"Very good," she said with a big smile. "You're fitting in already!"
"Thanks, I guess," I said as I got up to leave. I checked my watch. The interview had taken fifteen minutes, but it felt like an hour. This job was going to be complete torture.
"I'll see you tomorrow, at four o'clock then, Raven. Any questions?"
"Do I get paid for the interview?"
"You're father said you were bright, but he didn't mention your wonderful sense of humor. We'll get along great. Who knows, you may want to be a travel agent when you get older."
Mrs. Peevish, my infamous kindergarten teacher, would have been proud.
"I already know what I want to be," I replied. I wanted to say a vampire, just for old time's sake. But I knew she wouldn't get it.
"What do you want to be?"
"A professional tennis player. They get free rackets!"
My mother bought me some horrible brightly colored Corporate Cathy gear so I could fit neatly into the package of Dullsville's business world. I pulled them out of the shopping bags and freaked when I saw the price tags.
"Yikes! These outfits cost more than the tennis racket. Just keep them and we'll be even."
"That's not the point!"
"This doesn't make sense."
I reluctantly modeled a white blouse and blue knee-length skirt. My mother looked at me like I was the daughter she always wanted.
"Don't you remember wearing halter tops, braids, and bell- bottoms?" I asked. "What I wear isn't that much different for my generation."
"I'm not that little girl anymore, Raven. And besides, I never wore lipstick. I went au naturel."
"Ugh," I said, and rolled my eyes.
"Being a teenager is hard, I know. But you'll eventually find out who you really are."
"I know who I am! And working at a travel agency and wearing a white blouse and hose isn't going to make me find the 'inner me.'"
"Oh, sweetie." She tried to hug me. "When you're a teenager, you think that no one understands you and the whole world is against you."
"No, it's just this town that's against me. I'd go crazy, Mom, if I thought the whole world was against me!"
She hugged me hard and this time I let her. "I love you, Raven," she said, like only a smooshy mom can. "You're beautiful in black, but you're smashing in red!"
"Quit it, Mom, you're wrinkling my new blouse." "I thought you'd never say that!" she said and squeezed me even tighter.
The part-time after-school gig had to go. How could I get the scoop on the Mansion family if I was going to be at work all afternoon? I had to drag all those dry-clean only clothes with me to school and keep them neatly in my locker until school was over. My new afternoon punishment tore me up inside.
"Why doesn't that guy go to school?" I asked Becky as I was getting dressed.
"Maybe he isn't registered yet."
"If I didn't have this stupid job, we could go investigate right now. Ugh!"
I was envious of Becky because she got to go home to the land of cable TV and microwave popcorn, while I went from a school desk to a reception desk.
After parting ways with Becky, I snuck into the restroom and wiped off my black lipstick with a wet paper towel and replaced it with some ultra-flashy shade of red. I truly looked like a ghost with my pale complexion. I reluctantly put on my bright red rayon-and- cotton blends. "I'll miss you, but we'll be back together in a few hours," I said to my black dress and combat boots, placing them in my backpack.
I gave myself a once over--this was one time I really thought being a vampire would come in handy. Maybe I'd look in the mirror and see nothing. Instead I saw a miserable girl standing awkwardly in her red rayon outfit. I slithered out of the restroom looking right and left like I was crossing the street and made my escape safely out the front door. Or so I thought.