There is nothing more peaceful than quiet on a Saturday nightโor very early Sunday morning. Dadโs muffled snores rumbled from down the hall, but the rest of the house was silent when I crept in sometime after one. Or maybe Iโd been deafened by the thudding bass at the Oak Hill party. Honestly, the idea of hearing loss didnโt bother me too much. If it meant I never had to listen to techno again, I was all for it.
I locked the front door behind me and walked through the dark, empty living room. I saw the postcard lying on the coffee table, sent from whatever city Mom was in now, but I didnโt bother reading it. It would still be there in the morning, and I was just too tired, so I dragged myself up the stairs to my bedroom instead.
Stifling a yawn, I hung my coat over the back of my desk chair and moved over to my bed. The migraine began to subside as I kicked my Converse across the room. I was exhausted, but my OCD was totally calling. The pile of clean laundry on the floor, by the foot of my bed had to be folded before Iโd ever be able to sleep.
Carefully, I lifted each piece of clothing and folded it with embarrassing precision. Then I stacked the shirts, jeans, and underwear in separate sections on the floor. Somehow, the act of folding the wrinkled clothes soothed me. As I made the perfect piles, my mind cleared, my body relaxed, and my irritation from the night of loud music and obnoxious, rich, sex-obsessed pigs ebbed.
With every even crease, I was reborn.
When all of the clothes were folded, I stood up, leaving the stacks on the floor. I pulled off my sweater and jeans, which stank from the sweltering parties, and tossed them into the hamper in the corner of my room. I could shower in the morning. I was too tired to deal with it tonight.
Before crawling under my sheets, I took a glance at the full-length mirror across the room. I searched my reflection with new eyes, with new knowledge. Uncontrollable wavy auburn hair. A long nose. Big thighs. Small boobs. Yep. Definitely Duff material. How had I not known?
I mean, Iโd never considered myself particularly attractive and it wasnโt hard to see that Casey and Jessica, both thin and blond, were gorgeous, but still. The fact that I played the role of the ugly girl to their luscious duo hadnโt
occurred to me. Thanks to Wesley Rush, I could see it now.
Sometimes itโs better to be clueless.
I pulled a blanket up to my chin, hiding my naked body from the scrutiny of the mirror. Wesley was living proof that beauty was only skin-deep, so why did his words bother me? I was intelligent. I was a good person. So who cared if I was the Duff? If I were attractive, Iโd have to deal with guys like Wesleyย hitting onย me. Ugh! So being the Duff had its benefits, right? Being unattractive didnโt have to suck.
Damn Wesley Rush! I couldnโt believe he was making me worry about such stupid, pointless, shallow bullshit.
I closed my eyes. I wouldnโt think about it in the morning. I wouldnโt think about Duffsย ever again.
Sunday was fantasticโnice, quiet, uninterrupted euphoria. Of course, things were usually pretty quiet when Mom was away. When she was home, the house always seemed loud. There was always music or laughter or something lively and chaotic. But she never seemed to be home for more than a couple of months, and in the time that she was gone, everything grew still. Like me, Dad wasnโt much for socializing. He was usually buried in his work or watching television. Which meant the Piper house was pretty much silent.
And, on a morning after Iโd been forced to withstand all the racket of clubs and parties, a quiet house was the equivalent of perfection.
But Monday sucked.
All Mondays suck, of course, but this Mondayย reallyย fucked up everything. It all started first block when Jessica slumped into Spanish with tear-stained cheeks and running mascara.
โJessica, whatโs wrong?โ I asked. โDid something happen? Is everything okay?โ
Iโll admit it; I always got really freaked out on the rare occasions when Jessica came to class looking anything less than perky. I mean, she was constantly bouncing and giggling. So when she came in looking so depressed, it scared the shit out of me.
Jessica shook her head miserably and collapsed into her seat. โEverythingโs fine, butโฆ I canโt go to Homecoming!โ Fresh tears spewed from her wide chocolate eyes. โMom wonโt let me go!โ
That was it? Sheโd gotten me all freaked out overย Homecoming?
โWhy not?โ I asked, still trying to be sympathetic.
โIโm grounded,โ Jessica sniffed. โShe saw my report card in my room this morning, and she found out Iโm failing chemistry, and she flipped out! Itโs not effing fair! Basketball Homecoming is, like, my favorite dance of the yearโฆ
after prom and Sadie Hawkins and Football Homecoming.โ
I tilted my chin down and looked at her teasingly. โWow, how many favorites do you have?โ
She didnโt answer. Or laugh.
