Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Pride and Princesses The Love Drug chapter 5


Chapter 5

The Love Drug

     The first boy I saw on Monday, the second week of junior year, was Joel Goodman.  Joel is dangerous and wild and I have it on good authority that he dated both Teegan and Tory at the same time. He managed to hook up with them at Sunrise Mall one afternoon last summer. Joel is known as the virgin-converter and has a network of older and more devious buddies and a slightly unkempt air about him. There is no denying he is good-looking but he’s known to be a very bad person, not that I’m trying to moralize, it’s just that people talk. 

    ‘Whoa, he gave you such a nice smile,’ Mouche said as Joel walked past. We were on our way to the auditorium.

    ‘Please,’ I said, ‘he’s monosyllabic and barely grunts in class. Besides, I could never date a man who didn’t challenge me intellectually.’

    Peter Williamson, who was a math genius as well as a dancer, was a rare combination. He walked past us on the way to class.

   ‘Looking fine, girls,’ he said as he rushed to Algebra.

   ‘Why is it all the best boys bat for the other team?’ Mouche asked confidentially, although it was hardly a secret around here. 

    And it was good to know a boy with awesome fashion sense had noted we were looking our best.

    We’d planned new outfits for every day of the month. Our make-overs, along with our dating strategy, were sure to elevate us to a whole new level of social acceptance. We walked down the hallway with a unique resolve, like we owned the place. We were dressed very sharply in our new skirts and sweaters. Even our shoes had extra shine.

    After all, we’d had the previous weekend to prepare.

    ‘We should definitely start by wearing more appealing, feminine clothing,’ Mouche had suggested after we’d finished our Sunday night swim. We’d dragged some old dating and beauty guides back with us from the library that weekend and had raided our mothers’ vast quantities of them. They had titles like Sophia’s Pathway to Beauty and Ava Gardner’s Guide to Gorgeousness. There was also Marilyn Monroe’s Blonde Beauty Secrets and basically the stories of all the great movie stars with beauty guides from the 1960s and beyond. (For example, did you know you can make your own lip balm with beeswax, rosewater and natural food colouring?)

    I don’t want to sound shallow but we decided to start from the outside and work to within. Until midnight, we practiced hairstyles and make-up. We even dressed up Wednesday. We made her look like a smurf, then she fell asleep.  I don’t mean to sound like a Princess but we really felt we deserved some fun after our daddies had dipped into our so-called college funds and we would be working every spare minute during future holidays just to have enough money to last even a week in New York. We imagined a future time, when drenched in French perfume and looking like movie stars, we resided in our own luxury apartments overlooking Central Park. Man servants doted on us. Boyfriends wept at our non-exclusive schedules.

    Reality checked in along with dawn.

    We were wearing pink gloss and oatmeal face masks. The pasty oats were moistened with warm water and mixed with Vaseline so they didn’t drop off in clumps into the pool. Wrapped up in bathrobes, heavy duty moisturiser smoothed over our elbows and heels (our ‘rough edges’ according to Sophia’s Beauty @ p.29), our feet dangled in the water making us seem like ladies of luxury. 

    ‘I have a need for speed and a strange feeling I’m going to win this bet...’ Mouche said as she pulled her raisin feet out of the water. 

     I looked over at Mouche.

    ‘Don’t be so sure, Mouche, I’m totally going to give you a run for your money.’

     Mouche flicked some water at me.

     ‘That’s it,’ I said, ‘you’re going under,’ and instead of feet sloshing around a pond the pair of us were engulfed in a tidal wave, our clothes soaked through.

     ‘Hey, you pushed me first, I just pulled you under!’ Mouche said.

     We splashed about for a few minutes then stayed awake, texting plans, long after everyone thought we were sleeping.  

     The following day, Friday, was audition day.

     As we filed into the auditorium and looked up at the proscenium arch, Miss Tartt and Mr Sparks waved to us then pointed in the direction of our seats.

    ‘If I didn’t know better, I’d say we almost look like the Princesses,’ I mused aloud...

    ‘Except there are less of us and we have more taste.’ Mouche added. ‘I am so going to win this bet,’ she said, as if she’d solely invented the boy dating and rating competition in the first place.

     So you’re going to win, huh? Not so quickly Mouche, I’d thought laughingly. The truth is we were both looking sharp; our clothes were new, our hair extra shiny and our lip gloss sparkled. Boys were noticing us, especially Mark and Jet. We’d made a big effort as prescribed in our dating guides ad nauseum.

