“What about your secret agents in town?”
“They’re nice and helpful, but of the sweats and sneakers variety,” V said. “And much bigger than you.”
“You could make something,” Martha piped up.
“Out of what?” I asked.
“Maybe we could take a pair of shorts and pull out the seams and stitch them into a cute A-line skirt. That wouldn’t be so bad. And you could take the polo shirt and rip off the sleeves and collar and turn it inside out, so it looks kind of frayed and rough. And you could wear knee socks and your Converse shoes. That would be kinda punk, right?”
“Slutty schoolgirl? Martha darling, you’re a genius,” Bebe said.
“Can you do any of that stuff?” I asked.
“Sure,” Martha said sweetly, “but I’ll need a needle and thread and something to pull the seams out with.”
“I can smuggle that stuff from Home Ec,” Cassie said.
“They have Home Ec here?” Bebe asked. “How did I not know that?”
“I think it’s just for the, well, you know.”
“Ahh, the Ellens…..”
“Ellens?” Martha asked.
“As in DeGeneres,” Bebe explained.
“Yeah, it’s part of their plan to domesticate me. If I told ’em I wanted to sew, I could probably lay my hands on a needle and thread. I mean how much damage can you do with one little pin?”
Martha looked like she was about to burst with excitement. “Brit, I promise I’ll do a good job. I used to make all my costumes.”
“Costumes?” the four of us asked in unison.
“From when I was a Junior Miss.”
“You were a beauty queen?” Cassie asked.
“Yeah. I was Miss Junior Columbus, Ohio, when I was twelve.”
We all stared at her, completely astonished. Martha? A beauty queen? It wasn’t that she wasn’t pretty. She was. She had big green eyes and pretty pink skin. But Martha was a big girl, and she carried herself like she was trying to disappear. She just didn’t have the aura of a Junior Miss.
“Martha darling. Don’t take this the wrong way, but was it a plus-size beauty contest?” Leave it to Bebe. We’d all been thinking the same thing, but only she had the nerve to say it.
“It was a normal contest, Bebe, but I was skinny then,” Martha said wistfully. “I only ballooned a few years ago. I guess my metabolism crashed,” she said, looking down at her hands. “But I can still sew. Really, my costumes were gorgeous.”
“Martha,” V said. “You are a woman of mystery.”
“I am?” she asked.
“You are,” V replied. And with that Martha smiled a dazzling smile, and you could almost see the beauty queen within.
Chapter 15
“How awful is it? Are they mistreating you? Withholding food? We saw them do that to one inmate.”
It was the night of March 15th and I was being smuggled to St. George with Beth and Ansley. V’s plan had worked perfectly. It hadn’t snowed again. Cassie had gone on a bowling field trip and slipped away to call our moles. Bebe had faked a case of food poisoning and jammed the infirmary door open, and Martha had worked magic transforming the Red Rock uniform into an almost-hip outfit. At twenty minutes after lights-out, I snuck out of my room, down the hall, out the door, up the tree, and over the fence, not even skinning my knee. When I saw Beth’s pickup truck waiting for me, I couldn’t believe how easy it was.
Beth and Ansley were chatty and dying to know about Red Rock. Normally I’d have welcomed the chance to spread the word about the fraudulent therapy going down there, but I was too busy trying to avoid puking. My stomach was in knots. I’d spent the previous three weeks worrying about V’s master plan, imagining all the worst-case scenarios, having horrid nightmares about Sheriff grabbing my arm as I went out the door or Clayton and my dad waiting for me on the other side of the fence. In fact, I’d been so busy obsessing about my prison break that I hadn’t really given much thought to why I was breaking out: to see Clod, to see Jed.
But now I was about to be reunited with my band—except they weren’t my band anymore. I was going to be a spectator this time. Which was going to be weird. And speaking of weird—Jed. His letters, his affection, his distant support—he’d been like my firefly the last six months, something to light up the dreariness of Red Rock. I thought about him all the time, way more than I would’ve if I had my normal, full life. Way more, I was sure, than he’d been thinking about me. “Firefly” was probably just his way of being nice and encouraging. Riding toward town, I tried to let go of my well-nursed fantasies and started steeling myself for a major disappointment. It would be good to see Jed, and Denise and Erik anyhow, I told myself.
If I could find them. All I knew was that Clod was playing in St. George. I had no idea where or what time. It would be eleven o’clock at the earliest by the time I got there, and they might be long gone.
“Oh, no problem. St. George is dinky. There are only a couple of places where a band could play. We’ll swing by Java Jive and Cafenomica,” Ansley said.
“I’m sure they’ll be playing at one of those,” Beth added.
“We don’t get many new bands in town,” Ansley said. “Utah isn’t exactly known for its music scene.”
“Yeah, this is a real treat. We’re going to go to the show too, if you don’t mind,” Beth said.
“No, that’s great. I can’t tell you how much I appreciate your help.”
“It’s nothing. We’re glad to do it. We wish we could do more for you girls,” Ansley said, “like getting that dump shut down.”