Tweet Cute: Part 2 – Chapter 26
I sit with Grandma Belly for a while after that. We eat the day-olds from the deli that Dad stashed in the fridge, chocolate pie and Kitchen Sink Macaroons, and watch a few episodes of her beloved Outlander on the DVR under oath that we don’t tell Mom we watched it without her. Then the clock strikes eight and I slink into my room, conveniently just before I know Mom and Dad and Ethan will be trudging up from downstairs.
Nobody says anything to me, or even knocks on the door. I’m grateful and disappointed at the same time. I bury myself in my laptop screen—I’ve been working on something to surprise Bluebird—but the more I try to distract myself, the more restless I am. I don’t even realize I’ve started tap-tap-tapping my foot on the wall until Ethan bangs his hand on it from the other room to remind me to stop.
I’m too stuck in my own head. I pull out my phone reflexively, the way I have too many times to count in the last few months—talking to Bluebird has been like touching base with something outside myself, as if we’re just close enough to ease each other’s minds but far enough away it never feels as scary as it should.
I open Weazel and glance briefly at the Hallway Chat. A few people are swapping contact information for different organizations that are looking for volunteers, since the Honors Society kids have twenty-five hours due at the end of the month. Other than that, it’s a pretty slow night.
I hear footsteps in the hall and pull off my headphones, wondering if one of my parents is going to knock. I hear my mom’s voice, though, and realize she’s talking to Ethan.
“… nothing to do with this Weazel app we’re getting all these emails about?”
“I’m not even on it. Don’t have the time. Why?”
“Oh, I don’t know. They’re saying a student made the app. And I know you’re good with computers…”
“Mom, I fixed the Wi-Fi, like, two times. I can’t develop entire apps.”
Whatever they say next, I don’t catch. I shove my headphones over my ears and blast the music loud enough to make them go raw. It’s the kind of feeling that transcends hurt or anger or any of the things I try not to feel when they do this, over and over and over again—always assume the best in Ethan, and just plain forget about me.
Okay. That’s not fair. They don’t know I’m in here teaching myself to make apps, and they certainly aren’t asking Ethan because they’re proud of the idea of him making my unfairly maligned creation. But it doesn’t stop my hands from curling and uncurling, doesn’t stop my teeth from grinding together, doesn’t stop me from wanting to open the window and scream out into the street like the New York cliché I’ve probably been destined to become from the start.
I click out of the Weazel app, then, and pull up Pepper’s number.
Did you get home okay?
I’m not expecting her to answer so quickly.
Yeah—thanks again. You were a real lifesaver
I’m weirdly nervous texting her, like it’s somehow left me more exposed than actually talking straight to her face. And I guess in a way it has. Every time we interact, it’s because we have to—whether for the swim and dive teams, or Twitter, or ill-fated college admissions interviews. This is voluntary. Personal. Like anything she writes or doesn’t write back can affect me twice as much as it would otherwise.
Today 7:21 PM
Sorry for being a dick.
You weren’t
… But Ethan did TOTALLY screw up our bet.
Yeah. I’m less than pleased with him at the moment
Pepper’s typing, and then not typing, and then typing again. I wince, watching the little ellipses come and go. I can almost picture the exact look on her face on the sidewalk this morning, in the beats where she was trying to decide whether to speak or leave it be.
But he’s still your brother
My throat feels thick. It hits the nail on the head, in so few words—I can’t really hate Ethan any more than I could hate myself.
Today 7:27 PM
Yeah. Even if I want to scream at him sometimes
Hey, that’s the whole point of having siblings, isn’t it?
Do you and your sister fight?
Physically. In cage matches.
I snort. She’s still typing.
Today 7:28 PM
No, not really. But I’m mad at her sometimes. You know, sister stuff.
Like—the divorce happened, and everyone else found a way to get used to it. She’s the only one who won’t
Stubbornness must be another Evans virtue
Then breaking the rules of Twitter wars must be a Campbell one
I’ve stopped fidgeting, at least, but I only realize this because I’ve started chewing a hole into my cheek. The truth is, I haven’t even opened Twitter since I saw the picture of Ethan on the Hub’s timeline. I know we’re winning, and I wish we weren’t. It sucks all the fun out of it.
And for a little while, it was fun. Waking up in the morning to see what Pepper had cooked up the night before. Waiting to see the indignant look on her face when she opened up a response, and waiting to see the sly one that replaced it when she came up with something else. At some point, it stopped being a war and started being a game.
Today 7:35 PM
Are we maybe going too far with the Twitter thing now?
TBH, BLB has been going too far since the beginning. Thank god you guys got more followers or we’d really look like assholes
Eh, you don’t need our help to do that
But I mean more with the … phones and the hacking and stuff
Well, that was super shitty. And my mom was not pleased
But you know what’s weird is that Pooja and I are kind of friends now because of it?
Wait, what? Did I stumble into a parallel universe?
