BETWEEN THE BLOOD TEST,ย an ultrasound (that went where no man had ever gone before), and a massive list of probingโerโintrusive questions, I was done. More than done. And, for the first time in my life, I was glad to be wearing my school uniform again.
A knock sounded on the door. โDecent?โ
โYes,โ I managed, and Dr. Edmonson came in.
I got a great view of his bald patch as he walked through the door, flipping through my charts.
โItโs what I expected.โ He sighed, every bit as dramatic but nowhere near as sigh-worthy as McDreamy.
โWhat is it?โ I asked. โBecause Iโd love to get my mom to stop bombarding me with pregnancy tests.โ
He chuckled, but quickly sobered. โUsually, weโd wait for the readings to come back, but as a favor to your mom, I took a peek myself. You have PCOS.โ At my confused look, he added, โPolycystic ovarian syndrome.โ
For the next fifteen minutes, he explained this thing I had no idea existed but had somehow taken over my body, my weight, and apparently my fertility. He explained why Iโd packed on the pounds so quickly since middle school and had to go to weekly waxing appointments with my mother. That Iโd have a harder time conceiving, when the time came, if I was able to at all.
All of it seemed overwhelming. And unfair. I mean, yeah, I ate fast food, but so did half the kids at Emerson Academy. Why was I the one ballooning out and they could still stay in single-digit uniforms and procreate like monkeys? โSo, how do we get rid of it?โ
โYou could try to lose weight.โ
I rested back in my chair and rolled my eyes. โMy momโs on that one.โ Everyone acted like if you were fat, all your medical problems were fat. They never wanted to look beyond the extra layer of tissue to see what was really going on.
โIโm assuming she doesnโt know about that.โ He sent a pointed look to my takeout bag, and I scooted it behind my backpack.
I refused to respond. That was his only solution? Try to do something my mom and I had been working at for months? Youโd think years in med school would have given him some advanced thinking skills, but apparently not.
โMaybe you should take her advice,โ Dr. Edmonson said. โIn the meantime, Iโm prescribing you birth control to help balance out your hormones and jump-start your cycles. Youโll be feeling better in no time.โ
I wanted to tell him I felt just fine. That aside from my weight, I led a perfectly average existence no one could shake a stick at. Whatever that phrase meant. Plus, not having the bloody devil staining my underwear and stomping on my uterus every month wasnโt the worst thing ever.
โNow, I promised your mother Iโd have you done in time for class.โ He looked at me over his spectacles. โDonโt make me break her promise.โ
I turned and grabbed my bag. โWe wouldnโt want that, now would we?โ My lips quickly fell as I walked out of the office. Any dreams Iโd had of Beckett knowing my name and holding a secret torch for me shattered as I processed the news. How could I be worrying about infertility before Iโd even hit second base? And this disease meant I would have a harder time losing weight, but that was my only chance at being healthy? It didnโt make
any sense.
I got into my car and slammed the gearshift into reverse. What kind of cruel joke was this? What had I done to deserve this? I had straight As. I volunteered. I tutored every now and then. Heck, I even ate my momโs stupid grapefruit. None of it mattered. None of it made a difference.
I was still fuming when I parked next to Merritt Alexanderโs stupid hot- pink Hummer and walked into Emerson Academy. The schoolโs motto over the entranceway mocked me.ย Ad Meliora.ย Toward better things.
Or more tortuous things. Like an hour-long lecture presented by my very own mother on menstrual cycles and condoms and STIs.
I rolled my eyes before opening the classroom door. If only Mom didnโt have Dr. Edmonson in her back pocket, I could have stalled and gotten out of there in time for lunch. Doctors were notoriously slow.
Most of the girls in health class already lounged in their seats, but we had a few minutes before the hour started. Mom rose from her desk and came to me.
โAny news?โ she asked quietly.
โItโs…โ I looked away from her, toward the board where the projector had the first lesson slide on the pull-down screen. My mouth hung open at the four letters on the title slide.
โWhat?โ She followed my eyes. โOh, yeah, should be a good discussion for you girls.โ
โNo, Iโ”
The bell shrilled, and she rubbed a hand on my shoulder. โCatch me at lunch so you can tell me what Dr. Edmonson said?โ
Deftly, I nodded and went to the open seat in the front row where I sat in Momโs class. Every class except math, to be fair. Mom would know before I did if Iโd been goofing off or not paying attention. Perks of having a parent for a teacher.
Mom began the lecture, reading from the slides and covering all the information Iโd just learned from Dr. Edmonson.
โSome common symptoms are hair growth on the upper lip, weight gain, especially around your middle, and irregular cycles…โ Her mouth went slack, and she turned her eyes on me.
I nodded.
She swallowed.
I felt the entire classโs eyes on me.
โExcuse me,โ she said to the class. โI have to make a call. Work on…something until I get back.โ
She left to a chorus of murmurs, and I tried to hide my red cheeks. She hadnโt pointed me out directly, but she might as well have.
โThis is so dumb,โ Merritt trilled from the back row where she sat with the rest of her groupies. โMrs. H. might as well just give another lecture on โthe dangers of obesity.โโ
Her friend Tinsley made an ominous โoooohโ sound like the ghost of Christmas Fat was haunting the room.
Poppy giggled, egging them on, as usual.
โI donโt get it,โ Merritt continued. โWhy not just cut the Twinkies and quit whining about it?โ
I gritted my teeth and turned to see how Jordan, the scholarship student sitting next to me, was reacting to this. She weighed at least as much as me. But her eyes were on her homework assignment, even though her hand wasnโt writing.