โIโm sorry, Jessica. I know it must suckโฆ but Iโm not going either.โ I didnโt mention that I considered the whole practice of school dances degrading or that they were just giant wastes of time and money. Jessica already knew my opinions on the matter, and I didnโt think reminding her would help the situation. But I was pretty happy I wouldnโt be the only girl skipping. โHow about this: Iโll come over, and weโll watch movies all night. Will your mom be cool with that?โ
Jessica nodded and wiped her eyes with the cuff of her sleeve. โYeah,โ she said. โMom likes you. She thinks youโre a good influence on me. So thatโll be okay. Thanks, Bianca. Can we watchย Atonementย again? Are you sick of it yet?โ
Yes, I was getting very sick of the mushy romances Jessica swooned over, but I could get over it. I grinned at her. โI never get tired of James McAvoy.
We can even watchย Becoming Janeย if you want. Itโll be a double feature.โ
She laughedโfinallyโjust as the teacher made her way to the front of the room and began obsessively straightening the pencils on her desk before calling roll. Jessica tossed a glance at the scrawny instructor. When she looked back at me, her dark brown eyes sparkled with a few fresh tears. โYou know what the worst part is, Bianca?โ she whispered. โI was gonna ask Harrison to go with me. Now Iโll have to wait until prom to ask him to a dance.โ
Because of her sensitive state, I decided not to remind her that Harrison wouldnโt be interested because she had boobsโbig ones. Instead I just said, โI know. Iโm sorry, Jessica.โ
Once that little crisis was behind us, Spanish went by smoothly. Jessicaโs tears cleared up, and by the time the bell rang, she was laughing giddily while Angela, a friend of ours, told us about her new boyfriend. I found out that Iโd made an A on my lastย prueba de vocabulario. Plus, I totally understood how to conjugate regular present subjunctive verbs. So I was in a pretty damn good mood when Jessica, Angela, and I walked out of the classroom.
โAnd he has a job on campus,โ Angela rambled as we pushed our way into the crowded hall.
โWhere does he go to school?โ I asked.
โOak Hill Community College.โ She sounded a little embarrassed, and she quickly added, โBut heโs just getting his associateโs degree there before he goes to a university. And OHCC isnโt a bad school or anything.โ
โThatโs where Iโm going,โ Jessica said. โI donโt want to go too far from home.โ
Jessica and I were such polar opposites, it was sort of funny sometimes.
You could always predict what one of us was going to want to do just by picking the reverse of the other. Personally, I wanted to get the hell out of Hamilton as soon as possible. Graduation couldnโt arrive soon enough, and then Iโd be off to New York for college.
But the idea of being so far away from Jessicaโnot seeing her bounce by me every day or hearing her jabber about dances and gay boysโsuddenly scared me. I wasnโt entirely sure how Iโd handle it. She and Casey kind of balanced me out. I wasnโt sure anyone else would be willing to put up with my cynicism once I left town.
โWe should get to chemistry, Jess,โ Angela said as she shook her long black bangs from her eyes. โYou know how Mr. Rollins gets when we show up late.โ
They scampered off to the science department, and I started down the hallway heading toward AP government. My mind drifted to other places, to a future without my best friends to keep me sane. Iโd never considered that before, and now that I was thinking about it, it made me really nervous. I knew theyโd tease me for it, but I would have to find a way to keep in constant touch.
I guess my eyes lost contact with my brain, because the next thing I knew, I ran smack into Wesley Rush.
That was the end of my good mood.
I stumbled backward, and all of my textbooks slipped from my arms and crashed to the floor. Wesley grabbed me by both shoulders, his large hands catching me before I had the chance to trip over my own feet and slam into the tile.
โWhoa,โ he said, steadying me.
We were standingย wayย too close to each other. I felt like I had bugs crawling under my skin, spreading from the places where his hands touched me. I shivered with disgust, but he misread it.
โWow, Duffy,โ he said, looking down at me with a cocky grin. He was really tallโIโd forgotten that, sitting next to him at the Nest the other night. He was one of the only boys in our school who was taller than Caseyโat least six two. An entire foot taller than me. โDo I make you weak in the knees?โ
โAs if.โ I twisted out of his grasp, fully aware that I sounded like Alicia Silverstone inย Cluelessย but just not caring. I knelt down and began to gather my books, and to my intense displeasure, Wesley joined me. He was playing
the Good Samaritan role, of course. I bet he was hoping some hot cheerleader, like Casey, would walk by and think he was being a gentleman. What a pig.
Always looking to score.
