Day One, 8:07 a.m.
Iâm a traitor to my generation. Seriously. All we hear about these days is being strong women and standing up for ourselves, and now look what Iâve done. I should totally be one of those true life stories in Seventeen. âI Built My Life Around a Boy! And Now I Regret It!â Of course, it doesnât pack the emotional punch as some of their previous stories, i.e., âI Got An STD Without Having Sexâ but itâs important nonetheless.
âYouâre going to be fine,â my mom says, stirring her coffee at the sink. âIn fact, youâre acting a little bit ridiculous.â
âIâm ridiculous? Iâm ridiculous?â How can she say that? Has she lost her mind? Itâs so completely not ridiculous to be upset about going on a trip with your ex-boyfriend, when said ex-boyfriend broke your heart and left you stranded for some Internet slut. Although I really canât say I know for a fact that sheâs a slut. But Iâm pretty sure she is. I mean, scamming on guys on the Internet? I thought that was only for forty-year-old divorcées who Photoshop their pictures in an effort to appear younger and thinner. Not to mention what was HE thinking? An eighteen-year-old guy who could have any girl he wanted, having to resort to Internet dating? But maybe thatâs the problem with guys who can have any girl they want. One is never enough.
âI didnât say you were ridiculous,â my mom says. âI said youâre acting ridiculous.â
âThereâs really no difference,â I tell her. âItâs like if someone says âYouâre acting like a cheater,â itâs because youâre cheating. Which means youâre a cheater.â Like Jordan. Although I suppose technically he isnât a cheater, because he broke up with me before he started dating the Internet girl. In my mind, I still think of him as being a cheater. Otherwise, he just met some girl he liked better, and itâs not as dramatic.
âCourtney, you begged and begged to go on this trip,â my mom says.
âSo?â Thatâs her big justification for calling me ridiculous? Is she kidding? Teenagers beg and beg for stuff all the timeânose rings, tattoos that say âBadass.â Never a good idea. My parents are supposed to be the voices of reason, steering me on the right path at all times. Theyâre obviously insane to have agreed to this plan in the first place. I mean, what was I thinking? Making plans to drive over a thousand miles to college with a boy months before we were supposed to go? Everyone knows the average high school relationship is shorter than an episode of TRL. âYouâre the mother,â I say. âYou should have known this was a horrible idea.â Iâm hoping to lay a guilt trip on her, but sheâs not having it.
âOh, please,â she says, rolling her eyes. âHow was I supposed to know he was going to break up with you? Iâm not psychic. Nor do I know the habits of Internet chat rooms.â
âIt wasnât a CHAT ROOM,â I say. âIt was MySpace.â No one hangs out in chat rooms anymore. Although why some girl would want to date Jordan based on his MySpace page is beyond me. The song he chose for his profile is âLetâs All Get Drunk Tonightâ by Afroman.
âRight,â my mom says, taking a sip of her coffee. My parents are trying to teach me some kind of lesson. They donât think itâs right that they would have to pay more than five hundred dollars for a last-minute plane ticket from Florida to Massachusetts, when Iâm the one who convinced them to let me go on this trip. Plus, my mom thinks this whole thing is typical teen angst, one of those situations portrayed on a teen sitcom thatâs resolved in a half hour of laughs and mishaps. You know, where the girl gets dumped, but then realizes by the end of the show that sheâs better off without him, and then hooks up with some other hottie whoâs much better for her, while the guy who broke her heart ends up all alone, wishing he had her back. That is definitely not happening. In fact, itâs kind of the other way around. Jordan is having tons of fun with his MySpace girl, while Iâm the one sitting around, wishing I had him back.
I sigh and stare out the kitchen window, looking for Jordanâs TrailBlazer. Itâs 8:07, and he was supposed to be here at eight, which makes me think that:
or The most likely answer is A. (We went to the prom together, and the limo had to wait in his driveway for half an hour. At the end of the night, we got charged for an extra hour. Heâread: his parentsâpaid for it, but still.) Although Iâm all about option C. Okay, maybe not the dead part. Just, like, a broken leg or something. I mean, his parents have always been really nice to me and I would feel horrible if they lost their youngest child. Even if he is a liar and a cheat.
