. . In the days that followed, the movers came and the Millers unpacked. Haley seemed to be settling in swimmingly until the morning of her first day of school.
Convinced that everyone’s first impression of her would determine what her life would be like for the remainder of her high school career, Haley spent hours running between her closet and her mother’s full-length mirror, trying to find something suitable to wear.
Every article of clothing she owned was systematically rejected as too something. “Too West Coast.” “Too last year.” “Too unflattering.” “Too Montessori.”
“Haley, breakfast!” Joan called from the kitchen, before Haley was fully dressed.
With not another second to spare, Haley grabbed a pair of khaki pants and a pink sweater, in fact the first outfit she had tried on nearly two hours earlier.
“You don’t want to be late,” Joan said from the bottom of the stairs.
“I’m coming!” Haley replied, grabbing the blue book bag off her chair. She was still putting her hair up in a ponytail when she arrived in the kitchen, walking right into the shot her father had set up with his movie camera.
“So Haley, thoughts? Impressions?” he called out from behind the equipment. “It’s your first day as a sophomore at Hillsdale High. What are you looking forward to this year?”
That was the thing about growing up with a documentary filmmaker for a father. You lived your life in front of a vintage Super 8 camera. Every awkward stage, every embarrassing moment, the bad haircuts, the braces, it was all captured on film.
“I’m looking forward to being one year closer to getting out of this house,” Haley said, faking a smile before swallowing her vitamins in a single gulp of freshly squeezed orange juice.
“Haley, breakfast,” her mom pressed.
“Sorry, Mom, gotta run,” Haley said, dashing out the door as Freckles snatched her buttered bagel off the table.
Outside, Haley checked herself out in her mirrored pencil case. Not bad, she thought. Her sunburn, thankfully, had faded to a tan, and miraculously, there wasn’t a sign of a breakout in sight.
As Haley walked down the driveway toward the street, Perry loaded Mitchell into the station wagon.
“You sure you don’t need a ride, sweetie?” he called out to Haley as Mitchell stared at her blankly from the backseat.
“No, I’m fine, Dad. Really,” she said. The last thing she needed was to be dropped off at school by her dad on her very first day. Besides, she had just spotted Reese standing at the end of the driveway, and she wasn’t about to pass up the opportunity to share a seat with him on the bus.
“Really. Go ahead,” she said, waving.
“Okay. Suit yourself,” her father said. He honked the horn and waved to Reese as he pulled out onto the street.
Haley took her time walking to the curb, forcing herself not to look in Reese’s direction. Don’t seem eager, she thought. She was just about to casually glance up, feign surprise and say hello when a white convertible full of girls peeled around the corner and screeched to a halt in front of Reese’s house.
“Morning, handsome. Need a lift?” a pretty brunette with perfect skin and intense green eyes asked from the passenger seat.
“Hey, Coco,” Reese said in a familiar tone. “Ali, don’t you ever get sick of carting your little sister’s friends around?”
“As if I have a choice,” Ali said. “Why do you think my parents gave me the new car?” Meanwhile, a perky blond in the backseat was dismissively eyeing Haley’s khaki pants and pink sweater. “Who’s your friend?” she asked Reese. “Or is this another one of your charity cases?”
“Whitney, you know you really shouldn’t frown so much,” Reese said. “You’ll get wrinkles.” “Shut up!” Whitney cried, reaching for her compact. “That’s it, I’m asking my father for Botox this Christmas.”
“Whitney, you’re Jewish,” the driver said coolly from behind a pair of silver shades.
“Actually, Ali, the Kleins celebrate everything these days,” Coco said with a snide glance. “My soon-to-be-stepmonster is Catholic,” Whitney said, staring at her reflection. “Am I really getting laugh lines?”
“Maybe if you didn’t spend forty-five minutes a week in your tanning bed, you’d have less to worry about,” Coco replied. “So are you coming or not?” she asked Reese.
“Guess I’ll see you later, Haley,” Reese said, smiling and winking at her as he jumped into the backseat next to Whitney.
“Haley. That’s so cute,” said Whitney, exaggerating her words. “Like the star.” “You mean comet, stupid,” Alison said, her foot already on the gas. As the convertible disappeared around the bend, Haley was left standing dumbstruck on the sidewalk, plagued by the nagging suspicion that Reese Highland was way more than just friends with one of the girls in the car.
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