Right. The day only needs this.
The quiz is OMG-hard, so that means I’ll soon have another circled F. Awesome. Even failures should have a friend. I’m sure when I explain to Aunt Gabby that I only failed the second quiz for symmetry, she’ll be good with it. I read over both pages, but it makes no sense to me, so I wind up writing nonsense in trying to “show my work.” For all the good this quiz will do me, I might as well be doodling penguins all over the paper. When I walk out at the end of the period, I hear the doom song from Star Wars in my head—and that’s totally Ryan’s fault. Before I started hanging out with him three years ago, I didn’t know Han Solo from Luke Skywalker.
“Tough one,” Shane says.
Huh? I’m faintly astonished that he hasn’t bolted in trying to beat the jocks acting like they aren’t waiting for a chance to screw with him. I could’ve told him there’s safety in numbers, but he seemed to be in full-loner mode. Maybe he wouldn’t have listened. But he’s here now. Talking to me.
“Yeah. I’m not dumb, swear to God, but this stuff…” I trail off.
“He just doesn’t explain it well.” Shane tilts his head toward Mackiewicz’s classroom.
The man’s got tenure and he’s coasting. He gives us pages to read, rambles for an hour about Pythagoras, and then expects us to figure this stuff out from the text.
“You mean at all,” I mutter.
“If you’re struggling, I could help you.”
I’m surprised speechless.
Misreading my silence, he goes on quickly, “I know I don’t look like a math geek, but—”
“When?” I cut in. “I work Monday and Thursday afternoons.”
“And you have your green thing on Wednesday night.”
I’m ridiculously thrilled he remembers. “I’m not sure if I’m continuing with that.”
He falls into step as I glimpse the jocks already moving down the hall. They don’t have long attention spans, so they’re probably thinking about lunch or the next kid who needs to be taught a lesson.
“How come?”
I shrug, not wanting to get into it.
But he does, apparently. “I heard you broke up with your boyfriend. Is that why?”
We’re outside the cafeteria, other students pushing to get their tater tots. I consider letting the lie stand because it makes me sound cooler, less stupid, but if I’m mad at Ryan for lying, then I can’t start that way with Shane. Because gazing up at him now, just glimpsing the magic of his eyes through his tousled curls, I want this to be the start of something.
“Eat lunch with me,” I say then. “And I’ll tell you about it.”
Not everything. I won’t betray Ryan’s secrets, but I want Shane to know I’m not on the rebound; it’s not like that. It’s knottier and more complicated in some ways, but in others, it’s dead simple. I’ve been looking Shane’s way since he strode into my geometry class.
He hesitates. “I usually hide out behind the school.”
“With the burners. Do you smoke?” It’s a general question, but I mean weed more than tobacco. In my opinion, either is gross.
“No. Can’t afford it, even if I wanted to.”
“Do you?” I ask, joining the end of the lunch line.
“Sometimes. It might be nice not to care.”
Being numb is good for a while, until it’s not anymore.
“They’re fooling themselves,” I say. “It’s better to deal with your shit head on. Life doesn’t get better if you look away.”
Shane swivels his head sharply toward me. “No joke. Sometimes you absolutely have to stare it down.” But he seems astonished I know that.