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Authors: Carrie Secor

Tell (8 page)

BOOK: Tell
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Neil shook his head.  He was staring at her overtly.  “She wore that tank top a couple weeks ago and it’s definitely tighter in the chestal area.”

Andy was ready for a change in topic.  “Guess what I’m doing on Friday night.”

“What?” asked Lucas.  Neil did not respond; his eyes were still trained on Kristy.

“I’m going to that party after the game.”

“Who’s having a party?”

“No, the
post-game
party.”

Neil finally looked at Andy.  “How did you manage that?”

“Melody asked me to go.”

“How did
Melody
manage that?” Neil asked.

Andy shrugged.  “I guess Susan invited her.”

“So now we’re using Susan for invites to the post-game parties?” Lucas wanted to know.

“Can you suggest a better use for her?”  Without waiting for a response, Andy went on, “I’m hoping Amanda will be there.  So I can, you know… talk to her or something.”

Lucas did not reply right away.  He stared down at his baritone, absently tightening and loosening one of his valves.  Neil had lost interest and was craning his neck to get a better view of Kristy again.  “You sure that’s a good idea?” Lucas finally asked quietly.

“What, talking to her?”

“Talking to her when you’re going there with Melody,” Lucas answered, finally meeting Andy’s eyes.

Andy furrowed his brow.  “What do you mean?”

“I mean, if you’re going to a party with one girl, you shouldn’t be worrying about making time with another girl.  It’s kind of messed up.”

“Lucas, I’m going to the party with
Melody
.  It’s not like it’s a date.  She probably just invited me so she didn’t have to hang out with Susan all night.”

“If that’s the case, it’s still messed up to ditch her to hang out with Amanda.”

“I seriously think you’re making too big of a deal about this.”

Lucas shrugged.  “Whatever.”

Andy rolled his shoulders, feeling the ache in his back.  “The hell with this.”  He detached his saxophone from its strap and breathed a sigh of relief as he set it down in the grass.  “Ah, that’s better.”

The PA system on the field crackled to life.  “Okay, gang,” Mr. Bell’s voice rang over the field, “take this back a set and run it to here.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Seven

 

Felicia stood outside the dance studio waiting for Brian’s Shadow to appear on the street.  She reached in her pocket and pulled out her cell phone to check the time.  It was 8:23.  He was usually here by now.

She heard the door slam behind her and turned to look over her shoulder.  Elliot had emerged, her gym bag slung over her shoulder.  Felicia had learned that it took her forever to get changed after rehearsal.  On Tuesday, when Felicia had left the studio to meet Brian downstairs, Elliot had barely gotten her shoes off.  The fact that Elliot was done changing and Felicia was still standing there waiting was unsettling.

“Do you need a ride?” Elliot asked her.

“Brian is supposed to pick me up,” Felicia answered, leaning over the curb slightly to peer down the street.

“I’ll wait with you,” Elliot offered.

“You don’t have to.”

“Well, it’s getting dark.  Besides, now I finally get the chance to meet Brian.”

Felicia could not help laughing.  “I love how you say ‘finally’ as if we’ve known each other for months and he’s like this big secret I’ve been keeping from you.”

“He kind of is,” Elliot replied teasingly.  “I mean, I don’t know that much about him.  I don’t even know if you guys are boning.”

Felicia was silent.

“I’m sorry,” Elliot said after a moment.  “I wasn’t… I was just saying.”

“It’s okay,” Felicia responded immediately.  After a pause, she stated, “We’re not.”

“You don’t have to tell me.”

“No, it’s fine.  Brian and I aren’t having sex.”  She looked the other direction down the street.  “We do other stuff.  And to tell you the truth, he’s kind of been pestering me to have sex with him since he’s leaving for college so soon, but I’m not sure what I’m going to do yet.”  Felicia kept staring down the street, not wanting to look at Elliot.  She was not exactly sure what had come over her, but she realized she had absolutely no qualms with talking to Elliot about this.  She found that strange, because every time she thought about talking to Cadie about it, she felt uncomfortable.  Standing here with Elliot in the street, the last thing she felt was uncomfortable.  She was seeking advice and validation.  More importantly, she just wanted to tell
someone
.

“Are you just not ready to do it yet?” Elliot asked.

“See, that’s the thing.  How are you supposed to know if you’re ready?  Am I going to wake up one day and just know that I’m ready to start having sex?”

“Probably not.”

“We never really had problems in our relationship until he started bringing it up all the time.  I’m nervous about what’s going to happen.  Sex changes everything, right?”  She looked at Elliot, who shrugged.

