And When Your Heart Begins to Bleed
Text ©2008 The Angst Guy
(thenagstguy@yahoo.com)
Daria and associated
characters are ©2008 MTV Networks
Feedback (good, bad, indifferent, just want to bother me,
whatever) is appreciated. Please write to: theangstguy@yahoo.com
Synopsis: Daria, Jane, Quinn, Stacy, Sandi, and other students
at Lawndale High struggle through a brutal twenty-four-hour period of
unforeseen challenges, in this alternate-universe tale created from a list of
the “Top Ten Things That Never Happen in Daria
Fanfics” (with a few extra ideas thrown in).
Author’s
Notes: This story contains graphic
and disturbing material; it is probably just below having an R rating. Other
author’s notes were moved to the end of the story.
Acknowledgements: My sincere appreciation goes to Mike Xeno, who came
up with the original list of “Things That Never Happen in Daria Fanfics,” and to WacoKid, who came up with the Iron Chef
contest that sparked this story. All other contributors of ideas to this story
are acknowledged in the “Author’s Notes” at the story’s end.
*
It’s like a lion at the door;
And when the door begins to crack,
It’s like a stick across your back;
And when your back begins to smart,
It’s like a penknife in your heart;
And when your heart begins to bleed,
You’re dead, and dead, and dead, indeed.
—from “A Man of Words and Not of Deeds,”
(English nursery rhyme, anon.)
Chapter One
Daria Morgendorffer awoke on a cold
Monday morning in May with her head full of things she wanted only to forget.
Reaching for the off button on the alarm by her bed, she swung her legs from
under the covers and sat up, weary despite her heavy sleep. She didn’t brush
back the curtain of her brown hair and reach for her glasses as she usually
did. Instead, she stared at the floor and did nothing for a length of time. She
felt dirty with the knowledge of her stupidity. In a few hours she would face
the consequences of a misguided impulse, and she could think of no way around
it.
Better, then, to meet her fate as soon as
possible and get it over with—unless she could escape from it a little bit
longer.
She got out of bed and stumbled over
several days’ worth of discarded clothing on her way across her bedroom,
planning to take a shower. Her hand was on the doorknob before it occurred to
her that the world was decidedly blurry. Grimacing, she went back to the TV
stand, put on her glasses, and left the room, shuffling down the hall in her
nightshirt. Her parents moved quietly around in their bedroom, preparing for their
day at their separate jobs. If Daria hurried, she could get showered, eat, and
miss them both.
She opened the bathroom door to find that
Quinn had beaten her to it. Her red-haired younger sister was wiping acne
medicine over her face with a cotton ball. She wore a pink bathrobe, her long,
wet hair wrapped in a towel. The air was full of steam.
Daria was on the verge of making a remark
about a mythical zit on Quinn’s neck, solely to get back at her sister for
hogging the bathroom first, when Quinn said, “I’m done. Bathroom’s yours.”
“Oh,” said Daria. “Okay.” Her expectation
of exchanging witty barbs with her sister collapsed. “So, how did your date
last—”
“Gotta run,” Quinn said, looking away.
She threw out the cotton ball, picked up her hairbrush and hair dryer, and
scooted past Daria to her own room down the hall.
Daria stepped out of the bathroom to look
after her, but Quinn hurried into her bedroom and shut the door, locking it.
Daria went back in the bathroom, closed the door, and prepared herself for what
she suspected would be a very long day. When her shower and toweling off were
done, she hesitated before the mirror and looked at her face, examining every
aspect of it with great intensity. An unsuspected truth settled over her, a
burden that weighed down her shoulders as well as her dreams.
I’m not beautiful, she thought.
She turned her face from side to side, eyeing her image. I’ve always known I
wasn’t beautiful, but I never really saw how ugly I was until now. I’ve hardly
ever given my looks a second thought, except when I pulled off that stunt with
Quinn’s boyfriends to get her to stop pretending to be a brain, or when I tried
wearing contacts for a while. The reality is right in front of me. I can’t
believe I never saw it before. I’m not beautiful or even good-looking. I’m not
even handsome in a feminine way. My face has no character or sex appeal at all.
None, zip, zero, nothing.
Why did I think I could change that? I
really believed the trip I made to the salon in Oakwood Saturday afternoon
would reveal a beautiful me hidden under my glasses. I really thought it would.
I wanted to look my best for my beloved (a part of her mind began to laugh
at that phrase: my beloved). I went to the best salon Quinn knew of,
and they did everything they could to bring out that beautiful inner me, but I
came home looking like a desperate hooker. The eyeliner, the rouge, my hair,
everything—I looked awful, like a nightmare, like a whore, and I washed it off
before anyone else saw, the money wasted except to show me the truth of myself,
the real inner me.
I’m not beautiful. I’m not wise and
thoughtful. I’m not kind. All I have to catch a partner’s attention is my
intelligence, but even that sucks as a hook. It wasn’t worth a thing last
night, when I took that big chance and said those three magic words to the one
I loved. (The one I loved, ran her thoughts
again and again, emphasizing the past tense.) I held out my heart, and my
beloved looked at me as if I was a fool, because in that moment I was a fool. Daria,
said my beloved (gently, carefully, trying not to shatter my heart completely),
I don’t love you, not like that. We don’t have any chemistry. I care about you,
but I don’t love you in the way you want. We were always meant to be friends.
We can’t fit together in any other way, not like you want. Let’s be friends,
Daria, let’s just go back to being good friends.
The words were out, and my beloved did
not take them back. My heart fell from me and died.
Strange, that I did not cry when I went
home. Strange, I lost everything I had inside me and did not cry. It didn’t
seem to be worth it.
Daria took off her glasses and leaned
close to the mirror, looking over every pore on her nose and cheeks. After a
long moment, she looked away, ashamed, and put her glasses on again.
I was a fool for the one I thought was
my beloved, and what have I to show for it?
No one answered her.
She left the bathroom to get dressed.
