"So it's agreed
that our weekly trip to Cashman's will be tomorrow instead of Saturday and will
include a perusal of the new fall line for appropriately hued crimson items."
Sandi eyed Stacy's white shirt malevolently. "Since some club members
seem to be woefully behind the current fashions."
Stacy gulped. Labor Day had been the day before, and yet she had worn
white today. Stupid, stupid, stupid! How could I have forgotten today was
the day after Labor Day? It was easy since she had been so tired that
morning. Sandi had called an emergency Fashion Club meeting the night before to
discuss Waif's new issue and the hot colors for fall, this year, crimson. By
the time she had gotten home, her mom had gotten back from her shift at the hospital.
Stacy had volunteered to make her a late dinner, seeing how working the swing
shifts were wearing her out. By the time she had finished that and then her
homework (Sandi never knew she handed it in secretly), it was almost two in the
morning. Stacy was just happy she'd been fully dressed when she'd arrived at
school, but now she was regretting not setting something appropriate out
beforehand.
If you can't find the sun in your own day, at least you can try to be it
in someone else's. Her mother's words always
came back to her whenever Sandi was raining on her particularly hard.
"And crimson is such a good color for you Sandi, I'm sure you'll find lots
of things that will look great." Stacy felt better when Sandi rewarded her with
a smile, condescending though it was.
Quinn looked over her shoulder when the bell at the counter rang. "Number
four, one large cheese-less pizza." The acne covered teen squeaked out. The
four girls shuddered at his obvious lack of skin care knowledge and horrendous
Pizza King uniform.
"I'll get it!" Stacy volunteered brightly. The other three smiled at her. Of
course she would.
Stacy walked to the counter smiling, but it faded when she heard Sandi's
not-quite-whispered comment. "Maybe she'll spill it on herself and then she
won't have to bear the shame of wearing white after Labor Day."
Stacy's shoulders slumped as she approached the counter. As she was
handing the cashier the money, someone ran in the door and pushed her out of
the way.
"Give me all the money in the cash register! NOW!" His eyes were wild,
with huge pupils. Stacy cowered next to the counter, afraid to move and draw
attention to herself. She tried to get a good look at him with out staring,
silently describing him to herself so she could tell the police when they came.
When the cashier just stared back at him in fright, making no motion to
empty the register, the man pulled a gun out of his pocket.
"I said ALL THE MONEY! NOW!" The cashier shakily opened the register and
tried to get the bills out with jerky, terrified movements.
At the sight of the gun Stacy let out an involuntary whimper. The robber
turned his unstable gaze to her, immediately noticing the cash still clutched
in her hand. He took an unsteady step towards her, and Stacy noticed he was
shaking almost as badly as she was. He must be coming off some drug, he must
need more money for more drugs. She added these thoughts to his
description. He grabbed at the money in her hand, but in her state of paralyzed
fear, she couldn't unclench her hand to let him take it.
"LET GO, YOU B****!" He pulled harder, waving his gun hand wildly as he
tried to balance and wrest the money from her. The shock of a loud gunshot made
her finally let go. The robber stumbled back with her money and grabbed the
money the cashier had managed to pile on the counter then fled out the door.
Being early, and a Tuesday night, he later found out he had gotten a grand
total of four hundred and twenty-three dollars, including the fifteen he had
ripped out of Stacy's hand.
When he was gone someone called out. "CALL 911!"
Quinn ran over to Stacy who was shaking against the wall. "Don't worry
Quinn, I know what he looks like, I can tell the police everything." She tried
to breathe deeply and not hyperventilate.
Quinn's eyes filled with tears. "Stacy?"
"I'm okay, Quinn, but he took my money. Can you get the pizza this time?"
Stacy slid down the wall, after all the excitement she was feeling a little
dizzy. "I think I just need to sit for a minute."
Sandi and Tiffany rushed over and kneeled next to Quinn. They could hear
sirens in the distance. Stacy looked to Sandi. "I used the method you taught me
for coordinating outfits to remember what he was wearing." She laughed a bit
and coughed. "Can you believe his t-shirt was crimson? I mean, a drugged-up
thief was more fashionable than me."
A tear ran down Sandi's cheek. "No way, Stacy. He's nothing but trash.
You're way fashionable."
Stacy looked up at her with a delighted smile. "Really, Sandi?"
"Yeah, Stacy." Especially since the bright red stain had soaked through
Stacy's once white t-shirt, turning it the exact shade of red that Waif hailed
as fall's hottest hue.
Stacy closed her eyes, thinking that this was the first time Sandi had
ever sincerely complemented her. I'm going to tell the police everything and
they're going to catch that guy. Mom will be so proud. And Sandi really meant
it when she said I was fashionable. This was the best night ever…
Her world faded to black.
