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Authors: Stephanie Perry Moore

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BOOK: Get What You Give
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1
BABBLE

W
ould you risk your own life to possibly try to save someone else's? People talk about best friends, including you, Hailey Grant, but would you really lay it all on the line to make sure your best friend was spared from pain?” my roommate, Teddi Spencer, asked as I tried to study. “I mean, 'cause you're not acting like it.”
What was she talking about? We were tighter than tight, and she knew I had her back. But every now and then when I wasn't doing something she agreed with, she'd try to lay a guilt trip on me. So I kept studying and ignored her tail, hoping she'd get the picture and leave me alone.
Actually, most folks who knew us all last year wondered how we remained friends. We were pretty different. I was about facts, and she was about fiction. There was nothing wrong with dreaming, but you had to get your head out of the clouds to actually get things done. I swear, her address was La-La Land. She knew how to get to me, but I knew I could never intentionally walk out of her life. Teddi had lost more in her high school years than my heart could bear. If our friendship made her happy and brought her joy, I'd do anything to protect that.
“I'm just saying. I gotta win the election, Hailey. And you're not helping. That Covin Randall guy thinks just because he's the state senator's son, everybody's on his jock. Well, I'm ...” Teddi continued her rant about her disgust for her rival SGA opponent in the upcoming election as I tuned her out.
I looked at my short, frail, light-skinned friend. She had been through so much over the past two years I'd known her. We were now sophomores at Western Smith College. When she'd lost her parents in a tragic car accident her senior year, she'd moved in with her grandmother and begun attending my high school.
She hadn't known anybody, and she'd seemed like she was in deep pain. I had taken it upon myself to help and befriend her. I didn't know where that had come from—you know, the knack to want to help someone out. I guess somewhere deep inside me there was a place that felt I should give back since I'd been taken care of all my life. I had two great parents. My uncle, Wade Webb, was the president of the college I attended, for goodness' sake. My older sister, Hayden, had gone here, and everyone remembered what a gem she was. Honestly, I wasn't a princess, but I hadn't had any tragedies in my life either. Because I've had great experiences and supportive people in my life, I guess I felt the need to help those who had no one.
Teddi sat on my bed next to me in our dorm room and turned my face toward her. “You're not even listening to me, Hailey. I mean, I need to win this election. The last president we had was a disgrace. The students at Western Smith need to feel confident in their new president, and, personally, I don't think that right now anyone who uses the bathroom standing up qualifies enough to win the confidence of the entire student body. We need a gender change.”
“What are you saying, Teddi? We need a female president?” I asked, thinking she needed more reasons than that to feel she should win over her opponent.
She got a little loud with me and said, “You got a problem with that? You don't think I'm strong enough, do you? You don't think I can lead? I mean, why would any of us females around here trust someone who leads by what's between their legs?”
“No, no. I'm just saying just because one male was stupid doesn't mean the others have to be the same,” I jumped up and said, calmly defending myself.
Teddi paced back and forth and started freaking out. “Well, I'm just saying we need a change, and you're completely not behind me. You're supposed to be my campaign manager, and you're not even on my side.”
“Why are you overexaggerating the issue?” I asked. “I'm just telling you how I feel.”
“Because we need to come up with a strategy. I've seen posters all over campus for this guy, and my posters aren't even up yet. Isn't that your job?” Teddy asked me pointedly.
Quickly, I reminded her she was the reason we hadn't gotten a lot accomplished with her campaign. “Listen, chick, I love you, but you're full of it. Every idea I've had, you shot down. It's your fault you don't have a platform. I drill you on basic questions, like why do you want to be the Student Government Association President, and you stutter and say because we don't need a male. That's bull. I can't put out material on your campaign when you have no legit ideas. So don't try to blame this on me.”
Teddi sank to her bed. “Then say I'm just a loser and just quit my campaign. Don't help me.”
“Oh, girl, don't be melodramatic. I know your butt. You have substance. Find it and let's get a plan. I've seen the posters from the other candidate. People in the dorm have been hovering all around them. But we can get yours out—there's still time,” I said. I wasn't planning to bail on her, but we did need to get cracking if she wanted to win.
She sat up, clung to me, and became paranoid. “Were the guys all into his poster? The chauvanists. See—they stick together. We gotta do the same, Hailey, I'm telling you. Now I'm actually thinking that living in a coed dorm was not a good choice. How am I going to get support from the girls
and
the guys?”
“We can do it, Teddi. But with all these fine brothers I've been seeing coming in and out of here ... this is completely a good choice. It took hell and high water to convince my mom to agree to it,” I said, knowing how overprotective my mom was since she'd let Hayden live off campus in an apartment four years back and worried about boys having too much access.
It had taken a lot to make my mom ease up. I was in college, and there was no getting around me interacting with guys. At least I would be supervised in a dorm that had males on the other side of the building. Also, once my mom had met Teddi, she'd relaxed. Teddi wasn't boy crazy, and she wasn't going to let me run wild either.
“Do you smell that?” I said to her as I got a whiff of something really strong.
Suddenly, I knew I was not imagining the smell as smoke seeped in through the bottom of the door. The smoke was making it hard to breathe. I became uneasy. What was going on?
“No, I don't smell anything, Hailey. I'm trying to talk to you, but your focus is on everything else in the world. You're not being my best friend or my campaign manager right now. You're talking about all the reasons I don't have a shot. I'll listen to your platform ideas. Give them to me again.”
Covering my mouth so as not to inhale whatever was seeping through the door, I said, “Great—Teddi, we can work on it later. But now something is seriously wrong. Look at the door.”
As I moved to the door to find out what was up, someone knocked loudly from the other side. “Are y'all in there? Open up! Open up!”
“It's probably nothing, Hailey. Relax,” Teddi said.
She was clueless. As I walked to the door I tossed her a towel to cover her mouth with, but she threw it back at me. A gray fog was filling the air. She needed to quit tripping. There had to be something burning. I walked over to the door and answered it.
A cute girl wearing a Beta Gamma Pi shirt—who looked familiar—was at the door. “Hey, we gotta get out. There's a fire. We've got to move quickly,” she said calmly but with urgency.
Teddi didn't hear what she said. All she was focused on was the girl's shirt as Teddi walked to the door. “I knew you looked familiar. Cassidy Cross—cool. I didn't know you lived in our building. You were on the last Beta line. BGP, the sorority for me.”
“Yeah cool, but like I was telling your roommate, we gotta go. There's a fire!”
I tried to stay calm, but upon hearing the news, Teddi couldn't hold herself together. “Oh, my gosh! A fire! What about my things—your things, Hailey? What about my parents' box? It's the only thing I have left of them.”
As more smoke filled the doorway, I couldn't let her continue to ramble, so I grabbed her arm and said, “We can't think about that now, Teddi. We have to get out of here! We need to get out of this building, and quick.”
 
