Read Teen Idol Online

Authors: Meg Cabot

Teen Idol (17 page)

"AN ACCIDENT?" Mr. Hall screamed. "AN ACCIDENT? And do you know what that little ACCIDENT would have cost us if it had happened at Luers? DO YOU?"

Since I hadn’t the foggiest idea, I said, "No."

"Ten points!" Mr. Hall roared. "Ten points, Miss Greenley, can mean the difference between first place and NO PLACE. IS THAT WHAT YOU WANT, MISS GREENLEY? FOR THIS CHOIR NOT TO PLACE AT LUERS?"

I looked at Trina again. Had we been speaking, I knew that at this point, she would have raised her hand and said,
Mr. Hall, it was my fault, not Jen's. I should have caught the hat, but I didn't
, or something to that effect.

Except that if Trina and I had still been speaking, she wouldn’t have let the hat fall into the tuba in the first place. So really, the whole thing was her fault.

Only I couldn’t stand there and say that.
Mr. Hall, it wasn’t my fault. It was Trina's
. Because you just don’t
do
that.

So instead, I said, "I’m sorry, Mr. Hall. It won’t happen again." Even though I knew it would. Because Trina was never going to catch that hat.

"Sorry isn’t good enough," Mr. Hall yelled. "Sorry doesn’t make it right! You have been sloughing off all year, Miss Greenley. It’s like this choir is a big joke to you. Well, I will have you know that the Clayton High Troubadours are anything but a joke. We have won top honors at Bishop Luers for the past five years, and this year isn’t going to be any different, despite your efforts to sabotage our performance. I don’t know if your little tryst with Luke Striker has gone to your head, missy, but allow me to assure you,
he's
the star. Not
you
. Now either you work with me, or you walk on out of here. The choice is yours."

Then Mr. Hall picked up his baton and rapped it on his conductor’s stand.

"All right, people, let’s take it from the top one more time," he said. "And let’s hope that
this
time, Miss Greenley will show us a little more courtesy."

Here’s the thing. Last week, I might have let it go. For Trina, because this was her thing, really. I was just along for the ride. She was the one with the big solo. She was the one who’d talked me into joining the stupid thing in the first place.

If this had been last week, I might have been all,
Okay, Mr. Hall. I apologize, Mr. Hall. I’ll practice real hard to get it right, Mr. Hall
. Just to make things nice and easy for everybody.

But this wasn’t last week.

And I didn’t care about making things nice and easy for everybody.

I cared about making things right.

So I stepped down from the risers, walked around to where my street clothes were sitting—in a pile against the wall with my books—and scooped them up.

"Excuse me, Miss Greenley," Mr. Hall said. "Where do you think you’re going?"

I looked over my shoulder at him as I made my way up the steps to the doors to the hallway.

"You told me to work with you or walk on out," I said. My heart was banging hard against my ribs. I had never sassed a teacher before. Never, not even once. But I didn’t care what happened to me now. I told myself I didn’t care a bit. "So I’m walking on out."

"Stop being so dramatic. Really, this is the kind of behavior I’d expect from Miss Larssen—" he glared at her darkly "—not
you
, Miss Greenley." He pointed to the empty space on the riser where I’d once stood. "Now get back to your place. Let’s take it from the top, people."

"But." I stayed right where I was. "You said I had a choice."

"This is a
class
, Miss Greenley," Mr. Hall said. "You can’t just leave in the middle of it."

Which is true. You can’t just leave in the middle of class. Not without a hall pass. If you did, you could get detention, or worse, a suspension. Maybe you could even get expelled. How would I know? I’d never walked out in the middle of a class before. I’d always been a good kid. You know, the girl next door. The kind of girl who’d never quit anything in the middle and leave everybody in the lurch.

Mr. Hall knew that. Which was probably why he added, "You can’t just
leave
."

And which might just be why I replied, "Watch me."

And walked away.

"Miss Greenley," I heard him scream. "Miss Greenley! Get back here this instant!"

But it was too late. I was already out of that choir room and heading down the hall, straight into the ladies’ room, where I changed—my hands trembling—back into my normal clothes.

