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Authors: Hillary Homzie

The Hot List (13 page)

BOOK: The Hot List
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That's why I decided to call Heather and Nicole instead. Not only would I call them, but I'd also tell them about the bet with Nia. Why not? I mean, after everything that I had been through, what did I have to lose?

And you know what? It was the right move because they were giving me all kinds of support. Exactly what I needed, even if they weren't Maddie.

“I can't believe it,” I said to Nicole and Heather on a three-way conversation on the phone. I paced in the kitchen, eating stale pretzels because Dad never closes the
bag the right way. “What are the chances that Hayden would be out shopping when I was shopping?”

“Not a lot,” Heather admitted. “I'm sure you can explain, right?”

“Text Hayden,” commanded Nicole.

“Sure, if I had his cell phone number, which I don't.”

Nicole tapped her chin thoughtfully. “Then write on his Facebook page.”

“I'll sound like a lunatic. It's too late.”

“Sophie, you're being a drama queen.” Weird. That wasn't like me. My stomach bunched up and I felt jittery, like I'd had coffee before bedtime. Not that my dad let me drink coffee, except on special occasions. “Now everyone probably knows.”

“Nobody knows anything. Hayden wouldn't say anything. He's much too cool. Plus, it's not like he exactly talks a lot anyway.”

But still, I was convinced the world knew about the mall incident. The idea of this bet was to show Nia what I could do. I was now mud at Travis Middle School. This was not what I had in mind when I took on this little—excuse me—I mean
ginormous
Squid challenge.

Heather and Nicole tried to cheer me up, but even after eating almost an entire bag of red Twizzlers, I didn't feel any better. And then I really didn't feel better when
Dad came into the room and announced that he wanted to take me to dinner tomorrow night.

That, in and of itself, wasn't so bad. The going-out-to-dinner part. It was who he wanted to take me out to dinner with that was the problem—Nia and her mom. And he wanted to take them to my favorite restaurant, Bar-B-Q. It had an open kitchen, stone walls, and smelled like mesquite wood. They had these ribs and roasted chicken that was so moist you needed, like, ten napkins, and the portions were so big that we always end up taking home leftovers. The place was perfect, and I didn't want to spoil it with some bad memories. But Dad didn't give me a choice.

Dad and I got there ten minutes early so we could sit in his favorite booth, inside by the fireplace.

“You okay facing away from the kitchen?” Dad asked, sliding next to me. He knew that I liked to watch the chefs working, and I guess he wanted to sit across from Mynah, so he could gaze into her eyes.

“Sure.” What was I going to do? Tell him the truth? That I didn't want to be there, that I didn't want him anywhere in the vicinity of Nia Tate, now or in the future.

The waiter refilled our glasses twice, and Dad ordered us both iced teas, as we waited for
them,
and Dad talked about the chances of the Rockies next season. I pretended
to be interested in baseball stats when Nia and Mynah strolled into view. They were both wearing layers of shirts, vests, and scarves over skinny jeans with heels—only, Nia had her usual stack of beads and peace-sign earrings, and her Mom had on a simple gold chain.

Mynah took off her long wool scarf. “So sorry we're late. The traffic on the interstate was awful. Wasn't it, Nia? It was because of the sleet. Yuck.” She pulled off her lambskin gloves.

“Yeah. It was kinda bad.” Nia tossed her corkscrew curls. “But it didn't help that we left ten minutes late, either.”

Wow. Mynah busted by her own daughter.

Dad swatted his hand in front of his face. “Ahh, no biggie. We've only been waiting here five minutes, anyway.” He smiled and glanced at me. “And we got some good chatting time in.” I noticed that Dad was wearing his nicest wool sweater, and had put on a musky-type cologne. Normally, he NEVER wore scents.

“Actually, we've been here fifteen minutes,” I said. “If you don't count looking for parking along Main.” Wow, this honesty thing could be fun.

Dad stood up, took Mynah's coat, and patted the banquette next to him. “Sit down. You and Nia look nice.”

“Thanks,” murmured Mynah.

Mynah glanced over at me. “You look nice, too, Sophie.”

“You do,” said Nia, which surprised me. She was obviously trying to kiss up.

“Thanks,” I mumbled, although it wasn't true. My face was blotchy from post-traumatic Hot List/Squid stress.

