Authors: Sonya Mukherjee
Max laughed. “That's very flattering. But what happened to all that crap you were trying to sell me earlier tonight, about my obvious natural talent?”
“Dude,” Gavin assured him, “you're the tallest guy in the school. You'll be our star player. Juanita, you've been to some games. Tell him
exactly
how bad we suck.”
Juanita said thoughtfully, “I think I might be a better judge of how the guys look in their uniforms. The Los Pinos guys looked pretty great in theirs. Oh, and ah, yeah . . . That's right. They creamed us.”
“That's exactly right,” Gavin said triumphantly as he flung his lanky frame into a chair next to Juanita, “and, Max, my man, we would be happy to train you up to that same level of suckage.”
Josh rounded the corner, bent over his phone. “All right,” he said to us without looking up. “Vanessa and Jasmine are coming over. Lindsey, too, I think. They were watching a movie at Lindsey's house, but I guess it sucked.”
Max laughed. “Did you tell them about the bats?”
“Hell, no. Then they'd never come. I didn't even tell them the other girls were here.” Josh swung himself into his chair as a bat flew over his head. Looking up at it, he said, “But I'm looking forward to seeing their faces when they get here, that's for sure.”
I looked over at Juanita. I knew we should leave, for her sake. The last thing she needed was to see Lindsey. Or,
for that matter, Vanessa and JasmineâJosh's and Gavin's spawn-of-Satan girlfriends.
But she met my eyes and shook her head, as if to say,
We're staying
.
But that was just wrong. I couldn't put her through that. I leaned back, and as I tried to think of a good excuse to leaveâone that would even convince Juanitaâa brilliant light streaked across the sky. It was so bright and covered such a large swathe of sky that for a moment I was speechless.
When I spoke, my voice came out quiet and a little breathless. “Meteor.”
“Meteor,” said Max at the same moment, sounding equally awestruck. And then, a second later, “Jinx.”
“You guys are, like, weirdly into this crap,” Josh said. “What's up with that?”
Max looked thoughtful. “I don't know. Itâit's hard to explain, right? I just . . . I look out there at the stars and I thinkâI feel . . .” He exhaled loudly. “I don't know.”
My heartbeat started accelerating, the way it always does when I kind of want to say something but I'm not sure if it's the right thing, or whether I should talk at all. And I thought,
No, I should just stay quiet. No one will understand what I'm talking about. They'll look at me like I'm aâ
Oh yeah. They already do.
I cleared my throat. “Did you know,” I said to Josh, “that
when you look at those stars, you're looking into all different parts of the past? That star over there”âI pointed to Bellatrix, the nearest star in Orionâ“is two hundred and forty-three light-years away. We're looking at light from before the Declaration of Independence. But then when you look at that other star, down there”âI pointed to Alnilamâ“that star's light has been traveling toward us since the early Middle Ages.”
Josh looked skeptical. “Okay, and I should care because . . .”
“Because it's amazing,” I told him, “that just by looking up above us, with no equipment but our own eyes, we can see such huge distances that we're actually seeing right into the past.” I was gathering confidence now, and I tried to lean in Josh's direction, though I couldn't lean far, with Hailey behind me. “It makes you think about where Earth is in relation to the rest of it. It makes you feel how small we are. How small everything is that happens here. What a tiny, microscopic little window of time and space we ever see in our lifetimes. Can't you feel that?”
Josh shrugged. “Okay, but why would I want to feel small?”
I sighed, ready to give up, as Hailey and I leaned back together in our chairs. But then I looked at Max, and he was staring at me, and there was something both pleased and eager in his expression.
“It's not so much that you're small,” Max said, looking at
me as he spoke, “it's that everything around you is small too.”
I sat up again, pulling Hailey with me. “Right! It all seems so big, but it's just a blip in space-time. Less than a blip.”
Max nodded, still looking at me. “Do you ever wonder about the creatures that must be out there on other planets?”
