Authors: J. Minter
“Of course. I'm glad I can help you get the apartment. And I won't tell anyone that you're staying here either. I promise.”
“Wonderful. A secret!” She smiled. “Oh, this is going to be
cr-azy
fun!”
And thenâand I'm being totally seriousâSBB meowed at me and sort of wriggled around and then threw herself on my bed and kicked up her feet.
The next morning, when my alarm clock went off, I felt like I was still dreaming. Was it possible that the time had really come? My first day at Stuyvesant?
After twisting and turning in front of the mirror for about twenty minutes, I finally did my hair up in a messy bun, put on some watermelon-flavored lip gloss, and gave myself a final once-over. I looked good, I thought: the heels I'd picked really dressed up my jeans, and my skin, which is normally super pale, actually had some color to it since I'd spent all summer biking and hanging out down by the shore. And at this point, there was nothing else I could do to make myself look cooler or older. So I grabbed my backpack and went downstairs. SBB was still asleep in one of the bedrooms upstairsâI'm not even sure which one.
When I went down to the kitchen to drink a quick
glass of orange juice before school, I noticed something I hadn't seen before: a message on the answering machine. I pushed the button and it played into the room.
“Hey, Patch? Flan? It's Feb. So, it's Saturday night, and I'm just calling to say I might be gone for a few days. This friend of mine's shooting a music video in this abandoned warehouse in Brooklyn and I'm going to chill out there for a while. Don't tell Mom and Dad. Obviously. I hope everything's cool. Keep the peace while I'm gone.”
I sighed and walked out the door. I wondered if Feb ever felt nervous or awkward or uncool. Probably not.
Unlike Miss Mallard's, which is a long cab ride away, Stuyvesant is actually within walking distance of my house. So I took my time on the walk over. I love my neighborhood in the morning. Everything looks so fresh and pretty. Sometime either late at night or really early, somebody must hose down all the sidewalks, because they're always wet and sparkly in the morning sun, and even though I live right in the middle of New York City, the air smells like window-box flowers and tree leaves instead of garbage and taxi exhaust. As I walked down the street, I saw store owners pulling up the metal gates in the fronts of their stores and turning on the lights in the display cases,
and I started to feel a little happier for some reason, like maybe today wasn't such an awfully big deal after all.
As soon as I started walking down Chambers Street, though, I started to feel super anxious. Stuyvesant takes up a whole big buildingâten floors, with escalatorsâand I could see it looming up from more than a block away. The doors to the building hadn't opened yet, but already there were a million kids milling around on the sidewalk outside, and even more coming down the street or across the Tribeca Bridge. I didn't know any of them.
It couldn't have been more different from Miss Mallard's Day, where everybody wore a uniform and knew everybody else. Here all the students were divided up into cliques that couldn't have been crazier or more different from one another. There were guys all thugged out in baggy jeans and sports jerseys, kids with white faces and black lips who looked like they were auditioning for a Tim Burton movie, girls in professional-looking skirts and blouses who could have been in law school, plus raver types in bright colors and kids in dark baggy T-shirts with anime characters and computer jargon printed on them. My outfit had seemed so cool back at my house, but now I wasn't so sure. I felt really out of placeâand young
looking. Sara-Beth was right: everyone in high school seemed like they were trying to look as much older as possible. Some of the guys even had beards.
I didn't know what to do, so I just sort of wandered through the crowd like I was looking for someone I knew, which I kind of was, in a way. I passed a really chesty girl in a glittery BOYS LIE T-shirt and tight short-shorts, a punked-out kid who had so many piercings he looked like he'd fallen asleep with his head down on a sewing machine, and a really cute guy in a polo shirt who looked old enough to be in a frat before I finally gave up and sat down on the sidewalk with my back against the wall, all by myself. Even then I felt like just a speck in the crowd.
