CHAPTER ONE: A Strange Final
"Maaaaaaaaliiiiiiiiik!"
I groaned as I was jerked from a fantastic dream of being smothered to death by the class of 2019's best titties (Sarah Cornwick, if you were curious) by the shrill sound of my mother's voice screaming up the stairs. I twitched, writhed, then fell out of bed as she followed up my name with a hammering on the door.
"Malik! Get up! The bus is coming! You don't want to miss your final day of school, do you? Last shot before college to enjoy your high school career!"
I mumbled into the carpet: "Mom, god, senoritus, haven't you heard of it?"
Mom either didn't hear me or didn't take that as an appropriate excuse.
After a few minutes, I was in my clothes, brushing my teeth, and trying to console myself: Just one more day of school and I was going to be free. Free for summer. Of course, summer did mean that Mom was going to be in her distressingly tiny swim suits constantly. Bleh. Maybe I could get myself through by just burying my face in a book while she flounced around in a sling bikini? It'd be appropriate, after all.
I had struggled, early on, to read. I know, imagine that. Malik Fong, second generation American-Chinese, struggling academically. Yes, my Mom was appropriately nightmarish in more ways than just her willingness to show off her butt, and yes, there had been tears shed while she had forced me again and again to read the same fucking page for day after day, but fortunately, I had broken through. The squirmy, wriggly lines of text had become
words
. Then words had become sentences. And then sentences had become entire
worlds
. My backpack had two textbooks that I'd need and several novels -- from Turtledove to Hobb to LeGuine to Lackey, my interests ranged through science fiction, fantasy, post-apocalyptic.
In other words, it was the horror of every right thinking English teacher I'd ever had.
I spat into the sink, tossed my backpack over my shoulder with a grunt, and hurried down the stairs. Once I was there, Mom started to cluck over me. This was, as always, an amazingly distracting action. Mom was, um, kinda
turbo
hot. She was curvy and beautiful, and she didn't just check me over. She brushed her palms through my hair and pressed her chest to my chest as she looked me over, making it
really
clear how curvy and cute she was. I thought of nothing but math as she adjusted my hair, scowled at my T-shirt (
really, Malik, you should be wearing a button up! Not this T-shirt!
) and then finally had to relent as the bus was blaring on the horn outside. I loped out of the front door, past the newspaper that my Dad would grab up, and to the door of the bus.
And to think: It was just going to get
worse
visa vi Mom's hotness when summer hit.
Maybe I'd luck out and get to go on vacation?
Looking inside, I saw the smattering of freshmen (who, I was sure, would be so happy to hang up their freshmen hats after summer) and sophomores and juniors. I was one of the only seniors on the bus, as most of us had learned how to drive. But I hadn't bothered. Way too much work for way too little of a reward -- yeah, like I wanted to end up wrapped around a freaking
tree
. I walked on, past seats filled with other students -- usually brother/sister pairs, whispering to one another quietly, until I came to a seat that made me blink. It had something...odd.
A girl.
A girl I didn't know.
A girl I didn't know reading a book the size of a freaking phone book.
Now, the fact that I didn't know her wasn't strange. I didn't know many people at school. But the
book
? Oh the book meant I had to know her before summer hit. Maybe I'd have an alternative escape from my Mom's near nudity!
I slipped into the seat next to her, trying to look her over without being too creepy. She was willow thin, with short cropped black hair that framed her head. She was wearing a blue blouse with a purple skirt that had a large pinkish star decorating both hips. It looked nice. She was also wearing really kicking shoes, with high white socks that clung to her calves. Not that I was scoping out her legs. But. Like. She had amazing legs. Then I noticed that I didn't recognize the book. So, drawing on my
years
of being a sensual, suave, totally seductive man (and not a bookish Asian nerd), I coughed, spluttered, and finally squeaked out: "Heywhatsup?"
I had been
planning
to say 'what are you reading?' all cool and sexy.
Instead...squeaks.
Great. Great. Just...just
fucking
great.
The girl started, as if she hadn't realized I was there, then looked at me. She blushed and grinned. "Oh, uh, just reading a book I brought from home!" She said, tucking it quickly into her backpack. As she slipped it home, I noticed a pair of dark eyes looking up and out of her backpack. My brow furrowed slightly as I saw a small, wet nose and a short, dark muzzle peeking out to dab against her fingers. She drew her hand back back to her lap, grinning at me.
"Do you have a dog in your backpack?" I asked.
"Whaaat?" she asked.
Okay.
Something was
bugging
me about her voice. Not that it was annoying or anything. She actually had a really
cute
voice. Like, if her voice was a girl, I'd want to ask it out on a date just as badly as I'd want to ask her (not that I was about to ask her on a date or anything, I'm not a creeper!) But it was also really fucking
familiar
. Like it was on the tip of my tongue. I'd have thought I'd met her before, but I'd never seen her before in my life.
