her drink with her straw and smiles. âI knew you reminded me of something.â
âAnd how flattering,â adds Dina. âItâs vomit.â
The whole table goes quiet. Lauraâs smile starts to wobble, and I feel Chloe kick Dina under the table. âDonât mind Dina,â Chloe says. âSheâs a little bit challenged inthe good manners department.â
âDonât you want to get your food?â I ask.
And I have to hand it to Laura, she recovers quick. âRight!â she says, smiling full-on again. âBe right back.â
Laura hurries over to the food counter. Chloe looks over at Dina, and they both start giggling. âOh dearâ¦,â says Chloe, as if what just happened is the most tragic thing sheâs ever seen.
âDonât,â I tell her.
âWhat?â she says.
âSeriously,â I hiss. I glance around the table at Dina, Angela, Jenna, and Madison, and I whisper, âBe nice.â
âOh whatever, Brooke. Iâm not going to bite her.â
When Laura returns to the table with a plate of fried rice, we scoot our chairs over to make room. Then Chloe turns with a fascinated expression that manages to look almost genuine.
âSo! Laura! Youâve got to tell us: Whoâs hot and whoâs not over in the music wing?â
Â
On our way back to school, John catches up with me.
âI saw your Homecoming posters,â he says. âDress a needy choirgirl. Thatâs a good one.â
âThanks.â My heart starts thudding, so hard Iâm afraid Iâll puke up my pad thai. âI actually thought it up myself.â
I walk a little straighter, peeking around to see if anybody is looking. But Chloe and Dina and Laura are up ahead, and Lauraâs giving Chloe a run for her money in the marathon talking department.
As we get up to the building, we can hear the first bell ringing. John runs to the door and holds it open for me. Inside, the hallway is crowded so we have to press in close. Even though weâre pushing it on time, I slow down and switch my backpack to my other shoulder so he can get even closer.
âWhere you headed?â he asks.
âChoir.â
âMind if I walk you?â
This is it! I shake my head. My heart does an extra-hard thump.
âSo I wanted to ask you something.â
I was right. Heâs going to ask me to Homecoming. But the final bell is ringing. And as we turn into the music wing, I see the door to the choir room shut. Crap. Anderson hates it when people are late.
And I am hating myself right now. If I werenât so paranoid about what my choir director thinks, Iâd be savoring every detail of this moment. I stop walking and turn my back to the door.
There. I can focus now.
âWhatâs up?â
âIâm trying for a football scholarship at U of M,â he says. âGoing up there in a month, and I needed someplace to stay. Do you think Bill and Brice would let me shack up with them for a day or two?â
âUmâ¦,â I say while my brain rushes to process the disconnect between what I thought he was going to say and what heâs actually said. Crap, goes the little voice inside my brain.
But then another little voice tells me maybe itâs not that bad. It isnât very romantic asking somebody to Homecoming when youâre rushing to get to class on time. Johnâs probably waiting for a more private opportunity.
âI donât think theyâll care,â I say. âIâll call tonight and ask.â
âGreat,â he says, flashing those amazing green eyes. âWeâll talk later?â
âYeah,â I tell him. âLater.â
He takes off and I rush into the choir room. âNice of you to join us, Brooke,â Anderson shouts while I run up the risers to my spot.
I take a second to get myself into singing mode. Try to forget about John and concentrate on my voice. I
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