The Pros of Cons

Home > Young Adult > The Pros of Cons > Page 11
The Pros of Cons Page 11

by Alison Cherry


  It wasn’t okay, and I did want to talk about it, but the problem was, as usual, I had no idea what to actually say. So I stayed silent, my eyes squeezed shut because I couldn’t even think about looking at her.

  After a moment, Soleil said, “All right. Message received. I’m gonna wash up, okay?”

  She headed into the bathroom, leaving me on my bed. I’d spent all evening thinking I was about to star in a real-life version of one of our stories. We’d kiss, and we’d compare our feelings and find the parts that matched up, and we’d look into each other’s eyes and confess our deepest secrets, and we’d fall backward onto the bed in a tangle of passion. All the stuff that had happened in “Carry Me Home.”

  Or the parts that hadn’t happened in “Carry Me Home.” Like me telling her that this had been my first kiss.

  “Hey, Nessie?” called Soleil. “Is my contact lens case out there?”

  “I don’t see it,” I called back, without even looking.

  “Oops, found it!” There was a pause. “So, uh, hey, what are we doing tomorrow? I know we decided on the panel about gender in Doctor Who, but before that there’s still the choice between the vlogger thing and the presentation about Snape’s heroism. Oh, and the panel on lady superheroes. Which one—”

  “Actually, I have to get my badge replaced tomorrow,” I said loudly.

  “Wait, what? You lost your badge?” When Soleil poked her head out of the bathroom, she looked totally horrified.

  “Yup. I have to go to the registration desk for a new one. So I can’t go with you to the morning stuff.”

  “Oh man, that sucks so hard,” she said, looking all crestfallen.

  It didn’t suck, the idea of not spending the morning with Soleil. It should have, but it didn’t. Not after everything that had just happened between us.

  “Yeah,” I lied. “It totally sucks.”

  Soleil went back into the bathroom, muttering something about the horrible texture of the towels.

  I got out my phone, tucked myself into bed, and turned off my light. Then I downloaded the first episode of A Thousand Words. I’d never listened to it before, but Callie’s enthusiasm had piqued my curiosity, and I was desperate for a distraction from The Kiss. I plugged my earbuds in and listened, pretending to be asleep so I wouldn’t have to talk to Soleil again.

  Eventually I fell asleep for real, to the sound of at least ten different voices talking about the difference between obsession and love.

  * * *

  The next morning, Soleil was gone before I even woke up. She’d left a handwritten note on my side of the dresser, though:

  Morning, Nessie! Left early 4 the Lady Superheroes panel @ 9 & didn’t want 2 wake u since u have to get yr badge 1st anyway. Txt me when yr back @ WTF!

  xoxoxo

  And she’d signed it, not with her name, but with a drawing of a smiley-faced sun.

  There was nothing at all in there about last night. Sure, there was the “xoxoxo” at the bottom—but that was it. Maybe she was doing exactly what she’d said she would. Pretending it never happened.

  But maybe that was for the best, all things considered. Maybe that would make it easier for us to stay best friends, even if I’d been wrong about the dating part.

  On today’s schedule were a whole bunch of kick-ass panels, a writing workshop for which both Soleil and I had submitted stories, and the Karaoke Extravaganza at the end of the day. Soleil had already signed up to sing “Defying Gravity.” I’d promised to be the Glinda to her Elphaba. But before all that even started, I was going to check out the taxidermy convention. Callie had given me her badge in exchange for mine. I hadn’t been sure whether I’d pick dead animals over alone time in my room, but curiosity had won.

  So when I finished showering and getting dressed—in another one of Soleil’s shirts because, well, she did have really good taste—that was where I went. Toward B-wing, where a mass of people in flannel and camo and trucker hats were all milling around under a banner that read:

  Welcome to the World Taxidermy & Fish Carving Championships!

  Fish carving?

  Okay, then.

  A bunch of people were headed upstairs on the escalator, so I followed them, painfully aware of how much I stood out. I mean, I wasn’t just a sore thumb. I was a sore hand. An entire sore arm. I wondered if my badge would get inspected. I wondered if someone would call me out as a fraud and I’d get kicked out or, like, skinned and stuffed. But when I got to the top, the security guy waved me through with a glazed expression and barely a glance at my badge.

