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Authors: Laura Dower

BOOK: Back Online
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Dan furrowed his brow. “I'm too thick to remember what you said. Ha! See you at school!”

Madison grabbed Mom's elbow and leaned in as they headed for the door.

“He'll be fine,” Mom said.

“Who?” Madison said, thinking Mom was talking about Dan. “Who'll be fine?”

“Phin, of course,” Mom whispered. “Frozen yogurt on me, on the way home, okay?”

They stopped at Freeze Palace and got two larges. Mom got Pink Taro and Madison got Chocofun, which tasted a lot like hazelnut spread. Madison's teeth ached with each cold bite.

It was weird coming home to a Phin-free house. There was a message light blinking on the portable phone. It was Dad asking Madison to call him back. Mom had called him earlier to give him an update on what happened to Phin. He didn't live in their house anymore, but Mom always let him know about all the important little details, like when Maddie had a cold, or bigger things, like when Phin had an emergency trip to the vet. Even though they weren't married anymore, Mom and Dad knew how to keep Madison from feeling like she had two separate lives. They wanted her to feel like they were still a family.

“Maddie, if you want to sleep in my room tonight, you can,” Mom said.

Madison had a funny feeling Mom needed it more than she did.

“Okay,” Madison said. “I'll meet you there.”

Mom headed upstairs, and Madison got into the shower. She had just bought three new body washes from the mall and she wanted to try them all: Sweet Pea, Lovely Lilac, and Jasmine Scrub. It was hard for Madison to remember a time when taking a shower and doing her hair wasn't fun. Mom teased her and called her Miss Smell Well.

When she was done, Madison wrapped one towel around her body and another on her head, and went into her room and opened her laptop. She wanted to send Bigwheels an email about Phin. It had been a loooong day.

Madison found something very surprising when she opened her email.

Hart had written her a note—a real note.

From: Sk8ingboy

To: MadFinn

Subject: HEY

Date: Sun 8 Oct 8:14 PM

I didn't really know what to say earlier. I mean, I didn't not write on purpose even though you think that's what I didn't do. Wait. Does that even make sense? I hope we are still together like before. I know I live far away but I will try not to forget anymore. Sorry like I said, Finnster. See you around.

BFN

Hart

Madison wanted to be happy about
finally
getting a note.

So why wasn't she?

Chapter Three

“Get out of my way, puh-lease!” barked Ivy Daly from behind Egg Díaz in the lunch line Monday afternoon. Even when Ivy said something polite, it sounded obnoxious.

She was dressed mostly in purple, with a short skirt, polka-dot leggings, and a loose yellow chiffon shirt over a tank top. She also wore little black flats with purple bows on them, and her hair was swept back into a fishtail braid with purple and yellow barrettes. Madison always marveled at just how color-coordinated Ivy could be. Did she spend hours obsessing over every detail of her outfit? Madison had been so proud of her own sunburn-friendly ensemble this morning, but compared to Ivy, Madison's fashion sense was taking a siesta.

“Um, you're in my way,” Ivy repeated. Loudly.

Madison could see that Egg was ready to fling a spoonful of gluey mashed potatoes at her head.

The year before, all the boys seemed to
ooh
and
ahh
over Ivy, but this year things had changed—really changed. Everyone got tired of Ivy's dumb comments and mean-girl attitude. Once Poison Ivy's “drones”—Rose and Joan—disappeared, the equation changed. Rose Thorn finds new, less bossy pal + Phony Joanie moves away = Poison Ivy is rendered powerless.

It took some getting used to, seeing Ivy this year in a totally new realm where she was
not
the queen bee. Madison's feelings for Ivy were always so complicated.

Madison Finn and Ivy Daly's friendship began on the playground when they were toddlers. Ivy was the closest thing to a sister Madison ever had. But thanks to a humdinger of a falling-out in third grade, things cooled off. Last year, the pair had a brief bounce-back and shared a few nicer-than-nice moments, making Madison wonder if there was friendship potential again.

And yet.

Fact: Ivy Daly was not the most reliable of friends.

Madison worried that if she gave Ivy any indication of weakness, Ivy would chomp her head off like a praying mantis on the Science Channel.

So Madison figured it was better to chomp first, check for wounds later.

“Ivy, can't you just wait your turn like everyone else?”

