Chapter
Thirty Four
Chris Cline, September 2016
No more parties in L.A., please, baby no more
parties in L.A., uh … No more parties in L.A., please baby no more parties in
L.A., uh …
Chris parked carefully on the side of
the road. A few other cars were parked on the street already, some positioned
better than others.
… Friday night tryna
make it into the city … Breakneck speeds, passenger seat somethin’ pretty …
Thinking back to how I got here in the first place … Second class bitches
wouldn’t let me on first base …
He
sat in his car, tapping his finger rhythmically on the steering wheel. The song
lyrics wafted over him as he absentmindedly waited. He was hoping that someone
else would arrive soon, allowing him to ride their coat tails into the house.
It would be less awkward than entering alone.
… When did I become A
list? I wasn’t even on A list …
Eventually,
he couldn’t justify waiting any longer and forced himself out of the car.
“Alright,” he muttered quietly to himself, “Let’s do this.”
Tonight was West Chester North’s fall Homecoming
Dance, an event that had been serving Chris bite-sized pieces of stress three
times a day. The latest dish was a pre-dance picture taking session with a
group of relative strangers. At the conclusion of his short walk, he took a
deep breath and prepared to face his discomfort. Chris raised his good fist to
the door and knocked. Here we go.
Over the last month, Chris’s social circle had been
tossed around a tornado. A broken hand had pulled him away from his old
teammates on the football team and replaced them with a rag-tag group of cross
country runners. Then a split with his cheerleader girlfriend compounded
things, cutting him off from another group of compatriots. Whether he clicked
with them or not (he didn’t), they had still been the people he saw most often
on a Saturday night. As a senior in high school, he somehow found himself
starting over in his quest for identity.
“Hello there,” A friendly face appeared at the door
atop a long, skinny body. “Come on in! The others are all around back.” Chris
stepped inside awkwardly and followed her through the kitchen into a large,
open living room. Here, a crowd of his peers was gathered, dressed in suits and
dresses. Some were posing uncomfortably for photos in front of parents, while
others chatted in pockets of three or four, often times segregated by gender.
Behind them was a long, ornate staircase that Chris had a feeling he would be
posing on at some point tonight.
“Here we are!” The woman who had brought him stood
aside to let Chris step ahead of her, “We have sodas and chips on the island in
case you’re hungry.” She pointed at a well-stocked counter top, “If you need
anything else, just ask me or Dave. We’ll be fluttering around.” Another dull
thud sounded from the entranceway, calling the host back into the atrium and
leaving the party’s newcomer to fend for himself. Chris looked around, hoping
to catch sight of someone he knew. He took a tentative step forward.
“Hey,” A familiar voice called to him as a girl
approached from the right. “You’re late.”
He smiled at her, “Good to see you, too.” Sarah stood
opposite him wearing a long, light blue dress. Her hair was carefully and
ornately pinned up. “You look nice.” He
tried to make his compliment sound as casual and innocent as possible, but she
ignored it.
“She was starting to get worried you weren’t going to
show up.”
“Oh, c’mon, I’m barely even late-” He glanced down at
a shiny silver watch on his wrist. Admittedly, he was fairly late. “Where is
she?”
“I think her and Alexa were getting some pictures
outside. But they should be back soon …” She glanced back over her shoulder
expectantly. “Here she is.”
“Where?” Chris followed her gaze, but couldn’t pick
out his date from the crowd ahead, “I don’t see-oh, wow.” When he finally found Maggie his mouth dropped open. Her
signature combination of glasses and bushy hair were gone, erased by contacts
and a hair straightener. She wore a light pink dress and, for the first time
Chris could remember, she had put on makeup. When she caught sight of the two
of them she smiled broadly and waved, walking carefully forward to make sure
she didn’t stumble in her heeled shoes.
“Hi Chris!” She said cheerily. With the sound of her
voice to accompany her appearance, she became more identifiable.
“Hey Maggie! I almost didn’t recognize you with your
hair like that. You look great!”
She blushed slightly. “Yeah, I had to start getting
ready at like noon. Not sure it was worth it.” She laughed lightly. “Were you
waiting here long?”
“No, I just got here a little bit ago. And I had Sarah
to wait with so-” He turned to his right, expecting to see another woman at his
side, but no one was there. He briefly paused, staring at the spot where she
had been in confusion. “So … uh … I was ok.” He recovered. “I, um, have
something for you by the way.” Chris raised a small white box from his side and
opened it up, presenting a pink-flowered corsage.
