


Ugly Thoughts

by RainBoots



Category: Uglies
Language: English
Status: In-Progress
Published: 2009-05-18
Updated: 2009-05-18
Packaged: 2013-08-24 19:29:57
Rating: K
Chapters: 2
Words: 1,644
Publisher: www.fanfiction.net
Story URL: http://www.fanfiction.net/s/5070685/1/
Author URL: http://www.fanfiction.net/u/1931291/RainBoots
Summary: This is an OC that I wrote about a girl called Paili struggling with her identity as an Ugly, a Pretty and a then a Smoky.





	1. Prologue

The specials were here.

She could tell them from the rest of the pretties, even through their smart plastics. The way they carried themselves, it was obvious, their air of holier-than-thou confidence, the way they held themselves above the pretties.

Paili tried to blend in as much as possible, keeping her arms to her sides and putting on her jacket to hide the line of sunblock patches that patterned them. It wasn't much use. She stood out to specials as much as they did to her. Her tan, darker than the other regulation pretties, her intense, sharp eyes, that didn't match the airy, deluded expressions on every other pretties face.

She would have to split soon. She knew what would happen if they caught her. She'd be put under the knife here, have her lesions replaced, and some cuff attached to her wrist so she could never escape. She'd be _pretty_ pretty forever.

She shoved the pills into the hand of the guy she was dancing with, and leant in to whisper in his ear, before walking quickly out of the room. She headed for the stairs, cursing again that she had chosen Garbo Mansion to crash, as little as she missed the city, she would like a break from what seemed to be constant running.

Glancing down the staircase she could hear the quiet thud of special's moving upstairs towards her, joining their associates on the party floor, and, for the moment effectively blocking her exit via the main entrance.

She could only go up now.

She groaned as she realised what they meant. The party was being held on the top floor of the mansion. The only place left to run was the roof.

She grabbed her board from her bag as she took the steps two at a time, knowing that the specials would eventually realised that the Smokies had crashed another pretty party. She tried to prepare herself now, she'd need all the head start she could get if she wanted to fly away from the Special's on their all-terrain hoverboards.

She was nearly at the top of the stairs; her new pretty muscles teamed with extensive hard work from the Smoke making it pretty light work.

She kicked open the door, the crisp cold of the night stinging her exposed skin, as she ran across the open roof.

The specials couldn't be far behind, she'd have to find some way to slow them down. Her eyes went to a pile of drainpipe hidden out of sight by the stair door. The city always had supplies at the ready to make sure everything ran smoothly. She smiled, for once thanking the city for its need for constant order. She grabbed a the thinnest peice she could find, reletively sure it would do the job, and jammed it into the handle. It wouldn't hold them for long, but she hoped, long enough.

She could hear voices, and some feedback, from... a radio? Were they calling in re-enforcements already?

Paili quickly snapped her fingers, jumping on her board, wishing for the second time that night, that she had chosen to wear heels, to fit in more easily with the party crowd.

The soles were slippy and unsteady. You really weren't meant to hoverboard in them.

She tossed them off. Flying barefoot would be hard, but it couldn't be worse than teetering on her stilettos for the entire ride. She went barefoot a lot, and hopefully her feet were rough enough to get the traction to stop her from falling off her board one-too-many times.

Finding her balance she speeded across the roof until she reached the edge. Peering over the ledge, she felt a few stone crumble as her hoverboard brushed over them, and she saw them tumble down into nothingness.

It was a long way down.

She had always hated heights, and as much as she was afraid of the specials, she found herself frozen on the spot.

She could hear the bashing as the specials threw themselves at the stair door only metres behind her. If she left it any longer they'd break through.

It was now or never.

Trying not to think about the drop that she was about to face, she edged her board over the ledge.

She took in a deep breath, and jumped into the abyss.


	2. Chapter 1

June was a bad month to be born.

It wasn't that late in the year, but enough for all of her older friends to have already turned Pretty. Leaving her all alone to face the months leading up to her sixteenth birthday.

