eat. Or how they should or shouldnât look.â Rorie nodded. âNo one gets to tell us how to live our lives.â
âItâs a free country,â Jayda added. âIf I want to eat a pack of Oreos, itâs none of your business! No one asked you!â
I wanted to shout, âThatâs not true!â because Tanya had asked me. But I also wanted to leave Tanya out of this. She had enough to worry about. I wished I could defend myself the way Iâd defended Pip last year when Lacey made fun of her. But I couldnât. I was crumpling before their very eyes. If we were outside, would they be beating me up?
âYou know how some girls eat two peas and a lettuce leaf and call it lunch?â Jayda said. â Thatâs whatâs really bad! That and the girls who throw up on purpose.â She studied my face. âAnd just so you know, Iâm fine with how I look.â She put one hand behind her head in a sassy way. âIn fact, Iâm so fine , I could be a plus-size model!â Mackie high-fived her.
Rorie said, âOh, and if youâre looking for that nasty poster you made with your buddy Bea, itâs in the trash, okay? We donât need twigs like you going around telling everyone they should be a size zero. You got that?â
I might have nodded. Or my face might have gone up and down. But really, I donât think âIâ had anything to do with it. It was like I was watching this scene, not living it.
Rorie gave Lacey a look, and Lacey added, âAnd for your information, some people gain weight more easily than others. So watch how you throw around the word âfat,â okay?â
The girls were all staring at me, and I wished Iâd never titled my poster âFIT OR FAT.â To be honest, I mostly just liked how the words âfatâ and âfitâ looked together.
Stupid, stupid me!
âAnd some boys like girls with curves,â Jayda said.
That cracked everyone up, but to me, it seemed really random, because what did boys have to do with any of this?
Mackie spoke up for the first time. Sheâs the one who knows my mom because her dog ate the duck. âAva,â she said, âyouâve probably heard about sexism and racism. Well, thereâs such a thing as sizism too. So you need to think about that.â
Sizism? Is that even a word? How could I be a sizist? I am not a sizist! I made that list because Tanya asked me to and because Ms. Sickles had said obesity is dangerous .
Rorie jumped in again. âHereâs the thing: you may think itâs bad to be fat, but we think itâs worse to be a shallow little zero !â
Mackie looked at me and added more softly. âAva, the point is that itâs not good to judge peopleâs insides by their out sides.â
I wanted to say, âI wasnât! I donât!â but my nose was tingling, and I knew that if I said anything , Iâd burst into tears.
âPeople come in all sizes,â Mackie continued. âSome are big and some are small, and so what? Itâs not what you look likeâitâs who you are that counts.â
She glanced at Rorie as if to say, âEnough already.â
Rorie shrugged, then turned to me and said, âOkay, weâre done. But we donât need you judging us. So why donât you get out of here and let us have our lunch in peace?â
âAnd while youâre at it, grow up!â Lacey threw in.
I wanted to say that I was trying to grow up, but instead I ran out of the lunchroom even though I hadnât eaten a single bite. I didnât see Maybelle or Pip or Chuck, but I did see Kelli. She was staring at me. And I bet she knew exactly what had just happened.
AVA, ZERO
2/19
AN HOUR LATER
DEAR DIARY,
I phoned Maybelle, but she was on her way to Kelliâs for a sleepover with Zara. That made me feel even worse!
I told Dad what a horrible mess I was in and how in my head,
James Nelson
Simon R. Green
J.M. Sanford
Eden Connor
Tami Lund
David Roberts
Avery Flynn
Nicola Griffith
Harlan Ellison (R)
Noire