โSpanish, huh?โ he said, glancing down at the scattered papers as he grabbed them. โCan you say anything interesting?โ
โEl tono de tu voz hace que quiera estrangularme.โ I stood up and waited for him to hand over my papers.
โThat sounds sexy,โ he said, getting to his feet and handing me the stack of Spanish work heโd swept together. โWhatโs it mean?โ
โThe sound of your voice makes me want to strangle myself.โ โKinky.โ
Without another word, I jerked the papers from his hands, tucked them inside one of my books, and stomped off to class. I needed to put as much distance between myself and the womanizing bastard as possible. Duffy? Seriously? He knew my name! The egotistical jackass just couldnโt let me be. Not to mention my skin wasย stillย itching where heโd touched me.
Mr. Chaucerโs AP government class consisted of only nine students, and seven of them were already in the room by the time I walked through the door. Mr. Chaucer gave me a dirty look through his squinting eyes, impressing upon me that the bell would ring any second. To be late was a felony in Mr. Chaucerโs opinion, and to beย almostย late constituted a misdemeanor. I wasnโt the last one to show up, though. That helped a little.
I took my seat in the very back of the room and started to open my notebook, hoping to God that Mr. Chaucer wouldnโt call me out on my near tardiness. With my current mood, there was no guarantee I wouldnโt start cussing at him. He didnโt, and we were both saved the drama.
The last student entered just as the bell rang. โSorry, Mr. Chaucer. I was putting up signs promoting next weekโs inauguration ceremony. You didnโt start already, did you?โ
My heart skipped a beat when I looked up at the boy whoโd just come in.
Okay, so Iโm not quiet about the fact that I hate teenagers who date in high school and constantly rant and rave about how much they โloveโ their boyfriend or girlfriend. I freely admit that I hate girls who say they love someone before theyโve dated them. I donโt hide the fact that, in my opinion, love takes yearsโfive or ten at leastโto develop, and high school relationships seem incredibly pointless to me. Everyone knew this about meโฆ but nobody knew that I wasย almostย a hypocrite.
Well, okay, Casey and Jessica knew, but that didnโt count.
Toby Tucker. Aside from the tragic alliteration, he was perfect in every single way. He wasnโt a testosterone-loaded football player. He wasnโt an
overly sensitive guitar-playing hippie. He didnโt write poetry or wear eyeliner. So he probably wouldnโt have been classified as the typical hottie, but that worked in my favor, right? Jocks, guys in bands, and Emo boys didnโt look twice atโas Wesley would have so delicately worded itโthe Duff. I probably had a better chance with intelligent, politically active, somewhat socially awkward guys like Toby. Right?
Wrong, wrong,ย wrong.
Toby Tucker was my perfect match. Unfortunately, he wasnโt aware of this fact. That was mostly because I lost my ability to form coherent sentences every time he got close to me. He probably thought I was mute or something. He never looked at me or spoke to me or even seemed to notice me in the back of the room. For a girl with such a fat ass, I felt pretty invisible.
I noticed Toby, though. I noticed his outdated yet adorable blond bowl cut and his pasty ivory skin. I noticed his green eyes beneath the lenses of his oval glasses. I noticed that he wore a blazer withย everything,ย and I noticed the adorable way he bit his lower lip when he was thinking really hard about something. I was inโฆ okay, not love, but definitely like. I was deeply inย likeย with Toby Tucker.
โFine,โ Mr. Chaucer muttered. โJust keep an eye on your watch tomorrow, Mr. Tucker.โ
โSure thing, sir.โ
Toby took a seat in the front row next to Jeanine McPhee. Like a stalker, I listened in on their conversation while Mr. Chaucer started writing the lecture notes on the whiteboard. Iโm not normally such a creep, but loโlikeย makes people do crazy things. At least thatโs the popular excuse.
โHow was your weekend, Toby?โ Jeanine asked through her constantly stuffy nose. โDid you do anything exciting?โ
โIt was pretty good,โ Toby said. โDad took Nina and me out of state. We toured the University of Southern Illinois together. That was fun.โ
โIs Nina your sister?โ Jeanine asked.
โNo. Ninaโs my girlfriend. She goes to Oak Hill High School. Didnโt I tell you about her? Anyway, we both got accepted there, so we wanted to check it out. Iโm looking at a few other schools, but weโve been together for a year and a half, and we kind of want to attend the same school to avoid the long- distance issue.โ
โThatโs sweet!โ Jeanine cried. โIโm actually considering just doing some classes at OHCC before I decide what university Iโll go to.โ
My skin had stopped crawling, but now my stomach was doing sickening somersaults. I thought I was going to vomit, and I had to fight the urge to run from the room with a hand cupped over my mouth. Eventually, I won the
battle to keep my breakfast where it belonged, but I still felt pretty shitty.