    It is such a shame we had to entice them with teen glam,’ Mouche conceded.

     ‘It might be time to put away the old games of cards and tea leaves. We should rely on common sense and instinct,’ I said.

     ‘Of course,’ Mouche agreed.      

    The entire student body endured the welcome speech. Due to scheduling difficulties, it was delivered by our Principal a week later than usual.

    Mr Sparks, our drama teacher, appeared slightly dazed by the length and monotony of the address and could be seen dozing off during the speech. If Mr Sparks had been talking to the entire student body, he’d at least have added a light show, ‘and maybe some disco...’ Freya sniggered in a sarcastic horse whisper.

     Teegan, the Barbie, was the next person we bumped into that day and she said, ‘hi,’ in a newly mature way. We said ‘hi’ in return because it doesn’t pay to let the enemy know exactly how the land lies. Mouche and I still resented her and her friends for taunting us when we were children and invading our new school to boot. She almost tripped over her own shoes running down the hallway barking, ‘Mark! Ma-ark!’ as if she owned him already.

     I hadn’t seen Teegan this anxious to get someone’s attention since she chased an assistant casting agent through our school car park to try to snare the lead in a teen angst afternoon special.

     ‘Now observe her undignified display,’ Mouche noted, ‘desperate to try to get Mark’s attention. Doesn’t she realize, ‘if she has to work that hard in the beginning she’ll have to work like an Olympic athlete towards the end?’

    ‘Who told you that?’

    ‘Oh, this great dating tome is called, ‘How to Treat ‘em Mean to Keep Them Keen...’

    ‘The only problem is ‘they’ have to be keen in the first place...’

    ‘So true.’

     Mark seemed pretty busy ignoring Teegan as he walked on by but when she finally fell at his feet and her notes scattered around him, instead of stepping over them like some sort of android, he stopped, picked Teegan up and gave her a sincere smile. What a gentleman.

   ‘Clearly, her decorative exterior has won him over...’

   ‘I just knew she’d be busy chasing Mark Knightly,’ Mouche said.

   ‘You are so psychic, I can almost hear her thoughts, ’ I replied.

   ‘True. You are so telepathic,’ Mouche added.

   ‘She’s just pretending to be nice. Why can’t he see through her?’ I mused.

   ‘Absolutely,’ Mouche replied. ‘If only they’d learnt what we have...men have zero radar for feminine wiles...’

   ‘I’ve noticed...’ I stated succinctly.

    ‘High school is an anthropological exercise at the best of times,’ Mouche replied.   

     The faces of Joel, Teegan, Mark, Peter and Ethan merged into the crowd as she spoke. Ethan was a pianist, the others have been introduced. Two Princesses and one listed male (Jet) were missing, but we knew they’d make an appearance sooner rather than later.

   With morning classes over, I was sitting alone at lunch with the unfilled diary, wearing my Sunrise High oversized sweatshirt and my black cut off ballet tights (the black pair layered over the pink). I was busy plotting a course of action for the remainder of the day and waiting for Mouche to get out of class. Sitting at a lunch table, sipping fizzy water through a bendy straw with the sun peeping in through the long bay windows of the room was conducive to dreaming. I kept imagining the boys on my list and what they’d look like given a style make-over and some re-programming, when Mouche arrived early.

     ‘I already have the order of dating in mind...but there are quite a lot of them and only one or two I can actually see potential chemistry with...’

     ‘Good,’ I said, ‘me too, that will make things less complicated.’

     ‘It says here men hate over-achievers...’ Mouche said as she carefully applied some lip balm from a tiny container.

    ‘Mmm...we’ll just have to re-educate the boys on that one.’

     ‘Here, I signed the contract in lipstick pencil. Want some?’

     ‘I don’t think that’s legal.’

     ‘I added my signature in pen just in case...’

     ‘Listen, I’ve been thinking,’ Mouche said. ‘Why don’t we just...help each other in the beginning, see what we come up with, pool our dating resources in the so called ‘dating guide’ then go for it for the last few dates. See how much useful treasure we can get from the  first ‘dates’ without them knowing they’re just being used for information and teach the boys a thing or two in the process.’

