2006, Camp Wawa, Week One âOkay! So we all learned something important from last nightâs fiasco,â Darian begins, having corralled the entire staff of counselors to the field beside the pavilion. Meanwhile the campers are suitably distracted with pancakes and sausages, and grossly exaggerated versions of the vampiric, winged beast that tried to kill the occupants of Cabin Nine.
She pauses to look around the group, her index fingers pointed outward. Itâs her signature move before she asks for audience participation. âWho can tell me what it was?â
âDonât run into a cabin full of sleeping kids screaming, âRun for your lives before the bat kills you!â?â Colin, a tall dark-haired guy, calls out. All the counselors laugh.
All except Christa.
âI did not say that!â she bursts with indignation, her face heating to match the color of her camp T-shirt. âThatâs not what happened.â
âNo. Well, yes, Colin, technically, youâre not wrongâyou should never say anything along those lines. And perhaps there might have been a more orderly way of waking the children to deal with last nightâs situation,â Darian hazards, lifting her hand in the air to stall Christaâs next words of defense.
The first eardrum-splintering shriek had come within seconds, as little Teegan looked up to see the wiry black body cowering in the corner directly above her head, a mere two feet away. A chorus of shrill screams soon joined in, as we scrambled to pull all five girls sleeping on top bunks down, to take cover below.
The next few anxiety-laden seconds felt like they were happening in slow motion, as the bat lifted off and fluttered around the cabin for a few laps before swooping toward Christa. Armed with our pillows, we took turns swinging at it until finally it sailed through the open door and toward the trees.
But the damage had been doneâten terrified little girls who took hours to drift off once again, along with disturbed rest for the ninety other female campers who were awoken by the high-pitched alarm. Plus Darian, of course, came speeding across the campgrounds in a golf cartâdressed in an Elmo nightshirt and hiking boots, her short blonde hair standing on endâto find out what was going on.
âLetâs take this as an opportunity to remember to shut your cabin door fully when youâre going to the restroom at night, okay?â Darian says. âSimple mistake, I get it! But guess what, everyone? Weâre in the woods, and bats live in the woods! Itâs part of nature. Itâs fine. We can coexist in harmony, as long as they donât get into our cabins.â
My eyes flash to Christa before averting them to the grass. When Darian asked for a rundown of exactly what happened, I was bracing myself for trouble. I assumed Christa would rat on me for sneaking out to meet up with Kyle.
But instead, she went along with the lie, nodding vigorously when I explained that I saw the bat fly in just as I was coming back. Maybe she felt partly responsible, because sheâs the one who left the door open. Either way, at least she didnât throw me under the bus the first chance she got.
Thereâs another dramatic pause from Darian, another index-finger point. âAnd why donât we want bats in our cabins at night, besides the obvious creepiness?â
Avery lets out a yelp and then, âEw . . . gross, Eric!â Heads spin to see Eric hovering over her shoulder from behind, a frothy white substance dripping from his mouth and onto her shirt. Thereâs another round of laughter around the group.
âBecause bats carry rabies,â Kyle offers innocently, as Eric holds up a can of whipped cream and then swallows. And grins at Avery.
âHow did you get . . .â Darian shakes her head. âNever mind. Yes, Kyle, you are correct. Bats can carry rabies, and while the cases are rare, we canât have bats hanging around our sleeping kids. Bats have very small teeth and itâs possible the kids wonât realize theyâve been bitten, especially as deep as they sleep after their days here. Weâre feeling pretty confident that none of the girls came into contact with our furry little friend last night thanks to quick action by our counselorsââ
âRun for your lives!â that Colin guy calls out.
âBut,â Darian spears him with a warning glare, âhad they not noticed it right away, it would have spent all night in there with them.â
I shudder at the thought.
âThen weâd be dealing with a very different situation, involving calls home and a lot of shots. So please remember, keep your cabin doors closed, report any tears in the window screens, and letâs all start doing visual checks around our cabins before lights-out from now on, just to be on the safe side. Okay, everyone?â
Mumbled agreement sounds.
