Six Moon Summer (2 page)

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Authors: SM Reine

BOOK: Six Moon Summer
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People turned to look at them, and Rylie stared harder at her shoes. A counselor broke away from the group. “You must be Rylie! Glad you made it!”

 

“Thanks,” she told the ground.

 

The counselor scanned her clipboard. “Let me see... there you are. Group B.”

 

Rylie’s dad slung an arm around her shoulders in a half-hug. She tried to inch away from him. “Do I need to check her in?”

 

“No, but it looks like her paperwork isn’t finished. Did you mail it in?”

 

“Uh... I might have forgotten,” he said.

 

Hope swelled within her. Maybe he hadn’t finished Rylie’s enrollment and she wouldn’t be able to stay. She could walk back down the hill, get in the car, go home, and pretend this camp thing didn’t almost happen.

 

“That’s okay,” the counselor said. Rylie peeked at her name badge. Louise. She looked like a high school gym teacher. “You want to come to camp and fill a couple things out?”

 

And all hope was gone.

 

“Sure!” he boomed. “Good day for a hike!” Rylie could have withered and died on the spot.

 

Louise clapped her hands. “All right, campers! Let’s catch up with everyone else!”

 

Rylie trailed behind everyone, watching the other girls in Group B while her dad chatted with the counselor. They all wore short-shorts and fake tans. One girl had a gold chain around her ankle with a single diamond, and Rylie glimpsed perfect white teeth when she talked.

 

Many of the people in Group B were from Rylie’s city, but they went to the private school, May Allan. Rylie’s parents would have sent her there, but it was too far from home. Seeing her potential classmates made her glad. Rylie was the richest kid in her class at school. She would have been a nobody at May Allan.

 

It was a long hike to the girls’ cabins, and Rylie was worried her dad would have a heart attack before they made it. Louise set a fast pace to catch up with the other groups. He barely managed to keep up.

 

Once they reached the camp, Louise directed them to a log building overlooking the lake. “That’s the office. I need to take Group B to their cabins.”

 

“I could just go home with you, dad,” Rylie said in a last-ditch effort to escape.

 

He laughed, bracing his hands against his knees to catch his breath. He seemed to think she was joking. “The paperwork will only take a minute, pumpkin. Why don’t you wait out here?”

 

She sat on one of the benches, smoothing her hair down with her hands. There was already a canoe out on the lake. Rylie could just make out more cabins on the other shore—probably the boys’ camp. She had read about Camp Golden Lake in the brochure. The boys and girls weren’t allowed to hang out at all.

 

Rylie studied the rest of her surroundings from the bench, digging the toes of her hiking boots into the dirt. The common area was unremarkable. They had cut down a lot of trees to make seats around an amphitheater with a fire pit in the middle. Rylie could see the recreation hall and the dining room, and paths leading to cabins elsewhere in the camp.

 

It was oppressively quiet, like she was the only thing alive in the woods.

 

“Three months,” she mumbled.

 

What in the world was there to do in a forest for three months? Walk around? Look at trees? Commune with the stupid deer? At least in the city, there were libraries and coffee shops. There was nothing like that here. Rylie wasn’t even sure there were showers.

 

A splashing sound drew her attention back to the lake. The canoe had drawn close to her side of the shore. Rylie shielded her eyes to look at the person sitting inside.

 

It was a boy. He was probably her age, or maybe a little older, judging by the breadth of his shoulders. His arms were dark tan, like he had already been camping for months, and he was looking right at her.

 

Rylie chewed her bottom lip. One of the guys from Golden Lake? He was going to get in trouble if he was caught so close to their shore.

 

She raised a hand to wave at him. After a moment, he waved back.

 

Her dad came out of the office. “Okay, everything is settled. They told me you’re in Cabin B3. Sounds like you’ll be with some nice kids! Why don’t I take you there?”

 

“I can find it myself,” Rylie started to say, but her dad looked sad. She rolled her eyes. “Yeah, sure. Show me.”

