Sway: A Novel

Sway: A Novel

by Kat Spears
Sway: A Novel

Sway: A Novel

by Kat Spears

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Overview

A YALSA 2015 Best Fiction for Young Adults Pick

In Kat Spears's hilarious and often poignant debut, high school senior Jesse Alderman, or "Sway," as he's known, could sell hell to a bishop. He also specializes in getting things people want---term papers, a date with the prom queen, fake IDs. He has few close friends and he never EVER lets emotions get in the way. For Jesse, life is simply a series of business transactions.
But when Ken Foster, captain of the football team, leading candidate for homecoming king, and all-around jerk, hires Jesse to help him win the heart of the angelic Bridget Smalley, Jesse finds himself feeling all sorts of things. While following Bridget and learning the intimate details of her life, he falls helplessly in love for the very first time. He also finds himself in an accidental friendship with Bridget's belligerent and self-pitying younger brother who has cerebral palsy. Suddenly, Jesse is visiting old folks at a nursing home in order to run into Bridget, and offering his time to help the less fortunate, all the while developing a bond with this young man who idolizes him. Could the tin man really have a heart after all?
A Cyrano de Bergerac story with a modern twist, Sway is told from Jesse's point of view with unapologetic truth and biting humor, his observations about the world around him untempered by empathy or compassion---until Bridget's presence in his life forces him to confront his quiet devastation over a life-changing event a year earlier and maybe, just maybe, feel something again.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781466852198
Publisher: St. Martin's Publishing Group
Publication date: 09/16/2014
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
Sales rank: 855,376
Lexile: 900L (what's this?)
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 14 - 17 Years

About the Author

Kat Spears has worked as a bartender, museum director, housekeeper, park ranger, business manager, and painter (not the artistic kind). She holds an M.A. in anthropology, which has helped to advance her bartending career. She lives in Richmond, Virginia with her three freeloading kids. Sway is her debut novel.
Kat Spears grew up moving every few years and is still looking for her hometown. Kat writes realistic, edgy, honest, sometimes heartbreaking, often funny books about and for young people. Being a teenager sucked for Kat, and she’s still trying to write her way out of it. She spends her free time rearing caterpillars, vacuuming up dog hair, and writing letters the old-fashioned way. Her favorite job, ever, is being the mother of three perfect and hilarious humans. She is the author of Sway, Breakaway, and The Boy Who Killed Grant Parker.

Read an Excerpt

Sway

A Novel


By Kat Spears

St. Martin's Press

Copyright © 2015 Kat Spears
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-250-05142-4


ONE

The first time I ever heard Bridget Smalley’s name, it was a day like any other. There was no reason for me to think everything was about to change. That’s the way life happens, why you have to be able to see all the angles every time you make a choice. What’s true today might not be true tomorrow.

When the last bell of the day rang, my butt was already halfway out of my seat and I took the stairs two at a time to the first floor. A group of chattering girls banged through the stairwell door and I stepped back to let them go by me. As they passed, I was enveloped in a cloud of bubble gum and fruity body spray. Nauseating.

The hallway quickly filled to capacity with students leaving their classrooms while I tried to slip through unnoticed. A blond girl in heavy makeup squealed when she saw me and held out an arm as if to put it around my neck in a hug. She looked vaguely familiar. In fact, I might have taken her on a date once, but I ducked her arm and then slid along the wall for a few steps to avoid a herd of freshmen as they spilled out of the gym.

Two varsity basketball players were terrorizing a wimpy kid by playing keep-away with his backpack and blocking the corridor. The kid was obviously not destined to last long in the high school ecosystem, but there was no way I was going to engage in any misguided acts of heroism to help him out.

Instead of trying to get past the basketball players, I cut through the teachers’ lounge to emerge in the math and science wing just as David Cohen was passing by, talking with a short kid whose name I didn’t know.

“Hey, David,” I said as I fell into step beside him and gestured for the short kid to get lost. “How’s it going?” I asked.

“It’s going,” he said, eyeing me suspiciously. The short kid moved away and was instantly lost in the throng of students hurrying to leave the building.

