The Boy Book (10 page)

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Authors: E. Lockhart

BOOK: The Boy Book
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Angelo Martinez called me that night, and our conversation went like this:

 

Him: Hey, Roo. It’s Angelo.

Me: What’s up?

Him: Not a lot. Just got in from playing basketball.

Me: Cool.

Him: Um. Listen.

Me: Yeah?

Him: I, ah, I wanted to say I had a good time the other day. The other night. It was nice.

Me: Oh, yeah. Sorry about squashing your dog.

Him:
De nada.
He can take it.

Me: At least it wasn’t little Skipperdee.

Him: No. If you squashed her, she’d have bit you.

Me: Oh.

Him: I’m serious.

Me: Actually, I meant if I squashed her I might have killed her. She’s so small.

Him: You don’t know her like I do. She can take care of herself. Once I sat on this Yorkie we used to have called Stinky, and I broke her foot. I felt so bad.

Me: So. Hey.

Him: Hey.

Me: Nice of you to call.

Him: Yeah. Well. I didn’t want to be, like, not calling after what happened.

Me: Oh, you didn’t have to.

Him: But I did.

Me: Don’t angst. You’re quite the gentleman.

Him: Not if you ask my mom.

Me: I’m hardly your mom.

Him: No. (laughs under his breath) You are hardly my mom. (Silence. For too long.)

Me: Do you want to go for a drive?

Him: What, now?

Me: My parents are in all night. I can take the Honda for an hour or so, but I have to be back by ten.

Him: You mean go on a drive, and park?

Me: Exactly.

Him: I’m going out to the porch right now, with the portable.

Me: You’re what?

Him: I’m on the porch now. Waiting.

 

And he clicked off.

I told my parents I was meeting Meghan at the B&O and drove to Angelo’s. He got in the car.

We drove two blocks down to a parking lot next to a playground and made out for an hour, listening to stupid songs on the radio oldies station.

It was great.

Then I drove Angelo home. He kissed me goodbye.

“Don’t say you’ll call me,” I said. “I don’t want to have a calling/not-calling thing going on between us.”

“Okay. I won’t say it. But Roo?” He was halfway out the car door, silhouetted by a streetlamp.

“What?”

“You can call
me
.”

 

Levels of Boyfriends

1. Friend-Boy. The two of you are just friends.

2. Friend-Boy plus Unwanted Crush. You are just friends, but you can tell he likes you. It is highly annoying.

3. Friend-Boy plus Crush. You have a crush on him, but you’re just friends. Sigh. (Note:
You
are probably being highly annoying.)

4. Hopeless Crush. You long for him from afar. He doesn’t know you exist.

5. Friend-Boy plus Mutual Attraction. You are just friends, but maybe there is something more in the air.

6. Flirtation. But you are not friends.

7. Scamming Mate. You fool around, but you don’t hang out. Ever.

8. Friends with Benefits. You fool around, and you do hang out, but you are not
going
out.

9. Boyfriend. You are going out!

10. Serious Boyfriend. You can see a future. The two of you are getting horizontal on a regular basis. You borrow his T-shirts.

 

—written in my handwriting, with some additions by Kim. Approximate date: September of sophomore year.

 

w
hen I got home from being with Angelo, my parents were asleep in front of the television. I went straight to my room, dug out
The Boy Book
and read all our old entries. Because I had no one to talk to.

I remembered holing up with Kim, lying on our stomachs on her big double bed, writing and laughing. And the time we brought
The Boy Book
over to Cricket’s house, and Nora made chocolate chip cookies, and I burned my hand taking them out of the oven, then had to dictate my contributions to the book because my fingers were too sore to hold a pen. And the time Cricket had the weird interaction with Billy Alexander and demanded that I bring the book to school so she could add an entry the next morning. And when Kim left it out on my parents’ coffee table, and my dad was just picking it up to look at it when we came back in the room, and we grabbed it and ran away squealing.

I fell asleep with my face on the page dedicated to Levels of Boyfriends. I drooled a little and smudged the ink. At two a.m., I woke up, brushed my teeth and changed into pajamas, then went back to bed.

 

 

So Angelo. He was, at that moment, an SM. Scamming Mate. Possibly to be elevated to Friend with Benefits, possibly to be elevated to Boyfriend. Or possibly not.

It might be too strained, with our parents being friends. Or too weird, with our lives being so different. Hanging out with him had never been easy, the way it was with Jackson (my only real boyfriend, ever). Angelo and I usually watched TV for a bit and then ate dinner while tolerating boring grown-up conversation. I didn’t even know that much about him, besides that he was a summer camp counselor, and liked reality TV, and was an expert in the boob-groping department.

I had been to his house a million times and had never seen his room.

So Noel. What was he?

Because I had to admit, we were flirting. Or at least, I felt something very close to disappointment when he didn’t kiss me and used his asthma puffer instead.