We ordered calamari and fried onion rings as appetizers and made small talk, or, rather, Dad and Mynah actually talked, and Nia and I both pretended to love looking at the menu. When Dad saw a principal from another Boulder middle school across the room, he hopped over and brought Mynah with him.

“Okay,” I said to Nia, who was dipping her bread into flavored olive oil. “Guess it's just you and me.”

“Uh-huh.” She popped the soaked piece of bread into her mouth. Then she ate an olive that sat on the table as a pre-appetizer. “Oh, yum. This is good.” Her eyes glanced at her phone, which made me want to get her attention.

I couldn't help but stretch the truth a little. Okay, a lot. “So, I'm making really good progress with Squid.”

“Really?” Nia scooped up another olive. “I'm like, um, surprised, since his, like, essence is all wacky and weird.”

“Yeah, he's pretty wacky. But I'm working on it. Soon he won't be recognizable.”

Nia shook her head. “That would be so sad, in a way.”

“Sad?”

“I dunno. Then he wouldn't be Squid.”

“Isn't that the point?” I was starting to feel angry.

“Definitely, which is why I think it'll actually be impossible for you to win. You've got to be true to your essence.” Nia fingered her crystal necklace.

“Oh, c'mon. Is Maddie”—I made little quotes in the air—“‘true to her essence' now that she's all flowy and hippie-chic?”

“Yeah. Why do you think we're friends?” Nia sat up really straight, as if she were trying to will herself to be as tall as me. It made me sit up straight too, so I'd be taller and intimidating. I was surprised she didn't say “best friends.” “It's the law of attraction. Like attracts like.”

“So, are you saying that you picked Squid because I'm just like him?”

“Or maybe you want to be like him.” For the first time all night, she didn't look bored. “You know, I want to be a therapist someday, but, like, the holistic kind.”

“Holistic?”

“You know, someone who helps people feel better by treating their mind, body, and spirit. My ultimate dream is to work in a little town higher up in the Rockies and to run groups under the stars, where people could find their authentic, real selves and touch their, you know,
‘inner magic' and let the universe do its thing.” Then she laughed at herself. “Goofy, right?”

“Kind of.” Whoa. I didn't really have any idea of what she was talking about. Okay, maybe I did. But I was much too practical to buy any of it.

Nia dipped another piece of bread into the olive oil. “That could be good for you, Sophie. My mom did it, and she figured out who she really is. That's when she left my dad.” As Nia chewed, I couldn't help but think she was talking about Maddie and me. That Maddie stopped being friends with me in order to find her real self. I clenched my toes as I thought about it. It made me
so
mad.

But Nia didn't seem to be aware of how upset I was getting. She kept going on about her parents. “They weren't meant to be. My mom wants the white picket fence, the house. The whole suburban thing.”

Did that mean my dad was the suburban thing?

“My dad's a ski instructor up at Telluride,” she continued. “And does ski patrol up there, too. In the summer, he's a white-water rafting guide.”

“Sounds fun.”

“Yeah,” said Nia. “It's pretty cool, if there's any water left in the Colorado River.”

It's weird. Part of me wanted to stay mad, and part of
me was fascinated learning more about Nia's life. Her dad, who spent his summer days on a rubber raft and winters on the slopes, sounded so different from my dad, who always stayed in one place. He was even born in Denver, so he didn't ever move too far. I decided to tell Nia thanks for sharing when her cell phone rang, and she picked it up.

“Hey, Maddy Mads. It's you!”

I slumped in my seat and shredded my napkin as I tried to figure out their conversation. It was hard. Nia kept on going. “Yeah. Bigger. Bigger. Much bigger.” I had no idea what they were talking about and it was driving me crazy. And it was rude.

Suddenly, it all became so clear that I had to help Squid. There was no other choice. The boy was getting onto the Hot List and that was all there was to it.

“I know it,” said Nia in a louder voice. “I'm so bored too.”

That did it. I grabbed Nia's phone away. Of course, it was the exact minute that Dad and Mynah happening to be walking back to join us. “I can't believe you just did that,” snapped Dad.

“But she”—I flicked my chin at Nia—“was being rude.”

“It would be nice if you said something first,” said Nia.

Mynah sighed deeply. “I don't get it. We were just
saying, a second ago, how nice it was to see y'all chatting together and bonding.” Mynah/Mrs. Tate looked at me. “Sophie,” she said. “Why don't you give me the phone, and I'll put it in here for safekeeping.” She tapped her pocketbook and glanced at her daughter. “Nia, you know better than to have a conversation in the middle of a meal.”

