Don't Call Me Baby

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Don't Call Me Baby Page 1

by Heasley, Gwendolyn




  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

  HarperCollins Publishers

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  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

  HarperCollins Publishers

  ..................................................................

  Advance Reader’s e-proof

  courtesy of HarperCollins Publishers

  This is an advance reader’s e-proof made from digital files of the uncorrected proofs. Readers are reminded that changes may be made prior to publication, including to the type, design, layout, or content, that are not reflected in this e-proof, and that this e-pub may not reflect the final edition. Any material to be quoted or excerpted in a review should be checked against the final published edition. Dates, prices, and manufacturing details are subject to change or cancellation without notice.

  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

  HarperCollins Publishers

  ..................................................................

  Dedication

  For Cory.

  Contents

  Cover

  Title

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter twenty-Three

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

  HarperCollins Publishers

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  Prologue

  DO YOU KNOW WHAT IT’S LIKE TO BE RECOGNIZED AT THE MALL by random moms pushing strollers when you’re just trying to hang out with your friends?

  Do you know what it’s like to have strangers at Starbucks say, “Ohmigosh, I’ve watched you grow up. I’m so glad that your braces finally corrected that awful overbite!”

  Do you know what it’s like to have your classmates read about you getting your first period?

  Do you know what it’s like to have everyone think that they know you because of what they read on some stupid website?

  I didn’t think so. I imagine that Suri Cruise could empathize with me, but at least she has awesome clothes and actually famous parents. I’m recognizable because my mother writes a lame, but very popular, blog.

  My mom has been a blogger since before I was born. It started out as a healthy living blog, but then she found out she was pregnant. Ever since then, it’s been a mommy blog. (Technically, it was a womb blog for my first nine months.) The thing is, I’m fifteen now, and she’s still blogging about me. I have two lives: my life as the blogging world knows it and my actual life. You can read my life as my mom tells it on mommyliciousmeg.com. This version is my actual life. Thanks for reading.

  Mommylicious

  Back to School

  Imogene is starting the ninth grade today! Can you believe she’s fifteen?

  Do you remember when she was born? If you don’t, click HERE. Do you remember when she first walked? If you don’t, click HERE. The first day of preschool. The first day of middle school. And now, the first day of ninth grade.

  (Insert the Niagara Falls of tears over my little girl growing up.)

  Even though she’s my baby, I know that many of you have grown up with her too! After all, y’all named her in that genius contest, and it turns out that she is such an Imogene! I have the smartest readers.

  What does ninth grade mean for Imogene? It’s a big one, since it’s the last year of uniforms AND the last year before high school. Soon, she’ll be driving, and then before we know it, she’ll be off to college. But the REALLY huge event in ninth grade is the Halloween Pirate’s Booty Ball, which will be Imogene’s first date dance.

  While listening (okay, maybe I was technically eavesdropping), I overheard Imogene and a friend already talking about who they want to ask them. No spoiler alerts here! I’m just scared that she (or someone else) might get their feelings hurt. What do y’all think: Should there be formal date dances before high school even starts? Send me your feedback!

  I can’t wait to share Imogene’s back-to-school photos tomorrow! I know you guys don’t want to miss seeing how grown-up she looks. She’s even wearing a real bra these days. You know, the type with underwire and a little padding . . . but shush, don’t tell. Where did our baby go?

  Butterfly kisses,

  Mommylicious!

  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

  HarperCollins Publishers

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  Chapter One

  THE GREAT ESCAPE

  CLICK.

  I recognize the precise sound of my mom’s camera shutter opening and closing.

  Instinctively, I dive for cover and throw my pink-and-white seahorse-print Lilly Pulitzer duvet over my head.

  “Are you serious, Mom? This can’t be happening.” I moan, but the goose feathers in the duvet muffle my cries.

  “Gotcha!” my mom exclaims. “That was a hilarious shot. And, Imogene, I do before and afters every first day of school. They’re adorable. Readers love seeing you waking up to a new year. It signals fresh starts for them, too. You know this, Imogene.”

  Just because I know it, doesn’t mean I’m okay with it. And I want a reset button just as much as my mom’s readers do, one where I’m not the subject/star of a mommy blog.

  I stay under my tent of privacy until I’m positive that my mom’s exited my room. There’s no way I’m going back to sleep for an extra ten minutes when I’m this angry, so I fumble my way into my bathroom for a shower.

  I miss summer already, and it’s not even seven a.m. on the first day of school. As I soap up, I practice the abbreviated version of my “Can this year please be different?” speech.

  “Mom,” I say to my Bubble & Bee organic shampoo bottle. “We need to talk. I’m in ninth grade now, which means I’m almost in high school, and I don’t want to be on your blog every day. I don’t want people to know what we did over the weekend. I don’t want to review clothes or products for your sponsors. I want a normal life where I have privacy. I want be Imogene, not Babylicious. I want you to be my mom, not Mommylicious.”