David was a full head shorter than I, probably barely five-five, made to look even shorter because his shoulders were permanently slumped under the weight of his overstuffed backpack. His Jewfro was much frizzier than mine, though we had the same coloring—brown eyes, brown hair.

I glanced casually at my six to make sure no one was paying attention to our conversation before saying, “Listen, I’ve got another job for you.”

“Another one?” he asked with a grimace.

“I need two term papers for Bartlett’s class.”

“Oh, come on, Jesse, I barely have time to get my own work done,” David whined. “You’ve already got me doing labs for half the football team. How am I supposed to get two term papers done too?”

“I understand it’s a lot of work on short notice, David,” I said, my voice automatically shifting to smooth and soothing to divert his tantrum, “which is why I’m going to pay you fifty dollars for each paper.”

“It’s not about the money,” David said with a shake of his head. “My dad is the president of the university, Jesse. Believe it or not, he makes more money than you do.”

“Yeah, well, for now he does,” I said, though David was so busy wallowing in self-pity, he wasn’t really listening.

“I’m under a lot of pressure to get good grades,” David continued, operating under the incorrect assumption that I gave a shit. “I’ve got Model UN, student government—a lot of responsibility.” He crammed a hand in the pocket of his gray slacks and pushed his glasses up his nose with the index finger of his other hand. “I’ve got so much going on, I should be paying you to get my homework done.”

“I know everyone’s got high expectations for you,” I said as we walked. With David it was all about managing his tantrums and I needed him to be on his game, had a lot of money riding on his abilities. Not that I was so desperate for the money—I had pulled down a salary higher than any teacher at Wakefield High School last year, tax free. “Maybe there’s another way I can help you,” I said. “If you don’t need the money, what do you need?”

He barely hesitated, which told me this request had been on his mind before our conversation even started. “I want to go out with Heather Black.”

“Not a problem,” I said, my brain already calculating the costs I would have to offset against this transaction. “Just give me a few days.”

“Really?” he asked, his voice rising to a squeak. “But … didn’t you used to date her? Wasn’t she your girlfriend?”

“Sure, yeah, we dated,” I said with a nod, “but I wouldn’t say she was my girlfriend. Relationships are not my thing. There’s too much emotion involved.”

“I was … I was kind of joking,” David said. “I didn’t think you could actually … How are you going to get Heather Black to go out with me?”

“Don’t worry about it.” We both stopped at my locker and I spun the combination lock. “You ask her out next week and she’ll be willing.”

“Will she…? Do you think…?” His cheeks went pink and he pushed his glasses up again. “Do you think she might put out?” he asked as he leaned a shoulder against the locker beside mine, trying to look casual and failing miserably.

“Your dad’s rich, remember?” I said. “Which means you barely even have to be charming. But she’s not a hooker, David. I can’t make those kinds of guarantees. As long as you don’t blow it completely, she’ll probably let you get to second base.”

“Yeah?” he asked, the enthusiasm behind his voice enough to tell me that this deal was sealed. “What’s second base?”

“It depends on the girl,” I said with a shrug. “Knowing Heather, it will be farther than you might get with someone else. So, two papers delivered with a week of lead time so they can change a few things, make it look more like their own work.”

“Yeah, okay,” he said with a weary sigh.

“Alderman!” A shout reverberated down the hallway. The halls were almost empty now, most everyone gone for the day, which meant I was behind schedule.

“Oh, shit,” David said under his breath. “It’s Burke. I’m out of here, man.” And just like that, he was gone.

I spared a brief glance over my shoulder and there was Mr. Burke, principal of Wakefield High School—avid golfer, fly fisherman, father of three—and a major disappointment to his wife, the community, and himself. His high forehead was wrinkled in a frown, but not an angry frown—a worried, disappointed frown. Worry and disappointment defined Burke’s life.

His face was long and thin and his hair swept back from his forehead in a high pouf, giving the impression his head was even longer than it really was. I always wondered why his wife didn’t tell him to keep his hair shorter, try to create the illusion his head wasn’t so long. I suppose his wife didn’t care any more about him than did the students at Wakefield High School, which was not at all.

“I’ve been looking for you,” Burke said as he stood behind me, waiting for me to acknowledge him.

