Read Broken Hearts, Fences and Other Things to Mend Online
Authors: Katie Finn
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Friendship, #Emotions & Feelings, #Family, #Marriage & Divorce
been a moment when I’d looked at Josh sleeping on the couch and
seen him as more than a friend? Hadn’t there been a moment be-
tween us when we said good- bye? I concentrated on merging, and
tried not to think about the answers to these questions.
“Well,” Hallie said, looking relieved and a little less serious, “I
was so sorry you both got sick. I guess you can’t trust lobster,
—-1
huh?”
—0
—+1
S 243 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 243
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 243
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
I hadn’t realized Josh would have gotten that specifi c about
the events of the night, and I felt myself inwardly groan a little.
“So Josh really went into detail, huh?” I asked with a grimace.
Hallie looked thrown for a moment, then nodded. “Right, he
did. I mean, I asked what he’d eaten so, you know, I could never
eat there.”
I smiled. “It’s a good plan. Avoid the Crabby Lobster at all
costs.”
Hallie laughed and reached forward to turn on the radio.
“Noted.”
It turned out that Hallie and I had pretty similar taste in
music, even though she was a little more into hip- hop and I liked
the cheesy summer pop songs more than she did. But Hallie was
good driving company, telling me when I could merge and which
lanes were clear when I needed to get over. And when we stopped
at a gas station— it turned out we needed some after all— she
emerged from the minimart with a bag of chips to share. She
even took the role of the navigator, checking the map on my
phone, since I’d long since given up trying to use the SUV’s navi-
gation system. It was military grade and gave coordinates in lon-
gitude and latitude, and was incredibly unhelpful— and kind of
judgmental— when you made a wrong turn. I knew it was safe to
give her my phone, since I had password- protected anything that
might identify me as me— my pictures, e-mail, everything. I’d
even changed the background to one of the boring generic ones
that had come with the phone.
-1—
“Okay,” Hallie said, looking up from the phone and squinting
0—
at the road. “I think you should make the next left.”
+1—
S 244 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 244
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 244
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
“Great,” I said, noticing that we were pulling into the North
Hills Hyatt, which was exactly where we were supposed to be.
I avoided the valet and self- parked, and Hallie followed me
into the hotel, looking increasingly confused. “Okay,” she said, as
she looked around. “So . . . we’re going to a hotel?”
“I think it’s this way,” I said as I looked around for ballroom
2A. Sure enough, we rounded the corner and there was a giant
sign decorated with a spinning red British phone box that read
DROP IN TO SCOTT’S BAR MITZVAH!
Hallie turned to me, eyebrows raised. “Bar mitzvah?” she asked.
I grinned at her. “What,” I asked, deadpan, as I took in Hall-
ie’s baffl ed expression, “not what you were expecting?”
“Hello,” a frazzled- looking woman clutching a clipboard said
as she came hustling up to us. “Are you here for the event?”
“We are,” I said, taking a step closer to her. When Bruce had
put us on this list for this party, I wasn’t sure what names he
gave, and I certainly didn’t want Hallie to see
Gemma Tucker
printed there in huge letters. “Bruce Davidson’s guests?”
“Ah,” the woman said, scanning down her list. She paused,
her pen hovering over the clipboard, and I let out a relieved sigh
when I saw the list read only
B. Davidson 1
and
B. Davidson 2
.
“Got you,” she said. She looked behind Hallie, frowning. “And . . .
will Mr. Davidson be joining you?”
“Nope,” I said, trying to make it sound like this was totally
normal. I started to head into the ballroom, Hallie behind me,
when the woman held out two bright- red canvas bags to us.
“Gift bags,” she said, as we took them. They were surprisingly
—-1
heavy, which seemed to me like a good sign. “Enjoy your eve ning.”
—0
—+1
S 245 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 245
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 245
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
“Thanks,” I said as I pulled open the ballroom door and Hallie
and I stepped inside.
As I looked around the ballroom, it was clear that the newly
minted man, Scott, was very into the British show
Sergeant
Which
. I only really knew it because of Ford, who loved it, and as a
result, half his obscure geeky T-shirts made reference to it. From
what I could glean, it was about a brilliant ex- military detective
who solved crimes while traveling through space in a magical
phone booth. And yet, Ford refused to watch romantic comedies
with me because they were, in his words, “unrealistic.”
But the show was clearly the theme of this party. There were
blown- up cutouts of the actors, a photo booth made to look like
the red phone booth, and the show’s theme song playing at full
volume.
“Okay,” Hallie said, sounding more confused than ever as she
followed me to the seating chart, which had all the tables named
after the Sergeant’s greatest adventures across space and time.
“So . . . do you know these people?”
“Never met them,” I said as I saw that we were at table nine-
teen, the Battle of Gettysburg. I hoped that wasn’t a bad sign as I
negotiated our way around the side of the ballroom. It seemed
like things were just getting started— no one was eating yet, the
stage was dark, and the dance fl oor was empty. Apparently, the
theme song, with its repeated list of time periods, was not in-
spiring people to get down.
“But . . .” Hallie said, still sounding lost, as we sat down at the
-1—
mostly empty table— clearly reserved for overfl ow and last- minute
0—
RSVPers. “Um, what are we doing here? I like a gift bag as much
+1—
S 246 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 246
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 246
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
as the next girl,” she said, peering into it. “But I just think it’s . . .
ooh look, an iPod!” She picked it up, turning it over in her hands.
I noticed that it had a picture of a smiling kid— presumably
Scott— on the back, but I fi gured that was a small price to pay for
getting free electronics.
