MY SENIOR YEAR OF AWESOME
SCHOOL DAYZ BOOK 1
Jennifer DiGiovanni
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The author makes no claims to, but instead acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of the word marks mentioned in this work of fiction.
Copyright © 2016 by Jennifer DiGiovanni
MY SENIOR YEAR OF AWESOME by Jennifer DiGiovanni
All rights reserved. Published in the United States of America by Swoon Romance. Swoon Romance and its related logo are registered trademarks of Georgia McBride Media Group, LLC.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Published by Swoon Romance
Cover design by Hunter Blue
Cover copyright © 2016 by Swoon Romance
To my awesome family, Dean, Dean Christopher, Matthew, and Kristen
MY SENIOR YEAR OF AWESOME
Chapter One
Today is the beginning of the end. My last semester at Harmony High. Less than six months until graduation. Walking to school, my legs shake. My rapid breaths puff in front of me, short bursts of mini-clouds. By now, everyone knows where they’re headed in the fall—everyone but me. I don’t know why I can’t get over my denial. My high school education is all but finished, yet I haven’t applied to one college. Sure, Mom asks me what I’m doing about it. Every. Single. Day. The future looms like a swaying two-ton piano threatening to drop on my head. But I’m not ready.
I tug the zipper on my puffy, green jacket higher, slowing my pace as I travel the last block to school. Around me, the sounds of laughter and shouting ripple through the frigid air. Two weeks off and we’re all happy to be together again. For now.
I slip through clumps of students, managing to fade into the scenery. After eleven-plus years with the same group of classmates, I’ve perfected the art of avoiding attention. To a majority of seniors, I’m just one more person to be forgotten when we all move on to bigger and better lives outside of our small town.
As I cross through the crowded intersection, a text buzzes in from my best friend, Jana.
Jana: The votes have been counted. Meet me in front of Mrs. D’s room
At Harmony High, the Senior Superlative vote is one of the few highlights of senior year.
Me: Be there in a few
I text back, then hurry up the walkway toward school.
“Hey, Sadie. Ready for mathletes practice today?” I turn to find Andy Kosolowski, who’s in the running for the title of Most Likely to Succeed. Not only does Andy have an enormous brain, but he’s also freakishly tall, with thick glasses and moppy-blond curls.
“Mathletes today?” Did I forget to check email over the break?
“Yep. Mrs. McCaffrey sent the new schedule out last night. She wants to get a jump on training before the county tournament season starts.”
Darn. I was hoping to ease into my last semester. “I’ll be there, I guess,” I say, unable to rise to Andy’s level of excitement.
“Oh, and I heard the Senior Superlatives are posted,” Andy says, falling in step next to me. Wow. Mathletes and a Most Likely to Succeed award all in one day. Andy must be in genius heaven.
“Do you know who won?” I ask.
“Nope. On my way right now. Want to walk together?”
When he pats my shoulder, I restrain myself from shrugging away. Don’t get me wrong, Andy’s a nice guy, and I’ve known him forever. But he’s not exactly the person I want standing next to me when the Senior Superlatives are announced. He’s not in the running for Best Dressed Guy or Guy with the Most Awesome Ride. No, that would be someone like Dominic Altomeri.
Like an answer to my prayers, Andy’s next comment is drowned out by the growl of a black Corvette Stingray rumbling down the block. Dominic’s ready to kick off the second semester with style. When his window rolls down and he waves to the crowd, I raise my hand and wave back, hoping he looks my way. But, as usual, I’m not even on his radar.
Dominic whips around the corner into the student lot, leaving me in his wake. I turn back to Andy, but now he’s gone too. Breathing a small sigh of relief, I head into school.
In the senior hallway, chaos ensues. Everyone wants to know who will win the coveted awards; those voted on not by teachers or administrators, but by our high school peers. I slow my pace, letting others pass me as I search for Jana.
Truth be told, I don’t expect to be chosen for an award. I’m not the funniest, smartest, or the prettiest. I’m not the crazy girl who face paints at home games. I’m Sadie Matthews, the girl who coasts through life with reasonably good grades and procrastinates all decisions away. The potentially cute (when I live up to my potential) sidekick of my super-chic best friend, Jana Rodriguez.
I turn in the direction of Mrs. Downey’s room, pressing through throngs of students. Teachers patrol the hallways, ready to report anyone loitering, but this morning, like most others, seniors ignore the empty threats.
“Get to class, everyone,” Principal Dailey announces over the intercom. “The Senior Superlative results will be revealed during homeroom announcements.”
When I round the last corner on my way to the yearbook moderator’s room, I find Jana dancing a happy hula.
“Hey, chica! Ready to see who was voted Most Fashionable?” she asks, a sing-song rhythm in her voice, her hips swiveling back and forth with each word.
Not wanting to crush Jana’s dreams of greatness, I suppress my skepticism—most of it, anyway. “Do you think we actually won something?”
Jana tugs off her flip mitts and shoves them in her jacket pocket. “I thought you voted for me for Best Dressed.”
