Authors: Christopher Grant
THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Text copyright © 2010 by Christopher Grant
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Visit us on the Web!
www.randomhouse.com/teens
Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at
www.randomhouse.com/teachers
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.
eISBN: 978-0-375-89779-5
Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.
v3.1
To Uwingablye Sowo
“I
t’s better to be a good listener than a good talker, because the good listener can remember what was said.” As hard as it is for me to admit that my father says anything that makes sense, when I apply that little ditty to conversations with my best friend, Cherise, he hits the nail right on the head. Whenever we do something that doesn’t pertain to her, like standing in front of the study abroad office, she gets really antsy. Most times it’s a lot of eye-rolling and an occasional huff, but today she doesn’t last more than ten seconds before she says, “So why are we standing here again? For that nerd thing you’re trying to get into?”
I look at her sideways and grumble, “Yes, for YSSAP.”
“What’s ‘sap’?”
Cherise has been my best friend since the third grade, and
over the past six and a half years, this type of conversation has played itself out time and time again. I guess that’s what I get for doing ninety-five percent of the listening. “YSSAP, Young Scholars Study Abroad Program.”
“Sounds like loads of fun,” she sighs.
“Don’t be a hater because you can’t get in. You wish you could go to Spain for free.”
“Whatever. Like I’d want to be in Spain with a bunch of shribs.”
“I’m not a shrib”—her latest term for loser.
“If you say so … So how long do you plan on standing here?”
“I guess until someone comes out of the office.”
Apparently that’s all she needed to hear. She starts tapping on the door, waiting about three seconds before knocking harder. “There ain’t nobody in there, Teenie. Let’s go.”
Teenie, that’s what my girls call me. I’m five feet and one-quarter inch, one hundred and one pounds, with all my books in my book bag and a pair of waterlogged Timberlands on. “But they’re supposed to put the acceptance list up.”
“Do you see anyone coming to the door?” She says this as we’ve put about twenty feet between the office and ourselves.
I turn and look back, but don’t see anyone. “No.”
“That’s what I thought. If you want to get anywhere in this world, you gotta BE AGGRESSIVE! BE, BE AGGRESSIVE!”
“What the hell was that?”
“It’s one of the cheers that I have to do for tryouts, which is why I don’t want to waste time standing in front of that door with you when I should be practicing.”
“What time do the cheerleading tryouts start?”
“In twenty minutes.”
“Oh. Sorry.” I’m not really into the cheerleading thing, but Cherise definitely has the look: long hair, light skin, and a big butt, an apple bottom. She has all the makings of a video vixen.
“I don’t know why you’re so scared to try out for the squad.”
“I’m not scared.”
I am
scared, but she doesn’t need to know that. “I told you like fifty times I’m going to get my braces off.”
“You’re getting your braces off today?”
Make that ninety-six percent of the listening.
Since I’ve been home, I’ve been standing in the mirror, staring at my teeth. It took the dentist an hour and a half to take my braces off, but part of me wants to go back to his office and tell him to put them right back on. My teeth are gigantic, looking like some supersized Chiclets. They don’t taste like them, though, since I’ve been rubbing my tongue across them for the better part of an hour.
I hate being wound up like this. These are the times that I need Cherise the most, but as usual, when I’m desperate for help, she’s never around. It’s not every day that a girl gets her braces taken off, and after three years of being called everything from Tin Grin to Metal Mouth, the least she could do is be online when she’s supposed to be. Cherise was supposed to log on to Instant Messenger forty-five minutes ago. Honestly, she should know better.
I’ll be pissed if she’s on the phone talking to one of those
meatheads from the football team or has me blocked so I won’t see if she’s online. There are ways around that.
Appletini: crystal u there?
Bottle of Crys: yup, sup?
Appletini: nuthin’ much. u c cherise online?
Bottle of Crys: Nope
Appletini: k thanx. ttyl
Guess she really isn’t online, so I have to sit here and kill time. There are about twenty other windows flashing. I don’t feel like chatting to any of my cousins in Barbados. I have one of those families with like thirty-something grandchildren.
My mother thinks lack of education and birth-control methods are the reasons my father’s parents had so many kids. She may have a point, but I kind of agree with my dad’s take on the situation. He says, “It ain’t got a ting to do wit birff control. Dem people [his parents] was so cheap, dey ain’ want to pay nobody to tend dee land. So dey
make
dee servants.”
My paternal grandparents had fourteen children. My father was the first boy, after four girls. He has told many stories about shucking sugarcane and how he has the calluses on his hands to prove it. He embellishes, claiming he had to walk ten miles to and from school each day, uphill in both directions. I know he worked hard when he was growing up, busting his hump so we would have a better life than he did. Despite his family being well-off, nothing came easy for him. I think he works too hard, but that’s all he knows.
Now I definitely don’t feel like chatting to my cousins in Barbados. They’ll want to know when I’m coming down and then ask me to bring them some clothes. They never give me any money to pay for stuff, always asking for designer T-shirts and things like that, like I’m some kind of millionaire. I’ll kill time until Cherise gets online and chat with Garth. As annoying as he can be sometimes, he’s the lesser of two evils versus my horde of cousins.
I told him I would be right back about an hour ago. He’s written close to ten replies, giving updates on what he’s doing. I don’t even know why I gave him my screen name. Oh yeah, he helped me study for a math test, and I stink at math.
Honestly, I don’t see the point in studying numbers. Isn’t that why man invented calculators? I needed to pass an algebra exam to keep my ninety-three cumulative average and Garth gets hundreds all the time so you do the math. They call him Girth at school, and the name is well deserved.
My boy has a huge buffalo butt, looking like he’s got two volleyballs tucked into his pants. People pick on him all the time at school. Someone stuck a
WIDE TURN
—
DO NOT PASS ON THE RIGHT SIDE
sticker on his lower back last semester. I had to try my best not to laugh before I pulled it off. I guess I can talk to him for a little while.
Scratch that, Cherise just logged on.
Appletini: Took u long enough, trollop. Where u been?
Cherish me: What?
Cherish me: What’s a trollop?
Appletini: Look it up.
Cherish me: K hold on.
Five, four, three, two …
Cherish me: Oh u r wildin’ out u … wait lemme get a synonym.
Cherish me: u harlot.
Cherish me: Who u think u r callin’ me a Ho?
.
Appletini: lol
Appletini: Well how did it go?
Cherish me: I made the first cut.
Appletini: congrats!!!
Cherish me: thanx. Still got one more to go though.
Appletini: Oh come on u know ur gonna make it.
Cherish me: probably, judging from the competition.
Cherish me: You should have tried out. I’m telling you. You woulda made it easy.
Appletini: Nah. I’m fine. That ain’t my cup of tea.
Cherish me: u wouldn’t believe how many dusty chicks were out there trying 2 get on the team.
Appletini: For real? Like who?
Cherish me: The head girls cut some of those dump trucks before they even started dancing.
Appletini: Like …
Cherish me: Keep your panties on geez.
Cherish me: I was writing the names but u so impatient.
Pause. Now see, this is the kind of stuff I hate. Instead of writing all that crap about keeping my panties on, making me wait, why not write the names of the girls down?