“Oh, thank you!”
“Should I-like-put it on or …?”
“We should probably wait. I think my mom is going to
want to get a picture.” Her face was glowing red again. “They’re kinda … enthusiastic about all of this.”
“Haha no worries, my parents were the same way.” Chris
smiled, “Junior Prom last year was an experience.”
“But they aren’t here, are they?” She asked, checking
over both his shoulders, “So something happened to make them chill out?”
“Yeah. I didn’t tell them this time.” He shrugged.
“Haha I’ll have to remember that for next time. But
for now you will have to deal with them.” As she finished her sentence, a
petite brown haired woman and a bulkier man with shaved hair appeared at their
side. Chris recognized the couple as Maggie’s parents almost immediately.
Maggie had a very similar face to her mother, but her eyes were exactly like
her father’s.
“Hi, you must be Chris! It’s a pleasure to finally
meet you.” He took Mrs. Warren’s hand and her husband’s in turn.
Chris smiled broadly, “Great to meet you both as
well.”
“You may want to save those muscles,” Mr. Warren
remarked teasingly, gesturing toward his wife’s camera. “They’re going to be
sore soon.”
Together, Chris and Maggie posed from some cliché,
mildly awkward photos, but otherwise Chris found the experience relatively
painless. Although he had been previously dreading this night, he found himself
drifting toward optimism. He felt at ease with Maggie’s parents and soon
learned her dad was a big football fan. Once they dove into that topic, the pit
previously weighing down his stomach began to dissolve. For a brief moment, he
was comfortable.
As they transitioned from high school to the
professional ranks, Chris caught a glimpse of something out of the corner of
his eye. A surprising duo was posing together for pictures in another corner of
the room.
“The bye week just comes at a brutal time. It’s so
early in the season, you don’t even need it.”
“Yeah,” Chris replied, his eyes drifting periodically
back to the corner, “Terrible timing.”
“Brendan?” Mrs. Warren remarked, gently touching the
shoulder of her husband, “Do you have my keys? I need something from the car.”
“What is it? I can run out and get it,” As Mr. Warren
reached distractedly into his pocket, Chris seized the moment to look
unabashedly across the room. Sarah was standing in front of a pair of adults he
could only assume were her parents, posing for pictures with a tall, lean boy
dressed in a suit and sneakers. No way,
he thought to himself, She can’t be
dating him. What are the odds?
He stared into the smiling face of Will Aldrich, one of
two captains of the cross country team. From the moment Chris had joined the
squad, Will had made it clear that he wanted nothing to do with the football
star. And quite frankly, the feeling was mutual. The animosity between them had
nearly spilled over into an argument at the team’s most recent pre-race dinner
the previous weekend.
“Chris?” Maggie’s curious prod brought refocused him
on his surroundings, “You OK?”
“Yeah,” he lied, putting on a smile, “Yeah, I’m good.”
He tried to take a casual pause, but in his haste for answers, he found himself
diving straight into his next sentence, “Sarah and Will … Are they-?”
“Yeah. You didn’t know that?”
“No,” he said, trying to conceal his disappointment,
“This is the first I’ve heard about it.”
“Huh,” Maggie responded with an unconcerned shrug.
“You’d think that would have come up at some point.”
“Yeah … she must have just forgotten to mention it.”
“Alright everyone!” From the front of the room, the
woman who had answered the door upon Chris’s arrival was seeking the attention
of the group at large. “It’s almost time to leave for the dance, but before we
all scatter, if we could have all the kids move to our staircase, there’s one
more picture we need to get!”
After the seemingly endless picture taking was finished,
Chris traversed back out to his car, gently massaging his jaw. Because he was
one of just a handful of students there with his license, Maggie had asked if
he could drive her and her friend Alexa to the dance. He didn’t mind as he
guessed (correctly) that he would barely be able to tell the extra passenger
was even there. The first time the two had met, the tall blonde had attempted
to disappear into a wall. However, this did mean that Chris had to further
postpone his talk that he planned to have with Maggie.
He had wanted to make sure he made it clear that he
only wanted to attend the dance as friends, but he had been nervous about his
date’s potential reaction to this detail. That dread had already compelled him
to put off the conversation more than once. But the longer he waited to discuss
this, the more likely it was that things would end poorly. The car ride to the
dance had seemed like a safe, private location originally, but with Alexa on
board, the opportunity was lost. Even if she did try and hide in the seat
cushions.
