Catwalk (20 page)

Read Catwalk Online

Authors: Deborah Gregory

BOOK: Catwalk
5.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Answer it!” Angora orders me.

“Hello, Kaflamma Central,” I answer in the voice of my chirpy alter ego.

Caterina doesn’t miss a beat. Obviously in her line of work she’s seen more than her share of fashion alter egos—or just plain egos.

“I wanted to give you a heads-up,” she begins.

“Wazzup?” I query hesitantly, wondering why I am suddenly the recipient of so many heads-up today.

“Tune in to Channel Two news tonight, five o’clock—there might be a segment of interest to you.”

“Omigod!” I shriek before I realize what I’ve said. Felinez and Angora snicker. “Is this about Chandelier?”

Felinez and Angora close in on me like an invasion of body snatchers is about to take place. In her typical cagey fashion, Caterina doesn’t give me a straight answer. “It just may be something of interest to you.”

“Awright. I’m on it,” I say, sick to my stomach as I sign off. Then I tell my crew what Caterina said.

Zeus comes back with a fresh plate of capellini. I push it away. “I’m sick,” I confess, reporting the phone call to Zeus. “I think we might be getting the ax.”

“You mean, like, cut from the competition, or losing a limb?” Zeus asks.

“Could be either,” I say, kaflustered. “Forget about catfights. With these latest developments, I honestly think fashion is going to the dogs—
for real.

FASHION INTERNATIONAL 35TH ANNUAL CATWALK COMPETITION BLOG

New school rule: You don’t have to be ultranice, but don’t get tooooo catty, or your posting will be zapped by the Fashion Avengers!!

YOU’D BETTER WORK, SUPERMODELS….

Today was the official start of Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in New York City—the only place in the world I would rather be than Paris, Milan, or Firenze next June (opening the Pitti Bimbo show, if I’m lucky—and I think I will be now that I have hooked up with the most purrlicious house in the Catwalk competition this year!). Anyhoo, back to foundation basics: I waited three years for the moment I could walk into the glamour-fortified tents at Bryant Park with an access pass—instead of hiding in the folds of the tent for a behind-the-scenes peek! More than 100 spring collections will sashay the runways under the over-guarded tents during the course of five days at Bryant Park, and other nearby venues (because not every design house can afford to sell their embryos in exchange for a spot in the park!). The spring shows are held every year in the fall and the fall shows are held in the spring. (Got it?) The fall fashions you are seeing in the stores now were shown earlier this year—that means last spring, when I was merely a junior, so those collections were not christened by my eyes! The lag between showtime and
shipping gives the press and retail buyers ample time to manipulate the fashion crystal ball so you will think you’ve made your own selections to hang in your closet. (You don’t honestly believe you have been put on this planet to make your own choices, do you?) Anyhoo, I adore the anticipation, the music, the models, the fashion makers pacing to and fro with scissors, sandwiches, and sponges—and, of course, the goodie bags placed so delicately on each guest’s chair! Street-smart fashionistas remove the appointed goodie bag from their seat and plop it immediately into their kiss-lock purses to be on safe side. (Swag looting is on the rise, so guard your goodies with a vengeance, my dears!) More than the goodie bags, I honestly just love seeing inspired fashion brought to life. By the way, I spent more than three hours in line with my fellow senior fashion classmates to get our student access badges with nothing more than my sponges and Booty Dust, which I applied generously to everyone in line. I say, who needs kitty litter, when you have glitter? It’s simply all-purpose! Anyhoo, I’m not bwitchin’ about the long lines that come with being a die-hard fashionista. I don’t even mind that I cannot take off my Dolce loafers right now because my feet are so swollen. I’ve decided that I’ll just sleep with them on.

The other reason why I was so electrified today is because I also met
some feline fashionistas with whom I plan to align myself so we can “scratch, scratch” out the Catwalk competition at our school next June! With no disrespect to the creativity I witnessed today at Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week, the Catwalk competition means more to me because I will finally be an important ingredient in a fierce fashion enchilada. Sorry, I must be getting famished again—gotta go get my sponges and Booty Dust out, so I can beat some more faces …!

10/10/2008 11:45:22 PM

Posted by: SpongeBob

10

Next period, I have model appreciation. I’m so scared that I’m going to be dragged like an alley cat into another scrappy situation that I don’t even look up from my notebook in class. “The Trinity of Terror was not a left-wing Palestinian organization but the reign of which three supermodels?” asks the teacher, Ms. Boucle. Her ample chest heaves with anticipation while she waits for a response. “Anybody?” No one volunteers. “Pashmina?”

I feel a poke in my back that startles me back to reality. I look up and see everyone staring at me.

“What, what?” I ask, embarrassed by my trip to the Bozo sphere. Ms. Boucle pushes her thick red glasses up on the bridge of her nose disapprovingly. Ruthie Dragon, who is seated in front of me, raises her hand energetically.

“Yes, Ruthie,” Ms. Boucle says, putting her hands on her hips and throwing me a glance like
I’m watching you Pinkie
.

“Um, it was Linda Evangelista, Christy Turlington,
and Naomi Campbell!” Ruthie says enthusiastically. I am so over her. I thought we were on the same fashion page, but she didn’t even show up for my team interviews. Then I find out that she’s joined Chandelier’s house, or perhaps I should say chop shop.

Suddenly, there’s a loud outburst right below our second-floor classroom, which faces Thirty-eighth Street. A few students jump up and peer out the half-opened windows to check out the action. Even Ms. Boucle adjusts the extra-wide red lizard belt trapping her waist and waddles over to the scene of an unfolding drama. I sit frozen in my chair, paralyzed by my own fears. Ruthie Dragon turns from the window and shoots me a look like
You’d better get over here and check this out
. I make a fire-breathing face at her like
Don’t make me slay you, okay
. I figure the commotion outside probably has something to do with Chandelier. No doubt she’s finally gracing us with her notorious presence. And with the chop shop heiress’s dumbfounding luck, her father has probably already bribed his way out of prison by donating a few hardened arteries to the Police Athletic League.

