FRONT PAGE FACE-OFF
FRONT PAGE
FACE-OFF
Jo Whittemore
If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”
This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
ALADDIN M!X
Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com
First Aladdin M!X edition March 2010
Text copyright © 2010 by Jo Whittemore
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
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Designed by Lisa Vega
The text of this book was set in Garamond.
Manufactured in the United States of America
0110 OFF
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Control Number 2009927097
ISBN 978-1-4169-9169-4
ISBN 978-1-4169-9898-3 (eBook)
For Cheryl,
the best critique partner the world has ever known
acknowledgments
Always for God, family, and friends.
For my editor, Alyson Heller, who appreciates the hectic news world as much as I do.
For my agent, Jenn Laughran, who thinks I’m funny and helps me to see it.
For Michelle Andelman, who convinced me I had the
talent to write this book.
For the Awesome Austin Writers, who I’m proud to call
my friends.
For my Rochester posse and my Andover crew, who
appreciate my second life.
And for ALD, JCH, and KPK, who always answer my phone calls, even when it’s hazardous to their health.
Chapter One
In China a red envelope meant the owner had good luck and protection from evil. At Brighton Junior Academy a red envelope meant the owner had half a brain and way too many pairs of shoes.
I never expected to be in that group, but somehow, on the first day of seventh grade, one of those envelopes found its way to my locker.
Across the front of the envelope my name, Delilah James, flowed in fancy gold script, complete with a sparkling rhinestone dotting the i. As a writer for the school paper, I’d seen my name dozens of times in the byline, but never printed with quite as much pizzazz. Most girls would have squealed, taken their picture with the envelope, and framed it, but I just stared.
“Come on, Delilah!” Someone jabbed me in the ribs. “School ended five minutes ago, and I’ve got to have some real food.” My best friend, Jenner, held up the candy necklace she’d been gnawing, now just a sticky elastic string holding some sugar loops. “I’m this close to cannibalism.”
“Well, can you stop picturing me as a giant pork chop and look at this?” I stepped aside, revealing the envelope.
Jenner sucked in her breath, along with a partially chewed bit of candy. She coughed until I smacked her on the back. “No … way,” she finally managed.
“I know.”
She bent and studied my locker door, as if it had somehow produced the envelope on its own. “She would never send this.”
“I know.”
“She hates you!”
“I …” I frowned. “Well, I don’t think she hates me. She just … mildly objects to my existence.” I shrugged. “And maybe we’re wrong. Maybe it’s from someone else who has a thing for red envelopes.”
“Oooh!” Jenner’s curly blond hair bounced as she leaned close and whispered, “It could be from a creepy Valentine killer who’s seven months behind. Or a creepy Christmas killer who’s getting a head start on the season. Or—” I glared at her and she backed away. “Or something not involving any form of creepy holiday killer.”
My best friend, queen of the macabre.
Jenner was overly fond of death, disease, and dismemberment. She’d once told me that if she couldn’t make a career out of surfing (her first passion), then she wanted to be a grave digger.
The two of us turned to face the envelope.
It was time to get serious.
I plucked the envelope free, and a supercharged whiff of Chanel No. 5 hit me. In that instant I knew we weren’t mistaken about the sender. Only one girl at Brighton Junior Academy wore that fragrance. Only one girl was allowed to wear that fragrance—Paige Sanders, president of the Debutantes.
And Jenner was right; Paige did hate me.
Of all the cliques that girls would push one another in front of a train to get into, the Debutantes had the longest line at the tracks. To be accepted meant instant popularity, but scoring the invite took an insane amount of brownnosing. The only exceptions to the admission process were the new president and her officers, who were chosen based on the number of girls they could crush beneath their wedge sandals.
I’d written an article on the whole affair, earning the wrath of the Debutantes, who didn’t like the bad press or the fact that I called them “Little Debbies” (like the desserts, they were flaky, artificial, and hard to stomach). But I’d won an award for the piece and impressed the new student editor, who promoted me to lead reporter.
To be honest, that hadn’t been half as surprising as the envelope in my hands.
“Open it.” Jenner nudged me.
I ripped into the paper, and it exploded in a shower of star-shaped confetti and iridescent glitter. “Wow. This must be what happens when unicorns throw up.”
“It’s probably some decorative version of anthrax that’ll make your lungs rupture and explode.” Jenner brushed the excess off my hand. “Don’t breathe too deep.”
The card inside the envelope had “You’re Invited !” written across the top in even more glitter, which clung to my fingertips and made the invitation sparkle. To add to all the shimmer and flair, the Little Debbies had jotted a personal note:
Dear Delilah,
It is our pleasure to formally announce your consideration for the Debutantes. Please join us tomorrow during study hall in the student lounge to discuss your potentially exciting future.