  Even before the conditioner’s all the way rinsed out of my hair, I already know that I don’t have the guts to give that speech to my mom today. It wouldn’t change anything, anyway. But while I might not have the courage for the speech right now, I’m definitely going through with the escape plan I thought up last night when I couldn’t sleep.

  “Focus on your getaway,” I say in my most confident voice.

  After drying off, I zip myself into my gray polyester pleated uniform skirt. Then I button up my light blue Oxford shirt, leaving the top three buttons undone. Bowing my head, I say out loud: “Please let this be my last year of uniforms. Aphrodite, goddess of all things beautiful, please have mercy on my wardrobe.”

  Every year a few of the parents start a petition that high school students should also wear uniforms, but so far, thankfully, it’s never passed. Of c
ourse, it would be just my luck for the school to change its policy next year when I go to Neopolitan High.

  I run my fingers through my hair before slowly approaching my full-length mirror. Breathing in, I slowly take in my reflection. Long brown hair, freckled skin, dolphin-gray eyes, and skinny legs. I sigh because I look exactly like myself. Every summer I hope that the Gods of Puberty and/or Beauty will bestow me with a new look for back to school, but alas, I appear nearly the same as last year. And the year before.

  I partly blame the uniform.

  How are you supposed to grow up when you’re dressing exactly the same as you have since you were six years old? Really?

  As I apply my lip gloss, I check myself out in the mirror again. Despite recently purchasing a lightly padded bra (a “demi push-up” in Victoria’s Secret language), I still totally look like a kid. I guess I will be Babylicious forever. At least, after I get to school, I can roll my skirt up a few inches. My mom would murder me if she knew I did that. She specifically bought me new uniform skirts after my recent growth spurt because she deemed last year’s skirts “inappropriate, especially for someone like you.” By “someone like you,” she meant the daughter (and star) of Mommyliciousmeg.com, a blog with twenty thousand daily readers. Or something roughly around that. I can always tell if my mom’s readership is up or down based on what treats she buys from the grocery store. If there are fresh gourmet bakery cookies, it was a good month for readership, therefore advertisers. If it was a bad month, it’s Chips Ahoy! all the way.

  I clip my bangs to one side with a bobby pin, and I use my magnifying mirror to check for any zits on my face. Every time my mom takes a picture of me, it’s always “Get your hair out of your face, sweetie” or “Honey, do you want to borrow some cover-up?” Cover-up is the only makeup that my mom approves of for a fifteen-year-old, and she’s always try to it peddle on me. Sometimes, it seems like I’m not even good enough for my own mom’s blog, which is hysterical, since it’s about me.

  I wonder if my mom’s hoping that this is the year I finally get pretty. Maybe that would bring in a bigger readership, which seems to be the only thing that makes her happy anymore. Truth Number One of Life with a Blogger: the more website hits, the bigger the smiles. To put it simply, affirmation from random strangers is a total turn-on for my mom.

  I take one final look in the mirror before heading down the stairs. Standing at the kitchen counter, I gobble down a bowl of Honey Nut Cheerios with chocolate milk, my all-time favorite breakfast. I can hear my mom upstairs, rustling around in her closet.

  I hear a loud thump. Thump.

  This means only one thing: She’s getting the tripod out for my “after” back-to-school pictures, the posed ones she takes of me before school when I’m actually standing upright and wearing clothes, not pajamas. She needs the tripod because the point-and-shoot camera isn’t good enough on a day like today. Of course, she’ll set the timer to get a few posed shots of the two of us together: arms around each other, pretending to be thrilled about going back to school.

  Some might think that it’s sweet that my mom wants to remember my first day of ninth grade and my last day of uniforms, but it’s really not. It’s all business. Later today, after the photo shoot, she’ll upload uncomfortable photos of me and write awkward captions like “Good morning, Babylicious. Love the bed head!” for the “before” photo and “Isn’t she filling out nicely?” for the “after” photo. Majorly awkward. Then tonight, my friends and enemies alike will visit her blog and have a nice laugh about it.

  But not today.

  Today I have an escape route. Even if I’m not ready to confront my mom, I’m still not just going to willingly submit to a back-to-school blog feature.

  I open the door that leads to our basement and I tiptoe down the stairs.

  Grandma Hope is reclining on her red leather La-Z-Boy. The Golf Channel is on.

  She points at an up-and-coming golfer on the screen “He over-rotates. Why can’t anyone but me see that? I’ve watched this shot four times. I’m sure of it. These analysts are all blind bozos. Where are the women analysts? They have women on the sidelines at football games but not golf matches? That’s plain stupid.”

  She rewinds the screen and presses play. We watch the shot again.

  “See. Told you so,” she says.

  Before she was my grandma, or even my mom’s mom, Hope played professional golf in the 1960s; she was part of the early Ladies Professional Golf Association, or the LPGA, as it’s better known. When she moved in with us five years ago, right after my grandpa died, she cut back to playing golf four days a week, which doesn’t include the days she clocks in at the driving range and the putting green. Luckily, we live in Naples, Florida, where it’s summery all year round, so she never has to take a real break from golf. Although she’s as healthy as a Florida navel orange in autumn, I think that would kill her.

