by Trish Cook
I was still mourning the loss of the salty, creamy, carbo goodness when a balled-up piece of paper whipped me in the head. “What the hell?” I yelled.
Jenny was glaring at me, her face flushed crimson.
“Ix-nay on the acon-bay,” Chip whispered out of the side of his mouth. “Don’t you have any clue why she stopped talking?”
“No,” I said, uncrumpling the paper to read it. It was a long list entitled Pigs Rule. “How could I? She doesn’t talk to me, remember?”
“Jenny, please refrain from throwing things or I’ll be forced to give you demerit points. And Emmy, if it’s okay with Jenny, perhaps you could read from the note aloud,” Tina said, looking over at Jenny for confirmation. Jenny nodded emphatically.
“Uhhh, sure,” I said, scanning the paper. It was actually kind of interesting, if maybe a little unbelievable. “ ‘One, pigs snuggle each other when sleeping, and dream as much as humans do. Pigs like to play, sunbathe, and explore. At farm sanctuaries, they are reported to love music, playing soccer, and getting massages.’ ”
“It’s good to be a pig!” Chip crowed.
Jenny gave him a big smile before frowning again in my direction. Then she rolled her hand and wrist at me in that universal keep going sign.
“ ‘Two, pigs communicate constantly and have twenty different vocalizations. Mama pigs sing to their babies when they are nursing.’ Awwww, cute!” I looked over at Justin to see if maybe he thought I was cute, but he was staring out the window, totally not listening. I went through the rest of the list without any more of my clearly uncute commentary.” Let me see, ‘Pigs have the mental capacity of a human three-year-old, a great sense of direction, can run up to eleven miles an hour, and are clean, do not sweat, and eat slowly and in moderation.’ ”
Tina was nodding happily. “Great point you make there, Jenny.”
“Exactly what point did she make?” Justin chimed in. If he’d been listening he’d know … wait, no, that wasn’t true. Because I’d read the list and I still had no idea what her point was.
“Seriously,” I agreed. “I have no clue either.”
“Well, that we shouldn’t use the word pig as an insult, of course. Just like no one should ever use the word gay to mean uncool,” Tina explained.
I sighed, more loudly than I intended to.
“You don’t buy into that crap, huh, Emmy?” Diana said, excited to be the one calling someone else out. Her tears were all gone, and the demonic grin was back.
“I guess I was just thinking most stereotypes have some truth to them. So if pigs don’t eat a lot or sweat, then how did expressions like pigging out and sweating like a pig get started?” I asked. I honestly was wondering. “And seriously … how could anyone possibly know if pigs dream as much as humans do? Are all the pigs like I had that nightmare about my teeth falling out again and then their pig friends are like LOL, Freud said that one is subliminally about masturbation?”
Justin kind of gave a little chuckle, which only fueled my desire to keep going. Guys liked funny girls, right? “Also, can you imagine a pig lying on a massage table saying, Can you work my lower back some more? I must have pulled a muscle scoring that winning soccer goal yesterday.”
Here Justin actually snorted. There was no stopping me now.
“So sorry, Jenny, that I didn’t know discrimination against pigs was so rampant,” I said, wrapping it up. “I’ll try not to take their little piggy names in vain again.”
Jenny, who looked like she was about to shoot lava out her ears, waved me over. Tina got all excited.
“I think she wants to tell you something,” Tina said, clasping her hands together like she was thanking God for all her wonderful head-shrinking gifts.
I walked over to where Jenny was sitting. She hauled herself out of the beanbag, stood up, whispered “Fuck you” in my ear so quietly only I could hear it, and then socked me surprisingly hard in the gut.
And just like that—barf-o-rama. I couldn’t have stopped the flood even if I’d wanted to. During the past six months of stealth purging, I’d had to learn to puke quickly and quietly by clenching my stomach. Only this time, Jenny had clenched it for me—with her fist.
I wouldn’t have even felt bad about it—score one for me for getting rid of all those calories, and two for getting back at someone who’d just told me to f-off—except for the fact that Justin had witnessed it. Not sexy. No amount of laughs would make up for that kind of gross performance.