“I know. But it was an emergency.” She smiled at her mother and then at my dad.

Yeah, right. The only emergency she had was rubbing her friendship with Maddie in my face. That was it.

After the dinner finally ended, and I was done with the torture of eating with Nia Tate, I decided I needed a little vitamin Nicole and Heather.

At first we were all texting, but then I decided to call because I wanted to tell them everything in detail. So I told Nicole and Heather about how my dad had been dating Mrs. Tate for a couple of months. After I told them about my dad's dating life, I wondered why I had held back from telling Maddie. I guess a part of me thought by speaking about it, I'd be admitting that it was really happening. Neither Nicole or Heather seemed too surprised about my dad and Nia's mom being a couple, since, as Heather put it, my dad's pretty cute for a middle-aged dude with big ears, and Mrs. Tate was
the prettiest single teacher. Heather also thought them going out together was cute, and Nicole wondered if Mrs. Tate was going to get a raise.

Of course, I also told Heather and Nicole about Nia dissing me in the restaurant and the holistic therapy stuff.

“She wants to do therapy,” said Nicole, “because, I can guarantee you, she's been in therapy for years, so she thinks she's an expert. Most therapists were messed-up when they were younger. So you have messed-up people helping other messed up people further spreading messed-up-ness.” Nicole knew about that stuff since her dad was a psychiatrist.

“Do you really think so?” asked Heather. “About Nia seeing a therapist? She seems too happy and flowy, right?”

“Oh, she's a huge fake,” said Nicole. “I bet when she gets home, she flings off her love beads, chows down on bloody sirloin steaks and screams for hours.”

“Stop it. That's so mean,” said Heather. “Don't you think that's mean?”

“No,” I said. “I agree with Nicole. I think it's all an act. I saw her eating calamari and she admitted to me that she likes to win. That doesn't sound very peace-loving to me. She's competitive. I remembered when she first came to Travis, she glommed onto Ava because
she could tell she was, like, the queen bee at the time. And when you start hanging around with the queen, her reputation rubs off, and then when you start acting like you belong … well, you do.”

“I think you've just discovered the answer to the universe,” said Nicole.

“Thank you. I try. But I've got to get someone cool to rub off on Squid.”

“He's been hanging with you,” said Heather. “That counts, right?”

“Not quite the same,” I said, as I could feel the necessity to go to steps five and six of the get-Squid-hot plan. Not only did I need to get Squid to hang with the cool crowd but also he had to let everyone know about it. So I said good-bye to Nicole and Heather and texted Squid about the plan. Well, first I ate humble pie and apologized again.

Texts sent and received on Sophie Fanuchi's phone:

After Dinner

Fanuchi House

Boulder, Colorado

USA

Thursday, October 5

Between 8:01 p.m. and 8:06 p.m.

Central Time

Sophiegrl
8:01 PM October 5

Sorry

Squidster
8:01 PM October 5

Say it agn

Sophiegrl
8:02 PM October 5

Sorry

Squidster
8:03 PM October 5

Louder

Sophiegrl
8:04 PM October 5

SORRY!

Squidster
8:04 PM October 5

☺

Sophiegrl
8:05 PM October 5

so we ron?

Squidster
8:05 PM October 5

Y

Sophiegrl
8:06 PM October 5

Good. Cuz we're going 4 step 5 and 6 on my

get you Hot List.

Chapter Seventeen

D
uring gym, I sat in the bleachers next to Brianna Evans
, who was still moping about how Bear had cut back on flirting with her in homeroom. I tried my best to listen to her complaints, but it was hard to focus. The place was hot, stuffy, and smelled like sweat socks. And anyway, I was focusing on step five of the get-Squid-hot plan. I desperately needed to find some Hot Lister to rub off on Squid, who earlier in the day was actually looking semidecent in one of the shirts that I had picked out for him at the mall. And he was wearing regular-looking un-neon, un-glow-in-the-dark basketball shoes. Guess he had kept on doing some shopping in the mall. But unfortunately, Squid was also busy discussing the new superhero that his friend Elio had just drawn on a piece of notebook paper. The boy definitely needed some new friends if he was going to hotify.

BOOK: The Hot List
3.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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