The Beginning of After

Chapter Eight



I went with Meg, Nana, and Mrs. Dill to Bettina’s Boutique to shop for our dresses. It was the one store almost everyone went to for the prom, since decades ago. They actually kept track of who bought what so you wouldn’t get caught wearing the same thing as someone else—unless you wanted to, of course. Meg had desperately wanted to try Macy’s or even go down to the city, but her mother insisted.

“It’s a tradition,” she said. “I bought my prom dress here.”

“Further evidence as to why I should skip it,” snorted Meg as we walked up the store’s brick steps.

The boutique was now owned by Bettina’s daughter, whose name we could never remember, so we called her Bettina 2.0. She greeted us as we walked in and smiled wide at me and Meg.

“Hello, girls!” she chirped. “All the prom stuff is over there; I call it the ‘Prom Parade of Prettiness.’ See the banner?”

She doesn’t know who I am, I thought, and felt disappointed, and then felt bad about feeling disappointed.

Nana hurried toward the prom racks, which were organized by color, and in seconds was holding up something pink and fluffy.

“Oh, I like this,” she said, as if she were going to wear it herself to the next Hospital Auxiliary luncheon. I shook my head and frowned, then followed Meg toward the dark dresses at the far end of the racks.

“Black all the way,” Meg said. “Don’t you think?”

“Not for me,” I said. “Too obvious.”

Meg froze for a second and looked at me sadly. “Right.”

As she plunged her arms into the rows, I scanned the whole rainbow of the Prom Parade of Prettiness, not sure what I was even looking for. Bettina 2.0 had put up extra banners that said FUN & FLIRTY! and FOREVER YOUNG! but nothing jumped out at me. I let my eyes wander past the prom racks, into the rest of the store. There was a mannequin near the front, and all I could see was that she had her arms up in a sort of “Oh, to hell with it” pose. I went over to get a closer look.

The dress did not make the mannequin look Fun & Flirty or Forever Young. It made this mannequin look like she was at the Oscars and owned the red carpet, even though she was made of plastic and had no face. It was a color blue I’d never seen before, and a material I didn’t even know what to call. It caught the light in dazzling ways and begged me to touch it.

Somewhere in the corner of my gaze, I saw Bettina 2.0 and Mrs. Dill talking in low voices. I made out the words remarkably well.

Now I felt their eyes on me as I found the dress in my size on the rack next to the mannequin. I paused, then took a moment to notice the feeling of my jeans loose around my waist, saggy in the butt. It was a feeling I’d been ignoring, because it felt so unfamiliar. I let my fingers find the dress in the next size smaller, and headed to the fitting room. Meg noticed my beeline and motioned for the others to follow.

Minutes later I stepped out, toward the scary three-way mirror where everyone was waiting.

The dress wasn’t perfect; at least, not the “It’s so me!” kind of perfect. Instead, it looked like it was worn by someone else. This not-Laurel person’s skin glowed pale against the blue fabric, and the overhead fluorescent light deepened the shadows under her eyes. She was older, and came from somewhere foreign like Europe or Vermont. And it hung on her just right, with a long flared skirt, beaded bodice, and gauzy sleeves.

“This is it,” I said to Meg. She nodded. I raised my head to look at Nana’s reflection over my shoulder. I said it again: “This is it.”

“It’s not really a prom dress, and the color . . . ,” Nana said weakly, but I just twirled, letting the fabric caress my legs. Finally, she just said, “You’ve lost weight.” In the past, coming from her this would have been praise. Now she said it with worry, like she wasn’t doing her job of getting me to eat.

I shrugged as casually as I could. I’d been trying halfheartedly for a year to drop a size, and now it had just happened and all I could feel was sad about it. I mean, could I afford to lose anything else?

Not the time or place to be sad, I told myself. These were pounds you didn’t want. Push it, push it, push it away.

“Nana,” I said as solidly as I could. “I love this dress. Don’t you love it?” And Nana had no choice but to nod.

At the register, Bettina 2.0 looked wide-eyed at me as I handed her the dress, as if I were a celebrity she’d just now recognized.

“This is one of my favorites,” she said. She fumbled for the tag and looked at the price. I’d already checked it and knew it was more expensive than any of the prom dresses. It was probably more expensive than anything else in the store.

“Oh . . . this is wrong,” said Bettina 2.0, frowning. “This dress is actually on sale.”

“Isn’t that lucky!” exclaimed Nana.

I looked around the store. “There aren’t any signs,” I said.

“That doesn’t matter,” Bettina said, touching my arm across the counter. Now she looked at Nana. “I’m the owner, and I can put things on sale whenever I want.”

I felt heat rise from the middle of my back. But Nana winked at Bettina 2.0 as she pulled out her MasterCard, and the someone-else dress was thirty seconds away from being mine.


The next day, Meg and I were walking through the senior parking lot on our way out of school when we heard a car driving slowly alongside us. I looked up to see that it was Andie Stokes’s canary yellow VW Beetle.

“Hey!” yelled Andie from the driver’s seat. She was alone in the car. I didn’t think I’d ever seen her without Hannah or one of her other friends. “Laurel! How are you?”

I’d talked to Andie almost every day since I’d come back to school. She was always seeking me out after class or by my locker, touching one finger to my arm as she asked how I was and gave me an update on the memorial fund plans.

Meg and I approached her car. Other students walked by extra slowly to check us out. I am talking to Andie Stokes, I thought, and people are seeing me talk to Andie Stokes.

“Hi Andie,” I said.

