"Your Bedtime Story Is Scaring Everyone"
It all started with Gemma, or at least that was what everyone thought until it was too late. The ostensible study session in the common room had devolved into a conversation about everyone's worst slumber party experience, and just after Ami finished with hers ("and her mom came in with something she called 'Better Than Pizza', and it had this horrifying gluten-free crust and dyed tofu instead of pepperoni and the cheese tasted like, like congealed glue or something! And she wouldn't leave until we all finished our slices") and everyone looked over to Gemma to top it, she blushed fiercely and said, "I, um... I never went to a slumber party."
A look of mingled horror and sympathy went around the room. "We moved around a lot growing up," Gemma blurted into the silence, feeling the weight of everyone's stares on her. "Dad was a regional manager for a big investment firm, and whenever someone else was underperforming, they sent in Dad for a year to whip things into shape. I think I went to something like eight schools in twelve years. It kind of made it hard to make friends."
Everyone made clucks and murmurs of sympathy--even Annette, who lived in a small town outside of Paris until she was nineteen and whose only experience with slumber parties was the slow cultural infiltration of American movies and television throughout the entire world. "How sad," she said softly, shaking her head at the tragedy of an American denied what she assumed was the most quintessential rite of passage for a young girl.
But it was Christine, one of the new freshman class, who immediately insisted on doing something about it. "Guys," she said, "we have to have a slumber party. Tonight. Sleeping bags in the common room, popcorn and sappy Nora Ephron movies, braiding each other's hair and telling each other's fortunes, talking about cute boys... or, um, girls," she added quickly, glancing over at Melanie with a slight blush. "All of it. The full slumber party experience."
Gemma scowled a little, not wanting to diminish the new sister's enthusiasm but also not entirely comfortable with being someone's new charity case over something as insignificant as missing a slumber party or two. She also missed out on Girl Scouts, birthday parties with kids her own age, and a mom who didn't numb her marital troubles away with Valium, but she was talking to a therapist about it and not her sorority. It was a little presumptuous of Christine to just decide that this was what she needed.
But she could see the other sisters beginning to get excited, their eyes lighting up at the prospect of abandoning the responsibilities of early adulthood for a night and retreating into childhood nostalgia, so out loud she just said, "Tonight's a school night, though. Maybe Friday?" Maybe someone would have a scheduling conflict on Friday or she'd get more comfortable with the idea by then, Gemma thought but didn't add.
Instead, the others all cheerfully agreed. "Friday it is!" Christine squealed, clapping her hands in excitement. "I'll make my special party punch and my super messy s'more brownies and my ooey gooey salted caramel popcorn and we can tell scary stories by flashlight with the lights out and we can all have the bestest time ever!" Gemma tried to smile, to join in with the younger woman's radiant enthusiasm and determination. She knew it came out as forced, though. She couldn't help it. Christine seemed so hellbound to drag everyone along with her to Party Town that it somehow managed to make Gemma even less interested in the idea.
Still, she could hardly duck out of her own party. She was just going to have to make the best of it... and maybe not let Christine know when her birthday was this year.
* * * * *
For all that she grew to dread the upcoming weekend, it was still kind of fun to see everyone get into the preparations. Thea dug into her secret stash of romantic comedies to pull out 'Sleepless in Seattle', 'Mama Mia', and 'Better Off Dead' ("it's a cult classic," she added defensively, "and we've got to have a John Cusack movie in there!") Ami used her dad's credit card to buy a dozen sleeping bags, insisting that it was far from the weirdest purchase she'd ever had to justify to her parents. Deena, the sorority mother, was duly informed and invited and agreed to sit in on a single hair-braiding session on the condition that she in no way had to dish about her current romantic life. "Trust me, girls," she said, "you do not want to know."
And of course Christine went into a whirlwind of buying, mixing, baking, popping, and melting, all of which got so intense that she skipped class on Friday in order to have the kitchen to herself. "It's just a review session anyway," she replied dismissively to Tori, who came in with Gemma in tow to convey the news that her absence was noticed by Professor Deane. "Here, try the punch." She handed Tori a glass with one hand while stirring liquid caramel with the other. "Tell me if it needs more grenadine."