Part 5 (1/2)
”We have to get out of here now.” now.” Ma.s.sie ripped the plug of her DVD player out of the socket and threw her bag over her shoulder. ”My lookout team says Princ.i.p.al Burns is on her way here to set up for a meeting she has tonight.” Ma.s.sie ripped the plug of her DVD player out of the socket and threw her bag over her shoulder. ”My lookout team says Princ.i.p.al Burns is on her way here to set up for a meeting she has tonight.”
Layne was about to take a sip of Go-Gurt but immediately lowered the tube. ”On a Friday?”
”Guess so,” Ma.s.sie said.
”Funny, I didn't hear your ring tone,” Olivia said.
”Funny, it's called vibrate,” vibrate,” Ma.s.sie snapped. ”I suggest we split up. A few of you should take the service exits so this looks less ahb-vious. I'll go out the main doors and if I see her, I'll just say I left my headache medicine in here after the Hillary Clinton lecture.” Ma.s.sie snapped. ”I suggest we split up. A few of you should take the service exits so this looks less ahb-vious. I'll go out the main doors and if I see her, I'll just say I left my headache medicine in here after the Hillary Clinton lecture.”
”That was last year,” Dylan said, sounding concerned.
”Well, I'll say I have a migraine and I really need to find it,” Ma.s.sie said. She covered the camera lens with her hand and climbed out of the pit. Kristen, Dylan, Alicia, and Claire followed her. ”Everyone else, use the other doors. Go, hurry!”
”What about the rest of the lesson?” Alexandra asked from inside the pit. ”We leave for Lake Placid on Monday.”
”We'll do it there,” Ma.s.sie shouted over her shoulder as she led her friends to safety. ”I promise.”
And as usual, they believed her.
Ma.s.sie let out a deep sigh of relief. The fake phone call trick had served its purpose and bought her the time she'd need to retool her lesson plan. She was failing miserably as a kissing teacher, and she knew that the only way to redeem herself was to make out with Derrington before everyone figured out that she was a completely inexperienced wannabe.
It was ahb-vious to Ma.s.sie that the girls had been less than pleased with their first lesson. And that certainly did not need to be advertised on a video blog. So she went back to her old system of recording State of the Unions on her PalmPilot and keeping them private.
Ma.s.sIE BLOCK'S CURRENT STATE OF THE UNION.
IN.
OUT.
Earth tones Ring tones Field trips with boys Field hockey with girls Making out Chickening out
THE BLOCK ESTATE Ma.s.sIE'S BEDROOM.
Sunday, February 22nd 1:16 P.M. P.M.
Claire lingered in the potpourri-scented hallway outside Ma.s.sie's bedroom, trying to work up the nerve to open the door and walk in. Her hands were clammy and the insides of her stomach felt like a scene from that boat-disaster movie The Perfect Storm The Perfect Storm.
Earlier, when she'd walked across the gra.s.sy acre that separated the guesthouse (hers) from the main house (Ma.s.sie's), Claire had asked herself why she was so nervous about attending the packing meeting and decided it was probably because she had no idea what a packing meeting was.
Claire took a deep breath and gently placed her hand on the gla.s.s k.n.o.b of Ma.s.sie's door, then quickly removed it, leaving a streak of sweat behind. She was six minutes late and that meant the girls could be bad-mouthing her. Not that she'd done anything wrong, but she was still paranoid. After all, bad memories take longer to heal than b.l.o.o.d.y wounds.
”One ... two ... three ...” she counted inside her head. When she got to five, Claire would open the door. ”Four...”
But a sudden burst of laughter erupted on the other side of the wall and Claire jumped back. She knew knew they were making fun of her. they were making fun of her.
Claire pressed her ear against the door.
”Did you get Krazy-Glued to the walls again?” someone behind her said.
Claire quickly lifted her head and turned around. She felt her face turning red.
”Hey, Dyl.” She tried to sound casual. ”What's with all the stuff?”
Dylan had bags from every boutique in Westchester hanging off her arms. Her wrists were purple from the rope handles that were digging into her flesh. But she still managed to lift the green straw in her venti Frappuccino to her lips and take a long sip.
