Authors: Amy Spalding
Tags: #Young Adult Fiction, #Girls & Women, #Humorous, #General, #Romance, #Romantic Comedy, #Social Themes, #Dating & Sex, #Friendship, #Contemporary, #Juvenile Fiction, #Humorous Stories, #Love & Romance, #Social Issues
When we step out of Ms. Schmidt’s classroom, my face must be reflecting even more surprise, because there are bright blue flyers everywhere.
TALON IS COMING
, they say, with a little icon of an eagle.
“This is very strange.” I mean to just think it, and the way it comes out of my mouth sounds way more full of wonder than the average person would be at seeing some flyers. “It’s just that there are very strict rules with administration about
what’s allowed to be hung in hallways. It’s supposed to only be from officially recognized school groups.”
Alex grins at me. “Then I guess someone from an officially recognized school group did them.”
I know he’s teasing me, but at least he’s teasing me. And I’m definitely blushing when I head off to calculus, so maybe I’ll have to start getting used to this as my new state of being.
I still think Sadie could provide me with a checklist, though, if she really wanted.
Everyone in calculus and then in American lit is talking about the flyers, because at least in my classes this is the kind of event that rates extreme gossip levels. Either no one knows what TALON is or no one who knows is willing to say, because speculation is all that happens. (“A gang?” “A cult?” “A dance battle group?” These are all serious guesses by people whose grades are good enough to be in AP courses.)
But I barely participate in any speculation, because time is ticking down until I’ll be walking dogs with Alex Powell. On paper it would sound ridiculous, but I reread the texts at least seven times, and it’s really going to happen.
Alex and Sadie walk out of American lit with me, but Sadie somehow quickly disappears, and then it’s just Alex and me.
Already!
“I’ll meet you at your locker,” Alex says, and then he’s gone too. It’s much easier to figure out which books I need to take
home without Alex’s company, but they’re barely in my bag before he’s back at my side.
“You don’t have to go if you don’t want to,” I tell him, even though now I can’t imagine walking dogs without Alex. Is it even possible? “In case you offered to be nice.”
“I never do anything to be nice,” he says in a voice that sounds extra deep. And then it’s like earlier, when all of a sudden he’s close. The moment becomes A Moment. His eyes are like metal and mine magnets, or maybe it’s the other way around, but it doesn’t matter because there’s no possibility I could pull away. When you think about it, you can spend your whole life around people and yet never hold someone’s gaze with your own.
Actually, it feels more like my gaze is being held.
“We should go,” I say, because I don’t know where to take this. Or I guess I have an idea, but I can’t imagine kissing him on school property. I can’t imagine kissing him at all. So I lead him outside to my car. He climbs into the passenger side and his tall frame just kind of melts into the seat. I feel my brain again head down the path of attempting to calculate how any of this is happening to me, but then I realize something.
I can tell my brain to shut up.
I drive down Eagle Rock Boulevard to York Boulevard, which is definitely one of the cooler parts of LA. There are vintage boutiques, coffee shops, hipster bars, a Manic Panic salon where Sadie sometimes gets her hair dyed, and a doughnut shop I let myself stop in only after I’ve walked many dogs around many blocks. I point it all out to Alex as we make our
way to Highland Park Stray Rescue, and he looks at everything with attention, especially Donut Friend.
I find parking directly behind the rescue, and I show Alex in. Tricia, who usually works the front desk, grins at me and waves as we walk inside.
“Happy Wednesday, Jules! How was school?”
“It was pretty good. This is my… this is Alex. He wanted to help out today. That’s okay, right?”
“Of course.” She leans over the desk to shake his hand. “You’re so tall!”
“Thanks?” Alex smiles at her. “And thanks for letting me help out.”
“Of course. Once you fill out this form, you can follow Jules to see where to pick up the dogs and where to walk them. Since it’s your first time, you should only take dogs with green collars. That means they don’t have any behavioral issues and won’t act up on leash. Sound good?”
“What color collars are you allowed to walk?” he asks me.
“Any of them,” I say. “But I’ve had a lot of experience now. I’ve been volunteering since we got Daisy two years ago.”
