Bad Apple
Bad Apple
Laura Ruby
For Ray of Sunshine
Shine on
The way to read a fairy tale is to throw yourself in.
—W. H. Auden
All children are artists. The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up.
—Pablo Picasso
Contents
Epigraph
The Future is Grimm
Squirrels can’t be Trusted
Achtung
Hairball
Wolf Woman
Gingerbread
Skin
Bad Apple
Baloney
Anywhere and Everywhere
Validation
Threes
Liar
Silence is Golden, Duct Tape is Silver
Screamo
Geek Force
The Bath
Glass Slipper
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Other Books by Laura Ruby
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
THE FUTURE IS GRIMM
Mr. Mymer, my art teacher, is tall and skinny with floppy hair the color of yams and a peculiar affection for “funny” T-shirts: CLUB SANDWICHES, NOT SEALS. YOGA IS FOR POSERS. FULL FRONTAL NERDITY. When my mother met him at parent-teacher conferences, she said he seemed like a very interesting person. She doesn’t say that anymore. Now she says things like he’s “evil,” “a criminal,” and “a predator.”
After she says these things, she sometimes stares at me as if I’m a wounded bird flapping around her living room—maybe something you want to help, maybe something you want to smack with a broom. She opens and closes her mouth as if she might call me a name, too, but she never does.
I think the name is “liar.”
My father didn’t go to the parent-teacher conferences. He was on his honeymoon. His new wife is Hannalore, which is German for I keep poisoned apples in my purse.
“No, stupid,” says my sister, Tiffany. “It’s German for I haul spoiled stepchildren into the woods and leave them for the wolves. I gather the bones that are left and crush them to a powder. I drink the powder in my afternoon tea. It keeps my skin looking young.”
Hannalore is six hundred feet tall and looks like one of those opera singers. You know the ones. They wear the metal breastplates and the big hats with the horns. They’re always the last to sing.
Like Hannalore, the Brothers Grimm also came from Germany. We all know what kind of tales the brothers had to tell. Bad things have gone down in Germany.
“You’re such an idiot, Tola,” says my sister, her eyes narrow as punctures. “Ever hear of the Spanish Inquisition? The Salem witch trials? Slavery? Bad stuff goes down everywhere.”
But my sister doesn’t really care about the Brothers Grimm or anything else. After a few minutes of talking about it, she suddenly shrieks: “Shut up! Shut up about the Brothers Grimm! Why does everything you say have some sort of literary reference? Why do you carry around that stupid book? How pretentious are you?”
Someone who wears lavender contact lenses shouldn’t talk about being pretentious. I refuse to call my sister Tiffany, so I call her Madge. Madge is eighteen going on Crypt Keeper and cries all the time. I often find her curled up on her bed, wailing like a lost kitten. When you ask her what’s wrong, she can never explain. “Life,” she says. Or, more specifically, “Everything.” Sometimes she hyperventilates. She carries around a supply of brown lunch bags just in case she has to sit and breathe into one.
Only people named Madge breathe into brown lunch bags.
Madge has been to four doctors—one regular one and three therapists. She doesn’t like therapists. She calls them voodoo headshrinker freaks. She says that all they want to do is blame our parents for her problems when it’s the whole world that’s in pain.
I myself have not been to any therapists, which is funny, considering that my sister is (was?) the golden girl and I’m the bad seed. Five years ago, at one of the parent-teacher conferences my mother enjoys so much, my sixth-grade math teacher told my mother that though I was doing better in class, I still stared out the window and appeared stupid. Those were her exact words, too. “She still stares out the window and appears stupid.” This is not the sort of thing you say to my mother about one of her children. My mother used her coldest voice—the voice so arctic and furious that icicles spiked the air as she spoke—to tell off my teacher. It took a while. A half hour, maybe. (I’m not sure how long because I was staring out the window and appearing stupid.) My teacher got paler and paler as my mother told her how inappropriate and ridiculous and irresponsible this comment was and how rude and naive and inept the teacher was. My mother talked until the teacher blended in with the white board behind her. And then my mother grabbed my arm and yanked me from the room.
In the car on the way home, my mother used that same freezemonster voice to tell me that I’d better start paying attention in class and living up to my potential, or she would send me to a monastery in Nepal, where I’d spend my life combing fleas from the yaks.
I told my grandpa Joe what my mom said. He patted my hand and declared that he’d never met a yak he didn’t like.
Me, Mom, Madge, and the yaks. Sounds bad, but it’s not. It wasn’t. Take the teachers. Most of them are nice. Sometimes I draw portraits of them and leave the pictures on their desks. That doesn’t thrill some of the other kids, who think I’m a brownnoser. But that’s not true, either. I like to draw, and the teachers are there just waiting to be drawn. Besides, the things I draw aren’t always the kinds of things that teachers find flattering. Like, say, putting Ms. Rothschild’s head on a rabbit’s body. Or drawing Mr. Anderson with a tail. Ms. Rothschild thought her portrait was hilarious; Mr. Anderson, not so much. Actually, that last drawing got me a trip to the principal’s office.
