The Summer of Moonlight Secrets
Page 1
For my mom, Joan,
who inspires me in every way
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
Acknowledgments
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1
Allie Jo
“Hey!” I yell.
I don’t know who I’m yelling at; I can’t see them. But I was lying out on the concrete pad around Hope Springs—Hope Springs Eternal, if you want the full name—with my face turned up to the sun, letting it press its golden rays on my face. Later today, the sun will fry the skin right off your bones.
So I was lying here all peaceful. Quiet. No tourists, which are the worst kind of trespassers. Until suddenly I hear a crash, someone jumping into the water on the other side. I sit up real straight, lean forward, and watch as a girl glides through the water, fast as a sailfish. Her hair flows behind her like a fin and she flashes with color. I sit even straighter now; why is she wearing regular clothes in the water?
Two hands grip the edge of the wall that surrounds the springhead, and she rises from the water.
“Hey!” I yell again, recoiling from the ice-cold splatters.
Water streams down her face, causing her to squeeze her eyes. She pushes her hair back and pops her eyes open. They are as black as midnight.
She smiles at me as she hoists herself out of the water, fully clothed in jean shorts and a black and purple T-shirt. “Hello to you,” she says.
I gape at her.
She’s so pretty. Her long, dark hair shimmers with blue, reflecting the sun and water. She leans her head to the side, grabs her hair into a twist, and squeezes the water out.
Pointing to the hotel, she asks, “Would that door be open?”
I nod dumbly.
She flashes her Colgate smile again and winks at me.
I turn and watch as she glides up the lawn to The Meriwether. She barely pauses as she passes the dock and snatches a towel right off a cabinet.
Just as she slips into the side door, my brain starts working again and I want to call out the rules to her: No running. No diving. Towels must be checked out.
She’s broken every one of them.
And worse, the side door she just went in is Employees Only.
When I see her again, I’m going to have to set her straight. This used to be a five-star hotel; you can’t be running around all splashing and grabbing things like that. But at the same time, she smiled as if she knew me. And when she winked, it was like she was including me in on a secret, just me and her.
Staring up at The Meriwether, I scan the hotel, but I see no movement, no sign of her in the windows. I look down at the concrete where she just passed. Already, her footprints are disappearing.
2
Chase
Twenty-two hours cooped up in the car is enough for me. My butt’s sore and I’m bored out of my skull.
“What’re we gonna do first?” I ask Dad. I grab the pamphlets and scan them: parasailing, surfing, skimboarding, waterskiing. Ah, man, I can’t choose; they all sound good.
Dad cranks the wheel and we turn down a boulevard lined with palm trees. “I don’t know about you, but I’m going to sleep.”
“What?” Is he kidding me? I’ve been sitting in this car for a whole day, eating nothing but drive-through junk just so we could get here faster. Florida is a long way from Ohio.
“Yeah,” Dad says. “I didn’t get to take naps like you did.”
“I didn’t take any naps.”
Dad smirks. “Yes, you did.”
“No, I didn’t. I may have rested my eyes, but I didn’t sleep.” Hey, it gets boring watching scenery pass by.
“Well, you rested your eyes for about three hours a while ago.” He takes a sip from a Styrofoam coffee cup. Where did he get that? Maybe I did fall asleep.
I shrug my shoulders. “But you’re not really going to sleep, are you? It’s only”—I glance at the clock on the dash—“eight thirty in the morning.”
“Oh, good.” Yawning, he rubs the back of his neck, then cracks it sideways. “I can sleep all day.”
“What’s the point of driving all night if you’re just going to sleep all day?”
“Chase,” he says, turning to me. His face droops; okay, okay, he does look tired. But sleeping all day? I can’t be stuck in a hotel room on top of this drive.
None of the pamphlets in my hands show a guy taking a nap. “What am I going to do while you’re sleeping?”
He shrugs. “You can watch TV—quietly.”
Yes! That’s what I came to Florida for—quiet TV watching. “Dad! Come on!”
He takes a quick look at me and sighs. “How about we check in, get some decent breakfast, and see how we feel after that?”
I nod, knowing I’ll talk him into something over breakfast.
We turn from the boulevard down a drive that cuts through rolling hills.
“I thought Florida was flat,” I say.
“Not all of it,” Dad says. “Besides, this is hotel property. In the old days, this used to be a golf course.” Of course he would know that; he researched The Meriwether for the travel series he’s writing.
He scans the horizon. I know what he’s doing—he’s writing. He’s always writing. Even with no paper or pen, he takes notes constantly. I bet if I tapped into his brain I’d hear, Century-old oaks shaded the lawn, their branches covered—no—their branches arrayed in the finery of Spanish moss.