     As we ate, we made notes. A few boys from the opposite table actually looked up. Like I said, Mouche had re-vamped her look (and so had I) but hers was obviously working particularly well in relation to Jet Campbell. Jet has a fabulously inoffensive smile. He is about the same height as Mark and as fair as Mark is dark-haired and seemingly a hundred times more amiable, completely unaware of the annoying idiosyncrasies of those around him. Freya is messing up Jet’s hair and I can see him staring at her fake diamond necklace, sparkling in the lunch room light.

     ‘It’s sad that men are so attracted to artifice, but also very true according to the Young Ladies Guide and my own limited experience,’ I told Mouche.

    ‘Agreed,’ Mouche replied, highlighting a chapter titled, ‘How to please your potential husband,’ written in 1963.

    Have you ever felt like someone else has stolen your life? I was daydreaming after writing notes on Mark Knightly (tall, British-like, uptight) and I was imagining how divine it would be to star in a hipper, teen remake of Pride and Prejudice, we could just call it Pride...when Mouche interrupted my train of thought.

     ‘Oh, by the way...I have to tell you about...’

     ‘Planning time, don’t interrupt.’ I waved my paper in her face.

      Mouche ignored my request.

     ‘Jet Campbell left me this cute little post-it note on my locker and... he spoke to me again and...I think he might be the one.’

     ‘Are you joking? You can’t just settle for one. You’re starting to sound really unimaginative...like a Princess.’

     ‘I guess...I’m getting some lunch.’     

      Tapping my pen on the table, lost in thought, I’m inadvertently drawing attention to myself. As I look away, I notice the very emo/gothic looking Jack Adams who actually smiles back at me. I happen to know he is working on another teenage horror film script because he sent me a group email over summer, asking me to write comments about the stupid plot he’d written. I didn’t want to lie to him so I still haven’t replied. I look away even though he definitely has potential. I don’t want to encourage him just yet.    

   A few minutes later Mouche is on her way back to our table with today’s least offensive lunch fare – macaroni cheese and a peanut butter sandwich, fries and two sodas.

  ‘Okay, I also got us two apples...for our health.’

  ‘Thanks.’

   So we sat there, munching the apples, reading each other’s diagrammatic plans.

   ‘It says here,’ Mouche read, ‘... the surest way to mess up a date is to be too focused on getting a boy to like you, so take the focus off the boy and create other objectives...’

   This is what Mouche wrote:

 

Items to be gathered for our New York Adventure:

A pen

A lucky feather

A beret

Jeans - vintage (Mouche and I both wear the same size)

A black sweater (every girl should have one)

Coco perfume

The perfect shoes

A winter scarf

A golden bracelet (prefer eighteen carat)

A pair of Chanel sunglasses

A cashmere coat

 

     ‘I’m inspired...this will allow us to focus on our future journey. The list will give us ‘other objectives’ for the dates so we won’t be so focused on impressing the boys and thus end up embarrassing ourselves.’

   ‘Of course, and all these items will be useful in New York; they start with the most easily sourced and become a little more difficult to obtain...’

     ‘Quick, twelve o’clock,’ Mouche whispered before I could say anything more on the subject.

      I looked up instantly.

     ‘It’s Mark Knightly glancing at us from across the room. Don’t stare. You’re being very obvious,’ she whispered.

      We could overhear Freya talking at the opposite table...

     ‘So, how did you find out he was rich?’

     ‘Well, by the water fountain, on my way here...’Brooke added.

     By the water fountain,’ Teegan repeated. ‘That’s starting to sound very romantic.’

     ‘Exactly. Anyway, I heard him talking about a rich uncle in Scotland who’s planning to leave him a castle after he croaks...’

     I wish my uncle would leave me a castle. Then we’d never have to worry about our college funds.’ Mouche said grimly.

   ‘Never mind. We’re going to be self-made women, Mouche. By the way, are they serious? I’m not sure if castles in Scotland are worth that much but maybe we should move him to the number one spot on our list...just in case,’ I joked and considered removing Jet’s name (even though his family owned multiple companies – according to Teegan - and she googles everyone) with the stroke of a pen.

    Mouche instantly picked up her pink pen and drew another line straight through Jet Campbell and wrote Mark Knightly over it and added a bunch of love hearts. Then she scrawled: wildly rich - major possibilities.

   ‘That’s so twelve years old Mouche. I never knew you were such a gold digger.’

   Underneath Mark’s name she made a space for his advantages / disadvantages / physical attributes columns. We haven’t filled that out yet.

