Once Dead, Twice Shy

My teeth gritted, and I snipped a rush of lines before I became visible.

 

“That’s really classy, Amy,” Josh said bitingly. I glanced at Parker, knowing he lived down the street from me. His lips were pressed together and he wouldn’t look at anyone.

 

Amy brought her knees up, sitting sideways with her feet on the bench seat to look coy. “I think Josh is sweet on his new little friend. God! She has purple hair. What a freak.”

 

Josh exhaled slowly, eyes down. If I hadn’t already been dead, I would have died right then. My fingers reached to touch my hair, and I vowed to put a green streak in it next week. Beside me, I could see Grace starting to get angry, her eyes almost shooting sparks.

 

“I told you that you look better without these,” Amy said as she took Josh’s glasses off and set them on the table. “She’s weird and a bitch,” she said, so casually it shocked me. “You said it yourself. Why are you hanging with such a Meg!”

 

It sounded innocuous, but I was up on my Brit slang. It meant Most Embarrassing Gal or Guy. Great.

 

Looking pained, Josh glanced up. “I said that before I knew her, okay?” he said loudly. “What is it to you, anyway? Still mad about me dumping you last year?”

 

Len laughed, reaching to give Parker a high five. “Right before the prom!” he said, cramming three fries in his mouth. “If I’d had a camera, I’d be a millionaire.”

 

My eyes widened. Whoa. He dumped her, then took me out? No wonder she hated me.

 

Amy’s eyes narrowed. “Oh, for God’s sake. She’s so freaked that even the Goths won’t have her. A total case!”

 

 

 

Len leaned forward with his arms flat on the table. “Amy’s right,” he said seriously. “You can do better than her. You’re a senior.”

 

A total case? He could do better?My emotions swung full circle, and I gritted my teeth, so ticked I could scream. I should’ve walked away. I should have walked away and not listened.

 

Grace’s beating wings gave off a tight hum, and I heard her say, “There once was a girl from Lake Powell, whose mouth was something quite foul. The crap she did spew, like an overfull loo, till I smacked her right into a wall.”

 

Depressed, I sank down in the seat of the next booth over, still cutting threads, still invisible. “That doesn’t rhyme,” I whispered, wiping under my eye. Damn it, I wasn’t going to cry because of whatAmy said.

 

“Maybe not,” Grace said tartly, “but that’s what’s going to happen.”

 

“Shake her off, dude,” Len said. “Do it, or she’s going to be hanging on you all year.”

 

“You ever think I might want to hang with her all year?” Josh said angrily. “She’s a lot more fun than you, so afraid of what everyone else thinks you can’t even pick out your own clothes without calling someone. And that’s her drink, weenis.”

 

“I can’t believe you brought her here!” Amy said loudly. “This is our place!”

 

I perked up, starting to feel better when Josh said, “Better go, unless you want to see her. You might have to be nice, and a smile would probably crack your perfect face, Amy.”

 

Quietly I got up to look over the back of the booth seat. Josh was red with anger. Len seemed unsure, and Parker was clearly uncomfortable as he messed with his iced coffee. In a quick motion, Amy shoved her feet into Len to make him move so she could get out. “Later, dude,” Len said as he and Amy stalked off.

 

Parker gave Josh an uneasy look and stood. From the front of the hangout/skate park, Amy mocked,

 

“Bye, Josh,” as she waited by the door.

 

I knew my expression was ugly as Parker followed Len to the door. Josh exhaled, then whispered,

 

“Madison, I’m sorry. Are you still here? They’re jerks. Don’t listen to them. I said that stuff before I knew you. I’m an ass. Please come back. I’m sorry. I…I like your hair.”

 

Frustrated, I scrambled over the back of the booth seat and slid down. The seat was still warm from Amy.Yuck. I focused on my amulet, taking a moment to let the lines form, violet threads from the stone, to me, and to the present, grounding me in a brand-new past. Josh’s gaze darted to mine when I became visible, but I couldn’t look at him. The guardian angel seemed to relax, going to sit in the light fixture, where her faint glow was lost. “Nothing like knowing your spot in the pecking order, huh?” I muttered.

 

Josh shifted uneasily. “They’re idiots,” he said as he pushed my drink back to me. “I’m really sorry. I shouldn’t have said those things before. I didn’t know you then.”

 

I fiddled with the straw, unable to meet his eyes. “They are your friends.”

 

 

 

Kim Harrison's books