âGreat. Also . . . I happened to notice that one of our golf carts was missing last night. Yâall know that the golf carts are not to be used at night for anything except emergencies. Iâm not aware of any other emergencies last night, so whoever forgot that rule and borrowed it,â her sharp blue eyes float between Eric and Kyle, who are studying their shoes, âplease donât do it again. Okay!â Darian claps her hands. âTime to finish up with breakfast and get a move on! Itâs gonna be another hot, sunny day!â
The counselors disband at a leisurely pace, the promise of sweltering heat not as motivating as Darian seems to think it should be.
Kyle hangs back to fall in line with me, his walk more a swagger, his thumbs looped casually into his shorts pockets. âSounds like you had way more fun than I did last night.â
âIf thatâs what you want to call it.â My eyes are sore from lack of sleep and Iâm sure my bags match the ones under Christaâs. âI tried to sneak out after Christa fell asleep.â
His chest lifts with a deep sigh of relief. âThat makes more sense,â he murmurs, and then smiles.
I frown. âMore sense than what?â
He shrugs, nudging his shoulder against mine. âI thought maybe you changed your mind.â
âAbout what? Jumping off a cliff at night?â I mock-gasp. âNever.â
He dips his head, and a shy smile touches his lips. âThat, or . . . I donât know, about this?â
This being us.
I canât help but laugh at the suggestion. Does Kyle not feel my gaze glued to him whenever heâs in my line of sight? Does he not notice the stupid grin that takes over my face every time our eyes meet?
He lets out a soft chuckle and then shrugs. âI donât know. I was standing there, waiting for you, and I started thinking, and . . . yeah . . .â Beautiful molten eyes meet mine again, and in them I see a vulnerability I hadnât before. Or perhaps it wasnât there before. Perhaps it took him standing on the path in the dark, waiting for me, for doubt to seed itself.
Had our roles been reversed, had I been the one waiting, and he didnât show . . . A hollow pang stirs in my stomach with just the thought. And that tells me two things: one, that Iâm already falling hard for Kyle.
And two: that itâs not just me.
My pulse begins to race as I reach out to trail my fingertips over his forearm. âNo, thatâs definitely not it. I was just trying to avoid getting grilled by Christa.â I add, more to myself, âWhich I failed at spectacularly.â
His hand slips around to smooth over the small of my back, ever so quickly, before falling to his side. âWhat did she say?â
My eyes drift to the pavilion, to Cabin Nineâs candy-floss-pink picnic table. Christa stands over the campers, hands on hips, evaluating their plates to decide if theyâve eaten enough. She said a lot last night, but what was most unsettling, what I havenât been able to gain more information about yet, is what we ended with. âThat you lied about that robbery.â
âWhat?â He smirks, and his gaze flips to her. âShe doesnât know what sheâs talking about.â
Itâs more calculating than curious, I realize, studying him closely, his brow pinched with wariness.
Heâs wondering what she knows.
Which means thereâs something to know.
I watch him as I say, âShe also told me to ask you about your father.â
He canât hide his reaction fast enoughâthe way his smirk falls and panic flashes in his eyesâbefore smoothing his expression.
âWhat did she mean?â I ask as casually as I can.
His jaw hardens with tension as he stares at Christa from across the way. She must sense it because she glances over at us, her own eyes narrowing on him in a quiet challenge before she averts her gaze.
âWhat else did she say?â he asks quietly.
I toy with the idea of playing dumb but decide against it. Kyleâs too smart for that and I doubt heâd appreciate it coming from me. âThat sheâs the only one here who knows the truth about you.â
His shoulders sink.
An unsettling feeling begins to take over. âAll right, Iâm officially starting to freak out. Whatâs going on? Did you do something?â
âNo, I didnât do anything. Itâs just . . .â He shakes his head and sighs again. âItâs my family.â
âWhat about them?â
âTheyâre . . .â His throat bobs with a hard swallow. âTheyâre not like yours. Or anyone elseâs here, Iâm guessing.â Kids are beginning to get up and carry their dirty dishes to the nearby trolleys. Soon theyâll come charging out. âLook, can we talk about this later?â
âI guess. As long as you tell me whatâs going on.â Because now that the questions are out there, not having the answers will drive me insane.
He sighs. âMeet me on the path tonight. Iâll tell you everything.â Thereâs no missing the resignation in his voice.
