Cloudy with a Chance of Boys (18 page)

BOOK: Cloudy with a Chance of Boys
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Me:
So, this is like that, only in reverse.
Mr. Cannon:
I couldn’t be more pleased. This will be a good challenge for you, Alex. And the rest of us can learn a thing or two from Alex. Alex is quite the accomplished swordswoman. Or should I say swords
man.
Jayden:
(Looks pleased. Turns to Scott.)
Romeo
kills
Tybalt, you know. So, you’re going to have to kill her.
Scott:
(Turns to Alex.)
Wait . . . I have to kill you? Oh, yeah, after you kill Mercutio, I kill you.
Me:
Don’t worry. I’m good at dying.
Mr. Cannon:
Okay, people. Let’s have Romeo and Juliet, stage left, starting with “I would I were thy bird.” Alex, why don’t you work with Mercutio while they finish up. Then you and Romeo can practice some swashbuckling.

 

 

LATER THAT AFTERNOON, SWORD-FIGHTING LESSON WITH ROMEO.
Me:
Okay, we’ll start out using these wrapping-paper tubes for swords.
(Hands him a long cardboard tube.)
Scott:
Can’t we just start out with French fries?
(Grabs French fry from grease-stained white bag and waves it at Alex.)
On guard!
Me:
Okay, you are seriously weird.
(Takes bite.)
Yum! Okay, no more fries for you. Here’s your cardboard tube.
Scott:
Yeah, because I wouldn’t want to hurt you. I swashbuckle a mean sword, you know.
Me:
Very funny. Okay, first, we take position. Stand facing me with your feet wide apart and bend your knees.
Scott:
Like this?
Me:
Yes, except don’t bend your knees so much. You look like a first grader with a stomachache.
Scott:
Is this where I get to kill you?
Me:
(Laughs.)
Not if I kill you first.
Scott:
So what are we, like, frenemies?
Me:
(Hands on hips.)
Pay attention! Okay, now stand back a little. The tip of your sword should be about twelve inches from my belly button. Hold the sword in your right hand and point it to your left, at my side, right about here, at my waist. Never point the sword directly
at
the other person.
Scott:
How can I kill you if I can’t point the sword at you?
Me:
(Teases.)
For now, I’ll just be happy if you don’t poke my eyes out.
Scott:
Yeah, those are great eyes. To have, I mean. I’m sure you want to keep them both.
Me:
Okay, now watch me first. Raise your right arm, move it clockwise up and over your head, and our swords meet in the middle. Try it.
Scott:
Like this?
Me:
Great! When the tips of our swords are touching, it’s called the top hat position. Now, lower your right arm to your left again and bring the swords together again at our feet.
Scott:
How about this?
Me:
Okay, but try not to take my arm off, either.
Scott:
Sorry.
Me:
Try again. By yourself this time. I’ll be . . . stage left. As in far away.
Scott:
Ha, ha. Seriously, I can do this. I promise not to poke your green eyes out.
Me:
Maybe I should wear protective headgear. Like, a face helmet?
Scott:
(Glides tube through air, over head, and down to feet.)
Me:
That was great. Perfect. Now, we both go at the same time. Top hat position first, then down to our feet. Think of it like a dance.
Scott:
Whoa, whoa, wait a second here. You had to say “dance”? Forget it. I’m a horrible dancer.
Me:
No way. You danced in
Hairspray,
and you were fine.
Scott:
You remember that? We were, like, seven. All I had to do, pretty much, was stand on some lady’s feet and she twirled me around.
Me:
Well, don’t think your big clown feet are coming anywhere near my toes. C’mon. It just takes practice. Try.
Scott:
(Raises sword to top hat position, back down to feet.)
Me:
Perfect! See? Was that so bad?
Scott:
You’re a good teacher.
Me:
Thanks. Now we’re going to start downstage and move upstage. Just remember, keep a safe distance from me, and never let your sword cross the other person’s face. Your moves should be
around
me, not at me. Pretend you have an invisible force field around you.
Scott:
So, I’m like Superman or Green Lantern or something?
Me:
(Laughs.)
You know what I mean.
Scott:
Okay, no, seriously, I think I got it. Wow. That wasn’t bad. I have to say I was really dreading this part.
Me:
One more thing. Tomorrow we add footwork.
Scott:
Footwork?
(Slaps head.)
Aw, you mean dancing! Are you sure I can’t just stand on your feet or something?
Me:
Yeah, right. We’re mortal enemies. You hate me.
Scott:
That’s gonna be hard, but I’ll try to remember.
(Looks at floor.)
Me:
Then I’ll teach you the lunge, then we’ll add the kill to the high-low sequence.
Scott:
Is that a promise?
Me:
Okay, you ready?
Scott:
Ready.
(Clunking of paper tubes ensues.)
Me:
Good! That’s good!
Scott:
(Holds his side in pain.)
Oh, no!
Me:
What?
Scott:
Um, I hate to say anything, but you just stabbed me in the force field.
Me:
Romeo, thou art a villain.

