The computer was
in the family room, since James’s parents apparently still didn’t trust him to
have one in his room, even though every adult he knew regarded him as a “good
kid.” Just the right amount of good, too. Not so good that you felt like it was
a performance, or a way of making up for something really sinister in his
nature. He was the kind of kid who rebelled by riding his bike down the street
without a helmet, who made honor roll most quarters (but never high honors), who
left clothes lying around his room but did his own laundry whenever he needed
to. And all he ever used the computer for - and all he ever would use it for, even if it was in his
bedroom - was talking to his friends..
And his parents
were pretty good, too, as far as privacy went. They didn’t peer over his
shoulder or try to read his conversations. (Parent over shoulder. “POS.” That
was how the news seemed to think kids talked to each other online. James had
laughed when he overheard that, floating in from the TV in the kitchen one evening,
and then told Hannah about it as soon as she came online. Now it was one of
their inside jokes, one of their “things.”) But he knew they caught glimpses -
a screenname, a profile, a picture someone sent him - which was why he always
instinctively minimized his chat windows whenever one of them walked by. But it
would just be so much easier if the
computer was in his room. No one else used it, anyway.
James spent many
nights - the hours that passed between the time he told his parents he was
going to bed on school nights, around nine or nine-thirty, and the time his
adolescent brain was actually ready to sleep - mentally arguing with his mom
about this. He had all the logical arguments on his side: more privacy for him,
more space in the family room for them, less arguing for the whole family, he
needed it for homework anyway, etc. But James’s mom didn’t listen to reason.
She still pictured him as a little kid, even though he was practically fifteen
now. Even though he was taller than her.
But at least he
had chunks of time like this one. He got home from school at two-fifty (one of
the last stops on the bus, because of course they had to live so far from the center of town) and no
one else was ever home until at least five. That left one golden sliver of
privacy. For another, he had to wait for weekends. After his parents shut off
the TV and went to bed, he could stay up until one, two in the morning, talking
to whoever happened to be online. Usually Hannah.
Today, it was
two-fifty-seven when James completed his weekday routine - threw his backpack
onto his bed, used the bathroom, grabbed a soda from the fridge - and settled
into his spot in front of the computer. He logged on, scanned his friends list.
Hannah wasn’t on yet. That was good; that meant he could message her when she
came online. If she had been on first, it would have been her place to message
him, and sometimes she didn’t right away. (Torturous, agonizing minutes for
him.) Who was on, though? Sean had an
away message up: hw then bed. Added
21 hours ago. Kelly Castleman had been on for eight minutes. James reflexively
clicked her profile. The same Fall Out Boy lyric that was in there before, but
she had changed the font and color. And Victoria, Hannah’s best friend, had
signed on just a minute before him. Her profile was a snippet of a conversation
between the two of them:
XXxSuicidesxGracexXX: if any guy ever
hurts you
XXxSuicidesxGracexXX: i swear to fuckin
god
XXxSuicidesxGracexXX: i’ll chop his
balls off
victoriASS1992: omg lmao
XXxSuicidesxGracexXX: and then feed
them to benji
victoriASS1992: HAHAHA
James was hit
with a wave of annoyance, as he was every time he clicked on Victoria’s profile
and saw this conversation was still there. It had been in there for almost
three weeks. Way longer than you were supposed to leave anything in your profile, but especially a conversation. Song
lyrics you could get away with leaving in there a bit longer.
And Victoria had never even dated anybody. Unless you counted the
three days back at the beginning of seventh grade (a lifetime ago) when she
“went out” with Sean - had put his initials in his profile alone with the date
and a heart (SN 9.12.05 <3) and
decided that their wedding song would be “When I Look At You” by Beautiful
Misery (her and Hannah’s favorite band) because it was “just so us.” (The
lyrics to the chorus: “Sometimes when I look at you / I know that I’m in love
with you / And sometimes when I look at you / I want to kill you, my beautiful
darling.”) Meanwhile, Sean was busy playing video games and skating around
town. Then on the third day, in the hallway outside the Art room, a chubby girl named Courtney Collins - a former
teacher’s pet who had tried to rebrand herself in middle school as “the one who
knew all the drama” - told Sean what Victoria had been saying about him and he
remembered that he had said “yes” when Victoria’s friend had asked him if he
would go out with her. So he told Courtney to tell Victoria that he was
breaking up with her, and she beamed. James had been standing next to Sean when
this happened, and he had laughed, too, because Victoria annoyed him.