I watch him trudge away toward his kids, his head hanging.
What could be so wrong with his family?
I donât bother trying to sneak out this time.
Seven minutes after lights-out, when the last girl has drifted off, I slip down the ladder and pull on my sweatshirt.
Christaâs flashlight is shining on her open book, but I feel her gaze on me.
âIâm going to talk to him,â I whisper, and walk out, pulling the door shut behind me.
She doesnât stop me.
I rush along the path, my arms curled around my weary body. The camp is eerily quiet at night, the spruce and hemlock trees casting ominous shadows against the propertyâs lights.
Kyle is waiting where he said he would be, leaning against a tree, a cigarette burning between his fingers. âHey.â
Butterflies stir in my stomach. Iâm feeling oddly shy all of a sudden. âHey.â
I expect him to pull me into him and lay a teasing kiss on my lips, but he hangs back. âDid Christa give you problems again?â
âNo.â
âGood. Come on.â He nods to his left and I notice the golf cart.
âI thought we werenât allowed to use those after lights-out.â
âYou want to walk all the way up there?â He points toward the dark, wooded path.
I shake my head and slide in. âIs there any rule you actually do follow at Wawa?â
âUh . . .â He appears to be thinking hard. âLet me get back to you on that. I canât think of any at the moment.â
I laugh as we take off, rounding the same winding path through the trees, the only light provided by the dull headlights. The trip to the cliff isnât nearly as long as it seemed the first time. Weâre parking and climbing out in minutes. Kyle uses one of the campâs battery-operated lanterns to guide us up the narrow footpath, until we reach the same large rock from our last time here. He sets the lantern on a higher crop of stone, allowing it to bathe the area in dim light.
Itâs eerily quiet here at night. I much prefer the daytime, I decide. Though Iâd sit here in a torrential downpour if it meant being with Kyle.
He slides another cigarette into his mouth.
âYou know smoking is bad for you, right?â
âSo Iâve been told.â I catch his smirk in the flash of his lighter as he lights the end.
âNo cliff jumping tonight?â
âYou wanna go?â he asks through a puff, his intense gaze on me. âWe can go.â
I take in the inky sky, the moonlight dappled through the clouds. As terrifying as it was in the daylight, I doubt I could dig up the nerve to leap into the darkness. âDid you actually jump last night?â
âNah. Wasnât much in the mood.â
Because he was waiting for me. Because he thought Iâd ditched him.
Awkward silence falls over us, this wedge that Christa managed to slide between us effective.
âSo . . .â Where to start this conversation, so I can put my mind and nerves to rest? âYour dadâs a government spy. Is that it?â
He chuckles softly. âThatâd be cool.â
âAssassin?â
âThatâd be even cooler.â
My thoughts have been lingering on this all day, as I tried to work out what would make Kyleâs smile fall so fast when I mentioned his father. Whatever it is, it canât be good.
âIs he alive?â
âYeah.â He adds more quietly, âUnfortunately.â
Thereâs only one other thing I can think of, one thing that might make Kyle ashamed to tell me.
I swallow. âIn prison?â
The long stretch of silence answers me.
I reach for him, setting my hand on his forearm. âWhatever. Itâs not a big deal.â
âRight.â He chuckles darkly. âWould you say that if your father were in an orange jumpsuit right now?â
That gives me pause. First, I canât imagine my father behind bars. Has he ever done anything to deserve to be? No, I canât imagine so. Heâs always going on and on about principles and morality.
âSo, whatâs your father in for?â
âDoes it matter?â
âYeah. I mean, my dadâs friend got nailed for fudging financials at his company to get more money from the bank. It was dishonest, and of course no one will go into business with him now, but I still see him around sometimes. People still talk to him.â Not my father, mind you, but I donât need to share that part. âAnd people end up in jail for causing car accidents that kill people. Itâs horrible, but itâs not the same as someone who, like, killed ten people and ate their organs. I mean, thatâd be bad.â
âYeah, about that . . .â Kyle is silent. For too long.
âOh my God.â My stomach falls.
