You Can't Catch Me (10 page)

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Authors: Becca Ann

BOOK: You Can't Catch Me
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Then I smile widely at him, because I sure as heck don’t want him to take it all back. But I catch my smile in the mirror behind Coach’s desk, and if anything, that smile will only hinder me.

Oliver lets out a tiny breathless laugh, and his shoulders, which were up and tense, have fallen in a sweet relaxed pose.

“Thank you.”

“Hermph?”

“For being as weird as I am.”

I wrinkle my nose and give him a good sock in his bulky upper arm, but it’s a flirting punch. Not one of the punches I give to my other guy friends who need a bruise for whatever they’ve opened their mouths about.

“I think you knew that when you caught me talking to myself at the cemetery.”

He shakes his head. “You weren’t talking to yourself.”

Okay, I am totally into this guy. Totally. And with Cayenne haunting me, I think she approves, because after he says that sweet and understanding thing, the door behind me is pushed open, slams into my butt, and tosses me forward so I’m
actually
into
him.

My hands slap his forearms, my face bumps into his belly, and he catches my elbows and looks down at me with a grin. It’s two seconds of awesome and scorched skin before he glances up and says, “
HeHe Heyhyehlfakdhosihdfoiuhwefoihlkjdaslh
Hey, Mom.”

I turn my head over my shoulder and Coach Fox’s eyebrows are sky high, but she’s still got that sugary smile on her face. Good smiles run in the family, I conclude.

“Hi,” she says and then shuts the door. I quickly let go of her son. “I’m so sorry, Silverman.”

I let out a weird laugh and glance at Oliver. “Yeah. I think your door needs a window.”

Oliver gives me an amused look as Coach Fox takes a seat behind her desk.

“So, what can I do for you?” she asks. I have to blink and reset my mood to back when I was pounding on her door. Crap, I was all ready to go gungho on her for faking my time, but now with Oliver here I’m not sure if I want to lose it just in front of him. I mean, he already thinks—okay, he knows—that I’m weird.

Then Coach’s eyes brighten at me, and yup, I lose it.

“I am
not
a cheater.”

Oliver jerks back, but Coach just sits there like she has no remorse for what she did.

“I don’t cheat,” I continue, setting my arms on the edge of her desk. “I work hard to get where I want, and I don’t need handouts. If I can’t do it, I can’t do it, but I will
do it until I can.
It may be next week, next year, or ten years from now, but I don’t give up. I know it looks like I’m unfocused out there, but I thought you saw that all I needed was to relax. You told me to just relax, and this morning, I finally did. I was ready to go out during practice today and beat my time, but you took that away from me. Did you think I couldn’t do it? Because if you are a good coach, then you would’ve been upfront about that. And I would’ve turned around and proven you wrong. I would’ve
proved you wrong
.”

Coach and Oliver share a look, and what the freaking heck is that about? I basically just yelled at her, and she looks at her son like I’m a two-year-old having a tantrum.

“I don’t cheat either, Silverman.”

“Well, you better change… wait… huh?”

She lets out a small, barely-there laugh and slides her cell phone toward me. “I don’t cheat. I was timing you this morning.”

My brow crinkles, and I gaze down at the saved time on her phone. There it is… my two-seconds-faster time recorded at 6:43 this morning.

“From where?” I ask, my heart beating fast.

“The announcer box up in the stadium. And before you get too mad, I didn’t set you up. I wasn’t intending on tricking you to run alone, then hide out and time you. I was up there training with Coach Ferguson so I could familiarize myself with the equipment, and I saw you arrive. You had a few good practice laps, and when you got ready for your final, curiosity got the better of me.”

“You saw me.”

She nods. Smiles. Doesn’t get how embarrassing this is.

“You…
saw
me,” I more or less whisper to myself.
Nononono
. I back up to the door, grasp the door handle, Coach’s brow furrows, and Oliver straightens up like he doesn’t want me to leave, but the walls feel like they want to crumple in on me, fold into smaller sizes, and keep me captive here in the room with the coach who saw me not hiding anything, and the boy who I’d really like to go out with.