Today would only get worse, she knew. It
would get a lot worse. The analogy of looking into a bottomless grave was not
inappropriate.
Chapter Two
Quinn Morgendorffer sat on her bed and
dried her long red hair, staring into space. She then brushed it out until it
was a blaze of orange fire, but she didn’t look in the mirror to check. She knew
what she looked like. More importantly, she no longer cared. Being beautiful
was automatic. She no longer had to think about what makeup to put on or what
clothes to wear. Her hands moved of their own volition and did all the work for
her, leaving her mind free to think about anything she wanted.
What is it that I want? Quinn
thought. I finally have to choose. What is it I really want? She hadn’t
a clue. Twenty-four hours earlier she knew perfectly well what she wanted in
life. She was the most popular girl in Lawndale High, had all the clothing and
accessories any teenage girl could imagine, and had enough dates to keep her in
French food until she went to college. Quinn had not a care in the world, and
then she went out for a second date with Skylar Feldman. Now, she knew nothing
at all.
Skylar on the surface was okay. He was
handsome enough and knew his manners. His family was rich and had a boat, and
he had all the toys a teenage guy could want, including his own sports car.
However, over the last year, Skylar didn’t care about that so much. Lately,
he’d not been quite so full of himself, not so inclined to act like he was hot
stuff. Now he kept to himself and didn’t talk when he had nothing to say, and
that made him sort of interesting. Last Friday, Quinn found an excuse to chat
with him. After some hesitation he asked her out for dinner on Sunday night,
which was what she wanted in the first place.
Yet—it wasn’t exactly what she wanted,
either. Skylar had taken her out once before, several years ago, but he’d
dumped her when he discovered she was planning to dump him later for his best
friend. Quinn didn’t see the harm in it. She never had any intention of going
steady. Why limit your options when you’re on top of the world? Why limit
yourself to one guy?
But what if the guy was the right one?
And how did you know if a guy was right,
or only looked it?
No one had a good answer for any of these
questions. When asked the latter, Quinn’s mother ranted on about a stunt-car
driver to whom she’d lost her virginity, God knew how many years ago, until
Quinn escaped to the bathroom. Her friends in the Fashion Club had completely
different ideas on what constituted a “right guy,” none of them helpful in the
least to Quinn’s situation. Tiffany was the worst on the subject. She wanted
only a guy who thought she was thin, as if her recent habit of running to the
bathroom to throw up lunch would ever attract anyone except gastrointestinal
specialists. Clearly, Tiffany needed help, but whether that
help should be medical or psychiatric, no one in the Fashion Club could
say. Quinn had decided to inform the high-school principal, Ms. Li, about
it—anonymously, of course. Rail-thin Tiffany had no spare weight she could
afford to lose.
Quinn shrugged it off. Tiffany’s method
of finding the right guy wasn’t the issue. The problem was,
Quinn had not been looking for the right guy. It hadn’t even been an
issue. He had simply shown up, unannounced.
I’m not in love, Quinn thought. I
know that for sure. I’m not in love with Skylar, but I do want to see him
again. I wouldn’t mind if he came by today and asked me out again. It might
even be worth bending my rule about slow dancing and see what he’s like up
close on the third date instead of the fifth. If he doesn’t ask me out, I won’t
be broken up about it—but I’m pretty sure he’ll ask me. I hope he will, anyway.
I want that.
Her hands hovered over her collection of
perfumes, settling on her personal favorite. This had better work, she
thought, and she was surprised because this was the first time she’d ever not
been sure that a guy would ask her out again, the first time she’d ever
questioned her ability to catch a guy’s attention and hold it. The difference
was that during dinner the night before, Skylar had asked about the real Quinn,
which Quinn had assumed would always stay hidden. When Skylar pressed, though,
she finally let him see a little of what lay behind her bouncy orange hair and
makeup—and Skylar had liked what he saw. He liked the real Quinn. That just
blew Quinn’s mind. That anyone would like what was really inside her, that was just impossible.
And that was a rush like nothing else in
the entire world.
Well, like almost nothing else.
I’m not in love, Quinn thought, but
Skylar listened to me and got me to talk about stuff that was really bothering
me, like my grades and college and a career and all that futuristic junky
stuff. He didn’t talk about himself or his family’s boat. He didn’t tell me how
cool he was. He didn’t try to tell me what I should do about my problems. He
just listened. When did guys start to do that, anyway? Maybe he’s a mutant or
something.
And—he told me I was intelligent. I
couldn’t believe it. He said it like it was a good thing, not like it was a
smart-like-Daria geek thing. He said I had a lot going on upstairs, and he said
it like it turned him on. Not even my tutor David from last summer said I was
really smart. I can’t believe I ever liked him anyway, though he did help me
with my schoolwork and said he was proud of me, which was something, I guess.
But Skylar also said he believed in me, which David never did. Skylar said I could
do anything. When he said that, it made me think I could do anything,
absolutely anything in the world. Something inside me went ping, and I
felt really, really good. I can’t ever remember feeling good like that. It hit
me all the way from my head down to my toes—and everywhere between.
Quinn shivered, then got up from her
dressing table and walked to her closet. She put on the first thing she
grabbed, then put on the next thing she grabbed, then put something on her feet
and went to her jewelry box and put on a few more things—and stopped. The small
black box Skylar had given her last night held her attention. After
deliberating, she took out the box and unwrapped it.
Two gold earrings glittered within. Quinn carefully put them on and looked in
the mirror, then left her room, looking her best without half trying.
I’m not in love, but I think it’s time
to try going steady for real, she thought. I’ll go steady with Skylar,
if he’ll do it. I hope he does. I want that more than anything—even more
than—well, maybe even more than that.
Quinn knew she had crossed into a new
territory in her world. She had left behind the old and safe and predictable
for the new and frightening and exhilarating, traveled to a place where the
payoffs and losses and the joy and pain would be spectacular. A new Quinn was
in town, and there was no way to undo it.
