The Last Academy

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Authors: Anne Applegate

BOOK: The Last Academy
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W
hen I met him at the ocean’s edge, I wasn’t scared…. The sea was black as ink under the night sky, lapping and gurgling against the dock posts, taunting me. But the water wouldn’t end my life. He would. A smile flickered across his face, like he could read my thoughts.

Y
ou couldn’t pick a better night for a pool party: fire-red sunset, a breeze so hot it practically sparked as it floated across the lawn, chips and hot dogs and watermelon lined up and ready to eat.

The whole thing was my best friend’s idea. Lia was exactly the kind of girl who belonged at a pool party — blond, tan, and bubbly. When we’d become friends, way back in second grade, she’d had buck teeth and I’d had a face full of freckles and long, brown hair. Now, seven years later, Lia’s chompers had morphed into a thousand-watt smile. I’d stayed freckled and dork haired.

Lia loved me because I was game to go anywhere and do anything. I loved Lia because she always had something fun to do. Like this party. It was one last fling before high school started. But really, Lia planned the whole thing so
Kevin Meyers would see her in a teeny bikini. Personally, Kevin struck me as kind of a bigmouthed jerk, but being part of Lia’s plots was like having a front-row seat to my own private soap opera.

As the party started, Lia made the rounds, greeting everybody with a big laugh and a hug. I hung back at the food table, checking to make sure everything was ready. Right away, I saw there was nothing to cut the cake. I dashed into the house, relieved to have something to do, and feeling kind of smug to know where the cake knife was. When I’d been in fourth grade, my parents didn’t get along so great. That year, I biked the five miles from my house to Lia’s practically every day. The stuff with my folks eventually evened out, but ever since, I’d more or less been adopted by Lia’s family.

I grabbed the knife and went out to set it on the table.

“Go put on your suit.” Lia elbowed me, frowning at my lavender skirt and white T-shirt. The basketball guys had just dropped in — about eight of them, all wearing cutoffs. Lia’s other friends, Brooke and Grace, were decked out in jeans and tank tops. Lia was the only one in a swimsuit. A brand-new cherry-red bikini, and it showed off her tan perfectly.

I went over to the lawn chairs, grabbed my bag, and made an act of riffling through it. I knew what I’d find.

“I can’t believe I forgot to bring it,” I had to tell her a minute later. By then Lia was asking Hank from basketball which of the four city high schools he’d go to next year. The question sent a zing of excited nervousness though me. High school!

Lia rolled an unbelieving eye at me. I tried not to act guilty. I hadn’t forgotten my swimsuit. It was right where I’d left it. At home. The thing was, lately I’d been … well, developing like a Polaroid picture. When I’d tried my suit on that afternoon, it didn’t fit. My plan had been to wallflower it up by the onion dip while Lia flirted with Kevin, who hadn’t arrived yet.

“Cam … den,” Lia whined. She adjusted her bikini and heaved a sigh. “My yellow swimsuit’s in the dresser. Go put that on.”

I knew the yellow suit. One-piece, old, and ugly. Lia wore it for swim meets last year.

“I’m fine,” I said.

“Please,” she whispered, smiling nervously as Brooke and Grace walked over. “I’m the only one in a suit. Super please?”

Lia made puppy eyes at me that were impossible to resist. So I nodded, and she hugged me, and I trudged into the house. The sliding glass door closed on Lia’s laughter as the basketball guys threatened to throw each other into the pool.

When I finally found the yellow swimsuit, stuffed in the back of Lia’s bedroom dresser, it was uglier than I remembered. It was even worse on, making me look like a weird fried egg, my thighs the color of the white. I spent a few minutes telling myself how nervous Lia was, waiting for her crush to show up, standing around practically naked, by herself. It wouldn’t hurt me to look a little ugly for one stupid party. Then I told myself Lia would totally owe me.

On my way out, I stepped on a bag from Girl from Ipanema swimwear shop. When it crinkled under my foot, I could tell there was something in there. Slowly, I pulled it out. It was a bikini, in a bunch of different shades of green. Lia must have bought two and decided last-minute on the red. That was so completely like her. Probably, with all the craziness of getting the party together, she’d forgotten to mention it.

I held it up in the mirror. Thing was scandalous pretty. I tried it on.

