Now the Compress-O-Matic 4000 could work her magic and show the true
feistiness she was made of.
Sandi Griffin tiptoed to her door and checked for the fourth time that it
was locked and that the piece of tissue was crammed into the keyhole. She
then closed her blinds, put on "Cross of Changes" by Enigma, climbed onto
her bed, sat with her legs crossed and her palms up, and remembered...
When she was in kindergarten, her mother had taken her to a business
function, hoping to impress everyone with what a wonderful mothering job she
had done. And that was where she had first seen him - the love of her life,
so handsome and serene with his beautiful copper tone hair and straight,
white teeth. And he was so mature - a whole year ahead of her. Even then,
his voice and melodious laugh were deep, manly, and sensitive. She knew
when she first saw Charles Ruttheimer III that she had found the man of her
dreams, especially when he, who always knew exactly what to say, had walked
boldly up to her and purred gently in her ear, "Come to Chuckie, feisty
baby! Rowrrr..."
But of course her mother, the ever vigilant, could not see him for what he
truly was and had requested that Charles Ruttheimer Jr. and his young son
leave the function, Sandi recalled bitterly as she returned to reality.
She now walked swiftly toward her closet and unlocked the doors, then drew
the lighter from her pocket and swung the door open. Happy, smiling faces
of her beloved greeted her and she smiled back as she lit the candles and
incense surrounding the largest picture of him. After a few moments of
observing the beautiful shrine, she removed her favorite picture of Charles
and kissed it gently, then kissed it again and again. She didn't realize
until it was far too late that the corner of the photo had been ignited by
one of the shrine's candles, and though she tried desperately to save the
picture, soon all that remained of it was a small pile of ashes on the floor
and several ashy smears on her blouse.
"Oh God! This will never come out of silk!"
Something was terribly wrong with the Compress-O-Matic 4000. Charles
didn't know how he knew it, but he did. And as flames and shards of metal
erupted from its angry framework, the last thought that registered was that
he was not too terribly surprised. Then horrible, unending blackness crept
over the corners of his mind and he cried out in pain for the last time.
"Lawndale High Student Killed in Fiery Bast? What the hell does that
mean?!" a pink-faced Jake Morgendorffer roared from the Morgendorffers'
breakfast table.
"That you shouldn't invoke the wrath of the cat goddess, of course," Daria, who was reading a different copy of the same paper, replied without looking up from her reading.
"That's 'Blast', Jakey," Helen calmly answered him. "And what is that
article?" she asked as she rounded the table.
"Damn eyes," Jake grumbled as his wife's face grew more horrified by the
second.
"That poor boy!" she exclaimed. "I remember he was always so kind and
considerate and so sweet."
Daria, unconcerned, told her, "Mom, you
and I must be thinking about entirely different Charles Ruttheimers the
Third. Knowing this town, the Lawndale Tabloid just ran out of news tidbits
and got Ms. Li to write a sensational work of fiction for them."
"Eew, Upchuck?" asked Quinn, also rather horrified, though for somewhat
different reasons. "Why do only the geeks make the paper?"
"Oh, do I hear that!" Jake exclaimed, red-faced again. "When I was in
grade school, all I ever wanted to do was to enter the science fair so I
could get my name in the paper! But my old man said it was unmanly!"
Daria watched her family disapprovingly: Helen looking at the newspaper
with interest, probably thinking that the Ruttheimers would need a good
lawyer around now, Quinn pouting because for once she wasn't the center of
attention, and Jake screaming and shaking his fist skyward at his dead
father. She quickly got over her disgust, as she would have run away long
ago if she wasn't able to tune out her family, flashed them a Mona
Lisa-esque smile, and remarked, "Well, looks like its shaping up to be
another great day at the Morgendorffers'. Guess I'll head for Jane's."
She picked up her backpack and walked out, just barely catching Jake's
"Daria? Did you say something about a new paper in town? The Lawndale
Tabloid? I wonder if they need consulting..."
Daria rang the doorbell at the Lane residence and was greeted by a
tired looking Jane, complete with rumpled hair and pajamas. She gave her
usual, "What are you doing here? School's not for an hour," line, but
gestured for her friend to come inside.
