The Rites and Wrongs of Janice Wills

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The Rites and Wrongs of Janice Wills Page 2

by Joanna Pearson


  Mom clucked softly to herself and stepped behind me, leaving a pancake to burn while she ruffled my hair.

  “Oh, my clever anthropology girl. She can see everything so clearly and yet she can’t ever see her own —”

  “Ugh, stop it, Mom! Please!” I hissed, elbowing her away. She threw up her hands in exaggerated dismay and returned to the stove.

  Margo handed me the napkins. “I guess I won’t say no to having a handmaiden,” she said. “Nor would I say no to scholarship money. Nor to wiping the smug grin off TR’s face.”

  I took a straight shot of pancake syrup like whiskey and smacked my lips, then offered a shot to Margo, who slung hers back with relish. We smiled, syrup-mouthed, at each other and high-fived.

  And I thought then, perhaps foolishly, that that was the last time I’d have to worry about vying to be Miss Livermush.

  ANTHROPOLOGICAL

  OBSERVATION #2:

  In the high school ecosystem, hot, disgruntled theatre guys do not ordinarily engage in direct social transactions with stick-insect nerd-girl anthropologists with excellent mathletic records. Such direct interface between castes is highly unusual and thus worthy of further consideration.

  The next day, while waiting for Margo to show up for lunch period, I escaped outside to avoid the mayhem of the cafeteria. It was like bloodthirsty imperial Rome in there, one of my favorite societies to study, but not necessarily to eat lunch with. There were also signs all over the cafeteria now that said “Get Ready for the Annual Livermush Festival!” which weren’t exactly appetizing. Besides, it was beautiful outside — the familiar Melva High School buildings set against a blue, cloudless sky.

  FACT:

  Melva High School is home of the proud Fighting Hummingbirds. State 2A champions in football, tennis, and swimming, depending on the year. Proud constituent of the North Carolina public school system. Big, ugly hunk-a-brick buildings right there at the highway intersection, walking distance to McDonald’s, the Tan-A-Lot Spa, Dell’s Autowash, and Unyuns Diner. The opening to the MHS alma mater actually goes “Buzz, buzz, buzz, Melva Hummingbirds! / We loudly sing your praise! / Buzz, buzz, buzz, Melva Hummingbirds! / Look quick! We’ll fly away!”

  My only claims to fame at Melva High School were having finished fourth for sophomore class president (there had only been four candidates); being captain of the academic quiz team, Hi-Q; and serving as president of Science Club (a group that was, at its most glorious, five members strong). I had once also tried founding the Anthropology Enthusiasts Club, but no one had showed up except for Bobby Whitmore — and everyone knew that Bobby referred to all girls as “ho-bags” and showed up for any after-school activity that he could mock while gobbling all the free snacks.

  I opened up my notebook and reviewed the notes I’d compiled that day.

  ANTHROPOLOGIST’S NOTES:

  MELVA HIGH SCHOOL, A BRIEF TAXONOMY

  1. The Smart Pretty (aka Future Businesswoman of America): Adjectives frequently used to describe her include a) prompt b) cheerful c) hardworking d) anal-retentive. She eats Grape-Nuts with soy milk for breakfast every morning at 7:16 while listening to National Public Radio’s Morning Edition. She does squats while brushing her teeth and listens to Japanese language lessons on the treadmill. Existing in the middle level of the social ecosystem, the Smart Pretty is hungry for social advancement. Not mean, but often ruthless. Example: Missy Wheeler.

  2. The Dumb Pretty: Much like one of the Smart Pretties, only, as the name suggests, dumber. Greater emphasis on makeup. Sense of self-worth more tied to how recently she has shaved her legs. Thinks Cosmo is a magazine full of good and reasonable advice. Lower level of the social ecosystem than the Smart Pretty, more harmless, unless adopted into superior clique. Example: Casey Williams (former Dumb Pretty, achieved social ascendancy, and now = Beautiful Rich Girl).

  3. The Softball Husky: Enormous calf muscles, maximus gluteus maximus. Thick ponytails. Healthy American farm-girl look with big, tanned shoulders, like she could help you wrestle down your runaway hog in a pinch. She slaps her friends on the back in the hallways. Not typically predatory or powerful in the high school ecosystem, but known to yell at the pathetically nonathletic if, say, you’re on the same volleyball team in PE. Example: Tori Nathans.

