Read Home Sweet Drama Online

Authors: Jessica Burkhart

Home Sweet Drama (14 page)

Neither of us said a word as we brushed our teeth, flatironed our hair, and put on makeup. It was the most awkward morning we'd
ever
had.

I grabbed my bookbag, slinging it over my shoulder, and picked up the rest of my books off my bed.

“Sasha,” Paige said.

I turned to glance at her, really looking at her for the
first time since the bonfire. I noticed the dark circles under her eyes and her pale face.

“What?” I asked.

Paige looked down, then back up at me. “I'm so sorry about last night. I should have talked to you for at least a few more minutes instead of rushing off to work on Homecoming.”

I nodded, not responding. I'd pretended to be asleep last night when Paige had gotten back—I hadn't been ready to talk. But I didn't want to walk out now without saying anything. Paige really was sorry and I knew she hadn't meant to hurt my feelings.

“It's okay,” I said. “Everyone's stressed out right now and there are a million things going on.” I paused for a second. “I know I've been totally anti-Homecoming and I haven't been fair since it's something that's important to you.”

Paige looked at me, twisting a lock of her red-gold hair.

“I know how much you love Homecoming and I want to be better about being excited for you, even if I'm not,” I said.

“Thanks,” Paige said. “And I know there are lots of things going on for you related to Homecoming. You've
got Callie, Jacob, and Eric all there. I haven't been as sensitive to that as I should have been.”

“You were just excited about Homecoming,” I said. “I was never upset about that. It was just hard for me to think about going to Homecoming when Callie, Jacob, and everyone else were going to be there. But you know I was excited for you, too. It's a big deal that you and Ryan got nominated and I hope I didn't make that any less special for you.”

Paige shook her head. “Please. Stop it. You totally didn't. There are two days left of Homecoming and I want us to just have fun the rest of the time.
And
I want you to be comfortable doing whatever you want. I know you have to do some of the assigned stuff since you were nominated, but I don't want the rest of the week to be awful for you.”

“It's not awful,” I said. “Really. Jacob, Callie, Eric, and I just need to keep our distance from each other and we'll be okay.”

Paige walked over and wrapped her arms around me. I hugged her back, glad that we'd smoothed most of everything over and also relieved that things weren't going to be weird before fall break. I didn't want to start off fall break with Paige and I being awkward around each other. I had enough people to worry about.

“We need to totally start planning everything we're going to do over break soon,” I said.

“Absolutely,” Paige said. “We so have to.”

We smiled at each other and I willed the week to hurry and be over already.

When I got to history class later that afternoon, I took my seat and my eyes shifted between Jacob and Eric, who were already in there.

Eric had his phone under his desk and was texting. A lot. His phone buzzed seconds after he sent a text and he kept texting. He was slouched in his seat in a black T-shirt and jeans. Every few seconds, he'd grin, then type something back.

Then I looked over at Jacob. He sat at his desk, not even looking up. He looked as if he hadn't slept for days and he just stared at the front of the classroom as if he didn't know why he was there or what was going on. I watched him and my head started to pound. He had to be upset about breaking up with Callie, but I also knew it was about me. He'd wanted us to be together and he'd thought that would happen immediately after he'd left Callie.

But I'd made it clear at the bonfire that it couldn't
happen. Not now. Not ever. He hadn't believed me, but I'd have to do everything I could to convince him that I wanted to be single. That I didn't want him back. That we couldn't be together.

But part of my brain went to
that
place. What if I waited long enough, however long that was, and we did try to be boyfriend and girlfriend?
No.
I pushed the thoughts away. I'd decided to stay single and if we got back together now, it might make Callie question my story from the night of my party. That couldn't happen. I never wanted her to hate Jacob. I'd rather she hated me instead.

I sat through history class, not saying a word, and was sure that would be the most awkward class of my day. But when I got to math class, I saw Callie dressed in jeans and a red T-shirt. She was
really
down if she didn't dress up for Spirit Day.

I walked by her and took my seat, forcing myself not to go up to her. I couldn't. It would blow everything. But it hurt to watch my former BFF be teary through our entire class. I didn't know how many of those classes I could take.

18

RAH, RAH, RAH

CLASSES FINALLY ENDED FOR THE DAY AND I headed with the rest of the seventh and eighth graders to the gym for the pep rally. I'd almost bailed, but I knew I'd get detention from Headmistress Drake if she found out I'd skipped without a reason.

I climbed the bleachers with Paige and we sat next to each other. Paige's cheeks were flushed and she had a tiny green and gold flag in her right hand.

