"I can do this. I can get this job."
Jess and the other girls weren't due to be home for another hour, but I needed to say the words out loud. Like a lot of things in my life, it seemed like it helped if I willed them to be.
Think it. Say it. Think it. Say it. Think. It. Say. It.
If I did that enough, maybe it would happen. Or at least I hoped that it would work. I stared at the computer screen, bright with the application glaring back at me. The obvious fields had already been filled in. Name: Avery Mitts. Age: 20. And the list went on. Phone number. Home address. Email address. Hobbies and interests. Skills.
"Post secondary educational background?" I suppressed a small laugh. I couldn't understand why that might be important for a live-in homemaker, but I filled it in anyway. Maybe the employer was into academic conversation? I highly doubted my less than perfect GPA could lend to that, but I could at least humor a person. After the general section had been filled out, I moved onto the more personal section.
Cooking abilities. My fingers paused in a curled claw-like position above the keys, but then I shrugged and resumed typing. I could cook well enough. Pinching pennies at home with Mama taught me more than a few of the basics. I decided to check the box of intermediate. I was no expert, but the employer wouldn't starve.
Workout ethic. I had to read this field twice. This shouldn't even matter, and it almost put me off of the whole thing. And then my nearly empty food cupboard called to me from the kitchen, or so I thought I heard it, and then realized it was my low blood sugar talking instead. I racked my brain for an answer. For argument's sake, it was currently a good mile walking distance to campus. I had classes five days a week. According to that math, I was standing pretty well in that department. I decided to check another intermediate category.
Organizational skills. Now here, I could excel. I checked expert. Have you seen my closet? All five shirts and two sweaters impeccably clean, hung up, and color coded. All seven colors.
Knowledge of house maintenance. A druggy mother and dead-beat dad didn't teach me much in that area, so I decided to go with beginner. If it was a deal breaker, then so be it. I could change light bulbs and clean a lint trap, bare minimum. So, I had potential.
Cleaning abilities. I could learn. I looked around my and Jessie's bedroom. My side was tidy with my spread pulled up my bed and my desk orderly. We had a chore chart in the house, and I was pretty good at keeping up with that, so, moderate it was.
Ability to learn. I mean, I was in college. Learning was basically my full-time job for at least another semester. Maybe a year if the University decided to change something about my graduation requirements, which they've done to other students in the past. I checked the 'other' box and wrote in: 'highly willing'.
I was about to hit the 'send' button but hesitated for a moment too long. Without warning, the door swung open. Like I had been caught looking at porn, I slammed the cover down and sat up on my bed, my heart racing.
I tried to lean back casually, but my body felt as stiff as my cheeks felt red. "Oh, hey, Jess! How was the study sesh?"
Jess was peppy and, despite that not being my thing, I still liked her. I felt like we got along pretty well, even though our personalities were miles apart. Along with two other girls, we were renting a cozy two-bedroom house for a small fortune to live close-ish to campus. A consequence of the outrageous rent was having to share a bedroom in order to afford it. Fortunately I lucked out.
She narrowed her eyes at me but entered the room. "Not bad. I mean, I'm getting super burnt out and could really use a lay, but you know how it is. Am I right?"
"Yeah, a lay. Totally want to get one of those in the immediate to near future." I cleared my throat and squeezed my eyes shut. I had no idea why I couldn't avoid being so stupid. I couldn't believe she hadn't written me off as a complete psychopath yet.
Her brows pulled together as she looked me over. She chuckled. "Is everything okay?"
Sweat began to bead at the back of my neck, and I bit down on the meaty part on the side of my finger. It hurt, but I needed the distraction from my crumbling social skills. "Yeah. Why wouldn't it be?"
"I don't know. You just seem a bit.. on edge." The backpack she had shouldered slid down her arm to the floor by her bed. She walked to my side and yanked my finger from my mouth. "And you always do that when you're guilty about something."