Sloppy Firsts (17 page)

Read Sloppy Firsts Online

Authors: Megan McCafferty

Tags: #Fiction, #Coming of Age, #Humorous

BOOK: Sloppy Firsts
12.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

Ugh. I sound like Sara.

 

I can’t help but think of the last thing she said:No matter what I do, don’t take it personally. Maybe she knew then that she was leaving. As much as Hy disappointed me toward the end of school, I hope whatever is going on, it’s nothing bad.

 

Of course, the most conspicuous absentee from my life is Marcus Flutie.

 

I know he’s still at Middlebury, but I can’t shake the feeling that I’m going to see him again. The boardwalk is swarming with Marcus mirages. I fall for them every time. I catch split-second glimpses of his dreads, his slouch, and his tattoo. They last long enough for my heart to bang against my insides, like it wants me to expel it from my chest cavity. Every time I think I see Marcus, it turns out to be someone who looksnothing like him. One time the Marcus was a black guy. Another time the Marcus was agirl . It’s like I need to see Marcus so badly that I’m trying to turn him into everyone. And everyone into him.

 

the twentieth

 

Still no Marcus. No Hy either.

 

I’m on Bridget’s mass E-mail list, which pisses me off. You would think that after making such an annoying request, she would at least take the time to personalize her correspondence, or at least have the common sense to bcc the other people so I don’t know that she’s sending the sameI-just-missed-getting-a-tampon-commercial-but-I-saw-Freddie-Prinze-Jr.-at-Trader-Vic’s message to everyone in our class.

 

I’m still keeping my eye on Burke. The only girls I ever see him talking to are me, Manda, and Sara. He’d better keep it that way.

 

I see Scotty all the time, but I wish I didn’t. It reminds me of the whole Cal thing.

 

I was seven hours and thirty-eight minutes into my eight-hour shift when I saw Scotty for the bizillionth-or-so time last night. He was standing by a blinking neon sign that persuaded passersby to take ball in hand andWhack Our Kats . He was talking to the pruny man who had worked at that boardwalk stand for twenty-five summers and counting.

 

Scotty lifted his red Funtown Pier employee T-shirt up to his chest hair. There was a girdle binding his newly acquired beer bulge. He’s been kicking kegs all summer with the football team. The old man coughed a laugh as Scotty explained the need for the fat-sucking contraption. It was called a Gut Buster, the amazing machine that would sweat his gut away. He seemed okay with the fact that it would take an entire summer of intense weight training and wearing the Gut Buster to undo what it took only opening his mouth and chugging, chugging, chugging to do. The Whack Our Kats man watched and listened and laughed until it was clinically dangerous to laugh any harder.

 

I knew that this was the story that Scotty was relating. I knew the story because a few days ago, he had acted it out for me. Word for word, gesture for gesture—it was all the same. I had laughed, too. Seeing his repeat performance tonight, however, almost made me cry. Somehow it confirmed what I already knew: I’m no different than the Whack Our Kats man in his eyes.

 

This is a delayed reaction. I should have had this epiphany three weeks ago, when Scotty stopped carpooling with Burke, Manda, and me and started getting rides from a girl named Becky who goes to Eastland. There was no reason for it to bother me. So it didn’t.

 

Until last night, that is. We were stuck at the sixth of thirteen possible red lights on the route home when I realized that the person in the passenger side of the car directly in front of us was Scotty. I recognized his familiar superhero silhouette. He was violently thrashing up and down to the rap music blasting inside Becky’s car.

 

Becky’s dirty-blond braid poked through the back of Scotty’s maroon baseball cap, and the sight of it sent my stomach into spasms.

 

At that moment, I started wondering if Scotty’s enlarged gut has in any way affected his back crevice. Scotty had the best back crevice. I saw it whenever Manda rode shotgun and Scotty was stuck in the backseat with me. Scotty would lean toward the front seat to say something to Burke and his shirt would scooch up, revealing the muscular ridge cut from the middle of his back down to the elastic of his underwear.

 

I was thinking about Scotty and me together on that familiar road.

 

And I wanted to tell him this.

 

Suddenly the left-turn signal flashed red in my face. He and Becky were turning onto a road that didn’t lead to his house. It’s a road I’ve never been down before. As we passed them on the shoulder, he leaned across Becky to honk the horn with one hand and waved us away with the other. He knew I was behind him all along. More importantly, he knew I would wave back.