My breath stopped. I wanted to say,
I think about that all the time. I want so badly to meet them. I dream about communicating with them. The thought that we'll never find them in our lifetimes makes my heart hurt.
But all I said was, “Well, yeah.”
He said, “Do you ever wonder what they'd think about us?”
“What, are you worried about it?” Juanita teased him. “Like, whether the aliens will like your hairstyle? Will the extraterrestrials think you're cool?”
Max laughed. “No, kind of the opposite, right? Because how is an alien going to notice the difference between a cool haircut and a dork one?” He leaned toward me. “You know what I mean, don't you? I'm trying to come up with the words, here.”
I took a deep, shaky breath. I had never really tried to express any of this out loud before. “Well, this might be different, but . . . whoever's out there, sometimes I wonder what constellation they imagine when they're looking at our sun. Like, maybe we look over at their star and see it as
part of a great hunter's belt, and maybe they look over at ours and see it as part of some animal or shape that we can't even guess. And we could never see what they see, but it's still just as real.”
Max's eyes had been on me the whole time I was speaking, and they stayed on me as he said, “I would kill to go into space someday. Far enough out to look back and see our whole planet. It would shift your whole way of looking at everything.”
Hailey pushed her elbow into me, and I knew she wanted me to say something, but I couldn't. My mind was going in a million different directions at once, and it couldn't figure out where to land. My heart vibrated hard inside my chest.
I had never told anyone, not even Hailey, how much I wanted to see Earth from space. How much it hurt to know I would never be able to. What did it mean? How was I supposed to respond?
Max looked away. When he spoke again, his voice had returned to a slight stiffness. “Stupid, right?”
“No,” I said quickly, “it isn't stupid at all.” Not for him. Not for a healthy, able-bodied guy who loved the stars. In that moment I felt sure that he would find a way.
As I opened my mouth to tell him that, a bright flash of headlights whipped across us, and a car horn sounded, three quick blasts in a row.
Josh grinned. “Sounds like the girls have arrived.”
Like a trail of zombies, the dudes went shuffling out to meet Lindsey and her gang in the driveway. Clara leaned toward Juanita and said quietly, “We can totally go home, okay? I'll make up an excuse.”
Clara was ridiculous. She was impossible. How could she not see how wrong a move that would be?
“What, because of Lindsey?” Juanita said. “No, I don't care. I didn't do anything wrong. I'm not gonna run from her.”
“Good,” I said, “because I think poor Max would be heartbroken if Clara were to leave.” Not to mention the fact that it would give Lindsey more of an opportunity to sink her claws into him.
“Hailey, you're such aâ”
“No,” I said sharply. “Just shut it, all right? I am so sick of hearing that it's impossible. He likes you. I know he does. Juanita, will you tell her?”
Juanita looked at Clara. She seemed to be thinking it over. Unbelievable.
“See?” Clara said. “Juanita knows you're crazy, Hailey. Just because I like astronomy and he likes astronomy, it doesn't follow that he likes
me
.”
“I don't know if he does or he doesn't,” Juanita said. “But there is one thing I can tell you for sure. If we leave, he's going to think
you
don't like
him
.”
“But that's good!” Clara said. “Don't youâ”
“Sssshhhh!” Juanita waved her hands frantically in front of her, palms out. “They're coming!”
Max slid open the glass doors that opened from the living room out to the deck.
And moments later Lindsey, Vanessa, and Jasmine stood in front of us, staring down at us in our deck chairs, while the three guys stood by, all attention, like they were waiting for the mud wrestling to get started.
Lindsey stood right in front of me. She wore skintight jeans and a low-necked, clingy sweater, topped with a puffy red ski jacket that she'd left unzipped. Her hair, highlighted and flat-ironed to within an inch of its life, skimmed past her shoulders and onto the creamy skin of her throat and chest. For a moment, as I looked straight into her brown eyes, I could see her struggling with what to do.
And then her whole body sprang into a frenzy of excitement.
