Read Campfire Cookies Online

Authors: Martha Freeman

Campfire Cookies (12 page)

“You don't sound like it,” she said.

“I know.”
I exhaled a long breath, and some of my anger went with it. “I'm sorry,” I said. “But didn't he think it was weird when you asked him?”

Lucy shrugged. “He did, but he said it was less weird than when you asked about party decorations in Silver Spur Cabin. What was that about?”

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

Vivek

Two strange things happened the third Friday I was at Moonlight Ranch.

First, my bunkmate Jamil came over to our table at lunch and sat down with his plate of food, and started talking all “hot Lucy this” and “hot Lucy that,” and he would not shut up.

Luckily, I had constructed a generous and filling turkey sandwich with provolone on a kaiser roll. It was
delicious; it kept me busy and diverted. Without it, I don't think I could have put up with Jamil's nonsense.

At last, Jamil said, “So she likes me, right? That means she likes me?”

I chewed and swallowed and sipped my ice-cold milk before answering. “I don't know very much about girls.”

“Why else would she bring up Lance's girlfriend?” Jamil asked.

“Maybe she likes Lance,” I said.

“That's ridiculous,” Jamil said. “He's a counselor. I think she was trying to be sneaky by bringing up girlfriends. She was hoping I'd volunteer information about myself. See?”

“No,” I said.

“Oh-h-h, so
now
I understand,” Jamil said. “You're jealous!”

“No,” I said again.

“Look, Vivek, don't feel bad,” said Jamil. “Some of us got it, and some of us don't.”

The kid sitting across from us was Luke, another of
my bunkmates. He is from Phoenix—and even so he hates the heat at Moonlight Ranch. Phoenix is hotter than here, so you'd think he'd be used to it, right? But not at all, and go figure. Now Luke started to laugh. “Got
what,
exactly, Jamil? Germs? Fleas? Cooties?”

I laughed too, and Jamil scowled. “You don't have to be insulting,” he said.

“That wasn't insulting,” Luke said. “Trust me, if I want to insult you, there'll be
no
question. Anyway, dude, seriously, I hope you and Lucy are very happy together.”

This shut Jamil up, and I got to enjoy the last bites of my turkey and provolone in peace. I made a mental note: Thank Luke.

It was after lunch that the second strange thing happened. It also involved the girls from Flowerpot Cabin.

Something was up with them. It's like they were
haunting
me.

Always before, I had liked Grace Xi because she is serious and good at things. I even gave her a present on the last day of camp last summer, a very small one. That yelling incident in the mess hall was strange, but since
then she had seemed as normal as any girl. I had been thinking sometime I'd go over and say hi during free time before dinner, but there was always some distraction.

Anyway, forget that. Now I know that she is crazy too. Never mind Lucy. Grace and Jamil ought to team up.

After lunch ends, there are fifteen minutes till siesta. That equals thirteen minutes to hang out with your friends and two minutes to sprint for your cabin so you don't get demerits. I was sitting on the top rail of the fence in central camp with Luke when Grace came up and said, “Hi, Vivek. Can I talk to you?”

I said, “You are already are,” and smiled. At this point I did not yet realize she's crazy.

“Just us, I mean,” she said, and blushed, which was when I became suspicious.

Luke hopped down from the fence. “I guess I know when I'm not wanted.”

“Hey!” I tried to call him back, but he waved without turning around.

Now Grace was really blushing.

“What is it?” I said.

“If I asked, would you do me a favor?” she said.

“Are you going to ask? Or is that just hypothetical?” I said.

“I'm going to ask,” she said. “And it's not just for me. It's for all of us in Flowerpot.”

“Okay,” I said. “Ask.”

Grace swallowed and looked at her feet. Finally, she said, “One day soon, someone will give you a plate of cookies and a sealed envelope. We want you to put them on top of your counselor's pillow.”

Whoa!
Did I just walk into a spy movie or something?

In fact, the request was so weird I might have laughed out loud except that Grace looked super-serious. So I said something entirely reasonable: “Why?”

“It doesn't matter why,” Grace said. “It's just a favor.”

“I can't do it if I don't know why,” I said.

“Why can't you?” Grace said. “Don't you trust us?”

“Trust is not the problem,” I said. “I might be happy to do it. But it's bad policy to agree to do things you don't understand.”

When she had blushed, Grace's cheeks had turned
pink. Now they glowed positively red.
“I can't tell you!”
she said.

“So
I won't do it
!” I said.

I had mimicked her tone of voice, hoping she'd laugh, but this was a bad miscalculation. She stomped her foot—actually stomped her foot!—glared at me, and said, “Stupid
boys
!”

Then she turned and marched toward Girls Camp.

“Sorry,” I said to her retreating back. But I wasn't really sorry. I was thinking that girls sure can be unreasonable.

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

Olivia

Boys sure can be unreasonable.

Even a mostly nice one like Vivek.

It was the start of siesta, and we four members of the Secret Cookie Club were on our bunks. Grace had just told us Vivek's reaction to our request. Hannah could walk in anytime.

