“Oh, it’s Tracy Reed’s sister. Take a load off, Tracy Reed’s sister. You look tense. You need to re-laaax,” Drake said. The other kids laughed as though he was hysterically funny. I glanced at Tim, who was staring at his feet.
“Walk on the wild side, Tracy Reed’s sister.” Drake waved a bag of—I didn’t even know what—at me.
I made some lame comment about how I had to get to class, which Drake enjoyed riffing on for several seconds with lots of sycophantic chortles from his loyal groupies.
I started to leave, then turned back and called “Come on” to Tim, who was still staring at his loafers.
That was when he finally looked at me. “Fuck off, Samantha.”
Chapter Twelve
It takes me a while to shake off Tim’s visit, but things at Breakfast Ahoy come at you fast, and that helps.
Today, however, it’s all bad.
The morning also features a woman who becomes extremely indignant when we can’t allow her cockapoo to sit at the table with her and a man with two extremely cranky toddlers who throw the jam and sugar packets at me, and squirt mustard and ketchup into their napkin dispenser. As I walk home, I check my cell messages, finding one from Mom, still sounding peeved, telling me to clean the house: “Make it immaculate,” she emphasizes. And then “Make yourself scarce, as Clay’s bringing those donors over.”
My mother has never asked me to make myself scarce. Is it because I asked about Clay? I walk up the driveway, pondering this, then see the vacuum cleaner, still sprawled like a vagrant.
“Samantha!” Jase calls from around our fence. “You okay? Looks like life was tough today on the bounding main.”
“No sailor jokes, please. Believe me, I’ve heard ’em all.”
He walks closer, smiling, shaking his head. Today he’s wearing a white T-shirt that makes him look even tanner. “I bet you have. Seriously, are you all right? You look, uh, disheveled, and that’s rare for you.”
I explain about cleaning the house and making myself scarce. “And,” I say as I kick it, “the vacuum cleaner is broken.”
“I can fix that. Let me get my kit.” He jogs off before I can say anything. I go inside, ditch the sailor garb, and pull on a light blue sundress. I’m pouring lemonade when Jase knocks.
“In the kitchen!”
He comes in, carrying the vacuum cleaner in both arms like an accident victim, his tool kit dangling from one thumb. “Which is the part of your house that isn’t clean?”
“My mother’s kind of particular.”
Jase nods, raises an eyebrow, but doesn’t say anything. He sets the vacuum cleaner down on the tile, opens the toolbox, and cocks his head at it, searching for the right utensil, evidently. I stare at the muscles in his arms and suddenly have such a strong urge to reach out and run my fingers down them that it scares me. Instead, I spray the countertop with disinfectant and attack it with a paper towel. Out damned spot.
He’s got the vacuum cleaner fixed in less than five minutes. The culprit was apparently one of Clay’s cufflinks. I suppress the image of Mom wrestling it off in a frenzy of cougar lust. Then Jase helps me reclean the immaculate downstairs.
“Hard to feel I’m making progress when it was already so perfect,” he says, vacuuming under an armchair cushion as I adjust the already symmetrically aligned throw pillows. “Maybe we should get George and Patsy over here, use some Play-Doh and finger paints and then make brownies, so there’s actually something to clean.”
When we’re done Jase asks, “Do you have a curfew?”
“Eleven o’clock,” I say, confused since it’s just early afternoon.
“Get a jacket and your bathing suit, then.”
“What are we doing?”
“You’re supposed to make yourself scarce, right? Come get lost in the crowd at my house, then we’ll figure something else out.”
As always, the contrast between the Garretts’ yard and ours is extreme—Dorothy walking out of black and white and into Technicolor. Alice is playing Frisbee with some guy. Little shrieks and screams are coming from the pool. Harry’s whacking away at a T-ball stand, but with a tennis racket. Alice wings the Frisbee at Jase, who catches it easily and throws it to the guy—not Cleve-who-knew-the-score, but a hulking football-player type. I hear Mrs. Garrett saying loudly from the pool area, “George! What did I tell you about peeing in here?”
Then the screen door bursts open and Andy charges out, carrying about five different bathing suits. “Alice! You have to help me.”
Alice rolls her eyes. “Just pick one, Andy. It’ll be fine. It’s only a date.”
Andy, a pretty fourteen-year-old with braces, shakes her head, looking near tears. “A date with Kyle. Kyle! Alice. I’ve never even been asked on a date and now I have. And you won’t even help.”
“What’s up, Ands?” Jase walks over to her.
“Kyle Comstock. From sailing camp? I’ve practically capsized the boat looking at him for three whole summers now? He asked me to go to the beach and then the Clam Shack. Alice is completely and totally no help whatsoever. All Mom says is to wear sunscreen.”
Alice shakes her head impatiently. “C’mon Brad, let’s get wet.” She and the football-player type march off toward the pool.
Jase introduces me to Andy, who turns anxious hazel eyes on me. “Can you help? No one should have to have a first date in a bathing suit. It’s unfair.”
“You’re right,” I say. “Show me what you’ve got.”
Andy spreads the bathing suits out on the ground. “Three one pieces, two bikinis. Mom says the bikinis are out. What do you think, Jase?”
“No bikinis on a first date.” He nods. “I’m sure that’s a rule. Or should be. For my sisters anyway.”
“What’s he like?” I ask, surveying the other suits.
“Kyle? Oh, well, you know. Perfect?” She waves her hands.
“You need to be more specific, Ands,” Jase says dryly.
“Funny. Sporty. Popular. Cute but doesn’t act like he knows it? The kind who makes everybody laugh without trying too hard.”
“That one.” I point to the red Speedo.
“Thank you. What about after we swim? Do I change into a dress? Do I put on makeup? How do I even talk to him? Why did I agree to do this? I hate clams!”
“Get a hot dog,” Jase advises. “They’re cheaper. He’ll appreciate it.”
“No makeup. You don’t need it,” I add. “Especially after the beach. Throw some conditioner in your hair so it keeps the wet look. A dress is good. Ask lots of questions about him.”
“You have saved my very life. I shall be indebted to you for all eternity,” Andy says fervently, and streaks back into the house.
“I’m fascinated,” Jase observes in an undertone. “How did you decide which suit?”
“She said sporty,” I respond. The skin at the back of my neck gives this little twitch at the sound of his voice so close to my ear. “Plus her dark hair and tan skin with red. I’m probably jealous. My mom says blondes can’t wear red.”
“Here I thought Sailor Supergirl could do anything.” Jase opens the door to the kitchen, motioning me in.
“Sadly, my powers are limited.”
“Can you make sure this Kyle Comstock is a good guy? That would be a useful power.”
“You’re telling me,” I say. “I could use that one with my mom’s boyfriend. But no.”
Without saying anything further Jase heads for the stairs, and, snake-charmed again, I follow him up toward his room, to be met in the hallway by a very wide-eyed Duff. He has the family chestnut hair, slightly long, and round green eyes. He’s huskier than Jase, and a lot shorter.
“Voldemort has escaped,” he announces.
“Hell.” Jase sounds upset, which, considering that info about Harry Potter is old news, seems odd. “Did you take him out of his cage?” Jase is at the door of his room in two strides.
“Just for a minute. To see if he was gonna shed his skin soon.”
“Duff, you know better.” Jase is on his knees, peering under the bed and the bureau.