breaths.â He took several. âThere you go! Good job.â
âI did a good job. For once, I did a good job,â he said sadly.
âGo to your happy place, Dev. Kelly Clarkson. Happy place. Kelly Clarkson.â
âOh, no, I do not hook up, up, I go slow,â he sang softly.
âThere you go!â I encouraged him. âNow, whenever you get scared, just sing that song and think of me, and itâs like Iâm right there with you.â
Dev had dubbed Kelly Clarksonâs âI Do Not Hook Upâ the âOfficial Libby Kelting Anthem.â He took especial delight in singing this whenever we were at parties or dances, as a warning to potential suitors. So maybe Iâm a little picky. Sue me. I donât think thatâs the worst thing in the world.
âLibby,â he whispered, âIâm scared.â
Click. The line went dead. Yikes. An international publishing conglomerate might have just taken a hit out on my best friend. I tried to call him back several times, but to no avail. Garrett wasnât on the boat, so I paced and thought about Dev until the sun set and it was time for the Showdown. A loud whistle pierced the air. I leaned over the side of the boat; Cam was waiting down on shore, looking up at me. He whistled again. I scurried down the gangplank.
âDamn,â Cam said as I hit solid ground. âYou look . . .â He was at a loss for words.
âLike a prostitute? I know,â I moaned.
âHot.â He shook his head. âI was gonna say hot.â He put his arm around me and started steering me toward the boathouse.
âTheyâre making me. The museum. I swear to God, I did not pick this outfit. Roger thinks pirates are âfunâ and wants to put pirate pictures in the
Camden Crier.
He thinks itâll make more people come to the museum.â
âItâd certainly make me come.â He smirked.
âSo where are we going?â I changed topics quickly, blushing. If I was gonna keep hanging out with Cam, I needed to stop embarrassing so easily.
âThe beach. Not the town beach, the museum beach. Itâs that smallish strip of sand next to the boathouse. There, you see? Where the bonfire is.â
I did. It was glowing in the distance, shooting orange sparks into the darkening dusk. As night fell, the sky deepened to a shade of blue that was almost navy, dark enough to see the first stars of evening twinkling above.
The boathouse was a large wooden structure on the dock, with three walls and one side open to the beach. We walked down the length of the dock and entered the boathouse from the side, through propped-open double doors that looked like they fell off the side of a barn. Directly inside, there was a pirate at a desk with a series of lists.
âAhoy.â The pirate waved. âBe ye checkinâ in and competinâ in the Showdown, arrgggh?â
âYou look like a tool.â Cam chuckled.
âDude, shut up,â the pirate said. âThey forced me to wear this.â
âThisâ was a cobbled-together pirate outfit clearly meant to channel Jack Sparrow, except the sashes around his head and waist were a Barbie hot pink. The black dread-locked wig and beard he had on were threatening to consume his head altogether. He was drowning in a sea of nylon dreadlocks. I assumed the pirate had applied his own eyeliner, or else a six-year-old had sloppily drawn circles around his eyes with a black crayon. He looked like a mangy pandaâs piratical cousin.
âI feel your pain,â I sympathized.
âWell, you look hot,â the pirate grumped. âI look like a tool.â
âYou look very . . . distinguished,â I offered.
âBe ye singing, wench?â he asked, waving around a ballpoint pen with a giant feathery plume taped to it.
âHells no,â I said firmly. I would prance around all tarted up, but that was the extent of the
Jaci Burton
Robert Silverberg, Damien Broderick
Collin Piprell
Jeanne Bogino
Isabel Allende
Christine Warner
Donna Hatch
Bella Forrest
Theo Vigo
William Allen