Though my lunch got tossed mostly on the floor, some of my regurgitated taco and from the looks of it, banana and broccoli, landed on Jenny’s shoes. She took one look at her defiled blue canvas Toms and tackled me to the ground. At first, I tried to block her kicks and punches without really fighting back, but then gave up the whole pacifist thing and started scuffling hard.
“Pig pile!” I screamed, just because I knew it would piss off Jenny even more. Also I hoped it might be amusing enough to take Justin’s mind off the fact that I’d just vomited extremely uncutely in front of him.
Diana must have felt left out because a few seconds later she came at us full force. “Pigs are delicious!” she whooped, diving in between Jenny and me. “And vegetarians are all ugly pussies with hairy armpits who won’t wear makeup because it’s tested on animals!”
Somewhere along the way, Chip and Justin had start beating the crap out of each other, too. Only Mohammed, whom I’d pegged as the biggest brawler of them all, stayed out of the fray.
Tina’s calm request for us to stop fighting went ignored. Then she yelled at us to “Cut it out!” Still nothing. She tried pulling us off of each other. It was a total losing battle.
“Jenny stopped talking because the piglet she raised from birth won the 4-H fair, you asshole!” Chip screamed at me, even though he was using Justin as his punching bag. “Don’t make fun of her and don’t say the goddamn word bacon!”
“She’s mute because her pig won? That’s crazy!” I screamed back.
“No, because then they sell the winning pig. And slaughter it,” Chip spat. “Her stepfather thought it was funny to tell her the next day the bacon she was eating was actually from her pig. She freaked out, stopped talking, and the rest is Heartland history.”
“I’m sorry, Jenny. That’s awful. I wish you’d told me before … or, I guess I mean, wrote me one of your notes about that before.” I let go of her ponytail and dragged myself out of the catfight. Diana quit throwing jabs. Even Justin and Chip untangled themselves from each other and went back to their seats.
“Wilbur was the coolest pig ever,” Jenny whispered, shaking and crying.
Tina started applauding. “Great group! We’re really getting somewhere now.”
She had to be kidding. I’d expected a million demerit points, demands for apologies, and kids getting a level drop—if they had any levels to go down to, which I didn’t—but apparently not.
“I love the way you all communicated, despite the fight. Those are the first words Jenny has said in group since she came to Heartland eight months ago,” Tina said, smiling. “So here’s your assignment to keep this kind of great progress going: You are all responsible for each other’s actions for the rest of the week. For our two new members, that means for the time being, your mentors and chaperones will now be the people in this room.”
“Yes!” I whispered under my breath. That would get Alisha off my back, thankthefreakinglord.
Tina beamed at me. “Glad you’re so excited about it, Emmy. As a group, you will make sure everyone does their chores, their homework, gets the proper nutrition, and makes it to class on time. If you succeed, you may all have your iPod for one hour this weekend and get an extra ten minutes in the required weekly call to your parents or guardians.”
“And if we don’t?” Justin asked.
“You’ll keep on working as a team until you get it right,” Tina told him.
BACK IN THE ROOM, I WAS EXAMINING MY BRUISES IN THE mirror, and Mohammed was smiling. “I
liked the man-whore line,” he said.
“Yeah. Thanks for having my back with the Chipster there,” I said sarcastically as I looked at my arm where the Chipster’s watch, or possibly fingernail, had left a long, slightly bloody scrape.
“Listen. You get yourself into something stupid, you get yourself out. I’m not here to clean up your mess. And I’m not going down a level for anybody. This place is like prison, you know? Do your own time.”
I plopped down on my bed and found that my ass really hurt. No idea how that happened. “Well, according to Tina, we’re all supposed to support each other and hold each other accountable so we can earn ten more minutes talking to our parents. Which, I mean, wow. Big deal.”
Just like that, Mohammed was up off his bed and standing over me. “It is a big deal. And if you’re the one who screws it up, I’m gonna hurt you in ways you can’t even imagine.”
