“What happened to your face?” I croaked.
“You kicked it.”
“Sorry.”
We’d reached the boat by then, and Poe pulled me beneath a fiberglass ladder built into the side of the hull. Hands were already reaching out over the edge, but I couldn’t tell who they belonged to. Somehow, I pulled myself up onto the rungs. Somehow, I got over the side and onto the deck, trailing water, coughing and spluttering the whole time. Clarissa wrapped me in a towel. I could see vomit drying on the front of her shirt.
“Amy, I’m so sorry,” she said. “I didn’t realize you were standing so close to me. I feel awful—”
“It’s not your fault,” George said, placing a hand on her shoulder. “It was an accident.”
“Where’s Darren?” I asked. “Is he all right?”
“Fine. Seasick.” Clarissa pulled her shirt away from her chest. “I’m going to go change.”
Jenny took her place at my side. “You caught your life vest on that chain and it ripped right off,” she reported. “I’ve never seen anything like it.”
Harun stood above us. “When you went down again, we figured you’d hit your head or something. You just…sank.”
Yeah, dude. That happens when one doesn’t swim. But I didn’t say that. I just hugged the towel more tightly around myself and prayed that this boat ride would be over soon. But how was I supposed to get off the island once I was on it? Another boat? Was there any chance I could be airlifted off?
My Capri pants and T-shirt stuck to my body, my hair hung on my face in clammy tangles. The right side of my head throbbed where it had smacked against the water, and I could feel bruises forming on my right shoulder and the top of my foot where (I suppose) I’d hit it against Poe’s face.
Poe. Where had he gone? I looked around the deck for him, but he hadn’t joined the others in seeing I was okay.
“When will we get to the island?” I rasped.
“Soon, Amy,” Jenny said. She leaned in and dropped her voice to a whisper. “You don’t swim, do you?”
I put my head down on my knees.
I heard her voice overhead. “Come on, guys, let’s give her some space.”
That’s the last thing I noticed until the boat engines ground to a halt.
“We’re here.” Demetria’s voice was gentler than I’d ever heard it. She touched my shoulder. “Wake up, Amy.”
My clothes had dried somewhat, but were still damp and clingy in the back, under my arms, and, of course, near my crotch. Lovely. I pushed my tangled hair out of my face. “Thank God. Dry land.”
“Well, come on, Kevin Costner, and enjoy it.”
I looked up. Ugh. This was a mistake. I needed to get off the island, go someplace where there was no water for miles. I wondered if there were any interesting Spring Break trips through Death Valley.
“There’s supposed to be some sort of tour for the neophytes,” Clarissa said, crouching down to join us. I’d been huddling on a bench near the control panel, too afraid to go into the cabin but not wanting to get anywhere near the edge of the deck. Demetria and Jenny also stooped over me.
“So we’re neophytes again?” Demetria asked.
“Well, it is our first time here.” Clarissa looked at me. “But I bet we can take you straight to your room instead. I’m sure the last thing you want to do is spend time walking around, until you’ve gotten a chance to—”
“Change,” Demetria cut in.
“Rest, I was going to say.”
Hide out
would probably be better.
Jenny appeared at the door. “Seems this is going to be more complicated than we thought.”
“What do you mean?” Clarissa asked.
“There’s some sort of issue with the sleeping arrangements.”
“What?” Demetria said. “What issue?”
“Well, the island caretaker is what some would term a tad old-school. He says that he won’t put us girls in the same building as the other knights. We have to sleep elsewhere.”
“What?” Clarissa asked.
At this, I seriously considered staying on the boat.
Demetria frowned. “Are you sure it’s Victorian sensibilities? Maybe there’s something else going on here.”
“What?” Clarissa asked. “Are you taking up the mantle of Amy’s conspiracy theories?”
“Well, she’s hardly in any shape to do so!” Demetria replied. She turned to Jenny. “Go back and tell this guy that Eli dorms went co-ed ages ago. We have gender-free bathrooms and everything.”
