Authors: Jennifer Brown
“I just missed you,” she said. “We haven’t talked in forever. You okay?”
I’d freaked out in a drainage ditch last night and run away from the one person in the world who still believed in me. I was avoiding my dad, who came home late and sulked and drank every night. I’d watched my ex-boyfriend cry during an apology and I still didn’t feel sorry for him. Were those things okay? I didn’t know what okay looked like anymore. It had been so long since I’d seen it. But Vonnie didn’t need to know any of that, especially since I still wasn’t sure if I could even trust why she was standing in my bedroom. “I guess,” I said. “I don’t have a ton of friends these days, but I’ll survive.”
She lowered herself to the carpet and sat cross-legged, the way she always did when she came over, as if nothing had ever changed between us.
“I’m sorry, Buttercup,” she said. “I know I’ve been a really rotten best friend.”
“Yeah,” I said. She had, and I didn’t see any reason to pretend that she hadn’t. Granted, I’d never been in her position before, but I could almost guarantee that I would’ve stuck by her. I wouldn’t have run away to save my own reputation.
Or at least I liked to think I wouldn’t have. But would I? Because there was a time in my life when I’d have said I would never take a naked photo of myself and send it to someone.
She fiddled with the rhinestones on her boot. “You think you can forgive me? I’m really sorry. I miss you.”
“You still hanging out with Rachel?” I asked.
“Not much.”
“Because she’s a bitch, Vonnie, and you’re going to have to choose between us.” I hadn’t really thought this over much. The words had popped out of my mouth without my meaning them to. But I was okay with it, because it was the truth. If Vonnie was going to be Rachel’s friend, then she couldn’t be mine. Like Mack had said, I deserved a better best friend than that.
“Then I choose you. Totally,” she said, without even pausing to think about it.
I felt like maybe I shouldn’t forgive her. Like I should put it off—make her sweat it out or something. But I missed her, too, and I wanted her back. Even if my eyes had been opened to how we weren’t the best friends I’d thought we were, we’d still been friends too long to not forgive each other. And I didn’t see how holding grudges was going to solve anything.
“Okay,” I said. “I forgive you.”
She smiled wide. “Thanks.” There was a beat of silence, during which I busied myself trying to ease crumbs out of my keyboard with my fingernail. “So the end of the world must be coming,” she said. “I’m dating someone.”
“I know. I saw you two in the hall.”
“Aren’t you going to ask how it’s going?”
And I guessed that was something I admired about Vonnie: her ability to move on. To get past weirdness and awkwardness and hard feelings. She never needed to stew over things. She never needed to pick events apart and she would never, ever hold something over someone’s head. Apologize and move on. For her, life was nothing more than a series of phases. We were in the forgive-and-forget phase, and it was my choice to either play along or to fight it.
“How’s it going?”
She lounged back on her elbows, stretching her legs out in front of her. “Eh. He has bad breath, and you know how I can’t do bad breath. It’s like letting a dog put its tongue in my mouth. So the sex is definitely not happening. Because if his breath is that bad, I can’t even imagine what it must smell like when he peels his socks off.”
I laughed. “Gross! But he’s cute. Maybe offer him some gum or something.”
She made a face. “Too much slobber. I’ll probably just break up with him instead.”
I shook my head. It was always so easy for Vonnie.
“What about you, Buttercup? Any men in your life right now?”
“Uh, definitely not. Maybe never again.”
“Oh, please, you can’t swear off men forever just because Kaleb turned out to be a superdouche.”
I shut my laptop and pushed it to the side, then stretched back against my pillow. “I saw him.”
Her eyes got wide and she sat up. “No way. Really? I heard he’s, like, totally depressed now. I didn’t want to bring it up to you, but since you saw him… how does he look?”
“He looks rough,” I said. “He’s changed a lot. Skinny, pale, dark circles under his eyes, that kind of thing. He apologized to me.”
“For real?”
I flipped on some music and pulled a couple of magazines out of my desk drawer. I tossed one down to Vonnie, like old times. “His lawyer made him do it.”
