Read The Forever Crush Online

Authors: Debra Moffitt

The Forever Crush

Contents

Title Page

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-one

Chapter Twenty-two

Chapter Twenty-three

Chapter Twenty-four

Chapter Twenty-five

Chapter Twenty-six

Chapter Twenty-seven

Chapter Twenty-eight

Chapter Twenty-nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-one

Chapter Thirty-two

Chapter Thirty-three

Chapter Thirty-four

Chapter Thirty-five

Chapter Thirty-six

Chapter Thirty-seven

Ask the PLS

Get Healthy, Girls!

About the Author

Also by Debra Moffitt

Copyright

One

For the first time in my life, I opened Facebook and changed my profile to say “in a relationship.” Then I went one step further and identified the boy I was in a relationship with: Forrest McCann. Joy bubbled up from a deep, unknown well inside my chest. It burst into a towering fountain when I went to Forrest's page and saw he had done the same.

Tiny speck of a problem, though: Forrest is my almost-real boyfriend, my forever crush.

Oh, he's not pretend, like an imaginary friend. He's a real boy. But we've made a pact to pretend we are going out with each other. Or rather, he offered me this part and I took it. Forrest said he was worn out with girl trouble and wanted to be officially out of the dating scene for a while. Here was his plan: If I was his pretend girlfriend, no one would bother him. It would be like being on base when you're playing tag. No one can touch you.

There was no chance I'd say no. I wanted to get closer to him and this seemed like one rung on that very long ladder. We already knew each other well, if not recently well. I've known Forrest since preschool because our parents are friends. But something changed along the way, at least for me, and I started to crush on him in an overwhelming way. Forrest is all grown up now and he absolutely fascinates me.

The trouble is Forrest fascinates lots of girls. There was Taylor and then Piper (briefly), and now the Bouchard sisters, Lauren and Charlotte, and—it seems—every great-looking girl in a 100-mile radius. Why? He plays football and sings in a band and his beachy brown hair falls over his left eye. Enough said?

I know what you are thinking.
Jemma, duck! Get out of the way! Big mistake being made! Do not be someone's pretend girlfriend!

Oh, how I wish you were there at the time to give me that good advice. But I was on my own when I accepted Forrest's unusual proposal. I swore that I'd tell no one the truth about us. Why did I agree to this? Well, I guess it's because Forrest had just told me something true about himself: He was having trouble with girl-boy relationships and wanted a break. It made me extraordinarily happy to help him solve this problem. When it comes to tall, broad-shouldered, green-eyed Forrest, I rarely use anything like logic or reasoning to guide my decisions. I rely instead on my crooked heart, which was about to send me on a meandering journey.

Looking back, being his pretend girlfriend was a lot like being in a foreign country, where I didn't speak the language or understand the customs. But like all journeys of my heart, this one would start and end with Forrest McCann.

Two

“Love is in the air!” Kate sang out to me when she found me in the girls' restroom. In her hand, she held the invitation to Ms. Russo and Mr. Ford's New Year's Eve wedding, but I knew she meant love was in the air for me and Forrest, too.

“Are you so totally, over-the-moon, can't-sleep-a-wink happy?” my best friend asked. She wore a look of such happy hopefulness that it almost made me weep.

“Sure, yes. Of course. I'm happy. It's great,” I said.

“Details, details, I need to know all the details,” Kate said. “Wait! Don't say anything yet. You can tell me and Piper at lunch.”

And before I could gather my thoughts enough to respond, Kate had spun around and was heading out the door. But in almost the same second she stepped out of the restroom, she poked her head back in and said, “And now you will have the perfect date for the wedding. Aahhh!”

Her over-the-top, excited “Aahhh!” echoed in the restroom after she left. Thank God, I was alone. No one was there to see me lean on the restroom sink, for support, and look at myself in the mirror. Who was I and how long could I keep this up?

I wished I could turn to the Pink Locker Society instead of being one of three people in charge of it. This is totally the kind of question the PLS could help someone with. But since it was my problem and I was stuck inside of it, I had zero creative ideas about what to do. I couldn't just submit a question to the PLS Web site and wait for an answer. Or could I?

Three

FAT or NOT?

That was the screaming title inside a spiral notebook that was making its way around the eighth grade. The rules were simple. Everyone's name was listed next to columns labeled “FAT” or “NOT FAT.” People put stars in the boxes to “vote” for which one they thought you were.

I've always been thin and I don't even need to shop in women's clothing stores yet, but still I raced to my name. Phew, a long parade of stars under “not fat.” Then I started poking around looking for other people's names. Piper, not fat, of course. Bet, not fat. Forrest, not fat.

Gorgeous teen model, Clem Caritas, definitely skinny, skinny, skinny. Clem's little sister, I had noticed, was now a sixth-grader. Mimi looked nothing like the stunning Clem. She was not overweight, but Mimi was shorter and rounder than her willowy big sis. It was enough to make me glad I had no brothers or sisters—no one to compare myself to.