"My family is driving me insane. And now the paper is going insane, too,"
Daria told her.
"I hear there's a nasty insanity bug going around, so we
shouldn't be too surprised about that. Anyway, isn't it your family's
mission to drive you insane?"
"Well, yes..."
"But the paper?"
"Exactly. It says that Upchuck got blown up by an air compressor last
night."
After letting this revelation sink in for about fifteen seconds, Jane replied, "Ah, then I suppose that Brittany and her bunch of highly trained exorcists
will have to be called in again." She paused, then continued, "Are you sure that Sick, Sad World hasn't
been getting to your brain? It's a good show and all, but I think it
actually says you aren't supposed to watch more than twelve episodes at a
time."
"And all this time I thought they made subliminal messages
illegal."
"But has something as minor as a law stopped the SSW crew from doing...things
before?" Jane asked her. "And have you been getting any unexplained cravings for Skittles or
Dr. Pepper?"
"Nope. Sorry, looks like that's one point SSW's lost on the dishonesty
scorecard. They must feel pretty dejected. But anyway, I'm not making this
up."
"Then Li's behind it. No doubt about it," Jane told her.
"That's what I said. I guess we'll just have to go to school and find
out," Daria replied.
"Wow, I never thought I'd hear that line coming from you. Are you sure you
haven't caught the insanity, too?" Jane asked her friend, then continued, "Well, I guess I'd better go get dressed."
"I don't know. Those PJ's of yours make quite a fashion statement."
Angela Li's first response to the lead newspaper story was panic. How
could that despicable Upchuck do this do his school? Now Lawndale would
forever have to bear the name of the school that that poor Charles
Ruttheimer attended. And she would never get those important grants if it
was proved that despite all the drug dogs, metal detectors, and other
security precautions, one faulty air compressor could take the life of a
student...
By this point, Li was on her third cup of coffee laced with Vodka and was
lying on her breakfast table trying not to sob. However, six cups of the
same concoction later, the wheels of her devious little mind were turning at
full power.
"After all, the boy didn't die at school," she thought. "Perhaps something
good can still come of it."
And the only thing that Principal Angela Li could think of as she swerved
her way to work, screaming at anyone who was unfortunate enough to stand
between her and the Lawndale High faculty parking lot, was money.
Timothy O'Neill sat on a pillow on his bedroom floor, shaking his head a
sniffling. Why, oh why did the Great One take away such a virile young
life? Charles Ruttheimer III, though not the brightest of his students, was
certainly one of the happiest. He recalled Charles, with his shiny black
hair, cheerful smile, and bright yellow football uniform, sitting at his
desk and trying, yes trying so hard to answer the challenging questions put
to him.
"Was I too hard on the poor boy?" he wondered. "Was it me, in fact, who
drove him to his dreadful fate?"
O'Neill just couldn't take it anymore, and at that last thought, he finally
broke down and sobbed.
"Hey Daria, Jane, what's Mr. O'Neill doing over there?" Jodie Landon
called, walking through the parking lot, pointing to their English teacher,
who was unloading what looked like a cheap linen shop's worth of pillows
from his olive green Honda Civic.
"Uh, I've got no idea," said Jane.
"Probably just having another of his psychotic breaks," said Daria. "Oh no, I hope he's not going to make us do pregnancy breathing exercises again
to go along with the Scarlet Letter."
"Eck. Well, hopefully he'll accidentally bring his exercise tape again
instead of the rhythmic breathing music," Jodie replied.
"And if he follows through with it, I believe we may just have to pay a
repeat visit to Mr. Roof."
"I don't know about that. Have you seen the handprint scanner Li installed
on the roof door last month?"
"Handprint scanner? Good thing I brought my chisel," Jane said, rooting
around in her bag and coming up with the said tool.
"Okay, Handyman Jane," Daria said, pulling on her friend's bag. "Let's go
to class. Maybe this weirdness will be explained there."
Angela Li held the dictating device stealthily behind her left hand as she
bent down and spoke softly into it.
