If I Tell Part 10
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"Am I trespa.s.sing on your property?" I asked sweetly. In the back of my head an alarm silently rang. Who did I think I was, taking on Tina? "Or maybe he wasn't interested."
Nadine, her follower, made a tiny squealing sound. "Oh, my G.o.d, she can talk," she said and giggled.
Tina glared at me. "Gross. I'm sure I'd get an STD just kissing him. Guys like him have been around, you know." Tina snapped her gum and jutted her hip out.
Please, even I knew Tina had slept with half the football team.
"Well, I guess you have something in common," I politely told her.
"Oh, my G.o.d. I can't believe she said that," Nadine shrieked.
Truthfully, I couldn't believe it either.
"You're one to talk. Hanging out with that s.l.u.t Lacey Stevens." Tina glared at me. "She'll screw anything that moves."
So much for flying under the radar. I blinked, surprised and slightly alarmed. How did she even know Lacey? They didn't exactly hang in the same crowds. Did she know about Simon? Had someone else seen them?
Tina crossed her arms across her overdeveloped chest and sneered at me. "What's the matter? Cat got your tongue?"
"Why do you care who my friends are?" I asked.
Snap. Snap. She clacked her jaw, chomping on her gum. "Oh, please. Friends? And as if anyone cares about you."
"You did say she was talented," a girl said. Carly. I remembered holding hands with her at recess in second grade. Before it became social suicide to touch me. Or talk to me.
Tina shot her a death glance. "I said I would never act like I was cool and superior, showing off my singing and guitar like a friggin' busker looking for spare quarters. That's hardly a compliment." She glared at me.
"I guess you have no choice but to hang out with white trash like Lacey. No one around here has wanted anything to do with you since you almost drowned yourself. Oh. Except that lesbian. And now the juvenile delinquent. You're probably desperate enough to do both of them to keep them around." The girls around her laughed, but they sounded nervous. "You sure do know how to pick 'em. I guess you don't have a lot of choice. Half-breed and all. "
The hair on my arms rose. I stood straighter. Every inch of my body went into flight mode, even though I had several inches on Tina in her heels versus my flat sneakers. I took a deep breath. I wouldn't run. "You know nothing about me."
Or my color, I silently added.
She grinned. There was no friendliness in the smirk. "My sister told me you were fooling around with some black guy. Trust me, there's not a lot I don't know about people at this school." She smirked again as my head felt close to exploding with anger. "Even you.
"I heard he's cute. For a black guy." Tina flashed an evil grin. "You know what they say about black guys. I may consider giving it a try. Wouldn't be hard to take a man from you."
The girls giggled, all except Carly. She stared at Tina, frowning.
"What?" Tina said to her. "You know what they say about black guys. I'm not prejudiced."
My heart pounded as the girls swarmed off in their group. I watched them strut away, unable to utter a word. They were pretty. A blond, a redhead, and a brunette. Carly looked back at me and kind of grimaced.
G.o.d. Would I have been forced to hang out with them and pretend to believe what Tina believed if I'd had a white father? That a group of guys were all the same because of their color? Would I be shallow and judgmental and part of a stupid school clique?
People pretended my color wasn't what made me different. It was me, they said. I shut people out. Even Grandma and Grandpa said my skin didn't define me; it didn't matter. But obviously, it did.
I slowly made my way to the hallway. Carly was standing outside the door, waiting for me. Alone.
"Tina asked Jackson out," she said in a quiet voice. "He turned her down." She hugged her textbooks to her chest. "He likes you, and she knows it. She'll try and take it out on you. I'd be careful. She can be really mean."
I didn't say anything.
She started walking away and then stopped and turned back. "I think it's cool that you play guitar and write your own music," she said. "I've heard you sing. You have a lot of talent. Tina hates it. She's jealous. She thinks she's a great singer, but she couldn't even get a part in the senior musical. You should have gone out for it."
"I'm not the school-play type," I told her.
She bent her head. "I know."
She turned then but didn't move. Slowly she circled back. Her cheeks were red, and she took a deep breath. "I'm sorry. I know no one ever talks about what we did. But I've never forgotten it. I don't think anyone has."
My body froze in place. I dropped my gaze to the ground, wis.h.i.+ng she would go away. Stop talking.
"I wanted to tell someone what happened to you. Back in elementary school. For a long time. But I was too afraid. I saw the way you were shunned. I'm sorry I was such a chicken. I've never forgotten." She spun back around and hurried away.
I didn't know if her confession made me feel better or worse.
I walked into Grinds early for my s.h.i.+ft, repositioning my guitar case on my shoulder. I'd popped home after school and picked it up and stopped at the park to play some songs. Cold as it was in the park, playing cleared my head. My brain was swirling with old emotions better buried or picked away on my guitar strings.
I almost didn't pick up the guitar, remembering what Tina said, that I was trying to look cool. But I wasn't doing it to impress Tina or anyone else. Music kept me sane. Maybe the fact that it bugged her should cheer me up a little.
"So," Lacey called out in a singsong voice from a table in the cafe. "What's up with you and Nathan?"
"Nothing," I snapped to cover my embarra.s.sment. "Nothing is up with me and Nathan," I repeated for emphasis.
"Is that right?" a deep voice asked. "I definitely thought something was up."
Nathan was slouched over a chair behind Lacey's. She opened her eyes wider and lifted her hands in a defenseless pose. "He made me," she mouthed.