And you know what? Not a single person came after me to see if I was all right. No one asked Mr. Hall if it was okay to check on me. No one worried, the way I always had about Cara, that I might need a shoulder to cry on.

No one. No one at all.

Not even Trina, whose fault it all was in the first place.

Want to know why? Because the only person at Clayton High who’d ever cared enough to run after anyone to make sure she was okay was
me
.

Maybe that’s why I took my dress—my hundred and eighty dollar, one hundred percent polyester Troubadours dress, with the sequined lightning bolt down the front—wadded it up, and threw it in the trash.

Ask Annie

Ask Annie your most complex interpersonal relationship questions.

Go on, we dare you!

All letters to Annie are subject to publication in the Clayton High School
Register
.

Names and e-mail addresses of correspondents guaranteed confidential.

Dear Annie,

There’s a guy that I like as more than just a friend, but he seems to think we’re only buddies. He asks for my advice on girls, and has gone out with all my friends but never me. It just kills me! Should I come out and tell him I like him? What if that makes things weird between us, and he doesn’t want to be my friend anymore? I wouldn’t be able to stand it if we weren’t friends. Help! What should I do
?

Tired of Sitting at Home Whilst He’s Out With Other Girls

Dear Tired,

I have news for you. The two of you aren’t friends now. You can’t be friends with someone you have a crush on. You have a choice, either decide that as a couple, the two of you aren’t meant to be, or ask him point-blank why he’s asked out everyone you know except you. Either he’ll mumble something incoherent (in which case you’ll know he’s not attracted to you), or he’ll say never knew you were interested, and ask you. Either way, you’ll have your answer
.

Annie

T
HIRTEEN

I
thought it
would take days before I’d be able to look back at what had happened in choir that day and laugh. Maybe even weeks. I mean, it had been pretty upsetting and all. I had defied a teacher, walked out on a bunch of people who were depending on me, and probably irrevocably severed ties with my best friend.

But it turned out it only took about three hours before the humorous side of the situation hit me. Because that’s how long it was before the staff of the
Register
made me see it. The funny side, I mean.

Scott Bennett especially.

"You did
not,
" he said, when I got to the part about stuffing my dress in the trash.

"No, I really did," I said.

I have to admit, the reaction of the paper’s staff to the whole thing had given me confidence in myself and my decision. I had sat through the rest of my classes that afternoon expecting a summons from Juicy Lucy, who would undoubtedly call my parents, if she didn’t just outright suspend me.

But no summons came from the vice principal’s office. Nor did one come from Dr. Lewis’s office Or even Ms Kellogg's. Mr. Hall apparently hadn’t reported me.

Or more likely, he had, and no one from the office cared. Because it was, after all,
me
. And what kind of trouble was
Jen Greenley
likely to get up to, wandering the halls instead of sticking to her riser like a good little girl?

Scott and Geri and Kwang and the rest of the
Register's
staff made me lighten up about it, though. They didn’t know anything about Troubadours, really. Except that Kwang had been going to join them on the bus to Luers, to cover the event for the paper. Since the Clayton High sports teams lose every game they play, people were putting a lot of stock into the Troubadours pulling through for the Roosters.

"Now who’m I gonna sit by?" Kwang asked with a groan, since without me there, he’d have no one to joke around with on the bus.

"There’s Trina," I pointed out "And Steve."

"Theater types," Kwang said disgustedly.

"I can’t believe you just threw it away," Scott said, still referring to my dress. This was the part he couldn’t seem to wrap his mind around. That I’d thrown away my dress.

And I guess it
was
pretty weird. I mean, considering it had been kind of expensive.

But that had been the point. I had paid for that stupid dress with my own money. Baby-sitting money. Money I could have spent on . . . I don’t know. But something I actually liked.

"What do you think I should have done with it?" I shook my head. "I mean, it’s not like I was ever going to wear it again."

