Not a Happy Camper (12 page)

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Authors: Mindy Schneider

BOOK: Not a Happy Camper
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“That's so cool!” Philip said. “Can I come over and see it?”

“She had to take it down,” I explained with regret. “One of the incense sticks touched one of the sheets and burned a little hole in
it and we decided it might be a good idea not to torch another bunk. But it was pretty cool. Now she smokes outside by the cesspool.”

Philip wrinkled his nose.

“At least it hides the smell. Oh, and ‘Betty Gilbert has all the personality of a head of cabbage.'”

“I've got one,” Philip countered, then lowered his voice: ‘Kenny Uber is a conceited jerk.'”

“He is not,” I shot back. “I can't believe you said that.”

“Why?” Philip asked. “Do you still like him?”

He looked at me, stared at me, waiting for an answer even though he already knew it. What a relief when Maddy came walking into the dining hall with that same funny glowing look Julie Printz had worn coming out of the Hanky Panky Suite. My poor counselor. She got her thrills from doing paperwork with the boys' Head Counselor.

Dana and Aaron showed up a minute later, stopping by to check out the mess in and around the little closet under the steps.

“You two have been busy,” Dana noted.

I blushed and tried to explain. “We were just-”

“No need,” Aaron stated as Dana looked on approvingly.

“We were looking through stuff, okay?” I insisted.

Aaron peered in. “That door opens? Neat. What are all these papers?”

“Mostly stuff about old campers,” I filled him in.

“Any of them dead?” asked Autumn Evening, who'd just entered with the rest of my bunkmates. “No, don't tell me. I'll sense the vibe.”

“I can't believe you left me out,” Hallie said. “This is, like, my favorite thing.”

“Snooping?” Philip asked.

“Not snooping,” Hallie insisted. “I'm interested in information. It's like detective work.”

“Yeah, well, Encyclopedia Brown, you were off swimming.”

“Mindy, next time get me,” she said, picking up a few papers.

“How was it, anyway?” I asked.

“The usual,” Betty sourly chimed in. “We had to get out when the thunder and lightning started.”

Betty was dripping all over the artifacts and I determined it was time to shove them back into their boxes. Philip assisted and, as he gathered up the papers, his hands brushed against mine. A lot.

Upon returning to the kitchen, Walter was already working on the
Shabbos
meal, some sort of stew. I was pretty sure his stews had meat in them and was alarmed to see him throwing large chunks of cheese into the pots.

“That isn't really kosher,” I mentioned timidly.

“I don't care,” Walter told me. “You kids need the protein,” then he mumbled something derogatory about Saul under his breath. I liked Walter.

When the challah came out of the oven, we knew it would be amazing and Walter knew we'd be in a hurry to sample it. He warned us not to eat it hot, saying it was unhealthy, but the only thing that made it unhealthy was how good it tasted, prompting us to eat too much too fast and end up with cramps. Stuffed and sick, but not sorry for what we'd done, our group trooped back out to the dining hall, to lie down on the benches and recover.

“Wanna see something really old? From the first year of camp?” Philip leaned over and whispered to me.

“If it's a dead cockroach or something, not really,” I said, clutching my stomach in contented pain.

Philip pulled himself up and then reached inside his t-shirt, taking out a silver medallion at the end of a chain. It was shaped like the Star of David.

“They gave these out to all the campers that first summer. All twenty-five kids got 'em.”

I sat up and looked closely. The back was stamped
Camp KinA-Hurra 1922
. Now this was something. Not counting the other twenty-four, one of a kind. Because I have always been a very materialistic person, a hideous thought went through my mind:
If I marry him some day, maybe he'll let me have this.

I held it between my fingers and looked at it for a long time, during which Philip and I were face to face, but hardly seeing eye to eye. Although Philip was smart and funny and interesting, and probably the most perfect boy

for me, there was one insurmountable problem with him: Philip Selig wasn't Kenny.

But I wondered if there might be a way to use him to trade up.

“We're the girls that everybody knows
You can tell us by the color of our clothes
We come from the land where the wine
and whiskey flows
We're the girls from the Salvation Army!

7

I
T WAS AN EVIL PLAN
I
WAS CONCOCTING AND
I
WANTED TO CONFIDE
in my bunkmate, Hallie. It made sense that we'd begun spending a lot of time together. We were two of a kind (the kind whose grandmothers in Florida used words like “charming and smart” while showing our photographs to other old ladies with cataracts) and we both enjoyed doing the same stupid things.

Within the first few days of our arrival at Kin-A-Hurra, returning campers were talking about climbing Mt. Katahdin. Located a couple of hours away in Baxter State Park, Katahdin was the northern terminus of the Appalachian Trail. Everyone made it sound like it was some rite of passage to climb to the top. Hallie and I could not understand why. Why leave the bunk and ride all that way in the Green Truck just to do something so incredibly hard?

Thanks to heredity and the havoc it played on our bodies, Hallie and I already faced enough obstacles in our lives so we invented our own, more manageable mountain to conquer. Down by the flagpole, tucked away behind some overgrown weeds, was the lone Girls' Side archery target. Archery was more hazardous than necessary as Girls' Side wasn't particularly well laid-out. There was no safety net behind the target, only a little dirt hill. Just above the hill, opposite Bunk Eight (the one with the good showers), was the basketball court. On sunny days, when one might be inclined
to pick up a bow, it was common for campers and counselors alike to be out on the basketball court. Not playing, of course, but lying on beach towels, slathered in baby oil, clutching tin foil reflectors and soaking in the rays. With the ozone layer still believed to be intact, there was no such thing as “too much sun,” but bathing beauties did have to worry about being shot through the bikini by the errant arrow of an overzealous camper.

