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Authors: Julia DeVillers

Trading Faces (8 page)

BOOK: Trading Faces
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Uh-oh. This was it. I had to stand up and they were going to play some joke on me or something. What was
it? Were they going to say,
Did you really think you could sit here?
and knock my chair over or something? I slowly stood up and accepted my fate.

“Turn around,” Sydney said.

Oh, I bet I had a
KICK ME
sign on my back. Everyone was going to laugh at me.

“See?” Sydney said. “I told you.”

“OMG, it's by TC Couture!” a girl with long black hair said. “Look at the label!”

Ohhh
. They were talking about my Summer Slave skirt!

“How did you get that skirt, Payton?” someone asked.

Well. I cleaned out two gross shower stalls for it . . .

“Um—” I said.

“I want that skirt sooo bad.” A girl with brown hair sighed. “They're not even in stores yet. How did you get it?”

Whoa, I didn't know this skirt wasn't even being
sold
yet.

“Oh”—I waved my hand, like it was nothing—“you know.”

“Let me guess,” a girl said. “Your cousin is a famous supermodel and she let you borrow it.”

“Your dad is TC Couture's agent,” someone else guessed. “Or wait. Your dad
is
TC!”

“Ohmigosh, is your dad TC?!” someone else squealed.

“No!” I blurted out. “He's not!”

“Maybe it's fake,” the blonde with wavy hair said. “Is it fake?”

“No, it's real,” Sydney said. “You can tell. And show them your shoes, Payton.”

I held up a foot.

“So cute,” someone else said. “What size are you?”

“Six,” I told her.

“Ooh, me too!” the blonde said. “Well I'm a seven, but I could squeeze. Maybe I can borrow them? I have these pants that would be perfect for them!”

“Cashmere, leave the poor girl's closet alone,” Sydney said. She looked at me. “That's Cashmere. She's a big clothes mooch.”

The girl named Cashmere shrank back in her seat.

“And that's Quinn with the brown hair,” Sydney said. “And Priya, and everyone else.”

“Your shirt is so cute. I have the same one in green,” said Quinn.

“Thanks.” I smiled at her.

“We'll have to wear them on the same day,” the girl said. “And Syd has a blue one!”

“Don't wear yours on Friday,” Sydney said. “I have my outfit planned already. Payton, you can sit down. Isn't Payton's outfit so hot?”

Everyone complimented my outfit. I smiled and then sat back as they started talking about who was in whose classes.

And my moment was over. I tried to follow the conversation, but I didn't know anyone they were talking about. I just ate my lunch and pretended to know what was going on.

“You guys, poor Payton has no clue what we're talking about,” Quinn said, smiling at me. “Let's clue her in.”

“Okay, so Justin broke up with Aquilah,” Cashmere said. “Which means he's free. So we're deciding if Sydney should go out with him.”

“Everyone knows Justin has been in love with Sydney forever,” someone said. “Everyone except Aquilah, anyway.”

“Yes,” Sydney said. “But I haven't decided yet. Cameron's looking hot too. I so can't decide. Or maybe Noah.”

Must be nice to be able to choose
. I wondered if everyone
had a boyfriend. I hadn't had one yet. In my old school there weren't any boys.

“Quinn's going out with Josh,” Sydney said, as if she read my mind. “And Cashmere has a boyfriend from summer camp. Although we don't have proof he really exists.”

“He just lives far away and isn't allowed to e-mail me,” Cashmere protested. “He, um, has very strict parents. So Payton, what about you?”

I momentarily thought about making up a boyfriend too. Was that the right thing to say?

“Are you single right now?” Sydney asked.

“Yeah,” I admitted.

“That's cool. Priya doesn't have a boyfriend, either,” Sydney said.

Whew.

“But she doesn't want one. Do you?” Sydney asked.

I nodded. I did want a boyfriend. I'd just never really figured out how to get one.

“Ooh! We'll have to find Payton the perfect boy,” Sydney said. “Just stay away from Cameron, Mac, Noah, and Justin until I decide. Oh, and Griffin, too.”

“Okay,” I said. This would be the year I'd get a boyfriend, I decided. The perfect boy. But not one of Sydney's boys.

“Let me see your schedule,” Quinn said. I dug mine out and gave it to her. “Ooh, you're in my art class. Come sit next to me!”

“You're in my social studies class,” Priya said, looking at my schedule and passing it on.

“You have last-period gym like Sydney,” Cashmere said. “You guys are so lucky.”

“Last-period gym is key,” Sydney said. “You don't have to feel all sweaty and gross all day.”

I nodded.

“So do you play soccer?” Sydney asked me.

“Um, no,” I said.

“Oh, good, because Priya does, and she can never go anywhere with us until the season's over. It's a pain,” Sydney said. “Do you want to go to the mall with us this weekend?”

“Me?” She was definitely looking at me. “Sure!”

“Cool,” Sydney said. “Ask your parents if you can go. My older sister can drive us. We'll figure it out at lunch tomorrow.”

Lunch tomorrow! Mall shopping with Sydney and her people! A search for my perfect boyfriend! Middle school was working!

Eight

DINNER

“Great!” Payton said at exactly the same time I said, “Okay.”

We were answering Dad's question: “How was your first day at school?”

Dad, Mom, Payton, and I were at a Chinese restaurant to celebrate the first day of school. It was our annual back-to-school tradition. When I was five, our first day after kindergarten, I had glanced at the menu. And memorized it. When I told the server I wanted #72 with a side of #6, my parents realized I had a near-photographic memory. Normally, I love Chinese food, but I didn't feel much like eating tonight, especially after listening to Payton.

