Once upon a k prom, p.1

Once Upon a K-Prom, page 1

 

Once Upon a K-Prom
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Once Upon a K-Prom


  Copyright © 2022 by Disney Enterprises, Inc.

  All rights reserved. Published by Hyperion, an imprint of Buena Vista Books, Inc. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher. For information address Hyperion, 77 West 66th Street, New York, New York 10023.

  First Edition, May 2022

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  FAC-020093-22091

  Designed by Marci Senders

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Cho, Kat, author.

  Title: Once upon a K-prom / Kat Cho.

  Description: First edition. • Los Angeles ; New York : Hyperion, 2022. • Audience: Ages 12-18. • Audience: Grades 7-12. • Summary: Instead of going to prom, seventeen-year-old Elena Soo wants to spend her time saving the local community center, and she is determined to keep her priorities straight even when her childhood best friend—who is now a K-pop superstar—returns to make good on their old pact to go to prom together. Identifiers: LCCN 2022000479 • ISBN 9781368064644 (hardcover) • ISBN 9781368066983 (paperback) • ISBN 9781368066754 (ebook) Subjects: CYAC: K-pop (Subculture)—Fiction. • Community centers—Fiction. • Fame—Fiction. • Dating (Social customs)—Fiction. • Korean Americans—Fiction. • LCGFT: Novels.

  Classification: LCC PZ7.1.C5312 On 2022 • DDC [Fic]—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022000479

  Visit www.hyperionteens.com

  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  one

  two

  three

  four

  five

  six

  seven

  eight

  nine

  ten

  eleven

  twelve

  thirteen

  fourteen

  fifteen

  sixteen

  seventeen

  eighteen

  nineteen

  twenty

  twenty-one

  twenty-two

  twenty-three

  twenty-four

  twenty-five

  twenty-six

  twenty-seven

  twenty-eight

  twenty-nine

  thirty

  thirty-one

  thirty-two

  thirty-three

  thirty-four

  thirty-five

  thirty-six

  thirty-seven

  thirty-eight

  thirty-nine

  forty

  forty-one

  forty-two

  forty-three

  forty-four

  forty-five

  forty-six

  forty-seven

  forty-eight

  forty-nine

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  For Axie, who fed my love of K-pop and gave me the courage to write and publish my stories

  When most people think of prom, they probably picture dresses and limos and dancing the night away with their dream date. When I think of prom, I picture aching feet, overpriced decorations, and unrealistic expectations.

  Obviously, I was in the minority, though. As was proven by the long line of upperclassmen willing to spend their entire lunch period standing in line to buy prom tickets.

  It was day three of ticket sales, which meant it was also day three of the Awareness Club’s alterna-prom initiative.

  It was…not going great.

  Okay, fine, it was a big fat failure.

  We’d set up a station where students could donate their change to West Pinebrook’s Community Center after buying tickets.

  “Any more donations?” I asked, leaning over the table.

  Max Cohen shook his head. “Sorry, Elena.”

  I glared at the jar. It was almost empty. The dollar bill I’d placed in there was still the only donation. I’d thought maybe having money already would make us look less pathetic, but it just looked sadder somehow.

  I glanced at my carefully written spreadsheet. I’d made it to predict potential donations. We were way behind what I’d projected. But I guess I hadn’t factored in teenage apathy.

  “Has anyone taken a pamphlet?” I looked at the suspiciously full pile.

  “To do that they’d have to stop avoiding our table like we all had the plague.” My best friend, Josie Flores, rolled her eyes.

  I’d spent days writing those pamphlets up, included photos of the kids from the community center at last year’s holiday party and the fundraiser website to donate online. It explained that we weren’t telling people not to go to prom, but to rethink how they spent their money on the dance.

  That’s why Josie had come up with the term “alterna-prom initiative.” It hadn’t helped, though. Everyone just thought we were flat-out protesting prom.