But the real
reason that was in her profile was just so everyone would see that her and
Hannah really were best friends.
James knew she was afraid that people thought their friendship was one-sided,
that she liked Hannah so much more than Hannah liked her. This was her proof to
the contrary.
But James, who
was Hannah’s real best friend even
though she couldn’t admit that publicly, even though she had to call Victoria
her best friend because they had known each other since fifth grade, and you
couldn’t have a “best friend” who was the opposite sex, anyway (which is why he had to call Sean his “best friend”) -
he knew how much Victoria annoyed her
too. He was the one that she vented to, the one she trusted with her secrets.
For instance, she had even told him that she wished Victoria would take that
stupid conversation out of her profile.
its not even that funny, she had said on
Saturday night. i was just trying to make
her feel better cause she was like all depressed. and i dont think benji would
even eat balls hahaha.
Benji
was Hannah’s dog, a mostly-collie mutt, who she loved more than anything and
took pictures with all the time. James had never met Benji, but talked about
him like he had. Hannah had told him so many Benji stories that he felt like he
knew him, anyway. That night, he had responded to her: yeah i bet he’d just chew them up and spit them out.
James wanted to
meet Benji. But he couldn’t tell Hannah that, because it would just remind her
that he hadn’t, remind her that they weren’t really that close.
Victoria also
wanted everyone to remember that she knew Benji, that she was one of the only
people who ever got to go to Hannah’s house. But that was only because they had
known each other so long. she just like
shows up, Hannah had explained. and
my mom doesnt even care. but like my mom would freak out if i invited someone
else over. but like she doesn’t get how annoying victoria is.
James
glanced at the clock in the corner of the computer. 3:03 PM. Hannah should be
getting online soon, unless her mom had started a fight with her as soon as she
got home. That happened sometimes. Usually only if her mom had been drinking
(which she had told James but made him swear not to tell anybody, so he
hadn’t.) But that meant she would tell James all about it later, when her mom
passed out or went to her boyfriend’s house and Hannah could finally get
online. So he could put up with a couple hours of not talking to her, if it
meant he would get to be there for her when she really needed him later.
A chat window
suddenly popped up on the screen, accompanied by the familiar chime that always
meant Hannah - until it didn’t. James was hit with a surge of adrenaline, then
a wave of crushing disappointment when he saw the screenname. It was Courtney
Collins, who wasn’t even on James’s friends list.
CourtSport32: hey
He and Hannah
never started conversations with “hey” or “hi” or any actual greeting. Whoever
messaged first just said whatever they wanted to say, or if there was nothing
specific they wanted to say, just said a random word. (Some of Hannah’s
favorites: “penis,” “cauliflower,” and “unicorn.”) It was another one of their
“things.” But with someone like Courtney Collins, you had to go through the
whole ritual:
CourtSport32: hey
xx themachine: hey
CourtSport32: whats up?
xx themachine: nm, u?
CourtSport32: same
xx themachine: cool
James kind of
hoped the conversation would die there. Maybe she’d realize he didn’t want to
talk to her. But then again, if Courtney said something stupid, he could always
send it to Hannah when she came online and they could make fun of her.
CourtSport32 is typing . . .
The
line of text appeared, disappeared, reappeared. Courtney was drafting her
message carefully, or being indecisive. James placed his cursor over the X in
the corner of the chat window.
CourtSport32: do u like hannah?
