One
EVERYTHING CHANGED LAST fall when I started sixth grade. For one thing, it was the first time that the teacher wasnt the tallest person in the class. Jillian Harris came back from summer vacation and looked like she had grown a foot taller. She was at least two inches taller than our teacher, Ms. Brisbin. Then there was Jessie, my best friend. She started acting differently, too. All of sudden all she seemed to care about was boys.
And me, well, I think I started to become a grown-up. Well, maybe not a grown-up exactly. Its not like I had to get a job and pay my own bills, but I definitely didnt feel like a little kid anymore. It all began on the first really cold day of the season. That Friday I woke up to my sister Haleys voice. She always woke me up before I was actually ready.
Ill just wear pants under my skirt! Haley said to herself excitedly. Even when Haley talks to herself, shes loud. I hadnt opened my eyes yet and wondered if I was still dreaming. I rolled over toward the wall and squeezed my eyes shut tighter. Hey, Sophie, Haley called. Time to wake up! Should I wear leggings or jeans?
I groaned and rolled over. I hated sharing a room with Haley. I never got any privacy or peace and quiet. What are you talking about? I asked. Haley bounded toward my bed with two pairs of pants.
Mom said I have to wear pants today because its going to be really cold, so which ones? she said.
The jeans, I guess, I said. Usually Haley and I wear uniforms to school—gray skirts with white blouses. But on Fridays were allowed to wear whatever we want. I like to wear jeans every chance I get, but Haley hates wearing pants. Shes four years younger than I am, and she likes to wear a skirt or a dress every day, even on Fridays.
Haley climbed onto my bed. I think Im going to wear my purple skirt over them, she told me.
Haley, get off my bed, I said. I stretched out my arms and legs so there wouldnt be any room for her. That skirt is going to look really stupid over your jeans.
No, it wont, Haley insisted. The jeans will be just like tights. She jumped off the bed and went to the closet. Oh, purple skirt, where are you? she called. She moved some hangers aside noisily. I was sure she was making a mess, and I was already preparing to complain to Mom so that I wouldnt get blamed and have to clean it up myself. Oh, there you are! Haley exclaimed suddenly. She yanked on the skirt and the hanger crashed to the ground. Even though Haleys only in second grade and pretty small for her age, she makes a lot of noise and takes up a lot of space. You always know when shes in the room. Haleys good at being the center of attention, but I like things to be quieter.
You better clean that up, I told her.
I will, she said. After breakfast. Mom said I could make it myself.
Wheres Dad? I asked. Dad usually made breakfast. Mom called him the family chef.
He went to work early, Haley said. I watched her pull her skirt on over her jeans. Now its waffle time, she said, and she skipped out of the room.
I got out of bed after Haley left. I knew exactly what I wanted to wear: my favorite jeans and a pink long-sleeved shirt. I had pink Converse sneakers that matched the shirt perfectly. I like things to match, even though Jessie told me that pink is a babyish color. A month before, pink had been her favorite color too.
I finished tying my shoes and then I looked at myself in the mirror behind the closet door. I thought I looked okay and not too babyish. People always think Im younger than I really am because Im small for my age. Ive always been the shortest girl in my grade. Jessies the second shortest. Shes just a little bit taller than I am, plus she has curly hair so that adds a bit to her height. We both have light brown hair, but my hair is straight and flat. I really wish it were curly like Jessies. I tried to puff it up a little with my fingers. It worked a little bit.
Jessie and I met in kindergarten and have been best friends for five and a half years. We go to the Anne B. Victor School for Girls, but everyone just calls it Victor. Anne B. Victor was a real person who started the school more than a hundred years ago. Its a private school, which means we have to pay to go there, and which is why we have to wear uniforms. Victor goes from kindergarten all the way through twelfth grade, so you can stay at the same school until its time to go to college. Im perfectly happy not to have boys in school, but the way Jessie had been acting, youd think the fact that there are no boys caused her actual physical pain. She was all excited about the school dance the next month because there were going to be boys there.