  “Come on, El, if they won’t take a pamphlet, let’s just hand them out,” Josie said, stepping out from behind the table. She was willow thin with smooth brown skin, a pretty, narrow face, and dark hair that framed it in curls. It was everything I used to wish for when I was little instead of my round Korean face, short legs, and flat stick-straight black hair.

  “I’ll help!” Max jumped up.

  “No, you guard the table and the…dollar,” Josie said, eyeing the sad jar.

  I gave him an “I’m sorry” shrug. But he dutifully sat back down. He’d do anything for Josie.

  Since sophomore year, he always mooned at her behind his wire-rimmed glasses. They weirdly worked on him, like nerdy-white-boy chic. His curly hair used to be cropped short in middle school, but he’d grown it out now and it flopped into his eyes. It was cute in a Shawn Mendes kind of way.

  Josie started down the line, handing pamphlets out, making sure each person at least opened it before she moved on. She didn’t seem to mind the annoyed looks she got or the rude comments. I wished I could be that confident, to not care what everyone thought of me.

  “They’re in danger of losing funding,” I said to a group of juniors I’d just handed pamphlets to. None had opened them. So I took one and opened it myself to a bullet-point list of ways to save on prom. “Instead of spending hundreds on limos and dresses and tuxedos, you could just wear an old suit or a dress from Rent the Runway and drive yourself. Then donate what you saved to the center.”

  “Hey, you’re Ethan Soo’s sister, right?” One of them squinted at me as if trying to see the family resemblance.

  I sighed. It was common for kids to remember my brother before they remembered something as pesky as my actual name. He was the popular twin, after all. And he never did anything as annoying as asking kids to donate their prom money.

  “I’m Elena,” I mumbled. “So, back to the community center—if you don’t have any extra cash right now, there’s an online donation site you can use too.”

  They all just blinked at me before returning to their conversation about some new movie that had just released. Were these people heartless? Did they not see the adorable children smiling out at them from the pamphlet?

  “I’m sorry.” I tried to get their attention again, but they kept ignoring me.

  “El, you gotta stop apologizing all the time,” Josie said, walking over. She was down to her last few pamphlets, and I felt guilty that I still had a full pile.

  “I can’t help it.” I frowned because she was right. It was just such a knee-jerk reaction for me to apologize every time I had even an inkling that someone felt uncomfortable around me.

  “I don’t think this is working,” Josie said, scowling at the line of students doing their best to ignore us. “I think we’ll have to use more radical methods.”

  “Well, unless you want to go full Robin Hood, I think pamphlets and peaceful protest are all we’ve got right now.” I sighed.

  “I have something to help our cause,” Josie said, taking off toward the exit.

  “As long as it doesn’t make a mess!” I called after her, but I wasn’t sure if she heard me as she pushed out of the cafeteria.

  As I waited for Josie to return, the line moved up and a girl swung her bag into me as she turned to talk to her friend.

  “Can you find somewhere else to stand?” she asked, huffing in annoyance.

  “Sorry,” I mumbled before I could stop myself.

  “Did you see her weird-ass pamphlets?” the girl’s friend said, not caring that I was standing right there. “Imagine spending all your time trying to ruin prom.”

  I sighed and stepped back, turning away from the line and the annoyed glares. I wasn’t trying to ruin prom. I just thought this was a chance to support a good cause. And I guess I also didn’t think prom was as special as everyone else thought. I’d watched every one of my three older sisters get excited about the dance only to come home let down in some way or another at the end of the night. It gives perspective to a kid, even if I was only ten.

  I leaned against a lunch table as I waited for Josie to get back. It was filled with a group of freshman girls sighing over a music video playing on one of their phones. I could barely hear it over the loud volume of voices crashing through the cafeteria, but I recognized the group: WDB.