"Yeah, Scott," Geri said. They had reached a point in their new, unromantic relationship where they could tease each other again. I wasn’t quite sure if this was a good sign or a bad one. But I was relieved that neither of them seemed to be pining for the other. In fact, lately, Geri seemed to have been in a pretty good mood. "What, you think there’re a lot of places where a girl can wear a red dress with a lightning bolt down the front?"

"Yeah," Kwang said. "You think she should maybe wear it to the Spring Fling with Luke Striker?"

Everyone laughed
really
hard at that one.

Then Geri suggested we go back to the ladies’ room where I’d dumped the dress, fish it out of the trash can, and have a ceremonial burning and/or burying of it. Scott had a better idea, though: We should pour chemicals from the darkroom on it—since it was made of so many unnatural fibers—and see if we could make the dress explode.

I felt weird about going so near the choir room so soon after what had happened—I didn’t want to run into Mr. Hall or Trina or anybody—so I declined to go on the "recon mission" to collect the dress. Instead, Geri went with a couple of the freshmen girls. They came back empty-handed, though. The custodians had already taken out the trash.

This led to a lot of jokes about what if one of the custodians found the dress and decided to keep it, and the hilarity that might ensue if we happened to catch one of them wearing it. You know, beneath his coveralls.

It was stupid, I know. But I swear I almost wet my pants, I was laughing so hard.

Which was why, after the meeting was over, I didn’t hear Scott say my name. Because I was still laughing too hard.

"I’ll give you a ride home if you need one, Jen," Scott said.

I swear, he said it so casually that at first I didn’t quite realize the enormity of the situation. You know, because he says it every day, practically I just went—remembering that Trina wasn’t speaking to me and that I wouldn’t be able to count on a ride from Steve anyway, since they were broken up—"Oh, cool, thanks."

I got my backpack and followed Scott through the long, empty hallways to the student parking lot. We chatted casually along the way. Scott said he’d heard Avril Lavigne couldn’t ride a skateboard to save her life, and didn’t that make her a big phony; and I defended her, saying that she’d never professed to be a skateboarder herself, just that she hung out with skateboarders.

This naturally led to a discussion of the merits of skateboarding, and if we were rebuilding civilization, like in
Lucifer’s Hammer
, would we let skateboarders into our new Utopian society (Scott: Absolutely not. Skateboarding is not a useful skill. Me: Maybe. Because skateboarders often understand things like physics. They have to, while building those half pipes and all.)

It was just so . . .
easy
. Walking down the hall and talking to Scott, I mean. Like we’d been doing it our whole lives.

Except that we hadn't. There’d always been a third person along I just didn’t happen to notice—then—that she was missing.

It was still a beautiful spring afternoon when we got outside. The sky was like this big blue overturned salad bowl in the sky. It was hard to believe there were planets and stars and stuff spinning around behind it. In fact, in the old days that’s what people used to think—that the sky was like this huge colander over the Earth and that the stars were the light from heaven, shining through pinpricks in the protective covering of sky. People were all scared of the sky cracking and letting in the full force of the light of heaven, which they thought would kill us all. . . .

I was mentioning this to Scott as we got to his car and he was opening the passenger door for me. It wasn’t until I found myself staring down at the passenger seat—the empty passenger seat, the one in the front—that it hit me: Geri Lynn wasn’t with us. Geri Lynn wasn’t with us, because Scott and Geri Lynn had broken up. Scott and I were alone with each other.

Scott and I were alone with each other for the first time
ever
.

I don’t know why that realization made me feel so . . . weird. I mean, Scott and I talk
all
the time, at lunch and at the
Register
meetings.

But the truth is, there are always other people around then. And, okay, maybe they aren’t taking part in our conversation. But they’re still
there
.

Being alone with him like this . . .

Well, it was just
weird
.

Like the front seat thing, for example. I’d never sat in the front seat of Scott’s car before. Ever. I’d always been in the back, behind Geri Lynn. All I’d been able to see from back there, as a matter of fact, was Geri’s big blond aurora of hair.

But from the front seat, it turned out, I could see all this stuff I’d never noticed before. Like Scott’s CD collection, for instance, which included so many artists that I also had in my own . . . Ms. Dynamite and Bree Sharp and Garbage and Jewel.

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