"How could this have happened?" Lucy asked morosely, burying her head in her hands as she stared down at 'C-minus scrawled across her essay paper. "I studied and studied, I was up until two in the morning going over the papers from previous years."
"Hey, it happens to the best of us," Marissa consoled her, tossing her heavy wool cheerleading sweater into the laundry pile at the center of the locker room, leaving it with the mass of blue and white uniforms left behind by the others. "Hey, it's better than anything I've ever gotten in Mr Sheridan's chemistry class, I still think that old bastard has it out for me. Don't know why."
"Maybe because you flooded the class with poison gas?" Lucy said, staring at the grade as though it would disappear, to be replaced with the one she felt she had truly earned.
"It's not my fault if the geezer can't keep his eyes off my breasts whenever he's walking around the classroom," Marissa tightened the warm white towel around her body, cupping her bust as she stared at her reflection in her locker's in-built mirror. "If he was watching me properly, then he would have caught me before I started pouring random chemicals into the beaker. Maybe by virtue of being associated with me he decided to deliberately tank your results?"
"Not all teachers are out to get you," Lucy crossed her toned legs and numbly swept a brush through her glossy chestnut hair.
The eighteen year olds's hazel eyes scanned the paper, locking onto every correction that had been scratched across her essay with harsh red ink, despising every callous question mark and line carved through entire sentences. It was by far the most scathing set of corrections she had received in her entire high school career, especially for someone who was used to seeing an 'A' on every piece of work that was handed back to her. For anyone else, it wouldn't have been cause for concern, simply a minor slip up among a near flawless record. But for someone striving for excellence and a place at an Ivy league college, it was a devastating blow.
"Some of them are. "Well, the coach is, but that's for an entirely different reason," Marissa smirked knowingly, recalling her attempts to draw the attention of the coach of the school's football team during practice, making her performance on the field a little more provocative than usual. She hoped the memory of the burly man's flustered face would have put a smile on her best friend's face, shaking her head when Lucy appeared incapable of tearing her eyes away from her paper. "Look, it really isn't that bad. Hell, it's better than anything I've ever gotten in chemistry, you're pushing yourself too hard."
"I don't have a choice," Lucy sighed, finally letting the paper drift from her hand down to the tiled floor, resting her head back against her locker door. "The likes of Yale and Harvard don't let just anyone enroll, they only take the best of the best. Every grade counts, anything less than perfect makes it easy for them to strike your name off the list. A 'C' is the difference between the Ivy League and regional college."
"Good, maybe we can apply to the same place," Marissa flashed a cheeky grin, laughing when Lucy rolled her eyes with a sparkle of amusement. "I'm just kidding. Besides, maybe a lesser college might not be such a bad thing, it could give you a chance to switch off that brain of yours and live in the moment."
"Marissa, my parents are both Ivy League graduates, have spent tens of thousands of dollars on private school fees, and have spent God knows how much more on private tutors over the years. There's no way they would accept it if their daughter didn't even get past the application process for at least one of the big colleges," Lucy finally decided to get changed, dropping her towel to reveal her Victoria's Secret matching white lace thong and bra. She opened her locker and pulled out her neatly folded up St. Margo's uniform.
"My parents have wasted thousands sending me here, we're not even Catholic. But knowing my dad he'll just slip the dean of a semi-prestigious college some cash as a 'donation' to get me in. My brother Simon is the wunderkind of the family, he'll be off to college before he can drive," Marissa pulled on her blouse, leaving the top few buttons undone, a trademark of hers. "Look, if you're really that desperate to rectify the problem, you can always just change it."
"How? Mr. Sheridan logs the grades onto the school's internal system. It's not the 90s anymore, you can't just use a pen to forge a better grade," Lucy sat down and extended her legs, drawing a pair of plain black knee socks along them, highlighting every wondrous detail of her athletic legs. "Besides, I couldn't do it if it was even possible. It's cheating."
"No shit," Marissa scoffed fondly, never ceasing to be amazed by her friend's level of honesty, even when it directly put her at a disadvantage. "Sometimes I wonder if you've ever told a lie in your entire life. It's like you said, the top colleges are some of the most competitive places in the country. If you want to get in, then you've got to fight dirty. That's what everyone else is doing."
"Easy for you to say, you've got most of the boys in this place wrapped around your little finger. I'm not as devious as you," Lucy shared a brief grin with her golden-haired friend, knowing it was meant as compliment to Marissa's uncanny ability to always get her way in the end.
"So it's lucky you've got me, I'm packing enough deviousness for the both of us. Listen, Simon may be an annoying know-it-all, but he occasionally has his uses. Nobody knows computers better than him, so if you can give me Mr Sheridan's username and password for the school's net, I can get him to change the grade," Marissa said, making herself look presentable, even with the regulation breaking modifications to her uniform. "And with all the tests going on at the moment, Sheridan won't have time to notice the change, it's a win-win."
"I thought Simon was banned from using the internet after he crashed his own school's net trying to bypass the search restrictions?" Lucy asked.
"He is, for about a month. But if someone 'accidentally' slipped him a phone," Marissa whipped out her brand new iPhone, tapping the screen with her acrylic nail, "he'd be able to get in and out within minutes. And just like that, Lucy Meyers will be off to the college of her dreams. Maybe she'll meet a future doctor or lawyer? Then they'll start a family, buy a big house, and then- "
"I get it," Lucy laughed for the first time since laying eyes on her essay paper. "Meet a nice man, settle down, white picket fences, the works. But none of it matters. I don't know Mr Sheridan's login details, and even if he keeps them written down they'll probably be somewhere in his office."
"And he keeps that room locked up tighter than Fort Knox," Marissa paced for a minute, tapping a finger against her lips as she became lost in thought. Eventually, she stopped in front of Lucy, clearly hesitant to voice her one and only solution. "There's one way to get in there, but I think you would much rather just stick with the 'C'."
"Not an option," Lucy stared back at Marissa, preparing herself for whatever she had to say. "I'm a big girl, Marissa. At least tell me what it is, maybe I'll be open to it."
"Alright. Just like the rest of the rooms in the school, Mr Sheridan's office door has a universal lock, it has to be accessible in case of an emergency. Every teacher has their own key, but they all keep it with them at all times, and they're not going to hand it over to a student for any reason. But there is one person who has access to the skeleton key." Marissa paused, leaning back against the lockers, "Mr Barker."