“Just wait a second,” I said, glancing toward the stage and
seeing a very thin roadie hauling out equipment, then stagger-
ing backstage looking winded. “I think you’ll see why we’re here.”
“But . . .” Hallie said, looking around. “Should we really be
here? If you don’t know anyone? I mean . . .”
The lights in the ballroom dimmed, and a huge group of people,
most of them carry ing giant, unwieldy instruments, crowded
onstage. “Hi,” a guy wearing a T-shirt and carry ing a harpsi-
chord, said into the microphone. “Congratulations to Scott!”
The ballroom burst into applause, and Hallie turned to me.
Her jaw had dropped, and she looked utterly shocked. “This
isn’t . . .” she said faintly. “Sophie, you didn’t . . .”
“We’re Lenin and McCarthy,” the singer continued. “Hope
you enjoy the set!”
Hallie turned to me, shaking her head in what looked like
happy disbelief.
I smiled at her. “Surprise.”
—-1
—0
—+1
S 247 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 247
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 247
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
“That,” Hallie said, “was amazing.”
I nodded and picked up a slice from my pizza box. We were
parked in the driveway, sitting in the giant back area of Bruce’s
SUV. The door was up, and the space was so enormous that there
was more than enough room for both of us and two pizza boxes,
plus a Diet Coke for me, a ginger ale for her, and a stack of nap-
kins. We’d stayed at the bar mitzvah until the band stopped
playing, and when they left the stage, Hallie and I had joined the
crowd of thirteen- year- olds who lined up for autographs and pic-
tures. We’d hung out a little after that and took pictures to-
gether in the photo booth, but when a seemingly endless line of
relatives starting approaching the mic to tell stories about
“Scotty,” we decided it was time to hit the road. Since we’d left
before dinner was served, we stopped by the Upper Crust on the
way back to Bruce’s.
-1—
“It was fun,” I agreed, taking a bite. Even as someone who
0—
didn’t love their music, I’d enjoyed the show. The only thing that
+1—
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 248
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 248
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
I really regretted was that Sophie couldn’t be there. She would
have loved it. I had gotten the lead singer to say “Hi there, So-
phie,” into my phone and I’d recorded it, telling Hallie I wanted it
as a souvenir for myself.
“No,” Hallie said, shaking her head. “I mean, that was
incred-
ible
. Thank you so much, Sophie.”
“It was my plea sure,” I said, meaning it. The cupcakes had
been a bust, and while helping her babysit the twins was one
thing, to night felt like the fi rst time I’d really been able to do
something nice for Hallie. I’d been able to make her happy, and it
felt pretty good. Much better, in fact, than making her misera-
ble had done. “And after all,” I said, raising my eyebrows at her,
“you might have gotten a date out of it.”
“Oh my god,” Hallie said, laughing and covering her eyes. “I
could not believe that kid.” Halfway through the band’s set,
Scott’s cousin Marvin had decided he was in love with Hallie, de-
spite the fact that he couldn’t have been more than twelve. He’d
pestered her until his mom fi nally came and dragged him away,
but when we were leaving, Hallie found that he’d left his num-
ber, e-mail address, and World of Warcraft player name in her
gift bag.
“Maybe you should consider it,” I said, deadpan, as I reached
for another napkin. “It takes a special kind of guy to pull off a
plaid tie.”
Hallie just shook her head. “My boyfriend might have a prob-
lem with that,” she said. “But it’s nice to know that I’m a hit with
the middle school set.” She opened her own pizza box, but there
—-1
were only crusts left.
—0
—+1
S 249 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 249
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 249
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
“Want some?” I asked, angling my box toward her. I had two
slices left, which I had been planning on sneaking to Bruce as a
thank- you for getting us into his accountant’s son’s bar mitzvah.
“I’m fi nished.”
Hallie looked down into the box and her expression clouded
slightly. “No,” she said. “I’m . . . I’m fi ne.” She closed the lid on
her own box, taking her time getting the tab pushed in just
right. When she turned back to me, her face was drawn. “Actu-
ally . . . I used to know someone who ordered their pizza almost
like that. Someone who was pretty awful to me.”
It felt like my heart totally stopped for a moment. I hadn’t
quite ordered my usual, pineapple- pepperoni- sausage, because
I’d gone to town on the appetizers we’d been served at the party
and wasn’t super hungry. I had ordered my pie with just pineap-
ple and pepperoni. But that was a fairly normal pizza topping,
right? Other people ordered that, didn’t they?
After I stopped panicking that I’d given myself away, what
Hallie had just said sunk in— she was talking about
me
. Eleven-
year- old, pizza- ordering, life- ruining me.
“Oh?” I asked, concentrating on lining up the edges on my
napkins so that they were all even. I didn’t trust myself to look at
Hallie without the truth showing all over my face.
“Yeah,” Hallie said, and I could hear the pain that was in her
voice. “Sophie, have you ever read any Tennessee Williams?”
This question surprised me enough that I felt like I could
look at her and not totally betray myself. “Um, no,” I said. I did
-1—
know who he was, because Bruce’s second wife had gotten him
0—
to fi nance a fi lm version of
The Night of the Iguana,
starring her
+1—
S 250 T
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 250
105-56018_ch01_3P.indd 250
10/2/13 7:32 AM
10/2/13 7:32 AM
and set in a postapocalyptic wasteland, with zombies. My dad
had wisely passed on Bruce’s offer to adapt the script. “Not
exactly.”
“Well, we read
Streetcar
freshman year, and this character
talks about how she just can’t stand deliberate cruelty. She can’t
abide it.” I nodded. I had a terrible feeling that I knew where
this was going. “And this person . . . the one who ate pizza like