Toby had a girlfriend? For a year and a half? Oh my God! How had I missed that? And they were going to collegeย together?ย Did that mean he was one of those stupid, mushy romantics I mocked on a daily basis? Iโd expected so much more from Toby Tucker. Iโd expected him to be just as skeptical about the nature of teenage love as I was. Iโd expected him to see college as a huge decision, not one that should be swayed by where your boyfriend/girlfriend got accepted. Iโd expected him to beโฆ well,ย smart!
He wouldnโt date you, anyway,ย a voice in my head hissed at me. It sounded uncannily like Wesley Rushโs unnerving whisper.ย Youโre the Duff, remember? His girlfriend is probably thinner with bigger boobs.
It wasnโt even lunch yet, and I already wanted to jump off a cliff. Well, okay, that was overdramatic. I definitely wanted to go home and go to bed, though. I wanted to forget Toby had a serious girlfriend. I wanted to wash the feeling of Wesleyโs hands off me. Mostly, though, I wanted to erase the wordย Duffย from my memory.
Oh, yeah, and things got worse that day, too.
Around six oโclock that night, the guy on the news started talking about some big snowstorm that would show up in the โearly morning hours.โ I guess the school board took pity on us since we hadnโt had a single snow day so far, because they went ahead and canceled classes before the storm even hit. So Casey called at seven-thirty and insisted that we go to the Nest, since we didnโt have to get up early the next morning.
โI donโt know, Casey,โ I said. โWhat if the roads are bad?โ Iโll admit it. I was looking forย anyย reason not to go. My day had been crappy enough on its own. I didnโt know if I could endure the torture of that hellhole, too.
โB, the storm isnโt supposed to even start until, like, three a.m. or something. As long as weโre home by then itโll be cool.โ
โI have a lot of homework.โ
โItโs not due until Wednesday. You can work on itย all dayย tomorrow if you want.โ
I sighed. โCan you and Jessica find another ride and go without me? I just donโt feel up to it. Itโs been a bad day, Casey.โ
I could always rely on Casey to act at the slightest sign of trouble. โWhat happened?โ she asked. โAre you okay? You didnโt look happy at lunch. Is it about your mom?โ
โCasey.โ
โTell me whatโs up.โ
โNothing,โ I assured her. โToday just sucked, okay? Nothing major or anything. Iโm just not in the mood to go partying with you guys tonight.โ
There was a pause on the other end of the line. Finally, Casey said, โBianca, you know you can tell me anything, right? You know you can talk to me if you need to. Donโt keep things bottled up. Itโs not good for you.โ
โCasey, Iโm fiโโ
โYouโreย fine,โ she interrupted. โYeah, I know. Iโm just saying that if you have a problem, Iโm here for you.โ
โI know,โ I murmured. I felt guilty for getting her nervous like that over something so stupid. I had a bad habit of holding in all my emotions, and Casey knew that all too well. She was always trying to look out for me.
Always coaxing me into sharing so that I didnโt wind up exploding later. It could get annoying, but knowing that someone caredโฆ well, that felt nice. So I couldnโt really get mad about it. โI know, Casey. Iโm fine, though. Itโs justโฆ I found out Toby has a girlfriend today, and Iโm a little bummed. Thatโs all.โ
โOh, B,โ she sighed. โThat sucks. Iโm sorry. Maybe if you come out tonight, Jess and I can cheer you up. Two scoops of ice cream and everything.โ
I let out a little laugh. โThanks, but no thanks. I think Iโll just stay home tonight.โ
I hung up the phone and went downstairs, where I found Dad using the cordless in the kitchen. I heard him before I saw him. He was yelling into the receiver. I stood in the doorway, assuming heโd notice me and immediately lower his voice. I figured some telemarketer was getting an earful of Mike Piper, but then my name came up.
โThink of what youโre doing to Bianca!โ Dadโs loud voice, which Iโd taken for anger, sounded more like pleading. โThis isnโt good for a seventeen- year-old girl and her mother. She needs you here at home, Gina.ย Weย need you here.โ
I slipped back into the living room, surprised to realize he was talking to my mother. Truthfully, I didnโt really know how to feel about it. About the things he was saying. I mean, yeah, I missed my mom. Having her home would have been nice, but it wasnโt as if we werenโt used to getting along without her.
