Authors: Niki Burnham
And did I mention that his eyes are phenomenal?
“I, uh, I heard you’re moving to, um . . .”
“To Schwerinborg.”
He smiles, but only on one side of his mouth. Could he be any more delicious? “Yeah. Of all places. Can’t believe you’re going to Smorgasbord. Who’da thought?”
I need a ventilator. Not only has David heard my news, he wants to
talk
about it?
“I’ll miss you, Winslow. I know we don’t hang out as much as when we were kids or anything, but I’ve always thought you’re one of the few truly cool people in this place. Plus, you’re the only person who can outscore me in history. What’ll I do without you here to challenge me?”
My mouth can’t form a reply, since I’m thinking,
Me, cool?
Me, with my whacked red hair and freak show green eyes,
when he is a complete and total sex god who can go out with anyone in the entire universe? Or at least with anyone in the entire school—which is still a hell of a lot of people, seeing as there are twenty-five hundred students at West Vienna High.
He stands up, and his gorgeous butt is no longer in contact with my backpack. “Will you have e-mail there?”
“I think so.”
He fishes a piece of paper out of his notebook and scribbles down his e-mail address. “In case I forget later, with exams and all. Let me know what’s up with you over there, okay?”
“Yeah, I will.”
As I slide the piece of paper into my jeans pocket, he says, “I’d really like to keep in touch. I’ve been thinking lately that we should hang out more. It’d still be cool to chat, even if it’s long distance now.”
“That’d be cool.” Cool. Understatement of the year.
He smiles back, then he leans over and gives me a lightning-quick kiss on the cheek before walking out the door.
I cannot move.
A few seconds later Natalie comes back in, but I don’t even see her. I hear her first.
“Come
on
, Valerie. What is with you?”
David. David is what’s with me.
* * *
Given the way this afternoon deteriorated on its way to evening, I should be really, really fried right now.
It’s seven p.m., and my dad
just
got home from work, which means I had to settle for chewy reheated pizza, even though he promised me yesterday he’d get home in time to make his divinely inspired chicken marsala. Why scientists can’t come up with microwave technology that makes a zapped pizza taste as good as one right out of the oven is beyond me, but that’s actually not the main reason I should be upset right now.
I glance across the kitchen toward Dad, who’s tuned in to CNN and shaking his head at some berserker pundit who’s ranting about the Democrats (of course) and how if they’d just been a little nicer to the Republicans, and supported them and their last proposed tax cut and a million other issues, maybe people would have voted differently in the last election and President Carew wouldn’t be in the White House. According to this jerk, Democrats like my mom (and secretly, my dad) aren’t nice people, and that’s why they aren’t in the White House.
I hate listening to this stuff, because a) I really don’t care about politics unless they directly affect me, which is practically never; and b) I know it’s upsetting to Dad, who tries so hard to like everybody and be tolerant and
play fair. That’s how he manages to keep his job no matter who’s in office.
And the icing on tonight’s cake? My mother—the main reason Dad has to leave the job he loves—is on her way over. She’s going to be taking care of the house while we’re in Schwerinborg, and Dad has a few things he wants to go over with her. I just know they’re going to get into it. Okay, not flinging dishes or anything, like divorcing couples always seem to on those Lifetime made-for-television movies, but still.
I’m not
really
upset by any of this, though. Pizza, loudmouthed politicians, even Mom can’t faze me tonight.
I mean, David Anderson
kissed me
.
Not a genuine, pressed-up-against-my-locker-between-classes-clawing-each-other’s-clothes kiss, the way I’ve always dreamed he’d kiss me. But it was definitely premeditated—I mean, he was waiting for me to come get my notebook, or at least watching for an opportunity to get me alone—which makes me think maybe Christie was right. Maybe he really does like me.
After all these years of secret lust, scribbling
Valerie Anderson
and
Valerie Winslow Anderson
and the totally old-school
Mrs. David Anderson
in the blank pages of my diary (because who has time to actually write real stuff in a diary?) before shredding the pages into the trash, mortified with my
juvenile behavior—is it possible he feels the same way?
The sound of my dad snorting at the television brings me back to the real world. This man is taking me to Schwerinborg in five days. If I go, I might never find out what David’s really thinking. What am I going to DO?!?