   ‘Objectively speaking, money is just a bonus and I could never actually marry a man for that, even if my college fund is depleted.’ Mouche said.

    ‘Who said anything about marrying? Perhaps we should wait until one of us has actually had a proper conversation with him first.’

     ‘You’re right. I doubt marriage is even legal at our age.’

     ‘Oh great, one o’clock, Miss Tartt...’ I whisper, hoping not to draw attention to myself.

    ‘Hello girls. Did you have a good summer?’

    ‘Yes Miss Tartt,’ I said. Mouche started to smile as I spoke.

    Miss Tartt is a failed Broadway actress with shortish sticky-out red hair and the figure of a former dancer who’s started to binge eat just a little too often. She doesn’t like me. Competition. She gives me looks that could kill roses. I don’t think it’s very professional to behave that way. Like, when we had try-outs for last year’s fashion show, she made me re-audition about ten times and waited right until the end to call my name as part of the ensemble. And only a few dance majors were available.

    ‘Hi Miss Tartt,’ one of the boys called out from across the room. Boys can be rude like that.

    Miss Tartt should have ignored him, as etiquette might dictate but, never one to shrink like a violet, Miss Tartt actually said, ‘hello boys,’ in a very theatrical voice.

    I’m so embarrassed for her. The guys certainly seemed to like it though. Obviously, she needs our future dating guide. We’ll add advice for older women.

    ‘Do you have an audition piece ready for try-outs, Mouche?’

    ‘I didn’t realize they were on today, Miss Tartt. I’m thinking of working behind the scenes.’

    ‘Oh. Well, they’re 3pm sharp. See you both there. Oh, and Mouche?’

    ‘Yes?’

    ‘I’d just love it if you could help design the costumes again.’

    ‘Oh, yeah, sure,’ Mouche said, trying not to sound too enthusiastic.

   After Miss Tartt left, Freya joined us and mocked Mouche.

  ‘Oh, that would be marvellous, Miss Tartt...ew...you two are such suck ups. That woman is totally skeezie – no wonder you’re both her favourite students in the whole world...she’s only nice because she wants you to do her dirty work...’

   ‘Ah, I believe that is your modus operandi, Freya,’ Mouche said.

   ‘You know, she’s just a teacher who really wants to be an actor and keeps casting herself in the lead role – Tory’s role,’ Freya replied.

    ‘I think that might be Phoebe’s role you’re confusing with Tory’s role, Freya,’ Mouche said.

    Mouche and Freya both had a point.

    Freya huffed off and said, ‘later girls,’ as if we were all friends.

    Suddenly Mouche leaned in and stepped lightly on my toe under the table.

   ‘Mark Knightly is walking back this way. See if you can convince him to talk...’

    We put our notes away in a pink folder.

    I was busy reading How to Please your Potential Husband. Mouche had opened up A Woman’s Guide to Bringing out the Best in Her ManPart 1; The Approach.

    ‘I’m so not ready for the approach. We’ve never even spoken,’ I added with hesitation.   

    ‘Well, I’m ready now – first cab off the rank and all that.’

    This could be like watching a train wreck in motion and I was nervous for Mouche. After all, she was just as inexperienced as me at proper dating and bound to make a fool of herself with an older, more mature man.

   

    Freeze the image:

    We were all alone in the cafeteria by then, since almost everyone else had left for study hall. Freya, Teegan, Brooke and Tory had drifted off. The chatter had quietened down and we hardly noticed Mark and Jet again, so immersed were we in reading our guidebooks and finalizing ‘The Plan.’

  

My dating guide was open on a page titled;

How to Attract Your Prey:

·           Always be neat

·           Wear a bright shade of lipstick

·           Use sweet smelling perfume

·           Always be interested in your man’s conversation

·           Make sure your hair is soft and shiny so he can rub his hands in it

·           Make sure you wear attractive, feminine clothing; skirts and dresses are uniquely female...

 

      I’m wondering if this old-fashioned advice could get much worse. I quickly close the guide.

    ‘It would be enough to make my mother retch,’ Mouche says, ‘she collects these guides as a joke.’

     Suddenly Mark is walking towards us.

    ‘Our ‘man-friendly’ looks are definitely getting us noticed....’

    ‘Or is that our cousin’s unfounded reputations?’ Mouche whispers. ‘Boys think the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree so we need to act remote.’

    ‘If he talks, you should talk,’ I replied.