“PASHMINA!!”

The guttural scream from outside is so visceral, my veins turn to warm milk. Now everyone in class turns to look at me. I jump up and run to the window. Ice
Très stands tall, looking up at the window, waving like he’s looking for someone—me. Mr. Confardi hovers by the entrance and barks at him, “A suspension isn’t enough? We can head right to expulsion if you’d like. As a matter of fact, why don’t you apply to the School of Visual Arts, where your
talents
would be more appreciated!”

“I’m sorry, Mr. Confardi. I just wanted to say good bye to someone real quick before I jet,” Ice Très offers in a feeble voice.

“Friday, awright?” yells Ice Très, still waving to get my attention. I stand still like a dummy—a real one—because I can’t help wondering,
How did I ever get myself involved in this corny kaflamma?

“Everybody go back to your seats, please,” orders Ms. Boucle. “The show is over!”

Felinez is waiting for me outside class, and I’m so embarrassed that I’m the one who’s now walking like a fashion felon on a perp walk. Shalimar is standing squarely outside like she’s waiting for me and ready to rumble. In her case, however, that merely means extra-heavy doses of lash batting. She’s wearing a brown flowered wrap dress. “I see we’ve been reduced
to wearing consignment shop finds,” I say, observing the vintage of Shalimar’s nineties-looking Diane von Furstenberg dress.

“She’s already handed in her forms to Ms. Lynx’s office,” Felinez informs me like it’s good news.

“So?” I hiss back. Just what I needed—an annoying reminder that I haven’t handed in my team membership forms yet.

“So that means she just got a strike since Ice Très got suspended,” Felinez says defensively.

“Oh, right,” I say apologetically, scanning the Catwalk rules and regulations in my mind:
Any infraction by team members results in an automatic strike, which will be calculated into the judges’ tally for your house’s final overall score
.

“We should consider ourselves lucky he didn’t show up to the meeting,
mija
. That’s all I’m saying,” Felinez adds.

“Luck is a funny thing, isn’t it?” I muse, staring at Shalimar head-on. Shalimar turns away sheepishly. “That also means Ice Très got disqualified as a team member in her house as a result of his suspension. Now I can see it. She’s become unglued at her Shimmy Choos.”

Angora joins us and, true to her journalistic nature, delivers an update. “Calls from Chandelier were fielded by Mr. Confardi’s office. I got that from a reliable
source. Even better,” she says, trying to look over at Shalimar, “you missed a certain person’s Coty Fashion Critics’ Awards performance in Ms. Lynx’s office fourth period. And I got that from an even more reliable source.”

“Crocodile tears?” I ask in disbelief.

“Au contraire,”
Angora tells me.

I gloat for a
segundo
, then turn glum. Shalimar may be shedding real tears, but I am far from shedding my real fears. “We don’t have a leg up on the competition yet,” I say apprehensively. “What we do have is a head’s-up from Caterina that we have to deal with.”

“Let’s wait for Zeus,” advises Angora. “We need all the back-watching we can get in this lipstick jungle.” I smile, realizing that she is already quoting quips from Bobby Beat, our latest addition to the House of Pashmina.

As soon as Aphro comes out, then Zeus, we all head uptown to my house. Zeus stays zip-lipped on the subject of Ice Très. But Aphro is anxious to gloat and just can’t miss the shopportunity to seal it with a dis. “I told you to watch out for Mr. Blinking and Winking,” she snarls at me.

I nod like I’m listening.

“Hi, Pashmina,” screams Stellina, running out of the courtyard as if she’s been waiting for me. “The cameras were here!” she says, like she’s giving me gossip so hot her little fingers are scorching.

“I know,” I say with a giggle. At least I can feel proud about one thing: how hyped Stellina and Tiara are about being included in the Teen Style camera crew’s visit to my humble abode.

“They were talking to Big Daddy Boom,” she continues.

“I know,” I say, secretly hoping my on-camera prank doesn’t backfire on me one day.

“Can I touch your hat again?” Stellina squeals to Zeus.

“Sure—cuz you have that Midas touch,” Zeus answers. He can tell by the look on Stellina’s face that she isn’t following his drift, so he just smiles and bends down so she can get her paws on his plushness.

As usual, Mr. Darius is in fine form. He and José, his assistant, are assembling the massive mountain of recyling bags that must be left curbside for pickup by the sanitation trucks tomorrow morning.

“Don’t you ever wonder where all this garbage ends up?” Angora asks.

“I’m sure Mr. Darius wishes it would just disappear daily,” I observe. Suddenly, Angora starts breathing
heavily and stops for a second to catch her breath. She takes out her inhaler and we all wait in silence for it to kick in.

In the meantime, I watch Mr. Darius in action. Now he’s yelling at one of the homeless guys, who we call Mr. Sunkist because he pushes around a shopping cart that’s always filled to the brim with empty soda cans. He spends most of his day taking the bottles and cans to the Piggly Wiggly supermarket across the street to collect the deposit money. “Every week, ticket I get!” Mr. Darius yells at Mr. Sunkist, who has already ripped open one of the recyling bags to plunder discarded bottles and cans.

Other books

Paradise by Joanna Nadin
New Frontiers by Ben Bova
Sometimes By Moonlight by Heather Davis
The London Train by Tessa Hadley
The Blade Artist by Irvine Welsh
Used by Kate Lynne
From Here to There by Rain Trueax
Mahu by Neil Plakcy