“You do it,” Jenny said. “Or am I the only one expected to get treated like a second-class citizen around here?”
“If the shoe fits,” Demetria muttered. She’d never really forgiven Jenny for the whole website fiasco last semester.
“Guys,” I said through my sore throat, “what’s the problem here? Where exactly do they propose to put us?”
“Just another cabin. But it’s kind of on the far side of the island. A bit out of the way.”
“So what?” Clarissa said. “It’s not like the island is that big to start with.”
“It’s the principle of the thing,” Demetria said. “Why do we have to be the ones to go away? Put the boys there if he insists on separating us.”
“And where’s the principle of that thing?” Clarissa replied. Demetria appeared to concede the point.
“Also,” Jenny said, “it doesn’t have its own bathroom. We’d have to hike back to use the shower house near the kitchens.”
“What?” I asked, while Clarissa shrugged and Demetria’s expression grew mildly less combative. “What do you mean, no bathrooms? What kind of luxury resort is this?”
All three of them blinked at me. “What do you mean?” Clarissa asked. “It’s our own
private island
. How much more luxurious can it get?”
And that was Miss Park Avenue talking. I instantly felt foolish.
“Yeah,” Jenny said. “No other club on campus has an island to call their own.”
What could I say to that? That I’d been expecting a fair approximation of the Ritz, on top of my own private island? I sank even farther into the bench cushions. Spring Break Score: so far, so crappy.
“Poor Amy,” Clarissa said, sitting by my side and putting a hand on my shoulder. “Don’t worry. If I’d been through what you had today, I’d be looking for some creature comforts as well. It’s okay. As soon as this tour is over, we’ll get you all settled in.”
“I’ll skip the tour,” Jenny offered, crouching on my other side. “I’ll find my way around later. Like Clarissa said, it’s not like Cavador Key is that big to start with. Besides,” she added. “I owe you one.” True. I’d stood by Jenny during her nervous breakdown last semester.
“What about George?” Clarissa asked. “He’s been here before. He can take her to her cabin.”
“I’m sure the last thing Amy wants is to have George tuck her into bed,” Demetria said.
“Maybe the last thing
you
would want,” Clarissa said under her breath, but I heard it nonetheless.
Before I had a chance to react, I heard someone clear his throat, and then Poe was standing there, still sopping. His black hair was swept back from his face, except for a few lone strands that hung over his forehead like slash marks and left trails of water sliding over his cheekbones.
Had no one given him a towel?
“I came to see if you were all right,” he said, as if the others weren’t standing between us.
“She’s fine, just shaken,” Jenny said, her voice cold.
I opened my mouth to thank him for saving my life, but once again, my sore throat refused to perform.
“I’m taking Darren to his cabin,” Poe continued before I had a chance to choke out my gratitude. “And I’ll help get you to yours if you want. Let
our brothers
”—his eyes flickered momentarily in Jenny’s direction—“go on the introductory tour.”
“What about you?” Demetria asked.
“I’ve been here before. Patriarch, remember?”
Demetria’s expression said it all.
Tough to remember when you’re always hanging around.
“Besides, I could use a change of clothes, too.” He pointed to his sorry attire.
It was amazing how quickly their attitude to Poe warmed once it became clear that he was offering to take responsibility for me. And how could I blame them? There was Spring Breaking to get on with. They hadn’t signed up to babysit a half-drowned brother who currently looked like a fully drowned rat. Within moments, the Diggirls had vamoosed, leaving me alone with Poe on the deck. I stood up at last.
“I just wanted to say—”
“That yours?” Poe interrupted, pointing to my yellow duffle. (It was the only one left on the deck.)
I nodded, noting as I did that Poe’s only luggage seemed to be the knapsack slung across his back. Well, he never had been much for fashion. Still, I remained concerned about what would happen with the clothes in that bag, as the T-shirt he wore was still so wet that it molded to his chest and shoulders. I looked away.
