Read Vegan Virgin Valentine Online
Authors: Carolyn Mackler
What?
V was quiet for a second. I could hear my dad’s voice in the background, like he’d just stepped into the room.
“I know, I know,” V said, as if we were in the middle of a conversation. “I told Bethany you could probably stop by after Common Grounds. Do you want me to let your parents know you’ll be home a little late?”
“She didn’t really call, did she?”
V didn’t respond for several seconds, which I took as a no, and then she said, “Just keep your cell phone on in case anyone needs to reach you. Tell Bethany I said to stay calm.”
“You’re good at this.”
“Lots of practice,” V said.
The rest of the night was seamless. My dad didn’t even call to check up on me. And when I got home, my parents had already gone to bed. That was a relief because my cheeks were flushed from a quick make-out session in the supply closet, and my clothes and hair were impregnated with an intensely smoky coffee scent.
Even so, on Saturday morning, I sent Bethany an e-mail asking if she could talk in person. She wrote me back a few minutes later and said she’s home all day if I wanted to stop by. The freezing rain was coming down again, so I put on my raincoat and sneakers. My dad was at his office and V was up in her room. I told my mom I was driving over to Bethany’s. It was a relief to actually mean it for once.
Bethany met me at her front door. She was wearing a Geneseo sweatshirt, and her scribbles of hair were held back by a paisley bandanna.
“Does that sweatshirt mean what I think it means?” I asked as I kicked off my soggy sneakers.
Bethany smiled. “The acceptance letter came last week.”
“Congratulations!”
Just then, Bethany’s mom walked down the hallway carrying a heaping laundry basket. We chatted colleges and summer plans for a few minutes before Bethany steered me upstairs to her room.
“So what’s up?” she asked, closing the door. “Your e-mail sounded mysterious.”
I glanced around Bethany’s room. I hadn’t been over in almost a year. The last time I was here, her walls were plastered with magazine cutouts of pop stars and posters of sleeping kittens with expressions underneath like
WAKE
ME UP WHEN IT’S SATURDAY.
But they were all gone and in their place were volleyball pendants and photos of her with a muscular blond-haired guy.
“I have a confession to make,” I said, sitting on her bed. “I’ve been using you as an alibi. In the last month, we’ve been going to movies and we’ve studied together and you’ve joined the yearbook staff.”
“I’ve always wanted to be on yearbook!” Bethany squealed, flopping down on the bed next to me. “What section did I work on? Did I put in tons of candids of me and all my friends?”
I cracked up. “I’m sorry I didn’t tell you before, but—”
“Is he cute?”
“Who?”
Bethany tugged at a loose thread on her quilt. “The guy you’ve made all these excuses for?”
“Very cute,” I said, smiling.
“Do tell.”
It felt good to finally talk about James. I told Bethany how he’s twenty-two and has his own apartment and, even though it’s only been a month, we’re falling in love, though neither of us has said the L-word yet. When she asked how I met him and I said he’s the guy who owns Common Grounds, she yanked at the thread so hard, she actually pulled it out.
“I know who that is! He’s not just cute. He’s HOT!”
I grinned. “I think so, too.”
“My boyfriend’s also in his twenties. Well, he’s only twenty.”
“That guy in all the pictures?”
Bethany nodded. “It’ll be four months on Thursday.”
“So…?”
“His name’s Keith Sawyer. Isn’t that a great name?” Bethany sighed. “Bethany Sawyer. I love that.”
So I hadn’t been the only one playing the name game.
Mara McCloskey. Mara Elizabeth McCloskey. Mara Valentine-McCloskey. Mara Elizabeth Valentine Herbert McCloskey.
“He’s a sophomore at Geneseo,” Bethany said. “He’s from Long Island. We met through volleyball. He’s the bane of my parents’ existence.”
“Why?”
“They can’t get over the fact that he’s twenty, even though I’ve explained to them a hundred times that when I was fifteen, I went out with guys who were seventeen, and that’s the same age difference.” Bethany tossed the thread onto her rug. “And also … well … I told them I want to get an apartment with him next year rather than live in the dorms.”
“What’d they say?”
“Over their dead bodies.”
“What did you say?”
“I asked whether they wanted to be buried or cremated.”
“Wow,” I said, laughing.
