Read The Ashley Project Online
Authors: Melissa de la Cruz
Ashley pouted but didn't push it, and Lauren felt relieved. For a while there, when she and A. A. had bonded over their love for dark chocolate and Lili had complimented her on her shoes, and even Ashley had made a point of sitting next to her, Lauren had felt that maybe they
really liked her. But Ashley's question brought that fantasy crashing down to earth. They were hanging out with her only because Ashley thought she would introduce them to Billy Reddyâa prize Lauren intended to keep dangling just out of reach.
Once Ashley met Billy, Lauren had the distinct impression that Ashley would have no more use for her and would kick her off the top of the social ladder. Besides, what if she took them to his lacrosse game and Billy had no idea who she was? Sure, he'd invited her to come see him play. But maybe he invited anyone he met. He was probably just being nice. She would have to stall their meeting for as long as she could.
“What's Billy's favorite movie?” Lili wanted to know. They had lost interest in the onscreen adventure once their favorite topic of discussion came up.
“Uh . . .
Nightmare Before Christmas
,” Lauren said, because it was Dex's favorite movie.
“Aw. That's so sweet.” Ashley sighed. “Quick Q. Do you think he'd prefer strawberry or mango?”
Lauren shrugged and thought it was safe to say she had no idea. “You guys, you're missing the best part,” she said, motioning to the movie. The girls turned to the screen for one second, registered that the handsome hero
was professing his undying love to the hapless heroine, and quickly turned back to one another.
“Why do you want to know?” asked A. A. “Are you sending Billy a fruit basket?”
“So I know what lip gloss to wear when he kisses me, duh!” Ashley cackled. A. A. laughed, but Lili made a face that showed she thought that was totally gross. Lauren was glad to see that someone else felt just as conflicted about kissing boys as she did. Ashley had said she couldn't imagine being thirteen and never-been-kissed, but Lauren thought she could probably wait at least that long.
“He doesn't have a girlfriend, right, Lauren? You told us he didn't,” Lili said in an almost accusatory tone.
She had told them that, not knowing whether it was true or not, and apparently it was the wrong answerâthe grapevine had it that Billy was dating some Reed Prep freshmanâbut Lauren had thought it was better to say Billy was unattached, so the Ashleys would think they had a chance with him and keep Lauren around for longer.
“No, no girlfriend. I told you he broke up with her,” Lauren said, keeping her fingers crossed behind her back.
“Everything okay in here? Everyone having fun?” asked her mother, popping in again for the hundredth time, her hair now perfectly coiffed. Lauren wished her mom wouldn't act so eager to please.
Like that bit about calling Dex by his full name earlier, something Trudy never did. Her mother was just as nervous about hosting the Ashleys as she was, and Lauren wished she would relax. That was the impossible thing about the Ashleys. Even if you secretly hated them, you still wanted them to like you.
So far, everything seemed to be going well enough. They did seem like they were having fun, and they were impressed by everything so far. At least A. A. and Lili were. It was hard to tell how Ashley felt. Lauren had felt a little left out earlier, when the Ashleys showed up for the day all wearing the same thing. They were like the world's corniest girl band. Why did they all have to match all the time? Lauren was relieved when they took off the coats and sunglasses and she saw they were all wearing different things underneathâAshley in a pale cashmere sweater and wool shorts, Lili in a tunic blouse and roomy oversize cardigan over leggings, and A. A. in a simple black turtleneck and black pants.
“We're going to be landing soon,” she told them,
zapping off the television screen and making an effort to tidy up the discarded candy wrappers, empty chocolate boxes, and half-eaten bags of chips that littered the floor. She noticed that none of the Ashleys offered to lift a finger. Ashley had even put her riding boots on top of Lauren's dad's cherished cherrywood coffee table. Lauren wished she could tell Ashley that no one put their feet up on the table, but she didn't have the courage.
“We're here?” asked Ashley. Lauren noticed her nodding meaningfully to the other two.
“Could you excuse us for a sec?” Lili asked. Lauren watched as the three of them grabbed their Proenza bags and matching Louis Vuitton carryalls and disappeared to the back of the plane. Should she join them? But she wasn't invited. But wasn't it her plane? Lauren felt stymied once again. Every time she thought she had finally cracked the Ashleys' codeâlooking perfect, check, having cool stuff to show off, check, acting like the whole world revolved around you, checkâthey added another clause to the rulebook.
