Rock Bottom Girl - Lucy Score Page 0,60

what it actually makes you. Pathetic. And I’ve seen a hundred girls like you graduate and go out into the real world and get chewed up and spit back out.”

Okay, that part wasn’t necessarily true. Some of them married Cadillac dealership owners and lived happily ever after in their mansions.

“You can’t talk to me like this. I’ll go to the school board.”

“And what? Get me fired from my temporary job? Or is this finally the excuse that all your teachers and your so-called friends have been waiting for? A reason to finally take away your power. What would you be if you weren’t popular? What do you have left as a human being?”

“I have my friends!”

“You have people you gossip about behind their backs. You know, the acoustics in here are really good. What do you think Morgan W. would think about you telling the bronzer triplets that you think she’s a slut for going to second base with the guy you have a crush on?”

“You’re a shitty coach and an even shittier teacher!”

“Oooh. Now you’re swearing at me, and I feel kind of threatened,” I said, crossing my arms. “Do you know where you’ll be in five years? Sitting in a divorce lawyer’s office because your $50,000 wedding was the beginning of the end to some poor idiot who thought he loved you. But you can’t hide mean forever. And that’s what you are. A sad, mean girl whose only joy in life comes from inflicting misery on others. I feel sorry for you.”

“I fucking hate you!”

“Yeah, the truth hurts. And guess what? I don’t care if you were the high scorer last year. You’re off my team. I don’t have room for bullies.”

“My mom is going to sue you and ruin your life,” she shrieked.

Culpepper must have turned into a litigious community. This was the second time I’d been threatened with a lawsuit. But it was amazing how freeing it was to have nothing to lose.

“She can do that. As soon as you report to the principal’s office.”

“I’ll tell everyone that you dyed the boys team red!”

I shrugged even though her threat made me uneasy. “Your word against mine, and I’m feeling pretty lucky today. Besides, you’re the one acting like a vindictive jerk chasing down a sophomore during gym class. I’m just the concerned coach and teacher looking out for my students.”

“I HATE YOU, you crazy bitch!”

“Lisabeth, this is your wake-up call. It’s not too late for you to be a better person.”

“Fuck. You. You’re just jealous because you’re old and ugly.”

Well, at least I tried.

I whistled as I followed her down the hall to the principal’s office.

“What steaming hot mess did you bring me?” Principal Eccles asked, thumbing open a bottle of aspirin.

“Lisabeth Hooper,” I said.

The principal eyed me as she shoved the aspirin back in the bottle and swapped it for a prescription migraine medicine.

“What did our lovely Ms. Hooper do?” she asked.

“Other than being just a shitty human being?” I was still mad. Really mad.

Eccles washed down a tablet with water. “This is where I’m supposed to tell you that teaching is not an opportunity for you to right the wrongs of your teen years. That you can’t insert yourself into student politics and hierarchies because it’s a more valuable learning experience when they live through it themselves.”

“I’m not so sure that Rachel will survive Lisabeth,” I interjected. “Lisabeth hit her with a hockey stick as hard as she could. On purpose. If her tibias aren’t fractured, I’ll be surprised.”

“This is me insisting that it’s imperative that students figure out their own way through social situations, the good and the bad,” Principal Eccles said, pinching the bridge of her nose. “And this is also the part where I encourage you to understand that many students who exhibit negative behavior, including bullying and general assholery, are struggling with serious issues that we may not be privy to.”

“Look. I know I’m new to all of this. But I’ve been Rachel, and I’ve known Lisabeths. And sometimes an asshole is just as asshole.”

Principal Eccles looked toward the closed door and sighed. “Off the record, Lisabeth Hooper is an entitled asshole, and none of the staff and faculty can stand her. Her mother, by all accounts, was the same kind of nightmare. And still is.”

Relief coursed through me.

“I can’t do much about having her in my class. But I don’t want her on my team.”

“Are you prepared for the fallout of punishing her? It’ll be ugly.”

“Principal Eccles, I’m

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