I continued to scan the list until my eyes stopped and stared at Kate's name. Instead of all her stars being bunched in the “not fat” column, it was mixed. An almost even number of people put their stars under “fat” and “not fat.”

“Ugh, no way,” I said to myself. Unfortunately, this was math class and Mr. Ford heard me.

He shot me a look.

I nodded and remembered that I could not get caught with this notebook. It was secret from teachers, who'd almost certainly punish me for having it, let alone writing in it. We were supposed to be working on homework, so I figured I could enter my votes now and it would look like I was working on parallelograms and rhombuses (or is it rhombi?).

I inked a big blue star under “not fat” for Kate and went on through the rest of the list. I was kind, I think, and only listed as “fat” people who really did seem overweight. Like Emma Shrewsberry and Alex Donovan. Kate was, well, just Kate. “She's got an hourglass figure,” my mother had said. Kate was bigger than me but not in a bad way. I hoped that Emma, Alex, and especially Kate did not see this notebook. When I was done, I tucked it into my purple English folder and went back to work on my geometry.

I wondered how Forrest had voted in the Fat or Not book. Had he given me one of my “not fat” stars? I figured that was what was expected of a boyfriend, that he would stick up for me in this kind of situation. It was another way of saying I was good-looking or at least not bad-looking. I glanced over my shoulder to the back corner of the room to see if maybe he was using a distinctive pen. Then I could have scanned the book again and figured out if he had already rated me.

But then I saw that his writing instrument of choice was just a boring old yellow number two pencil. I spun back around quickly because I didn't want him to catch me looking at him. He wasn't my real boyfriend and it took all my strength to remember that.

Four

Once you understand the cafeteria, you can be super efficient. And just about every eighth-grader knows the routine. You can pack your lunch, bring your own drink, and maximize the time you and your friends have to gab it up before it's time for afternoon classes. Or, you can buy your lunch, but you have to get there lickety split or you'll be at the end of the line. By the time you pay for your lunch, you will have hardly any time to eat it.

I used neither of those tactics today. I packed my lunch but left my raspberry seltzer water in my locker on purpose so that I could spend time in the lunch line getting a drink. I then moved at a snail-like pace to the cafeteria and stood in line instead of just jumping to the front to grab my milk. By the time I reached our table, Kate was halfway finished with her PB&J and Piper was pushing around the remnants of her spinach salad.

“Where were you, Mrs. McCann? With Mr. McCann?” Piper teased.

My stomach did a somersault and my face reddened.

“She's blushing,” Kate said with a grin.

“Stop it, you guys. I was getting a drink,” I said.

“Okay, we'll buy that if you tell us the whole story. Start at the beginning. He came over to your house for dinner and…,” Kate said.

“Right, my parents invited his whole family.”

I took a moment to set out my lunch components: grilled chicken wrap, apple, milk.

“And?” Kate said.

“Yes, and?” Piper said.

“My mom thought they were moving and I guessed they almost moved, but they're not moving,” I said.

“Okay, we know that,” Piper said. “Remember? My mom was their realtor, so I know they're not moving. Go on, please.”

“You're not mad at all, Piper?” I said.

Piper had gone to the eighth-grade dance with Forrest and I had been so upset about it. But she moved on.

“He and I were together for, like, half a minute,” Piper said. “I'm glad you finally upgraded your crush to a boyfriend.” She leaned over to give me a side hug.

Upgraded to a boyfriend? Not exactly.

I started eating my lunch, thinking this would pause the inquiry. For a while Piper and Kate just watched me eat. Bite after bite, all was quiet and they watched me, like I was an egg they were hoping would hatch.

“What?” I said, my mouth finally clear of food.

“Maybe you are new to this, but having a boyfriend is, like, the funnest thing ever to talk about,” Piper said. “In fact, I think talking about boys might
actually
be more fun that being with them. So, umm, what's your deal?”

“Yes, Jem. We're dying here for some details. What happened Saturday night at your house?” Kate said.

“Yes, and why wouldn't you have called us—or at least texted—like, immediately?” Piper asked.

I took a deep breath and began. I told them how we were stuck with Trevor most of the night, but that Forrest told me that he was having trouble with girls.

“He said, ‘Girls want answers and I don't have any answers, Jem.'”

“Awww. He called you Jem,” Kate said. “Did he kiss you then, outside by the grill?”

“No,” I said. “He squeezed my hand.”

“He held your hand?” Kate asked.

I shook my head no. Then I told them what happened the next morning, when I ran by his house and saw him shooting baskets.

“I asked him to run with me and we ran all the way to Price's Dairy and back. He was really hurting near the end,” I said.

“So is it then that he asked you to go out?” Kate asked.

Technically, no. After our run, he asked me to be his pretend girlfriend.

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