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He doesn’t, though, so I continue with my original mission. “I was thinking about what you said—the skating stuff?”

Josh shuts his locker, fingers tracing the combo lock. The tips of his ears go red like they did in the cold at Fillmore and that tiny, V-shaped scar jumps out again. Not that I’m making a police sketch or anything.

“Sorry if I freaked you out the other day.” He turns to face me, and my stomach flutters. “Guess my nonstalker plan kinda backfired.”

I smile. “I’m the one who freaked. I wasn’t expecting—”

“You have something on your shirt.” He starts to point at my chest, but quickly redirects to a spot on his own shirt instead. “Right here.”

Hudson Avery’s utter grace and all-around awesomeness? Confirmed. The sweater formerly known as white—and by formerly, I mean this morning, right before I dropped off my presentation cupcakes in the French classroom—now sports a giant orange streak clear across the left nipular region. It takes every ounce of willpower I have—plus a visual of last night’s plumbing disaster—to keep me from aborting the mission and bolting down the hall.

I close my eyes, shift my econ book so it covers the obnoxious stain, and soldier on. “Josh, um … Iwashopingwecouldskatetogetherattherink.”

Josh laughs. “Slow down.”

I open my eyes and look at the floor, black-and-gray speckled tiles that probably haven’t been cleaned since my parents were students here. I take a deep breath. Concentrate. “I thought about it last night, and if the offer still stands …”

“You want to skate with me?”

I nod. “But maybe we could use the rink instead of Fillmore? I’m trying to get back into a training routine, and Fillmore conditions can be unpredictable. Indoor ice would be better for technical stuff.”

“Baylor’s Rink?”

I sigh. “Sorry, you probably can’t, right? It was a stupid idea.”

“No, it’s a great idea. I should’ve thought of it sooner.” Josh scratches the back of his neck, his gaze drifting down the hall. “Let me talk to Will. He knows the rink manager better than I do. He’ll know when we can get ice time.”

I try to keep my smile in check, but my whole body is electrified with possibilities. Of the skating nature, not the hockey boy nature. Not that hockey boy possibilities aren’t equally electrifying, just that they’re—

“Not like anyone else uses the place, anyway,” Josh says. “What’s your number? I’m seeing Will first period, so I’ll … hang on.” He checks the phone suddenly buzzing in his hand. “I need to get this. Talk to you later?”

“Definitely,” I say, but he’s already answering the call, disappearing around the corner along with half the muscles that hold up my legs and the ones that make my lungs work. One slow step at a time, I head to economics on the other side of the school and sink into my desk in the back row.

Overly Analytical Mind, engaged.

Talk to you later … He smiled when he said that, right? Was he asking me, or telling me? Did he mean that he wants to talk to me, or just that he might talk to me, even if he doesn’t particularly want to?

Why did he leave so fast at the end? Who was on the phone? A girl? That’s it. He must have a girlfriend. One from another school. One he was just about to call so he could propose to her, but I interrupted, and then he had to run off to take her call, because weddings don’t just plan themselves, you know.

“Miss Avery?”

The sound of my name pulls me back to the classroom. Ms. Horner, a.k.a. Ms. Fanny Pack, drags her wooden pointer through the age-old chalk dust on the blackboard. No fancy-schmancy whiteboards and dry-erase markers for this establishment, thank you very much.

“Sorry … I didn’t … could you repeat the question?”

“I’d like you to give us a market scenario depicting how the laws of supply and demand impact pricing.”

Everyone’s looking at me like I’m the chair of the Federal Reserve being interviewed on CNN when all I can think about is Josh’s eyes and his smile and how good he must look in his hockey uniform and a whole bunch of other Josh-related stuff about which I can pretty much guarantee neither Ms. Fanny Pack nor the actual Fed chairman cares.

“Anytime you feel like participating,” she says, “jump right in.”

A few people snicker, and someone hums the first few notes of doom from Beethoven’s Fifth. I flip through my textbook as though the answer might suddenly appear there, just like it did earlier at Josh’s locker. “Um, when there’s a low supply of stuff, but a high demand, that means prices will be, um, they’ll—”

“Your family owns a restaurant, do they not?” The woman asks me this as if she isn’t in there every Wednesday with Madame Fromme for the all-you-can-eat chicken dinner special.

“Miss Avery?”

“Yeah.” My voice gets a little stuck inside and I clear my throat. “I mean, yes. My mom owns Hurley’s.”

“And you work for her?”

Someone chants “Cupcake Queen,” and I think of Hester Prynne in my Scarlet Letter book, only instead of being tried for adultery, I stand accused of baking cupcakes at my mom’s diner. Just wait till they find out I’m waitressing for her now, too—double whammy.

“Yes,” I say, face burning. “Sometimes.”

“Think in those terms. What if a competing diner opened across town, with better food at lower prices?” She pulls a box of chalk from her—you guessed it—fanny pack and draws a big yellow square with “Joe’s Diner” across the top. “In that scenario, supply would increase …” Arrows up, drawn in pink. “And demand would decrease.” Arrows down, mint green. “How would that affect your prices?”

“We’d have to lower them, I guess.”

She nods for, like, ten minutes, tight white curls wriggling on her head like a bunch of geriatric spiders. “Because if you didn’t lower your prices …”

“People would go to the other diner and we’d lose business.” Come on, lady, is this econ, or rocket science?

“Exactly.” Multicolored stick people with dollar signs over their heads appear inside the Joe’s Diner square. “And then what would happen?”

Well, Ms. Fanny Pack, if you must know, Mom wouldn’t be able to pay the rent, and after a few missed payments, Mrs. Ferris would threaten to evict us. Mom would have to sell the restaurant just to keep the roof over our heads, but the bills would pile up until, one by one, the utilities got shut off. Mom would sit at the kitchen table and cry while my brother and I huddled in our sleeping bags to stay warm, eating dry cereal for dinner and cursing my father and the landlady and even poor old Diner Joe. Bug would likely turn to a life of crime—nothing lowbrow, strictly the high-net white-collar stuff on account of him being a genius—and I’d go door-to-door hocking cupcakes made from whatever random stuff I could scrounge from our dwindling pantry. So the real question here, Ms. Fanny-P, is not what would happen, but whether I could keep up with the demand for my Soy Sauce Cap’n Crunch Tuna Cakes. Think so?

“Miss Avery,” she says curtly, “I asked you what would happen if your family’s diner lost business.”

“Um … it would … we’d … um …” My entire body is engulfed in flames thanks to this cruel, spider-haired chalk hoarder masquerading as an educator, and while I personally will never leave the apartment again after this public stoning, she’ll probably win an economics award and get promoted to the president’s financial team. “I’m not sure.”

“Well, Hudson, it wouldn’t be a viable model for your family’s income, so you’d be forced to seek other employment. And then we’d all suffer, because I doubt Joe can do cupcakes like you guys can.” She laughs and, certain we understand the cutthroat world of diner economics, erases all the dollar-headed stick people and reholsters the chalk box against her hip.