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  Only Girls Allowed

  Only Girls Allowed

  THE PINK LOCKER SOCIETY

  Debra Moffitt

  ST. MARTIN’S GRIFFIN

  NEW YORK

  Table of Contents

  Title

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-one

  Chapter Twenty-two

  Chapter Twenty-three

  Chapter Twenty-four

  Chapter Twenty-five

  Chapter Twenty-six

  Chapter Twenty-seven

  Chapter Twenty-eight

  ONLY GIRLS ALLOWED. Copyright © 2008 by Debra Moffitt. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. For information, address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

  www.stmartins.com

  Chapter Illustrations copyright © Chuck Gonzales

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Moffitt, Debra.

  Only girls allowed / Debra Moffitt.—1st ed.

  p. cm.

  Summary: Thirteen-year-old Jemma, her best friends Kate and Piper, and new student Bet are invited to join a secret society at school meant to help other girls with their problems, but membership brings many complications.

  ISBN 978-0-312-64502-1

  [1. Secret societies—Fiction. 2. Best friends—Fiction. 3. Friendship—Fiction. 4. Middle schools—Fiction. 5. Schools—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.M7245Onl 2010

  [Fic]—dc22

  2010022068

  First published in the United States by The Nemours Foundation/KidsHealth

  First St. Martin’s Griffin Edition: September 2010

  Printed in August 2010 in the United States of America by

  RR Donnelly, Harrisburg, Virginia.

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  For one and only one day of the school year, I am so excited that my body works as its own alarm clock. Waaaaaaaay early in the morning, my eyes pop open. I wake up in my quiet room, with my cat purring on top of the covers and sun streaking through the window. My clothes are clean and ready, waiting for me on a hanger on my bedroom doorknob. Socks are tucked inside the shoes I’ll wear. My lunch is in the fridge, and my backpack is loaded with new pens, pencils, folders, and even a few “supplies” in case my you-know-what shows up at school.

  I know from experience that I will not wake up so chipmunk chipper on the 179 school days that will follow this one. On those days, my bed holds me down like a magnet and I simply can’t-can’t-can’t move. And I don’t move until my mom calls me for the third time, when her voice gets that “Jemma, I’m not foolin’ around here” sound. But today, she doesn’t have to call at all. I’m not tired. I’m wired. I could run a marathon or bake a cake before the bus comes. Energy runs through my body and sparks up and down each strand of my wavy blond hair. I want eighth grade to start, and start now.

  BEEP! I dig through my already-packed backpack for my phone. It’s a text message from my best friend, Kate.

  KATE: Forrest alert!

  That means she’s already on the bus and she’s spotted him.

  THE Forrest McCann.

  ME: wearing?

  KATE: camo shorts w/ blue t

  ME: sigh . . .

  Who wouldn’t want eighth grade to start right away? Eighth grade is what I call one of the “royal” grades. There are three of them. The core royal grades are fifth grade, eighth grade, and twelfth grade. Get the connection? Royal grades are when you’re in the top grade at your school. In other words, you get to be queens (and kings) and rule the school that year. The top-top-tippy top would be twelfth grade—the senior year of high school, with the prom and driving cars and all of that. But I know eighth is gonna be magic, too.

  Ask an old person (like a parent), and they’ll probably say there’s not much difference between the first day of sixth grade and the first day of eighth. OK, it is true that any sixth grade girl at my school, Margaret Simon Middle, will . . .

  Eat breakfast.

  Get dressed.

  Fix her hair.

  Grab her backpack.

  Hop on the bus.

  Look for her friends.

  Go to homeroom.

  Open her new locker and move in.

  Hope for the best.

  But look more closely at the sixth-grade girl and the eighth-grade girl. Their first days of school are as different as Alaska and Hawaii. I should know. I’ve visited both—the states and the grades. The sixth grader doesn’t yet know that at Margaret Simon, headbands are in and barrettes are out. She doesn’t know that you need to pick a spot before the first day of school to meet your friends in the lobby or you’ll never find them in the crowd.

  Our 6GG (sixth-grade girl) doesn’t know to sling her backpack over only one shoulder. And unless she’s what my mother calls an “early bloomer,” she doesn’t know that over both shoulders she needs a B-R-A. Even if you’re Flatty McFlat Chest, like me, you still wear a bra. It’s part of the uniform.

  The 6GG will fumble and fuss with her new locker, remembering the good old days when she just stowed everything in her desk. The lockers at Margaret Simon are sea-foam green on the outside, big enough to stand up in, and the combination lock is built into the door, like a bank safe. So there our girl will stand, clutching a slip of paper with the combination written on it, backpack hanging from both shoulders, and two pancakes flying free under her shirt. The locker won’t open on the first try, or the second, making the first day of sixth grade feel as bone-cold and lonely as Prospect Creek, Alaska, before sunrise.