  4. Hipster Hippie: Artfully scraggle-haired. Often rich. Purchases expensive clothes meant to resemble clothes obtained from a dumpster. Cultivates air of artsiness without ever having made actual art. The rival tribe of the Beautiful Rich Girls — different aesthetic, but similar roles as social power brokers. Example: Darby Hunt, or Madelyn Flynn.

  5. Formerly Homeschooled: Denim prairie skirts and year-round candy cane–patterned turtle-necks. Eighties bangs and scrunchies for the girls, center parts for the guys. He or she presents an otherworldly innocence about basic facets of adolescent life and sometimes has difficulty reading the sarcasm in scathing remarks made by members of other groups. Often very good at one particular thing — trombone, chess, physics — and it is this particular interest that has pulled them away from the homeschool cloister. Example: Stephen Shepherd.

  6. Beautiful Rich Girl, or BRG: Take TR as an example

  The rest of the pages were missing. I shuffled through my notebook before emptying my entire backpack. Where were the rest of my notes? I could hear the blood rushing in my ears like approaching white water. I’d had all my notes last in French class. Tanesha Jones, my favorite French class friend, and I had started to work on our French language skit together. She’d seen one of the pages and said, “Wow! What have you got in there? Secrets of every single social division in Melva High School or what?” I’d made a joke and quickly put the rest of my anthropological notes away. Tanesha and I had worked on our project, I’d gone to other classes, and sometime between then and now, half the notes had disappeared! This couldn’t be happening. Suppose Darby Hunt found them? Or worse still — TR? If she found my anthropology notes, I wouldn’t survive to see the end of junior year.

  I pulled out my Swiss cheese sandwich, hoping I might think clearly once I ate. Or if disaster was imminent, I might as well eat one last meal. I’d just taken a bite when Paul Hansen approached.

  “Hey, Janice,” he called before plopping down beside me on the grass. He tossed his backpack and a thick book, A History of God, down beside him. I raised an eyebrow at the book.

  “What? It’s interesting,” Paul said, nodding at it. “Besides, I already read up on the history of the devil. So many depictions of the devil over the years — you’ve got your witch trials, you’ve got your Paradise Lost, you’ve got your Rosemary’s Baby — it’s fascinating.”

  I exhaled loudly — for Paul’s benefit. “And yet you still haven’t realized how fascinating anthropology is,” I said.

  He smiled, pulling out his lunch from a bag. “I’m leaving that to you. This town’s only got room for one anthropologist.”

  We sat there for a minute in silence, each chewing our food thoughtfully. Paul was my good friend, but he was prone to passing obsessions. Recently there had been the political activist spell, during which he tried to drop out of school to campaign for the Democratic candidate for president; the playwriting interval, when he missed a month of school to finish his masterpiece; the time when he shaved his head to become a Tibetan monk but didn’t have money to get to Tibet; his temporary craze for the metaphysical poets…. It helped that Paul was a quasigenius, so he was constantly reading about some new topic — he could become interested in anything — and during each phase, he usually knew what he was talking about. But this faddishness seemed to undermine the legitimacy of his passions, and it annoyed me sometimes, as it suggested that no one our age could actually be serious about something the way I was serious about anthropology. I’d once asked Paul why he always got super-enthusiastic about new things but didn’t necessarily keep up with all of them. He’d looked at me with this sad expression and said, “Well, I’m looking for something I can feel, I dunno, passionate about �
�� you know, believe in. Plus, the world is too interesting. I can’t help it.”

  Paul, currently in a raw foods phase, crunched his carrots and sunflower seeds. We were always able to do this with each other, I thought — just sit in silence. Paul and I used to get together to listen to obscure hip-hop or old gospel recordings that he found at yard sales, or whatever it was that he happened to be obsessed with at the time. We’d started a mix CD exchange too, or competition, really. Each of us made mix CDs for the other, striving to outdo the other’s best efforts with the most interesting or obscure finds. I liked the comfortable feeling between us, even if we weren’t really doing anything.

  We hadn’t hung out as much this year, though, because Paul now spent all his time with The Girlfriend. The Girlfriend went to the county high school. Her actual name was Susannah. She was delicate and preternaturally pretty, like a girl who should live in a Victorian locket. She added to this effect by wearing high lace collars, vintage patent leather boots, and velvet hair bows. The Girlfriend made these clothes look very artsy and cool, whereas I (and almost anyone else) would have simply looked like my imaginary British great-granny had dressed me for a High Anglican church service.

