Read Just Like the Movies Online

Authors: Kelly Fiore

Just Like the Movies (4 page)

BOOK: Just Like the Movies
10.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“You're home tonight?” I ask, surprised. She shakes her head.

“Not for long. I just wanted to get some pasta boiling for you and Mac.”

Then I realize that she's in full date makeup—fake eyelashes and all—and that her hair is in rollers. I take the wooden spoon from her hand and wave her away from the stove.

“I'll do this. Go finish getting”—I look at her short skirt and tight tank top—“ready.”

“Thanks, babe.” She kisses my cheek, and I smell the cotton candy lip gloss that makes me gag. I don't know why she insists on wearing something marketed specifically for twelve-year-old girls.

“Who is it this time?” I ask as she heads for the door.

“Jim.”

“Oh, right. Jim.” I have no idea who Jim is.

“You remember.” Mom is looking at me, a little impatient. “The contractor? The one who was remodeling Dr. Benson's kitchen?”

“Oh,
that
Jim,” I say sarcastically. “Sure, Mom. I
totally
remember him.”

Dr. Benson is Mom's boss. His house is both his office, in the front, and his residence, in the back. I bet it's nice to roll out of bed and walk into work, but I'm sure it gets old sharing your house with patients, employees, and, apparently, a contractor named Jim.

“Yeah, so,” Mom is saying, her voice a little breathy with excitement, “I think he's taking me to Skinners to see some band, so that should be fun.”

I just nod. I don't know what Skinners is. I don't
want
to know what Skinners is. I mean, I know what Skinners sounds like and that alone makes me want to hurl.

“But I shouldn't be home too late,” she adds as she walks out the door.

“Famous last words,” I snort.

When kind-of-bald-and-sort-of-chubby Jim picks up my mom, he makes a good show of shaking my hand and kneeling down to Mac's level. He asks me about school and then promptly ignores my answer, while watching my mom adjust her cleavage in the hall mirror. He ruffles Mac's hair as they leave. When the door shuts, Mac just looks at me.

“Does he think I'm the family dog?”

I shrug. “Maybe.” Then I sling an arm around his shoulder. “Mom made some pasta, but I'm thinking pizza. What do you say?”

“I say yes!”

Thirty minutes later, Mac and I are pigging out on pepperoni thin crust and watching repeats of
Ice Road Truckers
until he gets distracted by the lure of his Nintendo DS. I pull my scholarship essay up on the family laptop, but as I stare at the screen, the little blinking cursor taunts me.

Write something brilliant
, it says.
There are a million girls just like you—great grades, long résumés—and they have actual activities on their list of accolades. You know, like student athletes. Prom queens. Class presidents. Girls who are a
part of life
, not just living on the edge of it.

Clearly I have a very judgmental cursor.

I start typing my answer to “Describe how your high school experience has impacted your desire to pursue higher
education,” but all my answers are coming out monosyllabic and shallow.

My high school life was good.

It taught me things.

I like things.

Things are good.

I close the laptop.

Resigned, I grab the remote and flop back on the couch, flipping through the first few hundred channels. The next time I glance at the clock, it's a little before ten and I remember Mom's promise of coming home at a reasonable time. If she actually meant it, I've still got a few good hours before she'll pour herself into bed.

“Mac,” I yell, then listen for my brother's voice. In the distance, I can hear some electronic combat sounds. It's like a cat with a bell, except the bell has automatic weapons and lots of ammunition.

“Mac!” I try again.

“Yeah?”

“Bed soon, buddy.”

He hesitates. “Just another ten minutes. I linked the DS with Nathan and Geoff. We're trying to kill off the world-dominating aliens.”

“Oh, well, carry on then. Thanks for preserving our freedom.”

Sometimes I'm jealous that Mac has good friends, but
most of the time I'm glad. I never really managed to make the connection with anyone the way he has. Of course, we moved around a lot more when I was his age. By the time we settled here, it was as though I'd missed out on picking teams. The friends and groups were already decided, so I just kind of wove around the cliques, hoping I'd absorb like in cell osmosis. I didn't. Like all inhospitable hosts, they rejected the unfamiliar. I have people I'm friendly with but not actual friends—not the way other people do, at least.

I flip through a few more channels until
Pitch Perfect
pops up on HBO. It's about an hour in, but I've seen it a million times, so it doesn't really matter. I love everything about this movie—the singing, the characters, and especially how slightly dorky Jesse falls for sarcastic Beca. Watching him pursue her, even when Beca shoots him down, makes me wonder what that would feel like to have someone really fight for you. And not in a scary, controlling way, but in a way that makes you believe that there is actually someone out there for everyone.

The Barden Bellas are about to perform their final number when the sound of keys jangling distracts me from the movie. I mute the TV and sit up a little, listening to the front door jerk open. There's a giggle and a deeper-sounding chuckle.

Great.

Mom's home and she's not alone. Again.

“Well, I had a really great time, Jim.” Mom's voice is pitchy and lilting, like she's half-singing her words. My lip curls up in disgust.

“So did I, Claudia. So did I.”

There's a distinct lack of talking, which translates to busy mouths of another kind.
Gross.
That's my cue to pull my mother back down to earth.

“Hey Mom,” I call, not yet daring to move. The last thing I want is to see my mom sucking face with Contractor Jim.

“Hey baby,” she yells back, clearly startled. Did she really think I'd be asleep already? What does she think I am, eighty years old?

I hear a series of sharp, staccato whispers, and Mom pokes her head into the living room. “You're still up?”

I nod, then raise my eyebrows.

“Back so soon?” I ask sweetly.

She sort of waves a hand. “Yeah, I got, you know, tired and all. I'm—I'm just going to say good night to Jim.”

