True Lies
©2004 The Angst Guy
(theangstguy@yahoo.com)
Daria and associated
characters are ©2004 MTV Networks
Feedback (good, bad, indifferent,
just want to bother me, whatever) is appreciated. Please write to:
theangstguy@yahoo.com
Synopsis: What were Daria and Quinn
really doing out late on a school night just before they were caught by their
parents in the opening scene of “The Big House”? And who would dare to believe
their answers?
Author’s
Notes: This
story was written in response to an Iron Chef contest on PPMB in early 2004,
but it proved to be a little controversial. Here it is. Enjoy!
Acknowledgements: Thanks to Kara Wild, who
thought this had some redeeming value. Thanks also to Outpost Daria (www.outpost-daria.com) for posting the
transcript of the first-season episode, “The Big House,” the opening part of
which is used in this story.
*
Quinn Morgendorffer, almost fifteen
years old and nobody’s fool, made her ride let her out a full block away from
her home that warm spring evening. She knew perfectly well that the sound of a
car stopping in front of the house would tip off her parents that she was back
at twelve minutes to eleven on a school night, when her date was supposed to
have ended at nine-thirty.
Her cover story, however, was
basically foolproof, and she reviewed its elements as she walked up the
sidewalk along Glen Oaks Lane. She’d hidden a small makeup kit with built-in
lights on the back patio next to a lawn chair. Silently, she would walk around
to the backyard, turn on the makeup mirror, and knock on the patio doors for
her parents to let her in. The chances were fair that her fuming mother would
accept her excuse that she’d gotten home at nine-thirty, then spent over an hour
out back trying on different types of makeup to see which one looked best in
dim light. Her clueless father would buy any story, no matter how fantastic.
I’ll have to put some makeup on,
first, of course, she thought with a nod. Otherwise, the story will be
bogus and—
The sound of a car behind her
spurred her into a run. She could not afford to be seen by one of her parents’
local friends, wandering around out front of her house where she wasn’t
supposed to be. Quinn made it to the bushes near the front door and hid behind
an evergreen shrub just as a canary-yellow sedan pulled up in front of the
two-story suburban residence that the Morgendorffers called home.
To Quinn’s astonishment, her
sixteen-year-old sister Daria got out of the front passenger side of the car.
She’d thought Daria would be home by now, lying on her bed reading a book or
doing something equally dull. For a second, Quinn wondered if Daria had been on
a date—then mentally slapped herself. Talk about the impossible.
Even from a distance, Quinn heard
Daria whisper, “Thanks!” to the unseen driver before she carefully shut the car
door. The sedan then roared off toward the end of Glen Oaks. Quinn winced. Damn
it! Mom and Dad are sure to hear that! And I can’t run around back now because
Daria will see me! Her alibi was in grave danger of being sunk before it
had even been launched.
But . . . what was Daria doing out
so late? Quinn frowned, determined to get to the bottom of this.
As Daria tiptoed up the sidewalk to
the front door, pulling a house key from a pocket of her green jacket, Quinn
left the bushes. Her feet were soundless on the grass as she got behind her
sister, ready to strike. “Hold it, young lady!” she said in her best
imitation-Mom voice.
It was satisfying to see Daria flinch
and freeze, then turn half around with a look of infinite disgust. “Funny,” her
sister said in a very unfunny tone.
Gotcha! “What are you doing
out so late?” Quinn asked. Her instincts said this secret might be good.
“What are you doing out so
late?” her sister retorted with a glare.
Typical of Daria to dodge the issue
by asked another question. “What do you mean?” said Quinn. “I’m always out so
late.”
Daria nodded in agreement, her anger
fading. “Then you can tell me how to sneak in,” she said blandly.
“Well, for one thing, stop tiptoeing
around like a geek. Have a little dignity, Daria.”
Daria sniffed. “If I had any
dignity, do you think I’d be letting you teach me how to be cool?”
Quinn rolled her eyes in annoyance.
“What-ever.”
The conversation was interrupted at
this point by the sound of a window opening on the second floor. Both girls
looked up with the expressions they’d had as preschoolers when caught raiding
an off-limits cookie can.
“What’s going on down there?”
shouted their father.
“More threatening!” said their
mother, farther back in their bedroom.
“Let me handle it!” snapped their
father, looking behind him. He looked down at his daughters again. “Darn it,
what’s going on down there?”
“Oh, you sound like such a geek,”
grumbled their mother.
“No one here but us jewel thieves,”
Daria called. “Go back to sleep.”
“Why aren’t you in your room?” their
father yelled. “Were you and Quinn at the library all night?”
“Daa-ad!” yelled Quinn. “Puh-leeze!”
