You gave it to me! LOL
???
You told me to let you know about the party at my house tomorrow night.
You don’t remember??
I don’t remember giving that guy my number. I don’t remember anything
about a party. I barely even remember that guy.
“Edy, sorry!” Mara calls from down the hall. “I
was talking to Cameron
after class.”
“That’s okay, come here. Look at this,” I tell her, holding my phone out.
“It’s that guy, Troy, from the playground. Apparently I gave him my number.
And apparently there’s some kind of party tomorrow. I don’t know, I don’t
remember any of this. Ringing any bells?”
Mara takes the phone from me and writes:
Hmmm . . . don’t
remember,
LOL. But tell me about this party . . . ?
Cool. I’ll text you the address. Make sure you bring your friend :)
OK
“There,” she says, handing me my phone back with a grin. “I kissed that
guy, Alex, you know.”
“You tramp!” I gasp. “I have no idea what I did with the other one, I
guess.”
“You didn’t do anything,” she says with a laugh, smacking me in the arm.
“I honestly think you two just passed out on each other,”
she says quietly,
even though there’s no one else in the hall. She would never say it, but I know
it still weirds her out that I’ve had sex. Or maybe it’s just knowing that people
think I’m a total slut, that people talk about me like I’m a total slut. Especially
when she’s standing there next to me, not one.
“So, what’s the deal with Cameron, exactly?” I ask her as we walk out to
her car.
She throws her arms up in the air. “No fucking idea, Edy. I swear to God!
He’s driving me crazy. Sometimes I think he likes me just as a friend. Other
times I feel like he’s about to kiss me! I don’t know, I don’t know, I just don’t
know!” she yells.
“Yeah, it kind of seemed like he liked you—the way he was talking to you
and looking at you at the piercing place. And how he’s had to come and find
you every single day just to ask how your nose is doing. But then he doesn’t
ask you out or anything?”
“Exactly!” she shouts, swinging her car door open. “Well, I’m done waiting
for him. He’s had almost two years to figure it out—two years!” she tells me,
looking across the hood of the car at me, this fire in her eyes.
“Okay,” I tell her carefully. “That’s good, Mara. You don’t have to wait for
anyone.”
“Exactly!” she says again, except this time with conviction as she slams her
door shut.
“Are you okay to be driving?” I ask her, confused by this sudden anger.
“Oh, I’m more than okay—I’m great!”
She laughs, shifting the car into
drive.
I’m not sure if I should be laughing or concerned,
so I just quietly say,
“Okay.”
“Maybe I want to go out with this Alex person. See what he thinks of that!”
She looks at me when I don’t respond. “Right?”
“Right. I guess. But—” I begin.
“But what?” she interrupts.
“But it just seems like those guys are, I don’t know, probably fun to hang
out with or whatever, but I mean, they’re big-time stoners. Obviously not
boyfriend material. For you.” She looks at me like I’m
crushing all her
dreams. “Probably. I mean, I don’t know them. Maybe not.”
“But we’ll go to the party, right?”
“Sure.”
“Good.”
She smiles and turns on the radio.