Victor is on the corner of Eighty-Ninth Street and Madison Avenue in New York City. Theres a boys school across the street from our school. Its called the Dorr Day School, and Jessie liked to hang out on the corner after school to talk to the Dorr boys. They get out of school about fifteen minutes after we do. Jessie waited for them to come down the block and cross the street, especially to see one boy in particular: Madden Preston. She never just called him by his first name. She always said Madden Preston. At lunch the week before shed said, Oh my God, Soph! Did you see what Madden Preston did with his hair yesterday? Madden Prestons hair had looked the same to me every day Id seen him, but Jessie went on and on about how he must have started using gel in it. He has the most beautiful eyes, too, she told me. Sometimes theyre blue and sometimes theyre gray. It depends on the way the light hits them. I told Jessie that I hadnt noticed. She said that was because I never paid attention to details.
I didnt really think she was right about that. Details have always been important to me, which is part of the reason why I remember most things. I remember peoples birthdays, and the day I won the writing award at school, and the day my sister Haley broke her wrist, and the day my teacher Ms. Brisbin caught Jessie and me passing notes during math—that was also the day Ms. Brisbin started hating me. I had even noticed plenty of details about Madden Preston—like how hed looked at me sort of funny that day when hed crossed the street to where Jessie and I were waiting. I dont think Jessie even noticed, which proves that I was paying more attention to detail than she was. Frankly, sometimes I wondered if maybe she was just making up her crush on Madden Preston because she wanted to be cool. She even started blowing her hair dry in the mornings and putting just a little bit of glitter on her eyelids. If she put on too much, shed have to wash it off. Youre not allowed to wear makeup at Victor until high school, and thats three years away. But Jessie was smart. She put a tiny dab over each eye, so you could only really tell if you were looking for it. She thought it made her look exotic, but I think glitter is kind of silly and certainly more babyish than the color pink.
Lunch was right after our math period, which was a good thing because math is my least favorite subject and it was nice to have a break afterward. Jessie and I went down to the lunchroom together. Friday is always leftovers day, and I wanted some of the macaroni and cheese from Wednesday. Jessie refuses to eat leftovers. I stood in line while she went to pour herself some cereal. Save me a seat, I called to Jessie, even though I knew I didnt have to tell her that. We always sat at the same table, just left of the center of the room. Its a good table to sit at so you can see what everyone else is doing, and it is far enough away from the teachers table on the far right-hand side of the room.
I balanced my tray on one hand and carried my orange juice in my other hand. Jessie was across the room at our table. Three other girls from our grade, Amy, Lindsay, and Melissa, were also sitting there. Id never been that friendly with them, but because there are only about forty girls in our entire grade, you get to know everyone pretty well. Even so, I didnt really want to eat lunch with them. But Jessie always did, so sometimes I had to put up with them.
Jessie was sitting in between Amy and Melissa. Its not like I needed to sit next to Jessie every day, but I did anyway, unless one of us was sick. I put my tray down next to Lindsay. Oh, gross, she said as I sat down. I cant believe you got the leftovers. Thats from like Monday.
Wednesday, I said. Monday was beef Stroganoff.
Whatever. I dont exactly memorize what I eat each day, Lindsay said. The other girls laughed, even Jessie. And Jessie had said I was the one who was bad with details. Anyway, I dont know why Lindsay thought leftover macaroni and cheese was gross. She was dipping two fingers into a mound of cottage cheese and sucking it off her fingers.
So anyway, Lindsay said, my mom is determined to be one of the dance chaperones.
Oh, thats terrible! Melissa said.
I know, Lindsay said, and she paused to slurp on her fingers. But she did promise that if shes there, she wont try to talk to me for the whole night, and if anyone asks, shell pretend to be someone elses mother.
I dont know why mothers always want to be such joiners, Amy said. My mom said she wanted to come too. She thinks its so cute that were having a school dance. But I told her she couldnt come and ruin my night just because she wanted to relive her childhood.
I know what you mean, Jessie said. But I knew she was lying. Jessies mother never comes to anything. Its not because she doesnt want to, but she works a lot. When we were younger, Jessie would get really upset about her mother not being around. Jessies mother is a researcher at a news station and she also teaches three nights a week at NYU. The only field trip Jessies mom ever came on was the one we went on in third grade to the TV station where she works. They pulled up the mornings news stories on the teleprompter, and we got to read into a camera and watch ourselves on the monitor. The producer told us to ignore the monitor and just speak into the camera, but its really hard not to get distracted when you see your face staring back at you on the screen. Jessie and I got to be the anchors and sit next to each other on the couch in the front of the set. We read from the teleprompter in unison. Jessies mom had a tape made of it, and we watched it a couple times at her house.
