“Where will you be in five years, Tabitha?” Bo says to me. Sometimes it’s like he can read my mind.
“I don’t know. Anywhere but here.”
“You going to leave me then?”
“No, you’ll come with me. We’ll go together.”
“I see myself in prison.”
I look at him. Just when I think we might be dreaming out loud, he’s imagining the worst.
“Prison? For what?”
“For shooting a dickhead named Hal Glisson.”
Hal Glisson again. “Did he bother you today?”
Bo smiles ruefully. “Just looking at him bothers me. I spend most of class thinking about ways to kill him.”
“That’s not good. Or healthy. Maybe you should sit in the front so you can’t see him.”
“You know what he said today? He said the Holocaust never happened. That it was a hoax the Jews came up with to further their own anti-Christian agenda.”
“That’s crazy.”
“I know, but people believe him. Ignorant redneck bigots like Hal Glisson say this shit and people believe him. And it makes me want to kill him.”
“You can’t kill him. Freedom of speech, remember?”
“But let’s say I could do it without getting caught. Wouldn’t the world be a better place without Hal Glisson in it?”
“Maybe, but now you’re sounding like a Nazi yourself.”
He tilts his head and narrows his eyes at me. “You’re good, Tabby Cat.”
He’s right, I am good, because I’ve had years of experience trying to talk him out of doing stupid shit, which is why I never know about the things he gets caught doing. Because if he’d told me ahead of time, I’d be able to convince him not to do it.
“In five years, we won’t even remember guys like Hal Glisson and Cameron Kleter,” I say. “We’ll be touring the country with our rock n’ roll band. We’ll be seeing the world.”
“No we won’t,” he says. “Best case scenario, is we drive away from here and never look back, but these shitheads are like Gremlins. And even if we started up in a new place, I’ll still be working at a Walmart and you’ll still be…” He trails off and I wonder what he was going to say.
“I’ll still be what?”