A few minutes later the Ashleys emerged. Gone were the thick sweaters and warm boots. Ashley was in a tank top with an A-line miniskirt and Prada flip-flops, Lili was wearing an airy spaghetti-strap sundress
over a tissue-thin T-shirt and cork mules, and A. A. wore a Lilly Pulitzer polo with Bermuda shorts and Chloé flats. Even their complexions looked differentâthey looked tan.
“Did you guys find a tanning booth back there?” Lauren joked, trying not to feel too excluded. She wished she'd remembered to keep her spray-tan appointment last week. Maintenance on her new look was a lot of work, and she had a hard time keeping up. Already her roots were growing in curlyâthe horror!
“Tan in a can,” explained A. A., showing Lauren the aerosol sunless tanner. “Here, you want some?” she asked, spritzing a thick mist on Lauren's face before she could reply.
Lauren coughed and waved A. A. off, but it was too late. She felt her face turning orange.
“You just can't wear San Francisco clothes in L.A.,” Lili declared as she folded up her bulky clothes. “It's not just a different climate, it's a different style sensibility.” She expertly powdered her cheeks with bronzer to cover up any streaks.
“Totally,” A. A. agreed, stuffing the self-tanner back into her purse. “It's, like, year-round summer. But you can wear your San Francisco clothes in New York.”
“Duh,” said Lili.
“Do you mind if we just leave our things here?” Ashley asked. She gave Lauren the old up-and-down, taking in the belted jumpsuit and the thick-soled boots. “Aren't you going to be hot in that?” she smirked.
Lauren hoped it wasn't going to be one of those eighty-eight-degree SoCal days. She kicked herself for not thinking to bring a change of clothes like they had. Then again, they could have been nice enough to tell her what the plan was.
But that was the thing. The Ashleys weren't nice. They weren't her friends. She'd gotten past the velvet rope at the front of the club, but she had yet to make it inside the VIP room. She wasn't one of them. At least, not yet.
IT WAS ONLY AN HOUR
to Los Angeles on a private plane, but for Ashley, it couldn't end fast enough. She'd had to take a backseat while onboard, since she was a guest on Lauren's plane. It wasn't like she could stop A. A. and Lili from making total fools of themselves, stuffing their faces full of chocolate and chips and oohing and ahhing over everything inside that tacky flying McMansion. Now that they were back on the ground, Ashley felt more like herself again. In command.
“Where are we?” A. A. asked, shielding her eyes from the glare on the tarmac. It was a beautiful, cloudless, blue-sky day. A soft wind whispered through the gently swaying palm trees.
“Santa Monica,” said Lauren, a thin sheen of perspiration on her face already, Ashley was glad to see. “It's the nearest private airport to Beverly Hills.”
“Ladies,” Dex announced, opening the door of an immaculately preserved cherry-red vintage Cadillac convertible that was parked by the airplane.
“Great car,” Lili gushed.
“Thanks,” Lauren said. “My dad's a bit of a car freak. He bought it from some famous actor. He wanted to send a limo for us, but I thought you guys would like this better. It's really hard to find a vintage Caddy in great condition.”
Ashley was still determined not to be impressed by anything Lauren showed her, but now her resolve was weakening, especially at the sight of the beautiful red car. So what. It was only a car. “Isn't vintage just another word for âused'?” Ashley asked.
Lauren looked relieved when A. A. immediately began asking about the doodads on the dashboard, and she showed them how the old-fashioned radio worked.
Ashley climbed into the backseat next to Lili and Trudy while Lauren and A. A. sat up front. She noticed A. A. was paying Dex a lot of attention. He was definitely a cutie, but, hello, a little old for them, she
thought. But then, A. A. was
supposed
to be experienced, so maybe she could handle it.
Dex drove smoothly through the streets of Santa Monica, past the boardwalk, where Ashley could see the waves cresting and armies of people gathered on the beach. There were families having picnics, couples riding bikes, groups of friends tossing Frisbees. A giant Ferris wheel towered over the whole scene, and the air smelled like hot dogs. Lauren was still blabbing on and on about how the actor had given her family a tour of the set of his latest movie, and A. A. and Lili were totally eating it all up. How long did she have to listen to this girl yak?