  Yeah, apparently people sneaking in wasn’t a huge concern over here.

  The room was pretty big, but not nearly as big as the WTFcon marketplace room, which I’d visited yesterday with Soleil. It looked like a museum. A museum so crowded with displays that you almost couldn’t walk, but still.

  There were lions. There were foxes. There were wolves and zebras and this giant shaggy cow thing, guarded by a super proud-looking guy dressed in a button-down American flag shirt. There were a couple of animals I was pretty sure didn’t even exist anymore, like a saber-tooth tiger, and I wasn’t a hundred percent sure if they were fake or not. Someone had sawed a baby deer in half and replaced its midsection with a fancy dollhouse—the title plaque below it read This Faun Is Not a Metaphor, whatever that meant. And right beside it were two enormous boars, one humping the other. I stifled a laugh as I moved past the display.

  Just beyond it was a long table crowded with birds, all arranged in what I guessed were supposed to be their natural habitats. I zeroed in on a red-winged blackbird with spread wings, and leaned closer for a better look.

  As I inspected the bird’s tiny feet, a male voice said, “No touching, young lady.” I jumped back. The flannel-clad guy who’d spoken pointed to a sign pasted onto the table.

  DO NOT TOUCH, it said. A zillion other signs, pasted in front of pretty much every other display, said the exact same thing.

  “I wasn’t going to,” I said.

  A few feet away from me, a pair of serious-looking men approached another display: a cute black-and-white monkey perched in a forked tree branch. Its long tail was curled around one of the branches, and its face was tilted upward a little, like it was curious about something.

  Now I understood why those signs were there. I really, really wanted to pet the thing.

  “Cebus capucinus,” said one of the men as he peered under the monkey’s tail with a penlight and one of those little mirrors they stick in your mouth at the dentist’s. “Good pose. Has jizz, for sure.”

  Okay, what? I inched closer to the two men.

  “The neck’s slightly overstuffed,” countered the second man. “And is it supposed to be climbing up or down? The direction of the gaze implies up, but the way the metatarsals are flexed indicates down.”

  The first man peered at a page in his binder, then at the monkey’s leg. “You’re right.” He leaned in and sniffed the monkey’s shoulder. Like, literally sniffed it. “Good odor, though.”

  They kept muttering to each other, pointing out flaws that I absolutely couldn’t see. Uneven stitches along the inside of one ankle. Something about the paint color on the inside of its nostrils. And what in the world had they meant by jizz?

  “… nothing for sale at all?” came a voice that, thankfully, startled me right out of that train of thought. Mostly because it sounded young. Like, my age. I hadn’t seen anyone in the entire B-wing who looked my age.

  But there, standing between a slightly cross-eyed eagle and a really awkwardly posed lion, was a girl. White, dirty-blond ponytailed hair, seriously cute. She was talking to an older woman wearing a sweatshirt with a pug face on it.

  “Sorry, sweetheart,” said the woman. “None of the work here is for sale. Now, if you wanted to mount your own vulture—”

  “No, no, that’s okay,” said the blond girl. “I’ll just stick with my bluebird. Thanks, though.”

  That was, like, a bluebird or whatever
, came the echo of Soleil’s voice in my ears, and I instantly knew who the blond girl was. Wait, no. Not girl. The blond person.

  “Merry?” I said, going over to them as the pug-sweatshirt woman wandered away.

  They jumped a little at the sound of their name, then their eyes brightened with recognition. “Oh, Ness! Hey!”

  Merry wasn’t in costume, which was why I hadn’t recognized them right away. Instead, they were just wearing baggy jeans, sparkly Chucks, and a T-shirt that said Maximum Effort across the chest, over a black-and-red circular logo.

  “Deadpool?” I said, pointing at the shirt. “Nice. Good movie.”

  “The comics are even better,” said Merry with a grin. “What’re you doing over here?”

  “Secret mission,” I said.

  “Ooh. Do tell.”

  “Well, it’s not that secret. It’s not even a mission. I just wanted to see the animals. How about you?” Then I remembered what they’d just said to the pug-shirt woman. “Something about a vulture? Are your friends here somewhere, too?”