    ‘Just ignore him,’ Mouche says, as Mark walks straight past us on the way to study hall.         

    Well, that conversation went smoothly,’ I said.

    ‘Give him time, Pheebs. Guys are analytical and need extra moments to process attraction...’

     I laughed as we walked to English but my expression changed to disappointed when I realized Mark and Jet had ditched the class.

     ‘As has been the case from time immemorial, while the boys ditched, the girls worked...the boys hunted...the girls gathered...’

      I was reading over my history notes in study hall after Mark and Jet had successfully managed to abscond. I saw them leave the car park via my study hall window, but nobody as yet recognized Jet’s car and from a distance they looked like teachers....albeit very rich ones.  

    ‘Second week of school and they’re already in trouble,’ Freya stated.

     ‘I just love bad boys,’ Teegan replied.

     After biology, which I’d slept through, history was cancelled but our classes were late so although I’d also tried to ditch along with Mouche, we got caught in the entrance hall (or exit hall in our case). The teachers are more than a little militant at the start of the semester, but luckily, they let us off with a warning. 

   

     ‘Sometimes I just can’t wait for school to be over so I can start my real life,’ Brooke mused like a child.

     Social skills are far more important than intelligence; it says so right here.’ I whispered to Mouche in the library.

    ‘I’m not so sure about that,’ our teacher said, eavesdropping.

     ‘We need to network!’ Mouche passed me a note attached to the diary. Page nine was open with all our gathered quotes from man-dating guides of yesteryear attached. The basis for the diary was gaining some real momentum.

    ‘Honestly, if school is just like a microcosm of the real world, it’s a wonder any of us survives it. At least in the real world you can hide from people you hate,’ I whispered just as Freya walked by, a little too close to my ballet slippers for comfort. Behind her, her twisted sisters trailed like ducks near a pond. They were caught leaving by the overly zealous teacher and had been herded up like cattle. Now they’re all chewing gum in retaliation; so ninth grade.

    Freya ‘accidentally’ kicked over my bag as she entered the room.

   ‘Oops, sorry,’ she said. Usually, she travels in a pack. It makes it a lot easier to disguise her evil intentions.

Pride and Princesses Swim Team chapter 6


Chapter 6

Swim team

    ‘Throughout history, women’s moral behavior has always been highly scrutinized...males have had social freedoms women were seemingly unaware of...these freedoms were kept from women not just because of biology but because men invented the patriarchal rules...’ I was glued to A History of Suffrage in the back seat of the bus as we embarked on our trip to the swimming centre.

    ‘What does patriarchy mean?’ I asked Mouche.

    She instantly looked it up.

    ‘It’s like...society is male-dominated, so women have to fit in with rules they didn’t create but then they help to maintain them...otherwise, I guess, society as we know it...would break down completely...’

    ‘Oh,’ I sort of understood. It was like Mark and Jet escaping while we had to stay and be bored in study hall. Maybe they were just smarter, or quicker or something.

    ‘And maybe they are just male...because according to your literature...being male might be enough to let you progress easily through life,’ Miss Tartt was way bitter and overheard us as we snapped the pages shut. She really wasn’t ready to hear this stuff. She needed to focus on prettying up and being nice to other women in particular. Then people would take her seriously and she could study the history of feminism but still husband hunt.

    ‘It’s good to know the history of our sexual struggle,’ Mouche said, ‘but we so don’t want to become like her...’ Miss Tartt wandered off the bus after taking the roll. I was so glad she wasn’t going to be coming along to pass judgement on my freestyle.

    I’d also been relieved to wave Freya and Brooke goodbye at the bus stop but dismayed to learn that Mouche and I are two of only six girls on the swim team. Teegan and Tory are going with us because they are quite athletic and always compete with Mouche and me in everything. Brooke and Freya are waving us off, standing on the pavement. Brooke is wearing her latest crucifix because she has recently found religion and is working on her ‘do unto others’ motto. Proof of this is the magnanimous smile colouring her expression. She’s also considering the benefit of ‘dressing more modestly’, but worried she may not fit in with her junior sorority sisters.

    Meanwhile, Teegan, Freya, and Tory have decided to dress entirely inappropriately for the morning. It’s uncharacteristically cold and none of them have sweaters.  Teegan occasionally pretends to be my friend, so I mock smile and try to be ‘friendly’ in return. Freya, meanwhile, is trying hard to impress Mark who has barely looked at her. So sad. As Mrs Jones might have said, ‘those girls need to play hard to get.’