I actually look good
, I thought, shocked as I twisted and turned in front of the mirror. Unlike my swimsuit at home, this fit me perfectly. I mean, I didn’t even look like myself. And since my other option was fried egg …

I walked back to the party. At the sliding glass door, I had to do a little happy dance for my BFF — Kevin had arrived. He stood with Lia, right next to the Jacuzzi. He slouched as she talked, his hands in his jeans pockets, tossing his head every few minutes to get his glossy brown hair out of his eyes.

The underwater lights for the pool were on, and the sky was twilight. Hank peeled off his shirt, cannonballed into the water, and came back up, laughing. One of his buddies dove in after, and Grace laughed. Out of nowhere, Hank caught my eye and smiled at me. Completely giddy, I sort of pranced down the path toward Lia.

“Whaddaya think?” I asked, pointing at the suit and laughing. I thought Lia’d laugh, too. Instead, Kevin let out a low whistle.

“Whoa there. Niiiii-ce,” he said, checking me out. I blushed, embarrassed by his tone. I didn’t know what Lia saw in him. “You are smoking hot.” He grabbed my hand and spun me like we were dancing. I heard myself giggle, but I
could see Lia’s face going red. I was messing up her plan. Worse, I was hurting her somehow. I pulled my hand away.

“That’s not the yellow suit,” she said. “It’s my brand-new one.”

Brooke came over. “Isn’t that Lia’s new suit?” she asked, which made me mad, because Brooke was just saying it because Lia had said it. My best friend flashed the fakest smile I’d ever seen. It hit me like a ton of bricks: She hadn’t forgotten about the green bikini at all. She’d wanted me to look ugly.

I stood there, tensed up, meeting Lia’s eye. Then Kevin broke the silence.

“Whatever,” he said. “This party sucks. Wanna get out of here, Camden?”

That’s when Lia said, “No. She’s gonna go swimming.”

She smacked my chest, knocking the wind out of me. As my feet left the ground, I saw the first star, winking in the sky. And then I was in the Jacuzzi, getting water up my nose. My butt smacked the concrete seat, and I swirled down through the bubbles. Up there, they laughed at me. And right in that moment, I never wanted to be friends with Lia again.

F
ive days later, I was still fuming at Lia as I packed for boarding school. She hadn’t called to apologize, and I sure hadn’t called her. It was totally unbelievable she was going to let me leave for California without even saying good-bye. I was throwing clothes into a duffle bag when Mom came into my room, carrying a box. She sat down on my bed. I threw a last pair of jeans in the bag and sat down next to her.

“I found some things of yours,” Mom said. She handed me an old photo from my ninth birthday. It was a picture of the cake Lia had made me — homemade and lopsided, with
HAPPY BIRTHDAY CAMDEN
in Lia’s uneven icing scrawl. As it turned out, the cake was a water balloon covered in frosting. When I’d cut it, the whole thing exploded.

I didn’t touch the photo. Mom dropped it back in the
box, sighed, and pulled out an old teddy bear Dad had won for me at the fair when I was six. Downstairs, Dad was rummaging around in the kitchen. He wasn’t so great with good-byes.

“How are you feeling?” Mom asked, patting my hand.

I said, “Last night, I dreamed I was standing in the doorway of an airplane. I was up in the sky, and everybody was yelling, ‘Jump-jump-jump!’ But I didn’t have a parachute.”

I knew right away I’d said the wrong thing. I could see all the energy deflate out of my mom. Like she was a vacuum and I had tripped over her cord and unplugged her from the wall.
It’s just a dream
, I wanted to say. It was just a stupid dream. I had practically forgotten about it already. Nervously, I ran a hand through my newly short hair. What used to be wavy to my waist was now swinging below my chin. Good-bye, dorky, hello, new me.

Mom’s eyes scanned the carpet. This meant she had lots of things to say and was shuffling through to find one she liked.

I was already enrolled. I’d signed papers and taken tests. My dad had sent a big, fat check. Somewhere out there, a girl named Tamara Stratford knew I was supposed to be
her roommate, just like I knew she was supposed to be mine. I had to go. But I was scared. My parents, Lia, my old school, the small suburb of Minneapolis where I’d lived all my life — everybody and everything I knew stayed here. Only I was leaving. I could hardly breathe, I was so scared.

I wanted to crawl over and rest my head in my mom’s lap. Nestle right in and listen to her heart thudding away in her chest and smell the good smell of her. But I was fourteen years old and so I just sat there with my mom, who was usually a total chatterbox, and both of us were quiet.

Then she said, “Well, Camden. You don’t have to go if you really don’t want to.”

And that’s how I knew I was going for sure.

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