I never thought my life would end over a homecoming date. Funny how the course of a life can turn on one moment, one tiny decision, so small you'll never know it until your future has changed forever. Maybe that's the whole point. If you saw them coming, you might have actually done things differently. I know I would have.
At the time, I thought it nothing more than a chance encounter with an annoying admirer.
"Hello Amanda. Guess who I'm asking to homecoming this year?"
Victor Moralles. Tall, darkly handsome in a way that veered a bit too close to pretty, but definitely good looking. Cute enough to catch my interest, or at least he would have been if he hadn't been one of the most stuck up, egotistical brats I'd met . The self-appointed king of the school. Or rather, its wannabe CEO, a position he claimed as his natural right.
We were all fairly well off. You had to be, if you wanted to afford a good school ever since the mid-century education collapse gutted most public colleges (and many private ones). But even here, some families were better off than others, and his was at the top of the heap. He took that to mean that he deserved whatever he wanted, and sometimes, whoever he wanted.
Bringing him back down to Earth had become something of a guilty pleasure. Disturbing as his attentions could be (I had a boyfriend, after all. Not that it stopped Victor), there was a perverse joy to be had in crushing his pretensions. Even if I wished he'd leave me alone, it was fun putting him back in his place.
"Your mother?" I asked him, not bothering to look up.
"No," he said. I smiled to myself, hearing the newfound strain in his voice. "I'm looking at her right now?"
"You're looking at your mother?" I said, trying to keep a straight face as I made a show of surveying the lounge.
"Does she know that you're over here bothering me, instead of saying hello like a good son?"
The downside of looking up was that I noticed how he leered at me. Staring down the front of my nice new dress, a green and blue designer outfit I'd bought that very day on an afternoon trip out to Paris. The hypersonic had just gotten in an hour or so ago, and I couldn't wait to show all my friends. But something in the way he stared made the whole thing feel tawdry.
Look, I know I have a large chest, I've always believed that "if you've got it, flaunt it", and aside from the occasional creep it's worked pretty well. But the way he looked at me, like I was some cheap merchandise on the clearance rack in one of his daddy's stores, that bothered me. I felt an urge to cover myself, but ignored it. I wouldn't give him the satisfaction.
"And here I thought you were some kind of scholar," he joked, "but I'll spell it out for you in tiny words. It's you. I'm asking you out to the dance with me."
I did laugh that time. No matter how much he tried to play it off, I could see I'd gotten to him.
"After you've already asked your mother? My, how disappointed she'll be that you've stood her up."
His face darkened, but I was on a roll.
"You know, Amanda, most girls never get an opportunity like this."
"We should all be so lucky."
"Do you know who I am?"
"Of course I do. I'm telling you off, aren't I?"
"One last chance," he told me, "That's more than I usually give. Think carefully before you answer, it's not too late to say yes."
"Since you like small words so much, here's one for you: No! Nope, non, nyet, nein! Was that small enough for you? Here it is again. No. Even if I wasn't already going out with someone, and you were the only boy in a school full of girls, and a date was mandatory, I'd still have the same answer for you. No"
"Funny," he said, his voice dripping with malice. "Nobody ever told me you were stupid."
"Someone must have, if you thought I'd say yes."
He turned and fled the room, and I wasn't the only one laughing behind his back as he retreated. Chuckling to myself, I called my best friend Emily and told her to swing by my room to see the new outfit, though I decided to add a really cute shoulder scarf I'd bough a couple months back.
At the time, I counted the day as a win. Sure, he'd probably come up with some petty revenge later - he was a spiteful little bastard, after all - but I'd handle that when it came.
After all, what could he really do to me?
The announcement came midway through my French exam, several weeks after my encounter with Victor, and interrupted right as my instructor was grilling me on the finer points of Proust.
"Amanda Doyle, please report to the head office immediately."
I paused, stumbling over my answer as I suddenly fished for words. It was more difficult than I'd like. I was competent enough at the language, but certainly no natural Parisian.
Had that really just happened? They knew full well I was in the middle of an oral exam. They never interrupted those. I remember a kid who lost two grandparents and a sibling in a hypersonic crash last year, and they still made him take a full three day course of examinations before informing him.
Professor Engles was every bit as shocked as I.
"That can't be right," she said. "There must have been a scheduling error. Stay right there, and do
not
attempt to access any outside materials. As far as I'm concerned, this examination is still in progress."
She left the room briefly for her adjacent office, and I stood there like an idiot trying to come up with a colorful way to work flower metaphors into my answer - the professor was always a sucker for those. What in the world could it be? Professor Engles was probably right, some sort of weird mixup was the most likely answer. Certainly, I knew she'd get to the bottom of it. That woman had as hard a teacher as I'd ever had, but just as ruthless when fighting on behalf of her students. I was sure that any minute now she would return to tell me that it was all a mistake, and the examination would continue as planned.
That wasn't what happened.