“What's
your
malfunction?” Ivy asked.

“Malfunction?” Madison asked, getting her attitude on. “I thought we decided we would try to be—”


We
decided,” Ivy interrupted. “Right.”

She took her tray, flicked her red hair, and huffed off in her too-cute flats. Madison noticed that Ivy was barely able to balance her chocolate milk with the plate of salad and an extra helping of tater tots along with the huge backpack on her shoulder. Ivy went to sit down with a few kids Madison didn't know very well, including a new girl in a turquoise shirt that read
SURF CHICK
.

Fiona waved to Madison. She'd gotten them all the usual seats at their table. Aimee and her other pals Lindsay and Madhur were there, too.

Madison took a seat near the others. “Poison Ivy attack. Am I bleeding?”

“What happened?” Lindsay asked.

“I wonder how long it'll be until Ivy wraps the new girl around her perfectly manicured finger. I can tell she misses her minions. Surf Chick is totally next in line,” Aimee said.

“I don't know,” Madison said. “That's a little harsh. Ivy just seems—”

“Worse than ever!” Fiona joked.

The actual word Madison was thinking of was
sad
, but she didn't want to say that out loud. She didn't know for sure that Ivy was sad. Maybe she was just tired. She felt badly about speaking to Ivy like that.

“Ugh, who cares about Ivy?” Madhur said.

“We waste so much time worrying about someone who doesn't care about us at
all
,” Lindsay added, grabbing a banana off Madhur's tray. They often stole food from each other.

“At least we can still sit together in the back,” Aimee commented.

“It is
our
table.” Madison smiled. “We need a plaque or something that says
BFFS ONLY
.”

“Swap for chocolate!” Madhur cried, snatching an extra chocolate-chunk cookie from Lindsay.

“Okay, everyone, I have an announcement.” Aimee stood up and tapped on the table like her fingers were drumsticks. “
Big
news. The deadline for filming the reality show in Far Hills is coming up, so it could happen any moment now. And our dance studio
officially
made the final list. I am soooo close!”

Madhur and Fiona squealed at the same time. “Wow!”

“Yeah,” said Madison. “Wow. Close to what?”

“Madison, if this really happens and Madame Elaine picks me to film and if they show me dancing”—Aimee got a dreamy look in her eyes—“life as we know it could change
forever
.”

“Change?” Madison asked. “Way to be dramatic, Aim.”


If
it happens.” Lindsay said. “When will you know for sure?”

“Linds!” Madhur thunked Lindsay in the arm. “Don't be negative! Of course it'll be awesome sauce once Aimee is a TV star.”

“Oh, it's not that I don't think it totally could happen,” said Lindsay, quickly backtracking.

“Because it totally could,” Fiona added.

“We believe in you,” Madison said. “It's just—”

“Look guys, I know my life on reality TV is a long shot,” Aimee said with a concerned look. “But if it does happen, not only will I be famous, but you guys can be on reality TV with me, too! A good plan, right?”

“I'm going to be that friend who always hides when the camera is around,” Lindsay said.

“Being on a reality show
would
be a good excuse to get a new haircut,” Madhur said thoughtfully.

“Hey!” Madison interjected. “Don't you think we're getting a little carried away?”

Aimee made another “announcement” and kept talking about the maybe-it-will-happen reality show. Madison wanted to ignore all of it, but what would happen if the show
did
make it on the air and
was
a hit? Could Aimee be the next big thing?

There were an awful lot of “what ifs” to consider.

Madison knew a lot about filming since her mom was a movie producer for Budge Films. So she knew that nothing was ever a sure thing when it came to movie making. Aimee was, as wise Gramma Helen would say, “putting the cart before the horse.”

“Maybe the TV-show producers will let us all have walk-ons as your best friends for life?” Lindsay added.

“I have an idea!” Fiona blurted out. “I'll suck up to the producers when they come to Far Hills and convince them to do
another
reality show about the Far Hills Rangers soccer team. Ha!”

“As if!” Madhur barked. “If you do that, then I'm getting them to make a show about the smartest kids at school. That would be me in the starring role, of course.”

Aimee gasped. “You guys crack me up. Stop or I'll pirouette on your heads!”

“Maybe they can film
that
for TV ratings!” Lindsay said.

