Avery clutched the folded printout in her hand, striding purposely across campus to... Where the hell
was
she going? She stopped suddenly, staring at the ground, trying to remember what she was doing.
"Avery!" The shout from behind snapped her out of her fog.
"What are you doing?" Dana demanded. She pointed to the paper. "What is that?"
"It's nothing," Avery replied, shoving it into her pocket. "I'm sorry," she continued. "Just...thinking about something. That's all."
"Can we think about it inside, out of the fucking monsoon?"
Avery noticed her flip-flops submerged in a puddle on the sidewalk, the water chilling her feet. Rain streamed down her face, covering up her tears. She followed Dana out of the storm into the nearest building.
Clutching Avery's wrist, Dana pulled her into the first bathroom they reached and locked the door. Avery examined herself in the mirror. She was absolutely drenched. The denim shorts suffocated her thighs like cling wrap. Her white hoodie distended, hanging heavily over her breasts, water trickling from the sleeves to the tile floor. She tugged the hood off. Her usually vibrant chestnut curls matted to her face and neck. She looked about as icky as she felt.
Dana shook her by the shoulders. "What. Is. Going. On."
Avery sighed, swiped hair out of her eyes. "I'm going to lose my scholarship," she said flatly. "I'll have to drop out of school."
"What? What happened?"
"I don't know, I...I have to maintain a 3.3 GPA to keep my scholarship. Somehow I don't...I don't have it."
"But...you're an A student."
"Not this semester."
Dana wrung her hands. "Is it final? Is there anything you can do?"
Avery shook her head and shrugged. "Preliminary grades are already in. None of my classes have finals, so I can't..." Her voice waivered, trailed off.
Dana removed her glasses, bit one of the arms between her teeth. She always did that when she was thinking. Avery turned for the door. "I just want to lie down," she mumbled.
"What about extra credit?" Dana injected. Avery stopped. Frowned.
"Extra credit?"
"Yeah," Dana insisted, "you know, independent study, make-up assignment, extra credit!"
Avery shrugged, bewildered.
"What classes are you taking," Dana demanded. "Come on, which classes?"
"Um...Tariffs and Trade, Global Markets, Golf...Econ 304 and...Copyrights and Patents. I think."
Dana contorted her face. "Okay, golf? Seriously?"
"I needed a P.E. credit!"
"Okay, okay, never mind." The gears were turning. "All right. T and T is Morrison. He's never given out an A, let alone extra credit. Global Markets is Shaw. She does independent study, but only if you request it the first two weeks, so that's out. C and P is...Stephens...yikes. Nothing there." Dana paused. "Econ 304, that's..."
"Reed," Avery offered. Dana nodded.
"Yeah, Reed. He has an extra credit essay you can take."
"Really?"
Dana nodded. "Keiko did it last year to boost her over 4.0. I don't know if it be enough, but it's worth a shot. It's that or...golf." She shrugged. "Maybe they'll let you...putt a hole-in-one, or something, I don't know...how golf works."
Avery hadn't heard a word after essay. She couldn't drop out of school. She couldn't go back home and tell her parents she dropped out of school. Let alone why. If there was a chance... She flipped back the lock and bolted out the door. Dana appeared in the doorway as she splashed back out into the rain. "At least change your clothes for fucks sakes!" she bellowed. No time for that. She had to reach Professor Reed's office before he left for the day.
Twenty minutes later, Avery found herself in Professor Reed's office, seated uncomfortably in the plush leather chair on the open side of his spacious glass desk, nervously waiting for him to say...something. Anything. He'd been silent nearly five minutes, reclined in his chair, eyes shifting from the fragmenting printout he held in his hand, to the pair of eyes desperately trying to avoid contact with his.
She was a miserable soggy mess. Her legs stuck to the upholstery, making unflattering sounds whenever she would fidget. Her underwear chafed her skin. And the office was so cold she was sure Professor Reed could see her nipples through her fleece. She crossed her arms over her chest, staring at the floor. Reed leaned forward, set his elbows on the desk, folded his hands under his chin.
"Help me understand this," he said, his silky baritone warming the room just a little. "I've had you in three of my classes. I know you're an A student. What happened?"
Avery shrugged. "I don't know, I just...I don't know."