  But if you’re in eighth grade, like me, you know the rules of the school. Today, a hot and steamy August morning, my headband is in place. The bra is on board. My backpack is hooked to only one shoulder. My two best friends and I had decided to meet where we always do—at the water fountain near the auditorium doors. In fact, we had even specified that if that area was too crowded (or if Taylor Mayweather was doing one of her MSTV broadcasts there), we’d meet next to the vending machine instead.

  And when it comes to my locker, no sweat. I calmly head to the number they assigned me (2121) in the eighth-grade locker block. I approach my new home, already armed with a little shelf to organize my space, a mirror so I can check my teeth for food particles after lunch, photos I want to stick on the door, and even tape to get them stuck. I spin the dial of the combination lock, feeling as tropical and sunny as it is outside. And I could dance the hula after I hear the chunka-chunk that tells me I got the combination just right—on the first try, too. Aloha, eighth grade!

  But that’s where this story gets kind of funny. Not “someone dropped their tray in the cafeteria” funny, but funny-strange. My mother once told me that there are certain days that you just know are going to change your life. Like the day you start college or the day you get married. From that point on, she said, you know lots and lots of stuff is going to change. And you’ll have this new dividing line in your life—with everything that happened before on one side and everything new on the other. My mom is always saying stuff like this. (If your mother is also a poet, you know what I mean.)

  “Don’t worry,”
I told Mom, “I can’t go to college for another five years, and nobody has asked me to marry them.” (This was almost true.)

  “And,” she said, “there are other days that are just as life changing, but you don’t see them coming. Life can surprise you.”

  Today was one of those days.

  Ok. I didn’t hula dance in front of my locker, but I did swing the door wide open in a ta-dah! kind of way. I almost whacked Clementine Caritas, my locker neighbor to the left.

  “Jeez, watch it!” she said, blocking the door with her perfectly manicured, shiny red nails.

  “Oops. Sorry!”

  Clementine was not a friend. She was the real deal—a teen model who had photo shoots in New York, Los Angeles, and on little islands that I’d never heard of. Clem wasn’t pretty in the cutesy blond way that Taylor Mayweather was. Her face was all big gray eyes and sharp angles—a high and wide forehead, strong nose, and jutting cheekbones.

  As awkward as it was nearly bashing the precious head of a teen model, I was glad my locker door didn’t swing open the other way. If it did, I might have hit Forrest. That he was my locker neighbor to the right was another reason to hula. I had a whole year of opportunities to say hi to the absolute hottest guy in school. That is, if I could look at him and form the word hi without passing out first. I’ve had other crushes, but none like this one. It’s a mystery to me why he still flutters my heart, when we’ve known each other for more than ten years and our moms are friends.

  Oh, yeah, did I mention he was Taylor Mayweather’s boyfriend? I wonder what she would think if she knew Forrest was my “line partner” in preschool? Seriously! When we were four, we had to hold hands all the time. Taylor didn’t arrive on the scene until fifth grade, and I still haven’t forgiven her for what happened that year. I’ll tell you this much: It involved me, a slumber party, and a bowl of warm water.

  My new locker let out a breath of cool air, and I stood for a minute to enjoy its emptiness, like a brand-new apartment all my own. So many possibilities. My mind was buzzing with all the organizing and arranging I wanted to do. But before I could reach for a roll of tape to start putting up my favorite pix, I saw it. On the back wall of my locker, staring right at me—it was the front door to another locker.

  This one was hot pink and shiny. Attached to the pink door was a note:

  Shhh!

  You are now a member of the Pink Locker Society.

  More details to come.

  Shhhhh!

  Remember that stuff about the dividing line in life? Draw mine here. I inhaled a short, sharp breath, dropped my armload of books, and slammed the door. I even thought about leaning against it the way they do in cartoons. Was somebody in there? Should I have opened that pink door? Was this a joke? All my stuff lay in a heap while everyone else busied themselves with interior locker design.

  Clem looked at me coolly. If she wasn’t such an ice princess, I might have pulled her down to my height and showed her the inside of my locker. Instead, I collected myself and looked away as though everything were fine. As for Forrest, he didn’t notice me (big surprise) or my gasp. I tore around the block of lockers, looking for someone I could tell.

  No surprise who I was looking for—Kate (BFF1) and Piper (BFF2). I turned left, and since everyone still had their heads in their lockers, I started scanning the backs of heads for Piper’s auburn ponytail and Kate’s brown braid. Nothing. I turned the next corner and found them both. They were standing close together, almost touching, as they stared into a locker. They looked like they were studying a painting at an art museum.

  “Guys!” I gasped, a little out of breath. But they only made eye contact with me for an instant, before turning back to the locker.

  “I just . . . (pant) found something crazy in . . . (pant) my locker.”

  This time, they looked up and locked eyes with me. They said nothing, but they parted so I could step in between. We bunched close, the three of us, like flowers on the same stem. All six eyes saw the same thing—a shiny pink locker door. Same note, too.

