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Bring It On
Bring It On
Bring It On
Ebook185 pages

Bring It On

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After winning the talent competition at the Harlem School of the Arts, the Cheetah Girls have cred uptown and down. Dorinda, the most stylish Cheetah of all, thinks they’re finally on their way to music industry millions. But just when things are clicking for the Cheetahs, Dorinda’s home life threatens to come apart at the seams.

Dorinda lives in foster care with almost a dozen other children, and even though Mr. and Mrs. Bosco aren’t their real parents, they’re the only family these kids have ever known. So when a mysterious man comes demanding custody of one of Dorinda’s brothers, she decides to fight back the only way she knows how: Cheetah style!
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 12, 2014
ISBN9781497677289
Bring It On
Author

Deborah Gregory

Deborah Gregory lives in England. She is the author of Cornflake House.

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    Book preview

    Bring It On - Deborah Gregory

    Bring It On!

    The Cheetah Girls, Book 15

    Deborah Gregory

    Let me holla at my ferocious friend

    Tonya Pinkins,

    who is always calling out the shameless hyenas

    while looking out for the bona fide cheetahs

    in the jiggy jungle.

    You’re simply growlicious, girlita!

    Contents

    The Cheetah Girls Credo

    Chapter 1

    Chapter 2

    Chapter 3

    Chapter 4

    Chapter 5

    Chapter 6

    Chapter 7

    Chapter 8

    Chapter 9

    Chapter 10

    Chapter 11

    Bring It On!

    Glossary

    Acknowledgments

    Preview: Twinkle, Twinkle, Cheetah Stars

    About the Author

    The Cheetah Girls Credo

    To earn my spots and rightful place in the world, I solemnly swear to honor and uphold the Cheetah Girls oath:

    Cheetah Girls don’t litter, they glitter. I will help my family, friends, and other Cheetah Girls whenever they need my love, support, or a really big hug.

    All Cheetah Girls are created equal, but we are not alike. We come in different sizes, shapes, and colors, and hail from different cultures. I will not judge others by the color of their spots, but by their character.

    A true Cheetah Girl doesn’t spend more time doing her hair than her homework. Hair extensions may be career extensions, but talent and skills will pay my bills.

    True Cheetah Girls can achieve without a weave—or a wiggle, jiggle, or a giggle. I promise to rely (mostly) on my brains, heart, and courage to reach my cheetah-licious potential!

    A brave Cheetah Girl isn’t afraid to admit when she’s scared. I promise to get on my knees and summon the growl power of the Cheetah Girls who came before me—including my mom, grand-moms, and the Supremes—and ask them to help me be strong.

    All Cheetah Girls make mistakes. I promise to admit when I’m wrong and will work to make it right. I’ll also say I’m sorry, even when I don’t want to.

    Grown-ups are not always right, but they are bigger, older, and louder. I will treat my teachers, parents, and people of authority with respect—and expect them to do the same!

    True Cheetah Girls don’t run with wolves or hang with hyenas. True Cheetahs pick much better friends. I will not try to get other people’s approval by acting like a copycat.

    To become the Cheetah Girl that only I can be, I promise not to follow anyone else’s dreams but my own. No matter how much I quiver, shake, shiver, and quake!

    Cheetah Girls were born for adventure. I promise to learn a language other than my own and travel around the world to meet my fellow Cheetah Girls.

    Chapter

    1

    Saturday is definitely the most dig-able day of the week because I get to go to the Drinka Champagne Conservatory for vocal classes with my crew, the Cheetah Girls. But Sunday is the only time in my crazy-busy week that I get to indulge in my three favorite things: 1) listen to hip-hop music 2) spend time with my favorite foster sister Twinkie and foster brother Corky 3) fantasize about, then sketch some of the cheetah-licious outfits I’m going to make for the Cheetah Girls when we have the duckets to afford my designing skills.

    Lying in my twin-size bed on the supa-lumpy mattress, I close my eyes for a second so I can imagine the Cheetah Girls performing at a supersize place like Madison Square Garden with thousands of peeps in the audience. Yeah, I see it. The five of us descend from the ceiling propped up on a ten-foot-long glittery papier-mâché cheetah. We are dressed in Dorinda Designs—cheetah fur capes over cutout leather hip huggers and halter tops studded with serious sparklies—Austrian crystals shaped like flower petals, bugle beads sewn by hand, okay? When the big, sleek cheetah touches the stage floor, we hop off—swirling and twirling so the supa-bright klieg lights bounce off the spark-lies, causing the audience to go cheetah crazy!