"I'm Tw-abby!" She coughed. "Tabby! Sorry, stammered."
She held her hand out to me. Well. More accurately, she thrust her arm straight into my chest. I crooked my arm awkwardly to grab and shake her hand. My cheeks heated as I felt how soft her fingers and skin were. I pumped her hand and nodded.
"Malik," I said. "Malik Fong."
"I'm Tabby Sp...Spo...Spar...Sparnelli...ken...Sparnelliken!" She said, nodding excitedly.
I blinked slowly at her. "Uh, what's your actual last name?"
The bus interrupted her by roaring to life and starting away from the sidewalk. She jounced back against the seat and the classmates surrounding us started to shout to be heard over the roar of the engine. Tabby quickly bundled her backpack into her lap, holding it in place as she called over the din: "I'm a new transfer student, actually!"
I nodded.
Wait.
What
?
"You're a...transfer student?" I asked.
"Yeah!" she said.
"But it's the last day of school," I said.
Tabby looked stricken. Then she laughed. "Oh! I mean, I...uh, transferred...here it, uh, was a, it was a big paperwork mix up thing, you know how it is?"
"No," I said, shaking my head.
Tabby laughed. "Well, uh..." She pointed at my backpack. "Is that a Turtledove novel?"
Yeah, okay, she raised a good point: Who cared about what the fuck the school administration did when we could talk about books. The bus wound its way through the wily, curling streets of suburbia as Tabby and I talked. We both started to compare books read, and I was soon completely blown out of the water, if the
hundreds
of books that Tabby was talking about bore any semblance to reality.
"No way!" I said, shaking my head.
"Yeah, way," she grinned. "I used to work at a library, so I had
loads
of time and all the books!" She sighed. "My favorite was this series called..." She paused. "H-Harry Potter."
"You like Harry Potter?" I asked, my voice deadpan. "What. A. Shock."
Tabby stuck her tongue out at me and we both laughed. I felt my nerves uncoiling and recoiling, like a spring being tugged back into position. Yes, I was no longer squealing out every single word I had. But...like, um, she was actually starting to be...like...she liked reading. She was a total nerd. She kept saying
dorky
things. So, part of my brain was going:
HolyshitholyshitholyshitIhaveashotholyshit.
But another part of my brain was starting to panic just as hard as the other part was celebrating. It was like, I have a shot. But that means I had a shot to fail. And if I failed, it'd be worse than if I had never tried at all!
That was how the saying went, right? Tis better to not have loved at all than to try and die a virgin anyway?
The bus stopped and the two of us were almost catapulted into the seat ahead of us. The bus doors opened as Tabby pushed herself back and away from the seat ahead of us, laughing. She grinned and then picked up her backpack.
"So, wanna give me a tour?" she asked as she stood. "I mean, uh, even if this is my only day, I should, uh, know what the school is like. Right?"
"If we have time before class, sure. Or maybe at lunch?" I asked, grinning as I stood. I was grinning so hard that my eyes were scrunching up slightly. Tabby giggled and slipped past me, grinning.
"You look like a kitten when you smile like that," she said, laughing.
And with an audible
clunk
it hit me and I stood there, gaping in shock as Tabby turned and walked down the central aisle of the bus. As she walked, her skirt swished...and my brain reeled. Because I had just realized where I had heard her voice before.
She sounded
almost
exactly...no...
exactly
exactly like Juliet.
From Lollipop Chainsaw.
The game I had been re-playing all weekend.
Tabby turned to look at me, blinking. "Malik? You coming?"
I shook my head and hurried after her. Walking down and off the bus, Tabby looked around at Molehill High School -- yes, it was actually named that, no I didn't know why, don't even ask -- with a clear expression of:
Well, um, it's shitty, but I'm going to try and be positive about this
. The school was built around a central quad that looked like it had been dropped right out of a prison, with several brick shaped and brick built buildings slapped around it. I pointed at building after building.
"T-That's, uh, that's the library-"
"Ooh!"
"-and that's the science, uh, class rooms. Those, I should say. Those are the science class rooms." I shook my head. "And that..." I trailed off.
Another student I'd never seen was walking by. But that wasn't why I trailed off. I trailed off because, as he walked past me, I caught a glimpse of the left side of his face. He was actually a pretty handsome lad (if you're into that kind of thing), with dark hair and equally dark, brooding eyes. But he also had what I would charitably call a 'villain' scar along his cheek. Huge and furrowed, it looked like someone had stuck a knife in his face, dragged it down, and let it fester before applying stitches. It was still ugly and red, even long after it had been given. He glanced my way, his eyes sweeping over me. I felt a chill rush through me.
Then he walked on, and was lost in the crowd of other students.