"Eight-forty-one AM. Thursday. Contact Jodie Landon about Charles
Ruttheimer III Security Memorial Fund and bring it to the attention of the
boy's family. Alter Student of the Year elections. Talk to Yearbook
Committee about this year's dedication."
Li clicked the recorder off, then chuckled to herself.
"You are far too good, Principal Li," she told herself, thinking of the
Ruttheimers' vast monetary holdings. Surely they'd want their boy remembered
properly.
She congratulated herself again for her brilliant thinking, then poured
herself a reward from the bottle of rum so carefully concealed in the hollow
body of the faux jade Buddha on her bookshelf.
Jodie was getting a tiny bit impatient with Jane, who was trying to cram a
bag of art tools into her already completely full locker. She stood tapping
her foot for a while, then walked over to the doorway of Mr. O'Neill's room
and peered inside.
"Ohhhh," she breathed in disbelief, then called out, "Jane, Daria, come look
at this!"
The pillows they had seen earlier were arranged in a circle around the
room. Giant pictures of Kevin were wreathed in leafy branches and candles
burned on every tabletop. O'Neill was kneeling on the ground, plugging in a
bright yellow boombox. Suddenly, horrible music of the 'inspirational' grade began blasting from it.
"Uh-oh," Jane commented. "Ghetto blasters are back."
Daria cringed and covered her ears. "With a vengeance," she said loudly.
A red-eyed O'Neill turned around and greeted them.
"Good morning, girls...oh, really this morning isn't good at all...that
poor boy! Why? Why?"
O'Neill threw his hands up into the air over-dramatically, then grabbed
and economy sized box of tissues and blew his nose loudly.
"I'm sorry, girls. It's just that poor Tommy Sherman was killed so recently
and now the very quarterback who took his place was stricken down in the
prime of his life!"
He was so overcome with emotion that he flopped down on the nearest pillow,
put his face in his hands, and sobbed.
"Upchuck wasn't a football player," Jane whispered to Daria.
"Yes, but observe the giant pictures of Kevin prominently displayed
throughout the room, " Daria responded, also whispering. "One of us is wrong
and it should be interesting to find out whom."
Just then, Kevin walked into the room with Brittany at his side.
"Hey-hey, babe! Look at all this just for me! But Mr. O, the championship
isn't for three weeks. I guess he's just getting the team spirit up, huh
babe?"
"Go Lions, go!" squeaked Brittany, leaping into the air.
"I'm the QB!" Kevin proclaimed loudly.
"Go Kevvy, go!" squeaked his girlfriend.
At that, O'Neill's head snapped up and he stared in amazement at Kevin.
"Oh Charles! You aren't dead! It was all just a big mistake!" he cried,
running over to Kevin and hugging him.
"But Mr. O, I'm Kevin," Kevin replied, smiling stupidly.
"I guess I've underestimated Kevin. He's smart enough to know who he is,
after all," Daria whispered, drawing outright laughter from an already
snickering Jane.
Sandi had been nervous and jumpy ever since the evening before, but had
almost convinced herself that it was just weird hormones or something. But
her mom and dad were both on business trips and her brothers were both
staying with friends, so she was home alone and the empty house that morning
hadn't exactly been inviting. Her friends were too stupid to notice anything
different with her before school and she was feeling somewhat better by the
time she got to her first period class: history.
As she filed in with the rest of her classmates, she noticed that Mr.
DeMartino hadn't gotten anything out for the day's lesson and was standing
with his hands folded at the front of the class. Something was definitely
amiss, Sandi realized as the bell rang.
"Now CLASS, we were going to conTINUE our LESSon on the Civil WAR toDAY. But in light of the TRAGEDY, Ms. Li has DEMANDED that we take the DAY to
talk about and REMEMber him."
Sandi was confused, but quite interested. This sounded like gossip, and she wanted the scoop. "What happened?"
"SUREly you must know, Ms. GRIFFIN. Only the tragic DEATH of your classMATE
Charles RUTTheimer the Third."
Sandi stared at him as the words sunk in, then broke down.