“Figures. He’s a spineless weenie.”
“I don’t know,” I said. “I think this really messed up his life.”
“Good,” she said. “Not to be mean or anything, but it’s his own fault. What he did was really uncool.”
“Yeah,” I said, but I was feeling a little unsure. Yes, what Kaleb had done was his own fault, but on some level it was my own fault, too, right? I was the one who took the photo. I was the one who made that decision, and I was the one who stood in Vonnie’s bathroom and took off all my clothes. And I was the one who decided to text the photo to him. Had I not done those things, he wouldn’t have had the
photo to send around. And it sucked for him to get that much fallout over something so foolish.
“What about you? How’s community service going?” Vonnie asked.
Mack’s face popped into my head. Community service had stopped being such a horrible sentence, and I guessed he was the reason why. “It’s okay,” I said. “There are some real interesting people in there, but there’s also this guy who’s pretty nice.”
Vonnie perked up. “Guy?”
I shook my head. “Not like that. He’s a friend. He’s been my only friend for a while now.”
She ducked her head. “What’s he in for?”
I shut my magazine. “What’s he in for? What are you, a TV cop? I don’t know.”
Vonnie stopped, her hand holding a page in midflip, and gazed at me. “You don’t know? So he could be, like, a killer or something and you’re being his friend?”
“He’s not a killer. They don’t sentence murderers to community service. He probably just messed up like me.”
“If you say so,” she singsonged. “But I’d be checking it out if I were you, Buttercup. Before I got all buddy-buddy with him. The last thing you need is another bad guy episode.”
She started talking about something she’d seen on TV, and I listened to her gab for a while, my mind wandering, and then we read each other articles out of the Q&A sections in our magazines, laughing at them like we always
did, and I wanted so badly for this to feel normal between us. But it didn’t. People were moving on, and Vonnie had come back to me, and still I didn’t feel like everything was all right. There was something missing.
“So my mom said something about a board meeting tomorrow night?” Vonnie asked.
“Yeah, I think so. I don’t know much about it. My parents aren’t saying a lot about that kind of stuff around me anymore.”
“My mom said they were going to talk about ‘the sexting issue,’ ” Vonnie continued, making air quotes with her fingers. “And that a couple of board members are calling for your dad to step down or be fired. Do you think he will?”
In truth, I didn’t like to think about it. I didn’t like to think what it would mean for our family. We couldn’t live off Mom’s paycheck. And what would Dad do with himself? He loved his job. He would be devastated.
“I don’t know.”
“It sucks. My mom says there’s going to be a lot of people there. She said it would be really humiliating for your family. If I were you, I’d make sure I was nowhere near that meeting, Buttercup.”
“That’s probably good advice.”
Vonnie stayed until we could hear Mom rattling around in the kitchen.
After she left, I wandered downstairs to see if Mom was making dinner, and I couldn’t stop thinking about what
Vonnie’s mom had said about the board meeting: it would be humiliating for our family.
Mom was making soup, an apron wrapped around her work clothes, her reading glasses tucked up in the nest of her graying blond hair. Her eyes looked tired, and it seemed like there were more lines around them than there used to be. I bellied up to the cutting board and began chopping the carrots she had laid out.
“Was that Vonnie?”
“Yeah. She stopped by.”
“I haven’t seen her in ages.” Mom sounded distracted.
“We haven’t really been talking all that much lately. But it’s fine. We’re still friends.”
She glanced at me. “Well, I suppose that’s good, then.” She continued to stir, and I started chopping a celery stalk.
“How’s work?” I asked.
“Oh, it’s…” Mom said, and trailed off. She didn’t turn around or ask why I was asking or do anything to make me believe she wanted to continue talking about it.
“Are people… you know… did people at your school hear about… stuff?” I scooped the celery chunks into my hands and dropped them into a bowl, then drove the knife into an onion.
She paused, and then said, “I’ve had a few parents upset.”
“What do you mean?”
She turned and leaned her back against the stove. “Ash,
don’t worry about it. They were trouble parents to begin with. The kind that complain about everything.”