Normally I’d back down from something like this, but having just mixed it up with Chip, I was feeling all full of testosterone. “What the hell is your problem?” I said, standing up. “You think I’m scared of you ‘cause you’re black or something? You’ve been a total dick ever since I got here, and just when I think we’re having a normal conversation, you go all gangsta on me! What the hell’s your issue?”
Mohammed stared at me for a minute with murder in his eyes. Then he started to smile and laugh. “That was racist in about five different ways,” he said, and sat down on his bed. The crisis had apparently passed, but I wasn’t sure why. Heartland Academy was like the inverse of the real world. Here, you said something racist to a black guy and it stopped a fight.
“Do you know anything about Sierra Leone?” he asked.
“Is that in Africa?”
Mohammed smiled. “Yes. It’s in Africa.”
“Okay, well, I guess I know a little more about it now, then,” I said, smiling back a little though I didn’t know exactly where we were going here.
“My mother and I escaped the civil war there. I watched my father die screaming.”
“Oh. Oh shit, man, I …”
“With a burning tire around his neck, begging the rebels to let him live so he could raise his son. I was four years old.”
“Oh my God. I … I mean—”
“So yes, ten minutes of talking to my only living relative on earth means a lot to me. More than you can ever imagine.”
“Oh,” I said quietly. I really wished I had something to do so I didn’t have to focus on feeling like an asshole. This kid had reasons to be angry, reasons to be sad, probably reasons to kill himself. I was just a spoiled white kid with daddy issues.
We sat in silence for a minute. “Also,” he said, “Chip knows how to hack the staff Wi-Fi and download porn onto an iPod. That might make an hour with the iPod more appealing.”
I smiled. “Dude. I won’t need more than fifteen seconds.” And then he was smiling.
The next morning, I got woken up by a hand on my shoulder before the PA woke us up.
“What the hell?” I said.
“Get up,” Mohammed told me.
“Why?”
“Because we’ve got to be on time all week for you to get your porn and me to get my phone call. We can’t depend on any of these other people to take the lead, so it’s up to you and me.”
It was a real testament to how freaking tired I was that the prospect of access to forbidden porn wasn’t enough to make me spring out of bed. It took Mohammed pouring water in my ear for that to happen. “Ah, what the hell?” I said, jumping out of bed.
“Get showered. We’ll hit Chip’s room before breakfast.”
We wound up knocking on Chip’s door only thirty seconds after the PA told all of Heartland to get out of bed.
Chip answered the door in his boxers with visible morning wood. Man, I hated this place. “What the hell do you guys want,” he said, rubbing his eyes with one hand and trying to adjust the tentpole in his boxers with the other.
“We want to get a reward this week,” Mohammed said. “It’s important to us.”
Chip looked at me, then Mohammed. “You told him about the porn, didn’t you?” he said to Mohammed.
“It’s not like you make it a secret,” Mohammed said.
“Alright. I could use an hour with Xtube myself,” Chip said. “Might make it easier to get through the week.”
“Hey,” I said. “I’m, uh, sorry about yesterday. I’m still pissed about being here, and—”
“Don’t even worry about it, dude. You get a bunch of hotheads together, there’s gonna be a scrap sooner or later. Just glad we got it out of the way early.” He held out a fist. It wasn’t the same hand that he just had on his junk, so I bumped it. And it was over.
This, sadly, was not the way girls rolled. Mohammed, Chip, and I were the first ones in the cafeteria, and Mohammed signaled to everybody from hothead group that we had to sit together. Diana, Emmy, and Jenny still weren’t speaking to each other. No bacon on the menu today, but Diana was making a big deal out of eating her breakfast sausage and scrambled eggs, and Jenny looked like she was seriously considering hurting her.
I watched as Emmy took a single piece of honeydew melon and sliced it into twenty-five bite-sized pieces. She popped one in her mouth, chewed for ten seconds, swallowed, took a big gulp of water, and started on the next one.
“Really packing it away there, huh?” I said to her.
She looked up, hurt flashing across her eyes. “Be nice! It’s just too much food for me all at once.”