"Oh no, oh no, oh no!" she sobbed, running from the class.
"Whoahhh," said Tiffany. "What's wrong with her?"
"Like, it must be the same thing Quinn said," Stacy told her. "He was,
like, a total geek. Now he's dead and he's, like, getting all the attention
and no one even noticed Sandi's really cute new fuzzy barrettes."
"Yeahhhh ... that is sooo wrong."
Sandi ran to the door leading to the parking lot, stopping only to tie a
kerchief around her head.
"After all," she thought, "bad hair is always a Fashion Don't, no matter
what the circumstances."
She raced out the door, tears threatening to ruin her perfect mascara, and
got into her little red Mazda Miata, her mother's birthday gift for her.
Thoughts of her beloved racing through her mind, Sandi drove madly to
Lovers' Lane, right next to the quarry on the edge of town.
She carefully got out of her car and walked to the edge of the quarry,
staring at the ground a vast distance below. And with that, she closed her
eyes, splayed her arms, and jumped.
"Hey guys, have you seen Quinn?" Joey asked into his walkie-talkie.
It was his turn to add to the Quinn's route map project while his two fellow
Quinn worshippers stayed at school and told him where she was going. The
project had expanded from its original preferred way to school to everything
from her favourite route to the mall to maps of which rooms in her house and
her friends' houses she was most likely to be in at specific times. Now he
was on a delicate mission - to figure out the fastest way to Lovers' Lane so
that they could easily find the car Quinn was in and beat up the guy she was
with.
Now he heard Jeffy's voice over the walkie talkie.
"Uh, she's in the girls' bathroom putting on mascara. She won't be out for
another... two minutes and twenty four seconds."
"Good," Joey thought. "She'll never guess what I'm up to."
When he drove toward Lovers' Lane, he
saw a little red sportscar pulled up to the very edge of the quarry.
"That's dangerous," he thought. "I wonder where the driver went. I hope
they're okay."
He pulled over, jumped out of his car, and walked over to the Miata. Then he looked over the edge, gasped in horror, and screamed frantically into the walkie talkie, "Holy shit! Guys! It's...it's Sandi! Come quick! And bring help, like a teacher or something!"
"Where do you think you're going, you MAN?!" Janet Barch shrieked as Jeffy
tried to ease his way out of her classroom. The tardy bell hadn't even rung
yet, but she wasn't about to let him go anywhere. And she wasn't the kind
of help Joey was looking for, was she? He gave her a stupid looking smile,
which probably served only to infuriate her even more.
"Uh, Sandi just jumped off a cliff. Joey says I have to come."
Barch looked shocked, then more furious than Jeffy had ever seen her
before.
"Oh, I see how it is!" she screamed. "Another young woman's life ruined by
an disgusting, uncaring man! But this time, it wasn't just her good looks
and her charms; it was her entire life! HOW CAN YOU LIVE WITH YOURSELF, YOU
WORM?! YOU PARASITE! YOU...YOU...MAN!!!!"
Jeffy took this opportunity to bolt out of his science teacher's classroom
and out toward the parking lot. He ran by the office, then stopped and
turned back. Maybe Ms. Li could be of some help.
Irritatingly enough, Mr. O'Neill was forced to break the guidance circle in
his study hall when the intercom crackled and Ms. Li's voice came over it.
"Oh drat," he thought, reaching out to press the power button on the yellow
boombox. "And I think that we were really connecting with the Child of
Emotions."
"...unfortunate incident involving Sandi Griffin. Apparently, she jumped
off the edge of the quarry. I have to go and see about this, so school is
dismissed early. I repeat, school is dismissed. Everyone, just go home.
Oh...this is not the kind of publicity I needed right now..."
The intercom clicked off.
"Eep!" squeaked a distressed Brittany, as tears began to fill her eyes.
"Yes! No school!" shouted Kevin.
"Oh no! Not another horrible accident! And so soon after the first
tragedy!" O'Neill cried, glancing around at his walls, which now bore
Upchuck's pictures where Kevin's had been.
"But Mr. O, this isn't a tragedy! School's out! Right, babe?"
