Read Rules Of Attraction Online
Authors: Simone Elkeles
sit in front, next to her. I’ve never lived in a place where you’re not
judged by the color of your skin or your parents’ bank accounts, so I’m
wary of Madison’s immediate interest in me. Hell, I put on the charm
for Kiara before Heavy Shevy’s class and she didn’t even bat an eyelash
or attempt to loosen those pursed lips. All I got was a disgusted gasp.
Although yesterday she invited me over for cookies. Orange-marmalade
cookies. Who the hell invites someone over for orangemarmalade
cookies? The funniest part about it was that I think she was serious.
Today she walked me from class to class without saying a damn word to
me. I even tried to goad her into talkin’ by making fun of her, but she
refused to take the bait. Madison punches in the address to
McConnell’s on her GPS.
“So, Carlos,” Lacey says, leaning between the seats as Madison
starts driving. She taps me on the shoulder as if I didn’t hear her. “Is
it true you got expelled from your last school for beating someone up?”
I’ve only been in school three days, and already people are talkin’.
“Actually it was three guys and a pit bull,” I joke, but I think she takes
me seriously because her mouth opens in shock.
“Wow!” She taps me again. “They allow dogs in school in Mexico?”
Lacey is dumber than a beanless burrito. “Oh, yeah. Pit bulls and
Chihuahuas only, though.”
“Wouldn’t it be great if I could bring Puddles to school!” She taps
me on the shoulder again. I’m tempted to tap her back a ton of times so
she knows how annoying it is. “Puddles is my Labradoodle.”
What the hell is a Labradoodle? whatever it is, I bet my cousin
Lana’s pit bull could eat Puddles the Labradoodle for lunch.
“So is your brother the guy who brought you to school on Monday
when you registered?” Madison asks.
“Yeah,” I answer as we pull into the parking lot of the auto body.
“My friend Gina told me she saw the two of you in the office. Were
your parents out of town?”
“I live with my brother. The rest of my family is back in Mexico.”
No need to go into my whole life story about how my father died in a
drug deal when I was four and how mi'amá practically kicked me out
and shipped me here.
Madison looks shocked. “You live with your brother? No parents?”
“No parents.”
“You’re so lucky,” Lacey says. “My parents are around all the time,
and my sister is a complete psycho, but I escape to Madison’s most
days because she’s an only child and her p’s are never home.”
Madison is looking in her rearview mirror. At the mention of her
parents, she stills for the slightest moment before smiling again.
“They’re always traveling,” she explains while reapplying more of that
shiny lip gloss. “But I like it, because I can do whatever I want with
whoever I want without any rules.”
Considering my life has been full of people tryin’ to rule it, her life
sounds bueno to me.
“Omigod, you and your brother look like twins,” Lacey says as Alex
approaches the Mustang.
“I don’t see the resemblance,” I tell her as I open the door.
Madison and Lacey get out, too. Do they expect an introduction? They
stand in front of me with their flawless pale skin and their makeup
sparkling in the sun. “Thanks for the ride,” I say. They both hug me.
Madison gives me an extra-long squeeze. It’s definitely a sign that
she’s interested.
I can tell Alex isn’t exactly sure what I’m doin’ with these two
chicks. I drape my arms around Madison’s and Lacey’s shoulders. “Hey,
Alex, this is Madison and Lacey. The two hottest chicks at Flatiron
High.”
Both girls nod at Alex and flash their bright smiles. They like the
compliment, although I think they know they’re smokin’ and don’t need
to be reminded.
“Thanks for givin’ my brother a ride,” Alex says, then turns around
and heads back inside. After the girls drive off, I follow him into the
shop and find him working on the front bumper cover of an SUV that’s
obviously been in an accident.
“You the only one here?” I ask.
“Yeah. Help me remove this thing,” he says as he tosses me a
Phillips. Alex and I used to work on cars together at my cousin
Enrique’s auto-body shop. It was one of the few things we did when we
were actually tryin’ to stay out of trouble. My brother and cousin
taught me everythin’ they knew about cars, and whatever they didn’t
teach me I figured out on my own when I took apart junkers in the
back of the shop. I get under the hood of the SUV and work on the
inside screws. The sound of metal clinking on metal echoes through the
shop and for a second I feel like we’re back in Chicago at Enrique’s.