“Oh, sorry!” he called back, then looked
stern again. “Your mother and I will be right down! We’ll get to the bottom of
this!” Their father withdrew, but he banged his head on the window frame as he
did. Colorful curses, mixed with the thumping of adult footsteps heading for
the staircase, floated out from the open window.
Daria and Quinn looked at each other
in defeat. “Like rats in a trap,” said Daria, shoulders drooping.
“Eww!” said her sister with
distaste. “You, maybe, but I’m more of a chinchilla kind of person.”
Daria could not suppress the image
of how chinchillas were turned into fur coats: fifty thousand volts up the
butt. She wondered what an electric charge like that would do to Quinn’s
long red hair. “So, what were you really doing out this late at night?” she
asked, having nothing else to say before they were captured and punished.
Quinn raised her chin and looked her
sister in the eye. “I was at Dawn’s house studying algebra,” she said flatly.
Daria had to admire Quinn’s cheek.
She didn’t know which part of the lie was worse—that Quinn had been studying
algebra, that Quinn had been studying at all, or that Quinn had given up a
perfectly good dating night to visit an overweight, unfashionable, and only
mildly popular girl from Daria’s sophomore class. I wish I could lie like that,
she said to herself with a touch of envy. I’d be President of the United
States in no time.
She thinks I’m lying, thought
Quinn in relief. Having lived with Daria all her life, she could read her
sister’s minimalist expressions with masterful ease. All the better that no one
ever know the truth—that Quinn, the queen of popularity and cuteness, really
had been at Dawn’s house studying algebra, because when Dawn took off her
CD-player earphones and interacted with the real world, she knew algebra as thoroughly
as Quinn knew fashion.
That had been the nature of the
tradeoff, in fact. In exchange for secret, last-minute tutoring, Quinn gave
Dawn a small bottle of one of her favorite perfumes and copious advice on what
sorts of jewelry would go best with the math whiz’s blue eyes and light brown
hair. Quinn was now sure to pass the big math test on Friday, saving herself
from repeating ninth grade and losing bazillions of popularity points.
Thankfully, algebra was forgettable once the test was done—and Dawn would never
tell. She had been pleased that someone as popular as Quinn needed her help and
had rewarded her so well. Quinn vowed to never speak ill of Dawn again. It was
a promise she thought she might even keep.
Life, which for Quinn only sucked
once in a while, got a little bit better.
“Your turn,” said Quinn icily.
“Spill it. The Inquisition is almost here.”
Daria stared back at her sister. Her
right cheek twitched. “I was at that sex-toys shop just off Interstate Nine,
picking out a vibrator,” she said in the deadest of deadpans.
Quinn’s face was overwhelmed with
horror and revulsion. “Eww! Why do I even talk to you?” she
yelled, stamping her foot. “You never do anything other than go to the library
and read perverted books so you can make up perverted stories like that that
just make you look so totally . . . perverted!”
The front door of the
Morgendorffers’ home opened at this point and their angry parents came out,
mercifully ending the conversation. A half-hour later, after the expected
lectures and promises of horrible punishments to come, Daria checked her
bedroom door to be sure it was locked, then turned off the lights and got into
bed.
She left her newly purchased vibrator in her jacket in the closet, though. It made a buzzing noise that she feared would attract the attention of either Quinn or her parents down the hall, and she was dead determined that no one ever find out what she’d done—anyone other than her best friend Jane Lane, of course, who had driven them to the sex-toys shop in her sister Summer’s old yellow Mazda. With eighty dollars riding on an impulsive dare, Jane had coolly bought two small vibrators at the shop, one for herself and one for Daria. Each had hidden her vibrator inside her jacket before they got back on the Interstate and headed home—and promptly got caught in a long traffic snarl resulting from a truck accident.
When the traffic unsnarled, they
were over an hour late. Jane, who answered to no one at her house, was in the
clear. Daria was not.
To Daria, losing eighty dollars to
Jane and getting in trouble with her parents were insignificant compared to the
terrifying knowledge that she had hidden an actual, real vibrator in her room.
If anyone ever found it, she would then have to run away to Cambodia.
I’ll throw it out tomorrow
morning, she thought, lying in bed with the covers up to her nose. She was
so rattled that she hadn’t yet realized her glasses were still on. Or maybe
I can put it in that space over my closet door where they didn’t finish the
wallboard. Or I can unzip my mattress and hide it in there. No one will ever
find it, no one. And, thank God, Jane will never tell—if she knows what’s good
for her.
It was another twenty minutes before
the sleepless Daria realized that, properly muffled with a pillow and blankets,
the vibrator might not make any sound at all.
And life, which for Daria usually
sucked, got a whole lot better.
Original:
01/31/04, modified 11/21/04
FINIS