The Duff: Designated Ugly Fat Friend (22 page)

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Authors: Kody Keplinger

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“That’s good,” Dad said. “Tell me again, who did you go out with? Sorry. I can’t remember his name.”

“Toby Tucker.”

“Tucker?” Dad repeated. “You mean Chaz Tucker’s son? Oh, that’s great, Bumblebee. Chaz is a good guy. He’s the technology
director for a company downtown, so he comes into the store all the time. Wonderful family. I’m glad to hear his son’s a nice
kid, too.”

“He is,” I said.

The sound of shuffling came from upstairs, and we both glanced up at the ceiling. “Oh.” Dad shook his head and looked back
at me. “I almost forgot about them. They’ve been suspiciously quiet all night.”

“Yeah,” I said. “I should get up there before Casey has an aneurysm. See you in the morning, Dad.”

“Okay,” Dad said. He reached for the remote and turned up the volume on the television. “Good night, Bumblebee.”

I’d danced halfway up the stairs before Dad called out to me again. “Hey, Bumblebee?”

I paused and leaned against the banister, looking down at the living room. “Yeah?”

“Whatever happened to Wesley?”

I froze, feeling myself choke a little. “W-What?”

“Your friend. The one who, um… was with you that night.” He looked up at me from the couch, readjusting his glasses. “You
don’t talk about him much.”

“We don’t hang out anymore,” I told him, using that voice that made it clear he shouldn’t ask questions. All teenage girls
know that voice and use it on their fathers frequently. Usually, the unspoken order is followed. My father loved me, but he
knew better than to delve into the drama of my high school experience.

Smart Dad.

“Oh… I was just wondering.”

“Bianca!” My bedroom door flew open, and Jessica, dressed in neon orange pajamas, leapt out of my room. She sprinted halfway
down the stairs and grabbed me by the arm. “Stop making us wait! Come tell us everything.”

The way Jessica was beaming almost pushed Dad’s mention of Wesley from my mind.

Almost.

“Goodnight, Mr. Piper!” Jessica yelled as she dragged me to my bedroom.

After a few steps, my feet picked up again and I reminded myself that I’d just had the best date ever with the guy of my dreams.
I felt myself succumbing to the giddy joy my best friends expressed as soon as I walked into the room. Squealing, jumping,
cheering…

I had the right to be happy about this. Even we cynics deserved a night off once in a while, right?

22

My good mood lasted all the way through to Monday afternoon. I mean, what was there to be irritated about? Nothing. Things
were back to normal at home. My friends hadn’t dragged me to the Nest in weeks. Oh yeah, and I’d just gone on a date with
the perfect boy. Who could complain?

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen you this happy,” Casey observed as we pulled out of the student parking lot. Her voice was full
of pep, an unfortunate side effect of cheerleading practice, and she bounced up and down in her seat. “It’s so refreshing!”

“God, Casey, you make me sound suicidal or something.”

“It’s not that,” she said. “It’s just that you haven’t been as bitter as usual lately. It’s a nice change.”

“I’m not bitter.”

“You are so.” She reached over and patted my knee. “But that’s okay, B. It’s just part of your personality. We accept it.
But you
aren’t
bitter now, and that’s freaking awesome. Don’t take it as an insult.”

“Whatever.” But I broke into a smile.

“See there!” Casey cried. “You’re grinning. You can’t stop, can you? Like I said, you’re happier than I’ve ever seen you.”

“Okay, maybe you’re kind of right,” I admitted. It was sort of true. I had Casey and Jessica back. Things were normal again
with Dad. Why complain?

“I always am.” She leaned forward and changed the radio to some shitty Top 40 station. “So, what’s up with you and
Toby?
Anything gossip-worthy?”

“Not really. He’s coming over this afternoon.”

“Ooh!” She sat back in her seat and winked at me. “Sounds gossip-worthy to me. You’ve picked up some extra-large condoms,
right?”

“Shut up,” I said. “It’s not that kind of thing, and you know it. He’s just coming over to work on our editorials for AP government.
It’s—”

I was cut off when my cell phone, which was lying in the cup holder, started vibrating and playing loud music. My fingers
instantly clinched around the steering wheel. I knew who I’d set that ringtone for, and those few chords were all it took
to derail my entire afternoon.

“Britney Spears? You have ‘Womanizer’ as a ringtone, seriously? OMG, B, that song is so, like, two thousand eight,” Casey
laughed.

