โAre you going to vote for Finn?โ Sasha asks.
โFor what?โ I say. Weโre at Goodwill, looking through a rack of old wedding dresses. Itโs Sashaโs idea for her prom dress. Mom is making me buy a dress from a department store; she says that, right now, she needs something like buying me a real prom dress. I didnโt put up as much of a fight as I might have in the past. Brooke bought a dress from a department store too. She says that there are a lot of sequined nightmares at the mall, but it wonโt be as hard as I think to find something cool.
Angie is making her dress out of blue crepe. Itโs hard for her to find clothes now. Her mother-in-law buys her maternity shirts that look like something Sylvie would wear if she ever got fat. Mostly Angie wears giant T-shirts from bands that broke up in the nineties.
Angie holds up a mock Victorian dress with a high collar for me to see. โIf you want to tell Alex to keep his hands to himself, that will do it,โ I
say. I go back to searching the rack.
โWell, since Iโm about to be the last virgin of our friends, I might as well look the part,โ she says. I look up again. Sasha has the dress flung over one arm.
โJamie told you about that?โ I say. She nods. โYeah, why didnโt you?โ
I shrug. โI dunno,โ I say, and I honestly donโt. โIt doesnโt seem real, I guess.โ
โWell, youโve got two months and one week until it will be all the way real.โ
โYeah, I guess so,โ I say. I finger the yellowed lace on the nearest dress. โWhat were you saying about Finny?โ
โOh, are you going to vote for him for Prom King?โ I feel my face scrunch into a grimace.
โHeโs going to run for Prom King?โ I say.
โHe and Sylvie together. I thought you would know.โ Iโm not surprised that I didnโt know though. When Finny and I do talk, he never mentions Sylvie. Ever since Christmas, he usually only asks how Iโm doing and I say fine and then we watch TV or go finish our homework. Sometimes we talk about school or the weather.
โI guess that was Sylvieโs idea,โ I say. โNo wait, I know it was. He hates being the center of attention.โ
โBut heโs so popular,โ Sasha says. I shrug. โThatโs not his fault,โ I say. โHeโs likable.โ
โI guess,โ Sasha says. โAnd he is so hot.โ I shrug again. She looks down at the dress in her hands. โIโm going to look so cool,โ she says.
***
My mother and I go shopping on the first day that it actually feels like spring. Momโs face is thinner and there are always circles under her eyes, but today she is excited.
โNow,โ she says, as we glide up the escalator toward evening apparel, โis all pink entirely banned?โ
โNot if itโs like a sassy pink,โ I say. โBut if itโs a sweet, girly pink, yes.
Maybe some shade of sarcastic pink if it isnโt too abrasive.โ โIโll keep that in mind,โ she says.
***
I try on all kinds of pink, for her. I wear blues and greens because Dad is leaving her, and we consider oranges and reds because the whole world is open to us now. In the mirror, I see the girl I could have been if Iโd tried out
for cheerleading. I see what I would have looked like if I was the sort of girl who could turn a cartwheel and have more friends than favorite books. Every dress is another girl who is not me.
And then there is one. Beige satin, nearly the color of my skin, with one, just one, layer of black tulle over the skirt and bodice. A corset top and a black ribbon for my mother to tie in the back. We watch me in the mirror.
โOkay,โ my mother says. โSo.โ โPlease,โ I say.
โOh yes,โ she says. I smile and then I laugh. I try to hold my hair with my hands but it falls between my fingers.