Part 4 (1/2)

*Just forget it,' I said in disgust. *You guys deserve every bit of what you're about to get.'

And boy, did they ever get it.

Rule #6.

Lying Doesn't Solve Anything (Usually).

It didn't take long for the Kissing Game to become the rage of the fourth grade. Well, amongst most of the girls, anyway. The boys still had no idea what was going on. Until it was their turn to be chased, that is.

Then they found out pretty quickly.

If you asked me, they liked it. Well, OK, that's an exaggeration. Patrick Day liked it. Most of the rest of the boys didn't seem to. Most of the rest of the boys would run so fast when they saw that stampede of girls coming towards them, you would think their hair was on fire.

But Patrick Day would only run away from them for a little while a” and not very fast either a” before letting himself get caught. You could tell he liked it when Cheyenne leaned in and kissed him. He'd laugh and yell, *Stop, stop a” take it easy! There's enough of me to go around, you know, ladies!'

Whereas all the other boys would yell, furiously wipe their cheeks where she'd kissed them, and go, *Get away from me! Gross! Cheyenne! That's sick!'

Caroline, Sophie, Erica and I, watching from the sidelines, just shook our heads and tried to figure out how all this had happened. Rosemary, whose recess kickball games were suffering from these constant interruptions a” she never knew when one of her team members might turn out to be a target for Cheyenne a” was less concerned with how it had happened and more concerned with making it stop.

*Maybe if I gave them all a fist sandwich,' she said, meaning Cheyenne and all the other girls involved.

*You can't,' I said to her. *There are too many of them.'

*I'll stomp them,' Rosemary said. She looked like she meant it. *Like the little rats they are!'

I was glad I wasn't one of those rats. But I also knew violence wasn't the answer, so I told Rosemary this.

*It's not our fight,' I explained. *The boys are the victims. It's up to them to do something.'

*Oh, right,' Rosemary said, rolling her eyes. *Like that's going to happen.'

I hated to say it, but it was looking like Rosemary was right. The boys were totally incapable of figuring out how to solve the problem a” even though it was really bothering them (well, except Patrick Day). Stuart Maxwell told me in a shaky voice that the first time Cheyenne picked him out as her victim for the Kissing Game it had been like a nightmare, as he'd found himself cornered by the circle of girls, only to see Cheyenne's lips coming closer and closer to his cheek, until finally the smell of cranberry Kiehl's Lip Balm had overwhelmed him.

*And that's when,' Stuart told me in a horrified voice, *I knew it was all over.'

*Well,' I said, *you should have run faster.'

I maybe felt a little bit sorry for not having warned him about what was going to happen. But truthfully, I didn't have a whole lot of sympathy for him . . . or any of the boys. I mean, if they didn't want to get caught and kissed, there was something they could have done: Tell Mrs Hunter. She was always standing out there by the flagpole with the other teachers. I'd even seen her staring at the running girls with a slightly perplexed look on her pretty face, as if she was trying to figure out what was happening. Any boy who wanted to escape Cheyenne and her puckered lips could easily have run up to the teachers and asked them to make her stop.

I didn't understand why they didn't.

Although it might have been for the same reasons why I, when I was being threatened by a bully when I first started at Pine Heights Elementary, didn't want to tell my mom, for fear she'd tell Mrs Hunter: it might actually have made things worse.

If the Kissing Game was bad for the boys who got caught and kissed by Cheyenne (except for Patrick, who liked it), it seemed in some ways to be worse for the boys Cheyenne didn't seem interested in catching and kissing.

And one of those boys was Joey Fields.

I don't know what poor Joey did to make Cheyenne so uninterested in him. But she treated Joey like he had the chicken pox and poison ivy combined.

And this was bad, because Joey wanted to be kissed by Cheyenne. And badly. I knew this, because every day he bugged me about it. For some reason Joey thought I was in on the whole Kissing Game, and he kept asking me about it. Like, *Allie, who are they going to chase at recess today?' and *Do you think they'll chase me? I hope not! Ruff! Ruff!'

Except you could tell that underneath the I hope nots and the nervous barking, Joey really hoped they would chase him. I could tell because he started bringing mints to school and sucking them all the time.

