"It could not be worse for ninth grader Becky Michigan on her first day at a new school, sitting in beet juice and staining her white jeans in a classroom about to fill up with students. In the nick of time, a gorgeous blonde boy named Danny comes in and offers his over-sized baseball jersey so she can cover up, get to the office, and change. By the time she pulls the shirt over her head, however, he has mysteriously disappeared.
Becky scours the school in search of her dream-athlete and wonders why after contact with him she has magically gained the ability to throw a fastball ninety miles per hour! Instead of finding the answer, however, Becky's new skill pits her against the school bully and the entire varsity baseball team.
That night, after her exciting showdown in front of the entire school, Danny shows up at her bedroom window. If she will agree to meet him behind Rutledge High at midnight on the ball field at the edge of the woods, he promises to reveal a secret meant to alter the past and change her life forever."
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Nicholas Fisher is a college professor and
a sports enthusiast. He writes adult horror under another name, but thought of
the idea for Becky’s Kiss while
coaching his son’s baseball team. Since the story involved high school drama he
decided to write his first young adult piece. When not writing or teaching,
Nicholas Fisher enjoys pizza, reality television, and playing the banjo. He
lives in Pennsylvania with his wife and his son goes to Arizona State
University.
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Character
Casting
Becky Michigan: the lead character.
A "country" type girl (from
upstate New York) with long auburn hair, a small turned up nose, and sad
puppy-dog eyes. Built slim and very athletic, though she thinks she is a klutz.
Pretty, but she hasn't learned quite yet how to "package" herself, so
she thinks she comes off plain. When she tries out for the varsity baseball
team at her high school and puts on the royal blue Rutledge Tigers hat, pulling
all that hair through the hole in the back in a glorious ponytail, however, she
realizes how shockingly pretty she is.
Danny Taragna: Becky's love interest.
Only an inch or two taller than
Becky, and the epitome of the "beautiful jock," always seen wearing
his favorite little league tournament jersey, not tucked in. He is a blonde
with crystal blue eyes, arching eyebrows, and high cheekbones. Like a cherub.
He is humble and quietly clever, the type that "wears skinny well."
Cody Hatcher: The class bully.
Tall with unkempt long black hair.
Mole under one cheek. Peach fuzz goatee. Often wears an army jacket and dirty
sneakers. Wise guy in class as well as the hallways. The type that tenses up
the mood of the class, goading others to challenge the teacher, then leaning
back in his chair saying "Oooh," to instigate. The type of guy that
cuts himself shaving and wears that little piece of toilet paper with the red
dot on it into school.
Snippets
Excerpts
Excerpt #1
Excerpt from Becky’s Kiss. 9th grader Becky Michigan gets to health
class early on her first day of high school and sits in beet juice.
Something
was wrong. Something was wet.
She’d
sat in something.
“No,”
she moaned, standing, arching back, straining her glance, rubbing with both
hands and bringing them up before her all greasy and red.
It was beet juice, she could smell it…those
awful disgusting beets she had seen at lunch in the steamtable pan second to
the end, floating in a greasy puddle of scarlet broth. Clearly, someone had
snuck some out in an eyedropper or a monkey dish and doused the chair, ha ha,
and to make matters worse she wearing white pants!
What
was she going to do? The clock on the wall read 1:15 p.m., and in less than a
minute the halls would be packed with students, jostling, joking, pushing, and
laughing. Could she make it to the office before the bell? Doubtful. And she
wasn’t sure of the way. She didn’t even know if the trailers were connected to
the second or third floor, and she couldn’t remember whether it was the
auditorium or the shop that you had to detour around and on which side either
one sat. Oh, this was a mess!
Becky
looked for something to wipe her hands on, and of course, there was nothing.
She was holding her hands away from her body now, looking all around, seeing
everything all at once and registering little, trying not to scream.
There
was a clicking noise. Shoes. Out in the hall and closing.
Becky
froze. She would move the chair to the back corner and sit! Yes! She would park
herself right back in that puddle of beet juice all through health class. She
wouldn’t budge until everyone had gone to their busses. If the teacher told her
to get up she’d refuse, stay ‘til midnight if she had to, outlast everyone.
She
didn’t sit back down, however. Somehow, she just couldn’t move.
The
clicking had made its way right up to the doorway now, and in a scattered kind
of a way, Becky tried to determine what type of person walked that way. Someone
in heels, someone haughty. One of the popular girls. One of the older popular
girls. Or maybe an administrator. She hoped it was the third choice, but didn’t
look forward to any of the encounters.
He
came around the corner, a kid wearing a back-turned cap, gray baseball pants,
and a long, untucked yellow t-shirt, green lettering going across in a cursive
slant spelling out ‘Newtown Edgemont’ then fading off after the letters ‘Bic..’
Whatever that meant. The sound had been his cleats, and he had probably gotten
out of his last class to help set up for the first fall ball practices or
something.
Becky
stood there stunned, for he was the most beautiful boy she had ever seen in her
life. Dirty-blonde hair, drawn cheeks, and eyebrows that arched in a way most
girls would kill for. And his crystal blue, almond-shaped eyes had a softness
to them, a kindness, a familiarity like the tree in your back yard and the tire
swing hanging from it.
“Are
you all right?” he said. He was looking at her hands. She shook her head
slightly. No, you’re warm, keep guessing.
He put his knuckles up, pointed down a finger, and twirled it slowly, like
‘turn around.’ She did it and then turned back. If he was laughing, she would
simply shrivel up and curl like a cinder.
“Gosh,”
he said evenly. “They got you with a diaper rash something good.” He took the
towel that had been slung around his neck and tossed it to her. “Go ahead. Pat
it and blot it out best you can.” He looked at the clock. “And I think you’d
better hurry.”
Becky
widened her eyes and tilted her head expectantly. Now her hand was up, knuckles
high and index finger twirling so he’d turn and give her a second. She couldn’t
believe that she’d suddenly gained the confidence to be cutsie, especially with
the hour glass nearly depleted so to speak, but she had and he politely looked
off behind him.
She
blotted. Wiped her hands off. Threw the towel in the trash.
“What
now?” she said. He looked back, and if there was even the hint of a smile in
his eyes, Becky knew that this weird, delicate moment would shatter.
He
certainly didn’t smile.
He
took off his shirt and gave it to her.
“I
get them extra big and long whenever we win a tournament,” he said. “Go ahead,
put it on. It’ll get you to the nurse at least, and if you soaked up the extra
back there real good it shouldn’t cauliflower through.”
Becky
Michigan didn’t waste any more time wondering if this boy was going to smirk at
her. She slipped her head through the
collar, thinking about the way the inside of his shirt smelled faintly of Old
Spice, same as her Dad used, and she was thinking about the way the fragrance
brought up images of porch swings and prayers and sunsets and goodness, all of
it welling up inside her like some sweet longing that made worries like pants-stains
drift to the edges like corner shadows. She pushed through her elbows and
pulled through her chin, eyes closed, daring herself to next let her gaze drift
down from his glance a bit so she could really take a look at that muscular
little ‘V’ he had going on.
“Well,
how do I…?”
Her
voice died on the air, and her mouth closed. Slowly, she straightened and
smoothed down her new tournament shirt, then gathered her hair, pulled it
through, and let it fall down across her shoulders.
Her
problems were solved. Now she could go to the nurse without anyone bothering to
glance at her.
Her
real issues had only just begun. Gone were the images of sunsets and porches.
And the boy of her dreams had vanished.
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