It was weird: I'd been to a million parties where the other kids were older, but everyone always recognized me. I was usually with my sister or my brother or my ex-boyfriend, Jonathan, but even when I was alone, I was always Flan Flood, and people knew that. I never just blended inâI was always getting noticed and singled out, interrogated, practically, by gossipmongers and hangers-on. At the time I hated it, but sitting there on the sidewalk outside the high school, I started to think that maybe Angelica and Camille and the other girls from my old school were rightâmaybe I was giving up something pretty special by leaving
Miss Mallard's Day. Maybe it wasn't such a great idea to strike off on my own like this. Maybe I'd found my true selfâand she was a wallflower.
Just when I was feeling about ready to cry, though, I saw them: two other girls who looked just as lost as I did. They were both kind of tall, like me. One of them had wavy light brown hair pulled back in a ponytail, and an awesome skirt made out of men's ties stitched together lengthwise. The other one was sort of preppy, with long blond hair that she kept flipping back over her shoulders while she looked around the crowd. They were whispering to each other and their mouths were just barely moving, as if they were afraid they'd get in trouble if anyone figured out what they were saying.
I wanted to go talk to them, but for a minute I couldn't make myself get up from the spot I'd claimed on the sidewalk. What if I went over and said hi, and they thought I was some desperate loser and totally blew me off? I'd feel so lame. But then again, the only way to stop
being
a desperate loser was to make some friends. High school was supposed to be my big opportunity to meet new people, right? So I stood up, literally dusted myself off, and made my feet move in their direction.
I knew right away I'd made the right decision, because when they saw me, they both looked over with really friendly, relieved-looking smiles.
“Hi,” said the girl in the tie skirt, smiling at me. She had really pretty little teeth, and now that I was closer I could see she was wearing a shirt with flowers embroidered all over it in different colors of ribbon. “I'm Meredith.”
“I'm Flan. Flan Flood.” I figured I might as well get it out of the wayâbut when I said “Flood,” they didn't react at all. They just kept smiling at me in the same relieved, friendly way. So they hadn't heard of Patch and Feb? It was a thrill and sort of unsettling at the same timeâlike walking around on Halloween in a mask and discovering that people really can't tell who you are. “I really like your skirt,” I added, to cover my confusion. “Did you make it?”
“Oh, no. My grandma did.” Meredith gave her skirt a little twirl. “Isn't it great? She designs clothes. She has a little shop in Sohoâmy mom works there too.”
“That's so awesome.” I grinned, but inside I panicked a little. What would I say if they asked me what my parents did for a living? “They like to travel, and sometimes my dad buys cars or boats if he's bored”? If I wanted to seem normal, that was not the best way to start out.
“I'm Judith,” said the other girl. She talked like she'd had voice lessons or something, and she kept
flipping her long blond hair over her shoulders, but she seemed nice and I decided to like her anyway. “Are you new here too?”
“Yeah, this is my first day.”
Meredith pushed her hair off her shoulders. “Well, except for orientation, of course, but I guess that didn't really count.”
“Orientation? What?” I felt a sinking feeling in my stomach, like when you find out there's going to be a test you haven't studied for.
Meredith and Judith exchanged a glance.
“I thought we hadn't seen her before,” said Meredith.
“I just got back from Connecticut yesterday,” I said.
“Well, don't worry about it,” said Meredith, squeezing my arm. “It was mostly just a tour anyway. And we made ugly friendship bracelets.” She and Judith held up their wrists, and I looked. They really were the ugliest friendship bracelets I'd ever seen. “Judith and I can show you around the building and stuff.”
“Really?”
“Of course,” said Judith. “I've got a terrific memory for these things.”
We took out our schedules and figured out that we were in most of the same classes, except Meredith
had gotten into honors English, which seemed to irritate Judith a little, since, as she pointed out, she was
normally
the better student. We all sat together in the back of the auditorium for the first-day assembly, and I found out all about the two of them.