âDo you want some coffee?â my mom asks, which is ridiculous because she knows I donât drink coffee. Coffee stunts your growth. Iâm only five-foot-two, and Iâm still holding out hope that Iâll grow another few inches. Plus Iâm tense enough. Getting me all hyped up on caffeine is definitely not a good idea.
âNo thanks,â I say, looking out the window again. I feel a lump rising in my throat, and I ignore it. He wouldnât blow me off, would he? I mean, thatâs so screwed up. Although if he did, that means I wouldnât have to go with him. Which would be great. If he stood me up, my parents would have no choice but to let me book a flight and take it to Boston. Which is what they should have let me do in the first place.
I take a deep breath. Itâs only three days. I can get through that, right? Three days is nothing. Three days isâ¦I wrack my brain, trying to think of something that only lasts three days. Christmas vacation! Christmas vacation lasts ten days and it always seems to go by so fast. Three days is only a third of that.
Plus, I have the whole thing planned out in minute detail. The trip, I mean. So that every single second, weâll be doing something.
Of course, Christmas vacation is fun. And this is going to be excruciating.
My dad walks into the kitchen, wearing a gray suit and drinking a protein shake. Heâs humming a Shakira song. My dad loves pop music. Which is weird. Because heâs almost fifty. Although I think my dad may be having a bit of a midlife crisis, since lately heâs taken to buying weird clothes. And I suspect heâs been using self-tanner, because he definitely looks a little orange.
âGood morning,â he says, heading over to where my mom is sitting at the kitchen table and planting a kiss on her head. He opens the cupboard and pulls down a box of cereal.
âMorning,â I mumble, not sure whatâs so good about it.
âAll set for school?â he asks, smiling.
âYeah, I guess,â I say, trying not to sound like too much of a brat. My dad has been way cooler about this whole breakup thing than my mom. Heâs spent hours trying to cheer me up by telling me Iâd meet someone better, thereâs more fish in the sea, he never liked Jordan, etc. Plus he bought me a new iPod and tons of new clothes for school. He also slipped me a copy of Heâs Just Not That Into You, which I guess he thought was empowering. It actually kind of is empowering, because it talks about how you shouldnât settle for a guy who doesnât want to be with you. On the other hand, realizing the guy you like âjust isnât that into youâ is not very good for oneâs self-esteem. Plus I was reading parts of it to my friend Jocelyn one time, and she interrupted me to say, âActually, if you need a book like that to tell you heâs just not that into you, youâre probably not the type thatâs going to actually be able to let go.â She wasnât trying to say it about me, exactly, but still.
âJordan here yet?â my dad asks, pouring milk over his cereal.
âOf course not,â I say. âHey, if he doesnât show up, then what?â
âYou think he wonât show up?â my dad asks, glancing up. âWhy wouldnât he?â
âI donât know.â I say. âBut what if he doesnât?â Hope starts to rise up inside me. Thereâs no way either one of my parents can or want to drive me. I wonât even feel bad about the money theyâll have to spend on a last-minute plane ticket, since theyâre the psychos who are making me go on this trip in the first place. âThen what?â I persist.
But no one has to answer that, because the sound of gravel crunching on the driveway outside comes through the window. I look out, and the light shines off the windshield of Jordanâs TrailBlazer and hits my eyes.
Some kind of ridiculous rap music is blasting from the car, which makes me even more annoyed than I already am. I hate rap music. He doesnât even listen to normal rap, like Jay-Z or Nelly. He listens to âhardcoreâ rap. (His word, not mine. Iâve never used the word âhardcoreâ in my life. Well, until right now, and then only to quote Jordan.)
I ignore the weird feeling in my stomach and run outside so I can yell at him for being late. âWhere have you been?â I demand as he gets out of the car.
âNice to see you, too.â He smiles. Heâs wearing baggie tan shorts and a navy blue Abercrombie T-shirt. His dark hair is wet, which means he probably just got out of the shower, which means he probably just woke up. âIâm sorry, I was packing my stuff, and then I was trying to find my parents so I could say good-bye to them.â
Packing his stuff? Who waits until the day theyâre leaving for college to start packing their stuff? My stuffâs been packed for a week, neatly stacked outside my bedroom door until I moved it into the kitchen this morning. I mean, the housing office sent us a packing list. Of stuff to bring. Iâll bet Jordan doesnât have any of it. Not like I care. If he wants to sleep on an empty, disgusting, stained mattress because he forgot to purchase extra-long sheets, thatâs fine with me. Iâm so over him. This is me, being over him. La, la, la.
