Playing With the Boys

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Playing With the Boys Page 2

by Nicole Leigh Shepherd


  Lucy left her room and stepped out onto the deck off of the living room as the sun was beginning to set. She walked down a long set of wooden stairs that wound down to the beach below. It was weird to think that now she was living on the ocean. The vast, endless ocean. Her days of being a big fish in small pond were definitely over.

  She glanced down at her watch and saw it was almost six-thirty. She did the math. That meant nine-thirty in Ohio. She supposed Annie would go to bed early since school started tomorrow, so she figured she better call now or risk not getting to talk tonight. Good thing she had unlimited nights and weekends. Thank you, AT&T!

  Lucy kicked off her flip-flops, and her feet sank into the sand. About twenty feet out from the deck, she saw a fire pit with a few logs around it. The sight of something this cool should have made her happy, but instead, her heart sank. Annie would have loved this place. She could just hear her voice now.

  “No freaking way!” she’d have squealed. “You actually live here?” Lucy couldn’t really believe it herself. She grabbed her Razr phone out of her pocket and opened it. She’d begged for a Razr last Christmas, after she’d “accidentally” dropped her old phone—which, FYI, didn’t text—in the toilet.

  She was about to hit 2 on her speed dial—Annie’s cell number—when something caught her eye. Something bobbing up and down in the water.

  Lucy squinted and looked out to the horizon. She made out a surfer, paddling strongly as a huge wave approached. Right as the water swelled underneath, the surfer popped up perfectly, dropping down the face of the wave, then cutting back and forth inside of it. Lucy watched, awed. Growing up in Ohio, the closest she’d ever been to actual surfing was the third row at the local AMC, watching Blue Crush. As the surfer cut toward the beach, Lucy realized that she wasn’t just watching a surfer—she was watching a girl.

  two

  Once on the sand, the girl undid the Velcro strap around her ankle and shook out her dark, slicked-back hair, revealing it to be layered and shoulder-length. She wore small board shorts and a bikini top, and a dark tan emphasized her toned body. Her eyes were dark and soulful, and her face, like Lucy’s, was covered in freckles. She noticed Lucy staring.

  “Yeah?” the girl asked, expectantly. “Did you want something?”

  Lucy instantly blushed. “Oh, nothing . . .” she stammered. “That was just . . . really, really cool.”

  Lucy cringed, instantly hated the sound of her own voice. Really, really cool? Lame. Could it have been more obvious that she wasn’t from California?

  The girl barely smiled. “Thanks.”

  “I’m Lucy,” Lucy quickly said. “I just kind of moved here, like, five minutes ago.”

  The girl gave Lucy the once-over. “Yeah, you don’t look like you’re from here.” Lucy’s gaze tipped down as she, too, scanned her outfit. Madras shorts with cute slip-on gold flats had been semi-stylish back in Ohio, but Lucy wasn’t exactly a cutting-edge fashionista, often relying on Annie and sometimes even Annie’s older sister, Carrie, for guidance.

  The girl sensed Lucy’s self-consciousness.“Don’t worry,” she said, “Looking like you don’t belong here? That’s a good thing.”

  Lucy grinned, suddenly relieved. She liked this girl.

  “I’m Charlie,” the girl said quickly, as if she wasn’t particularly interested in her own name.

  “Charlie,” Lucy repeated. “I’ve never heard that for a girl. That’s really, really . . . cool.”

  Ugh! She’d said it again. She made a mental note: No more “really.” No more “cool.”

  Charlie sighed. “Not if your last name’s Brown.”

  Lucy had to ask. “Well, what’s your last name?”

  Charlie raised an eyebrow. It became obvious to Lucy that Charlie’s last name was Brown.

  “I’m sorry. . . .” Lucy cringed, not knowing what to say. Clearly, she’d hit on a sore subject. God, Charlie Brown? What parent would do that?

  Charlie shrugged and grabbed her board. “Whatever. I gotta go.”

  Lucy thought fast. She couldn’t just let this girl go without at least trying to make a new friend.

  She tentatively called after her. “Um . . . maybe I’ll see you around . . . or something. Meeting you was really, really . . .” She trailed off.

  “Cool?” Charlie asked, finishing her thought as she strapped her surfboard to her bike.

  Lucy shrugged, embarrassed. “Yeah, I mean . . . you know.”

  Charlie gave her a funny look. “Not really.”

  She jumped on her bike without a word and took off. And as quickly as Charlie appeared, she was gone, leaving Lucy discouraged . . . and feeling anything but cool.

  The following Monday, Lucy stood frozen at the doors of her new high school. Not literally, of course, because even at seven-thirty in the morning, it was “seventy and sunny, with the marine layer expected to clear by noon.” At least, that was what the perky weathergirl, who looked as though she belonged on Days of Our Lives rather than on the morning news, had chirped for the fifth consecutive day in a row—which was now exactly how many days Lucy had lived in Malibu.