“Everything’s going to be changing anyway.  You shouldn’t let that be a factor in your decision.”

Felicia looked down at her folded arms.  “I guess.”

“I mean, don’t let me tell you what to do.  If you don’t want to have sex, don’t do it.  Who cares that he’s leaving for college?”

“How do I know if I want to have sex with him?” Felicia asked.

Elliot looked surprised.  “You’ll know,” she responded.  “You may not know if you’re ready to do it, but you’ll definitely know if you want to or not.”

Before Felicia could respond, a pair of headlights appeared at the end of the street.  “That’s him,” she said quietly to Elliot.  She waved her hand at the car.  She felt relieved, and she told herself that was simply because she had started to worry about him being so late.  He pulled up to the curb in front of them, and Felicia and Elliot stepped back.

Felicia leaned down to the passenger side window and knocked on it.  Brian looked at her quizzically and shrugged.  She made a face and knocked on the window again.

He rolled the window down.  “The door’s unlocked.”

“I know that,” Felicia said impatiently.  “I wanted you to meet my friend, Elliot.  She just moved here.”

Elliot leaned over to stick her head in the window next to Felicia’s.  “Hello,” Elliot said brightly.  Felicia was reminded of prostitutes trying to get a date from the street and wished Brian would have just gotten out of the car.

“Hey,” Brian greeted her.  “Did you need a ride?”

“Oh, no, thanks,” Elliot responded.  “I was just waiting with Felicia.”

Brian simply nodded.

Felicia felt the awkwardness of the moment creep up on her, so she stood and backed away from the car, and Elliot followed suit.  “Well, I guess I’ll see you tomorrow,” Elliot said.  She turned and headed to the lot behind the studio where her car was parked.

“Yeah.  See you later.”  Felicia watched her walk away for a moment before getting in the car and slamming the door.  Brian immediately pulled away from the curb and sped off down the street.  She was tempted to say something to him; she felt like somehow he had been rude to Elliot.  When she thought about it, however, she could not pinpoint exactly what he had said or done that had been rude.  Instead, she remained silent.

She felt his hand slip over hers, and they laced their fingers together.  He smiled at her.  “So how was rehearsal?” he asked, and she felt herself smile.

“Pretty good,” she answered.  “It wasn’t anything too exciting.”

The two of them fell silent then, and Felicia found herself staring out the window watching the farms and houses pass by, enjoying the weight of Brian’s hand against hers.  She played back the conversation that she had had with Elliot on the curb.  Elliot made it seem so simple, but the truth was, Felicia really did not know whether or not she wanted to have sex with Brian.  She felt flustered simply thinking about it.  However, she did not think that she was going to figure it out sitting in his car, staring out the window.

She squeezed his hand, and he squeezed back.  Her eyes were still trained on the scenery passing by.  “Brian?” she said, breaking the silence.

“Yeah?”

Felicia took a deep breath.  “I think I’m ready.”

 

The school was a little abuzz the next day, as it usually was on a Friday before a football game.  Cadie had never paid much attention to the football team’s progress; she attended the games in order to see her sister’s performance and cheered for the team where appropriate, but never grew emotionally attached to the outcome of the game.  But that morning on the ride to school, Stacy and Susan had talked about it the entire ride, and Cadie had found herself getting somewhat excited about that evening’s game.

Cadie knew school spirit levels were going to be high when she noticed that Stacy was wearing a blue and gold t-shirt and jeans instead of her usual eighties garb.  “Wow, you look like you came from this century,” Cadie remarked.  They were getting out of the car in the school’s parking lot.

“I have to wear this shirt the day of the game,” Stacy replied, slamming the car door.

Cadie nodded in the direction of Melody and Susan, who were walking together toward school.  Aside from noticing that Melody had been unusually quiet the entire ride, Cadie also noticed that Susan’s shirt, while also a spirited blue and gold, was different than Stacy’s.  “Susan’s not wearing one,” Cadie pointed out.

“Oh, no,” Stacy answered.  “It’s not a cheerleader thing; it’s a girlfriend thing.”

“A girlfriend thing?” Cadie repeated, politely incredulous.

“Yeah.”  She shook her head slightly.  “All the guys on the football team have these shirts and their girlfriends always wear them the day of the game for good luck.”  She saw the look on Cadie’s face and said, “I know it’s kind of stupid, but it’s a tradition.  And I don’t mind doing it.”

“I thought it looked kind of big on you.”

“Will got it in
tenth grade
and it’s
still
big on me.  That kid is a beast.”

The two of them waited for a bus to pass, then crossed the parking lot toward the school.  “I’m stopping by your house tonight,” Cadie said.