I’ve read enough of his stuff to write it for him. You’re a natural, he’s told me. You write like someone much older than yourself. It’s true. It catches even me by surprise sometimes. I’ll just be looking at something and my thoughts slip into a fancy way of speaking. My teachers all say I’m a good writer, too; they read my stories out loud.
I stare out the window. I thought this place would be all palm trees, but it’s mainly oaks with heavy branches that dip low, some touching the ground before curving back up.
We climb a bridge and the hotel springs into view
. It’s like stepping into the old days. The place is like four or five stories tall, with peaked roofs and trim that Dad told me come from being built in the Victorian era. Mold eats at the wood under the windows, making the pale yellow paint look dirty. The porch colors are faded—purple, orange, and green—happy colors from a long time ago. Green shutters are missing from half the windows; a couple of them dangle at the sides.
Could a place like this even have cable?
We carry our suitcases in and stop at the front desk, where the guy is on the phone. College dude. Sandy hair, lanky build. He smiles at us and holds a finger up to Dad—Just a minute!
I put my skateboard down and push one foot on it. Nice! Great wood floor. “I’m going to look around,” I say.
Dad’s shoulders drop. “Just stay here.” He glances at the guy, who is now flipping through paperwork, still on the phone.
I kick up my board and hold it. The hall stretches for miles. It’s dark, lit up by chandeliers, and carpet covers the wood floor beyond the lobby. I see all kinds of alcoves and stairwells. “I’m going to check it out,” I say, wandering away from Dad.
“Chase!” he says, but he’s using the voice that means he’s already given in. He knows he can’t hold on to me.
This place is cool. The hallway is like a little street with tiny shops on both sides—an ice-cream store, a restaurant, a bakery. I’m not buying anything, though; I want to explore. I stop at a staircase that spirals up into darkness. Leaning against the handrail, I peer through the balusters.
“Dad!” I yell. He’s still standing at the desk, waiting. I motion to the stairs. “I’m going up there!”
I can see his frown from here.
“I’ll be right back!” The stairs are calling me. Come on!
He rolls his eyes. “You better be,” he yells.
I’m taking the stairs two at a time when I hear him add, “And don’t get in trouble!”
I just laugh.
3
Allie Jo
The best place to eat The Meriwether’s Famous Blueberry Pancakes is in the crook of the bay window in the Emerald Dining Room. That’s where Dad, Mom, and I are sitting, but I finish off that blueberry goodness in about two minutes and then I lick the maple syrup clean off the plate.
“Allie Jo,” Dad says, setting his coffee down. “That plate is spit-polished. Just put it back in and give it to the next person.” What a joker. He picks up his cup. “Time to get busy,” he says, kissing the top of my head before walking on out of here to his office.
“No tours today,” Mom says, “so I’ll be helping Dad in the office.” She gives me a quick squeeze before reaching out for Dad’s hand. I watch them walk out of the dining room together. Lovebirds!
I myself am not quite ready to get started, so I lean back in my chair and scan the dining room. That girl from this morning isn’t here. If she wants pancakes, she’d better hurry; Chef shuts breakfast down in fifteen minutes.
I pull my legs up and sit crisscross on the chair, staring out the window until the cooks come and break down the buffet. A red cardinal perches on the bird feeder by the oak. I watch as he pushes his head through the feeder, showering the grass with black sunflower seeds and a mix of little yellow seeds. His wife pecks through the grass. When a squirrel jumps from an oak branch onto the bird feeder, both cardinals keep eating. I guess they’re used to him.
Well, that’s enough sitting on my butt for one morning. Time to get started on my rounds.
Passing the mostly empty tables, I carry my dishes to the cart at the back of the dining room: silverware goes into the plastic cylinder; plates go on one side of the bus tub, glasses on the other. Guests don’t bus their own tables, but since I live at The Meriwether, I have to clear my own dishes, even though they don’t pay me.
“Hay, Clay,” I say, passing the front desk. I laugh to myself because I know he thinks I said, “Hey, Clay.” It’s just one of those private jokes I have with myself.
He nods to me. “Allie Jo.”
I get to the far staircase and dash up the stairs. As I climb past the second floor, I reach the sign that says, The Meriwether is renovating the upper floors for your future enjoyment. For your personal safety, please enjoy the amenities on the lower floors. And then, just in case you don’t understand what that really means, square black letters at the bottom say, Guests Prohibited. I step over the velvet cord and continue.
Everything changes as I turn on the landing. The sculpted floral carpet ends; the stairs going up are covered by all kinds of different rugs, depending on when or if that story got renovated. Which some of them did, but that was a long time ago, not anytime soon, as that sign would have you believe. That’s what makes these floors so interesting—you’re walking on actual history.