As they parked the car in the crowded gymnasium lot,
Chris was reminded of just how many people went to West Chester North High
School. Students flocked in droves into the hall, some in couples and others
just as packs of friends. Soon all of these kids would be gathered on the
makeshift dance floor, turning their attention as one to the homecoming court.
Waiting eagerly to see who be crowned king and queen. He let out a deep sigh
and wiped his sweaty palms on his pants.
“What was that?” Maggie said, appearing at his hip as
the trio approached their entrance, “Don’t tell me you’re actually nervous?”
Chris smiled sheepishly, “What-I’m not allowed to be a
little anxious right now?”
“C’mon! You’ve played important football games in front
of crowds three times this big. This should be nothing for you.”
“I don’t know … this is just different. But, whatever,
let’s just go have fun.” He opened the door and allowed his two companions to
walk through first. The atrium was well decorated with all sorts of
construction paper, glitter and paint. The loud, thumping bass of music was
palpable, even from this distance. Chris looked around him, taking in the art
as they trekked up the hall. It was amazing how the school had been transformed
so much since he had been in class just a day earlier. How did they find time to do all this?
“Amazing what can be accomplished when you aren’t
wasting your afternoons running,” a familiar voice remarked, as if reading his
mind. Chris turned to find his friends Andy and Matt from the cross country
team standing before them. They greeted each other with smiles and waves. Maybe
it was just Chris’s imagination, but Matt seemed a little less enthusiastic
than his counterpart.
“Hey guys, how’s the party?” Chris asked as the group
of five positioned themselves off to the side of the hallway to the right of
the flow of traffic.
“It seems alright so far.” Matt remarked with a shrug.
“A little cramped though,” Andy added, “I need a
decent amount of space for some of my moves.” He mimed a rhythmic spin and his
slightly extended arm narrowly missed a flock of tiny, freshman girls who were
walking past.
“I can see why that might be an issue,” Maggie said
with a laugh, grabbing him and pulling him back in their direction. “We missed
you guys at pictures by the way!”
“Yeah, we kinda got caught up doing our own set.” Andy
reached into his pocket and pulled out his cell phone. He scrolled up to his
album, pressed and then handed it across. Chris watched as Maggie scrolled
through the saved photos.
“Holy crap, how many pictures did you guys take?”
Chris asked in amazement as Maggie continued to cycle through more and more
images. The boys were in a variety of poses, locations and even outfits.
“We did the first one purely for the joke, but then we
kept coming up with other clever ideas. So naturally we had to do all of them.”
“And how did your dates feel about this photo shoot?”
Chris said as Maggie handed back the phone, still not positive they had made it
through the entire album.
“Neither of us had one. So really the only person that
was inconvenienced was my mom.” Matt replied. “We made her take all the
pictures.” He added, noticing the confused look on his friends faces.
“I thought you guys had already asked people though?
What happened?”
Andy and Matt exchanged a quick glance, before the
former explained. “Well, I asked
someone, but Matty here,” he patted his friend on the shoulder, “took his sweet
time getting around to asking the girl he wanted to take. And then somebody
else asked her. So I had to go back and tell my date I couldn’t take her
anymore.”
“You’re kidding, right?” Chris said, eyes widening
with surprise, “You guys can’t be that
codependent …”
“I’m not proud, but it happened … Actually,” he added
in a quiet voice, “I can prove it right now.” A tall brunette girl Chris
recognized from the volleyball team walked in their direction. She flashed Andy
a look of cold loathing as she passed. “Hey Laura, how’s the-”
“Go to hell, Andy.” She spit icily without breaking
stride.
Once she was out of earshot, Andy continued, “Still
don’t believe me?”
“Ouch. Sorry dude.”
“It’s for the best,” Matt said, now taking a turn
placing his hand on his friends’ shoulder. “It’s important for the women in
Andy’s life to know that I will always come first.”
“You guys are so weird,” Maggie replied, shaking her
head. “Now c’mon, let’s go inside and dance!”
Although she was the only one who seemed particularly
motivated to enter the gym, the group of five trudged off together to join
their peers. The music was blaring loudly with a few colorful lights peppering
an otherwise dark room. They waded through pockets of bopping students until
they found an open space in the back. The music turned to a new song as they
settled on their block.
On your mark
ready set let’s go … Dance floor pro I know you know … I go psycho when my new
joint hit, just can’t sit … Gotta get jiggy wit it, that’s it …
Chris started a cautious dance routine and Maggie and
Alexa followed his lead. However, Matt and Andy easily tossed their inhibitions
aside and began to showcase some of their best moves. Their enthusiasm was
infectious and by the end of the song everyone had started to loosen up.