Hallie and I called this little dirt hill Mt. Katahdin and were proud of the fact that we could run up and down it twenty times in a row. The real mountain was thirteen feet short of a mile high and we'd heard that some clever person had built a thirteen-foot rock pile on the peak to compensate for the difference. Hallie and I built a thirteen-
inch
rock pile on the crest of our Katahdin and took pictures of each other, with our Kodak Pocket Instamatic cameras, waving from the top. Sometimes we would take a break from running up and down to pick flat rocks from the pile and rub them against our noses, pretending this would somehow remove, or at least reduce, the big bumps we each sported.

Girls' head counselor Wendy Katz adored Hallie and this was yet another situation that made me incredibly jealous, but I couldn't blame her for preferring my compatriot. Hallie was like those products advertised on TV, the “New & Improved” version of me. Sure, she was going through an awkward stage now, but Hallie was confident that one day she'd be beautiful, holding no doubt that she'd eventually grow into her features. When I was with Hallie, we would go into Girls' Headquarters where Wendy lived in a back room, eat Humpty Dumpty brand potato chips from the blue and yellow five-gallon tin barrel Wendy had swiped from The Point and talk about the future.

“I'd like to be either an actress or a Supreme Court Justice,” Hallie announced one day. “But I'm not sure where you go to college for that.”

“Well,” said Wendy, “why not study both? Pick a place that has a drama department
and
a law school.”

“Law school?” Hallie looked confused. “You have to go to law school to be a judge?

Wendy nodded. “Usually.”

“So what's the best college that has a law school and a drama school?”

“Probably Yale,” Wendy said.

Hallie's eyes lit up. “Great. I'll go there.”

I didn't want to come right out and say I wanted to be an actress, too. My turn as Frau Schmidt hadn't exactly wowed anyone and, anyway, I knew it was an impractical choice. But I definitely didn't want to go to law school. If I'd known the word “stultifying” back then, I'd have used it to describe the rare visits to my father's office. Fortunately, I had a back-up plan.

“I think I want to do something in television,” I said. “I read about this company, A.C. Nielsen. They rate TV shows. People watch TV and then say if they thought it was good or bad. Do you think that's a job? Professional TV watcher? I'm not sure where you'd go to college for that.”

“I think you can watch TV anywhere,” Hallie said, and turned the conversation back to herself.

Wendy was the oldest person I'd ever hung out with, even older than my counselor, but as much as I appreciated Hallie getting me into places, sometimes I kind of resented my bunkmate's presence.

Then, one morning, a wonderful thing happened. Hallie woke up with a hideous rash on her rear end. We knew immediately that it was impetigo, as the “tushy plague” had been running rampant among the Junior Counselors. Although she refused to admit it, Hallie liked to hang out in the JC's bunks so she could poke around for information and she must have picked up the ailment on one of her missions. While the rest of my bunkmates and I were
content with reading
Betty and Veronica
comics, Hallie preferred the juicier stuff found in counselors' letters to and from their boyfriends, the hand-written pages filled with angst, detailing troubled relationships.

We knew where she went looking for these. Though she claimed to have no knowledge of Emily Herskowitz's heart-breaking split from her long-distance long-time beau, the jig was up when Hallie broke out in the telltale ass rash. To prevent her from spreading it to the rest of our bunk, Hallie was quarantined in the infirmary and forced to stay in bed watching
Andy Griffith Show
reruns. According to her diary (in which
I
later snooped), it was the highlight of her summer. With Hallie temporarily out of the way, I could try to get Wendy to myself, maybe even ask her for dating advice, but I found I was facing a dilemma.

I had taken to occasionally joining Maddy on her early morning jogs to Boys' Side. On this morning, while waiting on the porch for Maddy to wake Jacques, I overheard Kenny and his bunkmate, Chip Fink, talking on their way to the shower house.

“So y'over her yet?” Chip asked.

“I never liked her. She's a priss,” Kenny insisted. “I like the outdoorsy type, y'know? I mean, as long as she's got big knockers.”

There was a girl a year ahead of me in school who'd been trying for a long time to get a boyfriend, but nobody seemed to want her. Then, when she finally did get one, lots of other boys became interested. Remembering this while listening to Kenny and Chip, I figured if having a boyfriend makes you more enticing to other boys, then being with Philip, or at least looking like I was with him, might make me look good enough to make Kenny take a second look. It was all so simple—unless it was more than mere coincidence that the girl a year ahead of me in school became
popular right around the time she experienced a sudden growth spurt, her cups ranneth over, and that was why all the boys came a knockin'. In which case I didn't stand a chance.

Boys' Side was a busy place, even this early, with people coming and going. I looked up to see Jim Norbert, the man who'd built the Ferry, strolling down towards the lake, toting a sizeable coil of dirty rope over his shoulder. Jim was the quintessential Mainiac, a rugged mountain man, prematurely weathered and cantankerous at the age of thirty-five. Standing six-foot-three with not an ounce of fat on him, he looked like what they had in mind when flannel was invented. I'd seen him on the second day of camp, fixing the broken Girls' Side toilets. When I was informed he was the Head of Maintenance, I assumed he wasn't much good at his job. I'd since learned his real passion was running weeklong canoe trips. This also held little interest for me until I found out he was Kenny's idol.

“Hi, Jim,” I called out and waved.

“Mornin',” he nodded as he readjusted the weighty rope.

Jim was a man of few words, not a big help as I was trying to learn more about him in my attempt to impress Kenny.

I knew that Jim lived in a rusty old trailer by the side of US Route 2. I'd stopped by one time, on my way back from an emergency trip to O'Boyle's when I ran out of Juicy Fruit gum.

“You live here?” I asked, trying to sound surprised, even though I was essentially stalking him.

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