Tinsley scoffed, โI mean, Iโd trade Twinkies for not being fat any day.โ
Merrittโs voice turned falsely pensive. โI donโt know. I mean, itโs one thing to have a little extra cushion, but another to beย obese.โ
โTrue,โ Poppy said.
Was Zara hearing this? If anyone would stand up to Merritt, it would be herโshe was my size but had curves in the right placesโand a feisty personality to match. Plus, her dad was rich enough to have as much clout as Merrittโs parents. I turned to see if she was catching it, but she kept her thumbs tapping over her phone. Probably texting some celebrity her movie producer father had connected her to.
No hopes for Callie, who was so tame a kitten would probably scare her. โItโs so unhealthy,โ Merritt continued. โNot to mention gross. What guy
would want to be on top of all ofย that?โ
Tinsley let out a peal of laughter. โOr under it!โ
โEnough,โ I thought. Or, at least, I thought I thought it.
The entire room quieted, and Merritt said, โWhat was that,ย Aurora?โ My shoulders tensed. โItโs Rory.โ
โMore like Borey,โ Poppy said.
I raised my eyebrows. โMy name rhymes with whore and thatโs the best you can do? I expected more from you, Poppy.โ
Merritt seemed equally as unimpressed by Poppyโs insult and held up a finger to stall Poppyโs retort. โNo, I want to hear whatย Auroraย has to say. Tell me, how many guys have you been with?โ
God, could everyone stop talking about my vagina for one hot second? โWhatโs it matter? Just lay off.โ
โOh, I get it, your feelings are hurt because you canโt get a guy interested in all of…that.โ
I rolled my eyes. โPlease. I could get a guy interested.โ
Okay, I might have been blowing hot air, but at this point, Iโd do anything to get Merritt to shove her opinions up her size-zero ass.
โOh, Iโm sure you could getย aย guy interested. Chester would probably even pay you a quarter or two.โ
Tinsley cackled. โIf he could get it up.โ
Poppy shrugged. โThey make Viagra for a reason.โ
I bristled at them making fun of the sweet old man who always hung out at Waldoโs Cafรฉ. Being insulted like that wasnโt exactly fun either. Especially after the morning Iโd had. โItโs not like thereโs a checklist to get a guy to go out with you,โ I said. โTheyโre free to choose who they want.โ
โAnd my point,โ Merritt said, walking toward my desk and swinging her pleated skirt on the way, โis that no hot guy in his right mind would go out with someone like…well…you.โ
I barely managed to keep my mouth shut. Iโd heard Merritt talk like this to other people but had never had her wrath directed at me. (Being a teacherโs kid hadย someย advantages.) But now that I was an ant burning under Merrittโs name-brand magnifying glass, I couldnโt back down. Especially not with the other plus-sized girls overhearing this.
โI could get a hot guy to go out with me.โ I countered, sounding way more confident than I felt. Besides hotness was subjective, right?
โOh?โ She raised her eyebrows and looked around the room, lapping up the attention of everyone who had their eyes glued on us. โDid you all hear that? Precious Rory Hutton could get any guy she wanted.โ
More than a few people laughed along with her.
That didnโt feel great, but I kept my eyes leveled at her. I was not backing down.
She pressed her manicured hands on my desk and leaned over, revealing her cleavage. โDo you mean it? Any guy and not just some hottie in a strait jacket?โ
I stood up, not wanting to be underneath her in any way. โReally.โ I folded my arms over my chest, secretly wishing my mom would hurry up and get done grilling Dr. Edmonson about my prognosis.
โProve it,โ she said.
โOh yeah.โ I rolled my eyes. โLet me go grab a guy and ask him out with everyone watching. Good plan, Merritt.โ
She tapped her chin with a hot-pink fingernail. โActually…โ I did not like the look flashing in her eyes. Not one bit. โWhat do you say we make this interesting?โ
I lifted an eyebrow. โInteresting?โ
โYeah.โ She crossed her arms, giving her push-up bra some help. โWhat do you say we make a bet?โ
โGo on,โ I said, trying to hide my apprehension.
โIf you can get Beckett Langley to take you to homecoming, I will gladly give up my homecoming crown and back off. If you lose, you stay home from homecoming. I donโt needย your kindย ruining my day.โ
I rolled my eyes. โIf youโre going to make a bet, at least make it fair.
Iโm not trying to steal your boyfriend.โ
โHeโs not my boyfriend anymore.โ She leaned back on Jordanโs desk, oblivious to the obvious discomfort on Jordanโs face. Merritt picked at her nails, pretending to be bored, but I didnโt miss the flash of pain that crossed her dainty features. โSo what do you say? Do we have a deal?โ
Jordan shifted back and gave me a look somewhere between upset and helpless. She wouldnโt dare go up against Merritt and risk her scholarship.
It was up to me. โGame on.โ
The entire class gasped. Or maybe that was the blood rushing in my head.
I dropped into my chair, shell-shocked. Merritt forbid anyone in the room from saying a word of the bet until homecoming, on the threat of her daddy throwing around his money to get them kicked out of the school. It had been done before.
Mom came back minutes before the bell rang and assigned us chapters to read. At class change, I rushed to the hallway with the rest of the students, not wanting to hear what was sure to be a barrage of a million questions from my mother.
No, I had to get out of here and figure out how to do the impossible: get Beckett Langley to fall for a girl like me.