Not very long, she decided, spotting a shaggy-haired guy in a loose-fitting top walking on the sidewalk and gasped. “Look! It's that guy from
The Hunger Games
!” she shrieked, bringing Lauren's monologue to a halt. “The cute one!”
“Omigod. Is it?” Lili asked, standing up from her seat as well.
“Not a chance. Fooled you.” Ashley laughed, glad to have caught their attention. In retaliation Lili pelted her with yogurt raisins she'd taken from the plane.
“Are we going to see any celebrities?” A. A. asked eagerly, craning her neck around madly.
“A. A., you see celebs all the time,” growled Ashley. Did she have to remind A. A. that her mother was practically a celebrity herself?
“Those are just San Francisco celebrities,” A. A. replied, with an eye roll of her own. “Some romance writer and some geezer actor. I want to see Daphne Shepard and Venice Westin.”
By then all three Ashleys were standing in the open-top car, and they began to attract a lot of attention in the slow-moving traffic. Ashley started waving and blowing kisses to anyone who beeped at them, and Lili and A. A. soon followed suit. Lauren, Ashley was glad to note, was sitting rigidly and looking like she was not quite sure what to do.
“Hey, it's the StripHall Queensâturn it up!” Ashley ordered as the radio began blasting the popular song with the heavy bass line. The three girls immediately began their synchronized dancing, the result of years of dance-team dominance. The Ashleys had made nationals last year.
“Who's sexiest girl in the whole . . .,” they yelled, each pointing to herself during the chorus. “Who's the sexiest girl in the whole . . . world?”
“C'mon, Lauren, dance,” A. A. said, pulling her up
to stand. Lauren danced, but she didn't know any of the moves and settled for bobbing her head while the Ashleys mimed taking their clothes off. There was a frenzy of beeping and whooping when A. A. accidentally showed a little more skin than she intended to the crowd on the sidewalk during a vigorous over-the-head sequence.
“Girls, sit down,” Dex ordered, as the girls fell backward when the car lurched forward at the green light. “I'm going to get a ticket.”
“Aw, let them have their fun,” called Trudy from the backseat. “You're only young once.”
True enough, Mrs. P.,
Ashley thought.
Although you'd never think it from the way you dress.
Ashley sat back down, fanning her face with her hands, energized by the impromptu showcase. The song had ended and traffic began to move again. She noticed that they had left the streets of Santa Monica and had entered Beverly Hills proper.
“We're on Rodeo,” she said, elbowing Lili. The glittering avenue was famed for its high-end retail emporiums and was one of Ashley's favorite places in the world. The storefronts were as polished and sleek as the shoppers walking on the sidewalks.
Dex drove up to a building with jaunty red canopies
over the windows. “Barneys. Your stop, ma'am,” he said to Trudy, who climbed out of the car.
Ashley prepared to follow her out, but Trudy had already slammed the door. “You girls have fun now. Dex is going to keep an eye on you. Lauren, honey, don't spend it all in one place, okay?” Trudy instructed, handing her daughter a platinum credit card.
Then Dex revved up the engine and they were on their way again. Ashley looked back longingly at the store, wondering why they weren't going there. They drove past a host of elegant boutiques. Bulgari. Louis Vuitton. Tiffany. Gucci. Versace. Valentino. Then they were out of Rodeo Drive entirely.
Finally she couldn't stand it anymore. “Aren't we stopping here?” she asked plaintively when they passed Saks Fifth Avenue.
“We're not going to Rodeo Drive,” replied Lauren.
“Oh? Why not? I thought we were shopping in Beverly Hills,” Ashley said with a toss of her head.
“Sure, any tourist could shop on Rodeo,” said Lauren in the condescending tone that Ashley recognized as her own. “But we're going somewhere better.”
“What's better than Beverly Hills?” A. A. wanted to know.
Lili shrugged.
Did Lauren know something they didn't? Were they really going to get schooled in shopping from a girl who'd spent her whole life to this point in hand-me-down sweaters?
Ashley squirmed in her seat. Lauren was probably going to take them somewhere really obvious, like the Beverly Center or something. But there was nothing she could do about it. Outside, the scenery began to change from the glitzy streets of Beverly Hills to the more gritty environs of Los Angeles proper. Ashley couldn't understand why they had to leave Rodeo Drive without stopping at even one store.