She never once considered what Jeffy,
Joey, or Jamie would think about that. She did not even remember their names.
Chapter Three
It wasn’t until Daria was already outside
her home and on her way to school that she realized that she was walking to
Jane’s house, as she always did. She stopped and stared down the street, unsure
of which direction she should go. Do I really want to do this after last
night? Can I possibly face the mess I made? Can I possibly face Jane?
After a long moment, she tentatively kept
going for Jane’s. She could have turned around and let Jane walk to Lawndale
High by herself, which would have been less awkward than what she was about to
do—but what was the point of having a best friend if you made a point of
avoiding her?
Unless your best friend
wanted to avoid you. Jane probably wanted it that way, too, given
what Daria had done last night. Daria could hardly blame her if so.
The fifteen-minute walk to the Lane home
seemed to take eons. Daria turned a final corner and looked down Jane’s
street—and there was Jane, sitting on the front step of her home, looking back
at her. She’d obviously been there for some time. Daria stopped dead on the
sidewalk at the curb, focused on her only friend.
After a moment, her only friend got up,
brushed herself off, picked up her backpack, and casually strode across three
neighbors’ yards to get directly to Daria. As Jane approached, Daria looked
away, pretending to be interested in the building rush-hour traffic.
“Wasn’t sure if you’d come around this
morning,” said Jane without preamble. “Thought it was better if I came outside
rather than have you come in.”
Daria nodded,
her face expressionless. “I didn’t know if you want to see me,” she said,
looking at the ground.
“Why wouldn’t I? Don’t answer that.” Jane
began walking, Daria followed, and soon they were headed side-by-side toward
the high school. After a reasonable silence, Jane took a deep breath. “Are you
okay?”
“No,” said Daria quickly. “No, I’m not.”
She swallowed and added, “I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be sorry.” Jane shrugged. “It’s
not like the end of the world. I hope.”
“It feels like it is,” said Daria. She
rubbed her stomach as if in pain.
“Maybe it’s not, though,” said Jane,
squinting upward. “Sun’s up, sky’s blue, we’re not dead yet. That last part was
supposed to be funny, by the way.”
“That was so stupid of me,” Daria
mumbled. She realized she was walking too quickly and forced herself to slow
down. “It was just plain dumb. I can’t believe I did it.”
Jane made no immediate response except to
take another breath. “Don’t run away from me,” she said after a pause, “but I
sorta can’t believe you did it, either. I mean, you didn’t do anything wrong,
it’s just that—well, you surprised me, I guess. That’s all. You wanna talk
about it, or should I pick up the rest of the story telepathically?”
They walked together for an entire block
before Daria said, “I don’t know what got into me. It started after Tom went
off with his family to the Cove on vacation, and you and I were eating pizza in
your kitchen. That was two weeks ago from yesterday, I think. Then Trent came in
and had a piece with us, and I don’t know what came over me. You left the room
to turn down the stereo, and I asked him—” Daria coughed in embarrassment “—if
I could write a song for him. For his group, I mean. Spiral.”
“So, the song was for Spiral,
and not just for my brother alone?”
Daria cleared her throat and walked
another half block without answering. Jane walked patiently at her side.
The words spilled out of Daria in a rush.
“I’ve tried writing music a few times, and I can do lyrics, rhymes and things,
just not the music, you know. I told him I wanted to find out more about what
kind of music Mystik Spiral liked to play, because it would help me work out
the lyrics, so I kind of asked him out, and we had pizza a few times, walked
around town, just talked. It wasn’t like we were dating, but I guess we were,
sort of. Nothing else happened. We just talked, you know? It was nothing.”
“Trent didn’t talk about it much, but I
got the idea.”
“We were just talking,” said Daria again.
“It was nothing.”
“So nothing happened,” echoed Jane. She
thought to ask what Tom had said about all this, but she was quite sure now
that Tom was out of the loop regarding this little secret. “Slow down a
little.”
Daria forced herself to walk slower.
“Sorry,” she said, still not looking up.
“Daria,” said Jane, and she paused,
searching for the magic phrase to make this better. “If I understand what
happened correctly, things like this happen all the time.”
“No,” said Daria flatly. “No, they don’t.
Not to me.”
“So, you and Trent went out last night
and talked about the music business over pizza? He didn’t talk to me this
morning about what went on last night, but I take it that’s what happened.”
“Yeah,” said Daria in a small voice. “We
came right back to your place afterwards. You know that, right? We just came in
to talk a little more. About the song.”
“And you asked him what he thought of
it,” said Jane.
Daria opened her mouth to speak, but she
closed it after no words came out. She reached up and wiped her eyes under her
glasses. “I didn’t know you were in the next room,” she finally said. Her voice
broke. “I should’ve just shut the hell up and—and gone home and—”
Jane immediately knew what was coming.
She caught Daria by her upper arm and steered her away from the intersection
that would take them directly to school, pulling her friend toward a side
street. Daria followed like a robot, her face screwing up further with every
step. Jane put her arm around Daria’s shoulders, over the top of her backpack,
and pulled her close, matching Daria’s pace as best she could.
Two steps later, Daria burst into tears.
Her shoulders shook as she inhaled with a long, terrible wheeze, then covered
her face and sobbed. She slowed but continued walking blindly, guided along
only by the pressure of Jane’s body at her side.
Jane swallowed and felt her own eyes
burning. They walked down the side street for several minutes as Daria wept.
Passersby on foot and in cars glanced at the two but looked away as if they’d
suddenly become invisible.
The weeping subsided before long. “I deed
a hakerchef,” Daria mumbled, her nose stopped up.
Jane dropped her hand from Daria’s
shoulders and pulled a wadded tissue from her jacket pocket. Daria took it and
blew her nose several times, stuffing it into her own jacket pocket.
“What did Trent say?” asked Jane.
Daria suddenly laughed through her tears,
ending with another round of coughing. “He said it sucked,” she said, forcing a
smile.
