Here Lies Bridget. Paige Harbison
Читать онлайн книгу.you saying—”
“I’m saying it’s personal,” I spat.
“Not professional. Not academic. Per-son-al.”
Mr. Ransic finally looked like he didn’t know what to say. Thank God. It was about time he pulled his nose out of my business. Whether it was imaginary business or not.
At last, looking as if he had a speculative grasp on the situation and the fact that Mr. Ezhno and Meredith had something personal against me and that I needed help, not punishment, he said something about his busy day and stood up to open the door for me. I walked out, finally free from being judged.
Two HOURS LATER, I WAS in the locker room with Michelle, one of my best friends. Our gym lockers were next to one another, which was convenient for my venting.
“I was seriously only thirty seconds late. And it wasn’t even my fault! It was his beloved Meredith’s fault.”
“Yeah, that sucks.” Michelle pulled on her shorts. She’d had them since freshman year, and they didn’t really fit her anymore.
“You know, you should really buy new shorts this year. Those are getting a little tight on your hips. I think they’ll order some for you if they don’t have your size.”
I pulled on mine, which I’d been forced to buy two sizes too big because I got stuck with one of the last pairs before I knew they could just order them, and my father had told me to deal with them (his go-to response whenever I complained—it really sucks that he’s not a pushover). Meredith had said, in that irritatingly sweet way of hers, that maybe I’d grow into them. Yeah, right, like I’d ever let myself go up two sizes.
They were constantly slipping down, putting me an inch away from embarrassment every time.
“Mine, on the other hand, are huge.” I pulled on the waistband, and looked down at my sneakers through the pant legs.
“Okay, so what happened when you came in late?” Michelle asked sharply.
“Basically, he sent me to the office with this totally stupid note talking about how I’m some kind of menace. Ugh, and he said something about me distracting other students who were trying to pay attention.”
I watched Michelle for an aghast reaction, and was disappointed to see her fiddling with the cord on her shorts.
I kept talking.
“It was so stupid. So then I had to wait for like, ever, with three of Winchester Prep’s Least Wanted.” I looked expectantly at Michelle again.
She was tugging violently on her waistband now.
“Are you even listening, Michelle? Or are you just going to rip your pants trying to make them fit?”
She looked up, like she’d forgotten I was there.
“Oh, sorry, go on, I was listening.”
I sighed.
“So, finally I go in, right, and then I’m about to be super-nice and just say something about how I promised not to be late anymore, and how homework’s been hard lately, possibly start crying, and then …” I paused for emphasis “… Mr. Ezhno actually called the office to tell him that not only was I late but that I was disruptive or whatever.”
“Seriously?”
“Seriously. So then I knew I was going to have to think fast, and really all I wanted to do was to get out of there, right? So I start talking about how Meredith’s always got this ‘male guest’ over.”
Michelle didn’t see my finger quotes, or my self-impressed smile, because she was back to messing with her shorts.
My smile faded and I decided to finish my story, because obviously she was incapable of paying attention.
“I just complained about how she and Mr. Ezhno were always meeting and stuff, and how he was like in love with her, and how everything he does is because of that.” I looked at her. Was nothing I said going to get her attention? “And how they’re totally doing it,” I added, just to get a reaction.
“Wait, what?” She looked up.
I glared at her, and a whistle blew to indicate the beginning of gym. Oblivious to the ball I’d just set rolling, I flounced off to class.
CHAPTER TWO
The next day, I showed up to Mr. Ezhno’s class on time. Frankly, it wasn’t in reaction to his threat of suspension, but more just needing to escape my house and Meredith’s sobbing. If I didn’t hate her so much, I might have asked her what was wrong. I couldn’t stand it when other people cried around me. I always felt guilty, even when I hadn’t done anything wrong.
But seriously, who wakes up at seven o’clock in the morning to cry?
As soon as I sat down, Jillian, my other, more gossip-appreciating best friend, passed me a neatly folded note (she’d been the first one in fourth grade to be able to make origami and paper footballs).
I looked up at her.
“You can’t just say it? We have to pass notes?”
It sounded kind of mean, but come on, everyone was talking and class hadn’t even started yet.
Jillian made a face and mouthed, “Just read it.”
I opened the note and started to read the rounded, funky handwriting I’d never been able to copy. Instead, I had total boy handwriting.
Michelle told me about everything that you told her about Mr. Ezhno. Is it true?
I nodded and made a gagging face. Her eyes widened, along with her mouth. Finally someone appreciated how irritating the situation was. I felt a wave of fondness for Jillian, as I saw how commiserative she was.
As class started, I wrote back, asking her what else had been going on in school. She had some decent gossip, as usual. It was really the main reason I kept her around. Jillian had an amazing ability to remember just about everything. She didn’t use her memory to score high on tests and do well in Spanish class—obviously, if she was talking to me all through class, she couldn’t hear that information to memorize it. She used her memory exclusively to collect and archive everything about everyone we went to school with.
Jillian was going on about the colleges everyone was interested in applying to, and the boy who’d just gotten kicked off the soccer team for having a 1.9 GPA. I had just been about to say something about “getting to the good stuff” when she mentioned that there was a new girl.
“… 1.9 GPA, which is so sad, because it’s only like point-one away from being acceptable. Oh! And that new girl is in my gym class, speaking of soccer. She was actually really good.”
I thought of Liam and the girl I hadn’t recognized the day before.
“So, wait, did you talk to her?”
“Oh, yeah, she’s so nice. Her name is Anna Judge, and she moved here from Maine. It’s actually kind of funny, I kept running into her and Liam yesterday. Seriously, like, all day.”
My opportunity.
“Liam?”
I spoke too quickly. Super casual. But thankfully, Jillian never noticed that kind of thing and simply answered my question.
“Oh, right, he was showing her around yesterday. You know how the office, like, assigns you a buddy or whatever on your first day when you’re new?”
“Yeah, go on.”
SPIT. IT. OUT.
“Well, Liam was her buddy. I mean, he was assigned to do it, but I heard he volunteered. He was apparently in the office picking up some form for football when she came in. He dropped her off