I wait for Alex to complete the volunteer form, and then lead him down a row of kennels. The dogs on both sides bark as we make our way down, and of course those barks set off a chorus of barks throughout the building. Santiago, the afternoon and evening coordinator, is settling a German shepherd mix back after a walk, but he waves as soon as he’s able.
“It’s Jules day! And Lola’s walk is up next.”
“Lola!” I lean down to smile at Lola, a bouncy border collie and black lab mix, who I’ve been walking for at least a month now. I hate that she hasn’t found a home yet—she’s seven, and a lot of people want puppies or at least younger dogs—but I’m always glad to see her again.
Santiago looks from the German shepherd to Alex. “Hey, thanks for coming. I’m Santiago.”
Alex reaches over to shake Santiago’s hand, and I feel my stomach flip-flop over how grown up he looks. This isn’t how boys shake hands; these are men.
“You look familiar,” Santiago says, and my glow over Alex’s handshaking ability is gone. I hold my breath and hope that the words
Chaos
,
4
, and
All
won’t be uttered.
“I’ve got one of those faces,” Alex says with a grin.
“So, Jules, this your boyfriend?”
I move quickly to correct this statement. “Alex is—”
WHACK.
I somehow just slammed my face into the front of Lola’s kennel. Slamming your face into a metal grid will make your eyes water like you’re crying—probably even if you aren’t suffering total humiliation about the assumed relationship status of the boy you’ve brought with you. But since I am, now I’m dealing with not just the humiliation but the tears as well.
“Are you okay?” Santiago and Alex both ask, and I’m pretty sure I’m fine, but my eyes won’t stop watering. Lola lets out a little yip of concern, and then other dogs start barking, and the barking echoes out in concentric circles from my epicenter of humiliation.
“I’m fine,” I finally say, and I’m not sure whether it’s seconds or minutes or hours later. “I’m ready to take out Lola. I’m fine.”
I reach in to connect a leash to Lola’s collar and realize that since the rule is dogs have to be taken outside immediately once they’re on a leash, I can’t clear up any boyfriend misconceptions or explain the usual walking route to Alex or make sure he’s matched with a fun but easy dog. I just hustle Lola out of the building and down Avenue 52.
Lola looks back at me while we’re walking, and I’m pretty sure she’s just panting, but it looks like a comforting smile. I smile back. Then she pees on a patch of grass, so it feels less like we’re having a bonding moment.
Eventually I hear Alex and Santiago, and I glance back to see they’re walking in tandem with green-collared dogs. When Alex and I were riding down York with the sun shining, I didn’t expect that his dog-bonding experience would be with Santiago. But I make my way around with Lola, and then it’s time for Hudson, and Noodle, and Keno. I keep walking dogs, and I keep trying to delete from my brain that Santiago referred to Alex as my boyfriend.
I manage the first thing. The second, not at all.
Our volunteer shift is over at five, and I say good night to the staff and wait for Alex to catch up. I watch as he thanks Santiago and Tricia, and I try to identify the feeling washing over me. I think I might be proud of Alex for being so good with everyone, and maybe I’m proud of myself for bringing him here.
“I’m pretty sure I was promised doughnuts,” he says, so I lead him down the block to Donut Friend. I get a traditional doughnut with lemon glaze, but Alex—after spending at least five minutes reading the menu—goes all out with a doughnut cut bagel-style and stuffed with peanut butter and jelly. We take seats along the counter lining the back wall, and I try to determine if there’s an especially delicate way to eat a doughnut.
“Hey, so, I’m gonna tell you something,” Alex says at the exact same moment I decide to bite into the doughnut. I still try to look like I’m ready to hear anything he wants to tell me, but all at once I realize there are so many things he might have to tell me that I’m actually not ready for. What if he has a girlfriend at his old school? What if he wants to clarify exactly how much he does not like me? What if I found exactly the least delicate way to eat a doughnut ever, and it’s so bad he has to tell me?
That last one probably isn’t true, but now I can’t put it out of my head. Doughnuts don’t seem romantic! Why did I pick doughnuts? Why does my whole week feel defined by pastries?