“Oh, yeah? The front office doesn’t know where to find me during the school day? I’m pretty sure they have my class schedule.” I shut my locker and turned to give him my full attention.

“I—I’ve heard that you’re a person who could help solve a problem for me,” he said.

I cocked an eyebrow in question. “Who told you that?”

“A few people have mentioned it,” he said evasively. “This is a high school. No secrets.”

“You’re right about that,” I said as I lifted my messenger bag onto my shoulder. “What is it you think I can do for you?”

He hesitated for a minute, making up his mind, then rubbed his hands together as if to warm them. “There’s a particular student who’s causing problems for me.”

At first my mind leapt to the idea that he was actually having an affair with a student. There were some girls just freaky enough they would give it up to an authority figure like Burke, even if his head resembled a winter squash.

“What kind of problem? If you want my help, you’re going to need to be specific,” I said, fighting the urge to check my watch. I was already behind schedule and now I had to think through how I was going to get David laid. The calendar was filling up quickly.

“Travis Marsh,” he said.

“I think I know him,” I said. I nodded and squinted one eye, as if searching my memory for Travis’s face. “Gritty guy, blond hair?”

Of course I knew who Travis was. I sold him at least a quarter ounce of pot a week. It was unclear why Travis persisted in coming to school. He never studied, barely attended class, and was probably reading at about a third-grade level. I could only assume teachers passed him just to remove the threat that they might end up with him in their classroom for another year. Travis was big, over six feet, and muscle-bound. Sometimes he liked to bully the weaker kids, but he had never given me any problem.

“That’s the one,” Burke said, reeling me back to the present.

“What about him?” I asked.

“He’s a threat to my authority,” Burke said, his voice tight with strain. “He doesn’t care how much trouble he gets in. No matter how many times he gets sent to the office, he just treats it like a joke. The other students, my staff, everyone sees me as ineffective because I can’t control him. The other day, he put graffiti on my car.”

“How do you know it was him?” I asked.

“He signed his name,” Burke said, his voice heavy with defeat.

“Did you call the cops?”

“The police said it wasn’t proof enough, that anyone could have done it and signed Travis’s name. No fingerprints, no serious crime, so they aren’t going to pursue it. But half the students saw it before I covered it up. Travis Marsh is threatening the very fabric of this school’s discipline system. He has to be stopped.” By the end of this little tirade, beads of sweat had broken out on his brow and flecks of spittle dotted his lower lip.

I gave him a minute to compose himself before speaking again. “What do you think I can do about it?” I asked.

“I want him gone,” Burke said, though I could tell it cost him something to admit it.

“Gone? Like dead?” I asked, mostly to amuse myself, but still curious to see what he would say.

Burke looked stricken, his eyes wide. “No!” he cried. “I didn’t mean … Jesus, you couldn’t … I mean, you wouldn’t, right?”

“You couldn’t afford it, even if I was offering that kind of service,” I said with a dismissive wave of my hand. “So, what did you have in mind?”

He still looked a little uncertain, one hairy knuckle pressed against his chin like a contemplative chimpanzee. “He’s only seventeen. According to the law, he can stay in the public school system for three more years. Things will spiral out of control by winter break if he’s still here. I need an excuse to expel him—an incontrovertible reason,” Burke said. This last comment was weighted with the full implication of what he was asking.

“It’s an interesting problem,” I said pensively.

“Does that mean you’ll do it?” he asked, then held his breath as he waited for my reply.

“Maybe. You know there’s a price involved?”

“I assumed as much,” he said as he started to reach for his back pocket.

“Not that kind of price,” I said. “You keep your money. Once I’ve solved your problem, you’ll owe me a favor. Give me a week. If I need to communicate with you, it will be through an associate of mine.” He opened his mouth to protest but I cut him off. “Don’t worry. She’s discreet. And we need her so that there can be no connection traced back between you and me.”

“Okay, fine,” he said, and started to smile, then seemed to remember that wouldn’t be appropriate.

I brushed past him on my way to the door. Now I was really behind schedule.

Copyright © 2014 by Kat Spears


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Sway by Kat Spears. Copyright © 2015 Kat Spears. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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