“Oh, good!  You decided to come to the party?”

“I’ll make an appearance,” Cadie answered, “but I’m really only going to drop off Melody.  For whatever reason, she’s going to this party with Andy.”

“Oh,
God.
  How did they even find out about it?”

“I guess Susan invited them.”

“I love her,” Stacy announced sarcastically.

“You and me both,” Cadie said.

“So, you’ll be at the party then, at least for a little while.”

“Just to drop them off and pick them up.  Melody’s curfew is midnight.”

Stacy shrugged.  “You might as well stay then.  The game won’t be over until ten.  The party won’t get going until ten-thirty at the earliest.  It’d be stupid to drop them off and turn around and come back less than an hour and a half later.”

“You don’t live on Saturn.  It’s like a seven minute drive.”

“Cadie, come on.  What other plans do you have for tonight?”

Cadie was silent for a moment.  She really did not have anything else on her agenda for that evening, other than calculus, but that seemed a lame excuse, even by her own standards.  She would not have anyone else with whom to spend that evening; Felicia was spending the evening out with Brian while her parents would be at the football game supporting Shane.  Otherwise, her weekend plans looked pretty bleak, other than the brief trip to the mall she was planning with Felicia tomorrow.  “I might be tired after the game,” Cadie said lamely.

“You’re driving Melody and Andy there anyway,” Stacy pointed out shrewdly.

Cadie was silent again.

“Cadie, come
on.
  What do you honestly think is going to happen to you?  You’re going to be at my
house
.”

She had a point.  “We’ll see,” Cadie finally relented.

“That’s a yes, isn’t it?”

“It’s a ‘we’ll see’,” Cadie responded, though she was smiling.

 

Melody and Susan sat at the end of a long table in the cafeteria, with a gap of several chairs separating them from the group with whom they shared the table.  On the first day of school, Susan had made a point of saying how she would rather sit with Melody than sit with a group of cheerleaders, even though they would probably “give her hell” for not sitting with them at lunch.  When Melody suggested that they
both
sit with the cheerleaders, Susan had acted like the suggestion was ridiculous, as if the cheerleaders would even give Melody a second glance if she were not friends with Susan.  The truth was, school had been in session for several days now, and Melody had yet to see the other cheerleaders look in their direction at all.  She was not entirely sure they were aware of Susan’s existence.

Susan brought her lunch every day, though all that it ever contained was what Melody would call rabbit food.  Today she withdrew a container of yogurt and a Ziploc bag of celery and carrot sticks from her brown paper bag.  She had purchased an iced tea from the cafeteria.

Melody had been too nervous to buy an entire lunch.  She bought a carton of lemonade and a bag of white cheddar popcorn, which she started to eat very slowly.

Susan nodded at Melody’s meager lunch.  “You should eat more,” she said.

“Listen to the girl with the celery,” Melody responded, her mouth full of popcorn.  She wiped her right hand clean on her napkin.

“I have to stay in shape,” Susan answered moodily.  “I’m a flyer.”

Melody had no reply to that.  “I’m just nervous about tonight,” she explained to Susan.

“About going to the party?  Don’t worry about it.  I invited you, so it’s okay.”

“No, I’m nervous about going with Andy,” Melody whispered, pointedly ignoring Susan’s rude comment.

“Oh, right.”  Susan started nibbling on a carrot stick.  Melody noticed her nose did move a little bit like a rabbit’s.  “Well, are you going to say anything to him?”

“Anything about what?” Melody asked.

“Anything like, ‘Hey, Andy, I like you’?”

Melody shook her head fiercely.  “That was
not
in the plan.”

Susan snorted.  “So all he knows is that you guys are going to this party together, and you’re not planning on saying anything to him that would make him think that you’re more than friends.”

“That is correct.”

Susan rolled her eyes.  “So what’s making you nervous?  It’s just going to be a normal night.”

“It doesn’t feel like it.  It feels like it’s a date.”

“Does
he
feel like it feels like a date?”

Melody nervously rapped her fingers on the table.  “I don’t know.”

Susan ate some of her yogurt.  “I think you should tell him that you like him.”

Melody took a deep breath and let it out slowly.  “I don’t think I’m ready for that yet.”

Susan pointed her spoon at Melody defiantly.  “You said you were going to ask him to this party to start progressing your relationship.  But if he doesn’t realize that your relationship is moving forward, then it’s not really progress.  If you don’t say something to him tonight about it, he’s not going to get it because he’s an idiot. 
You
have to make the first move.”

BOOK: Tell
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