magician. He had his hands right near your backpack when he pulled that scarf out.â
âI thought you didnât believe in magic?â
âI donât. It had to be a trick. You know, sleight of hand.â
Kevin pressed play again. âLook. I got a shot of him covering one hand with the other when he pulled out the scarf. Thatâs how he does it. He gets you looking at one hand while he does something else with the other one.â
âWhy would Marty do a trick like that and not follow up on it? Wouldnât he have shown everyone how he put the box in there without anyone seeing it? It would be his moment of glory, right?â
Kevin paced across the porch. âI donât know. Maybe he got distracted by a customerâand we left the store.â Kevin drew two green stars next to Martyâs name. âHemight be the most likely suspect so far. He had the opportunity to do it and he had a motive.â
âI guess so, but Iâm still going with my writer theory. Draw two stars next to him.â
âAll right. But we still need to finish with the list. What did we do next?â
âYou went to tell your mom that we were going to play mini golf.â
âThatâs right. And when I came back, your backpack was unzipped. That proves it was Marty.â
âAre you sure? Heâs good with the cards and the scarves, but I canât believe he could hide a whole box of paints. And . . . wait a minute!â I narrowed my eyes at Kevin. âYou came up from behind me and said my backpack was open. You could have put the paints in there!â
Kevin flinched as if Iâd slapped him. âWhy would I do that? And where would I have gotten the paints?â
âI donât know. Maybe your mom found them at home when she was cleaning out your stuff.â
âWhy wouldnât I tell you that I was giving them to you?â
âTo surprise me?â
âWith a set of old, used paints?â
I rocked back and forth at rapid speed. âI guess not.â
âBesides,â Kevin said, âI already know what Iâm getting you for Christmas, and it isnât used.â
Christmas? Had Kevin already been planning that far ahead? Why had I been so worried we wouldnât see each other after summer? It was like Iâd been preparing for something before it even happened.
Mom once told me about this thing called the self-fulfilling prophecy, how sometimes if you think the worst is going to happen, it willâbecause you end up making it happen. Had I always drifted apart from my friends because I expected to? Was I the one who was really pulling away because I was afraid theyâd do it first? Had I even done it with Abbey?
At that moment, I wanted more than ever for time to move forward. I had to find out who gave me the yellow box. I looked at Kevinâs hurt face. âI know it wasnât you . . . maybe it was someone at mini golf.â
âBut you had the backpack with you the whole time.â
âNo! No, I didnât. You donât remember, but on that first day, the rickshaw driver swerved and knocked you down. I didnât get there in time to pull you out of the way, like I did today. He took me by surprise the first time, and when I ran to help you, I left my backpack on a bench at the last hole.â
âItâs weird I canât remember that,â Kevin said. âDid I get hurt?â
âYou skinned your knee.â
âWhy were you able to pull me away in time? But we canât save G-Mags?â
âI wondered that for a long time, but . . .â I looked away and rocked faster in the chair. âI think some things are just meant to be.â
Kevin was quiet for a while, and I wasnât sure what to say. Finally, he looked up and drew a green star next to mini golf. Then he added, âWe can cross out Number Ten. There was no one at dinner but all of
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