  “Nah, they’re at a Supernatural panel,” said Merry. “I gave up on that show in the middle of season six, so we split up for the morning. But yes to the vulture part. You remember my hat? From my Boggart Snape costume?”

  “Absolutely,” I said. “Hey, how’d the contest go? I’m really sorry I couldn’t make it. Did you win?”

  They rolled their eyes. “No. I wasn’t authentic enough.”

  “Because of the bluebird? Come on, that’s the tiniest part of the costume. And the rest looked amazing.”

  “I know, right?” Merry sighed. “But there was another Snape, and he … well, he was a he. So, you know. Authenticity!”

  “Ew,” I said.

  “Whatever. It goes like it goes. But just in case the bird made the difference, I came over here to buy a vulture for next time—only it turns out none of this stuff is for sale.” They looked furtively around, then lowered their voice. “It also turns out that these people are the absolute best kind of weirdos. Did you see that lady I was talking with before? She’s a taxidermist, and she was trying to drag me over there to see what she made, which is, and I quote, ‘a portrait of two boars who love each other very much.’”

  I burst out laughing. “Oh, I saw that! They were humping!”

  “Wait, seriously?”

  “Seriously! Come on, I’ll show you!”

  But before we got more than a couple feet, I felt a tap on my shoulder, which made me jump. I turned, and right behind me was yet another girl who looked my age. Tall and brunette and freckled, she grinned at Merry, then at me, and said, “Hey, I’m trying to find someone, and please say you can help me so I don’t have to talk to any of the trucker-hat guys?”

  Merry shook their head. “Sorry. Don’t know anyone here.”

  “We’re stowaways,” I added in a dramatic whisper. “We’re actually with WTFcon.”

  “Ooh, really?” said the brunette. “Man, I tried to sneak into that one before, but they are total dinosaurs about checking badges.”

  Merry and I exchanged a look. I was pretty sure we were thinking the same thing, but I took point on saying it:

  “Dinosaurs?”

  “Oh, sorry.” The brunette laughed a little. “My little brother discovered swear words last year, so my family’s been trying to say different stuff instead. Mainly animals. There’s a swear jar if we slip up, so. It’s kind of a habit now.”

  “Foxing good habit,” I said, as straight-faced as I could.

  “Exactly,” said the brunette, pointing at me as Merry burst out laughing. “Congratulations, you are now an honorary member of the Byrd family.”

  “Wait, wait,” said Merry. “You use animals to swear, and your last name is Byrd?”

  “It’s a four-letter word.” She grinned at us. “Ba-dum-ching.”

  “Womp womp,” I said, and Merry groaned.

  “Oh, shut up, that’s the greatest joke I’ve ever made,” said the brunette. “Anyway, my point is, it’s impossible to sneak in over there. Way easier to sneak in here.”

  “Can’t imagine why,” murmured Merry.

  “Excuse me, you three,” said a man’s voice. It was one of the judges, and he and his partner, still looking oh-so-serious, had apparently finished inspecting the monkey. “Would you mind not blocking the aisle? There’s an aardvark over there that requires our attention.”

  We moved dutifully aside, and there was this suspended moment where I was hyper-aware of the ridiculousness of my surroundings, and I could tell Merry and the brunette were, too.

  “Aardvark is definitely one of my brother’s favorite code words,” whispered the brunette, and all of us instantly cracked up.

  “I’m Vanessa, by the way,” I said, as soon as we’d all calmed down a little. “This is Merry. Should we call you Byrd, or do you have a first name?”

  “I do, and it’s Phoebe,” said the brunette. “So, do you guys wear costumes or what? I saw a bunch of totally killer costumes last night. I think there was a contest or something.”

  “Nah, I’m just a fanficcer,” I said, then tilted my head toward Merry. “But this one does the costume thing.”

  Phoebe peered at Merry. “Oh, wait, it’s you! Weren’t you wearing that Boggart Snape costume last night?”

  “That’s me,” said Merry. “I think I remember you! We talked for a second, right?”

  “Yeah, because I couldn’t get over how completely amazing you looked,” said Phoebe. “Seriously, it was like you stepped right out of the movie.”

