Dream Guy

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Dream Guy Page 27

by Clarke, A. Z. A;


  A lot of people have told me that we could almost be sisters—almost. I don’t know whether to take offense or not. I mean, to be told that you almost look like a sibling to a woman who’s in her mid-forties isn’t exactly something a teen girl wants to hear. But it always brings a glow to Mom’s face, so I guess it’s worth the perceived insult.

  Although, when I look at her, I can understand how she could be seen as younger. Her ebony hair is still as glossy, thick and dark as ever. And her stormy gray eyes, so like mine, are vibrant and brimming with life. So looking at her is like looking in a mirror—if it aged you about twenty-five years.

  Right now, the aged version of me has dragged me from the window and wrapped her arms around me for a bear hug. The woman may be small, but she’s got the grip of an anaconda.

  “Happy birthday, Ava darling! Eighteen! It seems like yesterday I was in agony for forty-six hours trying to bring you into the world, and here you are now, a gorgeous young lady.”

  I go through this every year. The hug and the weepy speech. Though this time she seems weepier than usual. I let her manhandle me for a little while longer. It only seems fair to suffer this for a few minutes annually when she went through nearly two days of agony. Only a few more to go before the debt is wiped clean, by my count.

  Finally, she sniffles and relinquishes my person, restlessly smoothing my hair and patting my shoulders and cheeks like she can’t get over what she’s seeing. “My baby is eighteen. I cannot believe it.”

  I try my best at a gentle smile. Any wider and she’d think I was mocking her, too small and I would be accused of faking. “If you’re going to keep this up, I’m not going to make it to my finals.”

  “Oh!” She hugs me again, this time releasing me after a second. “I’m being silly, of course. But it’s not every day a daughter—but I’m babbling again.” She pecks my cheeks and rocks back to smile at me. “Get dressed. You have a big day ahead of you.”

  “Mom…”

  Too late. She’s gone. Never mind. It’s probably best that I don’t tell her. At least not until I find out if there really is someone out there. Let’s hope that if there is a person up in my tree that they are a trapped supermodel and not a serial killer. I can’t help but giggle at the insane thought. The scarf probably got blown up there on its own and I just imagined everything else.

  But just to make sure, I lean out of the window once again to try to see if I can spot a person in it. “Hey! Someone up there?”

  No reply and I can’t see anyone. The tree’s leafy, but not that leafy. I’m pretty sure that I’d be able to spot anybody in it. I can’t see the scarf anymore either. Damn it! That was a nice scarf.

  Shoving disappointment aside, I start on my morning routine. Seeing as it’s a nice, warm spring day, I throw on a simple T-shirt with my favorite pair of jeans. I pull my hair back in a ponytail, slip on my black strappy sandals, apply makeup with a light hand and I’m good to go. All this was done in the bathroom, of course. Just a precaution until I find out whether or not there is really someone in my tree.

  My bag is heavy with the books and notes I packed the night before. Textbooks I have to return, notes to cram before the test, all the things every girl wants to think about on her birthday.

  What does surprise me, though, is the spread my mom has on the kitchen table. We’re not especially morning eaters. I might have a piece of toast and some juice, maybe cereal if I’m feeling crazy, but nothing too heavy before noon. What is laid out before me is amazing, seeing as Mom hardly ever cooks. Quite frankly, I’m not even sure she knows how to work the stove.

  Belgian waffles complete with cream and fresh fruit piled high is the centerpiece of the meal. A fruit salad, glasses of milk, juice and water are also present, arranged in an artful way—if you can arrange drinks in an artful way, that is. I don’t think I’ve ever seen any meal in this house with this much thought and care put into it.

  “This is amazing! Thank you!” I throw my arms around her and give her a big wet one on the cheek. It’s the least I can do for all this, even if the thought of eating all that makes me want to get in front of the TV and play Just Dance for the next two days. But being the dutiful daughter that I am, I plunk myself onto the chair and dig in.

