Pushing the Limits. Katie McGarry

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or that she claimed we’d had an actual conversation. While I was deciding, my father stood and put on his coat. “See, Mrs. Collins, Echo is fine. Just a little lovestruck. As much as I enjoy these sessions, Ashley’s appointment is in twenty minutes and I don’t want Echo to miss any more class.”

      “Echo, are you really interested in making money to fix your brother’s car?” Mrs. Collins asked as she stood to escort my father and stepmother out.

      I pulled at the gloves I wore to cover my skin. “More than you could possibly imagine.”

      She smiled at me before walking out the door. “Then I’ve got a job for you. Wait here and we’ll discuss the details.”

      The three of them huddled together on the far side of the main office, whispering to one another. My father wrapped his arm around Ashley’s waist and she leaned into him as they nodded at Mrs. Collins’s hushed words. The familiar pang of jealousy and anger ate at the lining of my gut. How could he love her when she’d destroyed so much?

       NOAH

      Fresh paint and the scent of drywall dust made me think of my father, not school. Yet that smell slapped me in the face when I walked into the newly remodeled front office. With books in hand, I sauntered toward the counter. “‘Sup, Mrs. Marcos.”

      “Noah, why you late again, muchacho?” she said while stapling papers together.

      The clock on the wall flipped to nine in the morning. “Hell, this is early.”

      Mrs. Marcos stepped around her new cherry desk to meet me at the counter. She gave me crap when I came in late, but I still liked her. With her long brown hair, she reminded me of a Hispanic version of my mother.

      “You missed your appointment with Mrs. Collins this morning. Not a good way to start the second term,” she whispered as she wrote my tardy slip. She tilted her head toward the three adults huddled together in the far corner of the room. I assumed the middle-aged blond woman whispering to the rich couple was the new guidance counselor.

      I shrugged and let the right side of my mouth twitch up. “Oops.”

      Mrs. Marcos slid the tardy slip to me and gave me her patented stern glare. She was the one person at this school who didn’t believe that me and my future were completely fucked.

      The middle-aged blonde called out, “Mr. Hutchins, I’m thrilled you remembered our appointment, even if you are late. I’m sure you wouldn’t mind taking a seat while I finish a few things.” She smiled at me like we were old friends and spoke so sweetly that for a moment, I almost smiled back. Instead, I nodded and took a seat on the line of chairs pushed against the office wall.

      Mrs. Marcos laughed.

      “What?”

      “She’s not going to put up with your attitude. Maybe she’ll convince you to take school seriously.”

      I rested my head against the painted cinder-block wall and shut my eyes, in need of a few more hours’ sleep. Short one person for closing, the restaurant hadn’t let me go until after midnight, and then Beth and Isaiah kept me up.

      “Mrs. Marcos?” asked an angelic voice. “Can you please tell me the upcoming dates for the ACT and SAT?”

      The phone rang. “Wait one sec,” said Mrs. Marcos. Then the ringing ceased.

      A chair down the row from mine shifted and my mouth watered from the aroma of hot cinnamon rolls. I snuck a peek and noticed red, silky, curly hair. I knew her. Echo Emerson.

      Not a cinnamon roll in sight, but damn if she didn’t smell like one. We had several of our main courses together and last semester one of our free periods. I didn’t know much about her other than she kept to herself, she was smart, a redhead and she had big tits. She wore large, long-sleeved shirts that hung off her shoulders and tank tops underneath that revealed just enough to get the fantasies flowing.

      Like always, she stared straight ahead as if I didn’t exist. Hell, I probably didn’t exist in her mind. People like Echo Emerson irritated the crap out of me.

      “You’ve got a fucked-up name,” I mumbled. I didn’t know why I wanted to rattle her, I just did.

      “Shouldn’t you be getting high in the bathroom?”

      So she did know me. “They installed security cameras. We do it in the parking lot now.”

      “My bad.” Her foot rocked frantically back and forth.

      Good, I’d succeeded in getting under that perfect facade. “Echo … echo … echo …”

      Her foot stopped rocking and red curls bounced furiously as she turned to face me. “How original. I’ve never heard that before.” She swept up her backpack and left the office. Her tight ass swayed side to side as she marched down the hallway. That wasn’t nearly as fun as I’d thought it would be. In fact, I kind of felt like a dick.

      “Noah?” Mrs. Collins called me into her office.

      The last guidance counselor had major OCD issues. Everything in the office perfectly placed. I used to move his plaques just to mess with him. There’d be no such entertainment with Mrs. Collins. Her desk was a mess. I could bury a body in here and no one would ever find it.

      Taking the seat across from her, I waited for my ass-chewing.

      “How was your Christmas break?” She had that kind look again, sort of like a puppy.

      “Good.” That is if you considered your foster mom and dad getting into a screaming match and throwing everyone’s gifts into the fireplace a good Christmas. I’d always dreamed of spending my Christmas in a hellhole basement watching my two best friends get stoned.

      “Wonderful. So things are working out with your new foster family.” She said it as a statement, but meant it as a question.

      “Yeah.” Compared to the last three families I had, they were the fucking Brady Bunch. This time around, the system had placed me with another kid. Either the people in charge were short on homes or they were finally starting to believe I wasn’t the menace they’d pegged me to be. People with my labels weren’t allowed to live with other minors. “Look, I already have a social worker and she’s enough of a pain in my ass. Tell your bosses you don’t need to waste your time on me.”

      “I’m not a social worker,” she said. “I’m a clinical social worker.”

      “Same thing.”

      “Actually, it’s not. I went to school for a lot longer.”

      “Good for you.”

      “And it means I can provide a different level of help for you.”

      “Do you get paid by the state?” I asked.

      “Yes.”

      “Then I don’t want your help.”

      Her lips flinched

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