“I’m glad I ran into you guys,” she said, letting her eyes bounce between Meg and me. “I was in Mr. Churchwell’s office today, looking at the prom seating chart, and noticed you weren’t assigned to a table yet.”

“We were going to let the guys figure it out,” said Meg, which was sort of a lie. We hadn’t even talked about tables.

“Well, I’ll tell you that we have four empty seats at ours, and we’d love for you to join us.”

Ours. We. Andie moved through life in a collective. I wondered what that would feel like, to always be part of a whole.

“I— Thanks— Cool—” was all I could say. I was still working on the not-a-moron thing with her.

“That’s totally sweet of you,” said Meg, stepping in. “We’ll talk to Gavin and Joe and see if that works.” Suddenly Meg and Andie were entering each other’s cell numbers into their phones. While they did this, other students were forced to squeeze their cars around the Beetle on their way out of the lot.

Business done, Andie waved good-bye and drove off. Meg turned to me.

“What do you think?” she asked.

“What do I think about going to the prom and sitting with the cool crowd?”

“Other than the fact that it reminds you of Carrie and you might end the evening covered in pig’s blood.”

“Could be fun, could be so bizarre our heads will explode.”

“I agree. But I’m going to bank on the fun part.”

We stood there, popping our eyes at each other. The exciting reality of all this was beginning to sink in. The prom! The someone-else dress! Joe Lasky! Andie Stokes!

“Let’s go to my place and put on our dresses again,” said Meg, and I followed her through the parking lot.


In the mornings, right when I woke up, I usually had about two seconds of feeling like nothing had changed. I was in my bed in my room, and the light coming in from my blinds was the same light as always.

Then I’d remember.

And then I’d have to think of something to get me out of bed. Usually it was as simple as walking Masher or a test in English. Today, it was the SAT scores.

They had been available online as of five a.m., which was when I knew Meg had logged on. I checked the clock. Six thirty. Earlier than I usually woke up. My body must have known.

I walked slowly downstairs and wondered if I was nervous, how much I cared. Clearly a lot, since my hands shook a bit as I found the paperwork where I’d written my log-in information. They still shook as I entered it, and clicked the mouse where I was supposed to.

710 on the math. 790 on critical reading, 760 on writing.

790 on critical reading! A near-perfect score. I turned around to tell someone, but realized Nana was still sleeping. I picked up the phone to call Meg.

“How’d you do?” she answered.

I gave her the numbers.

“Rock on!”

“I didn’t think I did that well. I wonder if they thought I cheated, since I took the test by myself.”

“I doubt that.”

We had another one of our awkward pauses.

“Laurel?” Meg asked softly.

“Yeah?”

“Aren’t you going to ask me how I did?” Her voice got high.

“God, I’m sorry. How did you do?”

“I kicked butt too.” Another pause. “I’ve got to go. We’ll celebrate after school today.”

We hung up, and almost instantly my speeding, soaring sensation—festal: meaning “joyous”!—hit a brick wall.

Dad.

He would have been standing here. Maybe he would have been the one to jiggle me awake just past dawn. He would have given me a high five and a hug, his customary “I’m so proud of you, kiddo” combo, proclaiming that all my studying, the prep course, him quizzing me—it had all been worth it.

The image filled me with instant agony. Make him go away. Don’t ruin this, don’t ruin this, don’t ruin this.

And with that, my father was gone.


When I walked into the house after school that day, I expected to find Nana making dinner. But it was quiet, and I followed that quiet upstairs to find the door to the guest room closed. I stepped closer to knock, but heard something soft and muffled on the other side. It sounded like one of the animals we sometimes heard in the woods at night.

It wasn’t an animal. It was my grandmother, crying.

I jumped back, ran down to the kitchen. How long had she been doing that, while I was at Meg’s, trying on our dresses and experimenting with hairstyles, snacking on Oreos and diet soda? I wondered how often she did that while I was at school, and then I stopped that wondering as quickly as I could.

There was no room in my head for the thought of Nana losing it. I needed her strong and wise and stoic. I needed her to remind me that my life could work, because her life seemed to be working.

I needed her to not need anything from me, because I had nothing to give.

Still, I found myself turning to go back upstairs, prepared to knock and see if she was okay, when the phone rang. I dove to get it so that Nana wouldn’t be disturbed. “Hello?”

“Hello . . . Is this Laurel?”

“Yes?”

“Laurel, it’s Suzie Sirico.” She said it like we’d been chatting every day, the best of friends. Way too bubbly.

“Oh. Hi.”

“I just thought I’d call and see how you and your grandmother were doing.”

“We’re okay,” I said. “Busy.” I really am busy, I added to myself. I have new friends and I’m going to the prom with Joe Lasky in an awesome dress!

I glanced up at the stairs, where I now heard the door to the guest room creaking slowly open. I pictured Nana on the landing, listening to try to figure out who I was talking to.

“I want to make sure you have my number if you need it.” Suzie’s voice, so steady and sure of itself, was possibly the most annoying thing I’d ever heard.

Was this how people in her line of work were supposed to drum up new business? God, she was no better than a telemarketer.

“We have your number,” I said, not sure if that was true. “Thanks for calling.”

I hung up as Nana came into the room. Her face was freshly washed but her eyes tired, unfocused.

“Was that Suzie Sirico?” she asked.

“Yes,” I said. “I have to get started on some homework.” With that I brushed past her, knowing I should stay and chat or help her cook dinner, but unable to make myself turn back.





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