”Ow, cold headache,” Dylan squealed, and hunched over. The weight of the bags almost pulled her to the ground. Claire rushed to her side and pushed her back up.
”Thanks.” Dylan's green eyes looked relaxed and playful. The red curls piled on top of her head were messy and slightly unkempt. She looked like a casual, weekend version of herself. Her jeans were loose and belt-free and the hood of her lime green sweats.h.i.+rt hung down the back of her faded black Marc Jacobs blazer.
Suddenly, Claire felt some of her anxiety melt away. She liked it when the girls in the Pretty Committee looked their age-or, more precisely, her her age. age.
”You saved me from getting crushed by my new wardrobe.”
”Well, if you want to repay me, don't ask why I had my ear pressed against the door,” Claire said without a hint of playfulness. ”And don't tell.”
”Done.” Dylan pointed at the door with her BCBG bag and Claire opened it without hesitation. It was always easier walking in with someone else.
Claire gasped when she stepped inside. She knew Ma.s.sie never did anything unless it was headlineworthy, but this time she had outdone herself. The neat and orderly iPad had been completely transformed into an outdoor campsite. Kristen, Alicia, and Ma.s.sie were sitting cross-legged on sleeping bags, staring at a stack of plastic logs that reflected flickering orange light off their faces. Marshmallows, chocolate squares, and graham crackers were being pa.s.sed back and forth. The lights had been dimmed and hundreds of glow-in-the-dark stars had been stuck to Ma.s.sie's ceiling. A sound effects CD supplied the greatest hits of the forest in surround sound, complete with howling wolf and babbling brook noises. An incense cone burned by Ma.s.sie's bay window, filling the room with the sweet scent of pine.
Bean, Ma.s.sie's small black pug, wore a pink, gray, and yellow flannel s.h.i.+rt and was curled up in a small stuffed canoe by the faux fire. The rest of the girls wore jeans, neutral-colored turtleneck sweaters, and red hunting caps. There was a cap laid out for Claire and one for Dylan on the two empty sleeping bags beside Kristen.
”This is awesome!” Claire knew awesome awesome didn't begin to explain how cool she thought Ma.s.sie's room looked, but she was too overwhelmed to think of a better description. didn't begin to explain how cool she thought Ma.s.sie's room looked, but she was too overwhelmed to think of a better description.
”Heyyyy.” Dylan yanked her clump of bags through the door frame. ”Sorry I'm late-I had to buy a whole new wardrobe.” She said it the way most people would say, ”I had to get my warts removed.”
”Why?” Ma.s.sie asked. It was obvious from her devilish half-smile that she already knew the answer.
”I lost ten pounds from the flu.” Dylan sounded surprised that Ma.s.sie didn't already know this.
”Oh, cool,” Ma.s.sie responded casually.
Kristen and Alicia looked down at their glowing PalmPilots and tried not to laugh.
”It's not funny.” Dylan stomped her foot. ”I can't believe you can't tell.” She unb.u.t.toned her blazer and opened it like a pervy trench-coat-wearing flasher.
”We can can tell.” Alicia rolled her eyes. ”It's just that you were never fat to begin with, so it's hard for us to get all psyched.” tell.” Alicia rolled her eyes. ”It's just that you were never fat to begin with, so it's hard for us to get all psyched.”
”Especially when you talk about it all the time,” Ma.s.sie added.
Claire sat down on her sleeping bag, picked up her hunting hat, and pretended to be very interested in the was.h.i.+ng instructions printed on the inside-anything to stay out of the potential fight that was brewing.
”Sorry, okay?” Dylan whined. ”It's just that losing weight had been my obsession for so long, and now that I did it, I have nothing to think about. I have no goals. I feel like I have lost my thing. I'm thingless.”
”Come sit down” Ma.s.sie waved her PalmPilot in the air. ”We just started working on our packing lists. You can help us envision woodsy-chic outfits that boys will like.”
”Okay.” Dylan dropped her bags and raced over to the empty spot beside Kristen. ”Wha'd I miss?”
Alicia tapped the screen of her Palm with the stylus pen and read her notes. ”So far we've agreed on a muted color palette for tops.” She tapped again. ”Khakis, chocolate browns, and greens-but no limes or pastels, ahb-viously.”