Outcast (33 page)

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Authors: Susan Oloier

BOOK: Outcast
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T
wenty-One

 

Mr. Gabreen held the two of us after class. I was anxious to go to lunch. Cassie planned to hold another private pool party at her house, and I promised to meet her in the parking lot. My breakup with
Chad
shattered me, so Samuel Adams and a few hits of pot seemed like a good way to numb the pain. I was passing with
D
s in most of my classes;
A
s in English and Art History. Why aspire to more than that?

Mr. Gabreen shut the door and sat on the edge of the desk. “Have a seat, girls.”

We avoided looking at one another.

“It seems we have a bit of a problem. Aside from the names typed on the cover pages, your research papers are identical. I mean word for word.”

His words sounded foreign. I tried to decode what he was saying. He tossed the essays onto one of the empty desks between us.

“What are you talking about, Mr. Gabreen?” Trina asked.

“You tell me. Clearly one of you stole this paper from the other.”

It was Trina. I wanted to say it, but the words wouldn’t come. She beat me to it. “I wrote it. It had to have been…” She couldn’t even utter my name.

“How could I possibly steal a paper from you?” I confronted her. “The only time you acknowledge me is when you have an insult to hurl my way.”

“How? Your friend, Grace. That’s how.”


Enough.” Mr. Gabreen silenced our dispute. “Until one of you comes forward with the truth, you both have a zero for this paper. Cheating is serious.”

“What?” Trina declared.

“Is that all?” I asked.

“Yes. Both of you are excellent students. I know you’ll do what’s right.”

I collected my things and headed for the door.

“I wrote that paper,” I heard Trina plead as I left the room.

I worked too hard on that paper to have it stolen from me. Trina was right about who the responsible party was. And she was going to get her just desserts.

 

I scrambled to meet up with Cassie in the parking lot. She impatiently drummed her fingers on the steering wheel. I sparked a cigarette the moment I tucked myself into the passenger’s seat.

“Sorry. I was held after class.”

“Why?” She started the ignition, anxious to get to her house.

I spotted Trina with her cohorts. They conspired with one another, once again making me the butt of their jokes.

“Because of her.” I gestured toward Trina.

Cassie saw her and punched the accelerator to give them a scare. She slowed down prior to reaching them.

“Stop the car for a second.”

“What for?” She was already annoyed that I made her late.

I stepped out and flicked my unfinished Camel to the pavement. I felt like a female version of James Dean in
Rebel Without A Cause
, except I had one.

“Trina!”

I knew she heard, but she ignored me.

“I’m talking to you, bitch,” I yelled.

She finally turned around. Jamie and Liana shared Trina’s hateful glare. Cassie viewed the scene with sudden interest from the comfort of her car.

“You fucking piece of chicken shit. You couldn’t even admit that you put Grace up to stealing my paper.”

Suddenly, she seemed at a loss for words. She actually appeared frightened by the unsuspecting confrontation, even a little vulnerable. The three of them stood like a wall against my attack. Yet I continued to walk toward them.

“Go to hell, Doctor Freckle,” Jamie chimed.

I forced myself to pretend he wasn’t there, even though his words echoed in my ear. I focused on Trina.

“One of your minions got your tongue?”

Jamie glared. “Why don’t you and your freakish friend go smoke some pot and leave us alone?” he retorted.

I didn’t like that they knew I smoked marijuana. It gave them more artillery to use against me. Trina & Company had no clue who I really was. To her, everything was about the exterior and the stereotype we all fit. She thought she knew me by the glasses and bad hair I had in junior high school. And now, she thought she knew me because I smoked, wore a lot of makeup, and befriended people she wouldn’t look twice at. She was so far from the real me it was unbelievable. But I couldn’t tell her that. She didn’t care. Perhaps I didn’t know the real Trina either. Maybe somewhere deep inside, she possessed some ounce of kindness and generosity. It could be that she was a great friend. I realized I stereotyped her, too. But it was a vicious cycle, one that would never be broken. And despite the revelation, I still hated her.

Trina & Company turned and headed toward their vehicle. They were finished with me.

“Don’t walk away from me,” I shouted.

They ignored me again, so I chased on their heels. When I reached Trina, I shoved her. She fell to the concrete. Liana rushed to her side on the ground; they didn’t know how to react to physical confrontation.

“What the hell’s the matter with you?” Jamie stared with disgust at what I had done.

The horn sounded on the Porsche. Trina crawled to her feet.

“You’re going to pay for what you did,” I warned. And I wasn’t simply talking about the paper. In fact, I was mostly thinking of
Chad
.

Satisfied with the fear that lighted in Trina’s eyes, I headed back to the car.

 

I ranted in Cassie’s backyard, pacing back and forth across the pea-green lawn. I was furious about the way Trina treated me and deeply angered that Grace would conspire with her to steal my paper. I should have seen it coming, should have suspected Grace’s motivation for wanting to be my friend again. The only friend I had now was Cassie, and she focused her attention on Pete who sat poolside downing Samuel Adams. I wondered if he even attended classes at the university or if he was simply registered for show.

“Relax,” Pete droned. “Why don’t you try some of this? It’ll calm you.”

He extended a tray of chalk residue to me. Cocaine. 

He piqued my curiosity, so I crept to his side and sat down. Without words, he demonstrated how to do it. He plugged one of his nostrils and snorted the powder. It was the color of lilies, freshly fallen snow blanketing the treetops in winter. It looked soft like a newly washed blanket. Staring at it, I knew it possessed all the deliverance I had been searching for but never found. I wasn’t afraid when Pete held it toward me.

