uh yes?
xLoupxGaroux: You don’t seem to get out much. I mean,you have to LIVE in order to write well about life, you know? Tolstoy didn’t spend the first 30 years of his life on the sofa watching Hulu Plus and then out of nowhere write Anna Karenina .
Scarface: i get your point.
xLoupxGaroux: Do something crazy. Go ask out a boy.
Scarface: oh shit. no way.
xLoupxGaroux: Yes way. I will if you will!
Scarface: it’s SO much worse in high school! people talk about who’s dating with such GRAVITY, like they’re talking about wikileaks.
xLoupxGaroux: If you don’t I’ll jump ship, swear to God. Lots of good slash OTPs for that CW show Imaginary Detectives . . .
Scarface: JESUS. Okay. Fine, I’ll do it.
xLoupxGaroux: Good. Honor system.
Chapter 4
I MARCH OVER TO GIDEON, MY HEART POUNDING, FEELING all the blood rush up to my head as I get closer. What the hell. After all, the first time Ted Hughes met Sylvia Plath, she bit him on the cheek, and he married her anyway. And they lived happily ever after.
“Hey,” I say. He looks up from his phone.
“Oh, hey,” he says in that neutral, accommodating voice you get when some stranger’s about to ask you for directions. When I don’t say anything, he asks, “Um, do you, like, need something?”
“It sucks about the show, right?” I blurt out.
“What show?”
“Lycanthrope High.”
For the first time, the name of the show sounds dumb and cringey coming out of my mouth, like how I’d imagine it would feel if I said the title of something I wrote myself.
“Oh.” He sort of shrugs. “Sure, I mean, I watched it when it was on. I wasn’t, like, a superfan or anything.” It is hard to tell whether he’s being honest or following the high school commandment of
Thou shalt not show thy uncoolness by openly caring about something
, which I have never been good at
.
“Okay, look. Imagine your life without access to comedy. That’s what it feels like. It’s so boring that even small, momentary escapes are in full Technicolor, like flirting with an older guy with a big calf tattoo at the gas station. It’s worse than boring, actually, because it’s not like you’re sitting in a waiting room, flipping through
Redbook
. I mean, that’s boring, but at least you’ll eventually get called in to your appointment. Whereas life is boring, but unless you’re suicidal or a Scientologist, the waiting and the appointment are the same thing—you know? Isn’t that how you’d feel?”
—What I want to say.
“Oh. Dope.”
—What I actually say.
Another weird long silence, the opposite of the knowing ones we used to have when we were kids, during which I pray for Aaron Sorkin to swoop in and write my life for the next two minutes (sans the cis-hetero-white-male-on-a-soapbox part).
“I—do you want to do something sometime?”
He looks surprised. “Uh . . .”
“I know it’s been a really long time since we hung out, but I think we still, you know, we like the same stuff, and we’re both . . .”
The look in his eyes stops me, like I was about to say “serial killers” or “Coldplay fans.” Shit. Come on, try again. I can be articulate. Go.
“You know, like how you and I both . . .” His blank look makes me falter again. I wave to vaguely indicate the hallway, the school, the town, the world. “Don’t you still feel like you don’t really . . .”
“What? Fit in?”
“I mean . . . yes? No. Sort of.”
A mix of confusion and annoyance clouds his face. Why did I think this was a good idea?
“I don’t feel like that.”
“Okay, um, I’m sorry.”
“That was a long time ago. You know? I mean, we haven’t hung out in, like . . .” He is so weirded out, he can’t even finish the sentence.
“Yeah, no, totally,” I mumble, backing away.
He shrugs. “So, I’m good now. Plenty o’ friends. Thanks for your concern, though.”
My face feels like it’s on fire. I back off and hurry away. In the back of