Jane stared down at Daria’s face. “He
didn’t put it that way, did he?”
“No, he didn’t. He was nice about it, but
he said the song . . . it just wasn’t the whatever, the genre or class or
whatever kind of song that Spiral does. He said the other guys talked about it,
and there were some things about it they liked, but they all thought it
wouldn’t work. They really didn’t like it very much.” Daria sniffed hard, her
smile gone. She struggled to resume her usual deadpan look. “He was nice about
it, though, and he gave it back to me and I tore it up and threw it out when I got
home, so that’s over with and I don’t have to do something stupid like that
ever again.” She sniffed again. “Back to reality for this
stupid girl.”
Jane led Daria around another corner,
taking her on a block-long circular detour back to the main road heading for
school. “You didn’t want me to see your song?”
“No!” said Daria, too loudly. She
continued in a more normal voice. “No, I think that for the sake of future
generations it should be left buried in that salt mine so no one’s harmed by
the deadly radiation it’s giving off.” She nodded to herself. “I’m over it.”
Jane waited. They reached the halfway
point in their long detour.
“Was that all Trent said?” Jane asked.
“Was that all he said?” repeated Daria in
a dead voice. She sniffed. “Was that all he said, you mean, after he said he
didn’t love me?”
Jane turned her head instantly. Daria’s
face was turning red again.
“Oh, no,” said Jane in horror. She slowed
down.
Daria’s eyes squeezed shut as she lowered
her head. “You didn’t hear that part? I told him that I loved him, but he said
he didn’t love me back and I said that was okay and I said I was sorry and he
said—” Tears fell like a hot rain over her jacket front.
Jane caught Daria by the arm again and
pulled her to a stop. There was nothing else Jane could do but put her arms
around Daria, as the smaller girl pressed her face to Jane’s chest and howled
in her grief and shame. There was nothing else Jane could do, but nothing would
be enough, and she knew it. The pain was too deep and wide.
When Daria cried this time, Jane looked
as though she might, too. She was close, but she stared at something over
Daria’s shoulder, something beyond seeing that held her back from the edge.
Daria wept, Jane stared at that distant thing, and the cars drove by.
Chapter Four
Quinn arrived at Lawndale High in a daze.
She didn’t recall putting on makeup before she left, and she stopped twice on
the way to school to look in her backpack mirror to make sure she had done so.
She wore a frilly white blouse over her skintight jeans, the proper amount of
midriff showing, with her white leather cowboy boots and the usual gold
bracelets and anklets and rings and necklaces—and the earrings that Skylar
bought for her. She was aware of them with every step, all the way across town.
Does he still want to see me? What
should I do when I see him? What do I tell other people about us? I always knew
what to do when going out with a guy, but if we really go steady, that means—
“Quinn! Ohmigod!”
Stacy Rowe appeared out of nowhere from a crowd of students in the hall and ran
to her, shaking her by the arm. Her pigtails bounced with excitement. “Quinn,
you’ll never ever believe this!”
Quinn pulled back and stared at her in
shock. Something looked odd about Stacy’s hair, but she couldn’t pinpoint it.
“What?”
“Tiffany! Tiffany called me last night
late and said she was in the hospital, at Cedars of Lawndale!”
Quinn forgot Skylar entirely. “What?
You’re kidding me! What is she doing there?”
“You know how we were so worried about her
last week because she was throwing up after lunch, and Sandi thought she was
being anorectic or bulimic or whatever? Well, guess what? It was food
poisoning! She was sick because she was eating this no-fat vegetable-substitute
chicken salad that had gone bad in her parents’ refrigerator, and she didn’t
know it was the chicken salad that was making her sick so she kept bringing it
for lunch, you know? And—”
“Well, how sick is she? Does she need to
have an operation or something?”
“No, I don’t think so.” Stacy was
catching her breath now. “She said they were keeping her in for the night for
observations, you know, to see if the antibiotics and everything they’re giving
her work. I guess she might come home later today if she stops throwing up. Can
you believe that? Ohmigod!”
Just like Tiffany to make herself deathly ill when she thought she was making herself
thin, Quinn thought. Stacy herself didn’t seen terribly upset about it; she
seemed far more excited to be the one to tell the news. “We should get Sandi
and go see her after school, then,” said Quinn, taking command. “Have you seen—”
This fired Stacy up a second time. “Oh!
Oh! Sandi’s been looking for you! She said she had to see you about something
really important but personal, and I asked her what it
was but she said it was club business and I wasn’t supposed to know what it
was, but that’s okay because I think it’s about Tiffany but it might be about
something else, you know? I don’t know. Anyway, I’m so glad to see you! You
look . . .”
Stacy’s voice trailed off. She leaned
closer, her eyes growing larger as she stared at the side of Quinn’s head.
“What?” said Quinn, frowning.
She reached up and touched her cheek. “Something wrong?”
“Oh, Quinn!”
Stacy gasped. “Those are so beautiful!”
The earrings, of
course. “Oh, thank you,” said Quinn. She held her hair aside. From her
ear hung a bright gold earring in the shape of a smiling sun with a human face
and wavy rays stretching out from it. The face had great character to it: the
pleasantly jolly look of a person who has been showered in goodness and is
content with the world.
“Where did you buy these?” Stacy asked, a look of religious awe on her face. She reached over
with care. Quinn felt fingers touch her ear, examining the earring in detail.
“Um, I didn’t.” She swallowed, aware that
she was blushing. “Skylar bought them for me.”
Stacy’s gaze shot to Quinn’s face.
“Skylar?” she repeated in surprise. “He got you these? Where did he get them? I
. . . I could use something like these. They’re so cool!”
“I don’t know. I didn’t even think to ask
him.” Quinn moved her head, pulling away from the lingering pressure of Stacy’s
fingertips on her cheek. “You said Sandi was looking for me?”
Stacy dropped her hand and seemed to come
out of a trance. “Yeah,” she said. She looked around. “She was . . . she was
around here just a minute ago, before you came in. I bet she’s in homeroom. The bell’s about to ring.”