“A few years ago, I was really into singing and dancing, and one thing just led to another, and… honestly, I ended up in this boy band.” He shrugs with one eyebrow cocked, and I don’t know him well enough to figure out if he’s pretending to be casual or he’s just casual. “We had one really big hit—not to sound like an ass, but you definitely heard it at some point—but we ended up being kind of a one-hit wonder. So that was that.”
“Wow,” I say, and I widen my eyes so that I look legitimately shocked. “That’s… legitimately shocking.”
He laughs. “It barely feels like it actually happened to me. Like it was some weird movie I saw at one point.”
I nod and raise my eyebrows a little like I’m surprised by every new tidbit of information.
“And that’s it.”
“Okay,” I say, and then I decide I’m not saying enough, but I don’t know what else to say. I just stare at him, and that feels worse than not speaking. He has to know I don’t care about this revelation, but maybe the staring and muteness is giving the opposite impression.
“I’ll tell you something too, not that it’s a secret. And not that it’s a big deal. I mean, not that your boy-band thing is a big deal, just… never mind about that, sorry. I just thought I’d tell you that I have two moms.”
“Oh, cool,” he says, then makes a face. “Not ‘cool,’ no, not that it’s uncool, just, yeah, sure, that isn’t a big deal, no—shit, I feel like I’m saying everything wrong.”
“Me too,” I say, and we both laugh, and it’s like out of nowhere I can see how people end up falling in love with each other. Oh my god, not that I’m in love with Alex. Just that if within the span of days you can feel so honest with someone, you can see how bigger things might be possible too.
“Is it weird?” I ask. “If you don’t mind… because of the boy band?”
“Sometimes,” he says. “You can see… not the best side of
people. They can be so fake just because of your fame or what they think they could get from you. Or they pretend to be one way publicly, but in reality they’re not a good person.”
“That sounds awful,” I say.
“Sometimes it is, yeah.” He smiles again. “I’m done with all that bullshit. You’re not like any of those people. It’s really cool you care about stuff.”
I look down at my nearly finished doughnut, but I’m sure Alex can still see my smile. And how red my face is.
“Can you give me directions to your house?” I ask Alex once we’re back in my car.
“What?” He laughs his deep and warm laugh. “I definitely cannot, but my mom wrote down my address. Hang on.” He digs through his backpack before pulling out a notebook, where I see that it’s carefully printed on the inside cover. “We just moved, remember. I’m not an idiot, about that at least.”
“I think it’s cute your mom wrote it out for you,” I say, but maybe that sounds sarcastic, so I just let it go at that. I type the address into my GPS and wait for the computerized voice to guide me.
At school the next day I decide to stop eyeing Alex with suspicion when he pops up near me. And that’s good because he keeps doing that. My locker, the hallway, the salad line in the cafeteria (though he abandons it for chicken fingers).
I can feel the eyes of the school on us. In my head they’re asking
Why her? Why Jules McAllister-Morgan?
But no one says it aloud.
On Thursdays I have Associated Student Body after school, so even though Alex asks, politely, for a ride home while leaning against the locker next to mine, I have to turn him down.
“Let’s get this shitshow over with,” Em greets me as I walk up to the conference room in the administrative building. She’s our class treasurer, and I’m the recording secretary. That would bother me, except that Natalie’s neither the president nor the vice president but the public relations director. This is the one extracurricular that’s more of a popularity contest than an earned honor, so we picked roles we
actually had a shot at. Em admitted she’s only padding her college applications, and considering that ASB hasn’t actually changed anything about the school in the past three years, maybe that’s what we’re all doing.
“So do you want to talk about it?” Em whispers. Hers, the opposite of Sadie’s, is a real whisper.
I gesture to my phone, recording the meeting so I can verify my minutes before submitting them to Ms. Reinhardt, our faculty advisor, and then go back to taking notes. Em writes furiously in her notebook, which is odd because she’s the treasurer, so she’s not responsible for capturing every moment like I am.
She shoves the notebook in my direction.
so do you want to talk about it??
It’s next to a realistic sketch of an avocado.
What does the avocado symbolize?
I write below, even though I normally try harder to resist Em’s attempts to distract me during meetings.
oh god jules. i’m bored and doodling. sometimes an avocado is just an avocado.