There it was -
that same stupid question he had been asked a thousand times before, plenty of
them by Courtney Collins, and had always given the same answer:
xx themachine: we’re just friends
CourtSport32: well ya
CourtSport32: ur just friends cuz SHE
says ur just friends
CourtSport32: but every1 knows u like
her
xx themachine: lmao
James copied the
last couple lines of the conversation so he could send it to Hannah later
(she’d appreciate his sarcastic “lmao”), then clicked the X. But Courtney
wasn’t done.
CourtSport32: why r u still denying it
CourtSport32: like kid
CourtSport32: EVERY1 KNOWS
CourtSport32: just admit it
CourtSport32: i wont tell anyone
Yeah, right, she
wouldn’t tell anyone. Courtney Collins couldn’t keep her mouth shut about
anything, nevermind something as juicy as this. James’s confession of love for
Hannah was a coveted prize: whoever
managed to get it out of him would be the center of attention all night and
maybe even into the next day. Not only would people be messaging them asking
for the details, asking to see what James said exactly - but everyone else would be talking about them, too.
They’d be an inextricable part of the story. Whenever someone passed
along the news that James did like
Hannah, after all, their name would be mentioned too: “Yeah, he finally
admitted it, he told Courtney Collins . . .”
But James
certainly wasn’t going to let Courtney have that. Besides, he really didn’t like Hannah as anything more than
just a best friend, and even if he did,
he would tell her himself, directly, because that’s the sort of guy he was. He
already knew how he would do it if he ever did end up liking her: he would
bring her to a concert by one of their favorite bands - (in the fantasy, he had
his license) - and then right in the middle of the best part of their favorite
song, he would look her in the eyes and mouth “I love you.”
Shit. The
concert.
That’s where
Hannah was, why she hadn’t come online. She was going to a Beautiful Misery
concert that night with Victoria, had been talking about it for months. How the
hell could he have forgotten? She even had the date marked in her profile: beautifulmisery 5.22.07 ICANTFUCKINGWAIT.
Victoria’s mom had gotten them the tickets for Christmas, so he couldn’t be too upset that he hadn’t been invited.
But it did make this whole night seem pointless. A chunk of time he just had to
endure.
xx themachine: so first of all
xx themachine: you don’t know me and
hannahs friendship at all so dont act like you do
xx themachine: and like
xx themachine: you should mind your own
fucking business anyway
xx themachine: go do your homework or
something idk
That was a good
line. In fourth grade, Courtney had raised her hand one day and asked the
teacher if they were going to have homework that night, and the teacher - a
grandmotherly, floral-dress-wearing kind of fourth grade teacher - had smiled
and said, “Thank you for reminding me, Ms. Collins.” Everyone knew that story.
James thought about copying this part
of the conversation, but remembered it would be tomorrow before he would talk
to Hannah again so he didn’t bother.
CourtSport32: how come u rnt going 2
the concert wit her then?
xx themachine: well its still none of
your business but
xx themachine: victorias mom got them
the tickets
xx themachine: and i dont even like bm
that much anyway
CourtSport32: i thought u did?
xx themachine: theyre ok
CourtSport32: oh
CourtSport32: cool
CourtSport32: gtg bye
Courtney signed
off. Or blocked him so he would think she signed off. James didn’t care either
way. She was just mad that he didn’t give her anything new to tell people,
didn’t say anything he hadn’t said before.
3:13 PM. This was
going to be a long night. James pulled his iPod out of his pocket, spent a
couple minutes untangling the headphones (even though he had just been listening to it on the bus),
and then put on the latest CrossMyHeart album. They were his band - everyone knew that - just like Beautiful Misery was Hannah
and Victoria’s band. Everyone listened to them, of course, but no one else
could ever say they were their favorite.
Why was Victoria
still online, anyway? Shouldn’t she be getting ready for the concert with
Hannah? Or was she actually sitting there on her computer, talking to other
people, when Hannah was over? Hannah had said she sometimes did that. like why does she even ask me to come over, she
had ranted to James one night. if that’s
what she’s gonna do? like thats really fucking rude.
i
know, right? James had replied. id
never do that.