“Well, let’s go then. Do you know
anything else about Tiffany?”
Stacy became animated again. “Oh!” she
said. “Um, she hates the wallpaper in her room, and she said—” Stacy dropped
her voice conspiratorially “—she was afraid she’d get fat from staying in bed
all day, just like what happened to, you know—”
“Sandi when she broke her leg, right.
She’s only going to be there one night, I’m sure.” Quinn tilted her head
looking at Stacy. Her hair looked . . . odd. “Did you color your hair? It looks
kind of coppery-reddishy.”
“Oh, do you like it?” Stacy grinned
mischievously. “It’s a rinse, Crimson Highlighter. What do you think?”
Quinn opened her mouth to say: It
isn’t you, Stacy. It clashes with your skin tone and eye color and your blush,
and you look like a B-grade sitcom actress on a television set with bad tint
control. She didn’t say that, however. She realized that she was sick of
playing fashion director for high-school kids, twenty-four/seven, telling
everyone else what looked good when they should be able to figure it out on
their own. Quinn liked being in charge, true, but she had a sense that her life
was moving on, and the Fashion Club wasn’t necessarily one of those things that
would be moving on with her. People should stand on their own two feet once in
a while, and if they made a fashion mistake, so be it. It wasn’t the end of the
world. Stacy couldn’t fix her hair at school, anyway.
“Oh—it looks fine!” Quinn said. “I like
it!”
Stacy’s face became unnaturally radiant.
“Oh!” she gasped. “You mean it?”
For reasons she couldn’t fathom, Quinn
had an eerie flashback to a time several years earlier when she had planned to
stay overnight at Stacy’s house. Stacy had insisted on dressing like Quinn and
acting like Quinn and otherwise turning herself into Quinn to an uncomfortable
degree, and Quinn had left in a hurry. Stacy was not so pathologically dependent
on others lately as she had once been, but still . . .
“Yeah,” said Quinn. There was no way out
of it now. “I mean it.”
“Thank you,” Stacy whispered. Her eyes
began to tear up. “I’ll be right back!” she said quickly, moving off. She
bumped into another student but kept going. “I have to go to the bathroom—I’ll
be right—” She turned and fled.
What the hell’s gotten into her?
Quinn looked after her, then shrugged and went on to homeroom. She would see
Skylar second period, in Mr. DeMartino’s world history class, and that was sure
to be a—
“Raffle?” Quinn
started, but it was only Jodie Landon with a handful of blue-and-yellow
cardboard tickets. “It’s for the new school library.”
“School library?”
Quinn took a ticket and looked at it. “I thought we had one already, sort of.
Or did the roof fall in on it again?”
Jodie lowered her voice. “Ms. Li caught
wind that reporters were coming to town next month to do a story on the state
of public school libraries, and some insider told her Lawndale High was on the
investigators’ list. She’s pulling a crash program to fix the place up after
she looted the library fund to put up the metal detectors at the school
entrances.” Jodie snorted. “I don’t trust her, but this raffle might actually
work.”
Quinn gave Jodie a quizzical look. “Is
this one of those voluntary
we’d-better-buy-a-ticket-if-we-know-what’s-good-for-us things?”
Jodie nodded,
her expression bland. “Smart girl. I bet you get
handed your own stack of these in homeroom that you have to sell by Friday. We’re
all getting them.”
“Whatever.” Quinn fished a dollar from
her purse and handed it over for the ticket.
“Better buy ten at least,” Jodie advised,
“but buy them out of your own stack. Our grades could be riding on this. She
keeps track of sales on the school computer. Have you seen Daria and Jane
around?”
Quinn shook her head no. “I’m sure
they’re here somewhere. Thanks.”
“No problem.” Jodie wandered off in
search of another wandering soul with a dollar to spare.
Thinking about the
library made Quinn think about Daria. Daria would appreciate knowing
Quinn contributed to a library raffle. Maybe it would help the two of them get
along better. It couldn’t hurt. She thrust the ticket in her backpack and
headed for homeroom.
The bell rang. Two
periods to go until she saw Skylar. She couldn’t wait.
Chapter Five
Half an hour after the first-period bell
rang, Daria and Jane walked through the doors of Lawndale High School. Jane
glanced at her friend and saw that Daria’s weary face was back to normal, no
longer red and swollen. She sighed in relief, then
glanced at the front of her red jacket. It was finally dry. Good.
“Better go turn ourselves in to the
authorities,” Daria muttered, almost her old self. “Let’s get our stories
straight about the kidnapping, first.”
“Black limo, possibly Mafia, locked us in
the trunk but we found a crowbar and got out.”
“And they wore ski masks.”
“Black ski masks.”
“Got it.”
“You’ve got what?” asked Ms. Li, from
behind them.
Daria and Jane slowed and stopped. Their
shoulders slumped, and they turned around as one. Principal Li stood in a
recessed classroom doorway, a handful of blue-and-yellow fliers in her hands.
“Um, good morning, Ms. Li,” said Daria.
“We were just looking for you.”
“Really?” said Ms. Li. “What was your
excuse for being late? I missed part of it.”
“The kidnapping part was a joke,” mumbled
Jane.
“It is now, anyway,” said Daria glumly.
“What really happened was that we saw
something in the sky,” said Jane. “It was kind of silvery with little flashing
lights along the sides, and we were following it in hopes that—”
“I broke up with my boyfriend,” Daria
interrupted in her usual deadpan. “I had to talk to someone about it, and Jane
helped me out. It’s my fault we’re late.”
Principal Li looked from Jane to Daria
and back. “Where did you see this silvery thing?” she asked Jane.
“No, really,” said Daria. “I broke up
with my boyfriend. I was having a bad time this morning, and Jane was the only
person I could talk to about it.” She hesitated and added, “It was her
brother.”