“My mom acted all normal downstairs, but we’ve been fighting like crazy this week. I can’t wait to get out of here and be on my own.”
I nodded, wondering if everyone has a hard time with their parents senior year.
Bethany and I chatted for over an hour about our boyfriends and who’s gotten into what college. Around noon, her mom called upstairs, something about needing help with the laundry already.
“She’s pissed off,” Bethany said. “I can hear it in her voice. She can’t deal with me having any fun right now.”
As we hopped off the bed and headed downstairs, I said, “We should hang out sometime.”
“For real?” Bethany asked. “Or wink-wink?”
“How about both?”
Bethany laughed. “Do you want to see
Damn Yankees
together? It’s the weekend after next.”
“Sounds great.”
“Did you know that Lindsey’s in the chorus?”
I shook my head.
“She can’t stop talking about V.”
“Good or bad?”
“Omigod … great! She says V’s a star.”
“Really?”
Bethany nodded. “Broadway quality.”
Tuesday was April Fool’s Day. It was also the last night of V’s SAT prep course. They were doing this special session on the college-application process for students and their parents. It wasn’t mandatory. And they’d already handed back the final practice SAT, which V rocked to the point where there’s a strong chance she’ll surpass my score on the actual exam.
V kept saying she didn’t see the point in going to the session, especially since she’s not even sure she’s applying to college. My parents, upon hearing that, tried not to balk too overtly. Instead they calmly said that it couldn’t hurt to hear what they have to say and, hey, some colleges have great theater programs. V still wasn’t convinced, so they suggested going for half and then taking her out to a steakhouse afterward. V finally agreed, her face brightening at the prospect of a juicy tenderloin.
After they headed to Rochester, I sat at my desk and began writing up a physics lab on the heat of fusion and ice. It’s due tomorrow. Generally, I would have finished it already and by this point would just be double-checking the numbers. But lately I’ve been putting off assignments until the last minute and then turning in dog-eaten excuses for homework. And the crazy thing is that I’ve still been getting top grades.
I was in the middle of determining the percentage of error when my cell phone rang. I didn’t recognize the number on caller ID, but I answered anyway. At first, I could only hear whimpers, so I figured it must be some kind of April Fool’s prank. I was about to push the “hang up” button when this muffled voice said, “Mara?”
“Claudia?” I asked. “Are you okay?”
Claudia sniffled and choked. At some point, she said something that sounded like, “Why … didn’t … tell … me–e–e–e–e–e?”
“What?”
“Why didn’t yo–o–o–o–o–o …” Claudia dissolved into sobs again.
I could hear someone taking the phone from her and then this woman’s voice said, “Mara?”
“Yeah?”
“This is Pauline. Claudia’s roommate.”
I’d met Pauline before. She comes into Common Grounds now and then, and Claudia always slips her free cups of coffee. She’s got a long, freckled nose that’s constantly buried in a psychology textbook.
“Hey,” I said, “we’ve actually—”
Pauline cut me off and launched into this story about how Claudia happened to be driving by James’s apartment this afternoon and saw a car in the parking lot that looked uncannily like mine. She got out to double-check and, sure enough, there was my bag in the passenger seat.
I was speechless. Yes, I’d been over at James’s, but the Presidents Village parking lots are on either side of the apartment complex, off the main road. You don’t just
happen
by them. You go in looking.
The whole time Pauline was talking, Claudia was sobbing in the background.
“Can I talk to Claudia?” I asked Pauline.
“I don’t think she’s up for it.”
“Can I at least tell her I’m sorry?”
“
Sorry?
How could you be
sorry
? You have control over your motivations. Don’t you know anything about ego and id?”
Ego and id? What did this have to do with ego and id?
“I’m just…” I massaged my forehead. “It’s just… It just happened… I didn’t mean to hurt—”
“Well, you did. You promised her there was nothing going on. Do you know what it does to someone when you betray their trust? It scars them, okay? We’re talking
deep psychological wounds.
But you’ll be happy to know that she’s resigned from Common Grounds. We just sent an e-mail to James. So now you two can go ahead and cross all those inappropriate boundaries in public and be as pathological as you want.”
The last thing Pauline said was, “You need some serious therapy.” And then she hung up.
Sure enough, V was a star.