As the songs continued, various others rolled through
their group. Austin Lynch visited the boys while Drake’s “Show Me A Good Time”
blasted across the speakers. A gaggle of girls that Maggie and Alex knew from
one of their study groups passed through as “Twist and Shout” reverberated
about. And then, as Chris had been hoping since their arrival, Sarah joined
them for the first time. To his pleasant surprise, she was without Will.
I need you, I
need you, I need you right now … Yeah, I need you right now … So don’t let me,
don’t let me, don’t let me down … Thinking I’m losing my mind now …
As a thundering herd, their cluster danced until the
last remnants of the Chainsmokers song faded away, leading into a new, slower
song. There was a slight groan from the crowd as the previously energetic
dancers slowed to halt, staring down their dates as they contemplated whether
they were ready to really dance
together. Chris and Maggie were no exception. They looked at each other
awkwardly and Chris picked his moment to strike.
“Hey Maggie-can we talk for a second? Maybe outside
the gym?”
“Sure,” she said with a smile and together they exited
the noise. Chris looked briefly back over his shoulder as he left, noticing two
different sets of eyes were watching the pair curiously. He swallowed and led
Maggie into a hallway that seemed quiet and relatively secluded.
“Pretty loud in there,” Maggie remarked, playing with
her ears as she adjusted to the volume change.
“Yeah, it’s like Rodney McLoud out there,” Chris said,
his mind only halfway wrapped in the small talk.
She looked at him confused. “What?”
“Look,” he said abruptly, trying to surprise himself
into starting the conversation, “I’ve got to be honest with you about
something.” He grasped his plastered hand nervously. “I didn’t intend for this
to be-like-a date or anything. I think you’re a cool person and stuff, but I
just think we work better as friends. What-um-how do you feel about that?” He
braced himself for tears or angry screams, expecting the worst. But to his
surprise, she giggled.
“Haha, I never really thought of it any other way.”
She said with a smile.
“Wait-really?” Chris breathed a sigh of relief.
“Yeah, I mean, you’re a nice guy and all, but I don’t
think we have any real connection.” She curled her mouth into a sympathetic
formation. “You’re just not really my type.”
“Is it the tie? Cause I told the guy at the store it
clashed too much with the shoes-”
“Haha you know what I mean! We’re different kinds of
people.” They turned around, at the end of the hallway and circled back toward
the gym. “Not to mention the fact that you have a crush on my best friend.”
If Chris hadn’t been able to clearly see the open
space in front of him, he would have been convinced that he walked straight
into a brick wall. “Um … I’m not sure I know what you’re talking about …” He
said unconvincingly.
“Oh really? You sure?”
“Ok, let’s say, hypothetically,
that was true-it’s not like there’s any evidence.”
“Chris, I hate to break this to you, but her name was
on the card you put in my locker.”
“Admittedly, that’s some pretty damning evidence.” He
cursed Ernie silently inside his head. “Wait-if you knew I was trying to ask
Sarah, why didn’t you say anything to us about it?”
“Because she would have said no,” Maggie said bluntly.
“Like quickly and mercilessly.”
“Geez, did you have to wear such sharp heels while you
stepped all over my heart?” He scrunched up his face in mock wounded-ness.
Maggie shook her head and laughed, “She just needed
time to realize that she liked you too! And seeing you at the dance with me was
sure to bring out a bit of jealousy to help her figure things out.”
They were nearly back at the gym now, the sounds of
music fluttering back toward their ears. “So this whole time, you’ve been
trying to set us up together? That’s pretty generous of you.”
“I want my friend to be with someone that I know will
make her happy. Any good friend would do that.”
“What about Will?” Chris asked, remembering back to
their earlier pictures.
“Eh, I think he’ll be cool with it. He may not like
you, but he respects her right to make her own decisions.”
Feeling puzzled, Chris opened his mouth to respond.
However, before he could begin his follow up question, they walked past a trio
of dolled-up, popular girls. They stopped and stared at the couple, minds
racing as they contemplated the two walking together away from a secluded
hallway.
“Hey girls,” Maggie clutched passionately at Chris’s
arm and waved her fingers at the stunned spectators with a broad, toothy grin.
The ladies gaze followed them, looking both appalled and envious. Once they
were out of range, Maggie released Chris’s arm and acted as if nothing had
happened. When she looked up at him, she found his eyebrows were raised up
toward his hair. “What?”