Jane looked back and forth from Daria to
Ms. Li, finally letting out a sigh and jerking a thumb in Daria’s direction,
nodding agreement.
Ms. Li stared at Daria with deep
annoyance. “Even if I believed you, Miss Morgendorffer, breaking up with a
boyfriend is no excuse for being late to school! The two of you are supposed to
graduate in three weeks! What kind of example are you setting for the rest of
the school, wandering in at whatever hour you please?”
“A damn good example!” someone cheerfully
called from down the hall.
Daria, Jane, and Ms. Li looked in the
direction of the voice. A young man with long, dark hair stood by the men’s
room door. He wore a black t-shirt with a bloody skull on it, black jeans with
a metal-studded black belt, and dull black military boots. He looked like a
young Tom Cruise.
“I don’t think we asked for your opinion,
Mister Griffin,” said Ms. Li coldly. “Return to class.”
“Call me Alex,” he said, sauntering over.
He eyed Daria and Jane with a smile. “If it was up to me, I’d come to school
from midnight to six. It’s easier to download porn and bomb-making handbooks
when no one’s looking over your shoulder in the computer room. It’s all
educational, right?”
“Someone peed in the gene pool,” Jane
muttered, looking Alex over with distaste.
“That’s enough, Mister Griffin!” Ms. Li
snapped. “That is not a socially accepted way to start your first day at
Laaawndale High School! Report to my office at once!”
“Sure thing,” he said. He looked at Daria
and grinned. “Alex Griffin, cynic at large. My stuck-up cousin Sandi’s the head
fashion bitch here. I heard you broke up with your boyfriend. Bummer—for him, I
mean. What’s your phone number?”
“Mister Griffin,” said Ms. Li in
her best warning tone.
“One eight-hundred buzz off,” said Daria
with a glare.
“When you get tired of playing hard to
get,” said Alex with a smirk, “maybe you and I can get a pizza, watch some TV
or something. What’s your name again?”
Daria’s glare deepened. “I’m Reality,”
she said. “I don’t think we’ve met.”
Alex laughed. “That’s pretty good! Go out
with me, all right?”
“When I see you in
Hell.”
“Mister Griffin, go straight to my office
now or face expulsion!” Ms. Li shouted in fury.
Alex grinned and waved as he walked away
in the direction of the office. He looked back at Daria and Jane before he
disappeared around the corner. “We outcasts have to stick together, right?” he
called.
“If he wants to stick together,” said
Jane darkly, “I’ve got a glue gun that will solve all his problems.”
“Miss Lane, that won’t be necessary.” Ms.
Li shot an angry glance after the departed Alex Griffin. “Though
your idea is tempting, given that young man’s complex and potentially dangerous
past. I’ll have to call his parents again.” She turned back to Daria with
a severe expression. “As I was saying, you can’t use emotional instability as
an excuse to—”
“You’re selling raffle tickets for a new
school library?” Daria asked, looking at the fliers Ms. Li held.
“Um, yes, yes we are, but that’s not
relevant to—”
“Oh.” Daria reached in her jacket pocket
and pulled out a handful of bills. She counted them out and handed them to Ms.
Li. “Put me down for fifty dollars’ worth, please.”
“Thirty for me,” said Jane, catching on
and pulling her own money out.
Her train of thought derailed, Ms. Li
looked at the two girls with a flustered expression. “I—I don’t—this isn’t—um—”
She hesitated, then gingerly reached out and took Daria’s money. “Well, then,
why don’t we go back to the office and I’ll get those for you right away?”
“That would be great,” Daria said with a
straight face. “I promise to never again let my boyfriend problems interfere
with my education.”
“Same here,” said Jane, “whenever I get
another boyfriend.”
“Excellent!” said Ms. Li, collecting
Jane’s contribution and leading the two girls down the corridor. “I won’t put
this incident in your permanent record, given your much-appreciated support for
bettering Laaawndale High! I tell you, school spirit pops up in the most
amazing places!”
Daria and Jane looked at each other and
rolled their eyes. “Ms. Li,” Daria said, “Jane and I need to get our books for
class. If we could stop by and pick up our raffle tickets in a few minutes—”
“Not a problem!” Ms. Li sang, counting
their money again as she walked away. Daria and Jane stopped and looked after
her.
“Fast thinking,” said Jane. “I’m going to
call you the next time that guy from the power company comes by to turn off the
electricity because Mom and Dad forgot to pay the bills.”
Daria shrugged. She looked tired and
drawn.
“Amiga,”
Jane said softly, “are you up to this today?”
Daria ran a hand through her brown hair.
“That wannabe poseur just got to me, that’s all.”
“Li will handle him for us.” Jane
suddenly looked uncomfortable. “Not to change the subject, and I hate to bring
up another troubling male-related issue, but—”
“Tom, I know,” said Daria. She stopped by
her orange upper-tier locker, but she made no move to open it. “I don’t know
what to do about that.”
“He’s back from the Cove, right?”
Daria took off her backpack and put it on
the floor, then spun the combination dial on her locker. “He’s been back for a
week. I’ve just been putting off seeing him.” Her face twitched. “Trent and
all,” she added.
“What happens next?”
Daria opened her locker and pulled books
from it. “I don’t have a clue. I just want to bury the last two weeks and move
on.” She put her books in her backpack, then straightened and stared into the
darkness in her locker. “Tom’s coming by the house tonight to talk. I was
planning to break up with him if . . . if things came out differently, but now
I guess I’m not. I don’t know why he still wants to go out with me, anyway.
Nothing’s happening between us. Ever since he and his mother took me on that
miserable trip to Bromwell, things have gone downhill. He and his mom pretended
to fight all the way up and back, but they have a better home life than I do,
so I don’t know who they were trying to kid. And no matter what I need from
him, every member of his family comes before I do.”