     Still, as I sat on the back seat of the bus watching the Princesses through the window, waving and pretending to be supportive of me, as they chat to each other, I have to admit I’m not sure even I have the restraint to act indifferently towards someone I like. I hold that thought as Teegan and Tory reach their seats.

    Everyone is seated, the bus takes off and lurches forward as I’m leaning over my tote bag searching for my iPOD. Gravity pushes me into the back of the seat in front.

     I steady myself. Mouche, seated next to me, smiles and whispers, ‘this should be fun, any excuse for extra-curricular activities with the boys and Princesses can barely contain their enthusiasm.’

     I nod in knowing agreement and flick through my playlist. Mouche is busy updating our future blog – the secret one of course, the one we carry in diary form. This one is for our eyes only. Mouche will update the official Sunrise News Blog after the Fall Fling. We’ve decided to go with a traditional headline ‘Possible Prom Themes’ then upload an article titled: Prom Themes Throughout History with the by-line -   vapid possibilities from previous junior years - Underwater World, Chicago 1930, Movie Star Couples (the usual). No sense running with the lead story of two girls dating themselves into history until it’s ready.

    Mouche was going to quit the swim team to concentrate on her academic classes but I persuaded her to come with me. ‘It is a known fact that ladies need strenuous exercise just as much as men...’ I told Mouche using received pronunciation.

   Which guide did you get that from?’

    ‘I don’t know, I think I heard the sentiments in Little Women.’

    ‘Oh, I love that story.’

    ‘Me too.’

    There aren’t very many people who swim and as luck would have it, Mark and Jet and Alex and Tom are riding the bus as well.

     ‘I’ve often noted that swimming tends to do beautiful things to shoulders. You can see the results in the broad arm muscles of the boy sitting in front of me, his face slightly obscured by the headrest of the seat,’ I whispered to Mouche.

     Of course, I’m describing Mark.

     When he turns his head Mouche stifles a giggle as I unwrap some gum, offer her some and innocently observe the world outside the bus windows. 

      ‘He’s very uptight,’ Mouche scrawled on the side of her note page, shoving it in front of me.

       ‘He still hasn’t spoken to me but earlier today, he offered to help me lift my bag when the locker door was stuck,’ I said softly. 

      ‘Chivalry is so not over yet,’ Mouche added, ‘Oh, fabulous, Tom Allen just glanced my way. Guess what?  Teegan and Tory have decided to flirt with all the boys on our behalf. Don’t they realize none of us are ready for the approach since we’ve barely had time to read the copious quantities of old-fashioned dating literature we found in the closets of our slummy mommies?’ 

     ‘I loved it when you used to jokingly answer the telephone with those immortal words, Hello this is Mrs Mouche’s brothel…’

      ‘I was only twelve…’

      ‘Our mothers weren’t quite as fond of the introduction as I recall...’

     The bus had stopped at a red light by this time. Suddenly Teegan crawled out of her seat and made her way to the back of the vehicle.

    ‘Hi Pheebs,’ Teegan said as if she was my best friend.

     I smiled tepidly. Mouche had her ears blocked with music.

    ‘Hi Mark,’ Teegan continued. ‘I can’t wait for you to pick us up Saturday tonight.’   

     Mark looked over at Jet as if Teegan had gone nuts, and then gave her a reluctant smile. Both Teegan and Tory smiled back and I was embarrassed for everyone and pretended to be writing, but the road ahead was bumpy so after a few minutes I stopped.

    ‘I forgot to tell you, Freya and Brooke are Jet’s neighbours. They’ve been ‘noticing’ him for years and Freya even spread a vicious rumor that she has webcam images of Jet doing it with an ex!’ I whispered.

     ‘So possibly illegal, to spread publicity unasked, but Brooke doesn’t care. She thinks she’s above the law. No doubt the footage is inspired because Jet is very sporty and buff. I’m not sure if Teegan and Tory realize just how popular Jet could become,’ Mouche added with a smile.

   ‘He’s good natured, too,’ I whispered after Jet had helped Mouche with her jacket and bags. ‘It seems like nothing is a trouble to him.’

    ‘Brooke and Freya act like eager fans when Jet is around. Although they are as obsessed with Mark as everyone else, he has blatantly ignored them and even the Princesses get a little hurt when boys like him look down on girls like them.’ Mouche said.