“I did. Do you know if anyone else voted for you?” Thanks to the male voting bloc, the Best Dressed award usually goes to the girl in our class who pushes the limits of the school’s dress code. Halter tops, uber-miniskirts, that sort of thing. Jana dresses cute, but way too conservatively.
“Let’s check it out, anyway,” she says.
By the time we make it to the end of the hallway, a large group has gathered around the Yearbook Committee’s bulletin board. As Jana and I approach, a bunch of people turn around, all of them pointing and clapping.
“Wow, Jana. Maybe you did win Best Dressed,” I say, speaking out of the side of my mouth, lest we seem overexcited.
The crowd parts to let us in, a few people now laughing outright. I glance at the board and frown when I realize Mia Romonov has won Best Dressed Girl. Not a huge surprise given that she basically looks like a Russian model.
“What did you win?” I whisper to Jana. “I don’t see your picture.”
Jana bites on her lower lip and points to the very top of the board. “Um, Sadie, I didn’t win. You did.”
Smack in the center of the top row of Senior Superlatives, I spy my junior year photo, blown up to 8 x 10 size, set inside of a glittery heart. Also inside the heart is an 8 x 10 photo of Andy Kosolowski. The caption above the heart reads, “Most Likely to Get Married.”
I want to die. No, I want to puke. I want to puke and then die. Andy, the biggest nerd in all of seniordom? The boy who wore the same Darth Vader T-shirt every day of eighth grade? The guy who passed out at middle school graduation and was trampled on by the rest of our class?
“Is this a joke?” Waves of laughter circulate around me
like a bubbling, too-hot Jacuzzi. “I don’t even like Andy,” I say, maybe a bit too loudly. “Not at all.” Eyes narrowed, I whirl around. “Who did this?”
And then Andy’s tall head appears above everyone else. He scans the board and finds his picture. His mouth falls open. His eyes meet mine. A swell of laughter reignites as we stare at each other. When he cracks a small smile, I elbow my way through what feels like most of the student body to confront him.
“You fixed the vote,” I say, poking him in the center of his extra-long torso.
“What? Why would I do that?” Andy looks completely confused.
“Did you think this would be funny? Like, ha-ha, let’s make fun of Sadie who hasn’t been on a date in … a long time.” Exactly how long is personal information.
He shakes his head, acting stunned. “Maybe they mixed up my picture with someone else’s.” Simultaneously, we redirect our eyes to the Most Likely to Succeed award, posted above a photo of Cindy Min. She’s ranked second in the class, albeit way behind Andy. I guess it takes more than brains to succeed.
“Listen up, people!” I shout, cupping my hands around my mouth like a megaphone. “I am so not marrying Andy Kosolowski. So ha-ha, joke’s on me. Hilarious.” I shoot one final look of disgust at my classmates and stomp off in the direction of homeroom.
***
I can’t remember ever feeling as humiliated as I do right now. By the time I slide into my seat next to Jana, my cheeks burn from the heat of thousands of eyes focused on me.
“I don’t want to talk about Senior Superlatives,” I tell her. “Not one word.”
Jana nods, feeling my pain. “Did you bring the book?”
Of course, with all the marry Andy nonsense, I’d nearly forgotten about the book. Every year my Aunt Tina sends me the latest version of Fill It In, a compilation of crucial lists to complete on one’s journey toward ultimate self-awareness. It’s the bible for confirmed listoholics like Jana and me, who spend hours debating the best type of cheese to include in a ham and cheese sandwich (Jana says good old American, and I choose sharp Provolone, but we both gave thumbs down to holey Swiss and frou-frou Brie.)
I pull the latest version of Fill It In from my backpack and crack the spine to loosen the pages. Jana squeals and grabs it out of my hands. She starts flipping through three hundred and sixty-five new lists, every single page offering blank lines begging for completion. Twenty-five Strange and Random Facts about Me. Top Ten Food Cravings on Sunday Mornings. Fifteen Unique Hot Dog Toppings I Want to Try. Stuff like that.
“I’ve been so waiting for this. What’s today’s assignment?” Jana twists away from me, prepping for the big reveal. “Ahem. Drum roll, please. Coolest Baby Names for the 21st Century. Dibs on girls.”
At least coming up with insane celebrity-worthy child names will divert my attention from the whole Senior Superlative mess. To avoid morning announcements, I excuse myself and hide in the bathroom until the bell rings. For the rest of the morning, while everyone stares and whispers about me and my future betrothed, Jana and I devote ourselves to baby-name research, hiding our iPhones under contraptions built with tented folders and notebooks.
By the time we meet for lunch, we’ve each devised an alphabetical list of names and favorited our top ten.
“I like Abileen, Olivia, and Whitney,” she says, dropping into the seat next to mine at our usual table. A dreamy look floats in her eyes as she imagines her future mini-me. Pretty little Abileen, with her mother’s silky brown hair and coffee-colored eyes. Jana’s mother is French, her father Cuban, and their genetic combination sparked my best friend’s flawless complexion. Also, years of braces and faithful retainer-wearing have shaped Jana’s perfect smile, which she now flashes my way, apparently satisfied with her mentally crafted reproduction.
“So, what did you come up with for your future son’s name?” she asks.