I put the knife down. “Upset how? What do you mean?” I repeated.
Mom closed her eyes, and I was struck with how worn down she looked, like if she stood that way for too long she’d fall asleep. Slowly she opened them again. “I’ve had a few parents pull their kids from the preschool. They don’t think I can set a good example because of the trouble you got in. It’s really not that big of a deal. We’ve got a waiting list to fill those spots, anyway.”
I felt like I should say something. Like I should comfort Mom, or apologize. But nothing I could say could undo what had happened. It was like the fallout over what I’d done would never stop.
After a few minutes, the soup began bubbling and Mom turned to stir it again, and I went back to my chopping. I supposed we’d said everything there was to be said about the subject.
“Are you going to the board meeting tomorrow night?” I asked.
“Yes. But I’ll have time to pick you up from community service and bring you home before then. That way you won’t have to be there.”
The board meetings were always held in the Central Office building, right upstairs from room 104, and I’d been wondering if maybe I should skip community service and come home. I definitely didn’t want to be stuck in a crowd
of the same people who’d said such horrible things about me online and in the media. I did not want to be there to see my dad’s work, and life, become a shambles. No way.
“Do you think Dad is going to step down?”
“I don’t even know if Dad knows what Dad is going to do at this point,” Mom answered, and her tone told me that was all the conversation she wanted to have on the subject, so I closed my mouth.
We finished putting the ingredients into the pot; then Mom covered it and lowered the heat to let it simmer for a while. The smell was familiar and homey to me. It made me think of being a little kid, of being safe and warm and cozy, of having family dinners together with Mom and Dad, all of us talking about our days.
But I knew that now the smell was just that—a smell—and that Mom and I would exchange meaningless pleasantries over dinner, and Dad would come home late, grab a drink, and eat in stony silence. Nobody wanted to share what their day had been like because we all wanted to forget it.
As if we could.
I was on edge when I showed up for community service the next day. The building seemed to be buzzing. A police car sat out front, which hardly ever happened, and I guessed someone had summoned the police to help keep order that night. The thought scared me a little.
Truth be told, I didn’t really want to be there at all, and I almost faked a stomach flu to get me out of it. But in the end, I knew that the sooner I got through my community service, the sooner this could all be over with, and the sooner I could try to get my life back. Winter break would be coming up before long, and I had a distant hope that the time off would give everyone a chance to forget and move on to the next big scandal and that I could start a whole new semester like nothing had ever happened.
But what if they didn’t? What if I remained the big topic forever? I tried not to think about the fact that I had a whole year to go after this one was done. The thought was too depressing.
I was the first one to arrive, and Mrs. Mosely looked up from her book when I walked in.
“I wasn’t sure if I’d see you today or not,” she said.
I placed my paper on her desk. “My mom’ll take me home before the meeting starts.”
Mrs. Mosely eyed me over her reading glasses and then took them off and let them hang on the chain around her neck. “Ashleigh, I think you need to know, I’ve never had someone come through my program with your… problem.”
Great
, I thought.
I’m an anomaly. And I have a problem. That makes me sound like a porn addict.
Mrs. Mosely continued. “I know a lot of kids send a lot of texts and nothing ever comes of any of it. You are not the first girl in the world to send a risqué photo of herself to her boyfriend. You know that, don’t you?”
I nodded, staring down at my shoes. The conversation was beginning to get uncomfortable.
“I’ve had kids come through here for drugs, for assault, for all kinds of things. I had one girl come through here because she had been caught plotting to kill her mother. Can you believe that? Good student, no drugs, got in with the wrong crowd and next thing she knew she was getting arrested. A murder plot, Ashleigh. But I have never had a girl come through here because she got seen naked. I want
you to know that. Your case is unusual because… it’s unusual. Do you follow?”
I nodded, though I didn’t really follow what she was saying at all. I already knew that my case was unusual. It didn’t make me feel any better, and it didn’t get me in any less trouble. And I just wanted to go to my computer and work.
“And if I were the district attorney, I might think twice about calling it anything other than unusual,” she said. “Child pornography is a pretty serious label.”