Not that I was ready to say yes to it, or anything. His invitation, I mean. I was still totally freaked out by the whole thing. But I was definitely more…interested than before.
The only problem was that David, when I finally got through to him on his cell later that night, didn’t seem quite as…interested.
Even when I explained to him that it wasn’t him. It was me.
“Seriously,” I said. “I want to…to…” I didn’t know quite how to put what I wanted to do. Have sex with you? Or should I use his vernacular (SAT word meaning “characteristic language of a particular group or person”) and say, play Parcheesi with you?
I found I couldn’t bring myself to do either, though, and ended up settling for, “…spend Thanksgiving with you, David. Honest, I do. But think about what people would say. If they found out, I mean.”
“Sam,” David said, in a voice I might almost have described as long-suffering. Only what was he suffering about? Boys have it so totally easy. “I don’t have the slightest idea what you’re talking about.”
Which was just so typically male of him.
“It’s just that there’s such a double standard if you’re a girl,” I explained. Or tried to explain. “Do you know what I’m saying?”
“Truthfully,” David said, in the same non-interested voice he’d been using since he picked up the phone, “I haven’t understood a single word you’ve said to me all week.”
God. I had really hurt his feelings. I definitely had some apologizing to do.
“Seriously, David,” I said, “it’s just something I have to work through on my own. It doesn’t have anything to do with you, really. It’s like…” I tried to think how I could explain it to him in a way he could understand.
And suddenly, from out of nowhere, Deb Mullins popped into my head. Debra Mullins, in her tiny dance team miniskirt, and her big blue eyes, filled with hurt after another run-in with Kris Parks.
“It’s like there’s this girl at my school, and there’s just a rumor she Did It—no one even knows for sure—and people call her all sorts of things to her face,” I said. “It’s horrible, I feel so bad for her.”
“Um,” David said. “Okay.”
“I mean, what about at your school? The same sort of thing must go on.”
“Uh,” David said. “I don’t know. I mean, I guess—”
“You guess?” My voice broke, I was so shocked.
“I don’t know,” David said. “I mean, I never noticed anything like that.”
Oh my God. I couldn’t believe it was so different at Horizon. But apparently, it was. Horizon must be like the Valhalla of private education, whereas Adams Prep is…well, hell.
“What about Right Way?” I demanded.
“Right Way? That dopey group your pal Kris Parks is in?”
“Yes,” I said, not bothering to mention that Kris Parks is hardly my pal, since he already knew that. At least, he should know that by now, after the number of times I’ve complained about her to him. “Because it gets out, David.” How could I make him understand? “No matter how discreet people are about it, eventually, it always gets out. And then they start in on you. Kris and the Right Wayers, I mean. Unless you’re one of the elite—like Lucy. But I’m not one of the elite, David. Sure, I saved your dad and got on TV, and all, but I am hardly a member of the popular crowd. Or any crowd, for that matter. And I just know they’ll be starting in on me next.”
“Who will?” David asked.
Oh my God. I really did think my head was going to explode.
“RIGHT WAY,” I said, through gritted teeth.
“But what do you care what these Right Way people say?” David wanted to know. “You don’t even like them.”
“Well,” I said, “no. But—”
“Who are they to pass judgment on everyone else?” David wanted to know. “Are they the school’s best and brightest?”
“Well,” I said, “no, they aren’t, necessarily. But—”
“I didn’t think so,” he went on. “Because if they were really all that smart, they’d know that abstinence programs, and all of that…study after study has shown they don’t work.”
I thought I hadn’t heard him right. “Wait…what?”
“It doesn’t work,” David repeated. “Just Say No? Kids who went through Just Say No programs in school are just as likely to experiment with drugs and alcohol as kids who didn’t, because those programs use hokey scare tactics no kid in his right mind is going to fall for. I mean, any moron knows you’re not going to become a homeless crackhead from one puff of marijuana.”
“Right,” I said. Because, um, if that were true, all of the stars in Hollywood would be homeless crackheads. I’ve heard what goes down at those movie premieres.
“All those programs do is make people who go ahead and try whatever it is they’re supposed to be saying no to—and believe me, more than half end up trying it—completely unequipped to deal with it,” David said. “Like couples who’ve pledged not to have sex. All that happens is that they end up having sex anyway, only they don’t use protection, because they don’t have any on hand, because all they planned on was just saying no. See? It doesn’t work.”
I nearly dropped the phone. “Is that…is that really true?”
“What, you think the Centers for Disease Control made it up? Because they’re the ones who did the study. So where those Right Wayers of yours get off, acting so high and mighty, I don’t know.”
“I don’t know, either,” I said stunned by this piece of information.
“So…” David cleared his throat. “Are we okay now?”
“Totally,” I said happily. Just wait until the next time Kris started in on Deb! I was definitely bringing up that CDC thing.
“And did you have a chance to ask your mom and dad about Thanksgiving yet?” David wanted to know.
Yes! And they said yes!
That’s what I wanted to say. Well, what a part of me wanted to say.
But another part of me—a bigger part of me—was all, NO! Okay? No, I haven’t. This is a huge decision and even though I’m slowly coming around to it, I still need time. It’s true I’m deeply in love with you, and I’m totally positive you’re my one true love, but I’m only sixteen and I still have action figures on top of my dresser and I’m not totally sure I’m ready to put them away yet….
“Uh, no, I forgot,” I said.
Hey, I kept my fingers crossed while I said it.
“Oh,” David said, sounding only a little disappointed. Like, not as disappointed as I would have thought he’d be. “Okay. Well, let me know. Because my mom wants to know how big a turkey she should order.”
Whoa. Was that some kind of code for I need to know how many condoms to purchase? I thought about telling him he didn’t need to worry about that part of it. But then my call waiting went off.
“That’s my other line,” I said, kind of startled because it was so late at night. I mean, the only other person who ever calls me on my cell is Catherine, and her parents make her go to bed at eleven on school nights.
“Okay,” David said. “I’ll see you tomorrow, anyway.”
This kind of surprised me.
“Tomorrow?” Tomorrow was the Return to Family town meeting on MTV. “You’re coming? With your dad?”
“Well, yeah,” David said. “But we have life drawing before that. Remember?”
Terry! How could I have forgotten Naked Terry?
“Right,” I said. “Yeah. Okay, see you then.”
Then I switched over to the other line. “Hello?”
“Sam?” Dauntra shouted my name. From the background noise, it sounded like she was calling from a nightclub. Where a murder was being committed.
Which, knowing Dauntra, was not out of the realm of the possible.
“Dauntra?” I wasn’t sure she could hear me. Where was she? Then I was hit by a horrible thought. “Oh my God, are you still in jail?”