âDidnât you get my email?â I ask him. Three days ago I emailed him a copy of our trip itinerary. It was really short, with a subject line that simply said âScheduleâ and read, âJordan, Attached, please find a copy of the schedule for our trip. Best, Courtney.â I was really proud of it. The email, I mean. Because it was so short and cold. Of course, it took me and my friend Jocelyn about two hours to come up with the perfect wording, but Jordan doesnât know that. He just must think Iâm too important to compose long email messages with him, or get ensconsed in a back-and-forth email exchange. Not that he ever emailed me back. But it was obviously because I was so cold.
âThe one about the trip?â He frowns. âYeah, I think so.â
âYou think so?â I ask.
âCourt, you canât plan everything to the minute,â he says. âThere are going to be setbacks.â He takes the sunglasses that are on his head and slides them down over his eyes.
âWell, whatever,â I say. Luckily I have three copies of the trip itinerary, along with specific MapQuest instructions all printed out and paper-clipped together. Iâll give him one to reference. I start to walk into the house, and Jordan hesitates.
âAre you going to help me with my stuff or not?â I ask.
âOh, yeah, sure.â I raise my eyebrows. âOf course,â he repeats more forcefully.
He follows me into the house, and I can tell heâs staring at my ass. Pervert.
âJordan,â my dad says, nodding. Jordan nods back but doesnât say anything. I hope heâs scared of my dad. If he isnât, he should be. My dadâs kind of a big guy. Not that Jordanâs scrawny or anything. In fact, just the opposite. He has these really amazing arms thatâUgh. I will not think about any part of Jordanâs lying, cheating, never-on-time body, arms or otherwise.
âExcited to be going to school?â my mom asks politely. Her tone is guarded, which makes me happy. When Jordan and I were together, she was always supernice to him. She might be making me go on this trip, but itâs obvious where her loyalties lie. I hope Jordan is uncomfortable. I hope heâs squirming. I hope heâsâ
âYes, maâam,â he says. Which is total bullshit. He could care less, obviously. I mean, he didnât even follow the packing list.
âWhatever,â I say, putting my hands on my temples like I canât take it anymore. âCan you start loading up the car? I donât want to be any later than we already are.â I give Jordan a pointed look, which he ignores, and then point him in the direction of my stuff, which is packed neatly and piled on the kitchen floor.
âJesus, Court,â he says, looking at the mound. âYou know youâre only going for four years, right?â I ignore him and pull a copy of the schedule out of my pocket.
âWe are way behind,â I say, frowning. We were supposed to have left twenty minutes ago. Although maybe if we donât stop for lunch and just drive straight through, we can make up the time that way. Still, itâs not good to be starting off late. Iâve budgeted for traffic and unforeseen circumstances of course, but still. This should not count as an unforeseen circumstance. An unforeseen circumstance is something that you canât avoid. And this could definitely have been avoided.
Jordan reaches down and picks up one of the bags thatâs on the ground near my feet, and it brushes against my toe.
âOw!â I say, jumping back. âWatch it. Iâm wearing sandals.â
He smiles. âSorry, honey.â He turns and heads out to the car before I can reply. I take a deep breath. I will not start fighting with him. Thereâs no way. If I start fighting with him, heâs going to know that heâs getting to me, and I canât let that happen. The last thing I need is for him to think Iâm upset about him breaking up with me. Iâve spent the past two weeks determined to show him I donât care, and Iâm not going to screw it all up now. Of course, itâs much easier to pretend you donât care about someone when theyâre not around you, but I can do it. I just have to gather all my self-control. Disengage and detach is my new motto.
I realize my heart is beating at a ridiculously abnormal rate, and I take another deep breath. I can do this, I tell myself. I start thinking of all the hot guys Iâm going to meet in college. Guys who read philosophy books and drink coffee. Guys who listen to real music, like Mozart and Andrea Bocelli and maybe even Gavin DeGraw. Anything but rap music. It makes me feel better, but only for a second. Because, letâs face itâno matter how much you tell yourself youâre over someone, your heart knows the truth.