Silver is for Secrets (2 page)

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Authors: Laurie Faria Stolarz

BOOK: Silver is for Secrets
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She points to the bloody splotches on my bed.

I fish my bathrobe from the recyclable pile of laundry on the floor. “I‟m gonna go take a shower.”

“At least this‟l teach you not to go digging for treasure.” Amber clutches Superman extra tight, one of her numerous mini raspberry-red pigtails poking right into his eye.

I respond by closing the door behind me.

two

After a shower and a cleansing walk on the beach, I head back to the cottage. To my surprise, everyone is up. While PJ overnukes box after box of microwavable egg-and-cheese sandwiches in the kitchen, Amber butter-and-Nutellas the toast; Chad flips through the sports section of the
Cape Cod Gazette
in the adjoining living room; and Jacob watches TV.

Jacob pauses from channel surfing and comes to greet me with a kiss. “Hey, beautiful.”

“Hey there,” I say, pressing myself into his embrace, like a breath of fresh ocean air.

“Enough already,” Amber says, dunking her finger into the Nutel a jar and licking a giant fingerful. “If the cook‟s not getting any action for breakfast, then nobody else should either. It‟s a matter of respect.”

“Say no more, butter biscuit.” PJ says, licking his greasy finger. “I can cook for hours.”

“I‟m hardly in the mood for string beans.”

I hear the blow dryer click on and off a couple times in the bedroom. Drea has this thing about blow-drying her hair upside down so that it goes all wild, and then she spends the next hour and a half putting each strand back in place, one by one.

Chad pauses from his newspaper to glance down at Jacob‟s grip on my hand, making me almost feel like I should pul away. But I don‟t. It‟s just so weird to be vacationing al together. I mean, it‟s one thing when you‟re in school, in classes, in the cafeteria, and pretending it isn‟t unbelievably awkward to see your ex with someone else. But it‟s a completely different thing when your ex is dating
his
ex a n d
that
ex just happens to be your best friend. Then, toss in the added awkwardness that comes with living together and, before you know it, your current significant other can feel completely ex-ed out. Translation: Chad and I are exes.

Chad is dating Drea. I am dating Jacob. We‟re al vacationing under one roof.

Jacob is sensing our drama.

I squeeze Jacob‟s hand and lead him over to the table to set it up. Meanwhile, PJ

has apparently aborted his microwave-egg-in-a-box idea, having pulled a carton of real eggs from the fridge. He‟s attempting to fry them in a spaghetti pot.

“So how‟s the snout?” Amber asks me. “Me and Drea were super scared for you. I mean, you looked like a freakin‟ chainsaw massacre.” PJ revs the blender a couple times for drama. “Amber told us all how you picked your nose to its bloody death.”

I ignore him and look toward Jacob, sensing that he can tel something‟s wrong, something beyond just a normal nosebleed. He stares at me hard and bites the corner of his lip, almost as though he expects me to get right down to it. But I look away, trying to keep things light. For now at least.

“I‟m fine,” I say, plunking a couple plates down on the table.

“Wel , that‟s a relief,” Amber says. “Just let me know if I‟l need to do anything drastic, like wear a raincoat to bed tonight.”

“You
could
move in with PJ,” I say.

Amber turns to look at him, at the egg yolk he‟s got dripping from his chin. “I‟l take your primitive habits over his disgusting ones any day.”

“They‟re hardly habits,” I say.

“Whatever,” she says. “Me, you, and Drea, bunking in together, just like old times

—it‟s real y the only surefire way to keep everybody from kil ing each other.” She definitely has a point, which is why we did end up with the parent-friendly sleeping arrangements.

“Or maybe, my little temptress, it‟s just your way of safeguarding yourself from taking advantage of me in the middle of the night.” PJ snarls at Amber.

“Oh, please,” Amber says. “If I had to room with you—”

“What?”

Amber grabs an egg from the carton and cracks it into the spaghetti pot-turnedfrying pan. “Any questions?”

“So you‟re okay?” Chad asks. “I mean, you don‟t need to see a doctor? My dad had to get his nose cauterized.”

“He must have quite the picker,” PJ says, faking a dig by scratching the side of his nose.

“I‟m fine,” I say, clearing my throat.

“Yeah,” PJ repeats. “She‟s fine. I mean, it‟s not like she started whizzing the bed again.”

“Or puking her guts up,” Amber says, as if we need the reminder.

