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Trinkets

Page 13

by Kirsten Smith


  The best part of the night was when the DJ announced he was playing a slow song “that goes out to Maureen, from Tabitha and Elodie.” I was like, WHAT? And then the song came on—“Glory of Love” by Peter Cetera. Tabs and Elodie elbowed Noah like they’d sort of planned it.

  Noah grabbed my hand and took me out on the dance floor, which was pretty empty because the entire student body obviously doesn’t understand the joy of a cheesy love song. We started slow dancing and I told him that this was one of my parents’ favorite jams, and he said that was cool.

  Tabitha came out with Patrick Cushman. It wasn’t as if suddenly they were a couple or anything, but they kept looking at each other like they were super into each other. As for Marc and Elodie, at first I thought it would be creepy to dance next to my brother and his “girlfriend,” but he kept a little bit of distance so it wouldn’t be weird. Plus, I made note of his ridiculous dance moves so as to mock him at length later. Tabitha and Elodie and I started joke-singing along to the lyrics and laughing, and some people were joining in, but they looked confused, like for the first time they were the ones who didn’t get the joke. At the end of the song Noah pulled me close in front of everybody.

  Later we did the Robot and the Running Man, and then it was over and we drove home. Noah asked me if I wanted to stop and get a hamburger. For a second I thought I wouldn’t want to eat in front of him and then I realized we’ve lived next door to each other for six years so who cares. Plus, I was starving. After burgers, we went home and he walked me to the door and kissed me with hamburger breath on the front steps. I waited in my room for about ten minutes, thinking he was probably going to try to sneak in my window, but then he sent me a text: NIGHT C U TOMORROW. I wrote back OK and was really scared he had a terrible time, but he wrote: I MISS U. C U FOR BFAST? It almost made me cry, even though I wish he was here right now so we could be together all night long. But I’m so tired, so I guess sleep is a good idea.

  XOXOXOXO

  New and Old

  The yearbooks came out today

  and everyone is busy looking through the pages

  trying to find themselves.

  I’ve been here nine months

  and I’m more old than new now.

  I’m old enough to know that Moe Truax

  has a soft spot for The Golden Girls.

  I’m old enough to know that Marc Truax

  is as good at physics as he is at wheelies.

  I’m old enough to know that Tabitha Foster

  can’t tell a joke to save her life,

  but it doesn’t make her any less funny.

  I’m new enough to have only recently figured out

  that people never stop surprising you,

  even if they’re your best friends.

  As I walk out the front door of school,

  I see Tabitha and Moe waiting for me in the parking lot.

  We’re taking Tabitha’s new car to the Roxy,

  the shiny silver Prius her dad bought her

  to make himself feel better

  about finally packing up and going,

  the car she accepted with a smile

  and moved on,

  because she’s smart enough to know you can’t make people—

  especially your parents—

  become who you wish they were.

  The sun starts out of the clouds

  and finds its way to Tabitha’s hair

  as she slides behind the wheel.

  It’s hair that girls like me will probably

  envy forever, whether we’re friends or foes.

  Moe sits shotgun, her feet up on the dash,

  wiggling her toes,

  which she’s painted neon turquoise

  so they looked like little blue Smurf turds.

  The yearbooks came out today

  and everyone is busy looking through the pages

  trying to find themselves.

  I don’t need to.

  It took me a minute,

  but I already know

  right where I am.

  HOARDERS

  “Hoarders called,” Moe says. “They want to do an entire season on you.” She’s staring in awe as Elodie and I unload gobs and gobs of stuff from the trunk of my car. We’ve just pulled up in front of the women’s homeless shelter on Burnside because we decided to take all the stuff we’ve ever stolen and donate it to homeless people. Okay, that’s a lie. Not all of it. Maybe half. It was Elodie’s idea. I think she wanted to show Marc she wasn’t an evil person and that she was a good influence on his sister and all. Point proved.

  “I like this,” Elodie says, holding up a green pencil skirt. “Can I keep it?”

  “Sorry,” I say. “Doreen’s eyeballing it.” I point to a really pretty but really skinny lady with frizzy brown hair who’s hanging out watching us.

  We haul the stuff up the steps to the shelter, and Moe’s right. There is a fuck-load of stuff. Based on the amount, we clearly should have been professional thieves. Maybe all this time we should have been planning a bank robbery instead of just ripping off retail merchandise. Oh well. Next year.

  Elodie has boxes full of books and scarves and makeup and knickknacks. As for me, I have boxes and boxes of clothes. I even put a couple of dolls and two of my snow globes in there for good measure. I figured if some of the women have kids, they’ll like them.

  “Hey, girls, I’m Natalie,” says a friendly black lady who lets us into the shelter. “Shawn said you might be coming by.”

  I look at Elodie, surprised. “You told Shawn we were coming?”

  Elodie shrugs. “I figured she’d know where the best place to donate was.”

  “Getting that phone call probably made her entire life,” Moe says, grabbing a Gumby doll out of my box and holding it up with a quizzical look. “Why you no keep Gumby?”

  I swat Moe with it as Elodie snaps a picture of us. Natalie leads us into the entryway of the shelter, which obviously isn’t the world’s most cheerful place, and around the corner to the main living area. She shows us where to put down our stuff, and immediately a group of women descend on the goods.

  “Dolce and Gabbana? Wuh-what?” says a woman in her twenties with a gap in her teeth, holding up a jacket to her friend. I wince. I love that jacket. I remember when I stole it at Mario’s and wore it every day that winter. I wish I’d kept it. Suddenly, I wish I’d kept all this stuff.

  As I’m thinking this, “Doreen” steps up, holding a white shirt with big cuffs. “Is this really Prada?” she asks shyly.

  “Yeah,” I confirm. “Well, last season.”

  She pulls it on over her tank top, and it falls to the perfect length on her hips. It accents her collarbone just right. So that’s how it’s supposed to look.

  “Wow. It looks way better on you than it ever did on me,” I say, genuinely impressed.

  “Really?” She beams. “I’ve never worn anything like this.”

  “Well, you look amazing.”

  As she nods, Moe snaps a photo of me with her phone. “Hoarders would be so proud.”

  I smack her, and Elodie laughs. Just then Natalie comes over. “Thank you, guys, for coming by.”

  “Sure,” Elodie says.

  “If you ever have any more donations, you know where to find us.”

  “Let’s hope we won’t,” Elodie says. “We’re trying to reform ourselves.”

  We say good-bye and walk outside. It’s a perfect sunny day in Portland, the first real summer moment of the year. It’s times like this, when you’re hit with greenery and blue sky, that you realize maybe all those months of rain really do pay off. As I walk down the steps with Moe and Elodie, I’m glad we gave away our stuff. Stolen trinkets lead you to places you never predicted you’d go, but eventually you have to leave them behind.

  TK

  Contents

  WELCOME

  DEDICATION

  EPIGRAPH

  PART ONE

  ELODIE

 
TABITHA

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  PART TWO

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  PART THREE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  PART FOUR

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  PART FIVE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  PART SIX

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  *MOE

  TABITHA

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  *MOE

  ELODIE

  TABITHA

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  COPYRIGHT

  Copyright

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2013 by Kirsten Smith

  All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher constitute unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at permissions@hbgusa.com. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Little, Brown and Company

  Hachette Book Group

  237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017

  www.hachettebookgroup.com

  www.twitter.com/littlebrown

  First e-book edition: March 2013

  Little, Brown and Company is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The Little, Brown name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

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  ISBN 978-0-316-16027-8

 

 

 


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