"You big oaf! Sandi's dead and all you can think of is getting out of
school early?" Brittany stomped on her boyfriend's foot, then started crying
and ran out of the room.
"Fine!" Kevin, totally oblivious to the fact that she was upset, shouted
after her. "I won't drive you home!"
As Brittany ran along the hall, she remembered those happy junior high
years when Sandi was still her best friend; before the ill fated gymnastics
tryouts. Poor Sandi, all she'd wanted was to be in that class, and after
she found out that only Brittany had made it, she'd withdrawn from her.
Brittany had always meant to apologize and get the friendship gong again,
but then she'd made the cheerleading squad and met Kevin and she was always
just so busy...and now Sandi was dead! She just couldn't believe it, but
there it was, awfully, horribly real.
Without really knowing what she was doing, Brittany reached for her bag and
got out the bottle and opened it. Panic stricken and crying fearfully and
angrily, she almost fell into the girls' bathroom. But once there,
everything became perfectly clear and she knew what she had to do.
"This has, without a doubt, been the weirdest day of my life," Jane told
Daria and Jodie, whom she was once again keeping waiting by her locker. "I
can't believe that they're actually dead. It was strange when Sherman
kicked it, but I actually knew these people. Not by choice, but still."
Daria was too stunned to be sad yet, so she was what was natural for her:
sarcastic. "What a tragedy. Two of Lawndale High's brightest
minds snuffed before they could achieve the greatness for which they were
destined."
Jodie was already upset and off balance by the day's happenings and Daria's
seeming total lack of emotion really rubbed her the wrong way.
"Daria, sometimes you astound me," she said coldly. "These weren't your
little pawns who got killed so you could kid around about them, these were
actual people with actual families and actual lives. And now they're dead.
And I'm sorry, but if that's all the sympathy and respect you can show for
them, no wonder people don't like to be around you. Okay?"
Daria looked stunned, then rather sheepish. Jodie glanced over at her and
smiled a little.
"That was a bit preachy, I guess," she said. "But Daria, I'm really not in
the mood to joke around."
"Yeah, I see your point. Look Jodie, I'm sorry," Daria told her. "I'm
having kind of a hard time keeping together myself."
Jane couldn't believe that she had just heard all of this from utterly
unperturbable Daria. This day surely had been one of her strangest...
She was just about to say something to break the uncomfortable silence that
followed when she heard a distinct clattering noise from the girls'
bathroom, which should have been deserted more than ten minutes before that.
By her friends' turned heads, she knew that they had heard it, too.
"You guys, stay here," Jodie whispered as she quietly walked over to the
bathroom and opened the door.
She looked from across the floor to Brittany, who was slouched in a corner,
then back along the floor. It was only then that she noticed the empty pill
bottle tossed onto the tiles. Jodie gasped, then ran over to her friend,
grabbed her around her waist, and shook her violently. Then she forced open
Brittany's mouth and the brightly coloured pills spilled to the ground.
Brittany started screaming and crying at the same time and Jodie looked
over at the pills again. Something was quite wrong. She knew that she
recognized the bottle so she picked it up, looked at it, and suddenly got an
irritated look on her face.
"Brittany, you tried to OD on TUMS?"
"Yeah," Brittany squeaked/sobbed. "I remembered that I always kept them in
my bag because sometimes after games Kevvy would get a tummyache. I thought
they would work..." She sniffled again. "Wouldn't they have?"
Daria and Jane who had watched the scene unfold from the doorway, walked
in.
"They might have, had you planned to die from constipation. And had you
taken about eight more bottles," Daria told her.
"Oh," Brittany squeaked, looking forlorn. Jodie suddenly felt so sorry for
her that she went over and hugged her.
"Brit, it'll be alright. Come on, I guess we'll drive you home."
Joey just couldn't take his eyes away from the cliff face, where, almost a half hour before, he had first seen Sandi hanging precariously by one of her shoes on a stunted tree growing a few feet down from the edge. She had been knocked out then, but had quickly come to and had just as quickly started complaining about how she'd been hanging there for what seemed about half of her life and her clothes were all ruined and why hadn't he gotten there sooner? Hed finally gotten sick of listening to her whining and had unsuccessfully tried to pull her over the cliff by her other foot a few moments before. Her shoe was now falling swiftly to the gravel below.