The principal: “Is this supposed to be a joke?”
Me: “No, it’s a present.”
The principal: “A present?”
Me: “As in gift.”
The principal (muttering) : “You couldn’t have given him an apple?”
Me: “You think he would have liked fruit better?”
The principal: “You’re a smart girl, so I’m going to be blunt. I think you’d be a lot happier if you stopped acting so weird.”
Me: “Who says I’m not happy?”
But maybe he was right, because nobody’s happy now.
Before Mr. Mymer, these are the kinds of things that people said about me:
In third grade, Tola Riley ate nine funnel cakes at the school carnival and then puked them up on the Tilt-A-Whirl.
In fourth grade, Tola Riley stole Chelsea Patrick’s American Girl doll—one of those creepy twin dolls—and tried to flush it down the toilet, flooding the school bathroom and causing thousands of dollars’ worth of damage.
In sixth grade, Tola Riley ran down Josh Beck, the fastest kid in the whole school, so she could rip out a lock of his hair to use in a spell.
In eighth grade, Tola Riley drew a picture of one of her teachers with a noose around his neck and was almost suspended.
In ninth grade, Tola Riley was caught making out with Michael Brandeis in the broom closet and was almost suspended.
In tenth, Tola Riley was caught making out with June Leon in the girls’ room and was almost suspended.
In eleventh, Tola Riley was making out with John MacGuire at a party when, for no reason at all, she smashed him in the head with a fishbowl and swallowed the goldfish.
She has strange piercings in mysterious places.
She’s descended from fairies, trolls, munchkins, and/or garden gnomes.
She has ADHD, bipolar disorder, Asperger’s, and/or psychic powers.
>
I think this stuff is funny; at least, I used to. No one really believed any of the stories; they just needed something to talk about. Everyone loves a villain. Or maybe not a villain, exactly, but someone you can point out and say, “I might be weird, but I’m not weird like her.” I was cool with that. I had my friends. I didn’t need to be like the rest of the drooling high-school idiots—obsessed with sex, YouTube, MySpace, Facebook, texting, drinking, and UV rays (Orange is the new tan!). Let people think I was crazy; let them think I would say anything, draw anything, do anything—what did I care?
Now that I do care, now that I’m trying to tell my own story, no one is listening. Madge says I haven’t helped my case by chopping off my hair and dyeing it a shiny emerald green (in addition to the nose ring my mother nearly had a stroke over).
I say, “About a hundred other juniors have dyed hair and pierced body parts. And that’s just the guys.”
“Congratulations,” says Madge. “You’re a teenage cliché.” She goes back to applying her makeup, or reapplying what she’s cried off. “Don’t walk too close to me in the mall today, okay? I don’t want anyone to know we’re related.”
“I never made out with Michael Brandeis, you know,” I say. “He made that up.”
Madge shellacs her bloodless lips with gloss. “Who?”
For the record:
I didn’t throw up.
I buried it under the monkey bars.
Hell hath no fury like the boy beaten in the hundred-yard dash.
It wasn’t a noose; it was a necklace of bones.
No.
It wasn’t the bathroom; it was the art room.
The fish was saved.
The nose is strange and mysterious enough. Just try to draw one that doesn’t come out looking like something that belongs on a grizzly bear.
Fairies, definitely.
I know what you’re thinking right now.
You’re thinking: Is she a liar? Or is she really crazy?
All I can tell you is that I read too many fairy tales about children left to be roasted by hags, vengeful stepsisters so desperate for love they’ll cut off their own feet, and girls locked up in towers with only their hair for company.
I didn’t know all the tales were true.
( comments )
A Willow Park High School art teacher, Albert Mymer, was suspended with pay pending an investigation into an alleged relationship with a sixteen-year-old student.
According to a witness, the teacher and student were observed lunching together at a New York City café. Sources within the school administration say that the witness, a fellow student of the alleged victim, described inappropriate personal contact. She also described an exchange of gifts, including a book. Other witnesses interviewed suggest that this is a pattern of behavior.
“I would like to say I’m shocked,” said a coworker of Al Mymer, who wished not to be identified. “But I’m not.”
Police and school officials are continuing their investigation.
—Dana Hudson, North Jersey Ledger
“Subject was interviewed at her house with mother present. She was cooperative but guarded during interview. Denied allegations of abuse but admitted that she wanted to protect her teacher from punishment.”
—Detective J. Murray
“She sort of lost it when my—I mean our—dad left us, and my mom started treating us like we were in kindergarten. At least, that’s what my therapist thinks. If you can trust the opinion of a therapist. Which, mostly, you can’t. Therapists are crazy.
“Look, she’s always been weird. She was born that way, so it’s not like you can blame her—at least not totally. No one asks to be born.”
—Tiffany Riley, sister
“It’s true that I was focused on other things at the time. I admit that. I take full responsibility. Maybe if I’d been around a bit more, none of this would have happened.”