Then she snatches the notebook back from me and scribbles for a few moments. Now the avocado has dark wavy hair like Alex’s as well as his eyebrows. A giggle bursts out of me like a hiccup, and then Em snorts. Since there are only twenty people plus Ms. Reinhardt here, everyone hears us.
“Is there something you want to share with the whole class, Miss Han or Miss McAllister-Morgan?” Michael Alves asks in a perfect impression of Teacher Voice. As senior class president, he’s in the midst of his student address, so it seems fair
that he’s making fun of us. Though, for a person cool enough to win the populist vote ASB presidency requires, it’s in a pretty dorky fashion.
“Sorry,” I say.
“Carry on,” Em adds, which unfortunately causes another laugh to squeak out of me. I’ve been on ASB every year since sixth grade, but I never had to make an effort to behave until Em joined during junior year. Before then I didn’t even realize I was corruptible.
Alex texts while I’m reading through the freshman submissions for the
Crest
when I’m at home later. If it were anyone else, I’d probably make it through the whole stack and at least start on my final list for Mr. Wheeler before reading it.
But it’s an understatement to say Alex isn’t anyone else.
Want to hang out Saturday?
Of course I want to hang out Saturday. But hanging out Saturday would be a date, maybe? It’s definitely not on my list of activities I’d planned on participating in my senior year. But it’s
Alex
.
And to be technical about it, he didn’t say
go out
, he said
hang out
. And that sounds less nerve-wracking, somehow.
I neatly stack the papers on my bed and type back to Alex.
I walk dogs in the morning. After that I’m free.
I go back to reading even though I feel I’m not being as fair to the freshmen as I could be. I’m of course evaluating their style, grammar, choice of topic, original voice. But I’m also wondering how Alex will respond. I’m wondering what hanging out will entail. I’m wondering if it’s too soon to kiss him. I’m wondering if he’ll be the one to make that happen, because I’m not sure I’ll have the nerve. Somewhere in the back of my mind—in all honesty it’s probably closer to the front of my mind—I’m not sure I have the right to make that call.
He’s Alex Powell. And I’m just me.
I start texting all of this to Sadie, but it’s turning into less of a message and more of an essay, so I delete it and get out my laptop to email her. Even this looks longer than could be typically constrained by email, but I hit send and then text her to make sure she’ll check it.
My phone buzzes less than a full sixty seconds later.
“You couldn’t possibly have read all of that,” I answer.
“Of course I didn’t! I hit the stupid point, and I had to call you immediately,” Sadie says, and I actually feel myself gasp because I’m not sure Sadie has ever called me stupid.
“He’s him and you’re
you
?” she asks. “Oh my god, Jules. Jules! Yes, he used to be famous, but you’re
amazing
.”
“Of course you think that!” I say. “You have to.”
“I don’t have to! Who’s making me?”
“Society,” I said. “Best friend rules.”
“Oh, shut up.” Sadie laughs. “Alex likes that you’re overachieving.”
“How do you know? Maybe he’s just humoring me. Maybe he’s just doing something where he conquers girls one by one at a new school.” I hadn’t even thought of these possibilities until they were out of my mouth, but now I’m terrified they’re true.
“I know because I’m not blind. Some people make what they’re feeling really obvious, and that, my friend, is Alex Powell. Also I guess we can talk about the obvious stuff, like that you’re cute and your hair is pretty and you pull off that whole preppy thing really well.”
“I still think that you have to think that,” I say.
“Oh yes, the international best friend bylaws, sure. Since when have you seen me obey any rules I think are stupid? Since
never
, Jules.”
Sadie had me there.
Friday night is the third year of our first-week-of-school tradition, which involves meeting up at Casa Bianca. It’s a small traditional Italian restaurant with the best pizza maybe on not just the Eastside but all of LA. By dinnertime there can be
a line to get a table, but since we’re out of school at three we decide to be there when the door opens at four.
“We can’t do this next year,” I say as we’re seated at a booth in the front dining room. “We’ll be living in different cities.”