  Diversion, I remember. Concentrate on your escape.

  “Grandma Hope, I need your help,” I say slowly.

  My grandma looks away from the TV and toward me. “Well, don’t you look like the bee’s knees! That gloss works on you, although I think a Pink Lady apple red would suit you better. I’m forever confused about your mom’s makeup ban. As women, we still aren’t first-class citizens like men, but at least we get to wear a nice lipstick. Why should your mom deny you that?”

  On top of being a terrific athlete, Grandma Hope’s also an incredibly classy dame. There isn’t a single day where she doesn’t dress to impress. Depending on her outfit, she wears either a strand of black pearls or a chunky turquoise necklace. And she always applies her favorite red lipstick, Ruby Slipper, while she’s still in bed. I’ve never seen her natural lip color before. Seriously. She keeps a tube of lipstick on her nightstand at all times. And one in her purse, and one in her glove compartment. Her hair is also permanently styled and highly flammable due to her heavy-handed sprays of Aqua Net. “Just because I’m an athlete, doesn’t mean I’m a tomboy,” she always says.

  “Grandma Hope!” I repeat. “I need to be quick. Ninth grade is an extremely, majorly big deal, but my mom is driving me crazy by making today about her and her blog. So will you please, pretty please with a cherry on top, drive me before my mom has a chance to make me her next photo spread? She already totally ambushed me once today when I was still asleep.”

  Grandma Hope shuts off the TV, which shocks me. Whenever she’s not out on the golf course herself, the Golf Channel is always on. It’s the soundtrack of her life; she even raises the volume when she’s in the shower. It can get so loud that we can hear it all the way upstairs.

  She stares at me from her perch on the couch. “Darling. I have a crazy idea: Why don’t you just try talking to her? Lord knows that I’ve tried, but I think it needs to come from you. You’re her daughter. I’m her mother, so that means she hasn’t listened to a single thing I’ve said since, well, since she was your age.”

  I pause.

  Grandma Hope would love my “Can this year be different?” speech I’ve been preparing. She’d be so proud of me, especially during the parts in which I stand up for myself and explain why I need my privacy. But I’m not ready for that speech quite yet. Asking someone to stop doing what she has always done is a fairly large request. It’s especially tricky to ask your own mother if she’ll stop being herself from now on . . . or at least stop being the Mommylicious version of herself.

  “I’m not talking to her today, Grandma Hope. There’s enough going on already,” I answer. “But can you please just help me skip the ‘after’ pictures? Maybe it’ll be an ‘Actions speak louder than words” kind of moment.”

  “All right,” Grandma Hope says with a nod. “But you can’t hide forever.”

  With the spring of a woman who’s had two hole-in-ones in her seventies (and she’s only seventy-three), my grandma grabs her keys and the gold chain that dangles with them, and her two most recent hole-in-one balls. She squints at the sun as she peers throu
gh the sliding glass doors that lead out to our side yard.

  She raises her eyebrows and winks her left eye. “It does look like a swell day for a drive. Do you have your schoolbag and your things for swim practice, Georgia?”

  My grandma never took to the name Imogene. She is still more than a little bit “salty” (her word, not mine) that my mom chose my name by holding a contest on her blog. So ever since I was little, Grandma Hope’s always called me Georgia, my middle name.

  I motion to a Vineyard Vines tote bag a with starfish border, a gift from one of my mom’s sponsors, and my blue swim bag that constantly reeks of chlorine despite the fact I wash my swimsuits out with a little vinegar to try to get rid of the smell.

  “Got the bags. Thanks, Ace,” I say. I use my grandma’s golf nickname because I know she loves it. Ace, in golf language, is a hole-in-one.

  We quietly exit through the sliding doors and make a quick getaway to Grandma’s old boat of a convertible, a 1960 Ford Galaxie Sunliner. It’s sea-foam green and gorgeous. She already promised me that I can have it when I turn sixteen, but only if I drive her to her golf club, the Orange Grove, whenever she wants.

  “You can be my designated driver, and I can finally play the nineteenth hole. I think at seventy-three-years-old, I’ve earned that right,” she has told me at least a dozen times.

  The nineteenth hole is when golfers gather in the clubhouse after playing and socialize over a round of adult beverages. My best friend Sage’s grandpa speaks Chinese; my grandma speaks golf. I’m happy to speak Pig Latin in a Romanian accent if it means I get a vintage convertible as my first car. Plus, I’ll finally be able to avoid Mommylicious without needing to find a getaway car and a driver.

  As my grandma’s car is backing down the driveway and only narrowly avoiding our mailbox, my mom, dressed only in her sunflower robe, rushes out our front door like someone just told her George Clooney was shirtless on our front lawn. My mom drives my grandma batty with her clothing choices. “Working from home isn’t an excuse to dress homeless,” Grandma Hope always lectures her.

 

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