too too terrible, although probably still not so nice. What if Oliver happened to ask me to the dance before I had the chance to ask him about Claire?
It could happen.
But then what if it did? Could I say yes? Or did saying yes to Oliver make me a lousy friend? What if Claire never forgave me? Even just wishing for that to happen felt lousy. But I couldnât help it.
I didnât say anything to Oliver during class. I wasnât planning to after class, either, but then I found Claire standing by my locker after school.
âWhat did he say?â she asked.
âNothing,â I said. âI mean I havenât asked him yet, but Iâm going to his house in a few minutes.â
âPerfect! Youâre the best, Annabelle.â
Claire gave me a hug, which only made me feel worse. âCall me later and let me know how it goes,â she said before taking off with a bounce in her stepâlike she knew Iâd report back with good news.
And the thought that Iâd betray her had never crossed her mind.
chapter twelve
bugs and boys
I think the red one should be farther left,â Tobias said that afternoon as we surveyed the construction paper weâd put out on Oliverâs lawn.
Oliver moved the paper over ever so slightly. âHowâs this?â he asked.
âLet me check.â Tobias pulled his tape measure from his back pocket and measured the distance from the edge of the patio. Then he compared it to our notes from last time. âNo, half an inch to the right, actually.â
âNo problem.â Oliver moved it back.
âEverything ready?â I asked.
âWait,â said Oliver. âYou guys need to see my bug sketches.â He opened his notebook and showed us drawings of a bumblebee, a ladybug, and an ant.
âCool!â Tobias said.
âThese are amazing!â I couldnât help but gushâbecause they really were. But I didnât want to say too much because I feared Tobias would make fun of me again. True, he was taking our project much more seriously lately, but I wasnât taking any chances.
âRoly-polies are next,â Oliver informed us.
âDid you guys know that theyâre actually called armadillidiidae?â asked Tobias.
âArma what?â I asked.
âIâll just write it down on the graph.â
Once Oliver put his sketches away, I set the timer on the stopwatch for thirty minutes. âNow?â I asked.
They both nodded.
âOne, two, three, go!â The second I hit the timer we all fell to the grassânot close enough to disturb, scare, or influence any bug that might land on our construction paper. But close enough so that we could actually keep track of what showed up where.
Within the first five minutes we recorded three bees, two ladybugs, six flies, and a beetle. Twenty minutes later we had an ant parade marching across the green page. And I realized I was stalling. If I didnât ask Oliver about Claire soon, Iâd be out of time. And Iâd promised Claire.
So I cleared my throat and blurted out the question. âAre you guys going to the school dance?â
âDances are dumb,â said Tobias.
âHow do you know?â asked Oliver. âThis is the first one.â
âIâve seen them on TV,â said Tobias as he retied one of his shoelaces. âAnd they sound dumb.â
âHeâs just saying that because he doesnât have a date,â said Oliver.
âDo you?â I asked.
âNot yet.â Oliver gave me a sideways glance. âWhat about you?â
âNope.â I shook my head.
âDo you want to go?â Oliver asked.
âI donât know yet,â I said quickly. âMy friends are, but most of them have dates. Wait. When you asked if I wanted to go did you meanââ
âYou guys are too cute!â Tobias interrupted, giving Oliver a little shove. âDude, just ask her and get it over
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