contrasted with my hair to make it look extra shiny. I looked like me , but now I was a shiny, better version. Maybe even a kissable version?
âLike it?â Ashley gaped at me. âYouâre buying it. I donât care if you have to sell a kidney or a snake or get your rich grandpa to send you a check. Youâre buying that.â She crossed her arms over her chest.
I felt the corners of my mouth turn up.
âI probably wouldnât have tried it on,â I admitted. âI mean, after the first one didnât fit.â
Ashley waved her hand dismissively. âJust remember, if something doesnât fit, thatâs the clothesâ fault. Not yours. Keep trying things on until you find something that looks like it was made for you. Everything in your closet should make you feel good.â
âI never really thought about it,â I said. Something was swirling in my stomach, but I couldnât pinpoint the feeling. âSpending so much time trying to look goodâ¦â I trailed off.
âWhat? You think itâs shallow to want to look good?â Her eyes hardened.
âNo!â I exclaimed, suddenly freaked out. âWell. I donât know. I always sort of figured you looked great in everything and were trying to rub it in.â I could feel the heat crawl up my neck. âYou know?â
She scoffed. âPlease. Youâre dead wrong on that one. You should see me in lavender. I look like a zombie.â
Ashley breezed past me, grabbing a pair of short shorts from the rack. âIâm going to try these on,â she said. âI got some shirts too, so wander around and see if thereâs anything else you like.â She stepped into the fitting room beside mine while I ducked back into mine to change.
As I stepped back into my comfy shorts and shirt, it occurred to me that this little shopping trip with Ashley was a sort of squat test of its own. And so far, I was eerily surprised by how it was turning out. I mean, she was trying to help, wasnât she?
Who knew that if clothes didnât fit you, it wasnât because you were some sort of freak? And could anyone have guessed that underneath that sneery, snarky exterior, Ashley was an actual person?
âSo whatâs going on with you and that geek guy?â she yelled from her fitting room. âIs that officially a thing yet or what?â
âWho? Kevin? You know who he is?â I stuck my tongue out at her door. âWeâve gone to school together forever.â I fiddled with the antitheft tag on my swimsuit and hung the rejects on the rack outside the room.
âBlah, blah. Spill it,â she said. I could tell she was smiling inside the room.
âNothing. Weâre just friends.â
âOh, come on,â Ashley said. âIâve seen the way you guys were at school. And you went to the dance together, and he totally stares at you all the time, and you stare right back at him looking all awkward and dopey.â
Great. So the entire world knew then.
âI mean it. We went to the dance as a group, with some other friends.â
âAnd your brother,â she piped in.
âYes, him too.â
âHeâs kind of cute, you know,â she said. I frowned at the closed fitting room door.
âWho? Kevin? Or my brother?â I couldnât help but cringe.
âWell, both of them,â she said. âYour brother is a nutcase, though. But Kevin is cute, if you like the whole nerdy guy thing. Thatâs not exactly my type. But I can see how he could be someoneâs type, you know?â
âI think heâs really hot,â I admitted, blushing. âPlus, heâs smart and nice, and that makes him seem even hotter.â I glanced at myself in the mirror again, surprised by the smile on my face.
âYou guys gone out yet?â Ashley asked. âYou know, on a date .â The word took up a lot of space in the
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