  I thought The Girlfriend was neither mean nor nice — I’d never really heard her talk. I hadn’t exactly avoided her, but I hadn’t sent the good ship Friendship sailing her direction either.

  I refocused on the gazebo. I’d seen a particular dark head exit the side door of the school, moving toward it.

  ANTHROPOLOGIST’S NOTE:

  In many societies, there is a sacred place of reflection reserved for certain members — think sweat lodge or secret society. For MHS, it was the gazebo. The theatre guys stand on the seats with their heads hidden in order to smoke without being seen. Occasionally a teacher busts them, and no one smokes for a while. Still, they prefer to stand there like that, half-hidden, instead of sitting. And eventually, the smoking starts up again. To outsiders, they appear as a circle of dark-jeaned legs, a low grumble of voices, and the faint whiff of smoke wafting from the cupola.

  “I see you looking at him,” Paul said. He tossed a carrot. It hit me on the nose. “Who?”

  “Jimmy. That’s who.”

  “Oh, Jimmy Denton? I barely even know him.”

  “Who are you looking at, then? It’s definitely one of the theatre guys in the gazebo.”

  “Hey, just because those guys are more artistic than anybody else at Melva … Besides, I’m not staring at anybody. I was just staring into nowhere. The abyss. The void.”

  FACT:

  I was indeed staring at Jimmy Denton. I’d spent the greater part of sophomore and junior years staring, or longing to stare, at Jimmy Denton. Ever since I’d seen him skipping class to read Hamlet, I’d been in love. At the time, the beginning of my sophomore year, I’d been waiting for my mom to pick me up early for a dentist appointment, and there’d been Jimmy, half-hidden under a tree outside, reading the very play that half the kids in my English class had refused to finish or had groaned over. I’d loved Hamlet. In fact, I’d been a little bit in love with Hamlet, and so that day, watching Jimmy read, I’d begun to imagine Jimmy as Hamlet, or vice versa…. By the time he’d nodded at me, I’d already dedicated my first anthropology book to him and named our three future children. It was insta-love. And it also didn’t hurt that Jimmy was the best actor MHS had ever seen. And the handsomest.

  Paul frowned, shook his head, and scooped up the rest of his food. “Listen, I gotta run inside. I told Stephen I’d return this DVD of his I borrowed….”

  “Stephen Shepherd? The caped crusader of dragons? Mr. Cheese Puffs Breath?” I asked.

  Paul laughed, but not really — it was more just an exhalation of air. “Yeah, Janice. Stephen Shepherd. He’s a nice guy. Smart. You should actually talk to him sometime.”

  I looked at him, unsure how to respond. But he jumped onto his lean runner’s legs and was off across the lawn to the cafeteria, leaving me with half a sandwich and half a view of my crush’s pant legs. Redirect, I thought. Stop looking over at Jimmy in the gazebo. There were other, more pressing concerns — like tribal cultures dying out in Papua New Guinea, my unwritten Current Anthropology article, or, worse yet, my missing anthropology notes on all the other students at Melva High, notes that were floating dangerously somewhere around the school….

  And that’s when Jimmy Denton approached me.

  I gazed at him walking toward me the way someone dying of thirst in the desert gazes at a glimmering oasis mirage. Me? Why was Jimmy walking toward me? I squinted to see if it was another one of the theatre guys instead. His face, however, was unmistakable — all brooding and dark-eyed and handsomely sullen. It was not another guy from the gazebo, not a mirage, not a hologram — it was absolutely Jimmy Denton in all his Jimmy Denton-ness.

  Jimmy wiped his hands on his T-shirt. It was somehow terrifically manly, that gesture, and I wondered why all males are not constantly wiping their hands on their T-shirts. Beneath that T-shirt, he had actual biceps, actual chest muscles — the kind one gets from doing push-ups or, I don’t know, lifting bushels of hay and hammering heavy wooden planks. He was still walking toward me. He was stopping beside me.

  “Hey,” he said to me. “You’re Janice, right?”

  I nodded, swallowing a huge knot of saliva wedged in my throat.

  “You and Margo Werther hang out all the time, right? You’re the one who’s the anthropologist?”

