The Fine Art of Keeping Quiet

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The Fine Art of Keeping Quiet Page 13

by Charity Tahmaseb


  An odd look crosses her face. “Okay,” she says, “sure.”

  The last speech is a how-to speech, and it’s thirty percent of our grade. This one speech is the difference between passing and failing. Even with the extra credit from the speech team, I still need every percentage point I can get. We duck into the empty world languages room, and Tory sets up the camera while I get everything ready.

  “What’s the topic?” she asks.

  I hold back the smile. “How to overcome the fear of public speaking.”

  A single heartbeat passes, then Tory bursts out laughing. She laughs for so long, I suspect she’s laughing at me, not with me.

  “Sorry, sorry,” she says, and wipes her eyes. “It’s just ... it’s just ...” She gulps a breath. “It’s just so perfect.”

  “It’s got to be,” I mutter.

  I go through my speech, pulling in everything I’ve learned from Tory, from Sam, and a few things I’ve invented on my own. Like how you don’t have to look anyone directly in the eye as long as you can fake it. Stare at a spot over their shoulder—or their uni-brow.

  Tory snorts at this.

  “Should I cut uni-brow?” I ask.

  “Are you kidding? Henderson loves that sort of thing.”

  She smiles when I mention the pencil trick and speaking into the mirror. I end my speech with advice on finding what you love about the topic, as motivation to speak up.

  “It’s pretty good,” Tory says when I finish.

  From where I stand, pretty good must be better than not bad.

  “Want to watch it?” she asks.

  Not really. My teeth behaved while I spoke, but I feel them now, just a hint. But since I asked Tory to film me, not watching the video would be stupid. So I nod and suck in a deep breath. I weave my fingers together and hold on tight so I won’t give into the urge to hide behind my hands.

  Tory presses Play. I survive. Maybe tomorrow won’t be as bad as I think.

  The final speech evaluation is the only one Mr. Henderson doesn’t hand back right away. We’ll find out how we did once grades for the third term go in. After class, a few kids come up to me, asking about the pencil trick.

  “Try it,” I say. “It sounds kind of crazy, but it works.”

  Another girl asks if practicing in front of her doll collection would help. I think of the tournament rounds, all sorts of eyes on me, beady and small. I nod. A doll collection would be perfect.

  At lunch, I bypass the cafeteria automatically, my gaze straight ahead. I clutch my brown bag and head for the stairwell. Every day, I tell myself this will be the day Jeremy rejoins his friends. So far, he hasn’t.

  Today is no exception. He’s here, with a massive lunch. I sit on the same step, but there’s plenty of air between us.

  “Hey,” he says, “I’ve been talking to some of my bros.”

  Really? Bros? Ugh.

  “About you being a skank.”

  “What?”

  He holds up a hand, one clutching a sandwich, but it’s enough to stop me. “I mean, not one. I told them you were tutoring me in biology, but I made up a story we were going out because I was embarrassed to be failing.”

  A strange sort of pang hits me. Something about making up a story and being embarrassed about failing—who knew Jeremy Spinner and I had something else in common?

  “They believed you?” I ask.

  “Oh, come on,” he says. “You’re on the speech team, in knitting club, and orchestra.” He draws out this last word so, in my head, I hear leprosy. “Besides, I’m getting a B, so of course they believed me. In fact, some of them might ask for your help.”

  “There was this guy at my locker this morning,” I say. “Lukas, I think.”

  “Yeah.” Jeremy taps his forehead. “He’s not that bright.”

  This, from Jeremy Spinner, is a condemnation. Or irony. Or both.

  “I thought he was a creeper.”

  “He’s okay, but he’s probably failing something.”

  After a moment, I say, “Thanks.” I’m kind of surprised I mean it, too.

  “It’s probably the least I can do, what with everything.” He raises a hand and lets it fall as if this everything is too heavy for even him to lift.

  Five minutes before the bell rings, Jeremy asks about the Big 9 speech tournament.

  “It’s the big one before sub-sectionals,” I tell him. “Tory says it’s when the teams start gunning for state—there are lots of upsets and surprises.”

  “What about Romero?” he asks.

