Black and White and Gray All Over (11 page)

I giggled, picturing Jeff Perry hanging out with a bunch of models, or even a gaggle of pretty girls. He'd eat it up! I was feeling better by the minute about all of this. But I didn't want to get too relaxed in case she had her eye on Michael for the future.

“So do you think Michael's cute?” I asked.

She paused, thoughtful. “Well, I wouldn't even bother to think about it, seeing as how he's so smitten with you. But since you ask, I do have a sort of boyfriend back home and—no offense—but he's more my type. I really like blond guys. Athletic . . .
not so much, you know? More the poet type.”

I laughed out loud and Kate blushed. “Is that just gross to you?” she asked. “Am I totally off the American girl's taste?”

“Oh my gosh, sorry. No! Not at all. I just . . . Oh, I guess I'm relieved . . . .” I couldn't believe I'd admitted it to her, but she'd been so honest, so open and forthright with me all along, I could see now that I owed her the same. Because suddenly I knew Kate Bigley and I were going to be very good friends for a very long time (even if I ended up having to join Buddybook to stay in touch with her). And since that was the case, it was time to come clean with her. “See, here's the thing . . . ,” I said. And as we sat on our uncomfortable bar stools at the Starbucks in the mall, I told her the whole story about Michael.

Chapter 10

NUCLEAR WINTER THAWS AS TALKS CONTINUE

Kate and I spent a really fun afternoon together, never running out of things to talk about. She loved the Michael Lawrence crush story, even the Pasty part, and she was mortified at her role in separating me from my one true love. She even offered to step down from the article so I could finish it with Michael, but there was no way I'd take her up on that. First of all, it would look bad for her, and second of all, there was no way I was taking on all that work at this late stage in the issue! She swore he only talked about me, and she wanted to talk about ways to get us together. I laughed because that's what Hailey is always trying to do, too.

At the bookstore Kate introduced me to the
work of John Green, which she said is amazing, and I told her about Lauren Myracle, whose books I really like. We both loved the Dork Diaries and had read all the books in the series, and we went over all the recent bestsellers and said what we thought of the ones we'd read. I could spend all day in the bookstore, the same way my mom could spend all day in the hardware store. I guess it's all about being surrounded by what excites you and shows you the most possibility.

Kate told me all about the dinner with her parents and their friends the night before. She also told me about a bestselling author of adult books who we both like to read when our parents aren't looking, and how the woman has nine children and writes for a week straight sometimes, having her meals delivered and showering in her office bathroom.

I told Kate how I really want to be a journalist when I grow up and travel to scary places to uncover the truth.

“I have no doubt you will do that, Sam,” said Kate, and it felt great hearing it from her.

When it was time to go meet our moms, we didn't want to leave, but we both were tired and had a lot of work to do at home. We hugged before we got into our cars and made a plan to do the same thing next week, maybe meeting Jenna and Hailey for lunch or a movie too. I was so excited to have made a new friend who shares so many of my interests, and I told my mom all about her and our day as we drove home.

“Did you know she's moved three times in the last four years?” I said. “And all her friends are back at the original place! But she still is in touch with all of them almost every day. Wow. I can't imagine how hard that is,” I said, shaking my head in wonder.

My mother looked at me in the rearview mirror. “You know how much I hate to say ‘I told you so,' right?” she said with a smile.

“Right.” I nodded. “So I'll say it for you: You told me so.”

“Thanks,” said my mom. And she turned up the radio and started singing along.

Sunday morning I got up early and began pulling together all my uniform pieces and facts and figures. Hailey called in a tally of 567 for uniforms and 129 against them. We were really shocked.

I started writing at about ten o'clock, and by twelve I had a ten-page article that I really was starting to like. I stopped for lunch and then went back and edited it down to eight pages. I cut and pasted a few photos from the school uniform company's Website—a couple of funny vintage ones and a few current ones. They might want to run them with the article, so I'd gotten permission from the marketing director at the company in advance. I tacked the permission on to the article so the managing editor would have it on file if it ever came up. I took one last read though and then I decided to e-mail it to Kate for a fresh pair of eyes. First I IM'd her to see if she was there and willing to read it, and she was, both.

I sent it and then waited. I always hate that part, waiting for feedback. To distract myself, I did my homework (there wasn't much this
weekend, thank goodness), and then I pulled up the Dear Know-It-All response to smooth that out.

But that just wasn't coming. I couldn't decide how to order the information and how to make it gender neutral. Like, should all the activity ideas be gender neutral (“Play Words with Pals”), which could get kind of boring, or should I separate the idea lists into one for girls and one for boys (like “Play paintball” and “Give each other mani-pedis”)? This was obviously pretty sticky business and I'd really need Trigger's advice on it. I don't like sending things to an editor when they're not the very best I think they can be. But in this case, I really needed my editor's help, and since no one else but my mom knows I write this column, it would have to be Trigger.

