| CHAPTER ONE
All Aboard!
I’m pretty sure my camp knapsack is not supposed to be levitating
off the sidewalk of Fifth Avenue. Whoopsies. I make a (somewhat)
discreet lunge for one of the red straps and plant it back next
to my feet. Tee hee.
My mother, who is fortunately too busy eyeing the parked camp
buses lining the street to notice my infraction, asks, “Do
you know where you’re going?”
“Yes, Mom,” my sister says, rolling her eyes. “We
know how to read. We’re both on the same bus. The sign says,
‘Girls grades seven thru nine,’ and since that’s
both of us, that’s where we’re going. Unfortunately.”
Miri is not happy about being shipped off to Camp Wood Lake for
seven weeks. She’d much rather stay in the city, free to spend
the summer as she pleases, which for her would be helping the homeless.
Which is her cause de jour. Unhappily for her, she can’t help
the homeless when she is being shipped off to a summer camp filled
with spoiled rich kids. Those are her words, not mine. I’m
perfectly happy to spend the summer with spoiled rich kids. No,
wait. That didn’t come out right. What I mean is, I’m
perfectly happy to be going to camp, because I’m perfectly
happy doing anything these days. Deliriously happy. Jumping-on-couches-like-they’re-trampolines
happy.
Why? Because I’m finally a witch!
No, not witch as in mean or cranky. I don’t pull my sister’s
hair or rip off her Barbies’ heads. (Not that either of us
still has Barbies. Okay, fine. Not that I still play with them.
Sure, they’re in a bag at the back of my closet, and I sometimes
take them out just to see how they’re doing, but that’s
it, I swear.) I am not that kind of witch. I have powers, like Hermione
and Sabrina. Like my sister. And my mother.
We found out in February that my sister was a witch. My mom, who
chose to live her adult life as a nonpracticing witch, had never
mentioned anything about this particular family trait because she
was hoping her powers would somehow skip over her kids. And for
a while it looked like they had with me. But oh no, they didn’t.
Both of us our witches. Finger-snapping, broom-riding, spell-canting
witches. Yes! And since I am a witch, nothing that can possibly
happen this summer can burst my bubble of glorious happiness. I
mean, hello? I finally have magical powers! I can zap up anything
I want. More handbags? Presto. Tastier food? Kazam. Friends? Zap!
Nah, I probably won’t cast spells on any wannabe friends,
since enchanting individuals is so morally wrong. But I could if
I wanted to.
Why? Because I’m a witch!
But even if nobody in my bunk wants to be my friend this summer--and
I don’t see why they wouldn’t, since none of them goes
to my school and therefore none of them knows anything about my
previous social mishaps (we were a bit wild and carefree with Miri’s
powers in the early days)--I’m not going to care.
Why? Because I’m a witch!
Even if Raf doesn’t fall in love with me this summer--yes,
Raf Kosravi, the hottest guy in my class and, I should mention,
the love of my life, is going to be at Wood Lake too--so what? It
will be his loss.
Why? Because I’m a witch!
Okay, that’s a lie. Not the witch part (yay!), but the part
about Raf. I’d care a lot if he doesn’t fall in love
with me. But you get my point. My ego has gained about seven hundred
pounds since I discovered my magic last month at prom. My mom and
sister were thrilled for me, of course.
Thrilled that I was happy—and thrilled that they would no
longer have to listen to me complain about not having powers.
For the first week after prom, I could not resist zapping everything
in sight. Lights. The television. Miri’s stuff. “I’m
doing it, I’m doing it!” I cheered while gleefully lifting
her pillow.
Which is when my mom walked in and told me that I’d better
relax with my magic. “If you want to go to camp, you have
to promise to control yourself.”
“Of course,” I promised. “But check it out!
I’ve finally got game!” Since my mom scores frighteningly
low on the hip-ometer, I had to explain. “Technique. Ability.
Style.”
“Got it,” she said, and left the room. And that’s
when the pillow exploded. Feathers and Miri’s pink pillowcase
shot across her room like confetti.
“Sorry,” I squealed.
“Game over?” Miri screamed, cowering against the wall.
“Tiny accident,” I said sheepishly. “Don’t
tell Mom.” I didn’t want our mother to have any excuse
to keep me home and away from Raf.
Where is he, anyway? I step up on my tiptoes and peer first into
the busy street, and then into Central Park. The six waiting buses
are supposed to be picking up all the campers coming from Manhattan,
but unfortunately, Raf doesn’t seem to be one of them. I know
he’s going to be a camper at Wood Lake this summer. Her told
me he signed up. And he’s been going for years.
So where is he? There are certainly lots of other cute boys, though.