  She looked down at her outfit—short, pin-striped shorts, with a flowy empire-waist tank top. It had seemed cute when she picked it out at the Urban Outfitters on the Third Street Promenade, but now it seemed as though too much of her arms and legs were exposed. Having grown four inches in the last two years, from 5’2‘ to 5’6‘, she often felt like a puppy whose feet were too big for its body.

  “Knees and knuckles,” her dad jokingly called her.

  Now she shook her hair in front of her face, wanting to disappear. It was all supposed to be so different. She should have been back in Toledo, starting her sophomore year at Hillcrest with all her friends—instead, she stood outside a foreign, sprawling campus that sat on a hillside overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Who cared if it was beautiful? She didn’t want beautiful. She wanted home. She wanted her friends ... or if not her friends, any friends.

  The bell rang. Kids hurried past her, some bumping into her as if she were invisible. Everything blurred together. She could hear a girl’s voice, talking to a friend as she texted. . . .

  “And then he was all whatever,” she said breathlessly. “And then I was all what-EVER! Can you believe that? I mean, whatever.”

  Lucy had no idea what she was even saying. Maybe she shouldn’t have signed up for Spanish. “Valley Girl” could have been its own second language.

  But no matter; she was sure she’d have plenty of time to contemplate her foreign-language choice when she was sitting alone at lunch in her exclusive school, picking at her fish sticks or fiesta salad or whatever disgusting food they served.

  She sighed, glancing down at her schedule, knowing she had no choice but to walk in the double doors and get this over with. It was now or never. She took a deep breath.

  “Okay, Beachwood Academy,” she said to herself.“Here I come.” She headed inside.

  Starting with gym class didn’t help. She hadn’t known to bring clothes to “dress out” (since she didn’t even know what “dressing out” meant), so the gym teacher, Miss Sullivan, had given her an oversized shirt and a pair of boy’s shorts from last year’s lost and found to change into. Ew. Loaners. Lucy hadn’t wanted to put them on, but she’d had no choice.

  Now, as she sat on the hard wooden bleachers, virtually swimming in an XXL, she couldn’t have felt more conspicuous. The other girls were wearing little fitted tank tops with built-in bras, and Juicy Couture pants with cute phrases written on the butt, like ANGEL and SEXY. Lucy’s shirt read 2003 TURKEY TROT. Huh? It might as well have said BIG GIGANTIC LOSER. She folded her arms across her chest, hoping to obscure the giant orange-and-yellow turkey on her front.

  The bleachers rattled beneath her as a weird-looking emo girl stomped onto them and plopped down next to Lucy. Lucy’s eyes darted toward the girl. Forget dressing out. This girl wore tight black jeans, horn-rimmed glasses and a too-small button-down shirt. She
had giant earplugs in her earlobes, black nail polish, and, apparently, as she scooted closer to Lucy, no regard for personal space. There were endless rows of bleachers, and this girl was practically sitting in her lap. Lucy gave a half-smile and tried to subtly scoot closer toward the boy next to her. He had a mess of dark curly ringlets that had practically achieved Afro-like status.

  As Miss Sullivan went over the rules of floor hockey, Lucy turned to the boy.

  “Hi,” she said shyly. The boy looked up from under his semi-curly, semi-Afro hair and gave Lucy a polite smile. He seemed to personify “dorky cool.”

  Miss Sullivan continued. “Now, when you hold your stick, you need to hold it tight....” This elicited giggles from everyone on the bleachers. What was it about kids in high school that made them interpret everything as sexual?

  “Sorry,” Lucy said softly to the boy. “It’s just, this girl is, um . . . kind of . . . in my lap. . . .”

  The boy looked around Lucy to the emo girl, who was glaring at them both.

  “Right.” The boy nodded as he scooted further down to make more room for Lucy.

  She smiled, grateful. “Thanks.” She debated whether or not she should say more, then did. “I don’t really know anyone—I just moved here,” she continued, then added, “I’m Lucy.”

  “I’m Benji.” He smiled, revealing a mouthful of braces.

  “Excuse me?” Miss Sullivan called out, annoyed. “Would you two like to share your conversation with everyone?”

  Lucy turned red as she looked down at her hands, her go-to avoidance move: stare at your hands as if they are the most fascinating thing you’ve ever seen and pray that the other person stops looking at you. She only looked back up when Miss Sullivan began dividing them into teams. As they were both called, Benji and Lucy stood up to take their respective places on the floor.

  Miss Sullivan handed them both floor-hockey sticks and only Lucy a pinny. Lucy slipped the red mesh on over her head. It reeked of sweat.

  “Cute,” Benji commented.

  “Let’s go, people,” Miss Sullivan instructed, “before the period’s over.”

  Lucy rushed to take her place on the floor, running smack into the emo girl, who was standing right behind her.