  “What about him?” I cringe because the words come out sharper than I mean them to.

  “We share the indoor field with Winnetka,” he says. “And I heard a few things.”

  “What did you hear?” My insides revolt. The carrot sticks I’m eating form a lump in my stomach. I think I might throw up.

  Jeremy shakes his head. “Nothing that makes sense, at least, not to me. Something about a ring.”

  “A ring for what?”

  “See, that’s what I don’t get, but the Winnetka guys were talking about it.” Jeremy pauses and considers the stack of Oreos resting in his palm. He—very generously—offers me one. “But it wasn’t really about Romero.”

  I sense more than see him turn his head. He stares straight on, and I feel his gaze against my cheek.

  “It was about you.”

  I’m dashing down the hall, late for speech practice, when Mrs. Riley, the creative storytelling teacher, catches me.

  “Jolia, walk.”

  Yes, we’re supposed to walk in school, not that it’s stopped anyone from running. Jeremy and his friends race up and down the corridors, and no one ever stops them. But I slow down and do a funny race-walk thing.

  Mrs. Riley laughs and falls into step next to me. “Are you looking forward to creative storytelling?”

  I nod because she expects no less. At the moment, I don’t know if I’ll be sitting in her classroom on Monday morning. This is also something I don’t feel like explaining.

  “Have you and Caro started working on your project already?”

  “Sort of,” I say, which is as close to the truth as I can get. For once, failing speech looks like the better option. How did that happen? And how, on Monday, will I ever work with Caro if we’re not even speaking to each other?

  Mrs. Riley halts in a teacher sort of way that means I must stop walking too. “Jolia, are you okay?”

  I nod, but that’s a lie. My throat is tight, but finally, I squeak out, “I’m late for speech practice.”

  Mrs. Riley smiles at me, then does the weirdest thing. She turns her back on me, then gives me a little wave, the sort that means, hurry, hurry, hurry.

  “I never saw you,” she says, and I can hear the laughter in her voice.

  I rush down the hall.

  I’m almost to the speech team room when I see two people who are not where they’re supposed to be. Jeremy should be at track practice. Caro should be in her mom’s car on the way home. Neither of them should be huddled in an empty classroom. From where I stand, I can’t tell if their whispers are happy or fierce, if it’s a fight—or if they’re making up. Their faces are close enough for kissing—or spitting. It’s like watching a couple in a movie, only I have no idea how this story will end.

  A hand—I think it’s Jeremy’s—shuts the door. With that one simple act, he’s closed off everything. This is what I’ve been afraid of all year, from the second they started going together. I’ve lost Caro. She’s been gone long before she dumped me on Monday.

  My heart thuds heavy and slow in my chest. I stare at that closed door, but the movie is over, or at least, my part in it is. I raise my hand in a goodbye wave. Then I continue down the hall.

  “I’m telling you, he’s not on the list.”

  In the speech team room, Tory and Ryan are playing tug of war with his laptop—a sure sign it’s a Friday before a tournament.

  “And I’m reminding you,” she says, “that you sai
d the same thing last week. What if they know we’re hitting the site and are just messing with us?”

  “Does it matter?” I ask.

  Both Ryan and Tory freeze, like we’ve pressed pause on one of Tory’s endless videos of us. Actually, everyone in the room goes quiet.

  “Well.” Tory clears her throat. “Of course it matters.”

  “How?”

  “It’s just that ... we like to be prepared is all.”

  “Does Henderson know you do this?” I can’t believe this is the first time I’ve thought to ask. “Technically, aren’t you hacking?”

  “Legacy,” Ryan says, as if that explains everything.

  “Huh?” This is Ben, and I’m grateful he’s always around to ask the dumb question in the most direct way possible.

  “Last year’s co-captains gave us Winnetka’s login info. It’s not our fault they haven’t changed the password.” Ryan puts his feet up on a chair, but I’m not sure he’s as confident as he looks.

  This sounds shaky. “Are you sure you should? It’s not like we’re going to change anything.” I point at Ryan. “Either Romero will be in discussion and ruin your life—or he won’t. Either he’ll give a great speech—or he won’t.”