Daria looked down at her boots. “He
doesn’t take me anywhere, he doesn’t act like I’m anything special, we just sit around and watch TV all evening. He has that
irritating cynical-rebel act down pat, but you know he’s joining his dad’s
investment company the second he’s out on the streets with a graduate diploma
and a trendy idea in his head. Everything I do, he’s always right and I’m
always wrong, and I can’t take it anymore. I’m sick of it.” She shut her
locker, then leaned her head against the locker door and closed her eyes. “I
don’t know what to do. Maybe we should break up. What do you think?”
“Hmmm.” Jane
scratched her nose. “I’m hardly the one to say, all things considered.”
“He’s the only guy who’s ever shown an
interest in me.” He’s the only guy who ever wanted to have sex with me, too,
she thought. Imagine that. The metal was cool against her forehead.
“There are lots of fish in the sea,
Daria,” said Jane after a beat. “Trust me on this.”
Funny that she said that, Daria
thought. Don’t just lie there, he said that night we were in his room.
You’re like a dead fish. Move around a little. I don’t know what to do, I said,
I’ve never done this before. Jesus, Daria, you read books, don’t you? Just be
natural, loosen up and be yourself. But I was being myself. I didn’t know what
to do. I don’t think he did, either. It hurt, and we had to stop, and that was
it. So I’m a lousy lay, and I’m ugly on top of it. Great.
That’s just really great. I’ve really got it all together. I can’t imagine why
he still wants to see me, after all that. Maybe I should just be grateful.
“Daria?”
“I wish I’d gotten into Raft,” Daria said
in a low voice. “If we break up, I’ll be stuck at Bromwell with him for four
years, and I don’t think I could take that.”
“At least you’re going to college,” said
Jane. “Just make the best of it.”
“You could’ve tried again at BFAC.”
“And wasted four years
of my life.” Jane’s expression hardened. “My art doesn’t sell no matter
what I do, so why bother? No one even wants to look at it. All that time I
spent trying to get into Gary’s Gallery, and pffft! Two months of a big freaking nothing. I should’ve learned my
lesson when I flopped at that Art in the Park thing. Better to just stay here
and go in with Ms. Defoe on her crafts’ shop idea. I can make a pretty good
concrete garden gnome, at least.”
Daria lifted her head from her locker and
looked at her friend. “That’s not right, Jane, and you know it.”
Jane snorted. “You have a chance for a
real life, Daria. Do something with it.”
Daria frowned, her voice rising. “Don’t
give me that crap, okay?”
They stared at each other, bristling.
“Let’s stop before we really screw this
up,” said Jane, softening her glare. “Come on. Let’s hit my locker and get our
tickets before Ms. Li breaks your charm spell.”
Daria’s anger faded as well, though
depression slid into its place. “Sure, whatever,” she said as she walked with
Jane to her own locker. The day was not over yet, she knew. She had no idea
what she would say to Tom. All she could hope was that he wouldn’t find out
about Trent. That would be the end of everything.
Chapter Six
There wasn’t time or opportunity to chat
in homeroom, so Quinn waited until the bell rang and she and Sandi Griffin
could head off to their first-period French class. “Stacy said you were looking
for me,” Quinn said as they went out the door together. “I didn’t check my
messages last night when I got in. Is this about Tiffany?”
“Among other things,” said Sandi in her
deep nasal voice, leading the way. She looked increasing irked as she
negotiated the noisy, crowded corridor. “Let’s escape this cattle stampede,”
she said, pointing toward an open janitorial supply room. They ducked inside,
and Sandi flipped on the light.
Quinn pushed the door shut to block out
the stomping feet and shouting outside, then found and flipped the deadbolt
knob. “Whew! It’s as bad as Cashman’s Labor Day Sale out there!”
“But hardly as much fun,” said Sandi. She
slipped off her backpack and dropped it on the floor by a wall, then knelt down
and unzipped it. “I got something special from Mo-om!” she added in a singsong voice.
“Just enough to see us through our busy day!”
“Oh, cool! Thanks!” Quinn took off her
backpack as well, setting it by the door. “Stacy told me Tiffany was in the
hospital. What is up with that?”
Sandi snorted as she pulled out her
overstuffed wallet and unzipped it, flipping it open to her makeup mirror.
“Well, it seems that our dear Tiffany managed to find the only germ-filled diet
food in her parents’ refrigerator, and that’s about all I know—except of course
she was raving on and on when she called me that she’s on the verge of getting
fat, and she had the marvelously bad taste to mention how bloated out like a
water buffalo I got when I was bedridden with my broken leg. If she didn’t have
such an instinct for color, I’d boot her size-two butt out of the club.”
“We should go see her anyway, you know?”
Quinn pulled a handkerchief from a pants pocket and blew her nose, then stuffed
it partway back in the pocket, ready for instant use. “Maybe tonight, Fashion
Club solidarity and all that?”
Sandi sighed, pulling the mirror out of
her wallet and putting the wallet back in her backpack. She stood, holding up
the mirror to check her appearance. “Oh, fine, why not. We’ll take my car. I’m
tempted to take pictures of her in one of those wretched hospital gowns and
give them to the yearbook staff. It would serve her right for throwing up in my
bathroom last Wednesday during our club meeting.”
Quinn burst into wild laughter. “You
can’t be serious!” she said. “Ohmigod, she would die!”
“I’m teasing, of course, but it is
tempting.” Sandi set the mirror face-up on an open shelf next to a row of
bottles of window cleaner. She reached down and took off her right shoe.
“That’s not the only cockroach in my consommé, though. My psycho cousin is
here, the one I told you about on Friday.” She stood, pulling up the padded
insert in her shoe and pulling out a very small white plastic bag. She dropped
her shoe on the floor. “I’ll point him out. He’s one of those weirdo
attention-depreciation types. He got evicted from Leeville High last week for
fighting, and he’s this close to going back to juvenile court. The worst
is that my moronic aunt and uncle want to get him into Lawndale because it’s
close to home, but if they did, that would be a bigger disaster than that
Thirteen Mile Island nuclear whatever that Ms. Barch keeps on harping about.”
