What the fuck was her problem? Why did everything have to be about feelings? Feelings had nothing to do with anything. It was fucking life. Like it or not.
“I feeeeeeeeeel like you ask about my feeeeeeeelings way too much,” Quill smartly explained.
“It’s what I do. Are you upset about the relationship between your dad and Seri?”
“No, I’m not, I don’t give a shit what either of them do,” she snapped. She really didn’t want to do this now. She was okay with the relationship between her dad and Seri. She wasn’t at first. She felt like he was taking Seri from her, but she was fine with it now. They truly were in love. Quill could tell. That didn’t change the fact that she didn’t need to talk about everything.
“We need to talk about the shooting, Quill,” Monica guaranteed.
Quill closed her eyes and rolled her neck, trying to relieve the stress from her day and now from Monica.
“Fine, Monica. Let’s fucking talk about the shooting. What would you like to know? Would you like for me to tell you about my feeeeeeeelings…..”
“Well aren’t you just a barrel full of meanness today.”
“I’m sorry. I wish you would have called. I really don’t feel like doing this today,” Quill apologized. She didn’t mean to be nasty to Monica. She just wanted to go home to her room and block out the entire day.
“Fine, we won’t talk about anything today. Let’s go find something to eat, and we’ll just hang out for bit.”
Aquilla agreed. She didn’t want to do that either, but found it best just to appease her so she would take her home and leave her the hell alone.
The first day of school turned into the first week. Quill didn’t like it any more than the first day. She hated it. She was bored out of her mind. The work was too easy. Nothing held her attention and she even hated band. The teacher never did get to anything more challenging. She dropped out after the first week and took up another boring study hall instead. Mr. Debias begged her to stay in his class. He had never had so much talent in his class in all his years of teaching. She declined. She wasn’t one to be persuaded into doing things she didn’t like to do.
Whisper continued to try and be her friend, and Aquilla continued to ignore her as much as possible. It didn’t work. The only things the two of them had in common were they were both loaners and tended to stick to themselves.
Aquilla walked out to the courtyard for lunch two weeks into school. She didn’t care that the air had taken a sudden turn and it was cold. She needed that time to get away from all the immaturity and, of course, Blain. The guy couldn’t take a hint.
Aquilla noticed Whisper walking off school property toward a patch of trees. She wondered what she was up to and why she was going into the woods. Should she follow? Fuck no. She didn’t care. However, her curiosity got the best of her.
“Hey, Whisper!” she called
Whisper shushed her and waved her to follow. Quill did.
“What are you doing?” she asked, walking to a clearing where Whisper sat on a log.
“I’m going to fucking burn one before I have to deal with the rest of this day,” Whisper assured her.
Fucking A. “You smoke?” Quill asked.
“How the fuck do you think I tolerate this place?” she asked, taking the little ivory bowl from her bag.
“You’re going to share right?” Quill hoped.
“I knew you were a stoner,” Whisper alleged.
Quill only smiled and sat beside her. Whisper ended up packing the bowl twice before they felt they had enough. Okay. Quill liked Whisper. She was officially her new best friend. They were laughing about people in their classes, teachers, lunch food, and even Blain, the star quarterback.
“That boy has been sniffing you since you came here,” Whisper claimed.
“He has been sniffing me ever since the day my little sister brought him to our house. Yuck. I would never touch that shit.”
“Are you a virgin?” Whisper asked.
Quill laughed. Weed always made her laugh. “No, are you?”
“No, but I’ve never been with any of these loser.”
“Oh yeah? Where do you hang out if you don’t hang out with kids from school?”
“The yard.”
“The yard?” Quill asked with raised eyebrows.
“Yeah, let’s ditch the rest of the day. I’ll show you.”
Quill was sure this was going to award her an extra session with Monica, a call from her dad, a lecture from her mother, and a bitch fest with Seri. She didn’t care. She was happy to ditch West Field High.
“Okay,” Quill agreed. “Are we walking?”
“Fuck no. I drive, but we have to hurry before the bell rings.”
They gathered their things and Quill followed her to her….Her what!! Her BMW?
“This is your car?” Quill asked.
“Yeah,” Whisper modestly replied.
Quill got in and Whisper sped away.
“Can you get me some of that?” Quill asked.
“You got money?”
“Yeah, if you stop by my house.”
“I can do that, and yes I can get it for you. I’ll introduce you to Sed. He’s my go to guy.”
Quill was suddenly a lot happier. Her only regret was the fact that she had blown this girl off for two weeks.
Quill ran into her house and took a crisp one hundred dollar bill from her hiding place. She took the steps two at a time, crumpling the bill up as she descended.
The yard happened to be a junk yard. Whisper drove them deep into the piles of rubbish to the far corner. It was a tin building or garage or something, Quill wasn’t sure what it was.
“Girl, you daddy gonna tan your hide,” a guy wearing all black too assured her.
“Yeah, whatever, this is my friend Quill,” she introduced.
“This that girl you been talking about, the kidnapped one,” he alleged.
Sed needed a good dose of English lessons. He too was covered in tattoos, wore a loop in his eyebrow and a barbell in his tongue. Quill couldn’t help but notice the tattoo of the feather going up the inside of his arm. It had writing under it but she couldn’t tell what it said. She wanted a closer look.
Quill hung out in the dirty building for about an hour before her phone was ringing. Mom flashed across her screen. She was expecting it. She was sure the school had called her.
“I’m fine. I just needed to get out of there,” Quill answered.
“Quill, you can’t just leave school. There are procedures. Where are you?”
“Just hanging out with a friend, I’m sorry, I couldn’t take it anymore. I’ll be home by the time you are.”
“This can’t happen again, Quill. Conner saved you from three days of detention. He told the principle that you were sick.”
“I don’t need Conner to lie for me. I can handle my own affairs.”
“Quill, I am a teacher. I work for this district. I can’t be getting calls like this. I don’t want you skipping school. Do I make myself clear?”
“Yeah, sure, I’ll see you later.”
Quill spent the afternoon with her two new friends. They sampled the weed that she would be taking home from Sed. She, of course, laughed more than any normal person, and was glad that she stopped being prejudice and decided to hang out with Whisper.
“Where’d you get your tattoo, Sed?” she finally asked.
“All of ‘em comed from Sam, he the best around.”
“Can I see the one on your forearm?” she asked.
Sed held out his arm as she studied it. She had to have one. No doubt about it, she needed a quill embedded permanently in her skin. The words that she couldn’t make out before said, “I am, I simply am.”
“Whose Sam?” she wanted to know. Sam needed to tattoo her body.
“He’s in your Current Affairs class,” Whisper offered.