“Hey.” Aimee grinned. “Imagine if they started filming and they liked Madame Elaine's so much that they made a spinoff series just about us.”

“We'd have to cast Ivy as the evil villain,” Lindsay said.

Everyone laughed aloud. Out of the corner of her eye, Madison caught a glimpse of Ivy moving tater tots around on her plate as she stared into space.

Madison realized that, over the years, friends meant different things at different times. That friendships seemed to zip and dip like the Giant Fang, Madison's favorite roller coaster ever. Sometimes they even left you feeling like your stomach was doing flops. But in the end, friendships always seemed to steady, coming back to the place where it all began, just like that crazy ride.

The bell rang, and everyone dumped their lunch trays and rushed off to their lockers. Madison looked for Ivy again on the way out, but she was gone.

Eighth graders had lockers for the first time this year, so Madison was often found between classes hanging out by her—as luck would have it—
orange
locker. All the students decorated their lockers as if they were the teeniest rooms ever, with posters, mirrors, and all sorts of swag. Mom got Madison a mini magnetic board with little orange magnets.

Taped up to the inside of Madison's locker door was her daily schedule. Some days the periods were all mixed-up, so she had to check it a lot, even though it was early October.

 

Period

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

1

SS 310

SS 310

SS 310

SS 310

SS 310

2

Math 309

ENG 305

ENG 305

ENG 305

ENG 305

3

Health

Spanish

Health

Phys Ed

Math 309

4

Lunch

Lunch

Lunch

Lunch

Lunch

5

Elective

Music

Art

Spanish

Elective

6

ENG 305

Math 309

Math 309

Math 309

Phys Ed

7

Lab Science

Lab Science

Lab Science

Lab Science

Lab Science

8

Tech

Elective

Spanish

Tech

Newspaper

 

So far, the transition into eighth grade had gone smoothly. Today, Monday, Madison had her elective after lunch. The fall semester elective for her section was American Cinema, which incorporated media, English, history, and technology into one class. All the kids loved it because Mrs. Wing made it fun. Plus, you got to watch movies during school.

Last year, everything about Mrs. Wing had made Madison smile: the way she talked, the way she dressed, and the way she always seemed to know
exactly
what someone was thinking before he or she even asked a question in class. This year was even better.

In addition to teaching the new elective for the eighth graders, Mrs. Wing still taught technology and advised for the school's website, so Madison saw a lot of her during the school day.

And what a blur today was! Madison was exhausted just
thinking
about it. After the last bell rang, kids flooded the hallways like a tidal wave. Egg, Dan, and Chet formed a minipack that rode the wave down the hall. Madison waved to them as she moved on by.

Dan sure looks cute right now.

Madison nearly crashed into someone's locker, distracted by her own secret thought. What was she thinking? Dan was not allowed into the “he looks cute” category of boys inside Madison's head, was he?

Apparently, he
was
.

“Hey, Maddie!” Aimee called out when she saw Madison rushing down the hallway. “Wait up! Let's walk home together!”

As they walked, Madison tried not to scream, because all Aimee did was talk, talk, and keep talking about nothing but the reality show. Madison had other things on her mind. A certain someone was coming home later—Phinnie—and she wanted to see him more than anything. They reached Aimee's house first, of course, and Aimee begged Madison to come inside, just for a little bit.

“Let's go up on the roof and talk,” Aimee said. The roof was the secret spot outside Aimee's bedroom window, a small landing where Aimee and her pals would lie out and gaze at the stars at night. It was the perfect place to escape—just a little bit—from the real world. It made talking with friends that much better.

“Okay,” Madison said reluctantly. “But I have to get home soon. Mom will be looking for me.”

There were dead leaves on the landing, but the colors were warm reds and browns, and the air smelled like burning logs. Even if the weather was still warmish, people dusted off their fireplace tools and built fires in the fireplace. Bring on the cozy! Madison noticed wisps of smoke rising from chimneys set against the pale pink twilight sky. It was still light out, but the fat, round moon was clearly visible. Aimee and Madison lay on their backs, talking.

“I wish Spanish wasn't so hard,” Aimee complained. “And technology.”

“Maybe you're just distracted by the whole reality-show thing.”

“Maybe,” Aimee said. “I saw Ben today. He said he might be able to help me with homework.”

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