I didn't see any restraints on her.
Nathan glared at me. "Why'd you take off on me? You ignored my calls all weekend too."
My stomach turned. I fought an urge to rush away. I didn't want to deal with Nathan, but I also didn't want him thinking we had something going on.
"My cell was out of juice. You didn't call my house," I stammered.
"Like I'd call your house. Your grandma would freak if she knew we were hooking up."
"We're not hooking up." My insides recoiled as if he'd asked me to perform live with him at a rap concert.
"Why not? I thought we were cool," he said as if we'd been more than drinks and hormones.
Was he serious? He thought we were an item? I sighed and plunked down in the seat beside Lacey and slid my guitar under the table.
"Sorry, Nathan." I breathed deep and searched my brain for words. "I drank too much. It was stupid. We're friends. Let's not get weird, okay? Can't we pretend it never happened?" I flashed a feeble smile and glimpsed at Lacey for help.
"Pretend it never happened?" Nathan pounded the table with his fist. "You weren't acting like a friend."
I shrunk down farther in my seat.
"Nathan. Chill," Lacey barked. "Leave her alone. She's a kid. She doesn't usually drink, and she's not experienced."
"She's experienced now." Nathan's voice sounded ugly.
I glared at him, the echo of my heart thumping loudly in my ears. I opened my mouth to defend myself when Jackson walked up to the table.
"Hey. How's it going?" He touched my arm, and something about it felt protective.
My skin tingled and my face burned.
"Hey," Jackson said to Lacey. He didn't greet Nathan.
"What do you want?" Nathan snarled.
"Relax, my friend." Jackson sat in the chair to my left. He raised his hand. "I come in peace."
Nathan slammed his fist down on the table again, so hard this time that it shook. "Screw you," he said to Jackson. "And screw you," he spit at Lacey. "And screw you too," he said to me. "Or maybe I already did?"
"You did not!" I yelped.
"Grow up." Lacey pointed to the exit of the coffee shop. "Get out of here until you cool off."
I glanced around the cafe. All eyes were on us. I wanted to crawl under the table.
"Amber'll ban you if you keep this up," Lacey told him.
Nathan leaped to his feet and gave her the finger. He glared down at me and stormed out of the cafe.
"Hmmm. I guess you're not on his Christmas list," Jackson said.
A loud laugh escaped my throat, like an unexpected hiccup.
Lacey crossed her arms over her chest. "Nathan's being an a.s.shole because he feels rejected."
"Well, he must act like an a.s.shole a lot then," Jackson quipped.
I giggled again but covered my mouth when Lacey scowled. I couldn't help it. My nerves, plus relief that he'd left, made me giddy.
"You know how he feels about you, Jaz. You shouldn't laugh at him," she said.
"How he feels?" I turned my nose up.
"He has a thing for Jaz," Lacey said to Jackson but her eyes stayed on me.
"He has a thing for every girl who breathes."
Jackson leaned across the table. "Hold your breath around him in the future," he whispered.
I ducked my head, but it was too late to hide my smile.
Lacey cleared her throat and tossed her hair over her shoulder. "I've gotta go get washed up before my s.h.i.+ft." She stood. "Don't forget who your real friends are." She ignored Jackson and spun on her heels and walked away.
Jackson watched her go. "I guess that doesn't include me."
"She should talk." I chewed my lip, the light mood gone for good.
"I thought she was your BFF." Jackson made quote marks in the air.
"So did I. I was wrong."
He brushed his bangs out of his eyes. "So, how come you hang out with those two anyway?"
"Lacey is my best friend. Was my best friend," I corrected myself. "Nathan and her go way back. They're roommates."
"They're a lot older than you." He twirled his hoop earring as he studied me. "You really shouldn't mess around with him."
I ducked my head and kept my eyes on the table. "I'm not. Anyhow, Lacey has been my friend since I was fourteen." I had an urge to cry. Because she wasn't my friend now. Not anymore. And Nathan wasn't my friend either. I wouldn't miss him though. He never really had been.
Jackson held out his hand. "All I'm saying is maybe you need some friends on the same page."
"I have Ashley."
He shrugged.
"She goes to our school. The swimmer. She hangs out at Marnie's too."
He nodded. "I've seen her around. I don't know her. "
I didn't want to explain further, so I pretended to study my nails. Easy for him to talk about making friends. He'd barely lived in Tadita six months and already got invited to parties. He probably made friends by dealing. It explained the calls on his cell.
"Nathan's not your type, and I don't mean because he's black."
I glared at him. "Nathan is not my boyfriend. And that has nothing to do with it."
"Good. He's too old for you."
He stared at me until I blushed and looked away.
"So who are you interested in then? Maybe you need a real boyfriend."
My stomach flipped, and my cheeks warmed. I prayed he couldn't tell my mind had conjured up a picture of him. Him as my boyfriend.
The trouble was that his voice sounded casual, almost brotherly, as if he was about to suggest setting me up on a blind date. Just what I needed. Love help from the juvenile delinquent I secretly crushed on. Man. I was seriously messed up.
Jackson pointed to my guitar. "How about someone who digs Neil Diamond?" He smiled and my heart actually hurt.
If I Tell Part 10
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If I Tell Part 10 summary
You're reading If I Tell Part 10. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Janet Gurtler already has 697 views.
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