“Nice girls,” my brother says sarcastically as we work side by side.
“Yeah, I know. I was thinkin’ about askin’ both of them to
Homecoming.” I shove the Phillips in my back pocket. “Oh, and before I
forget to tell you, Kiara invited me over for cookies yesterday.”
“Why didn’t you go?”
“Besides the fact that I didn’t want to, she uninvited me.”
Alex turns his focus from the bumper to me. “Please tell me you
weren’t a complete pendejo to her.”
“I just had a little fun, that’s all. Next time you want to arrange an
escort for me, make sure it’s one who doesn’t wear oversized shirts
with stupid sayings on them. Kiara reminds me of a dude I knew back in
Chicago, Alex. I’m not even sure she’s female.”
“You want me to p-p-prove it?” my ex–peer guide’s voice echoes
from the doorway. Oh, hell.
SIX :
Kiara
“Yeah,” Carlos says, challenge and amusement written all over his
face. “Prove it.”
Alex holds up a hand. “No. Don’t.” He shoves Carlos against the car
and mutters something in Spanish. Carlos mutters something back. I
have no clue what they’re saying, but neither sounds happy.
I’m not too happy either. I can’t believe I just stuttered. I’m so
pissed at myself for letting Carlos get me so emotional I stumbled over
my words. That means he has power over me, and that fact makes me
angrier. I can’t wait until Friday, when Operation Cookie will finally go
into effect. I have to wait until the cookies are good and stale in order
for it to work right. At least he won’t be expecting it.
A frustrated Alex stomps away from Carlos and pulls a box from
behind the cashier’s desk. “I tested your radio, and I think a spring is
missin’. I don’t think it’s gonna work, but I’d like to give it a try. Give
me your keys and I’ll pull your car in.” He turns to Carlos. “Don’t say a
word while I’m gone.”
The second after Alex leaves, Carlos says, “So if you still want to
prove you’re not a dude, I’m game.”
“Does being a jerk make you feel better about yourself?” I say.
“No. But pissin’ off my brother does. And pissin’ you off pisses my
brother off. Sorry you’re the one caught in the crossfire.”
“Keep me out of it.”
“Not likely to happen any time soon.” Carlos crouches in front of
the car they were working on and pulls on the bumper cover.
“You need to unhook the clips first,” I tell him, pleased to prove
that I know more about cars than he does. “It won’t come off until you
unhook the clips.”
“You talkin’ bras or bumpers?” he asks, then flashes me a cocky
grin. “’Cause I’m an expert at unhooking both.”
I shouldn’t have done it. It was immature. It was that sexy and
stupid comment Carlos made. That, combined with him making fun of
the way I say ‘marmalade,’ was what pushed me to make him eat his
words.
It’s Friday. Tuck and I came to school early this morning to rig
Carlos’s locker. Tuesday after school Tuck and I made over a hundred
double-chocolate chip cookies. When they cooled off, we glued a small
but powerful magnet to the back of each one. Now they’re stale cookie
magnets. When Carlos opens his locker this morning, the inside is going
to be decorated with a hundred little cookie magnets.
When he tries to pull each magnet off, the cookie will break into
pieces and crumble in his hand. I got superstrong little magnets the
size of a dime. It’ll be messy, that’s for sure. So he’ll have two options:
keep the magnet cookies stuck inside his locker, or take them off one
by one and be showered with little broken cookie pieces.
“Remind me never to get in a fight with you,” Tuck says as he acts
as a lookout. School won’t start for another forty-five minutes, so
there are only a few people passing in the hallway. I open Carlos’s
locker using the combination that was written on top of his schedule,
which Mr. House gave to me. I feel guilty, but not guilty enough not to
do it. I place a few cookies, then look at Tuck. He’s on the lookout for
Carlos or anyone else who might get suspicious. Each time I place a
cookie, the clink of the magnet against metal makes Tuck laugh. Clink.