    ‘They treat Jet with the reverence of a fan base and look up to him. Brooke was once overheard in the cafeteria saying, ‘of course we’re lucky to be his neighbours but we could be totally torn apart if it came to fighting over Jet.’

    Thankfully, Mark and Jet had their earplugs safely in their ears by this point.

    ‘Girls like the Princesses learn to be nice to boys at a young age. Perhaps their mothers teach them,’ Mouche whispered, ‘Brooke and Freya have loads of money and their walk-in closets are twice the size of Teegan’s and Tory’s who make up for this slight disadvantage with extra stylish ensembles.’

    The two other Princesses had waved us goodbye from the pavement wearing today’s furry back pack slung over their shoulders. They were wearing their matching boots and jeans. Even Mark looked twice. I made a note of this in our diary under the heading: what to wear / dressing to impress.

     Now, you might think we’re being uncharitable towards the Princesses since it’s obvious they are trying to make an effort but you don’t share the history. Perhaps it’s time I shared a bit of it as we head to the swim centre about twenty minutes from school.    

     Once, when we were in first grade at the Los Angeles School for Young Ladies, Teegan tried to make us pick her lunch up off the floor. She just dropped her grilled cheese and chilli fries all over our shoes. Splat. Then her twin sister, Tory, laughed and said, ‘pick it up and eat it. All of it.’

     Then, it was our turn to laugh.

    ‘As if,’ Mouche said. Instead, we kicked those fries right back at her and ran in the opposite direction.

    These war-like incidents happened between us all the way through grade-school.

     In the beginning, we might have been friends. As we got older, we all aced fashion and theatre design but then Teegan hired a designer to do the costumes for our lame sixth grade musical and made sure Mouche and I wore the most hideous ones. Freya and Mouche had a fight over whose mommy was prettier and everyone started being catty with each other after that.

     As girls, we weren’t really taught to support each other, just to compete with each other, which is so wrong if you ask me. Anyway, the Princesses were much better at ganging up than Mouche and I. Once they all conspired to get us into trouble for something we didn’t do (like writing horrible notes about our super-strict history teacher), we were defenceless against their conspiracies. For a start, it was always their word against ours. In the end, there were more of them; and sisters usually side with each other. Go figure. At least I had Mouche. And she had me.         

    The bus slowed and pulled over. Mouche, who doesn’t get car sick, is busy studying boyzamples. She hastily shuts down the images on her cell. We bunch up our belongings and grab our bags. This time, Mark hands me mine and our fingers touch. It’s kind of uncomfortable but, in a good way. Mouche sees my blush and starts to giggle as we head to the pool.

     ‘Alright everyone, you have three minutes in the changing rooms. Then I want you all out here and ready to go by 9.30am.’

    Mr Frames was raising his voice. He has brown, curly hair, glasses and a nice smile. Although he teaches music, he doubles as a swim coach and is one of the best teachers at Sunrise.

     Teegan was adjusting her goggles and talking to me in the bleachers as the boys lined up for the one hundred metres.

     ‘Take a look at Mark. He really grew up in England.’

      I was stuffing my hair into the required bathing cap and trying to find my goggles as Mouche rolled her eyes and began the search for her missing ear plug.

      We could hear Tory rating all the boys as they stood on the blocks: ‘nine, eight, six, eight and a half, three, ten, ten.’

      The last two were Jet and Mark. The one who got three, well, he wasn’t exactly athletic. Teegan and Freya started smirking when Mark adjusted himself.         

     Mouche and I nearly walked into Mark and Jet as we hurried back to the bus a few hours later, but Mark just said, ‘excuse me,’ quite dismissively and walked past me without saying anything else. Jet paused and smiled at Mouche and I noticed she smiled back, but now Jet seemed hesitant to actually say anything. Boys are complicated.

    That evening, after my mom and I finished our late night shopping at the market on Main Street, Mouche met me and together we tried on dresses for the dance. Mouche whispered into a changing room mirror as we swapped make-up, ‘I’ve been reading loads of classic dating guides, such as Deal With It - He Doesn’t  Want to Date You and The Unspoken Laws of Romance but I think we’re embracing unknown territory, our own Dating Adventure for Teenage Girls.’

    ‘Because we’re such experts...’ I added sarcastically.

    ‘True,’ Mouche replied, ‘but I’m sure we can teach while we learn – look at Mr Frames.’