  I felt hot and woozy, the way I sometimes did before a test, or when Forrest brushed by me. I looked around and didn’t see anyone else standing around in amazement. Some were still taping and stacking, but most seemed to be finished with their locker work and were beginning to head down the eighth-grade hallway.

  “There’s one in Kate’s locker, too,” Piper said. “I’m opening mine.”

  “No way!” I said, pulling her back by her shoulder. “It says ‘More details to come.’ We have to wait.”

  “And it says ‘Shhh!’ too.”

  “But it does not say ‘Do not open,’ ” Piper said, “so I’m opening it.”

  She looked like she was feeling for something under a bed. I heard her tug on a metal latch, but it wouldn’t open.

  “It’s locked,” Piper said.

  “No duh. It’s a lock-er,” Kate said. “You need the combination.”

  Piper stuck her head way inside the locker, popped back out again, and said, “This lock has letters on it instead of numbers.”

  Just as I was about to have a look for myself, the bell rang for first period. People scattered. Piper shrugged and Kate walked toward her locker. I rounded the corner and saw my stuff still in a heap. I quickly turned the combo on my locker. Chunka-chunk. It opened. Without looking, I threw my stuff inside and went to class.

  For a few days, we didn’t know what to do. Piper kept tugging on the pink locker door, but it was always locked. Kate Googled the Pink Locker Society and found something in the archives at our local university, where her dad works. Trouble was, you needed a password to see it. And me, well, I pretty much tried to avoid my locker. When I absolutely had to open it to get something, I acted like there was a hungry beast asleep inside. I was very quiet and pulled my books out gently. I closed the door firmly but never slammed it.

  Aside from discovering the pink locker, eighth grade wasn’t starting out all that magically. I didn’t understand geometry; Forrest had not said so much as hi to me despite thirteen locker encounters; and I still hadn’t gotten my you-know-what. On the bright side, the new gym teacher was nice and said, after we ran a lap, that I should consider going out for track.

  Did you know aloha means more than one thing? It’s hello, good-bye, and a whole bunch of other stuff. It’s even a technical term that has to do with sending radio and satellite messages. So what did I mean when I said aloha to eighth grade?” I meant hello, bring it on, let’s chow down at the buffet of exciting times in store for me, Jemma.

  Eighth grade was my chance (finally!) to be popular. Not Taylor Mayweather or Forrest McCann popular—and definitely not as popular as Clementine Caritas. But I wanted the easy-peasy popularity that just about every eighth-grader gets to have just by being one of the oldest kids at school. We are owed it. But how popular can you be when you’re me—the only girl in eighth grade who’s afraid of her locker?

  On Thursday, the “Shhh!” note in my locker was replaced by a new one. It was printed on pretty pink stationery, and the lettering was fancy, like a wedding invitation. It said:

  First meeting of the Pink Locker Society

  Friday at 1:35 P.M.

  To open your pink locker, use the following letter

  combination: S-E-R-V-E. This combination will be

  activated only from 1:35 P.M. to 1:36 P.M.

  The meeting begins five minutes after the start of the

  study-hall period. You have been excused from study hall.

  Enter through your own pink locker door! If too many girls are

  climbing through the same locker, it attracts attention.

  We looked at each other, then back to the locker, and at each other again.

  “We have to go through the locker door? Through to where?” I asked.

  Nobody answered, but Piper smiled widely. “This is unbelievably cool. It’s like Harry Potter or something.”

  “But Margaret Simon isn’t Hogwarts,” s
aid Kate. “We’re normal girls. It’s not like we can do magic or something.”

  “Not yet . . . ,” Piper said, flicking her pencil at me like a magic wand.

  I grabbed her pencil and gave her an exasperated look. “Nobody is doing any magic. I don’t know about you guys, but I’m not going in there tomorrow. Notice how it doesn’t say anything about when the meeting is over? We could be stuck in there forever!”

  Kate pointed out that the note said we were excused from study hall, so it sounded like we’d be out at 2:10 for our next class. Sometimes Kate was cautious like me, but not this time. She was going. And Piper couldn’t be stopped.

  “I’m not saying I’m not nervous, but I think we should go,” Kate said. “It really is an honor.”

  “What do you know about it, Kate?” I snapped. “We don’t even know what the Pink Locker Society is.”

  “I know a little,” Kate said. “All I can say is that I know it’s a good thing.”

  Did you ever have a friend who always reads every little instruction on the inside of the board-game box? The friend who already knows how to play but reads the directions every time to improve her grasp of each little rule? If you’re not properly spinning the spinner or discarding your cards the right way or adding up how much the bank owes you, this girl will let you know. That girl is me.

  I like rules. Piper could care less what the rules are. And Kate falls somewhere in the middle, which is good because she keeps Piper and me from having a billion arguments. So far there were no rules for the Pink Locker Society other than to be there the next day at exactly 1:35 P.M.

  That night on the phone, I tried to squeeze more information out of Kate about the PLS, but she wasn’t talking.

  “I can’t say,” Kate said. “Just show up tomorrow at 1:35. I’m bringing my camera.”