  I manage to get everything down and get up just as I see Mom ready with a second helping. I feel like an overblown blimp as it is. Another mouthful and I’d explode for sure. Or at least burst out of my clothes. Images of me doing my exams in the nude quirk my lips for a second. Um, yeah. Not going to happen.

  I wipe my mouth with an intricately folded napkin and get up. “I’ve got to run! I have some last-minute cramming to do.” I peck her cheek again. “Thanks. I’ll see you later.”

  I manage to somehow make it out through the door without keeling over. I’m surprised I can even walk after eating all that. Leaning against the banister, I take a moment to breathe, hoping that it’ll settle. It takes more than a few heaving breaths to convince my stomach to retain what it’s holding. I lower my head back in an attempt to try to stop reverse peristalsis. That’s when I notice the oak tree again.

  All gastric-related discomfort is now forgotten as I take a look to see if my Peeping Tom fashionista is still up there.

  A furtive glance around me lets me know that I’m all alone. “Hey! You still up there?”

  No answer.

  “I want you gone by the time I get back, all right? I’ll call the cops if I see you again.” There. The threat of getting the law involved should be enough to scare them off. I mean, how would they survive in jail if they can’t leave their couture at home while stalking?

  Proud of myself, I saunter off to academic hell.

  * * * *

  My school could hardly be described as modern. It was built sometime in the seventies, or it looks like a relic from that era. All brick and small windows, it comes across more like a prison than a school. At least it does to me.

  I head to the gym where the exam is to take place, taking a moment to stop at the table where they are collecting textbooks to drop mine off.

  Now for the fun part. The small window of time where we try to cram a year’s worth of knowledge into our brains and hope it sticks. I realize it’s stupid, and yes I have been paying attention and doing my assignments. I know this stuff. It just doesn’t hurt to remind myself. Unlike my frantic classmates, I’m relatively calm and flip through my notes, reading at a leisurely pace.

  “Ava…”

  The agonized moan could only have come from one person. My best friend Beth Coolidge trudges—no, more like stumbles—through the throng of people to fall dramatically against me. She isn’t her usual perfect self. In fact, she’s more haggard than anyone has any right to be for something as fleeting as an exam.

  I drag her off to the side and prop her up against the wall. “Beth, are you wearing stage makeup?” Even as I ask I can see it. She’s made herself look a few degrees warmer than death with a healthy pancake-thick layer of sickly pale makeup.

  “Do you think they’ll take pity on me?” Hope glimmers on her face for a moment before she adopts the pained expression again. “I mean, if they see how determined I am to take this test, even if I’m at death’s door, they’ll take pity on me, right? Maybe bump up my grade a little?”

  I close my eyes, but know she can see them rolling behind my eyelids. If Beth spent half as much time actually doing her work as she does coming up with these plots, she’d be like Einstein, Planck and Bohr all reincarnated in a pretty little overdramatic package. “You’re insane, you know that?”

  “It might work.” She droops against me again when a teacher walks by. “See? She noticed!”

  “She thinks you’re hungover.” I snicker.

  “Gee, thanks.” She snatches at my notes and starts reading, ignoring my glare. “Like you need to cram,” Beth accuses.

  “I might. Besides, I don’t have a brilliant plan like yours to fall back on.”

  “Oh, sarcasm.
I’m so hurt!” Beth slams her hands over her heart like I’ve pierced it with my nail file before falling over my shoulder to pore over my notes again.

  Despite my protests, I let her have the notes. She needs them more than I do at this point. As a matter of fact, I’m feeling more self-assured than I usually would before a test. I don’t ever remember turning into a frazzled mess like some of the people here, but I’m not always so sure of myself either. Call it a flaw.

  “Do not doubt your abilities.”

  What the…? The voice came from behind me, but as far as I know, my back is pressed up against the wall. Even then, I take a cautious look around. No one that I can see could have said it.

  Pinching the bridge of my nose, I sigh heavily. Maybe I’m not as together as I thought I was.