Dad did say I could change my mind. So maybe I should. Or not. Oh, damn, damn, and triple damn.
I mean, it isn’t like David hasn’t had years and years to kiss me before now. Or at least give me his e-mail address, if he wanted to talk or get to know me as a better-than-casual friend.
But does any of that matter if he’s interested
now
?
Then I realize why Dad is being so uncharacteristically vocal with the television. David’s father is on and he’s spewing his lobbyist crap.
What an unfortunate little coincidence.
I scoot to the edge of my chair for a better look. Mr. Anderson’s head is neatly framed in a little box that says
Washington
under it. There’s also a sharply dressed man in a box marked
Boston
and a prudish woman with square glasses above
San Francisco
. And they’re all saying that Carew was elected because people believe in his values, and that he has an excellent chance of being reelected. David’s dad loudest of all. Okay.
Now
I’m upset.
I let my head thunk against the table. This is too much
for one day. Why, why, why does David have to think every word out of his dad’s mouth is gospel? And why do I have to hear all about Carew’s value system via CNN, when those values are now ruining my entire freakin’ life?
“Valerie?” Dad clicks off the set. “You all right?”
I lift my head off the table. “Oh, peachy.”
Dad raises an eyebrow. “Is it CNN, or the fact your mother’s on her way over?”
I try not to laugh. How many problems can I accumulate in one day? On top of the fact that I have a ton of geometry formulas to memorize before this week’s exam. Geometry is—thankfully and surprisingly—much easier for me than algebra was last year (algebra was created by Satan, I’m convinced), but it’s still no cakewalk. I’d rather take ten Friday quizzes from Mrs. Bennett than one end-of-quarter geometry exam.
And we won’t even discuss the paper I have due in English on
Billy Budd
. My theory is that if Herman Melville wanted anyone to actually read it, he’d have called it
Killing a Sailor
or
Hang the Dude
or something equally attention grabbing.
“Look,” Dad says, “your mother and I have our problems, but we’re working them out. We don’t hate each other, and we’re not going to fight over furniture or place settings tonight.”
Good, I’m thinking, because what’s the point in having all the nice furniture if we’re going to Schwerinborg, anyway?
“How about we ask her to stay for a movie?” Dad crosses the kitchen and rubs my shoulder. “I’ll let you choose. What’s that movie you wanted to see with the medieval knight?”
“
A Knight’s Tale
?”
“Sure. It sounded interesting.”
“Mom won’t like it.” She’s into the indie film scene—the stuff that plays at Sundance and maybe a couple of art-fart theaters around your major metropolitan areas, if the producers are lucky. Not anything with drool-licious men like Heath Ledger wearing chain mail, may he rest in peace.
“What we watch isn’t the issue,” Dad says just as the doorbell rings. “Your mom wants to spend as much time as possible with you before we leave, and watching a movie together would make for a nice evening.”
“What about you, though?” I drop my voice to a whisper and follow him to the door. “I mean, if it bugs you being around Mom, I can go watch a movie at her place.” Even if it has one of those go-nowhere plots I don’t quite get.
“Look, Valerie,” Dad doesn’t even bother to lower his voice, and I know for a fact you can hear what’s said in the front hall from the front porch even when the door is
closed. “Go wherever
you’re
most comfortable. I’ve known your mother for nearly twenty years. I’m not happy about the divorce, but she’s still the best friend I’ve ever had. We can handle seeing a movie together.”
If it was me whose wife was leaving me for another woman, I’d sure feel uncomfortable having her over for movies and popcorn. Too much like a date, even if your daughter is there and everything is ostensibly for the sake of the kid. But I guess Dad’s a better person than I am.
“Okay.” I shrug as he flips the deadbolt on the front door. “Just checking.”
This could be fun. I mean, if the two of them are nicey-nice, it might feel like it used to, before Mom upended everything. I could use a dose of that kind of normalcy, even if it’s only for tonight and I know it’s not for real.
I smile at Mom, but I can tell from her face—as she and Dad walk through the house and discuss which plants need watering, how the alarm system works, and who to call when the sprinkler system needs to be turned on in the spring, since these are always tasks that fell to Dad—that she’s still surprised I decided to go to Schwerinborg with Dad instead of staying with her. She keeps glancing at me to see if I’m cool.