Maybe he was FBMA, Friend-Boy plus Mutual Attraction. Or maybe FBC, Friend-Boy plus Crush. Me with a crush on him. Or maybe just a Friend-Boy.

It didn’t feel like the crushes I’d had before, when I I had radar and could sense where the guy was from across a crowded room. Like when I had that crush on Nora’s brother, Gideon, and I felt like I was always saying the wrong thing when I talked to him, and wondered what to wear every morning in case he suddenly noticed me.

But I did think about Noel a lot. I tried to think of ways to amuse him. And I appreciated the way he walked, like his limbs were put together loosely.

I
noticed
things in Noel that I didn’t notice about guys who didn’t interest me.

So Jackson. We didn’t include ex-boyfriends on the list of levels. What can I say? We were naïve and unheart-broken back then.

I felt, if I had to give Jackson a type, like he was a Flirtation. Although we didn’t speak, besides hello.

Sometimes I hated him. He had betrayed me and dumped me, and he wasn’t the guy I’d thought he was back when we were going out. I felt like I was a better person than he was.

At those times, I decided that the notes he had written me since we broke up (just the two) were some attempt to rid his conscience of guilt. Like if Jackson could get me to be nice to him, then he could feel that what he’d done to me last year was really okay.

Other times, I felt like he and I had had this great relationship, and then someone (Kim) had interfered at a vulnerable moment when we had to decide whether to break up or say “love” or rip off all our clothes and do it.

If she hadn’t interfered, Jackson and I would have stayed together and worked it out, and everything would have been wonderful.

Wouldn’t it be good to have a happy ending now, after all that drama, with me and Jackson riding off into the sunset in his Dodge Dart Swinger?

Yes, it would.

The rest of the time, I thought, He has a girlfriend. He doesn’t like me. So don’t even think about it.

But I did think about it.

Jackson was there in my mind, all the time. Like a tumor.

 

 

In a surprise move, Cabbie brought his photos to school on Thursday. Nearly two weeks after Kim’s party. I guess he hadn’t finished the roll that night. Or he was drunk and forgot about the camera in his jacket pocket. Or something.

Anyway, he finally got them developed, and Darcy Andrews, this annoying guy I’ve never liked, had them when I got to Precal in the morning. He and a bunch of other boys were huddled over a desk, ogling.

I went to see what they were looking at, poking my head over someone’s shoulder.

There was Nora, sitting on the steps of the pool, her enormous hooters highlighted by a flashbulb. She looked hot, except for her face, which was a picture of mortification. Her hands were over her chest but completely failed to cover anything, really. One nipple was sticking out, and the rest of the boobage looked sexily squashed.

The second picture was less flattering—she was running up the hill toward Kim’s house, and the top of her head was cut off, but you could see her hooters from a side angle, her soggy panties drooping at the butt, and some mud on her legs as she stumbled across the grass.

There were other shots too, spread out on Darcy’s desk. Guys with their arms around each other, laughing. Cricket and her gone-to-college boyfriend, Billy Alexander, lying on the grass. Katarina and Ariel, holding up pieces of sushi and waving. Kim, her hair cut shorter than the last time I’d seen her, giggling as Jackson kissed her neck.

Ag.

I did
not
need to see that. I wanted to run out of the class and be sick in the bathroom. My hands started shaking and the room was suddenly hot and stuffy.

But Nora was due in Precal any minute. And everyone could see her boobs.

Now was
not
the time to have a panic thing.

“Where did you get those?” I asked Darcy.

“They’re from Yamamoto’s party,” he said. “Cabbie made double prints.”

“He knew we’d all be grateful,” laughed one of the guys.

“Van Deusen has a lot on deck,” another said. “She should get out more.”

“Ooh,” I said, all innocent. “Can I see? Let me look!”

“I don’t know,” said Darcy.

“Please,” I coaxed, scooting in next to him and leaning over flirtatiously. “Just for a sec. I love pictures.”

He pulled them into a stack and handed them over. As soon as I got them, I yanked the Nora pictures from the bottom of the pile, dropped the others on the floor and ripped the ones of Nora into tiny pieces.

“Oliver!” barked Darcy. “What’d you go and do that for?”

“You have to ask?”

“Don’t go all feminist on me,” he muttered. “Geez.”

“I wouldn’t need to be feminist if you weren’t such a pig.”

“Why jump on me? Cabbie’s the one who took them.”

“You don’t have to show them around,” I answered. “That’s so completely mean.”

“She looks hot,” he said. “What’s the big deal? Lots of girls were going topless. If they didn’t want us to look, they shouldn’t have taken their shirts off.”

“Not true,” I said. “What if I showed pictures of your dick around school?”

One of the other guys laughed. “You have pictures of Darcy’s dick? Darcy, Ruby, I never knew.”

“Do you have lots of dick pictures, Ruby?” someone else asked.

“Maybe she does,” muttered this guy Josh—a big luggy redheaded guy. (Recall my überslut reputation.)

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