“Or anything else juicy.” PJ dips his fingers into the bowl of eggs he‟s beating, pulling forth a handful of the slimy white part. It oozes through his fingers and drops back into the bowl in one gooey plop.

Sometimes I absolutely despise my friends. They‟re talking about last year when I was puking non-stop—a side effect of the nightmares I was having. And the year before that when my nightmares were causing me to wet the bed.

Jacob continues to stare at me. I know he wants to talk about my nosebleed. I want to talk about it, too. Just not right now—not in front of everyone like this. I mean, this was supposed to be a fun vacation, a stress-free summer.

A walk on the normal side.

“So why is everybody up so early?” I ask, in an effort to change the subject.

“It wasn‟t by choice,” Amber says. “After you left, PJ thought it would be funny to act like he was eleven years old again. So he snuck into our room to dunk my hand into a bowl of water.”

“So Miss Priss here goes al Fright Night on me and wakes the whole house up with her cowardly cries. I mean, seriously,” PJ says, smearing a knifeful of tartar sauce on his egg and cheese sandwich, “does she need to pay a little visit to the great and powerful Oz for a smidgen of courage?”

“No,” Amber says, “but maybe
you
should pay him a visit for a smidgen of maturity.”

“What‟s that supposed to mean?”

“If the pacifier fits.” She stuffs a fingerful of Nutel a into his mouth to shut him up.

“Don‟t go tempting me with your kinky ideas of seduction, my little vixen,” he says, happily licking up the chocolate on his lips.

PJ puckers up to Amber, but she responds by messing up his hair, the short, gravity-defying spikes bleached a Ken-doll platinum color—to go with the whole beach vibe, I imagine.

“Did someone say vixen?” Drea enters the living room and takes a seat next to Chad. She drapes her legs over his lap and over the sports section. And suddenly I‟m reminded of just why she spends so long doing her hair. I mean, it‟s perfect—

shampoo-commercial perfect. Shiny, bouncy, golden waves with just the right amount of tousling.

I grab a strand of my own hair, noting that it feels a little drier than normal and that I could probably use a trim.

The doorbell rings and Amber jumps from the table, practically trampling over everything in her pathway to the door—me included. “Maybe it‟s one of the fratboy yummies from next door. I thought I saw one of them scoping me out yesterday.” She pulls at the wedge in her Superwoman swim shorts, finger-counts her pigtails—

seven, her lucky number—and then whips the door open so hard that it crashes against the wall.

“Looks like someone‟s a little hard up,” Drea says.

Amber ignores the comment, her patty cake smile falling
splat
to the ground.

There‟s a girl standing there, maybe a couple of years younger than us but undeniably cute. The kind of cute you see on one of the shows on the WB—long and straight henna-red hair, heartshaped face with yellow-tinted sunglasses, super tight T-shirt with long bell sleeves, and one of those sarong things that looks like a skirt. I peek at Jacob to see if he‟s noticed, but he‟s completely zoned himself out, watching some talk show on TV, the audience barking in the background.

“Yeah?” Amber says.

“Hi. I‟m Clara. I was just wondering if Marcy and Greg are staying at this—”

“Wait,” Amber says, interrupting her. “Don‟t I know you from someplace?” Clara cocks her head slightly, as though trying to place Amber as wel . “Were you at the Clam Stripper yester—?”

“Forget it,” Amber says. She takes a step forward to look past the girl, hoping, I think, that she‟s brought along some WB-looking male friends. “Are you staying next door?” She points to the cottage at the right, where the fraternity guys have hung up their banner, the giant Greek letters marking their fratboy territory.

“Yeah,” Clara chirps, pointing in the opposite direction. “I‟m a few houses down.”

“Uh-huh.”

“So Marcy and Greg
aren’t
staying here?” Clara peeps at us over Amber‟s shoulder.

“Who?” Amber looks thoroughly annoyed now. She makes a big sigh and looks downward to assess the chip-page to her pedicure—pink and yellow checkerboards on one foot, yellow and white swirls on the other.

“Marcy and Greg,” Clara repeats. “They stayed in this cottage last summer.”

“Negative,” Amber says, taking another tug at her wedge.

“Oh, wel , sorry to bother you,” Clara says. “I just noticed that people had moved in and thought that maybe you were them.”

“Not so fast, my little Avon lady.” PJ steps in front of Amber, bumping her out of the way. He unfolds a napkin and throws it down over the threshold, red-carpet-like, to invite Clara in. “You couldn‟t possibly leave without experiencing my delectables.”

“It‟s not
that
kind of door-to-door,” Amber says.