“This is sooo cool,” she said. “Yay, Canterwood!” I chewed on the inside of my lip so I didn't say anything about how she was already cheering before the pep rally even started. I remembered my words from this morning—I wanted the rest of Homecoming to be awesome for Paige. She deserved it.

I stared down at my black sandals, then looked up when the Trio climbed the bleachers and entered our row. They passed Paige and Heather sat by me with Julia and Alison by her side.

“Pep rally,” Heather said. “Yay.”

I laughed at how flat her “yay” was.

“I know,” I said. “Yay.”

We laughed, and beside Heather, Alison rolled her eyes. She leaned past us and looked at Paige. “
I'm
excited,” she said. “This is so cool!”

“I know!” Paige said, smiling. “The pep rally is going to kick off the final big events of the week. It's going to be awesome.”

Heather and I shared a glance. The next day and a half weren't going to be awesome for us, but at least our friends were excited.

I breathed a quiet sigh of relief when Ryan walked up the bleachers and sat by Paige. She grinned at him and he couldn't stop looking at her.

Whew. At least I was off I-love-Homecoming-so-so-much duty. Ryan was as into it as Paige, so he'd fill in for me. I could spend the rest of the period mocking the pep rally with Heather, and Paige wouldn't notice.

I was about to turn to Heather, when I saw Callie enter
the gym and climb into the second row of stands. She looked devastated. Her eyes were pink and she had her lips pressed together. I wished I could do
something
, but I knew there wasn't a thing I could do.

Part of me was almost furious with Jacob for doing that to Callie. He'd hurt her and she was my former best friend. But I couldn't hate Jacob. I couldn't be mad at him for staying with someone when he didn't feel anything. That would have been leading Callie on. I just wished that they would have been happy together and that it would have been enough.

I tore my eyes away from Callie and saw Heather watching me. She didn't say anything, but I could tell she wanted to.

We both watched as Eric walked through the gym doors with Rachel and her posse. The more I watched Rachel, the more I realized it looked like she was the Heather of seventh grade, only nicer. Rachel and her friends sat on the bottom row of the bleachers and they were practically bouncing in their seats.

“They should have been cheerleaders,” Heather grumbled.

“No kidding,” I said.

Another wave of students came inside and Jacob
followed the group. He climbed up a few rows and by the look on his face, he was as thrilled to be here as I was.

The gym lights started flashing on and off and the Canterwood cheerleaders ran into the center of the court, shaking their pom-poms. A Billboard chart top hit started playing and the girls did back-flips and tossed each other into the air. The crowd started screaming and cheering as the cheerleaders finished their routine with a pyramid. I applauded along with everyone else, but my clapping was robotic.

The lights went down and the cheerleaders left the floor. In the dim lighting, I saw people hurry onto the floor and crouch down. An infectious beat starting playing and the lights flashed on. Canterwood's dance team jumped up and started a hip-hop number that got everyone to their feet. Members of the spirit club ran around the edge of the field and tossed balled up Canterwood Crest T-shirts into different sections of the stands.

The rest of the pep rally was a blur. The flashing lights, the music, and the dancing were almost overwhelming. All I could think about was getting out of here and going back to the safety of my room. The lights finally came on and Headmistress Drake, microphone in hand, walked to the center of the floor.

“Thank you, students!” Headmistress Drake said. I'd never heard her so excited. “I hope you all enjoyed the pep rally and are ready for our upcoming game. With all of you to cheer on the team, I'm sure Canterwood Crest Academy will emerge victorious! Go Canterwood!”

She left the floor to applause and I leaned down to grab my bag. When I looked back up, Callie was already bolting across the floor. She was one of the first ones out the door. I fought back the tightness that was choking my throat. Callie had just lost me at my party. And now she was without Jacob.

19

THE 411 ON JASMINE

AFTER THE PEP RALLY, I RACED BACK TO Winchester to change so I wouldn't be late for my lesson. I tugged on breeches and a T-shirt and pulled my hair into a messy ponytail before running for the stable. I grabbed Charm's tack from the tack room and headed for his stall.

I smiled when I saw Charm's head poking over the stall door.

“Hey, boy,” I said. “I missed you.”

Other books

Walleye Junction by Karin Salvalaggio
Stone in a Landslide by Maria Barbal
Rekindle by Ashley Suzanne, Tiffany Fox, Melissa Gill
A Velvet Scream by Priscilla Masters
Eastside by Caleb Alexander
The Language of Men by Anthony D'Aries
The Good Girls by Sara Shepard
Lost in Time by Melissa de La Cruz
The Privateer by Zellmann, William
Unmistakable by Abrams, Lauren