“Just to clarify-you’re doing this to help make your
friend happy?”
“Friends,” she said, blushing slightly, “And, hey, if
I get to tweak some of these stuck up bitches in the process, that’s not the
worst thing in the world.” Chris burst into a fit of laughter as they returned
to the gym and wandered over to rejoin their friends.
“What have you guys been up to?” Matt asked with a
hint of aggression as they returned.
“Just talking,” Maggie said nonchalantly, “Did we miss
any good songs?”
“Nah, but somebody came by looking for you.” He
pointed at Chris. “Tall, goofy dude. Large hands.”
“Ernie,” Chris muttered, mostly to himself. He reached
into his pocket, feeling around for his phone. By mistake, he first removed
Maggie’s phone which he had been holding for her. Replacing it, he recommenced
his search.
“He said he tried calling you and you didn’t answer,”
Matt continued, looking back and forth at the two of them, seemingly looking
for some type of reaction.
Chris pulled out his phone and pressed the button for
the home screen. Nothing happened. “Phone’s dead,” he said frustrated. “Which
way did he come from?”
Matt opened his mouth to respond, but never got the
chance to give his answer. Just then, the music lowered and a loud voice echoed
around the dance floor.
“ALL MEMBERS OF
THE HOMECOMING COURT AND THEIR DATES PLEASE REPORT TO THE FAR STAIRWELL AT THIS
TIME … HOMECOMING COURT TO THE FAR STAIRWELL.”
“Crap,” Chris exclaimed, taking one last glance around
for his wide receiver. “Well, I guess I’ll have to catch up with him later.” He
looked down at his date. “You ready, Maggie?”
“Ready as I’ll ever be,” she responded wryly and
together they pushed back out through the crowd, leaving a disappointed Matt in
their wake.
“What’s up with him?” Chris asked, feeling once more
like he was missing something.
“I don’t know,” Maggie replied quickly, brushing it
off. She seemed to know more than she was letting on. As they continued, they
passed quickly by Sarah who gave them a small wave, but was otherwise stoic.
“Maybe something in the water tonight.”
Eventually, they navigated through the packed dance
floor and into the desired hallway. Most of the court had already beaten them
there. At the very front of the line, Chris could see his ex-girlfriend Melissa
and her friend Gabrielle, accompanied by two large football players. The bigger
of the two turned just as Chris looked in his direction and the pair locked
eyes. Subconsciously, Chris’s left fist clenched around his bandage as he
looked at Coatesville’s linebacker Matt Clayton, the man who had effectively
stuck him in that very cast. Unfortunately, his venom could not be concentrated
on his rival for long. A voice behind caught his immediate attention.
“Chris Cline and Maggie Warren,” came the pompous
voice of Anthony Hawkins, another homecoming court member. “Oh, how the mighty
have fallen.”
The quarterback turned angrily away from his football
nemesis and over to this new, arguably more infuriating opponent. He and
Hawkins had already butted heads at the Homecoming football game with Chris
getting the better of him in that war of words. Now he just hoped this battle
stayed in words. His fist remained clenched at his side, but he could feel
Maggie trying to pull it open and keep him calm.
“Just ignore
him, Chris. He’s not worth it,” she whispered at his side.
“Aren’t you gonna hold your girlfriend’s hand, Cline?”
Anthony taunted him with a cruel laugh. He looked around for someone else to
join in his amusement, managing to corral his friend Justin into a weak laugh.
“It’s probably the most action she’s gotten in her entire life.”
Chris could feel himself becoming more heated, his
self-control ebbing away. And then, suddenly, his anger turned into joy. A
woman had just appeared at Hawkins’s hip, twisting a strand of long blonde hair
around her finger tips. Chris’s menacing scowl morphed quickly into a grin as
he reveled in the sight of the two together.
“What’s so funny, Cline?” Hawkins said, trying hard to
keep his snobby smoothness. He was unnerved by the sudden change of tone from
his target.
“Nothing,” Chris said, showing off his grin now for all
to see. “Is this your date?” He said, gesturing at the new arrival by his side.
“Yeah,” Anthony replied, playing with his tie
uncertainly. He looked at his companion as if he was searching for some joke
that had gone over his head. Finding nothing, he dug for some hurtful rhetoric
to try and wipe the smile from the quarterback’s face. “Alicia Silverthorn.” Getting no reaction from his reveal, he
continued, “Impressed?”
“She seems great,” Chris said with a smile, “She’s got
a little something on her nose though.” As he said it, the girl named Alicia
grasped desperately at her face, trying frantically to clear something.