  “Oh, sorry,” Lucy said quickly. “I didn’t see you there.”

  The emo girl just stared her down. Lucy swore she heard her growl. Her head began spinning. She’d been in California exactly four days and she’d met a girl named Charlie, a boy named Benji, and a growling emo. Could it possibly get any more bizarre?

  “Pickle,” Miss Sullivan called out, “you start.”

  Lucy watched a spunky, athletic-looking African-American girl knock the hockey puck across the floor. Lucy shook her head. Pickle. But before she could think about it anymore, she realized the hockey puck was heading directly toward her.

  At the end of fifty minutes, Lucy was relieved to lose the hockey stick and head to English. Wearing cargo pants and Vans, her English teacher, Miss Reese, looked as though she could pass as a student herself. And outside of school, Miss Reese insisted that everyone call her Martie. Martie quickly took attendance, as the class settled into their seats.

  Lucy took a spiral notebook out of her backpack. Due to the move and rush to unpack before work and school, her dad hadn’t had time to do their usual prerequisite back-to-school shopping, so she had only a half-used notebook from last year. Classy.

  Martie called out, “Amy Andrews . . . Payton Baker . . . Nick Baldwin?”

  A cocky guy’s arm shot up into the air. “Yo.” He gave a smarmy little wave.

  Martie checked him off as here. “Charlie Brown?”

  Lucy perked up. Charlie? She spun back around to look.

  “Here,” Charlie said as she picked at her black nail polish.

  Lucy couldn’t believe it. It was really her, the surfer. She was here. At Beachwood. In her English class. What were the chances?

  Martie smiled, as if she were particularly fond of Charlie. “Welcome back, Charlie.” From the front of the room, the pretty blond girl that Lucy had overheard talking and texting that morning—the whatever girl—sighed.

  “Where’re Snoopy and Woodstock?” Whatever Girl muttered to another impeccable-looking student next to her. Together, the two oozed popularity.

  “It’s getting old, Regan,” Charlie spat. “Kind of like your ratty hair extensions.” A few kids chuckled. That shut Regan up, as she self-consciously fingered her long, blond hair.

  Martie seemed to suppress an urge to giggle. Instead, she gave a reprimanding, “Charlie,” then continued. “Ryan Conner?”

  “Yep,” a male voice said. Lucy tilted her head toward the sound and realized she was sitting next to the cutest boy she’d ever laid eyes on in her life. He had sandy brown hair that was lightly gelled into what looked like the inklings of a tiny, messy Mohawk—the kind a preppy guy trying to be the slightest bit edgy would have. He was dressed in jeans, cheap black drugstore flip-flops, and a vintage Led Zeppelin concert T-shirt; he also had a Beachwood letter jacket thrown over the chair behind him.

  Lucy stared, mesmerized.

  From behind her, Nick poked her in the back with a pencil. “Take a picture. It’ll last longer.” Lucy quickly snapped out of it and blushed, embarrassed. She wished she actually could subtly take a picture with her camera phone.

  “Regan Holder?” Martie called out.

  Regan rolled her eyes. She’d already made her presence very known. “Obviously,” she sighed.

  Lucy barely heard her. She couldn’t take her eyes off Ryan.

  “Lucy Malone?”

  Annie has to see this guy, Lucy thought to herself.

  “Lucy Malone?”

  He looked like someone who had been genetically engineered to be the perfect combination of cute, clean-cut, and ridiculously hot. If the government wasn’t already cloning him, they should have been.

  “Is there anyone here named Lucy?” Martie asked for a third time. Lucy realized Martie was talking to her, and jumped as if she’d been electrically shocked.

  “Here!” she said, practically knocking her folder off her desk.

  The other kids laughed. Lucy again blushed a deep shade of red.

  Martie scanned the roster. “You’re new, right?” Lucy nodded, wondering what had given it away. Probably the fact that everyone else looked straight out of an Abercrombie catalogue . . . or something more expensive. “And it says here that you’re a sophomore?”

  Lucy’s eyes darted around. Wait—wasn’t everyone?

  “You know this is a junior English class,” Martie explained, as she thumbed through the paperwork she was holding. “It says here you’ve already taken English 2. . . .”

  Lucy nodded, remembering that her guidance counselor had said something about the school system in Ohio working differently, that she might be ahead in some of her classes, which meant fewer classes with the kids in her grade. Great, Lucy had thought at the time. That’ll make it even harder to make friends. . . .

  Martie smiled. “Well, welcome to Beachwood, Lucy. We’re glad to have you here.” Lucy could hear a few scattered chuckles. She slunk down in her chair, not wanting to stand out anymore than she already did as a badly dressed sophomore.

  As soon as class ended, Lucy tried to push her way toward Charlie, the one familiar face she’d seen—but before she could even say hi, Charlie was swallowed up in a sea of rushing students and was gone.

 

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