P.S. I Like You

I looked at my notebook. “We’ll never have enough alone time together, will we?” I asked it with a sigh. “It’s as if people are trying to keep us apart.”


My sister came back in swinging a hairbrush like a pendulum between her thumb and forefinger, a straightener tucked under her other arm. “Who are you talking to?”

“Myself.”

“You do that a lot.”

“I know. I’m the only one who understands me.”

Ashley threw the brush at me, narrowly missing my leg, then plugged in the straightener and positioned herself on the floor by my bed. I begrudgingly closed my notebook.

My sister had long, beautiful hair. It was the same color as mine, but unlike my crazy waves, hers was perfectly straight.

“People spend a lot of time to make their hair look exactly like yours,” I said as I ran a brush through it.

“And people spend just as much time to make their hair look like yours.”

“I guess everyone wants what they don’t have.”

As if I had been making a statement about her love life, Ashley said, “Boys suck.”

“Amen,” I said.

Ashley tipped her head back. “What? You’re agreeing with me? Spill.”

“You want to feel better about your supposedly embarrassing situation that in reality happens to everyone?” I asked.

“Not everyone.”

“Everyone at some point or another has had food in their teeth. But I bet your pet rabbit has never peed on your date’s foot.”

Ashley laughed.

“Yeah … exactly,” I said.

Ashley didn’t stop laughing. She put her forehead to her knees, causing me to let go of the braid.

“Keep on laughing,” I said.

“Okay, I’m sorry, I’m sorry.” She sat back and I separated her hair again and began to braid when she broke out into laughter again.

“I’m not braiding your hair anymore,” I announced, sitting back.

“No, no, no,” she said. “I’m sorry.”

I gathered her hair. Two minutes passed, then she said, “Do you call him Pee Foot now?” and burst into laughter.

I let go of her hair and shoved her. “You’re a brat.”

She stood and let out a happy sigh. “Your stories are the best, Lil. Your social life is so funny. Thanks for making me feel better.” With that she left the room.

“Yes, that’s me, the girl whose social life makes everyone feel better about theirs,” I said to nobody.

I yanked the straightener’s cord out of the wall, turning it off, and then picked up my notebook. I flipped to the back and titled the last page: Suspects. I didn’t have that sad of a social life. I had a fun and perfectly normal relationship with an anonymous pen pal. Okay, so an anonymous pen pal didn’t exactly sound normal, but I would ignore that fact. Maybe it was time to figure out who he was.





“Mrs. Clark, did you have rules when you were dating?”

I was beginning to wonder if I was the only girl in the world who didn’t have dating rules, and if this was part of my problem. I was sitting at a desk in the main office fulfilling my aide duties, which today consisted of transferring the handwritten sign-out sheet from the day before into the computer.

Mrs. Clark looked up from her computer. She was about my mom’s age, and pretty, with long blonde hair and glasses. I could almost picture her as a teenager. Almost.

“Rules?” Mrs. Clark asked, furrowing her brow.

“You know, like ‘be mysterious but not too mysterious,’ ‘don’t laugh at your date,’ things like that.”

She smiled. “Do you make it a habit of laughing at your dates?”

“Only when they do something funny.”

Mrs. Clark thought for a second. “When I was dating, my girlfriends and I used to say, ‘Don’t cry in front of him before date three.’ ”

“Cry?” I echoed, frowning.

“Yeah. Guys gets skittish when you cry.”

“I don’t think I have to worry about that one.”

“You don’t cry?”

“I don’t make it to date three.”

She smiled again, like I hadn’t been making a joke. I had been. Sort of. “Rules are silly,” she said. “Just be real.”

“Easier said than done.” I entered the last sign out into the computer, then filed away the hardcopy. “Done.”

“Oh, good.” She pointed across the room. “Can you grab the keys and drop this packet off in Mrs. Lungren’s room?”

“Sure.” I got to my feet. “Why do I need keys for that?”

“Mrs. L locks up during fourth. Prep period.”

“Where are the keys?”

“Have I never had you drop things off in locked rooms before?”

“No.”

She gave a grunt like she was surprised. “Well, you’re responsible, so I can trust you.” She winked and went over to a cabinet at the very back of the office, retrieved some keys, and then placed them in my hand.