  I nodded again, thinking this might be the greatest day of my life so far. Not only did he know my name, he knew that I was an anthropologist?! I felt a little light-headed.

  “I found this,” he said, pulling a folded wedge of papers from his back pocket. “I’m guessing it’s yours.”

  My hand was clammy as oyster meat as I took the papers from him and opened it up. This is what I read:

  of the quintessential Beautiful Rich Girl, or BRG. Certainly this is the ruling caste of Melva High School — BRGs are the taste determiners, the ones with the power to excommunicate someone socially….

  The rest of my notes! I flipped through the pages, making sure everything was there. My hand was shaking. Of course Jimmy had known these were mine — I’d idly scrawled my name and initials all over the sheet. “Janice Wills” in bubble letters, “Janice Wills” in all caps, and (oh, God!) “Janice Wills, Anthropologist.” Oh, I thought. Oh, no. If Jimmy didn’t hate me, he at the very least must have thought I was a complete dork.

  I looked up at Jimmy. “Thanks,” I said weakly.

  He smiled a half smile at me and shook his head. “No, thank you,” he said. “It was great reading. Especially the part where you speculate on the inverse relationship between baseball ability and intelligence. Oh, and the part where you argue that certain borderline personality traits are actually just culturally reinforced in theatre kids.”

  I stared at him.

  “Seriously?” I asked. “You’re not offended, right? This stuff is, ugh, well, it’s just notes. And it’s not exactly flattering. I’m a moron to have left it lying around. Oh — you didn’t show this to anyone else, did you?”

  He laughed. His laugh enveloped me. He smelled faintly of cigarettes and spearmint, and he looked so handsome standing there, his hair tipped by sun, like some beautiful Greek god dropped down in Melva.

  “No, relax. It’s probably true it’s best not to let this fall into just anyone’s hands,” he said. “But I’m glad I found it. I liked it. Somebody finally speaks truth to Melva High School. You’re good. As an anthropologist, I mean.”

  I stared at him again, unable to thank him for the compliment. Then the moment broke. He wiped his hands again on his shirt.

  “Well, anyways. See you around, Janice.” “Thanks again,” I said.

  “And you and I,” he added, turning to go, “we should hang out sometime. We’ve got more in common than I realized. Compared to everybody else in this place.”

  “Definitely,” I said. “Definitely,”
I repeated, but he had, like a mirage, already disappeared.

  I continued to stare into the absence where Jimmy Denton had just stood. I’d just had an actual conversation with him! And he had actually suggested that we hang out! I wished that Margo had been there to witness this and reassure me it had really taken place.

  I whipped my hair over my shoulder the way a beautiful girl would in a shampoo ad. Things felt different. Either I was hallucinating, or it seemed Jimmy Denton liked me, at least a little.

  ANTHROPOLOGICAL

  OBSERVATION #3:

  In smaller adolescent ecosystems, the topic of conversation is invariably that of the adolescent ecosystem itself. Thus, the fewer actual events that occur, the more likely the adolescents in question will talk about one another — a form of modern conversational cannibalism.

  By the time I walked outside to find Margo after school, the crowd in the student parking lot was just beginning to thin out. Margo was sitting outside the back entrance, soaking up the late-day heat. A few clusters of lingering students were still hanging out around their cars, flirting or wasting time before sports practice. I threaded my way through a crowd of Goths slouching against cars in guyliner and black pants, Cowboys sporting the fuzzy my-first-mustache look, Dumb Pretties laughing too loudly and wearing scandalously short flounced skirts, Smart Pretties with organized notebooks, quiet voices, and knee-length skirts, Hip-Hoppers encircling one bank of lockers in the corner, a little knot of the Formerly Homeschooled wearing long prairie skirts and off-brand sneakers, and a crew of Football Players crowing loudly at some joke. “Hey,” I called.

  Margo looked up at me, smiling. As I approached, I couldn’t help questioning my best friend’s fashion decisions. Margo’s T-shirt said “Get Funky!” in sparkly letters. It was the sort of shirt a bratty twelve-year-old would beg her mom to buy her from Wal-Mart. Margo was, in my opinion, the prettiest girl at MHS, but she barely ever fixed her hair and tended to dress “thematically” rather than fashionably. Today was one of her ironic looks: a sort of tongue-in-cheek take on the Early ‘90s Britney Spears—Idolizing Prepubescent Fangirl.

 

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