Not that I’m looking.
Oh, no, my heart belongs to Raf.
Honk! Honk! Honk!
It’s so loud in this city. And the noon sun is scorching
and everyone looks uncomfortable and sweaty. Unlike Miri, I’m
seriously looking forward to getting off of the disgustingly smoggy
island of Manhattan. Good-bye school, subways, and skyscrapers.
Hello summer, suntan lotion, and sleeping bags!
My mom grabs me in a hug. “You two are going to sit together,
right?”
“Yes, Mom, we’ll sit together,” I say from under
her left armpit. She’d better not mess up my flawlessly applied
mascara or perfectly straightened hair. It took me half an hour
to get my ocean of a head to look this flat, and this is probably
the only time all summer my hair will be de-rippled. I
bought myself one of those mega-popular ceramic hair straighteners,
and let me tell you, it makes my hair look flatter than the sidewalk
we’re standing on. But no matter how much I begged (I’m
talking down-on-two-knees pleading), my annoying mother was convinced
I’d burn down not only my cabin but the entire camp and forbade
me to bring my flat iron with me. She spent the past month mucho
paranoid that I was going to burn down our apartment, and every
time I emerged from my room minus my normally fuzzy crown, she ran
straight inside to make sure I’d unplugged the iron. I don’t
know what her problem is. I’ve only left it plugged in once.
Okay, twice, but still, I never started a fire.
Wait a sec. What am I even worried about? If my hair gets curly
I can just zap it straight. Hah! Straightening irons are for mere
mortals. I am a witch. An über powerful, glorious witch.
Crap. My stupid knapsack is rising again. Why is it doing that?
I pull away from my mom to grab it, but this time I swing it over
my left shoulder to keep it in place. I furtively look around the
crowded street to make sure nobody saw my uplifting experience.
Nope. People do not appear to be scratching their heads in confusion
or gasping in shock. Whew.
Lex, my mom’s new boyfriend, returns from finding a parking
space and takes hold of her hand. They’ve been inseparable
since they started dating. Whenever I see them, they’re holding
hands, gazing lovingly into each other’s eyes, or they’re--
“Ugh,” Miri says. “Can you please stop smooching
in public? It’s going to make me carsick.”
“Bus sick,” I say, and cringe. Now that would make
a great first impression. Still, I don’t blame my sister one
bit. All that smooching is, well, nauseating. And yes, my mom and
Lex are kissing. Right here. On the street. They’re always
kissing. They kiss in the kitchen when they don’t realize
we’re watching. At restaurants when they forget we’re
sitting across from them. On Fifth Avenue between eighty-fourth
and eighty-fifth when we’re leaving for camp. Not gross, open-mouth
kisses, but little constant love pecks that are highly embarrassing.
I mean, really. I can’t help but notice that random kids and
tourists keep glancing over at the pair and grimacing. This is one
of the reasons I begged my dad and stepmom not to come see us off
today. If it freaks me out, imagine how it would weird out my dad?
The other reason is that my mom would have to talk to Jennifer,
and my dad would
have to meet Lex, and for some reason the idea of the four of them
being on the same street, never mind the same continent, makes me
want to hide under my covers. Divorce issues, anyone?
My mom giggles. Ever since she hooked up with Lex (or Old Man
Lex, as Miri and I call him secretly, since he’s like a hundred--okay,
fine, probably only fifty--and because his bushy eyebrows and the
eight strands of hair left on his head are gray), she’s been
doing a lot of giggling. “Miri,” she
says now, still clutching Lex’s hand, “you’ll
keep an eye on your sister this summer, right?”
“Hey!” Is it normal that my mother is asking Miri,
two years my junior, to look out for me? I think not.
“I want her to make sure you’re careful with your”--she
lowers her voice--“Glinda.”
Is Glinda a doll? A Barbie that I’m insisting on taking
to camp despite the risk of other campers mocking me for my infantile
attachment? Nope.
Glinda is my mom’s new code word for magic. And yes, she
named it after the
good witch in The Wizard of Oz.
“I promise, Mom,” I say. “I’ll be careful
with my Glinda.”
Lex looks at my mom and then at me. He obviously has no idea who
this Glinda is and why I have to take such good care of her. As
close as they’ve become, Mom still hasn’t told him her
deep dark secret. But since she never told my dad, I wouldn’t
hold my breath waiting for her to spill the beanies to the new man
in her life.
She runs the bitten fingernails of her free hand through her short
tinted blond hair. “Please don’t play with it, except
if you absolutely have to.”
Whatev.