I’m part of her study groups now. We’re getting lunch tomorrow afterward
WOW. From frenemies to study buddies
This is going to turn the whole school upside down. Like, full on dancing in the cafeteria, “stick to the status quo” upside down
Yeah, it’s nice.
If you think you got away with making a High School Musical reference without me mercilessly mocking you for it, you’re wrong. I’m saving it for later
Noted. And I guess Paul had fun with the whole espionage thing
Just how pissed is your mom, though?
Eh. She’s mostly annoyed
I may have made a colossal mess stress-baking in the kitchen though, and have been banned from baking in the apartment for the rest of the week
Oh, shit. That sucks
Yeah, for you. No more random baked goods
I start to type and then stop. This could be a mistake. Like, the kind of mistake with a consequence as small as Pepper laughing in my face or as large as my parents tearing me a new one.
But I can’t imagine my parents not liking Pepper. Even Ethan remains somewhat endeared to her, despite disrespecting our Twitter rules.
So I send the text.
Today 7:47 PM
You could always come use our ovens
And step foot in the enemy camp?
It’s not a no.
Today 7:48 PM
We’d only poison you a little bit!
Seriously, though … you think after this we should just call it quits?
On the Twitter thing?
It occurs to me she thinks I might mean something else—namely, the whole friendship thing that seems to have inadvertently bloomed out of the Twitter thing.
Yeah. I think it’s run its course, probably
It takes Pepper a bit longer to respond.
Today 7:55 PM
Agreed
After the Hub thing is over?
It was my idea, but suddenly I’m reluctant to agree. No more tweeting means a whole lot less of Pepper, something I didn’t even know meant anything to me until right now—right now, when I’m every bit as annoyed about the Ethan thing on her behalf as I am on mine. Right now, when I’m actually upset over something as dumb as her getting grounded from baking.
Right now, when I realize I’m going to miss these barbs after it’s all over.
But we still have swim and dive, for another month and a half. And homeroom. It’s not as though we’re moving to other planets.
Yeah. After that we lay down our keyboards
Which means this will all be over by the end of this week.
I put my phone back down on my mattress, assuming that’s the end of our texting for tonight. It’s weird enough I texted her in the first place. Like nudging some kind of boundary, turning us into that kind of friend.
But then her next text pushes it further than I did.
Today 8:02 PM
It’s weird to me that it took four years and a Twitter war for us to be friends
Aw. So you do admit it?
Begrudgingly
But really. I know you have this thing about Ethan, but you shouldn’t. I feel like you’ve kind of been hiding because of it
Pepperoni. I’m the loudest person in our class.
And if we’re talking about hiding, it’s really Pepper who is probably guilty of it most. She chameleoned into Stone Hall so quickly, sometimes it’s hard to remember we didn’t grow up with her, like she was always there in the periphery, setting the bar annoyingly high for the rest of us.
Yeah. I think that’s a version of hiding, sometimes
I set the phone back down, my eyes flitting up to the window, feeling so absurdly exposed that for a moment I half expect someone to be peering in from the other side of it. I shut my eyes and try to rein myself in, the way my whole body wants to reject the thing I just read.
I don’t know what’s worse—that she might be right, or that she figured it out before I did.
Today 8:10 PM
Anyway, loudmouth or not, you’re fine the way you are.
But burn that text so nobody can hold it against me later.
I grin.
Yeah, well. Ruthless overachiever with a bloodlust for crushing other people’s GPAs aside, you’re fine the way you are too.
We both know that’s the end of our texting for tonight, as if someone gently closed a book before going to sleep. I sit there on my bed, almost in disbelief it happened in the mere span of an hour when it feels like it wasn’t in the bounds of normal time—the kind of conversation you already know is going to stick to your skin long after it’s over, long after the person you had it with is gone from your life.
I bite the inside of my cheek. I wonder where Pepper will end up when we’re all done here. Wonder in a way and with an ache I haven’t even wondered for myself.
In the end, it’s Pepper’s fault I do the thing I’ve been alternately trying to do and trying not to do for months now. I pull up the Weazel app and tap on my conversation with Bluebird.
Wolf
Okay, so it’s clear the app isn’t going to tattle on us anytime soon.
Only kind of a lie, since I’m the one who stopped it from triggering. But the response is almost immediate.
Bluebird
Are you suggesting we take matters into our own hands?
Wolf
I am.
Bluebird
When?
I glance up at the calendar I have hanging on my closet, the one my mom dutifully changes the months on when I forget. On Thursday the tally will be in for our retweet war on Hub Seed. The next day is Senior Skip Day.
Wolf
Friday?
Bluebird
Works for me.
I take a breath, feeling the familiar swoop of anxiety in my gut. But it feels anchored this time. You’re fine the way you are. It’s almost nothing, but in this moment, with this one choice, it makes all the difference.
Wolf
Cool. The seniors are all hanging out around town that night. We can figure it out then
Bluebird
Excellent. Gives me just enough time to come up with an alibi
God, this is gonna be fun.