"Oh my God, you dork! Do you know how expensive these were?"
He hoped that Jeffy would hurry up.
"Sorry, Sandi."
"You'd better be. And it's, like, sort of uncomfortable here, so could
your friend or whatever please get here? Now? And if you lose my other
shoe..."
Sandi was cut off by several cars pulling up almost simultaneously. Ms.
Li, armed with a megaphone, jumped out of her black Crown Victoria and
immediately began shouting orders through it. Jeffy and Jamie got out of
their cars, as did several other students.
Jeffy threw Joey a yellow nylon rope, which Joey tied around Sandi's ankle
and tried to haul her up with.
"What is that thing you're pulling me up with made of?" screeched Sandi.
"Because 'Waif' says that synthetic material or whatever suffocates your
skin and doesn't allow your pores to breathe. Not that I like have pores or
anything, but I still can't have like polyester or whatever touching my
skin."
After convincing Sandi that the rope was 100% cotton, Joey, Jeffy, and
Jamie managed to pull her over the ledge.
"I didn't think she weighed this much," Jamie whispered to Jeffy.
"Yeah. I bet Quinn would have been nicer to us, too," replied Jeffy.
"Yeah," said Joey.
As soon as Sandi got to safety, she began surveying the injuries to her
clothing.
"I hope that you know that there is now mud or whatever all over the front
of my new cashmere sweater. And you, like, ripped my Versace jeans! Do you
know how much these cost? I hope that you are, like, going to pay for this.
You," she said, pointing to Jamie, "you, Jonathan, are definitely paying
for my shoes."
"Huh? I'm Jamie."
"Whatever. Well, one of you is the one who, like, caused all of this."
"Okay, young people! Load the victim into a vehicle and let us make our
way back to Lawwnnndale High!" Ms. Li shouted rather ceremoniously into the
megaphone.
"Victim is such and un-cute word," Sandi commented as she was helped toward
one of the cars. However, she was soon too busy noticing the grass stains
on her remaining shoe to pursue this latest complaint.
It had been a long day. Coroner Annie Chen had barely sat down at her desk
when her assistant, Bill Sanders, wheeled the newest case through the morgue
doors.
"And what's this one, Bill?" she asked, vaguely interested.
"Heard about that poor kid down in Lawndale who got blown up in his room by
an air compressor? This is him. And from what I've heard, he's a pretty
nasty one. Burned beyond recognition and completely covered with machine
oil and pieces of insulation. My, oh my, I can feel a lawsuit brewing.
Don't you think, boss?"
"Yes, Bill. Get him up on the slab, please."
The young man lifted the sheet wrapped body easily and set it carefully
onto the autopsy table in preparation for its careful dissection and
analysis.
"He was pretty light for his size. One of those underfed ghetto kids?"
asked Sanders.
"No, apparently the dad is pretty well off," said Chen, preparing to make
the initial Y-cut.
As Chen's scalpel cut into Charles Ruttheimer the Third's charred corpse,
an eerie whistling could be heard. Then, suddenly, the body flew up into
the air and zoomed around the small autopsy room. Sanders started screaming
something about malevolent ghosts, but Chen calmly walked over to where the
body, now a dejected looking black lump, lay in a corner of the room.
She bent over the thing to inspect it, but suddenly began laughing and
turned to the pale and quivering Sanders.
"Sanders, come over here and take a look at this."
"My God, boss, it's an inflatable doll!"
Hours before, the hot afternoon sun had brought him back to a twisted,
aching version of reality. Something under him felt like sandpaper and his
whole body had floated in liquid seeming pain. When he saw the dazzling
light before him, he just closed his eyes again and let himself be pulled
back under by the pain, for surely he was already dead.
Now that he was a bit less confused, he realized that the light was not the
fabled death light, it was just the sun, and he felt vaguely stupid. He
tried to lift his head, but the same nauseating pain swept over him the
instant he moved. He would wait.
