Dicky could ask out the girl who would look best on his arm. Maybe Chloé or Dani or another one of the cheerleaders. Turn up the charm, flash some change and buy some flowers. Unleash the power of the grand gesture. The problem with that? There came pressure in asking out the hottest hotties in the school. There needed to be some forethought. Some planning. Big Dick had a lot to keep his attention on. His last appearance in a historic (if one-sided) basketball rivalry for example. Planning and putting on the Homecoming dance itself for another. Why not get some pictures with a cutie in a nice dress he could show off to his future fraternity brothers? Just as a reward for all the hard work.
Because high status meant high maintenance. One look at Richard would tell you that his plate was always full. Dicky didn’t need to go on supersizing his senior year even more.
Big Dick could ask out a girl he actually had romantic interest in. He could put himself out there and allow himself to be vulnerable as a young man. This was senior year. He wouldn’t see any of these people much after graduation. Most would just remember him as the fat kid who wore a suit every day. Who cared if he embarrassed himself any more than he had on the basketball court? Nobody would. Dicky knew that. Or he told himself that. He didn’t believe it though and he couldn’t imagine opening up his heart and allowing himself to be a romantic like that. Seemed mad corny. Maybe that’s why he really couldn’t ask out a girl he was actually interested in. Richard wasn’t open to giving any girl the power of his committed interest.
Big Dick wasn’t interested in dating anybody at JEM or so he said.
He also wasn’t interested in being dateless for Homecoming. This he knew.
[ Big Dick Buster Homecoming Start ]
There was a third option. A safe option. Miss Sure-Thing. She sat in front of him in math. She had sat in front of him in math for going on six consecutive years. You know, discounting pandemics. In middle school when he was obsessed with AAU basketball and copying Celtics stats as opposed to doing algebra—she was there to give him her answers. And they weren’t always right...but they always made it work just the same. They had dated in the eighth grade—where a date mostly meant walking together holding hands from class to class and stealing kisses at lunch.
They broke up when the school year ended. Dick told her that he wanted to stay friends. She had kept up her part of the deal better than he had.
There was a small moment before class started. If there was a moment to make his move…he wouldn’t find one better than this…
“Pssst,” he poked her on the shoulder with the eraser end of his pencil and hissed a playful, boyish whisper, “Hey Iris!”