“Yes…” she says, eyebrows still buried inward. “So you see? No cheating. You’ve made the team.”

“Yeah…” I breathe out, and my hand slips on the doorknob. “Yeah. Great.” I attempt a smile. “One less thing to worry about.”

Coach mimics my attempted smile. “Congratulations, Silverman.”

“Th-thank you.”

I should be grateful. Heck, I should be flying out of my shoes! I’ve made the team, but I still feel the walls coming in on me, and I just want to get out, breathe, maybe think straight again.

I finally get the door open, and I step out into the locker room. I give Oliver one last glance, hoping my face isn’t lobster red. He waves, sending a flurry of wings through my stomach, and then I head out to get changed. Luckily my gym uniform came yesterday, so for now at least, my Sharpie secret is between me and Coach Fox.

And Drake…

Dang, I hope the list doesn’t get any bigger.

15
Pop a Squat

 

The weight room can suck it. Normally gym in the fall is an hour and a half of running the track and doing stretches on the football field. But around noon today, the cloud people decided to relieve themselves in the form of a massive downpour. So the weight room it is.

Though, it’s not a bad view from the stationary bike with Benji Romans doing pull ups in front of me. I’ve never seen such a tight butt on someone who is not Chris Evans.

“Finish up your sets!” Coach Dicks says. I hop off the bike and wipe my butt sweat off the seat. Drake’s eyes catch mine from across the room, and he tilts his eyebrow and starts pumping the fifteen pound weights in his hands like they are feather-light.

“Careful,” I tell him as I pass. “Gotta make sure your head fits through the door.”

“Heard that one already, Silverman.” He smirks. “Time to be more original with your insults.”

I put the heel of my hand against my mouth and blow a loud and proud raspberry in his direction before I turn to leave the sweaty weight room and head to the very cold girl’s locker room.

“Hold up!” he calls from behind me. I don’t exactly stop and wait for him, but I do slow my pace. “You know,” he says when he catches up, “Fall formal is a week away, and I still haven’t gotten an answer.”

“Don’t pull that crap with me. I’m not saying it again.”

“Technically you didn’t say anything. You said you were going to answer in a ‘fun’ way.”

I roll my eyes. “It was implied, wasn’t it?”

“I think I deserve my fun answer.”

“Okay, Drake.” I nod over his shoulder at the room we just left, then put on a perky and very high voice. “I can’t
weight
to go to the fall formal with you.”

He shakes his head, crossing his arms. “Wow. I’m impressed by your effort.”

“Thank you.”

“And your ability to pick up sarcasm.”

“My, you are full of compliments today.” We start walking toward the locker rooms, and I elbow him in the side.

“Very unlike me.”

“Indeed.”

The hallway splits, and he heads right while I go left. There’s no need to say “See you later” or “Goodbye” because we’ll see each other in about ten minutes out on the track, rain and all. I’m in unusually high spirits today, mostly because of my run-in with Oliver earlier. We never did settle on if we were hanging out this weekend, but I mentally made it a group thing so it makes it more… non-date-ish. Guess I need to suck up my pride and ask Tiff and Fartbucket to accompany us.

I do my usual locker room gym clothes swap, meaning I pretend to take forever to untie my shoes, and start changing my gym shorts for my cross country shorts all underneath my very large gym shirt, and by the time I’m done my entire locker row has cleared out. It’s not like anyone watches other girls get dressed and undressed and so on. Actually, I think we all pretty much lightning speed our way through it while keeping our eyes glued to our open locker in front of us. But I really don’t want to risk someone accidentally glancing in my direction, and then find out that the Sharpies have debuted via Twitter.

Hashtag, OMGinger.

I hear the last locker door slam shut a couple rows over, and I peek around and watch Riley Thompson walk out the locker room door. Now I have about two minutes, three tops, before the rest of the cross country team comes in to change. I whip off my very overlarge gym shirt and toss it into the community laundry bag Coach Dicks takes home every Friday. We used to be able to do that ourselves, but there were a couple of girls who “forgot,” and well, the smelly complaint resulted in this solution.