  Within minutes, the doors to the gym open and we’re herded in like mindless, muttering cattle. I realize it’s not much of a stretch when I look at the gibbering mass that surges through with me. Beth and I sit somewhere in the middle of the room, sliding into the little desks and pulling out what we need from our bags long before anyone can accuse us of cheating. I roll three perfectly sharpened 2B pencils onto the desk, followed by an eraser, a ruler, two blue pens and a pencil sharpener. No such thing as being too prepared, right?

  I hear Beth mumbling something behind me that sounds like a cross between a prayer and a plea. Others are going about their pre-test rituals too. Becky Stevens is banging her head on the desk—none too lightly. Dave Beckett catches my eye and quickly tugs his sleeves down, concealing scrawl in black ink on his forearms. And those are just the ones who caught my eye. Shaking my head, I return my gaze to my desktop. Who knows what the others are up to or what the teachers make of their ragtag band of students?

  Mr. Burnson, the head of the English Department—an odd choice to administer the Ancient Civilization exam, if you ask me—has started handing out the tests with the forewarning to leave them face down until everyone gets one. Not like we could do anything with the sealed booklets anyway.

  So now I’m drumming the beat to Jingle Bells on the desktop for some unknown reason, not that anyone can tell. Nervous energy. What can I say? It does weird things to you.

  It’s another few minutes before all the tests are handed out. Then, finally, we are allowed to start. The multiple choice questions are easy enough. I start filling in the little bubbles rapidly. There are a few that I stumble on, a handful that really slow me down. I decide to come back to them later rather than let them hinder my progress. The essay questions are just as straightforward. I pick two and expound on them, mixing pure regurgitation, facts and my own flair for words.

  With that done, I have roughly an hour to go back and look at the problem questions. Now that I’ve had a chance to think them over, the answers are obvious. All except for one.

  I slowly fill in one bubble only to erase it. I drag my hand back and forth from one bubble to another. Yes, it’s one question. But this is my future we’re talking about. I want the best possible start, even if the question is vague and pointless and involves something that I don’t ever need to know.

  “It’s that one.” A fine-boned hand sneaks over my page and points to the A bubble. “I smote their asses with a vengeance.”

  “What the hell!”

  The arm quickly retreats. I trace the path it took with my eyes until I find myself gazing up at a tall, statuesque woman in the strangest outfit I’ve ever seen. No wait. It’s not that strange. I’ve seen them before, as a matter of fact, while filling my head up for the subject of this very exam. But it’s definitely out of place here in this day and age. Who wears a toga now, except maybe drunk frat guys?

  “Ava? Do you have a problem?”

  The teachers presiding over the test, not to mention several students, are all staring at me curiously now.

  I immediately drop my head back down, mumbling, “Sorry.”

  I jerk upright again when a thought niggles its way into my consciousness. Doesn’t anyone else see this woman? I’m looking around and no one seems to be acknowledging her sudden, and really bizarre, appearance.

  “Hurry up and fill in the box. It’s not like I have other people to help.”

  I tilt my head and study her. “I’m not interested in cheating. Go away.”

  Her stunning gray eyes lock on to mine, her expression shocked. Then, with a muted pop, she disappears. Like, completely. She’s nowhere in the room. And I really am searching.

  “Ava! Will you please pay attention to your own work.”

  Mrs. Bernard is peering over my shoulder. I didn’t even notice her approaching me.

  “Are you all right?”

  Well, she isn’t known as the teacher with the bleeding heart for nothing. When she finds a cause, there’s nothing stopping her until she feels it’s been righted. And right now, I’m the subject of her concern. Quick! Before I become the cause of a sit-in or a rally!

  I know I’m blushing and seriously fighting the urge to start babbling like an idiot. And I know she probably thinks I’m completely guilty.

  I wave her off. “I’m okay.”

  “Are you sure? You’re acting a little strange.”

  I feel a little strange. I’m seeing a person who apparently no one else can see and she’s helping me with my exam. But instead of telling her that and risking being carted away in a straitjacket I say, “I’m fine. I think it’s the stress.”