  WDB had achieved something no other K-pop group had done for over a decade: entered the hearts of teens across the whole globe. And somehow became the first Korean group to win an MTV V

ideo Music Award and American Music Award, which got them invited to other award shows, and they’d even performed on SNL. It was all so impressive, but there was an extra layer of surrealness for me as the face of the main rapper, Robbie Choi, graced the screen. It was a face I knew well, even though it had lost all the baby fat that had puffed up his cheeks when we were ten. We’d been best friends. I knew things about him that weren’t written in his official profile.

  I knew how he got that little scar through his eyebrow. (He’d fallen out of a wardrobe during an epic game of manhunter and into the edge of a coffee table.)

  I knew that even though he was famous now for his luscious locks, which had been dyed the whole rainbow during his career, he’d once let me shave a stripe through them because we’d wanted to see if we could write his name in his hair. (Spoiler: We could not. And yes, we did get into epic trouble with our parents after that stunt.)

  Now there were girls swooning over him and giggling whenever his face popped up on-screen.

  But Robbie was another reason I knew prom would be a disappointment for me. I’d once been just like everyone else, looking forward to a magical prom night filled with slow dancing and perfectly posed photos. But I’d always imagined it with a specific person. And since he was no longer in this country, let alone this town…why bother with the effort? When you knew something wouldn’t work out, it was best to just move on.

  “Robbie is my bias!” one girl declared, and I almost wanted to tell her about that time Robbie had fallen into mud during our third-grade trip. I’d had to walk behind him the rest of the day so no one thought he’d pooped his pants.

  Or maybe I’d explain how he’d forgotten all his old friends when he got famous….

  “JD is my bias. He’s just so…mysterious.”

  I watched as another member of WDB gave a sly wink on the screen. I’d never met JD, even though he was Robbie’s older cousin. I had to admit the song the girls were playing was pretty catchy. And perhaps I’d found myself downloading a few of WDB’s singles. But it was still so weird for me to think of my childhood bestie as a heartthrob.

  I remembered the last day I’d seen Robbie. We’d been ten, and we stood in front of his empty house. All of his stuff had already been shipped over to Seoul ahead of his family. I’d had friends move before. Becca Kuss had moved to Ohio in first grade. And Emily B. had moved to the next town over last year. But Robbie was my best friend and he wasn’t moving twenty miles away. He was moving to the other side of the world. We’d clutched each other, tears streaming down our faces. Robbie’s nose had been as red as a cherry. I told him so, and he said mine made me look like Rudolph. And then we’d hugged again.

  “I’ll email you every day,” I’d promised.

  “I’ll message you every day,” Robbie had said. “You downloaded KakaoTalk, right?”

  I’d nodded. I’d never used the Korean messaging app before, but Robbie had said it worked all over the world, so no matter where we went, we’d be able to talk.

  “And I’ll come back when we’re in high school and we’ll go to prom together,” he’d said with a wide grin. “And we’ll take pictures just like Sarah’s with those silly flower bracelets.”

  “They’re called corsages,” I told him. “And only girls get them.”

  “Says who?” Robbie pouted.

  I laughed. “I don’t know. Fine, we’ll get matching corsages.”

  “But I want mine to be made out of Legos,” Robbie said.

  “Then I want mine to be made out of butterflies!” I said.

  “Ew! Like dead bugs?!”

  “What?” I squeaked, horrified. “No! Like fake ones!”

  “Nope. You want to wear dead bugs. You’re a dead-bug wearer!” Robbie taunted, and despite our tears and our impending parting, he made me laugh. And I took off after him, chasing him around the yard until his mother called him to get in the car.

  “See you at prom,” Robbie said before climbing in.

  I’d watched him drive away until I couldn’t see him anymore.

  And in the seven years since, he’d become a part of the biggest K-pop boy group of all time and I wouldn’t be caught dead at prom.

  “Here it is!” Josie crowed as she returned, snapping me out of my memories. She held up a megaphone.

  “What am I supposed to do with this?” I asked. “And why did you have this in your locker?”