“You have another pair of shoes?” he said, taking in my bare feet. “The paths are all made of crushed shell. They’ll tear you up.”
I knelt and dug in the duffle until I found a pair of ballet flats. So much for showing off my pedicure.
Poe had my bag on his shoulder before I even stood up. We met Darren on the dock, where he was leaning against a pylon, head in hands.
“Feeling any better?” I asked him.
He nodded slightly, but didn’t look up. I wondered briefly if I should tell him that I didn’t blame him for my fall, but I clammed up once I caught Poe’s expression and the almost imperceptible shake of his head.
Of course. Poe would know. The last thing this teenager wanted from me was anything that carried a whiff of
pity
. He was already feeling guilty enough. I remembered the night Poe had ended up in the hospital after our crook. Nice to see he hadn’t matured much beyond his teens.
But neither was I capable of rolling out one of those guys’-guy faux-threatening comments in my current mental state. I couldn’t just laugh it off in any manner that would seem convincing. I think that ability was bundled with the Y chromosome.
And here we were always arguing for equality of the sexes.
So it was in silence that our little party trailed up the path and past the tour, where a man I supposed was Cavador’s caretaker was busy enlightening a knot of my brothers as to the geologic history of the island.
Maybe I was glad to skip this tour after all. My Spring Break–enthusiast Diggirls looked bored to death. As we passed, a few of my fellow knights twiddled their fingers in my direction, and George gave me a thumbs-up and raised his eyebrows. I smiled weakly in return and he looked relieved.
I’d give Cavador Key this: It may not be a luxury resort, but it sure was beautiful. The spring sunlight filtered through the leaves of shrub pines and palm trees, and the gray-white path snaked through thick palmetto ground cover toward a cluster of buildings. To my right, I saw a mangrove stand hugging the shoreline, and there were red and pink hibiscus flowers as big as my head on bushes all along the path.
We stopped by a low house hugging the path a little away from the main cluster of buildings. “Better stay here,” Poe whispered to me.
Must be the Gehrys’ house. He and Darren headed up the walk, but I don’t think the teen was interested in having the incident repeated to his parents, since he disappeared into the dark interior and shut the door in Poe’s face. Poe stood there for a moment, clearly torn between knocking or letting the whole issue slide. Personally, I’d vote the latter. I didn’t know if I wanted to know how Kurt Gehry would react to the news that Darren had almost killed me, accident or no.
He might be pleased.
After a moment, Poe returned to me. This of course is when I should have thanked him for saving my life. But for once, I, never at a loss for words, couldn’t think of anything to say that would get the job done. Eloquence deserted me. Even fluency seemed to be taking a coffee break. So instead I decided to have another coughing fit.
Poe paused on the path a few steps ahead of me and waited for me to finish.
The island was bigger than Clarissa and the others had led me to believe. At least, it seemed to take forever for us to get to the girls’ cabin. We trudged along in awkward silence, victim and savior, until finally we broke out of the scrub into a small clearing, and there it was, highly rundown, with dingy screens, a peeling green paint job, a sagging front porch, and a bright orange aluminum roof. I’d given up expecting luxury, and now merely hoped that the cabin would stand up to a rainstorm. (Doubtful.)
“There should be towels and sheets and stuff all set up for you,” Poe said, breaking the silence like a spell.
“Thank you,” I choked out. No. Not right. It sounded like I was thanking him for telling me about the linens. I reached out my arm. “No, really, P—Jamie. Thank you. How can I thank you? I could have died.”
He just looked at me, and then hefted the bag in his arms. “You’re welcome. Do you want me to take the bag in?”
“No,” I said. “I didn’t even want you to carry it this far. I could have found this place by myself.”
“It’s not a problem. Like I said, I need to change, too. So, the bag?”
“I’m fine.” I held out my hands. “Please.”
He handed me my luggage, and once again I faltered. Saying thank you wasn’t enough, even if I said it three times. Even if I said it three hundred. How could I let him carry my freaking bag after he’d saved my life? It was too stupid for words.