buckles and all?”
Had Tiffany just called me “Scumantha?” Wow, that meant Tiffany theoretically remembered my name. Not that I was flattered, just surprised.
Tiffany scowled. “I don’t know
“Shouldn’t you be in Intro to Arithmetic or something?” I growled at Tiffany’s back.
She stopped in her tracks and turned around. “Just because I’m richer and prettier than you doesn’t mean I’m stupid, you butt plug,” she spat, then continued toward the far side of the lecture hall. She must have made a special trip behind our row just to whack me on the head.
“Wow, I didn’t think she had it in her,” Madison said gravely.
“What, to be such a terrific bitch?” I said, rubbing my head.
“No, to be clever. That means she’s a
Tiffany sat down and flipped up the collapsible desktop hinged to her chair and slammed her book bag on top of it.
Boy, she really didn’t like me, did she? I don’t know how I’d gotten so far under her skin without even trying. Served her right for blindsiding me like that.
Madison shook her head, “That girl is trippin’ monkey nuts. I thought she’d gone over the edge on her yacht, but now I’m worried we’ve only seen her at stage-one crazy.”
I didn’t want to consider the morbid lengths to which Tiffany might go when pushed to her limits. She’d demonstrated her penchant for violence toward me twice already. For all I knew, she was planning on making me the first tragic victim in her very own true-crime documentary about girl murderers gone wild. “What’s she doing here anyway?” I sneered. “She wasn’t in Accounting last term, was she?”
“I don’t remember,” Madison said thoughtfully. “You think we would’ve noticed her throne and her attending hobots parading in and out of class every time.”
“She’s such an amaze-douche.” I rubbed the back of my head again. A knotty lump was already forming. “Maybe we can have her assassinated after class.”
“Let me know if you need to hire a hit man,” Madison said cagily.
“Why, do you know one?” I asked skeptically.
“No, I’ll do it for you.” Madison smacked her little fist into the palm of her hand. “Just give me a reason.” She glared at Tiffany.
“Are you mad-dogging her?”
“Yeah,” Madison smiled. “That’s why they call me Mads.”
I giggled, glad to have Madison on my side. Not that Tiffany seemed worried. Now that she was settled into her desk, she wasn’t paying any attention to us at all. Probably for the best.
“If push comes to shove, I
“Well, she pretty much pushed
Madison narrowed her eyes and snarled. “All right, fine. I’m cutting the bitch’s guts out after class. Don’t try and stop me,” she said menacingly.
“I won’t,” I smiled. “Promise.”
Me and Madison broke into giggles.
SAMANTHA
A few minutes later, the professor walked through a pair of double doors at the bottom of the lecture hall. He wore a white button-down shirt with a conservative tie. He was cue-bald with a thick ring of head-warmer hair.
I was totally stumped.
Why the heck was Managerial Accounting so packed? For this guy? Based on the crowd, I’d expected some gorgeous supermodel (male or female) or maybe a dancing bear.
Perhaps Madison’s easy-A theory was accurate? It was all I could think of.
The professor set his shoulder bag down on the table at the bottom of the lecture hall, and pulled out the contents. I was expecting stacks of free money and booze for all the students, but all the professor pulled out was a laptop and a stack of syllabi.
I was perplexed.
He walked up to one of the wall-to-wall chalkboards behind him, grabbed a fresh stick of yellow chalk, and starting spelling out his name.
“All right class,” he quacked, and I mean
DR. D O R Q U E M A N N
“—and I will be instructing you on the topic of Managerial Accounting for the duration of the quarter. Shall we begin?”
When I said quacked, I literally meant quacked. Like, I was expecting a flock of mallards to come flapping in and settle down at the bottom of the lecture hall by the side of their great king.
Because Dorquemann had the nasaliest voice I’d ever heard in my entire life.
Madison and I exchanged a horrified look. There was no way we were going to make it through the hour without getting ejected for interrupting the lecture with our hysterical laughter.
I gave us five minutes, tops.
Our only option was to focus on the material.
We did our best to take notes.
Unlike in Sociology 2, where I’d easily tuned out the droning Professor Tutan-yawn-yawn, listening to Dr. Dorquemann forced me to dig deep and find reserves of concentration I didn’t know I had. I teetered on the precipitous ledge of silence while staring down at a pit of insanely inappropriate laughter. The only thing preventing my fall from grace was my ingrained sense of politeness. At least my parental upbringing had been good for something.
Despite my best efforts, I knew my silence wouldn’t last much longer. Within minutes, snickers issued from around the lecture hall. I was certain the professor—I couldn’t even
Maybe he was used to this.
I, on the other hand, was about to lose it. I did the only thing I could. I pulled out my sketchbook, ready to start drawing. I had learned over the last several months that drawing consumed my attention like nothing else. It sucked me right in.
But I needed to find a subject to draw, quick.
I glanced around the room, looking anywhere except at the professor. It only took a second before my eyes landed on Tiffany, and I had my subject.
I went to work in my sketchbook doodling out the gory cartoon murder of Tiffany Meanston-Lightsout.
Madison, bless her stone-cold focus, was busy typing notes into her laptop. “Shouldn’t you be taking notes, Sam?” she whispered seriously.
“I can’t!” I whisper-whined, “not without losing my shit. This guy is going to be the end of me if I listen to one more word, I swear.”
“I hear you, girlfriend. I’ll share my notes with you later.”
“Thanks, Mads,” I whispered, still drawing.
Madison periodically peeked over at what I was doing.
“Don’t look!” I whispered, a big smile lighting up my face. “Wait till I’m done.”
The drawing had been the perfect protection against Dorquemann’s quacky voice. I don’t think I heard a word he said for twenty minutes.
During that time, I scrawled a cartoon of Tiffany lying on a big table with her tongue hanging out, her head