"Practice?"
"In Anger Management," he said, "we had to do all this role-playing stuff. You know, to get used to handling things in a less volatile way."
"You role-played," I said, trying to picture this.
"I had to. It was court-ordered." He sighed. "But I have to say, it was kind of helpful. You know, so that when and if something similar did happen, you had some kind of road map for dealing with it."
"Oh," I said. "Well, I guess that makes sense."
"All right, then." He slid a little closer to me. "So say I'm your mom."
"What?" I said.
"I'm your mom," he repeated. "Now tell me you want to quit modeling."
I could feel myself blushing. "I can't do that," I said.
"Why not?" he asked. "Is it so hard to believe? You think I'm not a good role-player?"
"No," I said. "It's just—"
"Because I am. Everyone wanted me to be their mother in group."
I just looked at him. "I just… It's weird."
"No, it's hard. But not impossible. Just try it."
A week earlier, I hadn't even known what color his eyes were. Now, we were family. At least temporarily. I took in a breath.
"Okay," I said. "So—"
"Mom," he said.
"What?"
"The more accurate the exercise, the more effective it is," he explained. "Go all out, or don't go at all."
"Okay," I said again. "Mom."
"Yes?"
This is so weird, I thought. Out loud, I said, "The thing is, I know that the modeling thing is really important to—"
He held up a hand in thestop position. "R and R. Rephrase and Redirect that."
"Why?"
" Thing. Like I said, major placeholder, super vague. In confrontations, you have to be as specific as possible, to avoid misunderstandings." He leaned a little closer to me. "Look, I know it's weird," he said.
"But it works. I promise."
This was little comfort, though, as I proceeded to cross over from simply uncomfortable to borderline humiliated. "I know my modeling is very important to you," I said, "and that you really enjoy it."
Owen nodded, gesturing for me to go on.
"But to be honest…" I reached up, tucking a piece of hair behind my ear. "It's just that lately, I've been thinking about it a lot, and I feel like…"
The thing was, I knew this was just a game. Practice, not real. But even so, I felt something seizing up in me, like an engine sputtering to a stop. I had too much at stake here— failing would not only reveal my weakness about confrontation, but embarrass me in front of him, as well.
He was still waiting.
"I can't do it," I said, and looked away.
"You so had it, though!" he said, slapping the wall with the palm of his hand. "You were right there."
"I'm sorry," I said, picking up my sandwich again. My voice sounded tight as I said, "I just… I can't."
He looked at me for a moment. Then he shrugged. "All right," he said. "No big deal."
We sat there, both of us silent for a second. I had no idea what had just happened, but it did feel like a big deal, suddenly. Then I heard Owen take in a breath.
"Look," he said, "I'm just going to say this: It's got to suck, you know? Keeping something like that in.
Walking around every day having so much you want to say, but not doing it. It's gotta make you really mad. Right?"
I knew he was talking about modeling. But hearing this, I thought of something else, the thing I could never admit, the biggest secret of all. The one I could never tell, because if the tiniest bit of light was shed upon it, I'd never be able to shut it away again.
"I should go," I said, stuffing my sandwich back into the bag. "I… I have to talk to my English teacher about this project I'm supposed to be doing."
"Oh," he said. I could feel him watching me, and made a conscious effort not to look back. "Sure."
I stood up, grabbing my bag. "I'll, um, see you later."
"Right." He picked up his iPod. "See you around."
I nodded, and then, somehow, I was walking away, leaving him behind. I waited until I was at the main doors to look back.
He was just sitting there, head ducked down, listening to his music like nothing had happened at all. I had a flash of my first impression of him—that he was dangerous, a threat. I knew now he wasn't, at least not in the ways I'd thought then. But there was something frightening about Owen Armstrong: he was honest and expected the same from everyone else. And that scared me to death.
When I first walked away from Owen, I felt relieved. But it didn't last.
The real truth, I realized as the day wore on, was that even though I hardly knew Owen, I'd actually been more honest with him than anyone else in a long time. He knew about what had happened between me and Sophie, about Whitney's illness, and that I hated modeling. This seemed like an awful lot to reveal to someone who, in the end, I couldn't even risk being friends with. But I didn't know it for sure until I saw Clarke.
It was after seventh period, in the hallway, and she was opening her locker. Her hair was in two spriggy pigtails, and she had on jeans, a black shirt, and shiny Mary Janes. As I watched, a girl I didn't know passed behind her, saying her name, and Clarke turned, smiling, and said hello back to her. It was all totally normal, just another moment in another day, but something in it struck me, and I found myself going back, back, all the way to that night down by the pool. Another time I'd been afraid of conflict, afraid to be honest, afraid even to speak. I'd lost a friend then, too. The best friend, really, I'd ever had.
It was too late to try and alter what had happened between me and Clarke, but there might still be time to change something else. Maybe even me. So I went to look for Owen.
In a school of over two thousand students, it was easy to lose yourself, not to mention someone else.