I didn’t say anything.

“Aren’t you gonna answer it?”

“No.”

“Why not?”

“Because I don’t wanna talk to him.”

“Who?”

I didn’t respond, so Casey picked up my cell phone and checked the ID. I heard her let out a knowing sigh. A few seconds later,
the music stopped playing, but I couldn’t force my body to relax again. I felt stiff and anxious, and it didn’t help that
Casey had her eyes glued on me.

“You haven’t talked to him?”

“No,” I muttered.

“Since the day I picked you up from his house?”

“Mm-mm.”

“Oh, B,” she sighed.

The car became quiet—well, except for the annoying sound of an untalented pop singer on the radio, but she was too busy whining
about her cheating boyfriend to care about my issues.

“What do you think he wants?” Casey asked when the song ended. She sounded a little bitter.

“Knowing Wesley… probably a booty call,” I grumbled. “It’s never anything more than that.”

“Well, then, it’s a good thing you didn’t answer.” She tossed my phone back into the cup holder and folded her arms over her
chest. “Because he doesn’t deserve you, B. And you’re with Toby now, and he’s perfect for you and treats you the way you should
be treated… unlike the douche bag.”

Part of me wanted to stop her. To defend Wesley. He hadn’t really treated me badly. I mean, yeah, he’d called me Duffy to
no
end, which was annoying and hurtful, but overall, Wesley had been good to me.

I didn’t tell Casey this, though. I didn’t say anything at all. She didn’t know about that last night with Wesley, how he
had been my friend for about twelve solid hours. She didn’t know about Dad’s relapse, or the way Wesley had stood up for me.
Those were things I could never tell her.

She was getting pissed at him only because she was scared. Scared I’d run back to him and forget about her and Jessica again.
Defending Wesley wouldn’t have helped put that worry to rest.

Toby had gone from geek to hero in Casey’s mind in a matter of days. Simply because he hadn’t taken me from her. I wasn’t
spending every afternoon with him the way I had with Wesley. I didn’t really want to. Sometimes that scared me, but I figured
that that was normal. This was a healthy, nonescapist relationship, unlike what I’d had with Wesley. And at the moment, I
was really happy to be spending some time with my friends.

I turned into Casey’s driveway and hit the automatic unlock button on my door. “Don’t worry about me. You’re right. Toby is
awesome, and he’s made it so much easier to move on. I already have. Things are going well for me, so don’t worry.”

“Okay,” she said. “Good. Well, I’ll see you tomorrow, B.”

“Bye.”

She climbed out of the car, and I drove away, wondering whether I’d just lied to her. Honestly, I wasn’t sure.

On the way home, Wesley called again.

I ignored him.

Because things were going well for me.

Because I was moving on.

Because talking on a cell phone and driving at the same time just isn’t safe.

I pushed Wesley out of my mind when I saw Toby’s car already parked in my driveway. Dad wasn’t home from work yet, so he sat
on the front porch steps with a book. The sun glinted off the rims of his glasses, making them look extra sparkly. Like he
was a trophy.

I got out of the car and hurried up the sidewalk toward him. “Hey,” I said. “Sorry. I had to take Casey home.”

He looked up at me with a smile.

Not a crooked grin…

I had to shake myself. I wasn’t going to think about Wesley. I wasn’t going to let myself miss him. Not when I had Toby. Sweet,
normal, sparkly-smiling Toby.

“It’s fine,” he said. “I’m enjoying the weather. It’s so unpredictable in the spring.” He stuck his bookmark in the pages
of his novel. “It’s nice to have a little bit of sunlight.”

“Brontë?” I asked, seeing the cover of his book. “
Wuthering Heights
? Isn’t that a little girly, Toby?”

“Have you read it?”

“Well, no,” I admitted. “I’ve read
Jane Eyre,
which was definitely full of early feminism. I’m not saying that’s a problem. Personally, I’m a total feminist, but it’s
a little sketchy for a teenage boy.”

Toby shook his head. “
Jane Eyre
is Charlotte Brontë.
Wuthering Heights
is Emily. The sisters are very, very different. Yes,
Wuthering Heights
is usually considered a love story, but I disagree
with that. It’s almost a ghost story, and there’s more hate than romance. Every character is atrocious and spoiled and selfish….
It’s kind of like watching an episode of
Gossip Girl
in the eighteen hundreds. Except, of course, much less ridiculous.”

