he whispered.
I looked.
âIt sure is,â I whispered back.
âItâs not her fault, though.â
âNo, moles arenât anyoneâs fault.â
âDo I have any moles?â
âNot yet, although you might grow some. Especially if you eat too many Sour Skittles.â
His eyes widened, then narrowed. âNuh-uh. You just want my Sour Skittles. But guess what? I donât even have any Sour Skittles!â
I still had the two dollars Mom gave me, and I displayed them to Ty. âSnack bar?â
His face lit up. Then he frowned. âButââ
I was way ahead of him. âWeâll tell Mom they were out of popsiclesâwhich they are.â I didnât know that, but I didnât not know that, either. It was summer. Freezers broke, popsicles melted.
I kept hold of Tyâs hand as we strolled to the snack bar. âSo letâs review what weâve learned. What do you think that frilly Erica girl would have said about the girl wearing board shorts?â
âThat she wasnât allowed?â
âYup. What about the man in the Speedo?â
âWhatâs a Speedo?â
âThe man whose bathing suit was like the bottom half of a bikini,â I clarified.
âUm . . . not allowed?â
âCorrect again.â I squeezed his hand. âSo is Erica right about things, and Iâm wrong? Or am I right, and sheâs wrong?â
âYouâre right, and so am I, and she is a poo-poo-head,â Ty said. âAfter we have our snack, will you play in the little kidsâ pool with me?â
âAbsolutely. You can be a dolphin, and Iâll be your trainer, and if you do your tricks right, Iâll reward you with Skittles.â
âOnly weâll say theyâre fish,â he said. We got into line at the snack bar. âAnd if we see that mean Ewica, then she can just . . . just . . .â
âFluff the ruffles on her bathing suit?â
He grinned. âYeah!â
His Dusty Rose toenails sparkled in the sunshine, calling to mind seashells and dolphin treats and all things summery, splashy, and fun-with-a-capital- fuh .
July
I was so mad at Amanda that I could cry. My tears would be as hot as the hot Georgia sun, and I would collect them in ajar and . . . do something with them. Pour them on Amandaâs head, maybe, so her beautiful blond hair would burn to a frizzle.
Only I would never do that, so fine.
Instead, I kicked Bearie, my stuffed animal bear that I loved. Ow . That Bearie was a Very Heavy Bear. He was stuffed with rice, was why, and if the urge fell upon me, I could microwave him and he would get toasty-warm and extra-cuddly. In the winter, I shoved him under the sheets to the bottom of my bed, and he kept my feet cozy while I slept.
Today he made my foot un happy, that bad bear. Except it wasnât his fault, since I was the one who kicked him, and that was mean of me, too. It made my heart unhappy.
I scooped him up and clutched him to my chest. âIâm sorry, Bearie,â I said. My voice wobbled, and I was tempted to go get a hand mirror so I could watch myself be sad. Then I remembered that I wasnât sad. I was mad , and not at Bearie, but at Amanda.
âWinnie, get down here now ,â Mom called from the foot of the staircase. She was exasperated with me for being draggy and slow on the first day of summer camp. But guess what? I was exasperated, too.
âI canât find my boots,â I complained.
âTheyâre in your closet . I put them there on purpose.â
Perhaps she did, but after I tried them on last night, I kicked them off on purpose. Theyâd arced through the air and landed humble-jumble by my beanbag chair, but I chose not to acknowledge their existence.
âGrab them and come on,â Mom called. She and I were the only ones in the house, as Sandra was with Ty at the park and Dad was at work.
I didnât grab them. I didnât do
A. M. Riley
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