“I've got bad news too,” Emma said. “I checked with Mrs. Arthur, the cook, and she said she can't give campers
permission to use the kitchen, only counselors.”

“That problem at least is easy peasy,” I said. “We will ask a counselor to help us.”

“But what counselor?” Emma asked.

“I have an idea, and I'll let you know at dinner,” I said. “The real problem is who's going to put the cookies on his pillow, and I'm afraid there's only one solution.”

“What?” Grace asked.

“We do it ourselves,” I said.

“But girls aren't allowed in Boys Camp!” said Grace.

“Are you forgetting the sentries?” said Emma.

“They'll never catch us,” I said. “We will move like the wind.”

“And by ‘we,' you mean
who
exactly?” Emma asked.

“I mean all of us—
duh.
We are in this together.”

My bunk was on top and Emma's was beneath me. I rolled onto my belly and hung my head over the edge of the mattress to look at her. Just as I suspected, she was rolling her head side to side on her pillow, shaking it
no
.

Ever since we started PFHL, I had been waiting for Emma's natural-born bossiness to come roaring back.

Now—at last—it had.

“With all due respect, O,” she said, “it doesn't make sense for us to trek through Boys Camp in a big galumphing herd, carrying a plate of cookies.”

“Galumphing?” Grace said.

“So we'll tiptoe,” I said, “tiptoe really, really, really
fast
.”

Across the room on her own bunk, Lucy giggled.

And Grace said, “I don't like that plan, O. Emma, what's yours?”

“You go,” Emma said.

“Wait,
what
?” said Grace. “By ‘you,' do you mean
me
? Tell me you don't.”

“I can't tell you that because I do,” said Emma.

“Wait, what?” said Lucy.

“And she's not the only one who's confused,” said Grace.

“Look,” said Emma, “of all of us, Grace is the most coordinated, not to mention the most agile, and the strongest.”

Grace said, “Uh . . . thank you? I think?”

“Plus you're the smallest,” Emma said. “You can get in and out of that window no problem.”

“You want me to break in through the
window
?” Grace said.

“Well, how else?” Olivia asked. “It's not like they'll be leaving the door open and the welcome mat out.”

Grace was on the bunk above Lucy. Now she rolled over and propped herself up on an elbow to see my face. “O, don't tell me you like this plan too?”

“Emma is making a lot of sense,” I said.

“Thank you,” said Emma.

Grace rolled onto her back and spoke to the ceiling. “Emma
would
be making a lot of sense except for one crucial fact. I am a coward.
Not
courageous.
Not
brave. In other words, freaked out at the very idea of crossing the border to Boys Camp.”

“That does pretty much define ‘coward,' ” said Emma.

“Don't be silly. You're not a coward,” I told Grace. “You told me off in front of everyone in the mess hall at lunch.”

Grace shook her head. “That was bad temper, not courage.”

“I know—maybe you could harness the power of your bad temper to make you brave,” Emma said.

“You want me to get mad at a plate of cookies?” Grace asked.

“Get mad at Vivek,” said Emma. “He's the one who didn't do a favor for us; he's the reason you're running a terrible risk.”

“Grace could never get mad at Vivek,” said Olivia. “Right, Grace?”

“Oh yes, I could,” said Grace. “I don't even think I like him anymore. And I
don't
want to be sent home.”

“You don't have to do it at all, Grace,” said Lucy quietly.

“Yes, she does too!” I insisted.

“Romance is overrated,” Lucy said. “Hannah is better off without Travis
or
Lance.”

I sat up straight and eyeballed Lucy, who looked totally innocent lying there on her bunk. “Can the rest
of you
believe
what you are hearing?” I said. “Where would we even
be
without romance?”

I meant this to be a rhetorical question, which is the kind that doesn't need answering, but Grace started to answer anyway, something about how the word “romance” used to be from Rome.

I ignored this, swung my legs off the bunk, dropped to the floor, and began to pace. In case you can't tell, I was channeling every lawyer that was ever on TV.

“Without romance,” I began, “there would no Prince Charming and no fairy tales. There would be no plots to Disney movies. On Halloween, little girls would be forced to dress up as ghosts and vampires and the Mario Brothers because—
hello-o-o?
—what would be the point of
princesses
?”

I paused for breath, then raised my eyes to heaven . . . or anyway, the white plaster ceiling.

“Without romance”—I pivoted to pace the other way—“what kind of a world would it be? I will tell you what kind of a world. A world without proms! A world
without Valentine's parties! A world in which candlestick makers and florists and clerks in chocolate shops are
broke
and
homeless
and living on the
street
!

“And what about the poets?” I raised my hands overhead. “
Think
of the poor,
poor
poets! In a world without romance, they would have nothing to write about except the trees and the weather. And who would read those poems? Not me!” I pointed at myself. “And not you either!” I pointed at Emma, who dutifully shook her head.

“Without romance,” I continued, “there would be no weddings, people! And you know what
that
means: No flower girls!”

I paused again, just like Mrs. Wanderling taught us in After-School Acting Studio, to gather myself for the big conclusion: “Where would the human race be without romance? I will tell you where! The human race would be . . .
extinct
!”

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