Read Broken Hearts, Fences and Other Things to Mend Online
Authors: Katie Finn
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #Marriage & Divorce
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BROKEN HEARTS,
FENCES, AND
OTHER THINGS
TO MEND
KATIE FINN
BROKEN HEARTS,
FENCES, AND OTHER
THINGS TO MEND
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REVENGE, ICE CREAM,
AND OTHER THINGS
BEST SERVED COLD
Coming in 2015!
HEARTS, FINGERS,
AND OTHER
THINGS TO CROSS
Coming in 2016!
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BROKEN HEARTS,
FENCES, AND OTHER
THINGS TO MEND
Katie Finn
Feiwel and Friends
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New York
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A FEIWEL AND FRIENDS BOOK
An Imprint of Macmillan
BROKEN HEARTS, FENCES, AND OTHER THINGS TO MEND. Copyright © 2014 by Katie Finn.
All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America by R. R. Donnelley
& Sons Company, Harrisonburg, Virginia. For information, address Feiwel and
Friends, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
Feiwel and Friends books may be purchased for business or promotional
use. For information on bulk purchases, please contact Macmillan Corporate
and Premium Sales Department at (800) 221- 7945 x5442 or by e-mail at
Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data Available
ISBN: 978- 1- 250- 04524- 9 (hardcover) / TK (ebook)
Book design by . . .
Feiwel and Friends logo designed by Filomena Tuosto
First Edition: 2014
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History repeats itself. First as tragedy, second as farce.
—Karl Marx
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The Wednesday afternoon that it all started, I was thinking
about how great my life was going.
Actually, to be totally truthful, it didn’t start that Wednes-
day. It started earlier than that— fi ve years earlier. But I didn’t
know that then. I was just wandering around the aisles of the
Putnam, Connecticut, Target with no idea what was coming, like
the blond girl heading down to the basement in horror movies.
I was blissfully unaware that disaster was looming, and thrilled
with the way everything was working out.
After all, I had made it through my sophomore year with de-
cent grades— including a passing grade in Chemistry, which was
in itself a minor miracle. (I’d been against Chemistry since the
fi rst class, when I noticed the safety station at the back, complete
with chemical shower and eye- wash station. These things didn’t
seem to be necessary in Algebra.) School was over for the year,
and the whole summer was stretched out in front of me. I had a
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wonderful best friend. And most important of all, I had an amaz-
ing boyfriend. Everything was perfect.
Well, except for the fact that I’d made the very grave mistake
of wearing, to Target, a red tank and khaki skirt. I’d forgotten
that all the employees there wear red shirts and khakis. And so
every few minutes people were coming up to me and asking where
they could fi nd the toothpaste, because they thought I worked
there.
“Okay!” I said, tracing my fi nger down the items on the list.
“Let’s get started.” I smiled across the aisle at Teddy Callaway, my
boyfriend. Of all the things that were currently good in my life,
Teddy was number one. We had started dating my second week of
ninth grade at Putnam High School and had been together for
the past two years. Teddy was older— eighteen to my sixteen—
and would be starting his se nior year in the fall. He’d been sopho-
more
and
ju nior class president, and had been elected se nior
class president for the coming year. He was consistently being
featured on the front page of the local paper, the
Putnam Post,
looking serious and humble, as a result of all the ser vice groups
he had started and all the good he was always doing for the com-
munity. And Teddy’s altruism was actually the reason we were at
Target together. We were leaving in a week to do volunteer work
in Colombia, and we needed supplies.
Teddy swallowed hard, cleared his throat, and said, “Gemma?”
“Yes?” I asked as I looked down at the list and tried not to
wince. When Teddy had fi rst told me about this volunteering pro-
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gardens and maybe teaching children to sing, until my best friend,
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Sophie Curtis, pointed out that I was actually thinking of
The
Sound of Music
. I hadn’t realized until I got the application forms
that this program involved things like building houses and dig-
ging latrines. The fi ve- page list of supplies included items like
work gloves and fi rst- aid kits (extra gauze) and antimalarial pills.
