NEED SOME HELP?” someone asked in a screechy voice that made my eardrums want to shrivel up and die. She sounded like the Screecher from the Black Lagoon.
When I turned and saw where the voice came from, I jumped. She didn’t just sound like a screechy Creature from the Black Lagoon. She, uh, kind of looked like it too. And she was dressed in what looked like a costume straight out of the 1950s.
Not to mention the girl was huge. Okay, that’s softening it. She was fat. I’m sorry, but it’s true. Some people look like manatees that have escaped from a musical theater production. Some people look like supermodels. I’m not judging, just stating facts. I’m no supermodel myself. You’ve seen the pictures.
I’ll say one other thing: In a cafeteria full of kids, the Screecher was the only one who stood up to help. So she actually looked pretty good to me.
The Screecher flipped over my tray and started piling my cup, plate, and bowl on it. “I’M RHONDA,” she said, grinning up at me. She had a really friendly smile—white teeth and a dimple in her left cheek.
“Oh. Hi.” I squatted to gather my silverware.
“YOU HAVE MASHED POTATO ON YOUR SHIRT,” Rhonda told me.
I sighed.
“AND YOUR FACE,” she added.
I let my silverware clatter onto the plastic tray. “Do you know where the girls’ room is?”
“DOWN THE HALL, TO YOUR LEFT. WANT ME TO SHOW YOU?”
“No, that’s okay. I’ve got it.” I took the tray from her hands. “Thanks.”
“ANYTIME!” Another bright smile, and then she stomped back to her seat. She walked like she talked: loudly.
So, in half a day, I’d met Mini-Miller and the Screechy Creature from the Grease Lagoon. Surely HVMS couldn’t produce anything weirder—right?
Wrong.