When we go into the family room for the movie, I work up the guts to ask Mom where Gabrielle is. If that
blond mom stealer is going to show up and plop on the sofa next to me while Heath Ledger is midtournament, I need advance notice.
Mom says Gabrielle’s out for the evening though. Get this: at a Weight Watchers meeting.
Shock must be as apparent on my face as it is on Dad’s, because my mother instantly looks from me, to my dad, and back to me before saying, “And what’s wrong with that?”
“Nothing wrong with it. Just . . . interesting.” Dad hustles to start the movie simply to escape the issue, I’m sure, so Mom turns to me.
“Valerie?”
I can’t help but snort out loud. I’m not as polite as Dad. “Interesting ’cause she’s built like a runway model. Total rail. She lives on vegetables and soy and stuff, right?”
“She used to be eighty pounds heavier,” Mom explains, using her I-wish-you-would-give-Gabrielle-a-break voice. “She was quite unhealthy. Borderline diabetic even. Her doctor sent her to Weight Watchers, and that prompted her to look into yoga and healthy living, and that’s how she became a vegan. Now that she’s lost the weight, she’s a lifetime member. Going to meetings every so often keeps her focused on living a clean, healthy life. I really admire her for it.”
This from the woman who believes chicken nuggets
and SpaghettiOs to be food groups in their own right? What she has with Gabrielle
must
be love.
I don’t say anything, so Mom shoots a pointed look toward the kitchen, where the empty pizza box is sitting on the counter. “You could probably learn from her, Valerie. How many times have you eaten fast food in the last week?”
Oh,
please
. I hold up the popcorn I made for the movie. “Microwave light. Can’t be that bad.”
She ignores me and looks at Dad, who’s now sitting in the chair as far from her as possible, remote in hand. “You’re going to watch what she eats while you’re over there in Europe, aren’t you, Martin?”
“Mom!” I mean, it’s not like
she’s
a vegan or a size four. And if she gets on Dad’s case again, I’ll remind her of her own little trip to Wendy’s last week. Gabrielle might’ve had a salad, but I saw that Biggie Value Meal bag in Mom’s lap.
Thankfully the movie starts, allowing me to enjoy a little eye candy in the form of Heath Ledger. I think I’ll pretend he’s David. A nonpolitical, totally-into-me David.
“I think David Anderson looks a lot like Heath Ledger. Remember him from when we watched
The Dark Knight
at Natalie’s?”
It’s ten thirty and I should be asleep, since tomorrow’s
a school day, but I can’t settle. I have David on the brain. And Jules keeps her cell phone, with the ringer turned on low, on her nightstand, so we can chat in the middle of the night without her parents realizing she’s awake either.
“Well, the hair, for sure,” Jules says. “But not his eyes. David’s are much nicer. More open, and green instead of brown. Heath’s were brown, right? And David has a slimmer nose.” She giggles, which is disturbing because Jules hardly ever giggles. “I can’t
believe
he kissed you—or that you waited until lunch to tell me about it. I told Natalie that now you can’t go to Schwerinborg. You can’t know how totally stoked I am over this.”
“On the cheek,” I remind her. “And I’m going. I have to.”
Jules gets really quiet, I guess because I told her the other night at Wendy’s that I didn’t
have
to go, that my parents were totally cool and gave me a choice. So I say, “Come on. Between this thing with David and you guys ragging on me, you’re making me feel like shit on a sidewalk. This isn’t an easy decision for me.” They don’t have half a clue how hard it really is.
“But you’ve loved David forever. And you’re leaving
us
,” Jules whines. “What the hell is going on with you? Something you’re not telling me.”
I roll over in bed so I’m facing my wall. I photocopied
David’s yearbook picture last spring and stuck it to a tiny spot near my head where I can hide it with my bed pillows, so Mom and Dad won’t know how totally obsessed I am. And so David’s the last guy I see before I go to bed at night. Pathetic. I know.
I use my fingernail to lift the tape at the edge of the photo, and pull it off the wall so David’s stamp-sized face is flirting with me from my fingertip. “You’ve seen
A Knight’s Tale
, right, Jules?”