Smirking slightly, Chris turned away from the couple, took Maggie’s hand and
pulled her forward.
“Oh my god,”
Maggie said quietly, realization washing over her, “Is that the booger girl?”
“Yep,” Chris replied simply, stopping about halfway up
the line, safely out of earshot from Hawkins and his date (who was now rushing
off toward the nearest bathroom). Maggie looked at him, searching for more.
“She took a shot at you in front of everybody-asked me if I wanted to ‘upgrade
my position’. Pissed me off.” He could feel his temperature rising again, so he
reconsidered the thought that had brightened his spirit a few moments earlier.
“Well, she was even more desperate than I thought if she ended up with
Hawkins.”
“So that was a true story? And the booger too?”
“Well … it’s true that I said she had a booger. That was good enough.”
“Isn’t that a little mean?” Maggie said, smiling
despite herself.
“Hey, those two had it coming.” Chris replied
defensively. “It’s just karma.”
“Well I hope it doesn’t come back to get you.”
They waited in
the hallway a bit longer, eventually joined by cross country captain Ricky Collins
and his date, a homecoming court member as well, Jenny Conner. The foursome
talked cordially for a bit to pass the time until, eventually, the music cut
off and it was time to start the introductions. They went down the list in
alphabetical order, starting with Stephen Bishop. Nervously, they filed into
line, Chris and Maggie stepping up past Melissa and Matthew Clayton to the
third position in line. He purposely avoided eye contact with either of them,
finding himself back in a good mood with no intentions to poison it.
“MR. CHRISTOPHER CLINE, ACCOMPANIED BY HIS DATE,
MISS MARGARET WARREN”
They walked back into the gym to what Chris felt was a
surprising amount of applause. He even thought he heard the sound of kazoos
sounding among the noise. Proceeding carefully to ensure he didn’t trip, Chris
walked up on to the stage as Maggie disappeared back into the throng.
“MR. RICHARD COLLINS AND MISS JENNIFER CONNER”
Again, he thought he heard the kazoos. From his higher
vantage point, he looked out into the masses and discovered the source.
Naturally, Matt and Andy were trumpeting away, leading a chorus of cross
country team support. It looked like they had enlisted roughly a half dozen
band members.
“MISS MELISSA FREDRICKS, ACCOMPANIED BY HER DATE,
MR. MATTHEW CLAYTON”
To Chris’s pleasure, there was a low rumble of
whispers and even some boos at the proclamation of Clayton’s name. The
Coatesville-West Chester rivalry ran deep enough that even non-football players
were uninterested in applauding for this outsider. Clayton seemed to revel in
the disapproval, holding his hand to his ear for extra encouragement, but
Melissa looked visibly put off. Clearly, she had not factored this into her
master plan.
Gradually, the
court began to fill up the stage, standing together nervously on display. After
Gabby Shephard was herded into the group, all the members of the court had been
officially announced. Now, all that remained outstanding was the results of the
homecoming voting. Chris looked around at the fellow members of his court to
gauge his relative nervousness. He felt he stacked up pretty well, keeping his
emotions more bottled than most. Of course, it was very possible he would
disagree if instead he was staring up at himself from the sea of peers below.
“… WITHOUT
FURTHER ADO … THE 2016 WEST CHESTER NORTH KING AND QUEEN ARE … MELISSA FREDRICKS …” And in that moment
Chris seemed to know exactly what was coming next. “… AND CHRIS CLINE!”
Karma’s a
bitch, he thought to himself as the
school’s vice principal walked forward with a ridiculous looking crown.
“LET’S BRING
THESE TWO DOWN FOR A DANCE!”
Melissa stepped down first, clearly caught in a pickle
between two strong opposing desires. She had no interest in sharing an awkward
ceremonial dance with her ex-boyfriend, but she had also been craving a
spotlight as bright as this her entire high school career. Chris lumbered down
after her and took a deep breath, preparing himself for the discomfort to come.
A school full of eyes fixed upon his embarrassment.
“This is not at
all how I pictured it,” she mumbled angrily to herself as the two locked on
one another and began to orbit. Chris avoided eye contact with her at all
costs, hoping to quickly pass through this moment and on to better ones. He
caught glimpses of multiple faces, some grinning perversely at the cruel irony
in front of them. “Are you even gonna say anything to me?” She said angrily,
looking up at him. He looked at her. He had not been this close to her in a
long time. For whatever reason, she looked much less pretty than he remembered.