  “Mentally prepared,” Tory says, her voice stronger now. She lets go of the laptop, and Ryan hugs it to his chest. “It’s not all here.” She taps a script lying on a desk. “A lot of it is up here.” She taps her head. “So, if we know where Romero is slotted this week.” She shrugs. “It helps.”

  Does it really? Which would be worse, I wonder. Seeing Caro and Jeremy together today or finding out Monday at lunch? I picture myself, alone in the stairwell, waiting for Jeremy, or peering into the cafeteria, Caro back in her old spot, me totally alone. Maybe Tory has a point. Mentally prepared. But my heart? I’m not sure you can prepare that.

  I hold out my hand and, to my surprise, Ryan passes me the laptop without a word. I don’t refresh the page. Instead, I click back to the main page, the one with the team picture. Strange as it sounds, I can feel the eyes of the Winnetka girls on me, like they’re about to taunt, “You’re going down.”

  But it’s Sam I stare at.

  I barely notice when Tory slips into the desk next to mine.

  “Don’t suppose you’re ready to give up the goods,” she says, voice low.

  “There’s nothing to give.” Not anymore, at least. “But—”

  Tory leans forward. “Yes?”

  The anticipation on her face makes me laugh. “Jeremy said something today about the Winnetka guys on the team, talking about me.”

  She slumps in her chair. “Trust me, you don’t want those kinds of details.”

  “No, it was weird. They kept talking about a ring.”

  Tory tugs me by the shirt sleeve, and we head into the hallway.

  “Word for word, what did he say.”

  So I repeat what I remember from lunch.

  Tory shakes her head in disgust. “That makes no sense.”

  “It’s secondhand from Jeremy Spinner,” I say. “Did you expect it to?”

  Tory sighs. “I need to do some investigating tonight.”

  “You’re like Sherlock Holmes,” I say.

  “Yeah, well, at least he had Dr. Watson.”

  “What about Ryan?”

  “Watson was a friend.” She leaves me standing in the hallway and heads back to the classroom. In a moment, she and Ryan are playing tug-of-war with the laptop again.

  A friend. Of all the things Tory has, I wonder if this is the one thing she doesn’t.

  Chapter 14

  Best black skirt. New gray top. I add the blue-gray scarf I finished knitting last night. Since I’m Jane Eyre at boarding school, I don’t want to dress too flashy. Vanilla chai deodorant.

  Okay, so they didn’t have Starbucks in Victorian England.

  Clouds cover the sky as the bus pulls from Fremont High. We travel south toward Mankato East High School, and the sun makes its appearance, just a small sliver at first. When we arrive, it’s to a sunburst of warmth. Tory steps from the bus, tips her head toward the sky, and smiles.

  “It’s a good omen,” she says.

  Ryan comes up behind her, pats her arm. “It is.”

  Today, they are a united front. They’re here to win. I tip my face upward as well. I let the sun warm my skin and inhale air that’s trying hard to smell like spring. The second I’m inside the school, I miss the sunshine. Near the entrance is a large open area with tables and chairs. I can’t tell if this area is for eating or studying or what, but it’s where we stash our coats.

  Kids from other teams mill around. Some wander off to find a classroom to practice in. Others gather at the water fountain, so if you actually want a drink, you have to fight your way in. My fingers touch the cell phone in my pocket. It hasn’t vibrated, and I know it won’t. And although I’ve seen plenty of Winnetka kids so far, I haven’t caught sight of Sam.

  I’m not sure what I’d say if I did see him.

  I’m thinking of practicing on my own when Tory comes up behind me. She grabs my elbow hard and tugs me away from the collection of tables in the common area.

  “Ow,” I say. “What are you doing?”

  “Come on,” she says.

  I reach for my script.

  “Leave it.”

  “But—”

  “This is ... this is... well, you won’t believe it.”

  Her voice is so stressed and urgent, I follow. When she starts to run for a classroom at the end of a long hall, I race after her.

  “Shut the door,” she says to me. She’s gasping, but still has that star speaker quality, and I do what she says. She shakes her phone. “Work, work. I’ve got a signal. Work.”