“Today was the best day,” she was saying. “I sat with this girl Sydney and some other people at lunch and the rest of the day they showed me around and saved the best seats for me in class.”

“You got good seats?” I groaned. Most of my classes had been so far away from each other that by the time I got to class I was stuck at a desk in a totally undesirable location. Like next to the heater, which clanked so I couldn't hear the Social Studies teacher. And next to some kid who snored and drooled in Math.

Adding annoyance to injury, in four—FOUR!—classes I was stuck watching Jazmine James in the front row, where I wanted to be. Where I deserved to be.

“You won't believe this,” I told Mom and Dad. “I got to Math early by getting a pass out of Choir—”

Payton giggled.

“What?” I said, annoyed to be interrupted.

“YOU are in Choir?” she asked.

“I know, I know, I don't sing,” I said.

“You CAN'T sing,” Payton said.

“That's not the point,” I said. “So I got to my Math classroom and it was empty. I went to my seat, front row center, and there was this little piece of paper on it. It said ‘Reserved for Jazmine James.' ”

I'd already told them about Jazmine James. And not only was her seat reserved, but the seats on either side of her had jackets holding spots for Jazmine's two cohorts, Hector Jordan and Tess Hamilton.

“This girl can reserve her seat?” my dad asked. “That doesn't seem fair.”

“Jazmine James doesn't know the meaning of fair! She's evil,” I said.

“Emma!” Mom was shocked. “That's a terrible thing to say. I know you had a bit of a difficult time today, but I'm sure everything will work itself out.”

“Yea, Emma,” said my sister loyally. “Once the smart clubs and after-school competitions start up, you'll find your people.”

“Thanks, Payton,” I said. “You're probably right.”

That time couldn't come soon enough for me.

“I remember Mrs. James from one of Emma's events,” my dad said, chewing on a spare rib. “Mr. James was very pleasant. We talked a bit about Jamaica, where he and his wife were raised. But Mrs. James wasn't particularly friendly, as I recall.”

“Oh, Tom,” my mother said. “She was probably just quiet. Not everyone introduces themselves to all the competition parents like you, dear.”

That was true. Dad was always the life of the parent party at my competitions. He was friendly and talked to everyone. He always won salesperson of the month awards at the medical supply company where he worked.

Mom wrote articles for women's magazines. She had an office at home and wasn't as outgoing as Dad. Obviously I was more like Mom, personality-wise. Payton was like Dad. Our looks, however, were a combination of both. We were blond like Mom and had greenish-blue eyes like Dad.

“More tea?” A server came up to the table. She paused and said, “Twins?”

Dad said, “Yes, identical!” and started telling her how Emma was older, but Payton was taller.

“Dad!” I interrupted. Like the server really cared about our twin-ness?

“Do you twins like to pretend you're the other one and trick people?” the server asked.

Apparently, she cared.

“No!” Payton and I both said.

“They're very honest girls,” my mother told her.

The server poured the tea and left.

“Girls, your father and I have to step out to the car for something,” Mom said. “We'll be right back.”

I wondered what they were doing. Well, they'd be back soon enough. I blew on my tea to cool it down.

“You know,” Payton said, pouring sugar into her tea cup, “it was weird not hearing those twin questions all day. I mean, I thought we'd be in the same classes and have to explain ourselves over and over.”

“Uh-huh,” I agreed. It always happened when we went somewhere new, like camp. Today had been weird. But not good weird. I wouldn't have minded those questions, because it would have meant I actually got to see my sister in school. Not only was she not in my classes, but we kept missing each other at the lockers.

“It was good weird,” Payton said.

Wait. Payton thought it was
good
weird?

“I felt like I could be, you know, just be myself for a change,” Payton continued. “Not just one of the twins.”

“Be yourself?” I snorted. “Sounds to me like you want to be Sydney's identical twin.”

All Payton had talked about since school ended was Sydney this and Sydney that. It was like camp all over again; just substitute the name “Sydney” for “Ashlynn.” Hopefully Payton wouldn't end up doing Sydney's laundry.

“I do NOT!” Payton said. “You're just jealous.”

“Jealous?” I asked her. “Jealous of what?”

“Me and my new friends,” Payton said.

“Please,” I said. “Like I'd want to be one of those gossipy clothes clones.”

“You don't even know who they are,” Payton protested.

Well. Actually, I did know who they were. I'd heard people calling “Sydney!” enough in the halls to see who she was. Sydney was really pretty and was surrounded by other pretty people, some of whom I assumed were Payton's “new friends.”

“I know who they are,” I said. “They're people who believe they should be middle-school royalty. Falsely, I might add.”

“What's that supposed to mean?” Payton challenged.

“Middle-school royalty should be those who excel in academics, not social life,” I said. “Meaning people with superior IQs and grades.”

“You mean like Jazmine James?” Payton shot back.

We both glared at each other, but just then Mom and Dad returned to the table.

“We're back!” Dad announced, handing us each an identical black box. “And we bring presents in honor of
my wonderful twins' first day of middle school.”

“Oooh! Presents!” Payton squealed.

I smiled too. Our conversation could wait. As much as I like a good debate, I also like a good present!

“Oh!” I said, pulling out a wide wristcuff. It was made of colored Lucite, with the letter
E
cut out of it.

“We had them specially personalized.” Dad smiled.

“I love it!” Payton was already putting her
P
cuff around her wrist.

“We match!” I said happily. Matching bracelets would show off our twin bond, even while we were separated at school.

“Now people can tell us apart!” Payton said at the same time.

Okay. That too, I guess.

“They're so pretty,” I said. “Thanks, Dad!” We both gave Dad a hug.

“My present next,” Mom said, smiling. And she handed us each . . .

BOOK: Trading Faces
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