“Congrats,” he said kindly, “I know this is what you
wanted.”
“Yeah, it is,”
she said sharply. Just as Hawkins was, she seemed taken aback by his
pleasantness in the face of adversity. Feeling satisfied, he gave her one last
smile.
“GIVE IT UP ONE
LAST TIME FOR OUR KING AND QUEEN!”
On the announcers command, Chris broke free of Melissa
and darted back into the throng as one final hearty applause was heard. Free
from his prison of awkwardness, he charged ahead without a look back to his
queen. By the time he reached Maggie, she had already grouped back up with
their original cohort close to their original spot.
“Congrats!” She exclaimed giving him a brief hug.
He returned it clumsily. “Thanks.”
“OK, WEST
CHESTER STUDENTS, WE’VE GOT ONE MORE SONG FOR YOU AND THEN WE’RE SHUTTING
THINGS DOWN! THANKS FOR BEING SUCH A GREAT CROWD AND GO WARRIORS!”
Another slow song came across the speaker system.
Unlike the first such song of the night, the crowd didn’t seem to resent the
choice. As the notes began to play, Andy grabbed Matt by the hand and whisked
him away into their own routine, leaving Maggie and Chris alone. They looked at
one another awkwardly.
“So … you want to dance?” Maggie asked uncertainly.
“Sure,” Once again Chris took up a dancing position.
The two waddled slowly back and forth, neither’s eyes on their partner.
… And then
she asks me, Do I look all right? … And I say, Yes, you look wonderful tonight
…
As they made a small circle, they neared closer to Matt
and Andy’s path. Breaking away from his date, Chris moved over to the pair of
cross country runners.
“Might if I cut in?” He asked Matt as he extended his
arm for Andy.
“As you wish my
liege,” he responded, revitalizing his English accent from a week earlier.
He stepped aside and Chris took his place, leaving both Matt and Maggie without
partners. Slowly, the quarterback steered Andy further and further to the left,
increasing the space between them and the two solo dancers. After a small
smile, the solos moved together to become a duo, picking up where each had left
off.
… And then
she asks me, Do you feel all right? … And I say, Yes, I feel wonderful tonight
…
Chris watched as the budding couple’s small smiles grew
larger. They talked and they laughed. It warmed his heart, spilling over into a
pleasant beam of his own.
“I think we can probably stop dancing now,” Andy joked
as the two broke apart to better observe their teammate. “Although, I do
appreciate the jealous looks I was getting from some of the ladies in your fan
club.”
Chris chuckled to himself. “Well, you better
capitalize on it while you have the chance.” He said, gesturing ahead of him to
a pack of woman stealing covert glances in their direction, “I’ll mange without
you.”
“You are a just and noble leader, King Cline,” he
said, putting his hand on Chris’s shoulder. “The karma gods will look fondly on
your acts of kindness. Now, we ride!” He dashed off, prancing as if he was
riding an invisible horse and, as was his way, drawing a ton of attention to
himself. Shaking his head and laughing once more, Chris plodded off to the side
of the gym to sit on the lone set of open bleachers. He plopped down
haphazardly on the end, relaxing his surprisingly tired legs. Then, realizing
he had never taken it off, he took off his absurd looking crown and tossed it
aside.
“I’m glad you took that off,” A voice said from behind
him, “Makes you much more approachable.” His heart skipped a beat as Sarah slid
into the row alongside him. “Your highness.” She pretended to curtsey from her
seated position.
“Oh gosh, you too? I’m never going to hear the end of
this am I?”
“Nope I don’t think so. Not unless you do something
that’s even more embarrassing. Like
wear cleats to a cross country meet.” She nudged him playfully.
“Very funny,” He responded dryly. They sat together in
momentary silence beyond the gentle music around them, watching their remaining
peers dance out the final notes of the melody.
“So where’s your date?” Sarah asked, scanning the
crowd. “Did she finally get tired of you? I tried to warn her you could be a
little much.”
“Haha, yeah she’s upgraded, actually,” he pointed out
at his friends, still talking and dancing as enthusiastically as before. For
those two it was if there was no one else in the room. “It took me a while to
catch on … but better late than never I suppose.” He looked away from the
rotating partners and over at Sarah. She looked back at him, differently than
she had ever looked at him before. Almost as if she had never seen him in this
light. He thought about how nice it would be to lean over and kiss her. “So
where’s your date?”
“What do you mean?” she asked, snapping out of her
previous mesmerized stare and into a state of confusion. “I didn’t have a
date.”