*
Victoria spent
that whole Tuesday in a state of nervous excitement. Her first concert. Her first
fucking concert. A chance to finally be a real person, a real teenager, to
walk around with Hannah and meet guys - cool guys, real guys, not these obnoxious
little kids who sat next to her in Social Studies and made stupid, homophobic
jokes when the teacher said “manifest destiny.”
Hannah had taught
her what “homophobic” meant, because she had a gay cousin who was, like,
twenty-three and lived in New York City. Victoria hadn’t met him yet, but she
and Hannah had plans to go down there for a weekend as soon as Hannah got her
license (she was six months older, would be fifteen in September), and Charlie
had already said it was cool for them to crash with him, and he would show them
around, bring them to all the cool places. And as soon as they graduated, they
were going to move to the city and get an awesome apartment in Manhattan
together (Hannah said Manhattan was the coolest part of New York) and Hannah
was going to be an artist or a graphic designer or something and Victoria would
go to college.
my parents will kill me if i don’t go to
college lol, she had told Hannah.
who cares? was Hannah’s reply. fuck what they think.
But later she had
softened, said it might be cool to have a roommate who was in college, as long
as she went somewhere cool like NYU or Juliard.
These plans for
the future had gotten Victoria through many boring days at school, or at home
with her parents and little brother, but this Tuesday she didn’t need them.
Beautiful Misery was enough. The greatest band in the world. With the greatest
lead singer in the world. Xander Cross. Even his name was awesome. (Hannah had
pointed out how the X in his name even looked like a cross.) And his perfectly
messy black hair and dark eyeliner and the way he near-whispered words like “my
love” and how much he appreciated and loved his fans. Apparently, after every
show, he picked a couple of random fans to come backstage and just hang out
with the band for the night. Eat Cheese-Itz (Xander’s favorite snack) and watch
Spongebob Squarepants (his favorite TV show.) That would be her and Hannah. She
knew it. Hannah would make it happen somehow.
Social Studies
ended, then it was Math (spent imagining conversations they could have with
Xander Cross, what she would say if he asked what her favorite Beautiful Misery
song was), then Phys Ed (the second day of a volleyball unit - practicing the
“bump pass” in partners), then her last class of the day and her only class
with Hannah - English. Taught by Mr. Brown, a youngish guy with a beard who was
pretty lax about rules and assignments, especially towards the end of the day.
Today he talked for a couple minutes about something that wasn’t Beautiful
Misery, then told them to read independently. Victoria took her beat-up copy of
whatever novel they were supposed to be reading, opened it to a random page in
the middle, and held it in front of her as a prop while she talked to Hannah.
“What are we
wearing?” was her first question.
“Well . . .”
Hannah said slowly, deliberately. “I’m
wearing the same pair of jeans that I wore last time, cause obviously they’re
good luck, and then probably either your light gray shirt with three buttons on
the top or something plaid - I don’t know yet, I’ll decide when we get to your
house - oh, you don’t care, right? And, like, obviously my Converse, the black
ones - I don’t know what you’re wearing yet, what are you thinking?”
“Well . . .” Victoria
started, trying to mimick Hannah’s speech but hers sounded nervous rather than
deliberate. “I was kinda thinking maybe I should wear my BM shirt.”
Hannah made no
effort to hide her laugh. A kid a few desks away shot a glare at her through
his glasses; Mr. Jones barely glanced up from his own book (not the class text.)
“Ohmygod NO!” she exclaimed. “You don’t wear a
Beautiful Misery shirt to a Beautiful Misery concert. You’d look like a total
poseur. And you are not a total poseur.
What the fuck are you looking at, Columbine?” she said to the kid with glasses,
who returned to his book without comment.
“But then, like .
. . what if I wanted to get Xander to sign the shirt?”
“Victoria. You
can’t. I mean, you can get a shirt there
- like, that’s obviously what I’m gonna do, and then we can wear them to school
tomorrow! But you don’t show up
wearing one. Plus, like. Your BM shirt is black. Ohmygod. I can’t believe you
were almost gonna wear that. I’m so glad you said something to me now. Like,
imagine if we were actually getting dressed - wait, your mom is dropping us off
down the street, right? I am not
getting out of a fucking minivan right outside of the show.”