  “It was from our save-the-whales rally,” Josie said. And I suddenly had horrible flashbacks of watching Josie dressed as a whale, marching through the courtyard with her megaphone. “Use it to rile up the crowd.” Josie held it out. “Give a speech. Get people excited.”

  “I’m not really a public speaker.” I folded my hands behind my back. In fact, I’d had to quit debate club because I couldn’t stand in front of the twelve other kids and argue my point without turning bright red.

  “El, I keep telling you that you can’t be a good activist unless you get over your fear of speaking in public,” Josie said. I didn’t have the heart to tell her that I didn’t think activism was really in my future. At this point I was only still in the club for her.

  “Come on,” Josie said, dragging me back to the prom ticket table.

  Caroline Anderson and Felicity Fitzgerald sat behind the table, accepting cash for the fancy embossed tickets. They were both pretty white cheerleaders, with the kind of perfect looks that graced CW shows and teen movies. Currently, they both wore their cheerleading uniforms even though it wasn’t a game day. I guess they thought the school spirit would flow through them and into the ticket buyers who were plopping down a whopping sixty dollars per ticket.

  “Elena, tell the truth,” Caroline said, resting her chin on her fists. “You hate the prom because you know no one will ask you.”

  I froze, my mouth falling open. “What? No, I don’t care about that stuff.”

  “Oh, come on, Elena. You were super jealous when I got my first boyfriend in seventh grade,” Felicity piped up.

  “Really?” Caroline asked, her sharp eyes sparkling with glee.

  “Yeah, she pouted for a whole week and didn’t even come to my birthday party in protest.” Felicity let out a laugh.

  I’d been sick that weekend, and my mom wouldn’t let me go to her party. But I knew if I said that now it would sound like an empty excuse and just throw more fuel on Felicity and Caroline’s fire.

  Felicity and I had been close once. After Robbie had left, I’d had no one to hang out with, and in middle school, I’d somehow glommed onto Felicity and her small girl gang until my decision not to go out for cheerleading in ninth grade made me outcast-worthy. I still remember the day after cheerleader tryouts in the lunchroom, when Felicity went full-on Gretchen Wieners, shouting, “You can’t sit with us!” Except less pink.

  Josie nudged my shoulder. “Come on, El. Don’t let them get to you.”

  She pulled up a chair and stood on it, shouting into the megaphone. “Attention, everyone! We have an announcement to make.”

  She stepped down and pushed the megaphone at me.

  “I can’t get up there,” I whispered, trying to push it back.

  “Just think of the community center. Speak from your heart.”

  “Is the announcement that you finally realize how pathetic your silly protest is?” Caroline called out, and Felicity laughed.

  It made me remember that freshman lunch where she friend-dumped me in front of the whole cafeteria. Which incensed me enough to climb onto the chair and lift the megaphone.

  But as I looked at all the staring faces, my mouth quickly became so dry I couldn’t even get out a squeak. I felt like I was sweating, but when I rubbed my hand over my forehead, it came away dry. I looked at Josie, who gave me a thumbs-up, and I pressed the button. I cleared my throat, and a high-pitched feedback sound made me wince. But at least it got the attention of the cafeteria. All eyes were on me now. Oh goody. I took a deep breath and remembered Josie’s advice: Speak from your heart.

  “Um, hi,” I muttered, and the megaphone squeaked again. “Sorry.”

  Josie pinched my leg and mouthed, Don’t apologize.

  I nodded and I cleared my throat again.

  Remember the community center, I reminded myself.

  “Um, so I’m here to talk about a place that means a lot to me.” I glanced nervously at Josie, and she mouthed again, From your heart. “And…and it also means a lot to this whole community.” Some of the freshmen at the tables closest to me were watching and they weren’t laughing or sneering, so there was that, at least. Pulse hopping, I kept going. “I don’t know if anyone remembers what the West Side was like when we were kids. But less than ten years ago, there wasn’t a lot there. Just the old, closed factory and not even any parks.”

 

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