    I know I’m dreaming, but one day I’m gonna get the op to make costumes for us, even if we end up on the chitlin’ circuit (second-banana nightclubs all around America where second-banana singers performed back in the day, to keep duckets in their buckets). All I know is, we’ll be the best-dressed girl group the chitlin’ circuit has ever seen.

    "Dorinda, I don’t have any more clean underwear, my sister Chantelle yelps, interrupting my fantasy flow. When you gonna do the laundry?"

    I should have known my ten-year-old sister would find a way to snap me out of my daydreams so early in the morning. See, I share my bedroom with my foster sisters Chantelle and Monie. Luckily, Monie, who is seventeen, has been spending a lot of time at her boyfriend Hector’s house on the weekends. I know I shouldn’t be tripping about Chantelle whining—but she knows I don’t do the laundry until after we eat breakfast. And she’s not the only one who depends on me.

    Are you coming, Cheetah bear? Twinkie giggles and peeks her head in my bedroom.

    I’ll be right there, Twinkie bear, I call back. Like I said, Chantelle is not the only one who depends on me. Everybody in my family does. And now that I’m in the Cheetah Girls, I’m doubly busy because my crew depends on me too. I’m not flossing: for example, I’m the best dancer in my crew, so I’m sort of the unofficial choreographer for all the Cheetah Girls’ dance moves. Oh, my bad. Let me tell you who the Cheetah Girls are: we are the fiercest singing group in the jiggy jungle, according to Galleria Bubbles Garibaldi, the real leader of the group. There’s also Chanel Chuchie Simmons, Aquanette and Anginette Walker and, the youngest member, yours truly, Dorinda Do’ Re Mi Rogers.

    Sitting straight up in my bed, I glance at Chantelle, who is plopped down on the floor—naked from the waist down—with all her clothes in front of her piled up in a big heap. Miss No-bloomers has even left the bottom two drawers of our bureau open, like a thirsty dog with his tongue hanging out.

    I know you’re going to put your clothes back in the drawers, right?

    I was looking for clean underwear, I told you! Chantelle whines, not moving off the floor.

    Not in your shirts and tops drawer! I counter.

    I thought maybe they was there, Chantelle protests. Sometimes you put stuff in the wrong drawer.

    No, I don’t, I reply, but calmly, because I know what Chantelle was really thinking—that I should have given her one of the prizes that the Cheetah Girls won at the Harlem School of the Arts talent show competition. Backstage after the show last Saturday, Chantelle grabbed my goodies bag and blurted out: I want a prize, too! Mrs. Bosco put a clamp down on that situation, though. She told me right in front of my ten foster brothers and sisters that I can’t give away any of my prizes (which included a one-year scholarship to the Harlem School of the Arts after-school programs, dinner for six at Maroon’s restaurant, as well as shoportunity gift certificates from Barnes and Noble, Radio Shack, and the Girlie Show Boutique).

    Staring at the big pile of magazines messily stacked next to Chantelle’s bed, I start to feel bad that I can’t buy her more Sistarella and Word Up! magazines for her collection. (There is nothing Chantelle loves more than to sit on her bed and flip through grown-up magazines like she’s in college instead of third grade!) But Mrs. Bosco was right—The Cheetah Girls earned those prizes and the Cheetah Girls should enjoy them. And I’m definitely gonna be doing that tomorrow after school: me and my crew are going to the Girlie Show Boutique to cash in on the shoportunity of a lifetime, you know what I’m saying? I’m probably going to be doing cartwheels when I walk into that store! Right now, though, I walk over Chantelle’s big pile of clothing and open the top drawer of the bureau to pick out a sweater. Holding up my khaki ribbed turtleneck sweater, I notice a big hole right in the front. I stick it back into the drawer, because I don’t want to deal with that holey drama right now. See, here’s the real deal: ever since I was five years old, Mrs. Bosco has been bringing home bags of secondhand clothes, while we’re supposed to pretend that they’re new, even though most of them have stains or holes in them. I used to fall for that when I was little, but not anymore. One day, even my five-year-old sister Kenya, blurted out, I don’t want no more holey clothes.

