bad shape. But a new shape.
I am a new shape. And they hate that shape.
My foot starts twitching of its own accord, and Iâm dizzy with the anticipation and the knowledge that it could be hours (hours!) before Joe logs on and we can enter back into banter and whatever that other thing is: daring each other to push it further? Anticipating what could be? Gambling? Iâm not sure, but it feels good and buzzing and warm, and it makes me ill with anxiety. I canât decide what makes me more nervous: the idea that it might happen in real life, or the worry that it might end before it begins.
Iâm not a person who would kiss someone elseâs boyfriend. Except that I am someone who is desperate to kiss Joe. Iâve never been two people at once before, and I donât like it.
I send Elise a few more chats, begging her to stop being a good student and gossip with me instead. When that fails, I get up and sneak myself another mug of coffee from behind the counter. Paul winks at me. I head back to my table and stir in the requisite three and a half packets of sugar.
âTabitha?â
Alison doesnât speak to me ever anymore. But Jemma butts in from time to time. I donât even hate it. It still feels good to have her close by, even though it then feels totally terrible if I actually listen to the words sheâs saying.
I look up and for a split second forget sheâs not my friend anymore. She has on the same style hoodie she wears almost every day, today in red, and she crosses her arms awkwardly over her chest. Sheâs not pretty, not hot, not popular or talented in any particular way. Sheâs smart, which is why I liked her so much. Sheâs ambitious and listens to NPR and has a really fascinating opinion on almost everything. Including, lately, me .
âI mean this as, like, friendly advice,â Jemma starts. Alison looks on with interest. Hugs The Fountainhead to her chest like a raft. âBut one of the seniors told me Ishould mention to you that the black eyeliner is, like, a little out of control this week.â
Oh right. This. This is why we arenât friends. Now I remember.
My skirts. My makeup. The looks I give boys. Maybe even the looks they sometimes give me.
The looks her brother, Devon, gave me.
And okay fine, the fact that I started touching my hair a lot around him, and wearing extra makeup and my smallest skirts when I went over to her house. I started flirting. I guess that was sort of bad.
But not that bad.
âAnd today . . . are you wearing some kind of crazy padded pushup bra?â Jemma continues. âBecause, um . . . that is a lot of cleavage. And my mom said some of the teachers are mentioning it as being a problem too. . . .â Jemma keeps the same look of bullshit-concern on her face for all of this, even cringing with mock humility at the word bra . Weâre sixteen, not seven. The girl has seen my nipples, for chrissakes. We compared nipple size in the seventh grade. I lent her one of my training bras when her mother wouldnât get her one. We Googled âblow job,â like, two years ago when we heard everyone was giving them.
âIâm wearing a normal bra,â I say, as if thatâs somehow the only pertinent part of the conversation so far. Jemmagives me a look like she doesnât buy it, and I wish this was a problem a change of bra could solve. âWhat did you need, Jem?â I immediately wish that Iâd stopped myself from using a nickname. It hurts, the remembered intimacy hanging in the air between us.
âYouâve just changed so much.â
âI havenât changed at all,â I say. And this I actually mean. Because a sudden jump in cup size isnât the same thing as changing who I am. Canât you be bookish and chill and also sort of a little bit hot? Iâd still rather spend my Saturday nights curled on the paisley couch with a book and a chocolate
Melissa de la Cruz, Michael Johnston