My mother was a motivational speaker. When I was a kid, sheโd written some sort of uplifting, inspirational book about improving self-esteem. It hadnโt sold well, but she still got offers to speak at colleges, support groups, and graduations all over the country. Since the book had flopped, she came pretty cheap.
For a while, sheโd taken only local jobs. Ones she could drive home from after she finished telling people how to love themselves. But after my grandmother passed away, when I was twelve, Mom got a little depressed.
Dad suggested she take a vacation. Just get away for a few weeks.
When she came back, she gushed about all the places sheโd seen and the people sheโd met. I guess maybe thatโs what sparked her addiction to traveling. Because after that first vacation, Mom started booking events all over the place. In Colorado and New Hampshire. Sheโd set up entire tours.
Only this tour, the one she was on now, had been the longest. She hadnโt been home in almost two months, and this time I wasnโt even sure where she was speaking.
Obviously that was why Dad was pissed. Because sheโd been gone for so long.
โDamn it, Gina. When are you going to stop being a child and come home? When are you coming home to usโฆ for good?โ The way my dadโs voice cracked when he uttered that sentence nearly had me in tears. โGina,โ he murmured. โGina, we love you. Bianca and I miss you, and we want you to come home.โ
I pressed myself against the wall that separated me from Dad, biting my lip. God, it was just getting pathetic. I mean, why wouldnโt they just get a fucking divorce already? Was I the only one who could see that things just werenโt working out here? What was the point of being married if Mom was always gone?
โGina,โ my father said, and I thought it sounded like he was on the verge of crying. Then I heard him put the phone down on the counter. The talk was over.
I gave him a couple of minutes before I walked into the kitchen. โHey, Dad. Is everything okay?โ
โYeah,โ he said. God, he was a bad liar. โOh, itโs fine, Bumblebee. I just had a talk with your mom andโฆ she sends her love.โ
โFrom where this time?โ
โUmโฆ Orange County,โ he said. โSheโs visiting your aunt Leah while she speaks at a high school there. Cool, huh? You can tell your friends that your mom is in the O.C. now. You like that show, donโt you?โ
โYeah,โ I said. โI liked itโฆ but it got canceled a few years ago.โ
โOh, wellโฆ I guess Iโm behind, Bumblebee.โ I saw his eyes drift over to the counter, where heโd left his car keys, and I followed them. He noticed this and looked away quickly, before I could say anything. โDo you have plans tonight?โ he asked.
โWell, I could make some, butโฆโ I cleared my throat, uncertain of how to say my next sentence. Dad and I really didnโt make a habit of talking to each other. โI could stay home, too. Do you want me to stay here and, like, watch TV with you or something?โ
โOh, no, Bumblebee,โ he said with an unconvincing laugh. โGo have fun with your friends. Iโll probably go to bed early tonight, anyway.โ
I looked him in the eye, hoping heโd change his mind. Dad always got really depressed after his fights with Mom. I was worried about him, but I wasnโt really sure how to approach the subject.
And in the back of my mind, there was this tiny fear. It was stupid, really, but I couldnโt shake it. My father was a recovering alcoholic. I mean, he quit before I was born, and he hadnโt touched a drop sinceโฆ but sometimes, when he got all pouty about Mom, I got scared. Scared that he might take those car keys and head to the liquor store or something. Like I said, it was ridiculous, but the fear couldnโt be vanquished.
Dad broke our eye contact and shifted uncomfortably. He turned and walked toward the sink, washing the plate heโd just eaten spaghetti off of. I wanted to walk over there and take the plateโhis pathetic excuse to distract himselfโand throw it on the ground. I wanted to tell him how stupid this whole thing was with Mom. I wanted him to realize what a waste of time these dumb depressions and fights were and just admit things werenโt working out.
But, of course, I couldnโt. All I could say was, โDadโฆโ
He faced me, shaking his head, a wet dishrag dangling from his hand. โGo out and have fun,โ he said. โSeriously, I want you to. Youโre only a kid once.โ
There was no arguing. That was his subtle way of telling me he wanted to be alone.
โOkay,โ I said. โIf youโre sureโฆ Iโll go call Casey.โ
I walked upstairs and into my bedroom. I picked my cell phone up off the dresser and dialed Caseyโs number. Two rings in, she answered.
โHey, Casey. I changed my mind about the Nestโฆ and, um, do you think it would be okay if I stayed over tonight? Iโll tell you about it later, but Iโฆ I just donโt want to stay at home.โ
I refolded the clean clothes on the floor at the foot of my bed before I left, but it didnโt help as much as it usually did.