    Suddenly I get a cute idea. I could put a brown poodle appliqué on the sweater to cover the hole. Yeah, that’ll work. Nah, maybe not. I already put a white poodle appliqué on my gray knit cap last week. I don’t want peeps to start wondering if I’m a dogcatcher working for the ASPCA. See, everybody knows that the Cheetah Girls are obsessed with dogs (only the cute, fluffy ones, though!). The bichon frise dog has become the Cheetah Girls’ mascot because Galleria has a white bichon frise named Toto. Luckily, frisky Toto impregnated Buffy, who belongs to her nasty neighbor, Mrs. Brubaker. As a result, the Cheetah Girls hit puppy payday: we won half of Buffy’s litter after Ms. Dorothea, Galleria’s mom and our manager, took Mrs. Brubaker to court to fight for custody. Of course, Chanel wasn’t allowed to take a puppy, because her mom, Ms. Juanita, wasn’t having it. (Ms. Juanita claimed she was allergic to dogs, even though bichon frise dogs are hypoallergenic.) But Ms. Juanita should have known that Chanel would get her way: for a whole week, Chanel walked around with her bottom lip stuck out so far she looked like a cuckoo bird. Ms. Juanita finally caved in and bought Chanel a bichon frise puppy from Dolly Dog Breeders in Hempstead, Long Island. Now cute little Prada is in the mix with Toto; my puppy, Nobu; Aqua and Angie’s puppy, Coco (in honor of Chanel’s middle name); and Galleria’s puppy, Ragu. And to top everything off, Galleria even wrote a song for our victory: Bow-wow Wow.

    Bow-wow Wow—that gives me another sweet idea: I can give the rest of the Cheetah Girls poodle appliquéd knit caps—for their Christmas presents. Then we’ll be the fluffy five for the holidays. Bow-wow Wow, Yippee Yippee Yay, Yay, I start humming cheerfully while looking for less holey sweaters in my drawer. I pull my brown long-sleeved T-shirt out and examine it for boo-boos. After it passes inspection, I close my bureau drawer real tight, just in case Chantelle gets any more messy ideas for our room. Now my mind is really percolating. Maybe I could make a felt flower appliqué decorated with sequined petals? Yeah, that would look tight, too. I start getting excited again and pull on my junior size–five blue jeans. (Yeah, that’s right, I’m shrimpy. So shrimpy that Chantelle and me wear the same size jeans even though she is two years younger. But she is not allowed to wear my clothes because then I would really go off.)

    Now Miss No-bloomers is sitting with her legs crossed Indian style like she’s on I Dream of Jeannie waiting for Aladdin to rub the lamp.

    You could at least put your denim skirt on. I shake my head. Why am I stressing? Chantelle shouldn’t be so upset that I’m not giving her any of my gift certificates. See, I definitely need to buy some books for school and some clothes without holes in them. And I’m definitely looking forward to that tasty meal at Maroon’s restaurant, with my crew and Mr. and Mrs. Garibaldi.

    As if she’s reading my thoughts, Chantelle turns up the volume on her complaining machine: I wish my birthday was coming up so I could get some presents, she moans loudly, like I’m supposed to feel sorry for her.

    "Okay, so I won a few prizes and my thirteenth birthday is next Saturday, I say, trying to reason with Chantelle. I got your message."

    "I got your message, Chantelle mimics, then throws out a not-so-bright idea: I’m gonna start my own singing group."

    I bite my tongue to keep from blurting out, Please don’t start singing now. After all, it’s not Chantelle’s fault that she sings like a hyena having a hiccup attack. Instead, I tune her out and think about the colors of felt I’m going to use to make the flower appliqués—peach, brown, plum—they would make a nice contrast against my khaki sweater. But before I get too creative, I check my supply box to see what color felt pieces I have left. These days, I’m guarding my design supplies like diamonds in the rough, because I don’t have duckets to buy more, and they’re dwindling fast. Plus, I know that Chantelle has been swiping some of my supplies. That’s why I started storing them in my locked metal file cabinet (even though I think she knows where the key is hidden, because sometimes I’ll go into the drawer and notice things have been messed with).

    As I step into my black Mad Monster combat boots, I fantasize about walking into

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