“So you’re
going to prom,” I said to him. He looked up, and then looked
back down.
“I’m de-vandalizing the Omnictionary article about a former prime minister
of France. Last night someone deleted the entire entry and then replaced it with
the sentence ‘Jacques Chirac is a gay,’ which as it happens is incorrect both
factually and grammatically.” Radar is a big-time editor of this online user-
created reference source called Omnictionary. His whole life is devoted to the
maintenance and well-being of Omnictionary. This was but one of several
reasons why his having a prom date was somewhat surprising.
“So you’re going to prom,” I repeated.
“Sorry,” he said without looking up. It was a well-known fact that I was
opposed to prom. Absolutely nothing about any of it appealed to me—not slow
dancing,
not fast dancing, not the dresses, and definitely not the rented tuxedo.
Renting a tuxedo seemed to me an excellent way to contract some hideous
disease from its previous tenant, and I did not aspire to become the world’s only
virgin with pubic lice.
“Bro,” Ben said to Radar, “the freshhoneys know about the Bloody Ben
story.” Radar put the handheld away finally and nodded sympathetically. “So
anyway,” Ben continued, “my two remaining strategies are either to purchase a
prom date on the Internet or fly to Missouri and kidnap some nice corn-fed little
honeybunny.” I’d tried telling Ben that “honeybunny” sounded more sexist and
lame than retro-cool, but he refused to abandon the practice. He called his own
mother a honeybunny. There was no fixing him.
“I’ll ask
Angela if she knows anybody,” Radar said. “Although getting you a
date to prom will be harder than turning lead into gold.”
“Getting you a date to prom is so hard that the hypothetical idea itself is
actually used to cut diamonds,” I added.
Radar tapped a locker twice with his fist to express his approval, and then
came back with another. “Ben, getting you a date to prom is so hard that the
American government believes the problem cannot be solved with diplomacy,
but will instead require force.”
I was trying to think of another one when we all three simultaneously saw the
human-shaped container of anabolic steroids known as Chuck Parson walking
toward us with some intent. Chuck Parson did not participate in organized
sports, because to do so would distract from the larger goal of his life: to one day
be convicted of homicide. “Hey, faggots,” he called.
“Chuck,”
I answered, as friendly as I could muster. Chuck hadn’t given us
any serious trouble in a couple years—someone in cool kid land laid down the
edict that we were to be left alone. So it was a little unusual for him even to talk
to us.
Maybe because I spoke and maybe not, he slammed his hands against the
lockers on either side of me and then leaned in close enough for me to
contemplate his toothpaste brand. “What do you know about Margo and Jase?”
“Uh,” I said. I thought of everything I knew about them: Jase was Margo
Roth Spiegelman’s first and only serious boyfriend. They began dating at the tail
end of last year. They were both going to University of Florida next year. Jase
got a baseball scholarship there. He was never over at her house, except to pick
her up. She never acted as if she liked him all that much, but then she never
acted as if she liked anyone all that much. “Nothing,” I said finally.
“Don’t
shit me around,” he growled.
“I barely even
know her,” I said, which had become true.
He considered my answer for a minute, and I tried hard to stare at his close-
set eyes. He nodded very slightly, pushed off the lockers, and walked away to
attend his first-period class: The Care and Feeding of Pectoral Muscles. The
second bell rang. One minute to class. Radar and I had calc; Ben had finite
mathematics. The classrooms were adjacent; we walked toward them together,
the three of us in a row, trusting that the tide of classmates
would part enough to
let us by, and it did.
I said, “Getting you a date to prom is so hard that a thousand monkeys typing
at a thousand typewriters for a thousand years would never once type ‘
I will go
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