It contained everything the relationships in my life did not; it cleansed me more deeply than the holy water that stagnated in the containers of the vestibule. I confessed everything to it, and it forgave me without the curse of guilt, Hail Marys, or penance. I floated, and all of the problems that had accumulated over time drifted away with the tide. Or maybe I was the one drifting away.

Cassie tried to coerce Pete to drive to KFC for fried chicken. She smoked so much weed, her craving soared out of control. When he refused to go, she peeled out of the driveway to get it herself, leaving me alone with her boyfriend.

I lounged in the lawn chair by the pool’s edge.
Chad
tiptoed silently into my thoughts. I saw his face in the cumulous clouds overhead. The memories of him flooded back to me. They were so strong, I felt I could reach out and kiss his dimples. I wanted to tell him how wrong I was, that I loved him, but it was too late. He lingered in my past. He didn’t want me anymore. I was a betrayer. A cheat.

The liquid pool, the skies full with hollow clouds, and Pete were my part of my present. They were the things that were tangible. They represented what my life had become.

I looked at Pete, and he leered at me. There was nothing left for me but emptiness.

 

He pushed me against the washer in the laundry room just off the patio. The door stood ajar, and a sharp sliver of light sliced through the dimness of the room. It opened up everything inside of me and allowed it to spill onto the tiled floor, cold beneath my bare feet. As Pete pressed himself against me, I witnessed the shards of my broken life scatter across the floor. As hard as I could try, nothing would ever put it all back together the way it once was. It was changed forever.

When it was all over, Pete left. I sat on the floor of the laundry room, playing Pick Up Sticks with my life. Wanting to feel something, needing to be affected somehow, I tried to push tears from my eyes. But they refused to come. Just like the unyielding clouds overhead, I was vacant inside.

 

She scuttled through the hallways, camouflaged herself in bathrooms, and adopted new routes to get to her classes. But I finally caught up with her. Her reaction to seeing me, and her actions to avoid me, instantly implicated her. 

I trapped her near the lockers on the way to lunch, yanking her arm like a choke chain to keep her from escaping.

“I have to go. I’m … meeting people in …” She tripped over her words.

“They can wait,” I threatened.

Her pupils dilated with fear. I cinched her wrist in my hand, and she writhed to escape it.

“Why’d you do it?”

“Do what?” She tipped her chin upwards in defiance.

I glared at her to make the truth seep out from beneath the lie. “Don’t play these bullshit games with me.”

She squirmed as my grip tightened around her wrist. I violently released her arm.

“You know what? I don’t want any explanations from you. You’re so transparent, Grace. You think I don’t know why you stole my paper?”

“You don’t know—”

I cut her off. “What happened to you? This isn’t the tough Grace from junior high. This is cowardly, weak Grace.”

“Wait a second…” she started.

“Don’t deny it. I know you better than you know yourself. And if you think you got away with this, you’re wrong.”

“Just wait…” Grace began again.

“You think she’s your friend?’ I asked. “Come here.” I pulled her reluctantly by the arm toward my locker. For some reason, I still had them there after all that time. I unearthed them from the top ledge. “Remember these?” I asked.

Grace gaped at the beads in my hand.

“Remember?” I pressed again. “Sophomore Acting? You made a bracelet for Trina. Well, this is what’s left of it.”

“You probably broke them yourself,” she stammered.

“Yeah. I did this.” My tone was nothing short of sarcastic. “Believe what you want to believe,” I said as I pushed them at her. Most of them pinged on the hallway floor.

It was the first time Grace seemed afraid of me. It wasn’t the way I wanted things to be between us; it was the way they had to be. As far as I was concerned, we were strangers to one another. I had no intention of seeking revenge on Grace for what she did. Someone else would pay for everything that happened. And that someone would pay dearly.

 

I blamed Trina for much of the bad that happened in my life. I somehow linked the breakup of my parents to her in some remote way. My hatred for her intensified to a level I no longer controlled.

My eyes were jaundiced with jealousy as I watched Trina and
Chad
play out their respective roles as the newlyweds, Corey and Paul. To me, it was no act. Now he was free to date anyone he wanted, be with anyone he wanted. I tried to restrain my imaginings of the two of them together, but the visions took on a life of their own. And to make matters worse,
Chad
took huge steps to avoid me. It was all Trina’s fault.

The only way to relieve some of my pain was to inflict some on Trina. So when opening night of
Barefoot in the Park
finally arrived, I was filled with adrenaline. I entered the backstage of the theater before any of the actors or technicians did. The plans were firmly stamped in my mind.

I made my way to the dressing rooms, equipped with a chemically-altered bottle of Trina’s hair gel. Two parts Nair, no part hair gel. It was enough to remove a sufficient amount of Trina’s hair. Enough to ruin both graduation and prom for her. I stationed it near the mirror of her dressing table, turning it one hundred eighty degrees one way, moving it two centimeters another. For all the dress rehearsals, she had fixed her hair in the dressing room. The night of the performance should prove no exception. All I had to do was wait.

 

Between props and lightning, I had no time to check things out in the dressing room. I desperately wished to see Trina apply gobs of hair gel to her sulfur-yellow tresses. Soon they would pool in clumps on the stage floor. A trickle of joy coursed through me when I pictured her wearing a wiry, slip-on wig to the prom.

When the house lights dimmed and the production started, I anxiously observed from the wings. I knew it would be a show I would never forget.

As the actors took their places at the wings of the stage, I scampered to the dressing rooms. If Trina failed to use the hair gel at the beginning of Act I, I would have to find a way to make her use it later in the production. But there was no need. The lid had been taken off of the bottle. True to character, she used it. Blood surged from my heart. I rushed back to the wings to watch the monster I created come to life.

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