âIâm kidding.â He reaches out to squeeze my thigh. âSeriously, Iâm kidding.â
I give his side a gentle elbow, but groan with relief. âSo then, whatâs he in for?â
âLetâs see.â He takes a long puff of his cigarette. âHe stole a bunch of equipment from the construction company he worked for and resold it. Mainly tools.â
âThatâs not the worst. I mean, no one got hurt, right?â
âIâm sure they had insurance,â he agrees. âBut it was that scam where he robbed a bunch of senior citizens of their life savings that really seemed to piss the judge off.â
I cringe before I can help it. âHe robbed old people? But, thatâs just . . .â
âUp there with stealing medication from sick children. Donât worry, you can say it.â Kyle kicks at a loose stone. âMy dad is a lowlife.â
I try to imagine the kind of man who would do thatâwhat he looks like, how he talks, what youâd see when you look into his eyesâand I come up empty. Iâve never knowingly met someone that vile. âWhen did this happen?â I ask quietly.
âSeven years ago. I was ten. It was the last time I came here. Couldnât afford it after that.â
Ashley did say that he and his brother stopped coming. I guess I know the reason why now.
Kyle has burned through one cigarette already. He lights another. âWe were living in Albany at the time. My mom was working at IHOP. She got fired because the owner figured she must have known what my dad was doing. He said he couldnât trust her.â
âDid she? Know, I mean.â
âSheâs never admitted to it, but she definitely had to know he was doing something shady. I remember this one day he came home on a Saturday night with this fat wad of cash. She had a big coffee can where she stuffed it in, then put it in the cupboard above the fridge. I asked her why she didnât just put it in the bank. She laughed and said sometimes you have to hide your money. So yeah, Iâd say she knew. But did she know he was stealing from old people?â He shrugs. âShe acted all horrified when news started spreading, but Iâm thinking it might have been an act. She visits him.â He studies a cut on his index finger. âShe finally stopped trying to make me go, though.â
I donât know what to say so I say nothing, and instead smooth a tentative hand over his back. His tension practically vibrates beneath my palm. He really must not like talking about this.
âBefore my dad got busted, things were okay. After, though, everything turned to shit. We got kicked out of our house a few months later, for not paying rent. We moved to Poughkeepsie, âcause thatâs where my mom grew up and itâs actually closer to Fishkill, where my dadâs at. We stayed with my grandparents in their tiny bungalow for a few months until my mom landed a job working reception at a tire shop. Now weâre in this apartment, above a Seven-Eleven. You know, in one of those strip malls.â
âIâm so sorry.â
He chuckles softly. âAbout living above a Seven-Eleven?â
âNo! I mean yes, but about everything.â
âYeah. It sucks. Thatâs why I like coming to Wawa. Itâs peaceful here. I can be someone different. Someone who doesnât have half their family in prison.â
I frown. âHalf?â
âOh, yeah. I forgot the best part, didnât I?â His gaze wanders out to the black skies. âMy two older brothers are in jail for trying to rob a fucking bank.â
My mouth drops open in shock. Iâm thankful for the darkness. âAre you . . . is that for real?â Or am I unwittingly playing another round of two truths and a lie?
âLook it up. Poughkeepsie Journal. They did a nice, big front-page spread with the three of them pictured side-by-side. Itâs titled âCriminal Gene Runs in Family.â â He swipes a hand through the air in front of him dramatically; his voice is thick with bitterness.
Heâd only mentioned a little brother before. âBut I thought you saidââ
âYeah, I lied. Iâm sorry. Iâve got three brothers. I just like to pretend that two of them donât exist.â He butts the rest of his cigarette out against the rock.
âSo that story about being in an armed robbery the first nightââ
âWas true. I was in an armed robbery. I just left out a few key details. Like, the part where my two idiot brothers told me to stay in the car while they went inside to take care of some bills and how I didnât listen. Big surprise, right? But it was January and it was cold, and the heat in that car barely works, so I said fuck it and I went inside, and found the two of them with pantyhose over their heads, pointing guns at the tellers. I knew it was them right away by their voices. It was surreal . . .â He shakes his head slowly, as if replaying it in his mind. âThey started yelling at me for not listening. Apparently they needed me to wait in the car so I could drive it away when they came running out.â He snorts. âThen they yelled at me to watch the security guard to make sure he didnât do anything funny. The poor guy was sixty-seven years old and theyâd taken his gun from him as soon as they came in. He wasnât gonna do anything.