And a bit later, sirens pierced the cold early morning air. For somewhere
out there, someone had given orders to search everywhere around the
Ruttheimer estate. Charles, lying on the stable house roof, could have
kissed that person.
Especially if she was a woman.
A young, foxy woman.
"Rrrowwwrrrrr..."
Friday dawned cold and foggy. Daria woke with the first light, feeling
tired and disoriented. Then she remembered the happenings of the previous
day, groaned, and rolled out of bed.
"How is it," she thought, "that there could be two so profoundly botched
suicide attempts only hours apart?"
She wondered about how, now that he had been so tragically killed,
Upchuck's faults would be forever forgotten, for the ultimate taboo was to
insult a dead person.
"I wonder how people would remember me if I died," she thought, running a
finger along one of her own pale wrists.
"Oh, dammit, I'm way too tired to be thinking of this," she said, then
walked off to take a shower.
Jane dragged herself out of bed and down the stairs for another lonely
breakfast before Daria came to walk to school with her. She, too, had given
the previous day's events more than enough thought and had barely gotten any
sleep, so she wasn't in the best of moods.
And she wasn't prepared to see Trent sitting at the breakfast table,
drinking a cup of hot water and looking unusually chipper.
"You forgot to add the coffee again," Jane informed her brother.
Trent looked in irritation into his coffee cup, then looked up at Jane and
nodded. He got up, opened a grimy cabinet, and pulled out a can of instant
coffee. Then he removed a spoon from a tottering pile of dirty dishes in
the sink, wiped it absently on his less than spotless shirt, and stirred the
coffee into his cup.
"Thanks, Janey. I thought the coffee tasted a little weak."
"Trent, why are you up this early? I didn't hear Mystik Spiral at all last
night, so you shouldn't be up for hours."
"Got a gig."
"Gigs aren't this early, Trent. What are you hiding?"
Trent's cool exterior was slipping and he turned a little red.
"Gigs for school are." He tried to save himself from instant
embarrassment, though he knew Jane would get her way eventually.
"What the hell is that supposed to mean?" Jane asked, confused. Then the
truth hit her. She grinned. "You didn't."
Trent hung his head and nodded.
"Jesus, you must have been really hard up for cash. How much did Li offer
one of her more dishonorable former students and his newfound musical
friends?"
"Thirty-five each and a really long lecture about setting goals. And I
really needed the money."
"God, I'd hope so. Well, now that you're up, how about giving Daria and me
a ride to school?" She stopped and yawned loudly. "And how about some of
that coffee? I'm exhausted."
"Students!" Ms. Li whacked the microphone on her podium a few times before
she realized that it wasn't yet plugged in.
Pictures of Upchuck hung Chairman Mao-style around the auditorium and the
stragglers were just taking their seats as Li's voice came booming over the
now working microphone.
In the popular section of the seats, no one was paying attention to their
principal's futile attempts to make the speech, for Sandi, uninjured except
for for a small bump on her head and the damage to her no longer flawless
manicure, was back and was now, once more, the center of attention.
"And it was, like, this total geek went and made this fashion statement
about, like, dying and everything, and I just couldn't live with that or
whatever," Sandi recited her fake reason for jumping, carefully invented the
day before in the ambulance, her heart breaking with every word at the
thought of her beloved.
"Wow... Sandi, you are sooo smaaaart..." drawled Tiffany.
"Yeah, Sandi, I would have, like, never thought to do anything
that...fashionable!" Stacy added.
"If she had died," Quinn thought indignantly, "I would have been president.
Why does Sandi always have to screw with my life?"
"Yeah, Sandi, we are so lucky that you didn't die. No one could have taken
your place," said Quinn.
" ...and now a song for the unfortunate boy himself," Ms. Li was saying.
Suddenly, the curtain behind her lifted, and Mystik Spiral began playing
some really bad song with a chorus about "A boy on the edge, Of a very high
ledge."
"Well, how long was this groundbreaking piece of music in the works?" Daria
asked Jane.