“Sorry. Reflex. You know, you get in the habit of being a dick, it’s kind of hard to break it.”
“Now that I wouldn’t know about,” Emmy said. Jenny snorted.
Emmy looked like she was about to say something back when Mohammed tapped a spoon on his plastic tumbler of orange juice. It made a dull clunking sound, and everybody stared at him. “Listen,” he said. “I need my reward this week. My mom has been in Africa for the last three weeks, and I haven’t spoken to her at all. I need to know what happened to my family. And we need to work together so we can—”
“Oh geez,” Diana said. “The African guy has problems. Let’s all do what the guards say so the guy with the real problems can get what he wants. Because we’re not important.”
I was thinking the same thing, but my desire for porn kept my mouth shut. “Diana. I have a thirty-two gig iPod. I’ve got Goblet of Fire on there. Daniel Radcliffe in the bathtub with his shirt off.”
Diana looked at me. “Liar,” she said.
“It’s true,” I said. “Sure would be nice to have an hour of iPod time, right?”
Diana stared at me, her little beady eyes boring into my skull. Finally she said, “Okay. I’m in.”
I looked triumphantly at Chip and Mohammed. I’d successfully brought one of the toughest cases on board. So why were they looking at me like I was an idiot?
“Uh,” Chip said. “Dude. If she’s got your iPod, how are you going to—”
“Crap,” I said, and Chip started laughing. “You can borrow mine. For ten minutes.”
“And that’s at least nine and a half more minutes than you’re going to need,” Mohammed whispered in my ear.
I laughed, and for a brief moment, things didn’t seem so bad.
And then it was off to Aesthetics of Classic Film, which I thought might be okay, but today’s class was just a lecture about silent movies. The teacher kept talking about chiaroscuro, which I thought was a sausage, though that didn’t really make any sense in this context.
At least in Culinary Science we got to bake things, since that was about the only thing you could do in a kitchen without sharp knives, though we were told before the cookies came out of the oven that we could be proud that our classmates would get to enjoy them at dinner tonight.
“So we get to smell cookies baking and we don’t get to eat them? The hell with that!” I yelled. I scooped up the pathetic remains of the batter with a rubber spatula from the bowl I was using and lic
ked it. This would probably stop me from moving up a level, but it tasted great.
And then I had to have an emergency session with Max during which I explained that I really just wanted some cookies, and I wasn’t trying to kill myself with salmonella from the uncooked eggs in the batter.
Which made me miss Fitness, which was fine with me. The terrors of the locker room could wait.
Then it was on to directed study time. I didn’t have any homework to do, so I was instructed to write home.
Hey guys, I wrote. Bars on the windows, bullshit classes, and rules about everything, including which way to wipe your butt. Front to back, in case you’re wondering. Wish you were here. Instead of me.
IN THE CAF THE NEXT MORNING, MOHAMMED TRIED ONCE AGAIN to keep us on track with the “all for one and one for all” setup Tina had instituted after the brawl by using a combo platter of intimidation and guilt. Everyone but me was totally fired up about the lame rewards, so they were perfectly happy to comply. Especially Justin, who seemed way more excited about watching gross actors have sex on a tiny little iPod screen than he was about having a real girl who might actually like him sitting right next to him.
As for me, I was so over it already. An hour of music or more talk time with my family just wasn’t that motivating. If I could speak to Joss, sure, I would’ve been thrilled about the extension. But I wasn’t allowed to chat with anyone other than my mom and dad until I got to level two, at which time I would have supposedly learned to “trust” again and started moving into the “realization” of how I had gotten myself into this predicament.
So things being the way they were, not only did I not want more time for that call to ’rents, I was totally dreading the awkward, guided conversation we were supposed to have during it. I’d been informed my goal for the required weekly report to Mom and Dad was to clearly and calmly communicate my progress in three key areas: Academic, therapeutic, and social. It was going to be totally weird, following a script like we were business associates instead of people who actually knew each other. It seemed like just another way my parents were cutting ties with me. Even thinking about it hurt.