  Luckily for me, Mrs. Bernard realizes that I’m not like that. I have never cheated on a test, nor would I ever consider it. She pats my shoulder and murmurs something that sounds comforting before returning to the head of the room. Whew. No rallies to save the sanity of Ava Goddard will be happening any time soon. I can see her explaining my situation to the other teachers. They all turn my way with concern written all over their faces. They just aren’t bothered enough to come over and whisk the test away.

  Tired of being here, I fill in the bubble that the mystery person, who I’m assuming was a hallucination, pointed to. I gather my things, get up, drop the test off and walk out without a backward glance. Once on the other side of the door, I heave a sigh of relief. Done!

  And not a moment too soon. My fragile brain seems to be at its limit. How tragic would it be to lose my mind just as I’m on the cusp of freedom? Snickering to myself, I wander around the near-empty halls to wait for Beth. She likes to take as long as possible revising her answers. I prefer to give my answers and leave before I feel the urge to start changing things.

  I’m already getting bored. A quick check of my watch tells me it’s only been three and a half minutes since I walked out and I’m already climbing the walls.

  Several people trudge from the gym—some look hopeful, others clearly the opposite. The strange thing is they are being trailed by toga-clad figures. A dark-haired woman is patting Becky on the shoulder consolingly. Dave looks like he is getting his already ungainly ego boosted by a blond man who is showing more leg than is really necessary. Becky and Dave don’t even notice them there, even though the two weirdos are hanging over them.

  My stares are gaining their attention now. Becky gives me a strange glance while Dave grins smugly and makes his way over, clearly mistaking my curiosity for something else.

  “Hey, Ava. What did you think about that test? Killer, or what?”

  I lift my shoulders in an automatic, nonchalant shrug. “It could have been worse.”

  He laughs as though he can’t believe I’m so calm about the whole thing. “So what are you planning to do after graduation?”

  “Maybe travel a little. Then university, I guess. I’ve been accepted at a few schools. I’ve decided on the one that gave me a big scholarship…”

  Not that Dave seems truly interested in university talk. It seems like he’s dying to tell me what he’s going to be doing, so I give him an opening. “What about you?”

  “Me and some friends are going to backpack around Europe for a couple of months. Isn’t that great? You shou
ld come with us, if you decide against university.”

  I mumble something noncommittal as I stare at the beautiful curly-haired man hanging over his shoulder as he whispers something to Dave.

  “Invite her along again. She likes you. Don’t take no for an answer.”

  I’m about to take a swing at the guy when Dave takes his advice.

  “Think it over. Do you really want to pass up on the chance to travel and party?” He winks. “Let me know if you want in. It’s going to be the party of a lifetime!” Dave is distracted from his attempt at recruiting me by shouts down the hall. Several of his friends are out and waiting for him to join them. He pats me on the shoulder and saunters away.

  Apparently I was just a way to pass the time. Not that it bothers me. I was barely paying attention to him. What I was interested in was the man hanging over his shoulder. Dave didn’t seem to know he was there. How could he not? The guy was breathing all over him. And what kind of self-respecting jock would allow any man wearing a toga anywhere near him, let alone close enough to feel his breath? He seemed to hear him, though he didn’t seem to acknowledge it.

  Something really strange is going on here.

  “Ava, why didn’t you tell me about your plan? I told you mine.” Beth has finished her exam.

  “What are you talking about?” I start walking, knowing that she will follow. I don’t particularly want teachers hearing her since I know where this is going.

  “You know.” She waves at the gym. “That act in there.”

  “I wasn’t acting.”

  “Puh-leeze! You were acting crazy so they would pity you.” She slams her fist into a locker as we pass it. “It was brilliant. I wish I’d thought of it.”

  “What, and give up this whole Princess of the Damned thing you’ve got going on?” I poke a finger at her wild nest of hair.

  She fluffs her coiffure as if she’d just had it styled. “Mine was brilliant too. Yours was just more subtle. And subtle is good.”

  “What are you doing now?” I ask as we turn a corner and nearly trip on a student cramming for their next exam.

 

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