âI told them to get the hell out of there before they got themselves into more trouble. They wouldnât listen . . .â They wouldnât listen. âI donât know what their plan was, but it went to shit, fast. Someone triggered the alarm for the cops and the place was surrounded in no time. They surrendered.â
âOh my God! Thatâs insane, Kyle!â
He studies the ground. âYeah, thatâs one word for it.â
I try to picture Rhett standing in front of a teller with a gun in his handâor something equally crazyâbut I canât. âWhat was going through your head during all this? Were you scared that theyâd hurt someone? I mean, theyâre your brothers.â
âHonestly?â His chuckle is low and sounds sheepish. âI remember wondering where they got those pantyhose from. Like, if they went out and bought them or took them from our motherâs dresser.â
I burst out laughing, and he joins in, releasing some of the tension in the air around us.
âSo, what happened after?â
âThe cops figured I was in on it, so they arrested me. Thatâs when I got scared. I thought Iâd end up in jail, too. But they dropped the charges after they reviewed the security tapes and witness statements.â
âAnd your brothers?â
âThey just got sentenced a few weeks ago. Nine years. Theyâll be getting out around the same time as my dad. Max will be thirty, Ricky will be thirty-two.â
âJust think, if you hadnât gone in when you did, you would have driven the car away.â If theyâd been caught, Kyle would be an accessory to an armed robbery. He would have ended up in jail, too, or juvenile detention, given his age.
I wouldnât be sitting here with him right now.
A sigh of relief runs through me.
âSo now you know why I pretend they donât exist,â he mutters wryly.
Even Rhett seems like a saint right now, despite the havoc he has caused in our family. âDid they at least apologize?â
He shrugs. âIn their own way. But they really fucked up things for Jeremy and me. Now every time thereâs a theft around school or the neighborhood, fingers are automatically pointed our way. Weâve even had the cops come by our apartment saying that so-and-so saw one of us in the area at the time. Thankfully we had proof that we werenât. Not sure whatâs going to happen the next time, when we donât.â He sighs. âSo, now you know the kind of lowlife trash I am, Piper. Weâre that family. Every town has one of them. The ones you canât trust, that you know itâs only a matter of time before they pull some shady shit.â
âYouâre not like your father or your brothers, though,â I rush to argue.
He laughs, but thereâs no mirth in the sound. âHow do you know Iâm not?â
âI just do,â I say with conviction, shoving away that tiny voice in the back of my head that wonders if I could be wrong.
His hard swallow carries in the quiet night as he fumbles with his cigarette pack, pulling another one out. He brings it to his lips but simply holds it there, unlit. âI found a dead cockroach in the box of Cheerios, the morning that I left to come here. Iâll bet you could never say that.â
I turn away to hide my cringe. Iâve never even seen a cockroach, alive or otherwise.
He casts his free hand toward the ground. âIâm wearing these shitty running shoes because I canât afford new ones until I get paid. My bumper is being held up by duct tape. And the best thing about coming to camp? Iâm not eating peanut butter sandwiches and ramen noodles five days a week.â Finally he gives in and lights the cigarette. His third.
I wish I knew what to say to comfort him, but I havenât the first clue. He speaks about a world I am entirely unfamiliar with, and itâs not what my mother deems ânormalâ life.
Itâs being outright poor.
I swallow my pity, because I know he doesnât want it. âDoes anyone else here know about your family?â Ashley doesnât, or she would have said something. Does Avery?
He shakes his head, his gaze off in the dark distance. âI didnât even tell Eric. It was nice, you know. No one knowing anything about me. I liked it that way.â
And now I know something big.
âI wonât say a word to anyone. I promise.â
He examines the end of the burning cigarette perched between his fingers. âDoesnât really matter anymore, now that Christa knows. She doesnât live too far away from me. She must have seen that news article and put two and two together.â
âI donât think you have to worry about her. She didnât even want to tell me. She actually held back.â
âWow. Christa holding back her opinion. Thatâs a first.â His voice drips with sarcasm.