  I noticed Phoebe’s eyes flicker down to Merry’s pronoun button as she talked. She didn’t comment on it, though. Just sort of nodded to herself.

  Merry grinned. “Thanks. So, you’re not here for the taxidermy stuff, and you’re not with WTFcon. Please tell me you’re here with that baby beauty pageant thing.”

  “God, no,” said Phoebe. “I’m here for IPAC. The percussion one.”

  “Checking out the other conventions on your downtime?” I said.

  “Well, that and these babies.” Phoebe held up a black case. “Long story, but I have to give these back to, what is it, Buchannan Taxidermy? And get my mallets back.”

  I was about to ask what the long story was, when something clicked in my head. I’d tucked my badge into my shirt so nobody would call me out on not being Callie, but I pulled it out now and checked to be sure—and, yup, there it was. I held it up so Callie’s full name was right there in plain sight. “You mean this Buchannan Taxidermy?”

  Phoebe’s brow furrowed in confusion. “But I thought you were here for the other—”

  “Shh!” I hissed. “Not so loud. I swapped badges with this girl who wanted to see a panel about a podcast she likes. It’s actually really good. The podcast, I mean. A Thousand Words?”

  “Oh, that’s one of my favorites,” said Merry. “After Limetown. And First Draft. Oh, and Welcome to Night Vale, obviously.”

  “Ooh, I love Night Vale,” I said. “Cecil and Carlos, am I right?”

  “Carlos and his perfect hair!” said Merry, pressing a hand dramatically to their chest. “Hey, did you read that one fic where Cecil and Earl hooked up?”

  “One fic?” I said. “Come on, there’s, like, twenty-thousand fics of that.”

  “No, but I mean this one in particular where—”

  “Um, just so you guys know,” said Phoebe, “I have no foxing idea what you’re talking about. Who’s Cecil …?”

  “Oh, sorry! Fictional character.” Merry shook their head with a smile. “Note to self: Make Phoebe listen to Night Vale.”

  “Anyway,” I said, “Callie told me about the panel last night when I met her, and I had nothing to do this morning, so we swapped badges for a bit.” That was when my bag buzzed. “Actually, that’s probably her,” I said, and dug my phone out from under all my crap.

  That was AWESOME, said Callie’s text. I totally owe you. Meet me by the weird cactus outside A-wing?

 
I knew the exact place she was talking about: a plastic cactus the size of a grizzly bear, standing outside A-wing for no reason that I could discern.

  Cool, be there in 5, I typed back, and tucked my phone back into my bag.

  “She wants to meet me outside,” I said to Phoebe and Merry. “Come with?”

  Merry beamed as they nodded. Phoebe’s only reply, though, was “Aardvark.”

  Apparently that meant yes.

  As I left the ballroom after the podcast workshop, I was actually glad for the first time that I’d come all the way to Florida. Anica and Rafael had walked us through the production of an entire episode of A Thousand Words, from deciding on a concept to building narrative structure to post-production. They’d done a sample interview with an audience member and then shown us how her words could make us feel different things depending on what sound effects or music they played underneath. I was confident I could master the technical stuff if I got my hands on equipment like theirs, but I had no idea how I’d ever learn to craft a perfect story out of other people’s experiences the way they could. They were just so freaking good at it.

  When the workshop was over, fans swarmed to the front of the room to talk to Anica and Rafael. Part of me wanted to go up and say hi, too, but I needed to get back across the convention center before my dad realized I wasn’t really in Hall 5C. Hopefully the information I’d learned from the duck taxidermy videos I’d watched on YouTube last night would be enough to convince him I’d been at the waterfowl demo all morning.

  And then I pulled out my phone, and there on the screen were two missed calls and five texts from my dad.

  Dad: Where are you?

  Dad: In 5C but don’t see you

  Dad: Talked to Harley and 3 other ppl. Nobody saw you in session

  Dad: Why aren’t you answering my calls

  Dad: CALLIE CALL ME RIGHT NOW

  Dad had been forced to tell his archrival that he’d lost his assistant? Oh god, I was in so, so much trouble.

 

‹ Prev