The tape around my bra is starting to get a little too sweaty, and I quickly glance at the clock to see if I have time to fix the problem. It’s quiet, and if someone walks in, I suppose I can duck into one of the bathroom stalls without being seen.

I grab one end of the tape, close my eyes, and hold my breath. The echoing
creeeech
makes me wince, but not as much as the pain of duct tape being yanked off the skin it clung to for an eight hour school day. My chest is a bright, scary red, and there are lines across my sides from where the tape dug in and cut off circulation.

I let out a long breath, wiggling around a bit before I have to confine them again. Funny how I was complaining a month ago about the extra weight hurting my back, and now with the tape I don’t think my back’s ever hurt more.

The clock ticks up above my head, but I’m still very much alone. I reach in my locker for my extra set of tape and my cross country shirt, but all I get is cold metal.

Pushing up on my tippity-toes, I peek on the upper shelf, heart starting to thump hard and loud behind my unrestrained and very exposed chest.

Nothing. There’s nothing in my locker. I keep my cross country uniform up on top, my gym one at the bottom. My shorts were here, so where the heck is my shirt?

Oh my gosh, the clothes I was wearing to school aren’t even here. I hope Dad isn’t too attached to that shirt I borrowed.

The locker room door creaks open, and in a panic, I rush to the laundry pile and pray that the top shirt is the one I just threw in there, but the laundry is gone. Coach Dicks must’ve grabbed it. Or I am losing my dang mind.

Voices start getting louder, and I do what I had planned before—dive into a bathroom stall. Though I’d planned to have a shirt with me, and now I’m just a half-naked runner afraid of anyone seeing what’s underneath the giant t-shirts.

The girls on the team start laughing, and I hear locker doors and some gossip, but nothing huge. I climb the toilet like the floor is hot lava and crouch so that there isn’t a risk of seeing any part of me.

“Whose phone is this?” someone says—sounds like Bridget. “It was just sitting here on the bench.”

“I’ve got mine,” Hadley says.

“Me too,” says someone else.

“Maybe it’s Ginger’s? She might already be out there.”

Oh my gosh, it is mine. I have my phone! I can call Tiff, and she’ll bring me a shirt.

“Should I just leave it here?” Bridget says, and I nod to the floor, hoping the vibrations make their way to her in some sort of translatable morse code.

“I’d put it in her locker. The door’s still open.”

Then my foot slips on the toilet seat and plunks into the water. Oh gross, oh gross, nasty, disgusting, water people pee in… I choke back bile and try to shake off my foot while balancing on the seat, but I slip again, rolling my ankle and crashing to the floor. Here I am, wedged between the toilet and the stall, wet foot high up in the air while the other is somewhere under my butt.

Thank heavens my uncoordinated moment happens right as someone shuts their locker, covering up the curse tumbling out of my mouth.

“Hey,” someone says… sounds like Chrissy. “Do you really think she ran that fast?”

“Ginger?”

“Yeah. I mean no one saw her do it.” A pause. “And we’ve all seen that she’s… rounded out over the summer.”

My mouth pops open in disgusted shock as I carefully peel my body from between the toilet and the stall and get back up on the seat. Chrissy and I always get along. It’s not like we’re friends exactly, but we’re friend
ly
. I hope one of the girls has my back out there. If I was wearing a shirt, I’d have my own back.

“Well, we can ask her when we get out there,” Hadley says.

“Ask her what? To prove it?”

“No, just ask her when she ran.”

“I don’t know,” pipes up Bridget. Her voice sounds a little muffled like she was talking while putting on her shirt. “Maybe the guys did what they said they were going to.”

“Tell on Coach Fatty?” someone snorts, and I do not find it funny at all. In fact I’m pretty sure I go up in flames and evaporate all the toilet water underneath me.

“Maybe we should see if she can beat our times.” Chrissy laughs and someone slams their locker shut. Their voices and laughter get closer as they walk past the potties, and then they’re cut completely off when the door to the field shuts behind them. I gently step off my perch, stretching my legs, and start counting to two hundred.

Does no one like Coach Fox? Because, as mad as I was that I could’ve been kicked off the team, I don’t think she’s a bad coach. What she did to bring the team together was great to see—actually, it’s the part of the reason I want on the team so badly—but maybe I’m the only one who notices.