“Interesting,” I muttered, chagrined that I secretly watched
Gossip Girl
on a regular basis.

“It isn’t a favorite of most boys my age, I guess,” he said. “But it’s a page-turner. You should read it.”

“I might.”

“You should.”

I smiled and shook my head. “Are you ready to go in or what?”

“Absolutely.” He snapped the book shut and got to his feet. “Lead the way.”

I unlocked the door and let him walk inside ahead of me, where he immediately took his shoes off. Not that we live like pigs
or anything, but no one
ever
does that in our house. I couldn’t help being impressed.

“Where will we be working?” he asked.

I realized suddenly that I was watching him and looked away. “Oh,” I said casually. “Um… my room? Is that okay?”
God, I hope he doesn’t think I’m a stalker freak for staring at him like that.

“If it doesn’t bother you,” Toby said.

“No, it’s cool. Come on.”

He followed me up the stairs. When we reached my bedroom, I pushed the door open a crack, checking quickly for embarrassing
items (bras, panties, et cetera) that might be lying on the floor. Sure the coast was clear—and praying I hadn’t been too
obvious—I
swung the door the rest of the way open and gestured for Toby to walk inside.

“Sorry it’s a little messy,” I said, looking down at the pile of unfolded, clean clothes that always stayed on the floor at
the foot of my bed and trying not to think about the last time I’d had a boy in my room and how he’d laughed at my neurotic
clothes folding. What would Toby think of it?

“It’s fine.” Toby moved a stack of overdue library books out of my chair and placed them on the desk. Then he sat down. “We’re
seventeen. Our rooms are supposed to be messy. It wouldn’t be natural if they weren’t.”

“I guess not.” I climbed onto my bed and sat with my legs crisscrossed. “I just didn’t want it to bug you.”

“Nothing about you could bug me, Bianca.”

It took everything I had to ignore how cheesy that sounded. I smiled anyway and looked down at my purple comforter. I’d never
received so many compliments from one person, and I wasn’t very good at accepting them. Mostly because I was always too busy
mocking how mushy they were. But I was working on that.

And the truth was, I was kind of blushing.

I didn’t even notice Toby had moved until he was sitting beside me. “Sorry,” he said. “Did I embarrass you?”

“No… well, yeah, but in a good way.”

“As long as it’s in a good way.”

He leaned forward and kissed me on the cheek, but I didn’t let him stop there. I turned my head and pressed my lips against
his, just as he started to pull back. It didn’t go quite as smoothly as
I’d hoped. I mean, his glasses kind of knocked me in the face for a second, but I pretended I hadn’t noticed.

His lips were so soft that I wondered if he used ChapStick. Seriously, nobody has lips that perfect naturally, do they? He
must have been disgusted by mine, which probably felt rough and scaly to him.

But if he was, he didn’t show it. His hand moved up my arm and rested on my shoulder, pulling me a little closer. We sat on
my bed and kissed for a few minutes, but the sound of my cell phone broke the moment.
Damn it!

And of course, it was that same Britney Spears ringtone—the one I wanted
least
to hear at that exact moment—that seemed to scream at me. Toby pulled away and looked down at the floor where I’d dropped
my purse. When I didn’t move, he turned back to me with raised eyebrows.

“Ignoring someone?” he asked.

“Well,… um, yeah.”

“Are you sure you don’t need to answer it?”

“Positive.”

Before he could ask any more questions, I kissed him again. Hard this time. And even though he hesitated for an instant, he
returned it. I fumbled to take off his glasses and placed them on the nightstand beside my bed before our arms twisted around
each other, the kiss deepening.

I pulled him down onto the pillows with me. There wasn’t quite enough room for both of us on my twin bed, so he had to lie
partially on top of me. One of his hands was in my hair, and the other rested near my elbow.

He wasn’t trying to grab my boob, he hadn’t slid his hand up my shirt, and he didn’t attempt to unzip my jeans.

Actually, Toby didn’t try
anything
risky. I had the feeling I was going to have to make all of the big moves, like loosening the buttons on his shirt, which
I did.

For an instant, I wondered if he was hesitating because of me. Because I was the Duff. Because he didn’t really find me attractive.
Despite all those compliments he paid me, it didn’t feel like he wanted me. Not the way Wesley had.

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