“Chase.”
Jana’s eyes grow wide. “Chase? That’s a verb, not a name.”
“It’s also a noun, meaning pursuit.”
“Okay, Chase it is.” Jana carefully scribes my top boy’s name in the book. “Does Andy agree with your choice?”
I toss my empty Gatorade bottle at her head, but she ducks away, laughing.
Anyway, unlucky Chase will probably inherit my boring brown hair, a few shades short of blond, and my light brown eyes, more cafe latte compared to Jana’s straight espresso. Also, I pray Chase doesn’t wind up with my high forehead because boys really can’t cover up that particular physical trait with fringe bangs.
“Check tomorrow’s assignment.” I’m more than ready to drop the subject of baby names and potential husbands. “We can start a rough draft tonight and finalize it in homeroom tomorrow.”
Jana flips the page. “It’s an awesome achievement list. The top ten things you’ve done to make your life bigger and better.”
I snort into my plate of fries and ketchup. “Fill It In is messing with our heads. Lists are supposed to be fun.”
“I know,” Jana wails. “This is way too much pressure. Do you think surviving high school counts?”
“My guess is no,” I say, straining to read over her shoulder.
Jana pounds the table with her fist. “We need ten solid achievements. How many do we have?”
“Um … none?”
“Senior Superlatives might count,” she says.
“Not in my book.” I send her a warning glare. “I can think of a million things that rank higher than a Senior Superlative.”
“Really? Cause I’m blanking.” She tears the page out with a decisive rrrrrrip.
“Geez-us, Jana, what are you doing?” I shriek. “That’s like defacing the Holy Grail!”
“We need to keep this list with us at all times. That way, whenever the opportunity arises, we can record our achievements.”
“Fine, but we can’t settle for easy stuff, like passing grades. We need to do spectacular things. Things that will make history. Things that will prove Senior Superlatives mean nothing in the grand scheme of my life.”
We spend the rest of lunch jotting down crazy achievements, most of which would result in expulsion or arrest. Jana keeps coming back to “falling in love” even though neither of us has any real plans for how to achieve that one.
“My mom fell in love in high school,” I say, digging a plastic spoon into my yogurt. “A few months later she was pregnant and alone.”
“Not every guy is your dad,” Jana says, using air quotes when she speaks of the man who participated in my formation and then promptly left for college, never to return.
“High school love doesn’t ever work out. So why worry about achieving it?”
“Maybe, maybe not. We’ll think of something.”
In my opinion, the coolest idea we come up with is riding in Dominic Altomeri’s car. I’ve secretly been crushing on him for years. He’s loud-talking but gorgeous, overconfident yet charming. Dom’s also perpetually late for school, arriving every morning around the same time Principal Dailey waits by the front door with a stack of pre-printed detention notices. So, if Jana and I achieve some act of rebellion, which also results in our very first after-school time served, maybe the cosmic patterns of the universe will align, and Dominic will offer us a ride home.
“Exactly, chica! We’re gonna make the most of our last few months in this horrible place,” Jana says, excited by the idea of potential incarceration with one of the hottest guys in school, if only for one hour.
“Because we’re either filling in ten awesome achievements and finding our soul mates or we’ll be expelled and decide this was the worst idea we’ve ever had.”
Fill It In – Your Awesome Achievements
To Be Completed By Sadie Matthews and Jana Rodriguez Prior to June 1st
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
>
9.
10.
Chapter Two
Sadie and Jana’s list of Sports with Fill It In Achievement Potential
Track and field: Coach Jenkins constantly recruits because he needs bodies to compete in the gazillion track and field events. Anyone can throw a javelin, right?
Tennis: No offense, but girls on the tennis team don’t look especially athletic. Most of the time, they strut around school wearing those pleated mini-skirts. If wardrobe is a requirement for success, Jana and I could totally pull that off.
Golf: Because we’re above average mini-golfers. At least if you go by those little scorecards. We’re almost always close to par, and even pro golfers don’t hit par all the time. Need to check if it’s co-ed.
“Just pick a sport, Sadie,” Jana says, handing me our list of potential activities between fifth and sixth periods. “Cause we’ll probably equally suck at all of them.”
“Given that tennis and golf are fall sports, and we’re into January, it looks like we’re running track,” I say.
“Decision finalized by process of elimination,” Jana agrees. “Oh, and doesn’t Dominic Altomeri hold the school record in the 400 meter?”
“Is he still dating Ghouliana?” I ask. Giuliana Ryder, a junior who won last year’s Miss Teen Harmony pageant, is Dom’s on-and-off girlfriend, her lovely nickname perhaps due to her excessively large eyes and ghostly pale skin. But Jana and I would never be so cruel as to make fun of someone’s unalterable features just because we’re jealous of her ability to nab the hottest guy in town. Well, maybe once.
“I heard they broke up again over break,” Jana says.
After careful observation, we conclude that Dom isn't exactly suffering from a broken heart. Admittedly, we don’t hang out in the same crowd, but Jana and I notice he’s had plenty of company at his lunch table, mostly of the female persuasion.
My Senior Year of Awesome Page 1