It was about as sad as it was gross.

Plus, he actually started was.h.i.+ng the sleep out of his eyes every morning, and combing the sticky-out parts of his black hair down.

Also, he made an effort to separate himself from the rest of the guys on the playground, so he'd make an easy target for Cheyenne if she wanted to issue the command to start chasing him. Instead of playing kickball like he usually did, Joey started sitting by himself on the swings, reading a book. Or pretending to read a book, I should say. Really, he was just opening the book, while watching the girls to see if they were going to chase him or not.

This was how I became sure that my eyes hadn't been playing tricks on me that first day I'd moved to my new desk. Joey Fields really was the other kid in Room 209 who was reading Mrs Hunter's collection of Boxcar Children books. He was h.o.a.rding them all in his desk! I saw him with them out in the playground, and sometimes I saw him taking them home at night. I couldn't understand how a boy as weird as Joey could love the same kind of books that I did.

Also, I couldn't figure out how I could make him give them back. He had like ten of them in his desk. The one time I confronted him about it a” *Joey,' I said, in my most reasonable big sister voice (Sometimes you have to use your reasonable voice to get what you want. Especially with boys. This is a rule), *why do you have all Mrs Hunter's Boxcar Children books in your desk? Those books are for everyone, you know. You're supposed to borrow them one at a time. Please put them back so all of us can enjoy them' a” he denied that they were there, and tried to make out like I was seeing things. Liar!

Lying doesn't solve anything. Usually. This is a rule.

I understand that a boy like Joey might be ashamed to be caught reading the same books as a girl.

But still! He didn't have to lie about it.

I was little bit glad that Cheyenne didn't want to kiss Joey, even though you could tell he was totally miserable about it. I wouldn't have wanted to kiss him either (although the fact was, I didn't want to kiss any boy).

So there I was, stuck in the back row between a boy who was miserable because the new girl in our cla.s.s wouldn't stop kissing him, and a boy who was miserable because the new girl in our cla.s.s didn't want to kiss him.

This was just living proof of what my Uncle Jay was saying a lot lately, about how there was no justice in the world.

I was pretty mad about it. Especially since I had innocently been taking a drink from the water fountain (like everything in Pine Heights Elementary School, the water fountains are old-fas.h.i.+oned, not the kind with a pedal that you step on or a b.u.t.ton that you push to make the water come out, but with a star-shaped cranky thing you turned) in the hallway on our way to the choir room for music cla.s.s, when Cheyenne got in line behind me (with Dominique and Marianne in line behind her), and asked, *Drink much?' in a snotty voice, which I guess in Canadian meant I was taking too long or something.

So I stopped drinking and turned around, wiping my mouth with the back of my wrist before I told Cheyenne to go stinkle somewhere else.

This caused Cheyenne to go, *Way to drool!'

Then Dominique and Marianne laughed, exactly like they'd laughed when Cheyenne had asked, Drink much?

I just looked at Cheyenne some more, because I was thinking that, actually, the s.h.i.+rt she'd been wearing her first day at school had turned out not to be telling the truth. She wasn't Talent, Not Talk. Cheyenne talked quite a lot, it turned out. She talked all the time. She was always getting caught chitchatting in cla.s.s by Mrs Hunter, but never with her neighbour, Erica. She was always chit-chatting with Dominique, who sat behind her, or Marianne, who sat in front of her, or Shamira, who sat diagonally opposite her a” when she wasn't pa.s.sing notes to them.

Today she was wearing a long-sleeved s.h.i.+rt that had sparkles all over the front that formed the words Girl Power! Girl power, when it came to Cheyenne, was right. She had a little too much girl power, if you asked me.

*Well,' Cheyenne said to me, *are you going to move, or what?'

I'd started to walk away because there didn't seem to be anything more to say, when the sound of Cheyenne's voice stopped me.

*Hey, Allie,' she said. *How come you never want to play the Kissing Game with us at recess?'

I looked over my shoulder at her.

*Because I think the Kissing Game is stupid,' I said. *Why would I want to chase after a boy so you could kiss him? Especially any of the boys from our cla.s.s. They're gross.'