I feel a twinge of guilt. âShe covered for me last night, too. With Darian.â Though the bat fiasco wouldnât have happened in the first place had she not tried to stop me.
His lips twist in thought and when he speaks again, his tone is much softer. âShe must really like you.â
Kyle might not want pity, but I canât help but offer comfort. âDonât worry so much about people finding out. No oneâs going to care.â I nudge his shoulder with mine. âI know I donât.â
âReally?â He tips his head to peer at me, and I can barely make out his face in the dim light. âThe girl who dated the captain of the rugby team doesnât care that her new guy is basically white trash?â
I sigh with exasperation. âStop saying that! You arenât that.â I frown. âAnd did you forget that my ex was a giant douchebag? Having rich parents doesnât automatically make you a better person.â
âFair point.â He kicks a loose stone away. âBut what would your mom say if she knew you were out here right now with me?â
âMy mom? She already knows Iâmââ I cut that sentence off, feeling my cheeks flush. My mother saw me fawn over Kyle. So itâs going to be the boy with the Mohawk, is it? she said, and she wasnât at all perturbed by that. Then again, she didnât know about his smoking habit or his tattoos, or that half his immediate family is behind bars. âShe wouldnât care.â
âRight . . .â Kyle murmurs, as if reading the doubt in my thoughts. He hesitates, and when he speaks again, his voice is soft. âDoes it make you wish youâd never taken my dare the first night here?â
When I announced that Iâm crushing hard on Kyle in front of everyone.
âNot even a little bit. Is that why you didnât want me to know about this? You thought I wouldnât want to be with you anymore?â
He bows his head and mutters softly, âSomething like that.â
âWell then . . . you canât read people nearly as well as you think you can.â
He lets out a slow, long sigh of relief, and then leans toward me.
My heart begins to pound in my chest.
But he stops himself. âIâm sorry.â He holds up his cigarette.
âI donât care.â I press my mouth against his with determinationâto prove how much I donât care. I revel in the softness of his lips, even tinged with tobacco.
He pulls back suddenly, to drop his cigarette to the ground and grind it out with his toe.
And then heâs moving for me quickly, turning his body, one hand sliding around to cup the back of my neck, the other one gripping the side of my waist.
There is nothing tentative or teasing about this kiss, his mouth smashing into mine with a hint of desperation. He beckons my lips to open and slips his tongue inside to move with mine, a deep moan rumbling from somewhere inside.
All day, Iâve had to restrain my hands, but I no longer have to, letting my fingers smooth over his body, familiarizing myself with the lean body Iâve been aching to touch freely for days.
He sucks in a breath as my fingers slip beneath his shirt, reveling in the warmth of his skin. Hooking a hand under one of my knees, he pulls me onto his lap to straddle him. The stone beneath my shins is hard and uncomfortable, so I wriggle my body to put my weight on his thighs. It earns his soft groan and a deeper kiss, his hands sliding down over my backside, the tips of his fingers trailing the hem of my shorts, teasing my thighs. I fist his T-shirt, itching to yank it off, my mouth working harder against him, my body aching for more.
He pulls me closer, until our chests are flush. His heart beats hard and his response presses against me farther down.
On instinct, I roll my hips against him, and the ache in my lower belly flares with even more need. All hesitation, all restraint is gone, that voice of reason silenced.
He groans, his hands sliding up beneath my shorts to grip each cheek. He squeezes as he pulls my hips against his.
And I want more. I want all of him.
Our mouths break free of our lip-lock at the same time, as if both of us suddenly realized how far and fast this could go tonight, right here atop this rock, if we donât show some control.
âWhoa.â He laughs.
I giggle. âI know.â
He leans in to press his forehead against mine, his hands now finding a safe place on the rock beside him. âWe have all summer.â
I trail his jawline with my fingertips. âYes. Definitely.â
âAnd this isnât the most comfortable place.â
âNo, it isnât.â I flick his lip ring with my tongue and he moans softly. âMy mom was right. I am going to love being a camp counselor,â I whisper, earning his throaty laugh.
He cups either side of my face and presses a sweet kiss against my lips. âAnd itâs only the beginning.â