The Party — a How Would You Answer entry —
The final tone buzzed at Ridgeview High, and the hallways erupted. Sneakers squeaked on the waxed tile floors, lockers clanged shut, and voices tangled together in a wall of sound.
“She was kissing who?” a girl shouted to her friend.
“Anyone got a lighter?” another voice called from across the hall.
“He knocked over the beaker and the whole desk was covered with foam,” a boy laughed, his voice carrying over the crowd. His friends joined in the laughter, the sound echoing down the corridor.
Posters for the Spring Dance were plastered crookedly on the wall, edges curling. A sign-up sheet for baseball tryouts flapped as students brushed past.
Marcus adjusted the strap of his backpack as he moved with the flow of students. His shirt was plain navy, nothing flashy, just clean. It stood out against the jumble of loud graphics and concert tees around him.
“Hey, Marcus!”
He turned at the sound of his name. Aiden was weaving through the crowd, no jacket yet, his backpack half-zipped with a spiral notebook jutting out. He caught up, grinning. “Big party tomorrow night. Jenna’s parents are out of town. Everyone’s going. You in?”
Marcus kept walking with him. “Saturday night.”
“Seven o’clock. Snacks, loud music, games — the whole thing.” Aiden bounced a little on his heels, like the invitation itself had a beat.
A teacher stepped into the hall with a paper cup of coffee. “Let’s keep it moving,” she said, and the traffic surged. From somewhere behind them: “Coach posted the roster!” — then a cheer.
Marcus glanced at the baseball sign-up sheet as they passed, the edges tugged loose by the draft. “You already know I don’t do house parties.”
Aiden nudged him with an elbow. “You always say that. This one’s different.”
“It’s the same,” Marcus said, not sharp, just steady. “Parents gone. People push lines. I don’t want to be there when it flips.”
“Nobody’s gonna make you do anything,” Aiden said. “You’ll be with us.”
“I know what happens at those,” Marcus said. “You know I don’t want it.”
They slowed near a bank of blue lockers as a cluster clogged the passage. Somewhere up the hall: “She was kissing who?” — then laughter, then the slam of metal doors in a row.
Aiden lowered his voice. “You’re part of the group, man. Don’t bail on us. One night.”
“I’m not bailing,” Marcus said. “I’m choosing.”
Aiden studied him, the grin fading to something like disappointment. “So? You coming, or what?”
Marcus felt his throat tighten. He didn’t like when things narrowed to a spotlight — one friend staring, waiting for the right answer, while the noise of the hallway pressed in around them. The lockers, the posters, the chatter — all of it blurred for a moment under the weight of that single question.
It’s just one party. Why not? Because I already know what it looks like inside: the lights down, the music up, people daring each other to drink or sneak off. Laughter that turns sharp. Phones out. And then what? I walk in different, and I walk out carrying it with me. Do I want that?
A burst of laughter broke over his shoulder — the same group still replaying the beaker incident, one boy’s voice imitating an explosion while the others howled. Someone slammed a locker so hard it rattled the row.
Marcus looked back at Aiden. His friend’s grin was thin now, expectant.
How would you answer?
What scriptural principles would you consider?
And why?
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