“Sadie and I won’t,” Em says. “Remember? We’ll be in the same city, just different schools. We can get pizza on our first Friday.”
“Cheap and greasy delicious New York pizza!” Sadie closes her eyes as if just the thought is too beautiful for her.
I’ve lived in the same house my whole life, and Sadie has lived in the same house her whole life, and those houses are only a ten-minute drive apart. I’m not sure what life will be like with her in Manhattan and me in Rhode Island. I’m excited about college and I’m excited about my future, but only recently did I start thinking about how all of that means my present has to end. Next year it won’t be the three of us, and I guess that means it won’t really be the three of us ever again after this school year.
“Why do you look depressed, Jules?” Em asks.
“Ugh, I have to work on my face not showing everything,” I say instead of answering. But, I do.
“You have no future in poker,” Em says. “But I would be surprised to hear you were even considering a future in poker.”
“So what’s up with Alex?” Sadie asks. “That’s not why you look depressed, is it?”
“It’s not why I look depressed,” I say. “I know Alex acts like he likes me.”
Today had been another day of that. Alex at my locker, Alex asking questions, Alex grinning at me when the mood didn’t call for anything more than
neutral
. Alex, Alex, Alex. My whole year was supposed to be about the
Crest
, the Reception Committee, college applications.
I don’t know what it’s supposed to be about now.
“But?” Em raises an eyebrow.
“Oh, I mean, no, no
but
. I just mean that I’m aware of it. We’re hanging out tomorrow.”
“‘Hanging out!’” they chorus—even Sadie who’s aware this was a possibility.
“He’s coming with me to Stray Rescue,” I say. “And I’m not sure what after that. Maybe that’s all.”
“Don’t you walk dogs at like six in the morning?” Em asks.
“Eight,” I say. “That’s when they need the most help.”
“He must like you
a lot
to get up that early just to walk dogs,” Sadie says.
“Eight isn’t that early. And maybe he’s a morning person,” I say. “Maybe he wants to do something good for the world.”
“No one wants to do something good for the world before ten on a Saturday,” Em says. “Except you.”
Darcy and Mom are hanging out in the living room watching TV when I get home. I take it as a sign to talk. Okay, actually,
it’s more that I have no idea how to keep any information from my parents, but I like the idea of fate.
“Soooooo,” I say, and the word comes out for much longer than I mean it to. “There’s this new boy in school.”
Mom perks up. “The boy that Sadie thinks likes you?”
Now Darcy’s perked up too. “Sadie thinks a boy likes Jules?”
“Look how
red
you are,” Mom says.
“Don’t tease her,” Darcy says, but they’re both giggling.
“I didn’t say this the other day, but… he was in Chaos 4 All. If you remember that video.”
“If we
remember
?” Darcy hums, and I realize it’s “Want 2 B Ur Boy.”
“Don’t do that,” I say. “He’s just like a normal guy now. He doesn’t like to make a big deal about it.”
“So Sadie’s right?” Mom asks in her gentlest voice.
“Yes,” I say, staring down at my feet, and at least this time she doesn’t comment on my face’s redness. She doesn’t say anything at all, and neither does Darcy. I take a deep breath and look up. They’re beaming at each other.
“Your first boyfriend,” Mom says. “I remember my first boyfriend.”
“Me too,” Darcy says, because they actually went to high school together, even though it took them a lot longer to fall in love with each other. “Matt Hale. I remember he wore that AC/DC shirt all the time.”
“I thought that was really sexy,” Mom says, which is disturbing. Not that she went out with guys in high school and college—
that much I already knew. But no one should ever have to hear what their parents think is sexy, about anyone, ever. “Meanwhile you were dating half of the girls at St. Elizabeth’s.”
“
Half
is a strong word,” Darcy says. “And so is
dating
.”
“Can we change the subject to something less disturbing?” I ask. “Please?”
“Remember that in the music video they had different traffic signs they danced with?” Darcy asks. “I still think about that sometimes when I see yield signs.”
I cover my face with my hands. Unfortunately even when I can’t see them, my parents still exist. “Oh my god.”
“We’ll behave when we meet him,” Darcy says.
“We promise!” Mom says. “When do we get to meet him?”