On a rainy Friday night in the middle of April,
Damn Yankees
debuted at Brockport High School. I went with Bethany and her boyfriend, Keith. We ended up sitting in the third row of the auditorium, right next to Lindsey Breslawski’s brother, Jordan, and their aunt and uncle. My parents were two rows in front of us, my mom with the video camera, my dad with the digital camera. They’d promised to e-mail pictures to Aimee as soon as they got home.
For the past few weeks, Aimee had been a touchy subject around our house. Ever since February, Aimee had been calling on a fairly regular basis. V really wanted her to fly up to Brockport for the
Damn Yankees
weekend. At first, Aimee said she could do it, and my parents even offered to buy the ticket. But then, two weeks ago, she called back to say that things were getting crazy and don’t get the plane ticket after all. She never specified what she meant by “crazy,” but after my dad relayed the news, V said how Aimee never comes through for anyone and how, mark her words, whenever Aimee says things are “getting crazy,” a breakup is about to happen and, mark her words, we’re going to get a call from Aimee within the month saying she’s decided that her life’s ambition is to make cheese in Wisconsin or work on a fishing boat in Alaska.
By the end of V’s rant, her face was splotchy. She stormed up to her room. My mom followed her but came back downstairs a minute later and said that V didn’t want to talk. For the past few weeks, whenever one of us mentions Aimee, V huffs and says, “Yeah, right” or “Mark my words, a fishing boat in Alaska.” After Aimee called this afternoon to tell V to break a leg, V disappeared into her room and didn’t come out until it was time for my dad to drive her over to the high school.
But V didn’t reveal any of this onstage. When she first swiveled out in the middle of act one, people stopped coughing and picking their wedgies and passing breath mints to friends. The audience froze, their eyes transfixed on her. Some guys, like Jordan Breslawski, actually leaned forward in their chairs, though I had a feeling it was to get a better view of her cleavage.
V was dressed a lot like the movie version of Lola, in a black strapless one-piece—part leotard, part corset—with a flirty ruffle at the hips. She was wearing fishnet stockings and black heels. Her hair had been set in rollers by one of the backstage moms, so her honey curls bounced down her back, and her now-grown-out bangs were swept to the side. Another backstage mom had expertly applied her makeup, so her cheekbones were pronounced and her lips were sultry. And then, of course, there was her cleavage.
We’d had a conversation about that the night before. V was getting dropped off from the dress rehearsal at the same time as I was coming home from Common Grounds. As we walked across the driveway, I said her stage makeup looked impressive.
V paused under a yard light. “You want to see impressive?”
She unbuttoned her jacket and cupped her hands beneath the twin peaks that had erupted under her T-shirt. “What do you think? I have ta-tas! Hooters! Knockers!”
“What’s in there?”
“A push-up bra and lots of foam. Who ever knew a bra could work such wonders?”
“So you think you’ll start wearing a bra now?”
V shrugged. “It’s fun for the play, but what’s the point? There’s not much to hold up anyway.”
“Do you ever want…” I paused. “Do you ever wish—”
“That Valentine girls weren’t denied the boob gene?”
I laughed. “I guess that’s one way to put it.”
“I like not having to wear a bra. I figure one day, when I’m forty or something, I’ll probably start drooping. Maybe I’ll wear a bra then. I don’t know. I’m in no rush.”
But it wasn’t just V’s va-va-voom appearance that was capturing all that attention. It was the way she spoke in this cutely seductive voice and tilted her chin to one side and strutted around in her heels, swinging her hips. When she belted out her first number, “A Little Brains, a Little Talent,” I actually forgot that the pit band was off-key and we were in the high-school auditorium and V was Lola or Lola was V.
When she finished singing, the audience burst into applause. I could see my dad clapping, his hands raised above his head. My mom turned the video camera toward the audience, to record the response. When she spotted me, I formed the letter
V
with my pointer and middle finger. As I did, I realized it was the same thing as the peace sign.
The audience finally quieted down when the next scene began. I could see Bethany and Keith reach for each other’s hands. It made me wish James were here.
I’d briefly considered inviting him, if it weren’t for the fact that my parents would wonder why my boss from Common Grounds was coming to the school play with me. In the past ten days since that phone call from Claudia/Pauline, our relationship had gone to a whole different level. When I look back, it’s like we spent our first month kissing and joking around a lot. And while we’re still doing that, it now feels like there’s a new element to us, a deeper element.