa, I'd also have that eerie feeling that someone was following me, and I'd stop every so often to see if I could catch the sound of them in the leaves.
Here, in my new Normal and Connected Life, the leaves have been sent who knows where by loud little cleaning machines. And even with no one aroundâno gardeners, pets, children, not even cars going byâI will not have that feeling because I will not allow it.
“Goddammit!” a girl shouts. I look up to see her jump out of the way of the black BMW from yesterday. It's the first full-length day of school, and I'm sitting on the benches in the alley in front of the little black-box theater,waiting for first period to start, feeling conspicuous and invisible at the same time.
A dark, smiling boy sticks his head out the passenger side of the car. “It's a car, Heather . . .
car
? Maybe you could move out of the way?”
“Maybe Stacey could learn to drive?” Heather's jeans are very low and way too tight and quite a significant roll of pink flesh bulges out between them and her tank top. It's twelve degrees and she has no jacket, but neither do most of the other kids. Maybe the rich are immune to the morning cold?
Stacey smiles a deadly smile and holds up her middle finger. Heather holds up
her
finger as Stacey parks directly in front of where I'm sitting. I recognize Stacey as the redhead
Vogue
model who liked me so much at orientation. I negotiate with the Universe to allow me to melt into the ground, but as usual, it's not listening. Stacey, Dark Smiling Boy, and Movie Star Blonde emerge like royalty from their car and I drop my head, pretending to read.
I need not have worried. Unworthy of their attention, I blend with my surroundings and they slide right by. The first bell rings. Hunched over and praying for continued invisibility, I skulk without incident past the library. Alas, I relax my guard to check my schedule and map and don't realize Stacey and Movie Star Blonde have stopped a few steps in front of me. Of course, I bump into them. I step on the Blonde's foot, knock her backward, send her books flying and basically drop her into a planter. A pause in the morning ripples out from where I'm standing.
“Shit!” says the Blonde.
“Layla?” Stacey asks, extending her hand. “Omigod, are you okay?”
I am now a large, wordless lump. In some still-functioning part of my brain, I wonder who would name their child “Layla.”
“You oughta watch where you're going,” Stacey hisses, checking me out and finding me even uglier than I feel.
“Why did she hit
me
?” Layla whines. “Why can't anybody ever hit
you
? Why does it always have to be me?” This makes Stacey giggle.
By the time I manage to whisper,“I am so sorry,” the Movie Stars have left the building. Dark Smiling Boy has turned into Laughing Butthead Boy. I blink a couple times and my legs finally work, but I can feel the edges of my vision filling in. I duck around a corner into a hallway. It's ninth grade all over again. How did this happen so soon?