 

Glancing back at the lake, Rylie saw the canoe had already moved on. The boy was gone.

 

The cabins for Group B were laid out in a rough circle around another fire pit. A few girls were trying to get a fire going, carrying wood up the path and piling pine needles between the rocks. The sun was still high, but Rylie could tell sunset would fall quickly in the mountains.

 

“Here it is!” her dad said. He rubbed his hands together, looking between Rylie and the cabin like he wasn’t ready to let her go. “I could help you unpack if you want.”

 

“I really think I can handle it,” Rylie said.

 

He sighed and handed the bag over. “You’re right. Have to let you go someday.”

 

“You could let me go home,” she whispered, but he didn’t hear. He hesitated at the mouth of camp.

 

“Love you, pumpkin,” he called. Someone near the fire giggled.

 

Rylie slung her backpack over her shoulder. “Love you too, dad.” She didn’t wait for him to leave. She couldn’t stand to see the other girls whispering.

 

It was going to be a very long three months.

 

The first few days were as bad as she expected. Rylie managed to skip orientation by telling Louise that she wasn’t feeling good. Once she was alone, Rylie pulled out her diary and opened it to the first blank page.

 

Dear diary,
she wrote.
I hate my life.
Rylie considered the words with a frown.
Camp could be interesting, I guess. Maybe if I see it as a learning thing instead of a punishment for the divorce...?

 

She chewed thoughtfully on her pen for a moment, then dropped it. Why fake optimism? She stretched her cell phone over her head to search for reception in the cabin’s tiny loft, but there was nothing this deep in the mountains. She wouldn’t even be able to text her friends back home. Rylie flung her phone to the bed and tried not to let frustration choke her.

 

“I can’t believe this,” she told the empty room.

 

Rylie missed a few campfire sing-alongs and hikes in the first week, but after begging illness for a few days, Louise forced her to go to the infirmary.

 

She tried to fake a cough. The nurse wasn’t fooled. “You can stay overnight, but you’re going back to the cabins tomorrow.”

 

“Are you sure?” Rylie asked. “I could be contagious. Maybe I should go home.”

 

The nurse gave her a look which obviously meant
nice try
, and Rylie was back in her cabin the next morning.

 

She didn’t mind sleeping on a tiny cot in the loft. (All the other beds were taken by the time she got there.) She did, however, mind having to share her living space with a bunch of teenage girls. Rylie’s friends back home were mostly guys. Girls were catty and stupid.

 

And these ones hated Rylie for no reason at all.

 

They shot nasty looks at her before heading out in the morning, and they didn’t talk when they saw her in the evenings. Her roommates avoided her during the day and treated her like an alien when Louise forced them to interact. Maybe they were shy, Rylie thought. She hadn’t done anything to make them mad, after all.

 

She learned she was wrong on the fifth day, when she finally made herself go choke down dinner at the mess. The cooks offered some kind of meat product slathered in gravy, and just looking at it made her queasy. Rylie had been a vegetarian ever since she learned how animals were butchered in the seventh grade.

 

“Tofu?” asked the man in the hairnet behind the counter. “You want
tofu
?” Which meant, of course, they didn’t have it.

 

She sat down to eat her carrot sticks, trying to imagine herself anywhere but the mess hall: maybe watching a movie at the second-run theater on thirty-second street, writing a journal entry on a park bench, or reading a book at the coffee shop on the corner.

 

Rylie closed her eyes and let her imagination carry her away. There were no moths fluttering around the lights and no mosquitoes. Only percolating coffee and an indie guitarist in the corner. Maybe a cute guy at the next table. She could sip a mug of chai tea and drift away on the angst-ridden guitar melodies.

 

“Where is
she
from?” whispered a girl at the table behind her, stirring Rylie from her fantasies. She was loud enough for everyone to hear. It had to be deliberate.

 

Another piped up in the same fake whisper. “I don’t know. She didn’t come on one of the buses; her dad dropped her off. I saw him. He was wearing glasses like this.” Rylie glanced over in time to see the girl holding her hands in front of her eyes to indicate big circles. “And he was super fat.”