Clink. Clink. Clink. Clink. Clink.
“He’s going to freak,” Tuck says. “He’ll know it was you, you know.
When you punk someone, the goal is to do it anonymously so you don’t
get caught.”
“Too late now.” I attach more magnet cookies, but wonder how I’m
going to get all one hundred of them inside. I’m placing them on the
top, back, inside door, sides . . . I’m running out of space, but I’m almost
done. It looks like the inside of his locker has brown measles. I reach
into the bag. “Only one left.”
Tuck peeks his head inside. “This could be one of the best pranks
ever at Flatiron High, Kiara. You could go down in the history books. I’m
proud of you. Put the last one on the outside, right in the middle.”
“Good idea.” I close his locker before anyone catches us, attach the
last cookie, then check my watch. Homeroom starts in twenty minutes.
“Now we wait.”
Tuck looks down the hallway. “People are coming. Shouldn’t we
hide?”
“Yeah, but I have to see his reaction,” I say. “Let’s hide in Mrs.
Hadden’s room.”
Five minutes later, as Tuck and I peek through the square window
in the door, Carlos comes walking down the hall.
“There he is,” I whisper. My heart is beating furiously in my chest.
His eyebrows furrow when he reaches his locker and sees a big brown
cookie on it. He looks left and right, obviously looking for any sign of
who did it. When he pulls the cookie off, it crumbles in his hand but
leaves the magnet stuck to his locker.
“What’s his reaction?” I ask Tuck, who’s taller and has a better
view.
“He’s smiling. And shaking his head. Now he’s tossing the crumbled
cookie in the garbage.”
Carlos won’t be smiling when he opens his locker to find ninety-nine
more cookie magnets.
“I’m going out there,” I tell Tuck. I emerge from the safety of
Mrs. Hadden’s room and walk to my locker as if nothing is out of the
ordinary.
“Hey,” I say to Carlos as he eyes his open locker with all the
cookies.
“I’ll give you an A+ for originality and execution,” he says.
“Does it bother you I get good grades in everything, even pranks?”
“Yes.” He cocks a brow. “I’m impressed. I’m pissed off, but
impressed.” He closes his locker, the ninety-nine cookies still attached
to the inside. As if the cookies don’t exist, we walk side by side to his
first-period class.
I can’t help but smile while we walk down the hall. He shakes his
head a few times, as if he can’t believe what I did.
“Truce?” I ask.
“No way. You may have won this battle, but this war, chica, is far
from over.”
SEVEN :
Carlos
I can’t get rid of the cookie smell. It’s on my hands, it’s in my books
. . . hell, it’s even in my backpack. I tried taking a few of them off my
locker, but it was such a mess I gave up. I’ll keep ’em in until they get
really moldy . . . then I’ll collect all the crumbs and shove them into
Kiara’s locker. Or better yet, superglue them to the inside.
I have to get my mind off cookies and Kiara. Nothing beats
mi'amá’s cookin’, but as soon as I get home from school today I take
whatever I can find in Alex’s apartment and attempt to make us an
authentic Mexican meal. It’ll get me to stop thinking about those damn
doublechocolate chip cookies. That, combined with the fact that I’ve
been here almost a week and have yet to eat authentic, spicy Mexican
food, is drivin’ me nuts. Alex leans into the pot of stewed meat and
inhales the scent. I can tell just by the expression on his face it
reminds him of home.
“It’s called carne guisada. It’s Mexican.” I say the words slowly as
if he’s never heard of it.
“I know what it is, smart-ass.” He replaces the lid, then sets the
table and goes back to studying.
We sit down to eat an hour later. I watch as my brother inhales his
first serving and takes a second.
“Eat much?”
“Nothin’ as good as this.” Alex licks his fork. “I didn’t know you
could cook.”
“You don’t know a lot of things about me.”
“I used to.”
I push around the food on my plate, suddenly not hungry. “That was
a long time ago.” I keep my eyes focused on my food. I don’t even know