“Hailey!”
she cried out, sounding like I had just handed her a winning lottery ticket. “Clara! Juanita! I didn't
even know you were all going to be here. What a great surprise! This is so
awesome
!”
She actually leaned down and started hugging us. I held my arms stiffly, torn between hugging her back and wriggling away.
Vanessa and Jasmine kicked it into gear quickly enough, with the same unnatural excitement and hugs.
Lindsey turned to Max and swatted his upper arm. “Max, you were holding out on us! You didn't even mention that our good friends were going to be here.”
Max looked confused. “Um, I guess it was just lucky that it worked out.”
“You know that Clara and Hailey and Juanita and I go way back, right?” Lindsey said to Max, still in that high, bouncy voice. “We've all known each other since the sixth grade.”
This was true. Sixth grade had been quite a year, what with moving from a tiny little elementary school where everyone had known us since preschool, to a middle school with four times as many kids, many of whom had probably heard rumors about us but had never actually seen us, or anything like us, ever in their entire lives.
But to be fair, it's also true that until we reached middle school, Clara and I had never encountered the likes of Lindsey Baker.
The kids at our elementary school had gotten to know
us when we were little. Our mom had even arranged a series of playgroups, where she'd encouraged the kids and parents to ask questions and get it all out of their systems. And yeah, okay, a couple of them had at some point asked us how it worked when we went to the bathroom, which was embarrassing, but we'd just brushed it off, and they'd eventually dropped it.
Then, in the second week of sixth gradeâin a new school, with dozens of new classmatesâthe old question returned. We were sitting in math class, watching the teacher write something on the board, and Lindsey was staring at me and Clara in the same dumbfounded way she'd been doing every day, with her mouth literally half-open. Then she blurted out, “But how do you go to the bathroom?”
And I looked right at her and said, making sure it was loud enough for the whole class to hear, “Lindsey, you're in sixth grade and you don't know how to go to the bathroom?”
And Lindsey's whole face just transformed into this animal fury. Back then she wasn't too attractive to begin with; her awkward stage was in full force. Her braces and frizzy hair didn't help. Scowling at us, she looked like some kind of wild beast.
But the next day, I guess she decided to investigate. Except she didn't just come into the bathroom and have a
peek for herself. She brought in a whole platoon. She used a quarter to unlock the stall door, and there they all were, staring at us.
We sat at a diagonal to the toilet seat. I was facing forward, my pants down around my ankles, my shirt coming just to my waist. Clara faced backward, still exposed, though not quite as badly. And the area on our backâthe spot where we're attached? I think they could see the whole thing.
I covered myself with my hands, but to pull up my pants would have meant standing up, not to mention taking my hands away from their job of covering me.
By then I'd had a few nightmares about being naked at school. Yeah, I know I'm supposed to be the tough one, but come on. I was eleven years old. Anyway, the reality turned out to be way worse.
I was half-aware of Clara behind me, shaking and crying, while I tried to convince myself that I wasn't humiliated, just pissed off. I tried, with limited success, to focus on how I was going to kick Lindsey's ass. Later. When my pants were on.
They all giggled and shrieked with excitement. I don't know how long they stood there laughing before Mrs. Barzetti started grabbing them by the shoulders and yanking them out of there. It felt like hours.
And then the whole school had to sit through a dumb-ass assembly on bullying.
At the time, I assumed that the assembly would backfire and make everyone mad at us, since we were the reason they'd had to sit through all that garbage. But weirdly, it didn't work out that way. Instead, Lindsey actually got a bad reputation for a while, and not like the cool bad girl but just like everyone thought she was an asshole. And of course she was suspended.
But she didn't try to get revenge for any of that. She apologized, which I'm sure she was forced to do, but she cried when she did it and seemed like she actually did feel terrible.
So I guess in a way we forgave her. But it didn't mean we had to like her.
“Have we really known each other that long?” I asked now, mimicking Lindsey's saccharine sweetness. “I don't know, I guess you could be right.”
“You know what,” Max said, “I think we have some more chairs in the garage.”