Apparently, they'd gone to an all-girls private school on the West Side all through elementary school and junior high, and they'd been best friends since either of them could remember. Meredith was really into arts and crafts, and from what she said it sounded like she'd wind up working in her mom and grandma's clothing store before too long, unless she decided she liked painting or photography better. Judith was more into getting good grades, especially in math, and she told me twice that she'd been the valedictorian of their eighth-grade class. Her father was a personal injury lawyerâ“You've probably seen his ads on the subway,” she said.
“Oh, yeah,” I said. The last time I'd been down in the subway was this one night when Feb took me out with her friends and we got stranded down near Battery Park at two in the morning with no cabs anywhere in sight. Feb and I had walked down into the subway station, taken one look at the dripping ceilings of doom and the sketchy fat drunk guy passed out on a bench, and called a car service.
I didn't pay much attention during the assembly, since Meredith and Judith and I were talking the whole time, but I did find out that in the afternoon we were supposed to have quick meetings in all of our classes so the teachers could tell us what books to buy and what the first assignment would be. After representatives from all the different clubs and sports teams and study groups got up and talked about themselves, they finally let us take a breakâto go have some lunch in the cafeteria.
“So, Flan, we've been talking about ourselves forever,” said Judith as we sat down to eat by one of the windows. The cafeteria at Stuyvesant is beautiful, and you can see right out to the Hudson River. It's so different from the stuffy old tearoom where we ate lunch at Miss Mallard's; instead, we were on the first floor, and we could see ladies walking past the windows with their little dogs, and beyond them were boats and ferries and maybe even the
QE2
out there in the Hudson River. “What about you? Where did you go to school before? What's your story?”
“Oh, there's nothing much to tell about me.” I turned a fork around in my spinach fettuccine. “I went to this place called Miss Mallard's Day. It was all girls too.”
Judith took a bite of her yogurt. “I can't believe
how some girls our age have already had a bunch of boyfriends. I feel like I've barely seen a boy since kindergarten.”
“Really,” I said, thinking of the hot older boys milling around at my brother's parties.
“Speaking of which,” whispered Meredith, hunching over and pointing across the room to the soda machines.
Judith and I both turned around to look. And there he was: tousled dirty-blond hair, squinty blue-gray eyes, and a gentle smile that showed his slightly chipped front tooth. He wore a ripped All-American Rejects T-shirt and long denim shorts, and he walked so gracefully I could tell he'd be great at slow dancing.
“Who's that?” I whispered back.
“Bennett Keating.” Meredith giggled. “He's the second-cutest boy in tenth grade!”
I watched him walk over to a table of other guys. “Who's the first?”
“Well, according to Judith it's this guy named Eric. But I hear he's really stuck-up. You know, always talking about his penthouse apartment ⦔
“⦠and all the celebrities he knows ⦔
“⦠and all the exclusive parties he gets invited to,” Meredith finished.
Judith rolled her eyes and settled them on a pigeon
outside. “I mean, who cares about that stuff anyway? It's so shallow, you know? That doesn't make you cool. Nobody cares, Eric. Nobody.” She chomped down on an apple slice like the case was closed.
“Yeah,” I said. I'd started to feel really comfortable around them, but all of a sudden I just wanted to hide. I pretended to admire the view out the window and tried not to think about Sara-Beth Benny, who was at that moment probably practicing her Oscar speech in front of my mirror. I went on. “I'd rather people like me ⦠just for myself, you know?” I barely managed a weak smile.
After school, I walked with Meredith and Judith over to the subway, which they were taking back to their apartments uptown. Meredith was telling us about how she saw Bennett Keating try to fill his Nalgene bottle at the water fountain, only to get totally drenched, and I was laughing so hard that I started to follow them down the stairs into the subway station before I even realized what I was doing.
“Oh, hey, I guess I should say good-bye here,” I said, stepping aside so a woman carrying a stroller could walk past me.
“You're not taking the subway home?” Judith asked, flipping her hair.
“No, I only live a few blocks away from school. It's a nice walk, actually.”
“Oh, wow, that's so cool,” said Meredith. “I don't think I met anyone else at orientation who lives so close.”