Paige’s signature appeared at the bottom, followed by several names with various smiley faces and hearts dotting the i ’s.
Jenner read over my shoulder and snorted.
I scanned the note several times and felt reality slipping further and further away. “I could never be one of them.”
Jenner nodded in agreement. “You’re smart and you have a good personality. Where would you fit in?”
I laughed and reached into the locker for my Thought Box, filing the invitation behind a cardboard divider labeled Unexplained Phenomena. “Congratulations, Paige. You’ve earned a coveted spot in my weirdo file.”
“Shh. Listen.” Jenner cupped her hand around
her ear. “You can almost hear the cries of all the girls who couldn’t score an invite.”
In that moment of mock silence I actually did hear something: a commanding voice growing closer and clearer, punctuated by the tap-tap-tap of heels hitting the floor.
“And make sure the area’s secure,” said the voice, which I recognized as Paige’s. She spoke in a nasal tone, as if she were pinching her nostrils to block out the smell of commoners. “I don’t want any rejects trying to sneak in.”
“Oh, that won’t be an issue. We’ve got Aaron and Travis
on freak patrol.” Another voice giggled, slightly out of breath.
“Good.” There was no matching joy in Paige’s voice. “And the pledge packets?”
A third voice chimed in, speaking at a rapid clip. “We’ve got pens, pins, forms, folders—”
“I didn’t ask for a complete inventory,” Paige cut in. “I just need to know if the packets are ready.”
“Yes, totally” was the rapid response.
By this point, Paige and friends were passing the locker bay, and I realized the other voices I’d heard were Friend 1 and Friend 2, speed-walking to keep up with Paige’s brisk pace.
Suddenly Paige paused mid-march and swiveled in my direction. Her blond hair swung around her shoulders like a shining silk curtain, and her eyes, one shade from violet, fixed on me.
“Delilah James.” Her tone was neutral, devoid of the invite’s glitter and confetti, and I wondered if one of her officers had sent it as a joke. But then Paige’s lips parted into a smile broad enough for me to count every one of her perfect white teeth. “I’m so glad we ran into you!”
I looked to her friends, half expecting one of them to offer me a juicy, poisoned apple. Instead, they clutched at their clipboards and mirrored Paige’s expression, toothy grins and all. “Um. Okay.”
Paige waved just her fingertips at Jenner. “And good to see you, too …” She trailed off until one of her companions whispered in her ear. “Beatrice.”
“I go by my last name, actually,” said Jenner. “Beatrice is more for prune poppers.”
Paige nodded while her companion whispered in her ear again. “Well, then, Jenner, it’s good to see you, too, but you might want to rethink that fashion statement.” She pointed to the lone piece of blue candy still hanging around Jenner’s neck.
“Sorry. Let me get rid of it.” Jenner brought the necklace to her mouth and crunched on it until the candy disappeared.
“And … now you’re just wearing a piece of spit-soaked elastic.” Paige’s lip curled. “Even better.”
Jenner winked at her. “I aim to please.” To me, she waved and stepped back. “I’ll see you in the courtyard.”
“Strange girl … but cute,” Paige commented, watching her go. “Too bad we didn’t invite her to join the Debutantes.”
“She’s a surfer,” commented one of Paige’s friends. “And you’re allergic to seaweed.”
“Oh.” Paige wrinkled her nose. “Never mind, then.” She turned back to me. “So, you got our invitation.”
I was still trying to make sense of their bizarre reason for excluding Jenner. “Um … yeah. I did not see that coming.”
Paige smiled and nodded at the confetti littering the ground. “Are you excited or what?” She held her arms open, as if expecting applause or a bouquet of roses.
“You made a mistake,” I said.
Paige’s arms snapped back to cross over her chest. “Interesting. I never make mistakes … but go on.”
“Don’t you remember that article I wrote last year? The one where I said less than stellar things about the Little Debbies?”
A flicker of annoyance crossed her face, but Paige smiled and relaxed. “Of course the Debutantes remember. That’s exactly the reason we want you to join.”
I glanced at her friends again, but they still stood with clipboards in hand, awaiting her next instruction. “I don’t get it.”
“Let me explain.” Paige smiled sympathetically and plucked a stray hair off my blouse. “Jesus once said, ‘If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em—’”
I wrinkled my forehead. “Jesus didn’t say that.”
Paige rolled her eyes. “Confucius, then. Whatever.” She gripped my shoulders. “The point is, Delilah, you have the power of the pen, and if you want to continue spreading horrible lies about us”—I opened my mouth to object, but she held up a palm—“we’re powerless. So, since we can’t beat you, we ask you to join us.”
I frowned. “But that quote means you should join me … since you can’t beat me.”