But I wasn’t going to let that dissuade me. I had been on board
to go on this trip ever since Teddy told me about HELPP (Humani-
tarian Education Learning through Progressive Programs).
Well, technically, I had been on board once it was clear he was
going with or without me. My parents had only agreed to let me
go after I’d shown them the literature, proving that there would
be supervision and that guys and girls stayed in separate cab-
ins. I needed them to agree, because it seemed there were actu-
ally a lot of costs involved with volunteering. We’d had to pay for
the program, something my dad hadn’t been too thrilled about.
He said that if I really wanted to learn about construction, he
would happily let me work on the addition to his house, and for
free.
But I pressed hard to be able to go, because this way Teddy
and I wouldn’t have to spend three weeks apart, even if we were
staying in separate cabins and digging separate latrines. We hadn’t
been apart for that long since we got together, and I didn’t see
any reason for us to start now.
“Okay, we need gauze,” I said, grabbing some from the shelf
and dropping it into my basket. “And . . .”
“Gemma,” Teddy said again, a little more loudly this time. I
looked down at the list and saw what he must have been pointing
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would need gauze for. I glanced over at Teddy and noticed that he
looked a little pale.
“Are you okay?” I asked as I looked for the Band- Aids. In the
two years we’d been together, I’d learned to read him really well,
and I could see that he had something on his mind. Possibly he’d
been wondering the same thing about the gauze I had. After all,
we were usually on the same wavelength.
And, okay, if we sometimes weren’t on
exactly
the same wave-
length, I let him think that we were.
It was actually how we met. I’d spent the first week of my
high school experience wandering the halls, bewildered, going
to the wrong classes in the wrong classrooms, sometimes not re-
alizing this until the class was over. My sense of direction had
never been great, and Putnam High, with two thousand students,
was huge compared to my middle school. I had been getting
through the fi rst week by basically clinging to Sophie like a bi-
valve. One day after school, I’d somehow gotten lost in the war-
ren of classrooms and was just looking for a quiet one to duck
into so that I could text Sophie and see if she could come and fi nd
me. It wasn’t until I’d shut the door that I realized I wasn’t alone.
“Hi,” a voice from the front of the room said. I blinked, sur-
prised, as a guy who looked older than me hopped off the desk he
was sitting on and walked forward. “Are you here for the Warbler
meeting?”
I just stared at him. The guy standing before me was incre-
dibly cute, with bright blue eyes and blond hair that was a touch
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confi dence and authority about him that I felt a little dazed.
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When I realized he was waiting patiently for an answer, I nod-
ded, even though I had no idea what he was talking about. “Yes,”
I said, hoping he would tell me what this meant. I was hoping the
Warblers wasn’t some kind of a cappella group, as I had a terrible
singing voice. But this was the most dazzling guy I had encoun-
tered in a while, and I would have said anything to get to stay in
his presence. “I am.”
“Great,” he said, nodding. “I’m so glad you care about this. Too
many people at this school are apathetic.”
“I know,” I said fervently, as though I hadn’t been one of those
people until a few seconds ago. “But it’s something I’ve always
been committed to.”
He looked at me appraisingly for a moment, and his smile wid-
ened. “It’s nice to meet you,” he said. “I’m Teddy.”
I later found out that the Warblers was a group dedicated to
protecting the environment of the Marsh Warbler, a rare species
of bird that wasn’t even found in Connecticut. But that didn’t mat-
ter, because after a while I really did come to care about the Marsh
Warbler, even if I also secretly thought it was kind of ugly. Be-
cause as far as I was concerned, it had brought me and Teddy
together, and so I would always have a soft spot for it.
Teddy and I became a couple almost immediately after that.
And overnight, I went from being an anonymous freshman
accidentally attending the wrong classes to Teddy Callaway’s girl-
friend. I was no longer just Gemma Tucker, not particularly special