And just because someone’s a little bigger around the middle doesn’t mean they can’t do something.

Or bigger around other places.

One-hundred ninety-eight, one-hundred ninety-nine, two hundred
.

I unlock the stall and peek out, covering the Sharpies and being careful on tile since my shoe is still wet, and I don’t want to crash land on the yucky bathroom floor again.

They closed my locker for me, so I quickly open it, grab my phone, and get back to the stall in case one of them comes back. I’m sure they’re bound to notice my absence since they want me to “prove my time” and all.

I swipe the call button for Tiff—a button I rarely use, but calling is going to be faster than texting right now.

“Um… hello?”

“Please tell me you’re still in your car.”

“Are you in the bathroom?”

“Yes.”

“Hang on, I don’t know if I have anything. Let me check.”

“Tiff, what are you talking about?”

“Tampons. You need one right?”

I wish it was only that. “I need a shirt.”

“Um…
nasty
! I do not need to know how bad it is, Ginger.”

“No, I need a shirt. Someone took my shirt out of my locker.”

“What? Who would do that?”

Funny how that question didn’t pop into my head until she put it there. “I don’t know. But could you get to my house and bring me another one? I need one from my dad’s closet.”

“I am not going into your parents’ room.”

“You said you owed me. I’m cashing in. Please, Tiff.”

She pauses for a torturously long second before giving in with a growl. “Fine. Be there as soon as I pluck up the nerve to open your parents’ closet.”

“You are the best, best, best.”

We hang up, and I crouch back up on my toilet perch. I hope she gets here quick, because cramped legs are going to kill to run on.

 

***

 

My stomach looks like it could talk to someone. There are lines forming across my abdomen, crinkling my skin, rolling up against the duct tape across my chest. I poke at it, inserting my finger to the first knuckle, prodding at the months of laziness that have solidified themselves on my body.

A frown forms on my lips, and I rest my chin on my knees and concentrate on the chips in the paint on the back of the bathroom stall door. One of them looks like a cupcake, and it sends a wave of regret through me.

This just sucks.

I already have to watch what I eat, and now I feel like I can’t eat anything at all.

Why
didn’t I run this summer? I love running. Running is my
obsession
. Yet I sat on my butt and chilled on the beach, without a thought or care to what the consequences would be.

But what in the world did I do to grow from raisins to cantaloupes?

I hear the locker room door creak open, shaking me from my miserable mind.

“Ginger?” Tiff hisses, and I let out a relieved breath and slowly stretch my legs down from off the toilet seat.

“In the stalls.”

Her flip flops smack the tiled floor as she patters in. Seconds later a big shirt flops over the top of the stall, sending a wave of Dad’s scent in my face.

I start singing, “Did you ever know that you’re my heroooo?”

Tiff giggles. “Listen to our generation’s music. Please.”

“Never.”

She waits outside while I toss on the baggy clothes and thank her a million times over.

“I don’t know how you’re going to run in those,” she says, her eyes giving me a once-over when I step from the stall. “I almost just brought you something of mine.”

“Like they’d fit,” I grumble to myself, but I forgot to take into account the bathroom echo. Tiff’s teasing smile fades quickly into a frown. She looks down at her stomach, pulling at the hem of her shirt and then crossing her arms over it, as if she has something there to hide. A jolt of realization hits, and I rush to correct my mistake.

“Your clothes would be too small on me,” I tell her, but she’s already shaking her head.

“Whatever Miss Fastest Runner in the School.”

She honestly looks dejected. Dejected in her perfect body and blonde hair and freshly kissed lips—which I don’t ask about. I look down at my own body, covered in three sizes too big clothing, and there are still bumps despite the force of the tape around my chest, and I can barely see my feet. An uncontrollable snort rumbles through my nose.

“Come on,” I say, hitching a hand on my hip. “I know you’re curious about why I’m wearing this crap.” I drag my hand along my torso, gesturing to the
Yeah, I’m in my Thirties
printed across just under my braline. It manages to get a laugh out of her.

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