"Oh my god! Look at that freak!" Gavin had spotted our neighbor, Leigh, who was out in her backyard with her telescope thingy. Leigh's sister, Millie, had been in our year at school before the car crash. Drunk driver. She wasn't in any year after that.
"Go on, Hayd. Ask her if she's looking for her sister." Gavin laughed.
At the funeral, Gavin whispered that Millie was in our year as in, the "passed" tense. Spelling the word, he started laughing. I didn't laugh. It was a funeral, and I didn't get the joke. Leigh looked at us with tight, squinty red eyes, her forehead lined, tear stains on her cheeks. My sadness made me serious and good thing cause in school it was always me who got caught laughing. It was nerve-wrecking to always be Gavin's escape goat.
I hesitated at the Walkers' side gate. You can take it for granite that Gavin will get his way in the end. Leigh was always nice to me, and I wasn't going to say anything mean.
It was the start of spring, but still cold. Sometimes, I think I'll leave Canada. Move to another country. Miami, maybe. I don't think they'd have me. I don't even know Miami's national anthem and can't speak Cuban, so it was just one of those crack pipe dreams.
I crunched on gravel to make some noise, not wanting scare Leigh. I didn't think I would since it wasn't so very dark, really, that she'd think I was, like, a zombie or something. Good thing, too, since I've never eaten brains. I don't think they'd agree with my tummy. It was probably good for her, too. She's real smart. A big brain like hers would be the first thing a zombie'd wanna munch down on.
I've always feared zombies and was glad we hadn't had an outbreak here. Easter was coming up. It's like my Halloween. Mom told me the story of the first zombie, which is the true meaning of Easter. The zombie came out of that cave, and people put out chocolates for him so he wouldn't eat their brains or their pet bunnies. Man, Easter is fucked up. I'd already bought my chocolates, and a month early. No way I was going to take the risk. I'm probably zombie-proof anyway since my brain is likely smaller that one of those Cadbury mini eggs.
"Hi Hayden."
"Hey Leigh. Doing homework for an astrology class?"
She smiled at me. And her eyes were smiling too. They looked like olives that'd been cut in half, creamy green with black dots in the middle that were the pits. I mean that those dots looked like olive pits cut in half, not like: "oh man, those eyes are the pits!" Even in the half-light, Leigh's eyes were twinkly like stars, which was cool cause Leigh was out looking at them.
"Not a course. Just a hobby."
I tried not to look at Leigh's boobs, but Gavin had made it impossible not to, after what he'd said. "Leigh doesn't need to visit Silicone Valley; she's already plenty high-tech." Meaning, I guess--from the way Gavin's hands cupped and juggled some air boobs--that Leigh already had big ones. She also had pretty, long red hair. Not the curly ketchup kind clowns have.
I couldn't believe Leigh would freeze her tits off for some hobby. Then she'd need to visit Silicone Valley for sure cause she'd be completely no-tech. And they cost a lot, so she'd have to make do with air boobs for some time. Her arms would probably get tired from all the cupping and the juggling cause how else would anyone know that you even had them?
I didn't know what to say but I sure wasn't going to repeat what Gavin wanted me to say. I asked the first thing that popped into my head: "Why do stars and eyes twinkle?"
Leigh's eyes twinkled even more. Her smile went into her cheeks, and I had to swallow. I guess I was nervous, knowing Gavin was watching.
"Stars twinkle because of the Earth's atmosphere. If you were in space, they'd never twinkle." She paused. "I think that eyes also twinkle when the atmosphere is just right."
I thought about that. "So, if I was in space, would your eyes still twinkle?" Leigh tilted her head and looked at me with another one of those smiles.
"You know, I think they would. If
you
were close enough to see them..."
She brushed hair away from her forehead, tucking it behind her ear before lowering her eye to the microscope thingy. The telescope was plenty high-tech cause somehow, you'd look down into the microscope part and it let you look out the sky end, even though it was at one of those Wright angles that caused so many problems for those brothers that made the first jumbo jet. Leigh fiddled with some sort of knob, probably to adjust the bass, or something.
My eyes went to the sky to see what she was looking at. No clouds, so you could see stars, but they weren't super-bright. With the moon, streetlights, and a glow from the city, they looked like someone would need to replace the bulbs soon.
"I'd like to get out to the country, to get away from light pollution."
I didn't say anything but thought light pollution in the city was still better than heavy pollution. I wondered if Leigh had asthma, like my aunt.
It's usually good when I don't say things since they don't come out right. I really liked the way Leigh's face, from the side, was shaped like a curvy half-moon. Even in my own head, that didn't sound right. It's not like her face was pointy and shit. It's just that she had this cute chin that stood out. The line of her jaw came down all curvy to meet it. I wanted to say it, since we were talking zodiacs and moons and such, but she mighta thought I was saying her complexion looked like green cheese. Or like: "hey, what are all those moon craters on yo' face?" She didn't have moon craters. Just a cute chin and a smile that made dimples show up in her cheeks.
Then, I wished I'd never gone down. Gavin was hanging out of my bedroom window yelling "looooser" and "freeeak". He laughed and I turned redder than a communist.
This is what I wish I'd said though, but it didn't come to me until the next day: "Oh, Leigh, dahling, I wish that rude boy would stop calling me those terrible names." Leigh's pretty smart though, so even using such a posh accent I'd still have needed about ten Grammys to pull the acting off. Gavin was mean to Leigh so many times, it was obvious he wasn't talking about me. And why would he hang out in my bedroom only to trash-talk me from the window?
Instead, and not with a very posh accent at all, I said: uhhhh...
I guess, right then, I did sound like a zombie. Leigh's brains were safe though. After Gavin had shouted, my tummy felt terrible. I couldn't have eaten them even if I did like to crunch on brains.
Leigh's smile was gone. She has a cute gap between her front teeth and, sometimes, she smiled so big until she realized it was showing and then smiled smaller to cover it back up again. I'd grin like an idiot if I had that gap. If I was frozen, like Elsa and Anna, I'd want to see her gap smile because it would warm me up. I'd be like the peas you'd microwaved instead of ones that had just come out of the freezer.
She gazed into the microscope again because I think the stars were kinder to her than us boys were. I didn't even get to ask what her sign was. I stumbled back to my house, not concerned with crunching gravel this time. She knew I wasn't a zombie. Maybe she did think that I was some sort of monster, though.