Paige’s expression darkened for a moment, but she forced a smile. “That’s another reason you’d be an asset. You’re so clever … and bold. You don’t mind pointing out people’s mistakes in front of others, even if it embarrasses them!”
Not even a machete could have hacked through the sarcasm hanging in the air. “Well, sorry, but I can’t join,” I said.
A clipboard hit the floor with a loud smack, and its pink-cheeked owner bent to pick it up. Paige scowled at the girl, then looked at me with an amused smile. “I … don’t think I heard you correctly. Can you repeat that?”
I knew she’d heard the first time. This was just her way of offering me a second chance to keep from executing the biggest blunder in Brighton Junior Academy history.
“I decline your invitation to join the Debutantes,” I said in my most formal tone.
Paige took a step back, as if I’d spat on her. “Seriously.”
“Seriously,” I said.
“But nobody declines!” exclaimed the girl who’d dropped her clipboard. She jabbed at it with her finger. “Out of thirty girls, you’re the only one!”
“Cool.” I peered at the clipboard. “Do I get a special trophy for that?”
Paige jerked the clipboard out of the other girl’s hands and tucked it under one arm. “You don’t want to turn this down, Delilah. You’d benefit as much as we would.”
“How?” I asked. “By getting to call myself a Little Debbie?”
“Most people are grateful just to be called Debutantes,” said Paige, stressing the last word so hard, I thought she might pull a muscle. “But we can help you achieve your heart’s desire.” She reached into her backpack and held up a teen magazine.
I read the headlines. “Well, I would like clearer skin in five days … but that’s not my heart’s desire.”
The magazine crinkled under Paige’s fingers, and she pressed her lips together before speaking in a quiet, girl-on-the-edge tone. “I’m talking about being a journalist, Delilah. That’s your big dream, isn’t it? To write long, boring articles about world affairs and the grayhouse effect someday?”
“Greenhouse,” I corrected. “Your point?”
“You have to start somewhere,” said Paige. “And we have access to information that would make US Weekly jealous.”
I tried to appear uninterested, but Paige had a point. If anyone knew what was happening at Brighton, it was the Little Debbies … and they didn’t share their secrets with just anyone.
I cleared my throat. “Out of curiosity … what sort of information are we talking about?”
Paige shrugged, but the corners of her mouth curved upward. “I guess you won’t know unless you become a Debutante.” She leaned closer to me. “But I can tell you this. One of our classmates is about to be spending a little time in juvie for her sticky fingers.”
“Shoplifting,” translated Friend 1. She immediately quieted after a look from Paige.
“And not even good shoplifting,” continued Paige. “In a roomful of Coach, the girl went for Nine West!”
I bit my lip and fought for calm. “Oh. Is that all?”
A lead-in like that almost wrote its own story, and I had no doubt Paige already knew who the girl was. If my first article as lead reporter could be about preteen shoplifting and its consequences from an actual offender …
Daydreaming wasn’t my thing, but I allowed myself a
hypothetical. In it I was holding the Junior Global Journalist Award, thanking my mom for her support and my late father for his inspiration.
My dad had died when I was still in grade school. He’d been one of the best journalists in the country, always praised for his original stories and attention to detail in his research. He was my idol; I wouldn’t exactly be following in his footsteps if the Little Debbies fed me all my information.
I sighed and shook my head. “It’s tempting, but I’d rather do this on my own.”
Paige stared at me for a moment before nodding. “I understand.” She gestured to Friend 1 and Friend 2. “We’ll see you in the lounge during study hall tomorrow.”
“Wait.” I waved my hands. “Didn’t you hear me? I’m not interested.” I thrust the invite at her, and she regarded it with an amused smile.
“Keep it. I’ve seen your future.” She arched one eyebrow and turned to walk away. “By tomorrow afternoon you’ll be holding on to that invitation for dear life.”
Chapter Two
Paige has seen your future? She can’t even see her own future as a Macy’s perfume spritzer.” Jenner let out her trademark laugh that was part hyena, part mule, and altogether terrifying to children and woodland creatures.
We were walking home from school, and I’d just filled her in on my discussion with Paige, including the mysterious shoplifter, but Jenner was focused on one thing.
“Wait!” She grabbed my arm and gazed at me with wide, dramatic eyes. “I’ll bet the Little Debbies have a time machine!”
I did crack a smile at that. “Man, the rich kids get all the best stuff.”
Jenner unwrapped a lollipop ring and slid it on her finger. “You should have Major build one for you,” she said as she popped the ring into her mouth.
Major was Major Paulsen, my soon-to-be-stepfather, a tall man with perfect posture and a salt-and-pepper buzz cut. When he wasn’t caught up in nauseating romance with my mom, he worked on government defense technology.
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