“Uh-huh.” I roll my eyes. There's that guilty look on her face, the one that shows what she was really thinking about doing until she heard my voice. Maybe she thought it was late enough to bring Jim back here, that she could have snuck him upstairs and back down before breakfast, never letting on that she'd had an overnight guest.

I know this was her plan. She knows this was her plan. I would imagine that Jim, now heading out the door, knows
that was her plan too. But I don't ever want Mac to know. He doesn't need to know that sometimes I hear whispers in the hall, or see her door closed and the light on when I wake up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom. I don't want to deny my mom the right to go out, to have fun, to try and meet the man of her dreams. I guess I just don't want her to forget about us in the process.

“I'm going to bed, sweetie,” Mom says from the doorway. I notice her hair is slightly mussed from what must have been an overly enthusiastic farewell to Jim, and once again I feel like we've switched roles.

Then, almost immediately, we switch right back.

“Is Mac in bed?”

I shrug. “I think. He was playing the DS.”

She shakes her head. “I'm going to have to start imposing time limits on that thing.”

I don't say anything to that. Instead, I lean back against the throw pillows and watch as Jesse and Beca finally exchange a passionate kiss after the Bellas nail their performance. Mom glances at the TV for a minute, then sighs.

“Now why can't a man kiss me like that?”

I keep staring at the screen. “Because it's a movie, Mom.”

“Well, I've been chasing a kiss like that my whole life.” She sighs.

“That explains a lot,” I can't help but mutter. I'd never
admit what I'm really thinking—that the kind of chemistry in this movie is the kind I'd love to feel in real life too. With a happy ending. Maybe even with a “happily ever after.”

But I'd never, ever own up to it.

Trust me, the last thing I need is to start taking after my mom in the romance department.

Monday mornings are the worst, but since it's the first school day since we won the county track meet, I manage to drag myself out of bed with a little more enthusiasm than usual.

I yank a blue halter dress from my closet. Tommy loves it when I dress up. When we talked on the phone yesterday, I asked him about his gig at Skinners, but he seemed distracted. A few times, I was sure I could hear him typing in the background, which totally pissed me off. He knows there is nothing I hate more than being digitally two-timed.

Tommy and I met halfway through our junior year when he transferred from a private school in the city. I remember seeing him for the first time and feeling a strange queasiness in my stomach. For a second, I thought I was sick. Then I realized I was just smitten. Tommy had no shortage of girls falling at his feet and, being sort of a jock, I never
thought I'd have a chance over the eternally tanned, coiffed, and lip-glossed. But Tommy said he liked my devotion to my sport and my competitive edge. He came to watch me run at every meet that spring. By the time we lost the county championship that year, Tommy and I were inseparable. We spent that whole summer in complete bliss.

Well,
almost
complete bliss.

The first time Tommy and I argued was a month after we'd started dating and I saw him flirting with Kari Caprice at a pool party. Of course he said he was just chatting with her, but everyone knows Kari's been crushing on Tommy since he moved here. Then, a few months later, I was on vacation with my family when photos popped up on Facebook of Tommy with his arm around Miranda Hoffman. Once again, he denied that it was anything romantic.

“Baby, it was a picture—don't you ever put your arm around someone in a picture?”

Which I guess sort of made sense. Not that it made me feel any better. It seems like I'm always chasing after Tommy, demanding an explanation of why he was hanging all over someone who wasn't me.

So it's sort of become, like, a
challenge
to keep Tommy. As a serious competitor, I'm hoping this dress will be another win for me. I mean, he always says I have nothing to worry about, that I'm the only one for him. But still—showing a little skin shouldn't hurt my cause.

When I come downstairs for breakfast, my parents are standing at the island talking quietly over coffee.

“Honey, you look so nice!” Mom says. I attempt an awkward curtsy.

“I figured that I should greet my fans in my formal wear.”

Dad nods. “Absolutely. You must always dress the part so as not to disappoint your adoring public.”

“I know, right?”

I grab a banana from the fruit bowl and a yogurt from the fridge before pulling my backpack off the hook by the door.

“I'll see you guys after school.”

“No practice today?”

“Nope. We actually get a break this week.”

“Okay, sweetie. Have a good day,” they say in unison. I shake my head. My parents truly are
too
cute, like they've been carved out of something fluffy and pastel colored. Sometimes they are a little obnoxious in their high-school-sweetheart love. Being the by-product of my parents' relationship can be a burden too. It's a lot to live up to when you're the end result of the world's most adorable love story.

Tommy's late picking me up, which isn't a huge surprise. Since he started driving me to school, I think he's been on time a total of once—and that was the day I'd asked him to be early. We always make it to school, but my
mornings usually include a mad dash to first period and, often, an apologetic smile to Mr. Pearson when I duck in a few seconds late.

In the old days, I probably would've texted one of my girlfriends while I was waiting. I used to be the student government secretary, up until last spring, and my old best friend, Courtney, is still the president. But when I had to make a choice of what to commit to as a senior, time with track and Tommy outweighed school fund-raisers and committees. Since then, I just haven't felt close to Courtney, or any of my old friends, really. Track and Tommy suck up all of my time and energy now. Not to mention school. And my far-too-perfect parents.

I pull up Facebook on my phone and start scrolling through the status updates below my profile. There's a reminder to the track team about this morning's plan—we're all meeting in front of the school so we can walk in together. I glance down the street again, then at my watch. If Tommy is too much later, I'll miss our grand entrance completely.

BOOK: Just Like the Movies
10.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Pieces of the Heart by White, Karen
Fast and Easy by Betty Womack
The Unwanted Earl by Ruth J. Hartman
Maybe Someday by Colleen Hoover
Boy Proof by Castellucci, Cecil