  Then I hear another voice, coming from the phone’s speaker.

  “Tory, you there?”

  It’s Caro.

  I push a lump down my throat. I don’t know what’s going on, but Caro face-timing on Tory’s phone can’t be anything good.

  “Okay, got you,” Tory says. “Jolia, come here. This is kind of complicated.”

  “I thought that was a Facebook status.”

  Tory eyes me, hard, so I inch forward until I can see the screen. Caro looks like she’s inside a strange, sparkly cave. Then I recognize her skirts and tops and realize she’s hiding in her closet. From the phone’s speaker come the muffled grunts of her little sisters fighting outside the door.

  “I have maybe five minutes.” Caro sounds angry.

  “Same here,” Tory says. “Just tell Jolia what Jeremy told you.”

  My mind flashes to yesterday—Caro, Jeremy, and a closed classroom door. I open my mouth to say something, but Tory shoots me a look so sharp, it kills all my words.

  “He thought it was weird that the Winnetka guys were talking about you so much,” Caro begins, “so after lunch on Friday, he did some texting.”

  Really? I’m a little amazed by this.

  “They kept calling you a ringer and mentioning the speech team,” Caro continues. “He showed me all the messages because he thought it was some special speech team thing.”

  Ring? Ringer? I try to connect this with what Jeremy told me at lunch. Like then, it still makes no sense. It’s certainly not a speech team thing. I frown, then peer at Tory. She holds up her free hand and nods at Caro.

  “He asked me about it, since I’d been sitting at the speech team table—” Caro pauses and cringes, I think, but the screen is so dark, I can’t tell.

  “So I asked Tory about it,” Caro finishes.

  “So I did a little snooping last night. Today Ryan and I cornered a Winnetka girl. It’s funny.” She pauses, her forehead scrunched like she’s puzzled. “She was really happy to tell us. It’s almost like they wanted us to find out. You want to know what they think?”

  This isn’t a question that needs an answer. It’s clear Tory can’t wait to tell me.

  “They think you’re a ringer!” she declares.

  Ha
dn’t we established none of us knows what that means? I shake my head, showing her I’m clueless.

  “You’re a plant,” Tory explains.

  “With leaves?” Okay, so it’s a classic Ben sort of question, but I still have no idea what she means.

  Caro snorts. Tory sighs and rolls her eyes.

  “They think you’ve been purposely performing badly at tournaments so Winnetka will be lulled into placing a less talented speaker into the prose category.” Tory speaks slowly like I’m all of three years old. “Then today or at sub-sectionals, you’re supposed to blow everyone out of the water.”

  This is the craziest thing I’ve ever heard. If they believe that, then Tory was right. Their coach is working them too hard.

  “Why would they think that?” I ask.

  “Because Sam Romero told them to.”

  My entire world shifts. Everything looks off kilter. The desks rest at an odd angle. The whiteboards hang crookedly on the wall. Even Caro’s face on Tory’s phone looks distorted, like I’m viewing her through the bottom of a glass.

  “Why?” I say. “Why would he do that?” This is not a question I expect an answer to.

  “Well, yeah,” Tory says. “No one knows about that part of it.”

  On the phone’s screen, Caro’s gaze goes to Tory, then Tory turns toward me. “We’re thinking you might know why.”

  My mind goes back to that first secret practice session, the one where Sam said, “You used to be so ...” So what? Even now, I can hear the frustration in his voice. What did he mean by that? Did he really think I joined speech to trick everyone? Couldn’t he see how truly awful I was, that I wasn’t faking? But if I wasn’t faking, does that mean he was? All this time? And from the very start? I think of that quote from Hamlet:

  To thine own self be true.

  I did a little reading about Hamlet after Sam threw that quote at me. Sure, it could mean be yourself. But in Shakespeare’s day, it meant looking out for your best interests. Was Sam doing that all along?

  I feel like a punch line to a joke I don’t quite understand.

  On the screen, Caro’s face flickers.

  “I’m losing battery power, and it’s almost time for the first round,” Tory says. “So we don’t know why Romero did any of this. Question is, what are we going to do now?”

 

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