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in the park.”

      She blinked at him. “Okay. Um. Yes . . .” She could still feel water dripping down the back of her neck. “So . . . is the office near here?”

      With a curt nod, he pointed to a sign marked “Office”. “Just in there.” With a squeak of his heel on the waxed floor, he disappeared around a corner.

      Somebody had taken a pen and written a big “P” on the sign hanging outside the office, so that it now really said “Poffice”.

      “That doesn’t make sense,” Terra thought to herself, perplexed. After all, if someone’s going to take the trouble to vandalize something, shouldn’t the result at least make some sort of sense? What kind of word is poffice?

      Terra shook her head then pushed open the heavy door.

      “Students, you have a new classmate,” said Mr. VanderVelde, a tall bearded man with a kind, earnest expression. “Her name is Terra Morrison. Everyone say hello to her.”

      A roomful of Grade Nine students stared at her. No one said anything.

      That’s just great, Terra thought irritably.

      She smiled weakly, nodding her still-damp head. She had a queasy feeling in her stomach, and she wished the floor would swallow her up.

      “Uh hum.” Mr. VanderVelde cleared his throat. “Well, Terra, please take a seat, and we’ll get on with today’s math lesson.” He quickly scribbled basic formulas on the chalkboard, the short piece of chalk squeaking painfully with each stroke.

      Terra slid into her seat and looked at the etchings on the desk in front of her, as the other kids alternately stared directly at her or shot covert glances her way, depending on where they were sitting. Terra sighed and started to copy the assignment down as the teacher wrote it on the board.

      Bang! She felt a shudder go through her whole desk. Then a few seconds later, Bang! She turned around to see a dark-haired girl behind her leaning back in her chair, nonchalantly swinging her leg and loudly chewing her gum. Every now and then, she’d deliberately smack it for extra effect.

      Terra smiled tentatively.

      But the girl only smacked her gum and looked away.

      Terra sighed again and continued the assignment.

      In the hallway after class, Terra knelt on the floor, trying to arrange her books in her new locker. It smelled strongly of disinfectant, and the hinges squeaked loudly when she opened the door.

      Suddenly a large shadow fell over her. She looked up to see a group of girls standing close around her.

      They stared at her, and for a moment, no one said anything.

      “Um, hi?” offered Terra tentatively. She squinted up at them, since the sun was bright in the window behind them.

      They just looked at her. Finally, a tall, heavy-set blonde girl spoke. “You’re new here, right?”

      “Yeah.”

      Terra blinked at them, tried another smile. No response.

      “Where’d you get that shirt?”

      Terra glanced down at the button-up cotton shirt she was wearing. “I guess my mother bought it for me.”

      “Oh. Your MOTHER.” They all laughed, as if it were uproariously funny. “Hey, Joyce,” said one of the girls, “her mother bought it for her.”

      “Yeah,” said Joyce. “I heard.”

      Everyone stopped laughing.

      “Thing is, it’s blue.”

      “What?” asked Terra, stupefied.

      “Well, nobody wears blue, unless we allow it.”

      Terra frowned at them. “You’ve got to be kidding.”

      “Oh, no, we’re not kidding. If you want to wear blue, you’ve got to have our permission. Pay us a fee.”

      “What?” Terra felt like she was in some sort of weird after-school TV special. “That’s crazy.”

      Joyce nodded and smiled. “Yeah, so we’re crazy. But if you wear blue again, be prepared to fork over a payment.”

      Terra opened her mouth, searching for some appropriate retort. But just then, the bell rang, and the girls around her disappeared. Shaken, she dropped her books in her locker and went looking for biology class.

      She slid into a seat at a table. The walls of the room were covered with diagrams of the inside of a variety of animals, including a very large frog. There was a poster of a human without skin, showing off the muscles. Terra grimaced. There was a slight chemical scent in the air.

      A large plastic skeleton dangled just a few feet from Terra, grinning maniacally at her. She was just considering moving a little further away when a tall boy with wavy brown hair and mischievous eyes burst into the room.

      It was the puddle-thumper!

      “Hey!” he stopped suddenly and smiled at her. Then he turned and yelled to the room. “I’m going to sit beside the new girl!” He slid into the seat beside her. “How ya doing?”

      “Well, fine,” Terra replied cautiously.

      “You’re new at the school, right?” He cocked an eyebrow at her.

      “Yes, it’s my first day. We just moved here.”

      Just then vice-principal Brenner, who apparently also taught biology, started to outline the day’s lesson, and the class fell silent.

      But her seatmate leaned over and stuck out his hand. “I’m Glenn,” he said.

      “Terra. Hi,” she replied, putting out her own hand for a brief, awkward handshake.

      Mr. Brenner frowned at them.

      But Glenn just grinned. He waited until the teacher resumed writing on the blackboard and leaned over to whisper, “Welcome, Terra.”

       Dear Diary:

      I don’t really like my new school. I don’t know anybody. Worse yet, there seem to be some strange mean girls. Otherwise, it feels like everyone is either staring at me or ignoring me. I don’t know which is worse.

      The courses seem okay. I wish gym wasn’t mandatory, but I also got to sign up for art and music, so that’s not too bad.

      I met a cute boy named Glenn, and at least he talked to me.

       Mom seems worried that it will be hard for me to make friends in this new place. Is she feeling guilty, or does she think no one would want to be my friend?

      I got a letter from my friend Lisa in Ottawa today. She says she misses me. I miss her too.

       two

      What a mess,” said Terra, tripping over bits of wood and dropsheets as she stepped in the front door of the new house.

      “Oh, I’m sure it won’t take too long,” replied her mother, smoothly stepping over a hammer. “This house just needs some work. But yes, it’s too bad it wasn’t done before we moved in. In any case, your dad’s work is paying for it, so we can’t complain too much.”

      “Yeah, yeah.” Terra shook some sawdust off her shoes.

      “Of course, he gets to escape to the office all day,” said her mom, hanging her

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