“Yeah, I think
so,” Victoria lied. Her mom had actually purchased three tickets to the concert, not just two, and she had not yet
worked up the courage to tell Hannah this. Her hope was that Hannah would be so
excited by the time they got there that she wouldn’t even care that they had to
walk in with Mrs. Brixton. And they would obviously ditch her as soon as they
got inside.
“Good. Because
like I said, I cannot fucking be seen getting out of a gray minivan.”
“I know, right?”
“And she’ll pick
us up in the same place, right? Like, five minutes away at least. And you’ve got to tell her to wait til you call her,
‘cause we might end up staying and hanging out with people after. Like, if we
meet anyone cool, I mean. Or like, no, you know what, tell her we can just find
rides back.”
“With who?”
“There’s always
someone,” Hannah said casually. She flipped to the next page in her book;
Victoria did the same. “Wait, you’re not actually reading right now, are you?”
“Yeah, right,”
Victoria said. “I’m just doing that to trick Brownie.” Their half-affectionate,
half-mocking nickname for Mr. Brown, which Hannah sometimes used to his face.
“Like he cares,”
Hannah scoffed. “This book is, like, actually kinda good, though.”
“Really?”
“Yeah. You should
read it sometime. But not right now because we’ve got way more important things to worry about - like Xander-Cross-and-how-fucking-sexy-he’s-going-to-look-tonight!”
She made a shrieking sound, loud enough to make Mr. Brown place his book
face-down on his desk, stand up, and scan the room. “Sorry, Mr. Brown.”
“Keep it down,
please, Hannah.”
“This book is
just really interesting.”
“Uh-huh.” Mr.
Brown played along. He remained standing but didn’t move from behind his desk.
No real threat. But Hannah had apparently decided their conversation was over
for now, anyway, which meant it was. Even if she tried to start it up again, it
wasn’t going to happen.
Victoria wondered
when the hell Hannah had had time to
read any of this book. She definitely never read during class, and after school
and on the weekends she was always either at Victoria’s house, online, or
dealing with her psycho alcoholic mom. Unless maybe she was reading right now, and her page-flip hadn’t been a calculated move
after all. That was the thing about being friends with Hannah. She would always
surprise you somehow.
Victoria tried to
read a couple lines of the page in front of her. Some kid named Scout who
sounded like he was from the south or something. Boring.
But Scout made
her think of Girl Scouts, and remember with a sharp pang of embarrassment, of
mortification, that she had still been a Girl Scout when she had met Hannah.
The person she had been back then, only three years ago, seemed like a total
stranger. A girl who rode horses and went to summer camp and did crafts; who
listened to the radio; who had a
backpack with her initials stitched on it, a backpack with wheels. Someone she and Hannah would make fun of now.
And then Hannah
had arrived one day, a transplant from Connecticut (“which is pretty much just
New York City”), the representative of all things cool. Dyed hair, eyeliner,
blue eyes, the body of a fourteen-year-old, t-shirts with the names of bands on
them, jeans with song lyrics and the signatures of all her Connecticut friends.
Rumors of a tattoo. And somehow, by some miracle, she saw through Victoria
Brixton’s little-kid appearance, saw her true potential, and was willing to
take her under her wing, into her gravitational field. She had introduced her
to Beautiful Misery and all the other good music, taught her how to do makeup.
Had saved her.
She only hoped
that other Victoria Brixton - the one
from Before - was dead to Hannah, as well. The fear that kept her up at night
was that Hannah still looked at her and saw a twelve-year-old with pigtails,
wheeling her backpack down the hall.
So did Hannah and Victoria meet in middle school or kindergarten? I'm invested in the story now Ray so I need to know!
ReplyDeletefifth grade. forgot to take out the line about kindergarten when i changed it, but i think it's important to hannah's social identity that she is (or at least was, or thinks of herself as) an outsider. thanks for reading!!!
ReplyDelete