Quinn watched as Sandi held her breath
and emptied a small pile of white powder from the bag onto the mirror. “They
can’t really get him in this late in the school year, can they?”
Sandi cut the white powder into four
narrow lines with an index card from her backpack. She then folded up the
little bag and put it back into her shoe, putting her shoe on again. “Oh, Aunt
Kay talked Ms. Li into letting him come here on probation until the end of the
semester, to see how he fits in, though it won’t count for anything until he
goes to summer school.” She reached down into her backpack again, into the
pencil holder. “I’m really steamed. He’s such an incredible jerkoid,
you just wouldn’t believe.”
“Can I do anything to help out?”
Sandi sighed heavily. “That’s sweet, but
no.” She straightened and handed a three-inch paper straw to Quinn. “Just avoid
him. He’s ill mannered, to say the least. If he annoys you in any way, tell
me.” She shook her head in annoyance. “We’ll survive, I suppose.”
Quinn examined Sandi’s face. “Is anything
else wrong?”
“Yeah, but it can wait. You first.”
“Thanks!” Quinn held her breath and
stepped up to the shelf with the mirror. Carefully pushing one nostril shut,
she inserted one end of the paper straw into her nose and placed the other end
at the end of a line of white powder. Quickly, she sniffed in long and deep,
inhaling the entire row. In three seconds more, she had switched nostrils and
inhaled the other line. Sniffing and rubbing her nose, she stepped back,
blinking madly. “Wow! Oh, wow, that’s—wow!”
“It’s from Mom’s desk at home. I took
only a little. I don’t know where she gets it, but she gets the best.” Sandi
repeated all of Quinn’s gestures to finish off the last two white lines. The
two girls then stood back, faces turned up to the ceiling as they breathed in
through their noses. The overpowering blasts roared through their heads and
lungs and skin and veins, as if their eyes and minds had opened into paradise
and they were now more than alive, newborn gods come down from Olympus.
“Jesus, I love that rush,” Sandi moaned.
She put her hands to the sides of her head, still looking up at the ceiling
light. “I love it, I love it, I love it, I love it.”
Sandi lowered her face and smiled at
Quinn. Quinn smiled back. A moment later, they hugged each other in rapture.
“I love you,” whispered Quinn.
“I love you, too,” whispered Sandi. “I
owe you so much. I thought I’d never be thin again.”
“I think you’ve paid me back now,”
whispered Quinn. They giggled, hugged some more, then kissed.
“Ick!” said
Sandi abruptly, pulling away and wiping her mouth. “Thy nose runneth over,
girl.”
“Whoa, sorry!”
Quinn pulled out her handkerchief and wiped her face. “Oh, well. I really hate
to say this, but we’d better clean up and go before someone tries to get in.”
Sandi was already at work on that. She
wiped off and put away the wallet mirror, then put her short paper straw in her
mouth, chewed it up, and swallowed it. Quinn did the same with her own straw,
grimacing as she did. Within moments, the girls had eliminated all trace of
their activity from the supply closet.
“Too bad Ms. Li had to sell those
drug-sniffing dogs,” Sandi said, zipping her backpack shut. “I thought those
German shepherds were kinda butch.”
Quinn made a motion to undo the deadbolt.
“Are we off, or are we off?” she said, grinning.
“Wait,” said Sandi, staggering slightly.
She put a hand to a wall to steady herself. “Don’t leave yet. I have to tell
you something else.”
“Bad news?”
Sandi nodded solemnly, sniffing back her
own runny nose.
Quinn wiped her nose again. “Okay,
ready.”
Sandi coughed and looked away. “I did not
want to—whew!—I didn’t want to announce this in public, for reasons that will
become clear, but when I was out last night, I saw your sister with a friend at
Pizza King.”
“Oh, that’s nothing. She goes out with
Jane all the time.”
Sandi looked up at Quinn, shaking her
head. “She wasn’t with her. She was with an older guy, dark hair, kinda
tall and thin, with blue tattoos on his arms. They looked quite animated with
each other, in my humble opinion. They weren’t eating much of their pizza,
anyway. Daria was looking at this guy like, you know, he really meant
something.”
Quinn blinked. “Oh,” she said, frowning.
“That sounds like . . . oh.”
“You know him?”
“Yeah, I think. Black
hair, kinda messy? Silver earrings and a black goatee?
Sloppy clothes?”
“That’s him.”
Quinn put a hand over her face and leaned
back against the supply-room door. “Oh, crap. That’s wonderful. That’s just
peachy-pie perfect.”
“What?”
“That’s Jane’s older brother, Trent. I thought
there was something going on, I just knew that something—” She
dropped her hand. “She used to have a thing for him, but I thought she got over
that, like, a year and a half ago. She’s—” Quinn stamped her foot in rage “—damn
it! I can’t believe she’d do that! What is it with her?”
“Wasn’t she going with that rich slacker
kid from the Sloane family, Tim or Tom—”
“Yes, she still is!” Quinn
snapped. “Oh, crap, I’m sorry, Sandi, I didn’t mean to do that. It’s just—I
can’t believe her! This is so embarrassing!”
Sandi shrugged, unconcerned. “No offense
taken. Bearing bad tidings is one of my duties as club president.” She wiped
her nose on a tissue. “I thought you should know ahead of time in case it got
out.”
Quinn shrugged, too. “Oh, well, what can
you do. Thanks, Sandi. I appreciate it.”
Sandi nodded. “When life sucks, it
sucks.”
Quinn nodded, too, eyeing her best
friend. She made a decision. “I have some news, too,” she said in a whisper.
“Good news, though, I hope.”
“What?”
“I’m going to ask Skylar if he’ll go
steady with me.”
Sandi’s eyes widened. “Kuh-winn!” she said in delight. She reached
in and hugged Quinn a second time. “That’s wonderful! Tell me all the details
at lunch!” she said into Quinn’s ear. She suddenly gasped. “Oh! Did he get you
these earrings?”
“Yeah!”