“Have fun, girls,” Lex says, squeezing both of us
on the shoulder. Even though he spends every day with Mom, he hasn’t
quite reached the potential-stepfather, hug-the-daughters level
yet. As nice as he is, we’re not just going to start hugging
some old man. Fine, he’s not that old. But he’s pretty
old.
“Take care of our mom, Lex,” I say while tugging on
Miri’s wrist. “Let’s go.”
“Will do,” he says. “Have fun, and remember
to write to your mom.”
“We will!” I sing as I inch closer to the bus. Time
to get this party on the road!
My mom makes a hangdog face. “’Bye, girls. Love you.”
“Love you!” Miri and I say simultaneously as we lean
into yet another group (minus Lex) hug.
“I’ll miss you,” my mom says, her voice catching.
Aw. Oh, no. Itchy eyes! Itchy eyes! No, don’t, don’t
. .
“We’ll miss you too,” Miri says, and bursts
into tears.
Sob. My tears are so going to mess my mascara, run down my cheeks,
my neck,
and make my hair frizz.
###
“Name?” asks the pen-chewing teen standing in front
of my gateway to happiness, aka the bus door. The ponytail of her
long blond hair is peeking out of her Mets baseball cap, and she’s
chomping on the end of the pen like it’s a pretzel.
“Rachel Weinstein.”
Chomp, chomp. “What grade did you just finish?”
“Ninth,” I say proudly. I’m going into the tenth
grade. That is so old. I’ve practically graduated. I’m
practically in college. I’m practically an adult. Next thing
you know I’ll be driving my own car, having kids, sending
them to camp. Omigod, that is so cute! My kids going to the same
camp that I went to! The same camp that I’m going to, if this
pen-chewer ever lets me onto the bus.
“You’re an oldest Lion then.”
Roar? “Alrighty.”
She takes another bite of the pen and it explodes into a navy-blue
mess on her lips.
“Um, you got some ink on you,” I tell her.
She touches her face, then stares at the sticky blue on her fingers.
“I hate when that happens,” she says with a sigh. She
ticks off my name and sighs again. “I’m Janice, your
unit head.”
I have no idea what a unit head is, but apparently it’s
stressful. “Hello, Unit Head Janice,” I reply.
She studies her clipboard and sighs yet again. “You’re
going to be in bunk fourteen. And who are you?” she barks
at Miri.
As Miri introduces herself, I skip up the three steps into the
excruciatingly hot bus. The backseats are filled with sweating and
chattering teenage girls, who all abruptly stop talking the second
they see
me. They collectively look me up and down--I have no idea why, since
we’re all wearing the same assigned pale brown Camp Wood Lake
cotton T-shirts and matching shorts--and resume their conversations.
Of course, at first I balked at having to wear any kind of uniform,
but these aren’t too bad. A little boring, but not awful.
The shirt says Camp Wood Lake in bubbly white and orange letters,
and underneath there’s a cute drawing of a girl and boy in
a white canoe. The shorts just say Camp Wood Lake across the butt.
Anyway, the glossy Welcome to Camp brochure instructed that we’d
only have to wear it today and during any out-of-camp trips. The
brochure also came with a funky DVD that flashed images of all the
camp amenities (tennis courts, lakefront, Arts & Crafts, indoor
swimming pool) while playing set-the-mood camp songs in the background,
like Greenday’s
“Time of Your Life” and Frankie Valli’s “Stay,”
in the background.
Some of the seats in the middle are empty. I look for a place
where Miri and I can sit together. Thank goodness she’s on
this bus. Imagine if I were all by my lonesome and had to sit by
myself! I’d be known all summer as the girl who had to sit
by herself because no one wanted to talk to her. Just as I’m
about to scoot in an empty row, the tall brunette sitting three
rows back stops talking to the two girls behind her, turns her head,
and waves at me.
Huh? I look behind me to see if she’s motioning to someone
else. Nope, just me. Unless she’s a nutcase who waves arbitrarily.
Or maybe she’s just done her nails and is air-drying?
“Hi there,” says the girl, speaking right at me. “You
can sit with me, if you want.”
I am dumbfounded. The girl is smiley and not at all loserish-looking.
Her layered curly dark hair is tied into a low ponytail, bangs clipped
back, showing off clear skin, bright blue eyes, and a big smile.
Plus she’s friendly. “Sure,” I say, plopping myself
down on the sticky leather seat next to her. Perfect! Miri can sit
in the empty row across the aisle. It will be just like we’re
sitting together . . . except not.
“I’m Alison,” the girl says.
“Rachel,” I tell her.
“This is Trishelle and Kristin,” she says, motioning
to the two girls in the row behind her.