 

“Where’s she been all week?”

 

“She hides in one of the cabins. She
never
comes out. It’s so freaking weird.”

 

“Look at her clothes.”

 

“Look at her
hair
.”

 

Rylie’s cheeks flamed as she touched her white-blonde hair. Even though she always thought it was too pale for her face, she had never heard anyone talk about her like that before. A rope of embarrassment twisted in her stomach.

 

She dumped the remaining food from her tray into a trash can and hurried back to camp. Sunset cast long shadows over the path. Rylie wanted to be back in bed before it got dark so she could hide from the night’s campfire activities.

 

The cabin’s lights were already on. The sounds of laughter poured out the window. Disappointed she wasn’t the first back, Rylie pushed the door open.

 

Her four roommates were clustered around a cot by the door. “...but I hope he doesn’t ask me out,” read Patricia in a nasal voice. “I don’t want to reject him and hurt his feelings, but I don’t want to be his girlfriend, either.”

 

Rylie recognized those words. She had written them herself.

 

In her diary.

 

The contents of her backpack were spilled across a bed as her roommates pawed through them. Patricia held out her diary so everyone could see it. None of them had noticed Rylie yet. “I bet she made it all up,” said Kim. “Who would want to go out with
her
, huh? She wouldn’t even show up for the date!”

 

“What are you doing?”

 

The girl with the gold anklet looked up. Amber. She was holding a pair of Rylie’s shorts in one hand and Byron the Destructor, her favorite stuffed cat, in the other. “We noticed you hadn’t unpacked yet. We were just... helping,” she said before bursting into giggles. The other girls followed suit.

 

Rylie stared at them. Her embarrassment in the mess was nothing in comparison to the numbness spreading through her now.

 

“Nice teddy bear,” said Kim before dissolving into snickers.

 

“You guys—you—I can’t...” She didn’t know what to say. Her mouth worked, but no sounds came out. “It’s not a bear. It’s a
cat
.”

 

She ripped the backpack off the bed, and they scattered. They had gone through everything, even her underwear. Rylie snatched her diary from Patricia’s hands.

 

“Way to be grateful,” laughed Amber. “Didn’t you hear me? We were helping!”

 

Eyes stinging, Rylie backed up until she hit the door. Why were they laughing? What was so funny?

 

“Of course,” she whispered hoarsely.
Helping
.

 

Rylie flew out of the cabin and passed Louise, who was setting pokers and marshmallows on a table by the fire.

 

“Where are you going?” called Louise. “Rylie? Rylie!”

 

She ran without looking where she was going. She passed a line of people heading back from the dining hall, and she knew they could all see her crying. Everyone would know what Patricia and Amber did to her. The teasing would only get worse.

 

Rylie had to stop by the office on the shore of the glistening lake. Her chest felt constricted and she wheezed with every breath. She fumbled for her inhaler and tried to let all the air out of her lungs, but it took a few tries before she could calm down enough to breathe at all.

 

She sucked down the medication. Wheezed again. Took another puff. Slowly, her air passage relaxed.

 

“How could they do this to me?” Rylie rasped, fist clutched around her inhaler. “I hate them. I
hate
them.”

 

The full moon’s reflection blurred in the water. It was laughing at her too, just like everyone else at the camp.

 

As if it wasn’t bad enough her parents were divorcing, she had been singled out from everyone else at camp as an outsider. They would make her life miserable for the entire summer if she stayed.

 

She couldn’t stand to be there a minute longer. Rylie threw her backpack onto her shoulder and plunged into the forest.

 

She didn’t know how long she walked. The trail grew thinner and twistier. She stumbled over a log in her path and the bark scraped her shin. Blinded by tears, Rylie pushed on. She didn’t know if it was the way back to the parking lot, but it didn’t matter. The buses had been gone for days, so she didn’t have a way home. But she didn’t want to go home. She wanted to get
away
.

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