“Don‟t mind her,” PJ says, extending a runny, half-cooked egg sandwich out to Clara. “She‟s al thorns and bristles. But do indulge yourself in a bite of my delights.

I hope you like tartar sauce.”

“The only delight you have to offer is a trip down to Beach Blanket Bagel to get us some
real
breakfast,” Amber says.

“Bristle bristle, spike spike.” He hisses at Amber.

“Hi,” I say, in an effort to save the girl from being preyed on by PJ. I introduce everyone, and Clara waves a hello.

“Where are you from?” Drea asks. She fumbles her way off Chad and his newspaper to come and greet her.

“Hartford,” Clara says. “But my parents are both from here originally, so we rent a place up here every summer. I‟ve already been here a week.”

“Great,” Chad says, doing that I-should-be-an-Abercrombie-&-Fitch-model thing with his hair. He threads his fingers through his sandy-brown locks, one strand conveniently landing just to the right of his eye—completely rehearsed. “So you‟l be able to fil us in on al the good spots.”

Drea pauses a moment to eye the inch of hula-girl tummy peeping out between Clara‟s T-shirt and sarong. She peeks back at Chad, totally catching him in a gawk.

“Definitely,” Clara says, propping her sunglasses up on her head like a makeshift headband. “You guys wil
love
vacationing here. Great clubs, cool stores. There‟s this amazing soda place downtown where they make the best ice-cream floats and frappes and stuff.”

“Sounds fattening,” Drea says, now scanning the slice of thigh peeping out from Clara‟s sarong.

“I guess it is,” Clara says with a giggle. She pauses to adjust the ties on her sarong—to cover her leg maybe. “But lucky for me, I don‟t have to worry about that.” She glances a moment at Drea‟s caboose.

“Is there a problem?” Drea asks, obviously noticing the butt check.

“Huh?” Clara cocks her head, feigning innocence.

“Don‟t mind her,” Chad interrupts. “It sounds like a great place.”

“Wel , we‟l have to go,” Clara says, with more giggles.

Drea clears her throat. She rests her head on Chad‟s shoulder and bats her eyes at him. “Let‟s go for a walk.”

“Okay,” he says, not moving.

“Now,”
she says, pouting her strawberry lips at him. “I feel like some beachy air.” Chad obeys, and they leave.

“I think I need some air, too,” Amber says. “That and a couple of frat boys to keep me busy. I wonder if they‟re hungry.” She grabs a plateful of Nutel asmothered toast slices.

“They‟d have to be starving,” PJ says, taking a bite of his egg sandwich.

“What‟s that supposed to mean?”

“You figure it out.” PJ col ects a couple more sandwiches from the table and goes off into his room.

“He‟s just bitter that I won‟t go out with him again.” Amber stuffs a couple tissues into her bikini top, right between her boobs, inside the cleavage. “It gets sweaty down there,” she explains. She flashes us a peace-sign goodbye and heads out.

“Wow,” Clara says, “I guess I real y know how to clear a room.”

“Not at al ,” I say, noticing how Jacob has left as wel . I hear the shower valve squeak on in the bathroom and assume that‟s where he is. “My friends are just a little
eccentric.”

“Wel , I real y
would
like to get together some time,” Clara says. “I mean, it‟s hard to meet people up here my own age. It‟s usual y just col ege kids and they don‟t normally want to hang out with a fifteen-year-old.”

“Wel , we kind of
are
col ege kids,” I say. “We just graduated from high school and thought it would be fun to rent a place together for a couple weeks this summer

—our reward for surviving the aches and pains of prep school.”

“Total y,” Clara giggles.

“But you don‟t look fifteen,” I add, noticing how she smel s like butterscotch pudding. “I mean, I would have said at least sixteen or seventeen.”

“Thanks,” Clara beams. “So can I give you my number? Maybe I can give you al a tour later.”

“Sure.” I hand Clara a napkin and a pen, and she scribbles her number across it

—circles with smiley faces for the zeroes.

“So maybe I‟l see you around later,” she says.

I nod and extend my hand to hers for a shake. And that‟s when I know. When I feel it. It‟s like my skin has iced over inside her palm. Like a mil ion tiny ice-needles have just splintered into my veins.

Clara is going to die.

three

Clara tells me she needs to head back to her cottage, and I just stand there, my hand stil tingling, stil frozen from her touch. There‟s a part of me that wants to just blurt it all out—what I‟m sensing, what I feel in my heart is going to happen to her.

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