“Hi,” I say, not believing my luck. I’ve only
been on the bus for thirty seconds and I’ve already met three
people! Trishelle has long highlighted hair and is wearing a lot
of makeup. I’m talking foundation, bright pink blush, heavy
lip liner and a thick ring of eyeliner. I hope it won’t melt
right off her face. Next to her is Kristin, whose cropped short
blond hair, tiny features, pearl earrings (which my mother would
never in a million years have let me bring to camp), remind me of
a Connecticut housewife. “What bunk are you guys in?”
I ask.
“Fifteen,” Trishelle and Kristin say simultaneously.
“You?”
“Fourteen.”
“Me too,” Alison says with a big smile.
Wahoo! This nice girl who invites me to sit with her for no reason
is in my
bunk!
“Rachel!” my sister calls. “I got us a place
up here.”
I turn to see Miri claiming the front row. “Mir, I’m
sitting back here. Come join us,” I say, pointing to the empty
row next to me. Instead of skipping over to me--come on, Miri, get
with the program!--my sister glares my way. “I’d rather
stay in front in case I get nauseous. It’s less bumpy.”
There is no way I’m budging from this spot. “All right,
but I’m right back here if you need me. My little sister,”
I explain to my new friends. New best friends? Soon-to-be best friends?
“So,” I begin, “is this your first—”
I’m interrupted by the blue-lipped Janice, who has motioned
to the bus driver to close the door and is now looking nervously
around the bus. “You’re all here, right?” Janice
then points at each of us while silently counting. “All right,
you seem to all be here. Everyone ready?”
“We’re ready,” announces Trishelle.
Janice’s blue lips stretch into a half-smile. “Ready
to start the summer?”
The girls around me all holler and applaud.
“Then let’s get this bus rolling!”
As the driver pulls onto the street, the girls cheer. I feel like
cheering a bit too, but I don’t want to look weird. Ah, what
the heck. “Yay!” I pipe in. I lift my knees into a fetal
position and place the soles of my pink sneakers against the back
of the seat in front of me. “Is this your first
year too?” I ask my new BFF.
“No way,” Alison says. “My ninth.”
“Wow.”
“I know. I started going when I was seven. My older brother
had been going to Wood Lake for years, and I begged my parents to
let me come as soon as I was old enough.”
“Were you in the starter program? My step-sister is doing
it next month.”
“Nah, that’s new.” She gives me a big smile.
“So how did you hear about Wood
Lake?”
When I was dating Will Kosravi(don’t blame me for going
out with the love of my life’s older brother; blame a love
spell gone wrong à la Miri), he happened to mention that
he was going to Wood Lake for the summer, and I happened to mention
it to my stepmom, who was trying to get some alone time with my
dad and decided it would be ideal if Miri, Prissy, and I went off
to camp. “Through someone at school,” I answer, not
quite ready to spill my heart. She might be my new BFF, but I’ve
only known her for ten minutes. “Is your brother still at
camp?”
She shakes her head. “Not anymore. He’s twenty-three
and in med school.”
“That’s a big age difference.”
“Half-brother,” she explains. “His dad got remarried
to my mom.”
A divorce in the family! We have something in common besides being
in the same bunk!
“It sucks that he’s not here, actually, cuz he was
head staff. Hey, your sister is motioning to you,” Alison
tells me.
I look up and, indeed, Miri is frantically waving. "What's
wrong?"I call to her.
Come here, she mouths.
Five minutes, I mouth, holding up five fingers, then
turn back to Alison. “Sorry, go on?”
“Well, it was great when he was here. Our bunk never got
in trouble for anything. Last year we were raiding the kitchen and
Abby, the head of Koalas caught us, but my brother begged her not
to rat us out.”
“Lucky. What was your brother head of?”
“Waterfront. Swimming and Boating.”
While I’m intrigued by the idea of boating, I’m not
really looking forward to the swimming part of the summer. I mean,
I know how to swim, sort of, if you count cooling off in my dad’s
pool after suntanning. And I can hold my head underwater for at
least six seconds. That has to count for something, right? At least
I have two cool new bathing suits, a funky black-and-white one-piece
and a sexy orange bikini. I also brought an old stretchy one-piece
that belonged to my mom, which I am only planning on wearing when
I have no other options, because that’s like sharing a used
tissue.
Anyway.
“Your sister is trying to get your attention again,”
Alison says. “Is she okay?”
She’s certainly giving me a cramp. A cramp in my style.
“I’ll be right back,” I tell Alison, then carefully
maneuver my way down the center of the bus and into the seat next
to Miri.
She looks an alarming shade of green. “I don’t feel
well. I think I might--”
And that’s when she throws up all over herself, the seat,
and me. |