—Richard Riley, father
“Do you really think that it was just that one time? Give me a break. That skanky little freak is getting exactly what she deserves. Sooner or later, everybody does.”
—Chelsea Patrick, classmate
SQUIRRELS CAN’T BE TRUSTED
It’s been two weeks since the rumors started, one week since Mr. Mymer was suspended, and four days since my mom had to change our phone numbers. I’m still allowed out of the house, but—ironically—only for school. No clubs. No activities. Except for homework, no computer. And no talking to the reporters who skulk around the house or just outside school grounds. My mother is protecting me until the school-board meeting, where she will attempt to get Mr. Mymer suspended permanently and publicly. Where she will throw me to the wolves.
Mr. Doctor, my mother’s husband, drives me back and forth to school. This is okay with me because it is November and damp and cold. Mr. Doctor keeps the radio off, preferring to hum as he drives. He thumps his palms on the steering wheel to the EZ listening music that loops in his head. Despite the cold outside, the windows are cracked. Mr. Doctor is fond of the word brisk. Mr. Doctor should move to Siberia, where brisk is a way of life.
“Can we close the windows?” I say.
“Hmmm?”
“The windows? I’m cold.”
“Oh,” he says. He presses a button. No windows close, but hot wind shoots from the vents in front of me. My eyeballs start to dry out, then water. Mr. Doctor sees me wiping at my eyes and manages to look both irritated and terrified.
“Don’t worry,” I say. “I’m not crying.”
“Oh. Well.” He clears his throat. It is hard for Mr. Doctor to hold conversations like a normal person. “I suppose I wouldn’t blame you if you were.”
“Nothing happened. I keep telling everyone.”
He doesn’t say, “Witnesses.” He doesn’t say, “Investigation.” He doesn’t say, “Pants on fire.”
He says, “Um hmm,” in a way that neither agrees nor disagrees. He’s Neutral with a capital N, that Mr. Doctor. He’s our personal Switzerland.
“Why doesn’t Mom drive me to school?”
This he doesn’t even try to answer. We both know it’s a stupid question. Mom makes him drive me and Madge everywhere. (You’d think that Madge would want to drive herself around, but Mom’s afraid Madge will have a crippling panic attack and end up in a ditch.) I think that’s why Mom married him: his willingness to jump in the car at every opportunity, like a Labrador with a license.
But then that’s not the only reason why Mom picked him. There’s the money. The security. The teeth. Mr. Doctor is an orthodontist. Half my middle school went to him. I went to him. That’s where he and my mom met. Both of them lingering in the examination room, discussing the Lost Art of Flossing.
“Most people would have taken me out of school,” I say. “Most mothers would have.”
Mr. Doctor keeps his eyes on the road. “Do you want to be kept home?”
At first, my mom wanted me to scream and cry and make a grand confession. She wanted me to go to therapy. She wanted me to name names so that she had someone to punish. But I wouldn’t. I won’t.
“No, I don’t want to be at home.”
“That’s what I figured,” he says. “Besides, your mother is not most mothers, is she?”
He rolls to a stop in front of the school and pops the lock. He waits until I get inside the building before driving away.
I walk down the hall, feeling the weight of eyes. I’ve always felt the weight of eyes, but now they’re heavier, like I’m wearing a lead dress.
I steer past the trophy case, where dusty trophies trumpet the kind of athletic achievements the school hasn’t had in years. A clot of freshmen—you can always spot the freshmen—gape. Faster now, I walk by the main office. Inside, the secretary glances up and frowns at me. The halls around the office have been freshly painted, a long expanse of white just begging for decoration. What would I hang there? Who would I hang there?
Even though I’m on the lookout for enemies
, I haven’t walked far when someone accosts me, one of the Whitestone twins; I can’t tell which one. Her gray eyes glint like rocks at the bottom of a stream as she says, “So. Is he going to leave his wife? Are you guys gonna run off to Mexico or something?”
I say, “Nobody’s running anywhere.”
“Did he promise to marry you?”
“He didn’t do anything.”
“That’s not what I heard,” she says.
I hate people; that’s my problem. “The truth is,” I say, “he’s having my baby. It’s a medical miracle. Someone call the newspapers.”
“Nice hair,” she spits. She stomps off, her cheerleader skirt swishing.
I’m not the only one who loves Mr. Mymer.
I make it to my first class without anyone grabbing my backpack and throwing it in a toilet. Madge says I should just drop out since most of my classes are a joke. Which is true. Except for art, I don’t take honors classes, I don’t take AP. I’ve always preferred slogging along with the druggies, the perpetually confused, the motivationally impaired. Maybe not a great plan for a girl in my situation. Mr. Lambright, my lit teacher, makes desperate attempts to interest us in words, in meanings. He plays scratchy old records on an ancient record player and has us study the lyrics.
“Before our eyes, buzzing like flies. Now, what do you think that means? Anybody? Loren? Jamie? Miles? Miles!”
Miles isn’t interested in song lyrics. Miles has spent the entire period pointing at me, performing obscene tongue acrobatics for the entertainment of his friends.