     Mr Frames was our student teacher last year and we leaned into the store window to watch him and his new fiancĂ©e walking across the road hand in hand. We’d conspired to let Mr Frames know how much our other student teacher, Miss Love, liked him. Now they’re both fully registered teachers and we’ve received invites to their wedding this winter. We are obviously very good matchmakers for other people – why not each other? Why not all the girls in school? The whole town?  The universe even?

    ‘But what is the point of all of this, when, what we really need, is some money for our college funds?’ Mouche said. ‘You’re starting to take this whole Emma fixation a little too far. Forget about school plays and dating new boys, I’m starting to worry I may not get my college scholarship.’

    ‘Of course you will Mouche. You’re one of the smartest girls I know. Besides, money isn’t everything...’

    ‘I just have this feeling,’ Mouche said.

    ‘What?’

    ‘That we’re going to be seriously sidetracked...’

    ‘Well, maybe that’s a good thing, because sometimes the real world lacks excitement...’

    ‘Really Pheebs, you are my best friend, but I’m not so sure...’

    I smiled and pulled out the copy of Wuthering Heights that I was being forced to re-read and review for an English assignment. I’d just finished skimming Emma, another Austen story, but Mouche had preferred the movie version. ‘Life’s kind of like that now,’ she had said one afternoon when we watched it, ‘except faster and with more sex and swearing.’

    We sat in the Sunrise cafe and viewed the world going past our window booth, each of us adding to the Boy Rating Diary as we waited for our food.

     Joel Goodman worked in the diner. He was kind of hot but monosyllabic. I should know. I tutored him in English once a month and in return he helped to fulfil my credit quota. He’d been brought up speaking English as a second language and although he spoke almost without an accent, he sometimes wrote the words around the wrong way.

   ‘Hey,’ he said as he took our orders wearing all black and his usual wife-beater shirt, ‘the usual?’

   ‘Yes please,’ said Mouche, who was unfailingly polite in public. Joel smiled at her then me, in turn. I looked away, because Joel was a huge flirt.

   ‘You know how long we’ll need to work Saturdays just to get enough money for even a year in New York?’ Mouche asked.

    ‘Do not fear...I have a feeling everything will come together in the end. It always does and money worries are no reason to change our plans...’

      We expanded our ideas on napkins after eating the special burger deal, watching the Sunrise world go by. Most of the people we saw through the window we knew or had met at least once. That was one of the things I liked about Sunrise, though Mouche and I mostly wanted to get out. Maybe she wanted out even more than I did.

    Later that evening we continued to plot.

    Mouche dropped her purchases next door at her house, then came over. 

    I was sitting on the porch eating ice-cream having my musical theatre star fantasy and waiting for my agent to call.

     Oh, that’s something else I haven’t told you much about yet. I’ve been acting, or rather auditioning professionally, part-time, since I turned twelve. I try not to spread this about as I was teased mercilessly at HSYL. I got to do a commercial a few years ago for breakfast cereal but since then the money has kind of dried up. It’s so weird how I can be outgoing when I’m pretending to be someone else, although lately, I’m starting to fear stage-fright. I have to really psyche myself up to perform. But I’ll get over that. All the best actresses do.

    My agent, Thom, says I need to wait until I’ve made the transition from ‘child to woman,’ which would be a bit creepy if Thom were even vaguely interested in females for anything apart from ‘art or fashion.’ Although Mouche liked dance and drama, she never seriously considered the artistic world in her career prospects.

     But when I looked up that evening, I suddenly noticed a possible usurper for my junior year glory. Mouche was framed by the moonlight and actually looked much more like a star in repose than I did.

     Mouche was so pretty. I believe Mrs Jones may have referred to her as ‘breathtaking.’

     Have you ever felt like someone else has stolen your life? Well, Mouche is so perfect and so perfectly nice that you’d almost give her your life if she asked, but then you’d totally regret it.

    The thing was, she could steal your life or the hottest guy in school, if she was so inclined. She was much prettier, if you ask me, than even the Princesses; although I’m fairly sure she never thought it. Mouche had Alice in Wonderland hair and cool jeans and perfect boots and was wearing bright pink, frosty lipstick.

     I forgot about the slight pang of envy I felt as we were trying on our Fall Fling dresses again and deciding what shoes and accessories to take. As we stood in front of the full length bedroom mirror, I knew it was wrong to be jealous or envious of your best friend forever, but it didn’t feel wrong at the time.