“The one and only,” I say back.
“OK.” He looks over at my new friends. “Hey, girls. Looking good this semester. You know what to do, so choose your weapon.” He nods to a box of lawn bowling equipment. “Drake, run three laps around the track.”
“I’m not running laps. I’ve got a bad knee.”
Fowler looks up from his roster and scratches his head with a pen. “You’re lying. We all know you’re lying, we just don’t feel like fighting about it. So you’re here. Congratulations on making it into modified PE. Now you’re going around that track three times at the start of every class or you’re gonna fail. Got it?”
Jesus Christ. I cannot cut a break.
“Josie and I will walk with you,” Mary says.
I look at her legs dubiously.
“I can’t go fast though,” she says, noticing my gaze.
“OK,” I say. I’m up for company. I need friends and at least these girls are nice. So the three of us set off to walk laps. They talk incessantly and I half-heartedly listen to them as everyone stares at us. It takes the whole period to walk those three laps, but I can think of millions of worse ways to spend a morning. So I don’t complain.
Fowler disappears after attendance. Good to know. I will be cutting this class regularly.
After that my day is economics, then lunch, then English, science, and driver’s ed rounds out the day.
Everyone takes driver’s ed in tenth grade here, and I’m a senior, so that teacher makes me his assistant. I like driver’s ed. I can feel this guy’s very low expectations of us the minute he opens his mouth. Plus, the person in the seat next to me is interesting as fuck. She’s a tiny Filipino girl named Quinn who is married at fifteen. Last month, that might’ve shocked me. This month, no way. I’m so out of my league, I just accept it and move on.
Quinn looks like she’s in training to be a CEO with her skirt suit and black pumps and she spends the entire class complaining to me about her in-laws as we pretend to watch a movie.
When the final bell rings I make my way to the farthest building on campus where my locker is located. Usually the seniors get lockers in the main building where the offices are. But I’m new, and it was December when I got here, so I’m in no-man’s-land.
After that I walk all the way across campus to the front and start heading across the street to the arcade. I have a few acquaintances there from school and I’m just starting to wonder if any of them might have a joint to share when a horn honks and scares me half to death.
Mr. Bowman smiles as he eases his car alongside of me. “Going over to Gilbert, Miss Drake?”
“Shit,” I say.
“You forgot?”
“I did. Mr. Bowman, I don’t have a ride and I don’t even have bus fare—”
“Get in.”
“What?” I say, looking around.
“I’ll take you. But I can’t take you every day, Shannon. You’ll have to figure this out.”
I rub my head because it’s beginning to ache, but if he’s offering me an easy way to get there, I might as well take it. So I walk around and get in the passenger side.
“How’s your birthday going?” he asks, pulling onto Lincoln Avenue.
“Shitty. I might as well be invisible, that’s how much people give a fuck about my birthday.”
He laughs and I look over at him. I’d say he’s late forties, with blond hair that is just about to go gray, and he’s lean and athletic. Not a bad-looking guy for a guidance counselor. And he’s tolerant with my fucks. I sorta like that about him.
“It doesn’t get any easier, you know.”
“I figured as much.”
“But I’ve been in this school for ten years and I rarely see kids with so much potential come through needing help. So I’m taking a personal interest in you.”
“Great,” I mumble.
“I’m sorry about your sister.”
I swallow hard and look straight ahead as we ride down Lincoln.
“It’s got to be hard to be uprooted in the middle of your junior year, moved out to California, and then have to switch schools three times in nine months.”
“Well,” I say, rummaging through my backpack for a cigarette, “it wasn’t a picnic, if that’s what you’re getting at.”
“So your brother-in-law?”
“What about him?” I ask, lighting up and blowing my smoke out the window.
“He’s…” I look over at Bowman. “Good to you?”
“We tolerate each other.”
“And the baby?”
I nod and take another drag. “She’s sweet. I love her.”
“He’s doing OK with her?”