The smoldering cloud in the hallway almost made it difficult to breathe. I instantly started coughing. I shook my head to stay focused. I knew I had to get out of the building, but when I looked behind me, Teddi was still at our doorway. If I had to, I would pull her outside myself because she wasn't moving.
“Hailey, I have to get my stuff. My jewelry. My mom's picture. My dad's Bible. That stuff is important. I have to go get the box. Hailey, don't you understand?”
To a rational person, that made no sense. The only thing we needed to be worried about was getting our tails out of there. However, I knew all the pain she had been through, and I didn't want to add more, so I decided to help Teddi get her things. Because Teddi's parents were gone, this stuff was all she had of them.
“Okay, tell me what you want me to grab. Where is your little trunk?” I said, referring to the silver box in which she stored everything.
“It's under my bed, but it's all the way over there. I can't—I can't breathe, Hailey.” Teddi clutched her heart.
“What are y'all doing? I said y'all have to get out of here!” Cassidy said as she came back to our room. She had gone knocking on other people's doors. “Y'all have to get out of here.” Her mouth was covered, but we could understand what she was saying.
“Go ahead, Teddi. I'll get your box.”
“Thank you,” she said, crying hysterically. “Thank you, Hailey. How ... how could I have doubted your love for me?”
The dorm beds were so heavy I needed to think about how I was quickly going to get in and get out. When my mom had come up a week ago, it had taken four of us to move the beds.
How am I going to move these by myself now?
I thought to myself.
Come on, Hailey. Think.
Then I figured it out. I could fit under the bed; I would just slide under and grab her box.
But I was becoming more and more tired. I wasn't a geek, but I knew the smoke was wearing down on my heart. With as little as I had in me, I decided to give it one last try. She needed the box.
That was all I could muster. I knew Teddi would never forgive herself if I risked my life for her personal belongings. I didn't pray often, but at this moment I could use a prayer. So I thought,
Lord, I know I've been a little angry at You for taking my friend's parents. I guess if You wouldn't have, she wouldn't be in my life. Out of lemons we're supposed to make lemonade, right? Help me get it, because I need to get out of here.
I grunted and got the box, exited the room, and went out into the hallway. I could barely see, but I knew which way the stairs were. When I got there, there was more moaning. Screams were filling the clouded air.
Cassidy said to me, “The door is jammed. We can't get out. And your friend, Teddi—look!”
When I looked down, I saw that Teddi had passed out. This moment was so terrifying there weren't any words to describe it. At this moment the smoke got denser, and I couldn't even see down to the other end of the hallway. I knew we were through.
 
“Help! Help! Oh, my gosh, help!” I screamed out, joining Cassidy and other people from our floor in their cries for help.
I just started praying to God to help us.
I know I don't come to You often, Lord. But I do care, and I love You.
I was going on and on until Cassidy shook me. “Come on, don't give up. Help us yell for help!”
As we continued yelling, the door we were banging on finally sprang open. Two guys from upstairs who had been heading out had stopped to help us. The air coming in was fresh and couldn't have come at a better time.
This guy shouted, “We heard y'all! There was a beam blocking the door! We gotta get out of here! Look at the fire! Help them, Jake!”
The Jake guy motioned for the other two girls to leave, and they fled fast. “Come on!”
Cassidy and I pulled Teddi to the stairs, and the other guy slammed the steel door shut behind us to momentarily hold the fire. Cassidy and I tried to move my roommate. Her limp body was not responsive.
“Cassidy, go!” I shouted. “I got her!”
“I'm not leaving you guys. You need my help,” Cassidy said as the smoke started to seep under the steel door.
“Run, girl—I'll help them,” the stranger said as he shoved Cassidy down the first step.
I looked closely at the guy who was risking his life. He could've kept going, but he'd decided to stop to help us. The smoke made my vision blurry, and it was like I knew him, but I didn't know him. I was thankful he cared enough to help.
“Is this Teddi?” he asked as he looked at her face.
“Yes,” I confirmed as we both tried to lift her. “You know her?”
“Oh, I gotta help her out of here. They will think I threw the election on purpose,” he uttered as he nodded.
BOOK: Get What You Give
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ads

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