"Five, possibly ten minutes. Trent wrote it while I was trying to eat
breakfast. I hate it when he does that - damn hard to do anything but
writhe on the floor and moan. I still can't believe he's doing this for
thirty-five lousy dollars."
"Hey," said Daria, "Five minutes, thirty-five dollars. That's 420 bucks an
hour."
Just then, the song ended and the cheerleaders started walking toward the
stage. Brittany, to Angie and the others' horror, stopped to talk to Daria
and Jane.
"Daria, Jane," she squeaked, "I just wanted to thank you for...well, you
know."
"Sure, Brittany. Anytime," replied Jane.
"And I wanted to say that I'm glad that it worked out that way because she
wasn't even dead, so I would be and there wouldn't be any reason and I
couldn't cheerlead anymore and Kevvy would be sad..." Brittany was
obviously getting herself confused. She frowned and concentrated hard, but
Daria interrupted her.
"Don't think about it too hard, Brittany," she said rather sarcastically.
Brittany instantly perked back up and started smiling again.
"Okaaay, Daria!" she squeaked, then rejoined her fellow cheerleaders.
Jane looked at her friend with a strange expression on her face.
"I've come to understand cheerleader logic," Daria explained.
"Now, that is a scary thought."
Just then, Mystik Spiral began playing what sounded somewhat like Jimi
Hendrix's rendition of "The Star Spangled Banner" (but way worse) while the
cheerleaders did a cheer to the anthem. The contrast was so strikingly
stupid that Daria and Jane barely kept from cracking up, while Ms. Li looked
horrified at something that was going on behind the side curtain.
"All this for little old me? Grrr...my lady friend in the principal's
office must have arranged it. Helllloooo, feisty little ladies! Your
Chuckster has returned!"
A bandaged Upchuck was being wheeled out from behind the curtain by a buxom
blond nurse.
"Oh my God....Upchuck is baaack..." Tiffany could be heard throughout the
auditorium in the dead silence that followed Upchuck's unexpected arrival.
"I knew it was too good to be true," Daria remarked.
"Only in Lawndale," said Jane, sighing and putting her forehead in her
hands. "Only in Lawndale."
Standing behind the podium and opening and closing her mouth, managing to
mimic a goldfish perfectly, Ms. Li was in a state of shock. Finally, she
picked up something from the top of her podium and held it out for Upchuck
and the rest of the school to see.
"The most expensive yearbook in Lawndale High's history, that's what it
is!" she exclaimed, frantically gesturing to the yearbook, which bore an
enormous picture of Upchuck on its front. The fluorescent lights caught the
gold glitter of the cover, which sported small neon coloured flowers and a
metallic purple dedication: In Loving Memory of Charles Ruttheimer III.
Upchuck wheeled himself up to the podium and put one hand on the yearbook
and one hand on his nurse's shoulder.
"I must be the luckiest man alive,"
he announced. "I'm touched, Ms. Li, I'm really touched."
Ms. Li exploded. "You should be ashamed of yourself, Mr. Ruttheimer!
Lawndale High is going to be the laughingstock of the town! You, Mr.
Ruttheimer, have brought the punishing hand of dishonour down unto yourself,
Lawndale High, and its distinguished principal. No one will buy a yearbook
memorializing a boy who turns out to still be living. You have caused the
loss of sums of money that could have been put to far better uses, such as
the placement of a Breathalizer at the door of every classroom. How could
you let you classmates down this way?"
"Whoa, feisty little baby! I'm sure that my father would be pleased to
relieve you of those little books of joy to send to the Ruttheimers across
the globe."
Ms. Li seemed somewhat soothed by this most recent revelation, so she
backed down and the whole school sat in stunned silence for the moment.
Then Sandi overcame her shock, was swept by a wave of joy, and let out a
small shriek, a shriek that everyone mistook for horror. She careened down
her row, open backpack and purse emitting occasional tubes of lipstick, and
ran, shrieking, to the girls' room at the back of the auditorium. Stacy ran
after her.
"It's okay, Sandi! He's back! They'll, like, notice your barrettes now!"
Everyone turned around and watched them, the popular ones sympathizing and
the others pointing and laughing.