Six
F
OR a minute no one spoke. Then everyone spoke at once.
“Too much!”
“Wow!”
“That’s really neat!”
Confused, Jordan glanced from face to face. “What do you mean?” she asked.
“How can you sit there looking innocent when you know that your boyfriend is moving here?” Laurie burbled.
“Yes, but . . .”
“But what a neat thing to happen!”
“It is?”
“Don’t you play innocent with us, Jordan Starling,” Carmen scolded. “You mean to tell us that Ryan, the guy of your dreams, is actually moving here?”
“Well, yes, but . . .”
For once, Jennifer had nothing to say. She only sat, wide-eyed, listening.
Carmen forged ahead. “Imagine living under the same roof with your very own boyfriend.” She faked an exaggerated swoon. “How
romantic
.”
Jordan’s brain began to whirl. Her friends weren’t laughing at her! Why they’d hardly heard the part about her summer vacation where she tried to confess the truth about
not
meeting him in the mountains. All they could talk about was that he was moving here. She couldn’t believe how lucky she was! Of course, they still thought that Ryan was her boyfriend, but she’d clear that up some other time.
“Calm down,” she warned her friends. “It’s been a long time since we’ve seen each other and I have no way of knowing how he feels about me.”
“Laurie dismissed Jordan’s comment with a wave of her hand. “If you were crazy about each other this summer, then the feelings will return.”
“I can’t be sure.” Why didn’t her friends back off? She didn’t want to make up any more wild stores she’d regret later.
“You’ll know for sure in a few weeks,” Jennifer said, giving Jordan a skeptical look. “Who knows how you’ll feel about each other when he arrives? Too bad you haven’t been writing all this time. That way you’d have some idea.”
Jordan’s blood ran cold. Trust Jennifer to think of the one thing that could expose her made-up stories. “You’re right. We’ll just have to wait and see.” Jordan scooped up her books, suffered through another round of good wishes from her friends, and then beat a hasty retreat to the bus stop.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Jordan couldn’t remember ever dreading a holiday more than that particular Thanksgiving. Ryan and his mother were arriving the next day and Jordan still hadn’t told her friends the truth. Even having her father home to carve the turkey didn’t make up for how rotten she felt. “More mashed potatoes?” her Dad asked from his chair at the head of the table.
“No, thanks,” she mumbled.
“Are you all right?” her mother asked. “You’ve hardly eaten anything!”
Jordan quickly smiled at Mrs. Starling. “I’m just fine. Maybe I nibbled too much when I was helping you cook.”
“I hope that’s all it is. Goodness, we don’t need you getting sick with Ryan and Beth coming tomorrow.” Jordan’s mom frowned.
“Right. I sure don’t want to get sick.”
Jamey piped up from across the table with, “Gee, just looking at her makes me sick.”
“Not funny, young man,” Mr. Starling told him with a note of warning in his voice. He directed his next words at his wife. “I’m sorry I won’t be able to hang around the airport until their plane lands, but mine leaves for Germany earlier in the day. I tried to post-pone the trip, but I couldn’t.”
“How long will you be gone this time, Dad?” Jordan asked half-heartedly. She’d been too pre-occupied with her own troubles to think much about her father’s upcoming business trip.
“Until mid-December. I’ll be home for Christmas.”
“You’ll have plenty of time with Beth and Ryan then,” his wife assured him. “I don’t care if they stay with us forever.”
“Me either,” Jamey interjected. “Do you think Ryan will like my snake?”
Jordan rolled her eyes. “All boys like snakes,” she said meanly. “After all, that’s what you’re made of—snakes and snails and puppy-dog tails.”
“Well, it sure beats sugar and spice,” he countered.
“Now you two stop bickering,” Mrs. Starling directed. “I want us to be thankful for each other.”
“I’m thankful,” Jamey insisted. “I’m thankful there’s another boy moving into this house tomorrow.”
Jordan stuck out her tongue. It was bad enough that Ryan was showing up on her doorstep, but what if he was as much of a pest as Jamey? What if she hated him?
Her kid brother was a nuisance, but she didn’t realize how much of one until later that day when she entered her bedroom, lost in her thoughts. She heard snickering coming from under her covers. She flung back the comforter and found Jamey buried in the sheets with a flashlight and her diary. “You sneak!” Jordan exploded.
Jamey tossed book aside and scrambled beneath the bed.
Jordan dropped to all fours and attempted to grab hold of him. “How dare you read my personal diary! You know the rules.” The family rules had always been very firm. Private property was off-limits. No one could borrow without permission or snoop in another’s things.
Jamey scooted away from her. “It was an accident,” he whined.
“An accident! You were deliberately reading my diary.”
“Well, you shouldn’t have left it open on your bed . . .”
“That’s no excuse. Come out here right now.”
“Only if you promise not to hit me.”
“Hit you? You’ll be lucky if I don’t
kill
you!”
Jamey again scooted away from her grasp. “Let me out from under the bed and we’ll talk about it,” he bargained.
Jordan knew it was impossible to grab him, so she stepped back. Jamey climbed out, but kept the bed between him and his sister. “We’re going downstairs right this minute and tell Mom what you’ve done. You know how she feels about sneaks.
Jamey’s brown eyes had grown wide with fright. “If you tell on me, then I’ll tell on you.”
Jordan paused, a prickling sensation shooting up her spine. “What do you mean?”
“You’re the sneak,” Jamey accused. “I read what you said about Ryan to all your friends.”
Jordan gasped.
“I just read a few pages,” he added hastily. “I didn’t read the whole book. If you don’t tell on me, I won’t tell on you.”
Jordan was trapped and she knew it. “You’re a real brat, Jamey Starling. But I may let you off this time,” she said grimly.
A smile full of mischief lit up his face. “Then it’s settled. You don’t tell and I won’t tell.”
She hated to give in to him, but she knew she had no choice. “Just get out of my room,” she ordered.
Jamey sauntered toward the door and then paused. “Of course, I figure you’ve got more to lose than I do.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“I mean it may cost you something for me to keep my mouth shut.”
Jordan studied him through narrowed eyes. “Don’t play games, Jamey.”
“I’ve got kitchen clean-up this week and I want you to take it for me,” Jamey said.
“No way!” she exploded. “That’s blackmail!”
“It’s negotiation,” he corrected. “I see them do it on TV all the time. You trade in an old car and bargain for the price of a new one. Then after you negotiate, you compromise,” he added. “How about kitchen duty for the next three days?”
She weighed the alternatives. She didn’t want her parents to find out all her fibs and fantasies about Ryan. She didn’t want to give in to Jamey either. But it was the lesser of the two evils. “Three days,” she told him through gritted teeth. “Just three days.”
A bright smile lit up his face. “My lips are sealed.”
Jamey scampered from the room. With shaky hands, Jordan retrieved her diary, locked it, and buried it in the deepest drawer of her bureau. Maybe it would be best if she never wrote in it again. But then who would she tell her thoughts to? She couldn’t tell her mom. Or even Laurie. There was no one. And confessing to the diary had given her some sort of outlet. Oh, why had she ever opened her mouth in the first place?