 

I’m being such a girl right now. I have no right to be jealous. Scotty isn’t my boyfriend. I barely let him be my friend, no matter how hard he tried. I guess I just didn’t want an in-the-face confirmation that I was right all along: our destinations differed from the get-go. Or perhaps I slammed on the brakes too early.

 

the twenty-ninth

 

I really need to get my period. I’ve got too many hormones stashed in my system. Or not enough. Whatever. All I know is that I’m out-of-control overemotional lately.

 

This evening’s two cases in point:

 

On my break, I decided to check out how The Geek was doing. The Geek is the main attraction of the skill game called, appropriately, Shoot the Geek. There is always a throng of testosterifically charged-up idiot boys lined up, dollar bills in hand, to fire paintball bazooka guns at The Geek. The Geek’s identity has always been anonymous, concealed by camouflage fatigues and an oversize mask in the likeness of the most maligned man of the moment. Past pariahs include Saddam Hussein and Ken Starr. This year The Geek is Bill Gates. For as long as I can remember, even before I started working here, The Geek was universally acknowledged as the most degrading job on the boardwalk.

 

Until this year.

 

This summer, The Geek was mesmerizing to watch. He rocked. Seriously. He was lightning quick and dodged those jackoffs’ shots with ease. Their inability to blast the hell out of him was an affront to theirmuy macho manhood. They screamed and yelled and pounded their fists in fury. But The Geek wasn’t intimidated in the least. In fact, he went out of his way to taunt his tormentors with obscene hand and finger gestures. He totally pissed them off. It was hilarious. The Geek never failed to cheer me up.

 

Tonight, of course, was the exception.

 

When I stopped by, The Geek was juststanding there. He wasn’t egging on the enemy by giving them the finger or diving on the ground to dodge their blasts. The Geek just got battered, each hit splattering his camouflage fatigues. Red! Yellow! Blue! I couldn’t see his face, but it was clear by the way he slumped and shrugged that The Geek’s spirit had been broken. I suppose getting paid five fifty an hour to be pelted by paintballs triggered by attitudinal tourists would do that to the best of us.

 

I wanted to offer him some encouragement. "C’mon, Geek! Get up! Give ’em hell. You can do it!" This would’ve been for my benefit as much as his. Yet I kept my mouth shut and moved on.

 

Then I started thinking. What if this is the best job The Geek can get? That’s no joke. What if he’s a "lifer" like the Whack Our Kats man? One of those losers who works on the boards between Memorial Day and Labor Day, then collects unemployment the rest of the year? Or what if he’s one of the poor Europeans who have to travel thousands of miles just to get a job as sucky as the Geek gig, or serving up greasy eats, for that matter?

 

I realized that working at Wally D’s Sweet Treat Shoppe is probably the worst job I’ll ever have. I know I have a bright future ahead of me. But instead of feeling happy about my good fortune, I just felt guilty.

 

When I went back behind the counter at frozen custard central, I couldn’t even engage in my favorite work diversion: making fun of all the customers, the first of which was primo making-fun-of material. If Scotty needs a Gut Buster, this man required a Whole Body Buster. He really pushed the limits of his dishwater-dirty wife-beater T-shirt. When he pounded the counter to get my attention, the pudding flesh on his arm shook, making the tattoo of a top-heavy woman do the hula on his bicep. Scripted letters swayed beneath her tiny feet:Sid Loves Myrna.

 

"Wazzat custud?" Sid growled. "Izzat iscream aw smudder shit?"

 

I understood this language with zero difficulty. This scares me.

 

"It’s richer than ice cream," I replied. "It’s made with a heavier cream."

 

Normally, I would’ve called him "Sir." See, Sid had several important teeth missing. It usually amuses the hell out of me to call a man with no front teeth, "Sir." But like I said, I was too sad.

 

Sid leaned into my face, pressing his palms into the cash register. "I wanna chocklit. Lahge. Wit rainbuh sprinkuhs." He then unleashed a long beef burrito belch.

 

I was repulsed, but somehow I resisted any retaliation. I didn’t want him to have a hemorrhage and shoot his sugar-sticky blood all over my counter.

 

I made his chocolate cone and I got even more depressed than I already was. I mean, it was suddenly pretty depressing to make a large cone for this beyond-obese, toothless guy. I started to wonder about the quality of Sid’s life. I wondered if Myrna was a real woman somewhere. Did she love him? I wondered if she left him because he was fat or belched in public. Had her devastating departure left him no choice but to seek solace in cone after chocolate cone?

