"We're having it now?' Star said.
 
 "No, I mean with boys," Misty insisted. Star looked at Jade.
 
 "Not until we've got everything the way we
 
 want it," Jade said, as if it was the most obvious fact
 
 of all. "When the time comes, we'll tell whomever we
 
 all decide to invite that Cathy's mother has gone away
 
 for the day and we have the house."
 
 "We don't want to invite too many people," Star
 
 cautioned, "and we better be sure no one makes it
 
 sound like an open party or we'll get all sorts of
 
 riffraff."
 
 "Let's just invite boys. Four of them," Jade
 
 suggested. "Who needs any more competition, not
 
 that I'm afraid o
 
 f it or anything."
 
 Star laughed and drank some more of her
 
 screwdriver. "I'm not! It's just ... not prudent to invite
 
 other girls at this time," Jade insisted.
 
 "Prudent? I like that. What do you think, Cat?
 
 Should we just invite boys?" she teased. "Is that
 
 prudent?"
 
 "I don't know?' I said. "You girls know about
 
 the only party I ever went to, really, and you know
 
 what happened to me," I said, gazing at my drink. They nodded, all looking both sad and angry
 
 for me as they recalled the story I had told them at the group therapy session. I had been given too much rum and Coke to drink and some boys had taken advantage and groped me while girls I thought were my friends
 
 looked on and laughed.
 
 "Nothing like that is going to happen here," Star
 
 assured me. "We won't let it."
 
 "That's right," Jade insisted. "We'll always look
 
 out for each other!'