She spent most of her time hoverboarding, her old friends hadn't really enjoyed it, and were reluctant to fly around town at night with her, or do anything tricky in general.

Actually… thinking about it, Paili's old friends had spent pretty much all of their time doing morphos. She had only had one friend who would do ugly tricks with her, and she was long turned Pretty, being two years older than her.

She sighed, stepping off her board and sitting down, leaning on the trunk of a nearby tree.

She really was sick of being lonely.

She traced the grip on her old hover-board, fingering her old stickers, which she'd stuck on back when she was into retro Rusty accessories.

She caught sight of her ugly face in the slightly reflective surface of her board and grimaced, it had becoming progressively harder to look at herself as she became less of a littlie and more of an ugly, and now, on the verge of her sixteenth birthday, she was most definitely an ugly.

She examined her snub nose, freckled skin, and round cheeks and groaned.

In some ways she couldn't wait to be Pretty, to have those big eyes, and full lips, the perfect cheekbones and skin. To have people think that she's gorgeous and to want to listen to what she says…

But still, there was something that held her back… something about the generic Pretty face, the conformity, having to look like everyone else…

She was ugly… but… her face was a part of her, could she really shed it off as a bad memory? Her features might be ugly, but they were hers!

The operation had always been a topic that sent her mind spinning, and she wasn't in the mood to dispute it with herself again. Anyway, there wasn't like there was an anything else she could do. Being pretty was her only option, so why was she fighting the inevitable?

She dropped her board to the ground, already feeling ready to go back to her room and sleep for the next weeks up to her birthday so she wouldn't have to spend her time going over the pros and cons of the operation just to pass the time.

She stood up, clicking her fingers; she felt her board nudging at her ankles. She stepped on, taking a second to gaze out across Uglyville, and over the river at New Pretty Town. Sighing, she pushed forward, curving around the corner of one of the football pitches.

The girl came out of nowhere, faster than Paili had ever seen an Ugly go. Paili didn't stand a chance, as she boarded unawares right into the oncoming girl's path.

She knocked Paili off the board instantaneously, who closed her eyes as she felt the tug of her crash bracelets swing her around hard enough to pull her arms from her sockets.

She landed back on her board, her wrists a bit bruised, and slightly shocked, but in one piece, but very annoyed: "Hey! Watch where you're going!" She turned to the girl who'd knocked her off her board, and found still recovering from her fall.

She'd been going a lot faster than Paili, and her crash bracelets would have swung a lot faster around and harder than hers had.

The girl straightened up, spinning dizzily, and smiled up apologetically at her: "Sorry, I wasn't looking where I was going."

Paili shrugged, as irritating it was to get pushed off your board, it wasn't worth picking a fight over: "Don't worry about it. But what were you doing speeding so quickly, anyway?"

The girl smiled, her grin spreading across her face. Her mouth was way too wide. She tapped her nose: "Tricks, you know?"

Paili smiled back. She'd missed hanging out with tricky uglies: "Anything good?"

"How do I know I can trust you?" The girl asked, jokingly, but Paili could hear a hint of suspicion in her voice.

You couldn't know who to trust these days.

"You don't." Paili replied honestly. "I'm Paili, by the way."

The girl held out her hand: "I'm Ay."

Paili raised an eyebrow, no one shook hands anymore. It was a real Rusty custom, abandoned by all but the occasional littlie club, and apparently this girl. She took it anyway.

Ay broke the handshake to twiddle her messy brown hair around her finger, as she looked her up and down.

Paili guessed she was probably wondering whether she should trust her, or whether she should be running in the other direction, hoping she wouldn't be ratted out to the wardens, realising that she probably should be wondering the same thing.

But there was something about this girl; she just seemed to exude trickiness. There was no doubt about it, this girl was the real deal.

Ay noticed Paili's board for the first time, seeing the open circuitry when two wires had been cut and her smiled widened Impossibly:

"Paili, have you even been to the Rusty Ruins?"


End file.