“Oh, c’mon, I saw you guys,” Chris continued, guessing
this could all be part of another joke, “You and Will. At pictures.”
“Me and Will?” Sarah laughed, her head tilting back
with joy. “Will’s not my date-he’s my brother.”
“Ooohh,” Chris replied, another mystery solved.
Internally, he debated whether this made his situation better or worse. Short term-better. Long term …
“So I guess that means you can ask me to dance now,
right?”
He laughed uncertainly, a rush of nervous adrenaline
surging through him. He got cautiously to his feet, hoping his shaking knees
would be strong enough to support him. “Yeah, um, would you like to-” But
before he could finish, the music ebbed away and the vice principal was back on
the loud speaker.
“THANK YOU EVERYONE,
YOU HAVE BEEN AMAZING GUESTS! HAVE A GREAT EVENING AND PLEASE GET HOME SAFELY!”
Chris looked at Sarah, his arm still half extended,
cut off mid-sentence. His head spinning slightly, he decided to plow ahead,
“Well … the offer still stands,” he said, now extending his arm in earnest.
“Chris, the dance is over,” she laughed, “Are you
planning to sing?”
“As entertaining as that would be,” he replied,
reaching into his pocket, “I actually had another idea.” He pulled Maggie’s
phone out of his pocket and flipped to her music. Pressing shuffle, a song
floated out of the device, somewhat decipherable within the slowly emptying
room.
Making my way
down town … Walking fast … Faces pass … And I’m homebound …
Sarah looked at him with her eyebrows raised, “Wouldn’t
have matched this to your iPod. You listen to this before football games?”
“Only when there’s no Sarah Bareilles available,” he
replied with a smile. “So are we doing this or not? My arms getting tired.”
Amused, Sarah reached out and took his free arm, allowing
him to pull her to her feet and guide her down onto the gymnasium floor.
… And I need
you … And I miss you … And now I wonder … If I could fall … Into the sky … Do
you think time … Would pass me by …
“You know,” Sarah said as the pair revolved around the
outskirts of the floor, dodging exiting students, “You’re a lot different than
I thought you’d be.”
“Good different or bad different?”
“Different,” She touched his left hand, feeling the
bandaged area. “What happens when this comes off? Are things different again?”
“I’ll still be the same person I’ve always been.”
She gave him a long, searching look. “Maybe that’s what I’m afraid of.”
He opened his mouth to respond, but as was the theme of
the night, he never had the chance to verbalize his latest thoughts.
“CLINE!” The powerful figure of Matthew Clayton was
thundering toward them, looking angry. Chris and Sarah broke apart as the
former braced himself for confrontation. “Who do you think you are, Cline?!”
The linebacker said belligerently, continuing forward until he was nearly nose
to nose with the quarterback. Chris could smell the pungent scent of cheap beer
on his breath.
“I feel like this is a trick question,” he responded
levelheadedly. He had already survived one near altercation tonight without
losing his cool. He tried to bottle that same unflappable temperament.
“Melissa just stormed out of here crying,” Clayton
fired back unamused, “Said it was because of what you told her during that dance!” He pressed a finger to Chris’s
stomach aggressively. There weren’t many students remaining in the gym at this
point, but those who remained were now transfixed by the heated dialogue.
“What are you talking about?” Chris tried to rack his
brain for what he possibly could have said to upset his ex-girlfriend to such a
degree.
“Don’t play stupid with me, Suck-Eye,” The Coatesville
Raider responded indignantly. Using a meaty hand, he reached out and pushed
Chris square in the chest. Caught off guard by the force of the attack, Chris
stumbled backwards.
“Hey, let’s just calm down,” Sarah said calmly,
stepping forward to get in between the combatants. “I’m sure this is just a
misunderstand-”
“Out of the way, bitch!” Matthew shoved her out of the
way with the side of his elbow as he advanced forward toward the disarmed
quarterback. Chris rocked back on his heels and lunged, now enraged and ready
for a counterattack. But to his surprise, he didn’t get there first.
A
wave of bodies rushed forward from multiple sides, blindsiding Clayton and
bringing him to the ground. One of the boys took a shot straight to the nose as
Clayton lashed out, wildly trying to throw off his attackers. Thrown of rhythm
by the changing battlefield, Chris prepared to jump into the scrum, hoping to
provide some aid, but he was grabbed from behind by a pair of strong arms.
Panting with rage and frustration he heard the voice behind call out to someone
nearby. “Bring back up! Call 911!”
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