Jessie used to tell me I was lucky because my mother is almost always around. My mom works too. Shes a head-hunter. I hate the name of her job because it sounds like she is out chopping off peoples heads, but really it means she finds people jobs. She interviews people in a room in the back of our apartment that is set up as an office. It should be a bedroom, but Mom has a desk, some chairs, a bulletin board, and a bunch of file cabinets in there. My dad even built shelves for her into the back wall behind the desk. My dads a lawyer but he likes to build things too. He made bookshelves for Haley and me, too. They are a little crooked but they work just fine.
The reason that Haley and I had to share a bedroom was so Mom could keep her office. By the time sixth grade started, I thought I was getting too old to share a room with a second grader, but at least if something important happened at school, or if there was a field trip, Mom could arrange her schedule to be there. Jessies father died when she was a baby, so her mother has to work an extra amount. He had a heart attack in his office. They rushed him to the hospital, and hooked him up to all sorts of machines to try to fix it, but he had another heart attack in the hospital, and he died. Jessie never talks about it, and she doesnt remember him because she was so little, but my mom told me about it. My mom said that Jessies mother sometimes gets very angry with her husband for dying and leaving her all alone.
At first it was hard for me to understand why Jessies mom would be angry with someone for something that was absolutely not his fault. I mean, its not like he wanted to have a heart attack and die. But my mom told me that being really sad can make you angry. The thing is, Jessies mom never seems really sad. Shes pretty, just like Jessie, she likes her work, and she has a lot of friends—and of course Jessie. She even lets me call her Liz instead of Mrs. Adler, even though I have to call all of my other friends parents by their last names.
I never met Jessies dad, but Ive seen his picture a lot. There are a bunch of photographs of him in Jessies apartment, and also, Jessie keeps a special album of pictures underneath her bed. Its a secret album, but she showed it to me. All of the pictures are of her dad and her when she was a baby.
Lindsay swiped the last bit of cottage cheese off her plate and slurped on her fingers. She pushed her tray away. Im stuffed, she said, and turned toward Jessie. Hey, did I tell you I decided to get that dress from Bloomingdales?
The blue one? Jessie asked.
Yeah. My moms taking me tomorrow. You should totally come. You have to get something to impress Madden!
That sounds good, Jessie said. Lindsay is one of the wealthiest kids at Victor, and her parents get her whatever she wants, but I wondered if Liz would really let Jessie get a new outfit just because Madden Preston was going to be at the dance.
And after you guys finish shopping, you can come over and hang out with Amy and me, Melissa said. Amy and Melissa live pretty close to Bloomingdales. Actually, Amy and Melissa live in the same building, so theyre always together. Lindsay lives in another building on the other side of the city, on the West Side, so she doesnt always get to hang out with them, but Lindsay doesnt strike me as the kind of person who would care about that or feel lonely. Amy and Melissa both really looked up to Lindsay, so Im sure she knew she was invited to their homes anytime she wanted to be included.
I listened to the four of them make plans to meet at Melissas after Lindsay and Jessie finished shopping. Nobody said anything to me at all, as though I werent even there. I noticed that Lindsay, Amy, and Melissa had the tiniest bit of glitter on their eyelids, just like Jessie. I wondered if they had done it to be like Jessie or if Jessie had done it to be like them—probably Jessie had copied them.
You guys can even sleep over, Melissa said.
The five-minute bell rang, and we picked up our trays and walked over to the conveyor belt where we have to put our trays when were finished eating. If you get caught leaving your tray at the table, you have to wear your uniform on Friday, so I always make sure to clear my tray. Usually I hate hearing the five-minute bell, but this time I was relieved to get back to class. It felt strange to hear Jessie make plans that didnt include me. In fact, it just didnt make any sense. We were best friends, so we always included each other. Jessie had even come with my family to Florida a few times over spring break when we went to visit my grandmother, because Liz usually has to work over vacation. I decided to talk to Jessie about it. Maybe it was just a misunderstanding and I really was invited.
© 2010 Courtney Sheinmel