I wrote up a little cover e-mail and attached my response. I was now ruining the surprise that I'd written a blockbuster, but at least he could start mentally mapping out the layout, now that he knew I'd be submitting a really long column for this issue.

Meanwhile, I had heard back from Kate!

Eagerly, I read her e-mail and looked for suggestions I could incorporate in any way, shape, or form. But I quickly saw she hadn't given me any notes. She wrote that it was “divine” and she gave many specific examples of things she'd liked and even loved, so I knew for sure she'd read it. But there was no constructive criticism to be found.

I wrote back. “Don't be shy, Kate. Any mistakes? Anything you'd change? Hate any parts? What's the most boring section, where your eyes truly glazed over?”

And then the phone rang. It was Kate. “I had to call. Honestly, it's flawless. I loved every inch of it, and I think you're a genius. I'm not just saying it. I swear!” Hmm.
Nuclear Winter Thaws as Talks Continue.

“Well . . . okay, I guess . . . ,” I said skeptically. There had to be at least one typo. The odds were about a billion to one that there wasn't!

After we hung up, I sat and stared at my screen for a while. I couldn't swamp Trigger with my own insecurity, asking him to review everything I was working on. I had my reputation to maintain, after
all. Hailey would be absolutely no help, and I felt too lazy to walk downstairs and ask my mom to read it.

Let's face it. There was only one person I wanted to hear from.

I typed up an e-mail apologizing for bothering him, and then I attached the document and hit send. I drummed my fingers on the table for a full five minutes while I waited for any sort of a reply. Then I gave up and went downstairs for a snack.

Since I was finished with my homework and in limbo on my articles, I settled in for an episode of
Star Dancing
with my mom and Allie and got totally sucked in. It was the perfect Sunday late-afternoon distraction.

When it was over, my mom stood up and stretched and went to get dinner going, while I hoped against hope that Michael had replied. I made myself climb the stairs slowly, cross my room slowly, lifted my screen slowly . . . and he had replied!

I sat on the edge of my seat and opened his e-mail. Which was long. Very long.

I began to read his comments and realized he had gone line by line to edit my article. Besides finding a bunch of typos and wrong word choices, as well as punctuation errors, Michael found an inconsistency I'd have to re-fact-check with the marketing company, a discrepancy in the wording of the Bill Clinton quote (having checked it against another source), and I'd carelessly said, “So we can see why Mr. Pfeiffer is for uniforms . . .” when I meant to say “against.”

After I'd finished what Michael had written, I felt whipped. He had torn me apart and I hadn't been expecting it, especially after the lovefest with Kate earlier. Slowly, I began to get mad. I shut my computer and went down to dinner, where I barked at my mom, froze out Allie, and generally behaved badly (according to my mother). But when I explained what had made me so cranky, they took Michael's side!

“Sammy, you asked the guy for a critique! You
solicited
the criticism!” said Allie.

“Well, so? He didn't have to be so . . . thorough!” I said, knowing it sounded dumb and spoiled even
as the words left my mouth.

Allie rolled her eyes. “What, you want him to skip over errors just so you don't get mad at him?”

“No,” I said, cutting my chicken. “But he didn't have to be so nitpicky.”

“Oh, please!”

My mother watched us, amused.

“I'm glad you think it's funny!” I said finally.

“I do!” she said. “Here you have some really constructive help from a very close friend and writing partner, whom you greatly respect, who has taken a large chunk out of his own work time to slave over every word you've written to make it absolutely as perfect as can be. And you're mad at him! You two are really too much!” she said, shaking her head and laughing.

“Well,” I huffed. “If you put it that way.” And I finished my dinner, cleared my plate, and went upstairs to call Michael.

My fingers shook as I dialed the number (I know it by heart, of course), and luckily it was Michael himself who picked up on the second ring.

“Pasty!” he said happily.

“Michael,” I said.

“Uh-oh,” said Michael. “No Mikey? What have I done?”

“First of all, thank you for reading and . . . uh . . . fixing my article. I'm sure it will be greatly improved now that it has been under your eagle eye.”

“Oh, so I was too aggressive, was I?” he asked, catching right on.

“Well, you certainly left no stone unturned,” I agreed.

He sighed. “Listen, Paste. It's a great article. If no one had looked at it and you'd sent it in, I'm sure it would have been just fine. I just can't bear to see you, of all people, submit something that's less than perfect. It's just not right.”

“Well, Kate read it and
she
thought it was perfect. She even used that word.
Perfect!
” I said indignantly.

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