 

I handed Sid his treat. He opened up his cavernous mouth and took a huge hunk off the top. Sprinkles that escaped his mouth trickled to the counter. He shoved three pocket-sweaty bills at me and lumbered away, muttering obscenities in between gulps. As I rang up his three dollars and grabbed the nearest rag to wipe the clump of drooly sprinkles off the counter, I tried to shake off my sadness. But I couldn’t.

 

I can’t believe people come here to have fun. This is about the least fun place on earth. Besides school, that is. If I get any more depressed about the human condition, I just might feel sorry enough for Tsylt to accept one of his numerous broken-English advances. He’s the most persistent of my European suitors, the one I’ve nicknamed "Woody" for reasons that I don’t want or need to explain.

 

Thank God I’m getting out of here in just a few weeks. I can’t believe I’m finally going to see Hope. I’m going to be there for her sixteenth birthday on the twenty-third. I really can’t believe it. It’s been more than six months. Even though we’ve been keeping in touch like we promised (with no guilt) I really want to see her surroundings for myself. Maybe seeing her in her element will be the thing that finally convinces me that she isn’t coming back.

 

August 2nd

 

Hope,

 

It’s not my imagination anymore. For the past week, Burke has started dropping me off before Manda, even though I live closer to him and it makes more geographic sense to take her home first. When I called him on it, he mumbled something about this being the route recommended by Yahoo! Maps.Bullshitbullshitbullshit. Then Manda told me that since I didn’t even have a learner’s permit (likeshe does!) I should just shut up and let him drive. She then proceeded to pat Burke’s knee and flutter those goddamn eyelashes of hers as the exclamation point on the insult.

 

What am I going to tell Bridget? I don’t have any hard-core evidence. But I’m not likely to get any. I can’t steal their uniforms and test them for DNA, can I?

 

No. I’m wrong. Waaaaaaay wrong. First of all, the only criterion Burke meets is the fact that he’s over six feet tall. Okay. I’ll admit. He does have a bod that could best be described as,fooooooyne . Maybe he flosses daily—I don’t know. But he’s not blond, doesn’t surf or ski, and drives a Ford Escort, not a jeep.

 

Plus, Manda wouldn’t stoop so low, would she? Flirting with Burke is one thing. Fellating him is another. That’s beyond skanky. That would officially make her a full-on skank of the first degree. And surely Burke loves Bridget. He’s strong enough not to whip out his junk just because Manda swings her jugs around … right? (Please say I’m right.)

 

There’s only one reason why I’m writing about this soap opera instead ofmy long overdue visit to see you in three weeks: I’m afraid that by writing about it, I’ll jinx it. And I can’t afford to jinx it. I really can’t.

 

Fingers crossingly yours, J.

 

august

 

the fifth

 

JUST EIGHTEEN DAYS UNTIL I SEE HOPE!

 

Every L.A.me E-mail I get from Bridget, every carnal carpool I share with Manda and Burke, everyquote Omigod! unquote anecdote I endure from Sara intensifies my need to hang with Hope.

 

I’m going down there for her birthday. The twenty-third. The fact that she’d still rather celebrate her Sweet Sixteen with me than with anyone she’s met down there helps relax the paranoia I have about being replaced.

 

This worry will only get worse if she gets into the all-girls private school she applied to. It was a last-minute thing; one of her relatives has an in on the board of directors or something. It has an amazing visual arts program that will really help her build the impressive portfolio she needs to get into a first-class college. Great instructors, great facilities, great supplies. She sounded so psyched about it on the phone. More psyched than I have ever sounded about anything in my entire life.

 

For her birthday, I’m burning her a CD mix. It has to strike the right balance between sincerity and irony. Not too much Beck or too little Duran Duran. Can’t go heavy onSouth Park or light on Moby. I will focus all my brainpower on this project until it’s done. I need this present to be perfect. Probably more for myself than her. I need to prove that I still know Hope better than anyone else.

Other books

Dancing With Monsters by M.M. Gavillet
A Broom With a View by Rebecca Patrick-Howard
WholeAgain by Caitlyn Willows
Filosofía en el tocador by Marqués de Sade
The Crimson Thread by Suzanne Weyn
The Price of Candy by Rod Hoisington