Monday. I dreaded the day I would have to go back to school and face Wire Rims, but it came anyway, just as I predicted. Whoever invented Mondays should get sent to permanent detention.

When I got to school, I didn’t see any sign of Wire Rims in the halls. Phew. I was safe until Earth Science.

I made it through morning recess. Still no sign of Wire Rims. But then it was time for Earth Science, and I knew I couldn’t put it off any longer.

“What am I going to do?” I asked Olivia, biting and ripping half the nail off my finger. “I mean, I freaked and just left him there. Just thinking of having to talk to him makes me want to throw up.”

“Well, you
have
to talk to him.”

“Easy for you to say.”

“Look. I don’t see why you can’t just like him. I mean, it’s obvious he likes you. And you do like him, right?”

“How many times do I have to tell you? Not like that.”

“Well, I like him.”

“Then
you
kiss him.”

“Gross. I don’t like him that way.”

“Hello! Me either!”

“So, tell him you hate his guts. Tell him not to come near you again.”

“It’s not like that.”

“Stevie, you’re driving me bonkers, you know that?”

I tried to tell myself it was going to be fine. But my stomach felt like I’d just stepped off the Tilt-A-Whirl.

Be strong,
I willed myself.
You can do this. You recited a poem in front of the entire Language Arts class. You sang in front of 457 people
onstage
. You entered a cupcake contest that was almost all grown-ups.

When I got to Earth Science, I couldn’t help looking directly at the second-to-last chair in the fourth row. Empty. He wasn’t even here!

I took my seat in the back. Maybe I’d been all worried for nothing. Maybe he hadn’t even come to school today. I felt my stomach unclench. I could breathe again.

“Are you looking for that kid Owen?” said the girl next to me.

“Yeah, um, we’re partners for the weather experiment thingie we’re doing.”

“It’s weird — I knew he was in this class, but I saw him just now heading into the auditorium.”

“The auditorium? But . . . that’s where it flooded. It’s all closed down. Nobody’s supposed to go in there for, like, a month.”

“Maybe he’s signing up for Drama Club.” She shrugged.

“Now? He’s already late. Mr. Petry’s going to give him det —”

That’s when it hit me. Wire Rims was cutting class!
He
was avoiding me, not the other way around. He must hate my guts for freaking out and running away like that. I was mean to him. What if he never wanted to talk to me again?

I could hardly concentrate all morning. In Earth Science, I made up some lame excuse about why I didn’t have our Weather Lab project. And in Language Arts, Ms. Carter-Dunne passed back our persuasive essays. It reminded me of that first day with Wire Rims, when I had to spend detention with him in this very room. It seemed like months ago.

My mind wandered. I glanced back at the magnetic poetry board behind me. Tons of new similes were spelled out all over the board.

Gossamer as grasshopper wing
Sad as he-loves-me-not daisy
Groovy as moon in June

What was it he’d called me that day with the Seventies magnets?
Cellular? Stellular!

At the very bottom of the board, two words caught my eye.
Hey Sunshine.
Just like that day we’d spelled out silly messages to each other. Was this some kind of secret message Wire Rims had left for me? Wanted me to see? Or just a coincidence?

Hey Sunshine
Dark Cloud over me
Sorry I M a Cheese Weasel

Maybe Wire Rims wasn’t so mad after all. Suddenly, I couldn’t wait for class to be over.

As soon as the bell rang, I headed out the door — not to lunch, where I was supposed to be, but all the way to the other end of the building. I ducked under the yellow
CAUTION
tape and pulled open the door of the auditorium.

The carpet had been ripped up and peeled back in places, and giant fans hummed, working to dry out the whole place. The lights were off, and it was spooky dark except for a crack of light leaking out from beneath the curtain onstage. I raced down the aisle, leapfrogging over heaps of old carpet, and climbed up the stairs to the stage, searching for the opening in the big velvet curtain.

There he was, all alone, hunched against the back wall, dwarfed by towers of upside-down chairs, scaffolding, a broken-down castle from
Once Upon a Mattress,
and a scarred piano. He had earphones on and was scribbling in a spiral notebook in his lap. An old-fashioned desk lamp plugged in beside him cast a small halo of light.

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