The air gets warmer the higher I go. Even the smell changes—a hint of cut grass, a trace of mildew—but mainly it’s the smell of heat and wood. It’s a good smell.
I turn onto the third floor to begin my inspection. They don’t pay me for this either, but, you know, someone’s got to do it. This floor has no rug on account of the hotel being sold in the middle of the 1972 restoration. Just as I’m coming up on the Beauford Chambers Suite, I spot a boy down the hall.
“Hey!” I yell.
He whips his head around, sees me, and grins. Then he throws down a skateboard and pumps like a hundred miles an hour.
I tear after him. “Get back here!” I holler. That’s antique heart of pine he’s rolling that stupid board over.
4
Chase
Guests Prohibited. Are you kidding me? I lift my skateboard and climb over the rope. Dad’s checking us into this place, and I’m checking it out. It’s like a creepy old mansion. The stairs groan under my feet. A deep crack spreads from one side of the staircase to the other, and the rug looks older and dirty.
When I reach the next level, the wood floor rolls out in front of me—the perfect surface. The sign said they’re renovating this floor, but I don’t see any workers. Still, I better be sure. I carry my skateboard and walk down the hall.
“Hey!”
I whip my head around and see a girl standing all sergeantlike, hands on her hips, legs apart. I grin, throw my board down, and I’m off.
“Get back here!” she bellows.
I laugh. “Come and get me!”
I’m flying over the whoop-de-doos, getting a little air, faster, faster! Yeah! I stamp my back foot down for a perfect ollie, only my landing’s sketchy and I feel one of the wheels catch in a groove. Suddenly I’m cartwheeling—arms flailing, legs snapping—and I have just enough time to think, This is gonna hurt! before I slam onto the floor.
Aw, man.
I’m squeezing my eyes shut, trying to decide which hurts more—my head or my ego—when I hear that girl come running up.
“Are you okay?” she yells.
I lift my head, try to look at her, and suddenly feel like I’m gonna hurl. I rest my head. Closing my eyes, I say, “Yeah, I just need to lie down for a minute.”
Her footsteps shuffle up close to me.
She gasps.
My eyes snap open. “What?”
Gaping, she points at my arm. “It’s crooked,” she says.
Oh, no. I try to sit up, but when I brace myself, fire races down my right arm. Oh, man. “I’m gonna be sick.”
Her face goes white. Mine feels green. “I better get my dad,” she says, and before I can say anything she takes off, leaving me alone on the floor.
Waves of seasickness overtake me. My arm throbs like a blinking red light. I moan. Then, because no one’s around, I moan louder.
It’s on a freshwater spring, Dad had said. You’ll love it—lots of history. Um, yeah, that’s what I want on summer vacation—history. An old, beat-up hotel with bad floors. I know he’s a travel writer and everything, but how come we never go where I want to go, like that place that had shrunken heads outside and the sign read, Heading this way?
What’s tak
ing so long? It hurts too much to just wait. If I had a mother, she’d already be here with an ice pack. I roll on my left side and part of my right arm rotates against itself. “Oh, man!” Tears spring into my eyes.
“Don’t move about,” a voice says. “Lie down; your arm’s broken; I feel much pain.”
I look into the eyes of the most beautiful girl I’ve ever seen. Her eyes are like black jewels; her long, dark hair brushes across my face as she helps me lie flat. I’d think she was an angel except I’m pretty sure angels have blond hair and I don’t think they say aboot instead of about. Wonder where she’s from.
“I just want to close my eyes,” I say.
She shakes her head. “Stay awake. You might have a concussion.”
Yeah, or a hatchet through my head. “Where’s my board?”
She looks around and stands up, and the floor creaks as she walks away from me.
“Oh, good,” I say when she brings it back. “Not broken.” Summer would bite without my skateboard. I’d be stuck sitting around the pool while Dad pecked out stories on his portable typewriter.
She lays my board by me and quickly stands. “I must go.”
“Aw, man.” I might start crying if I’m alone.
“They’re coming,” she says. “I’m not supposed to be here. Don’t tell anyone.”
Guests Prohibited.
I wince. She runs along the wall and disappears. I don’t hear her, but now I hear voices coming up from the opposite direction. Uh-oh. One of them is my dad’s.
5
How the girl’s heart had thundered when she revealed herself to the boy. His whimpering reminded her of pups struggling up the rocks, separated from their mothers. She could not but help him.
There was much risk in being seen, but what did this boy know of her? It was nothing to check on him. Her cousins had often helped others of his kind in troubled waters, taking pity on their flailing and thrashing; she could do no less.
Showing herself to the one called Allie Jo had been no accident. She had observed Allie Jo from afar for many days. The young girl had brown hair, not as dark as her own, and green eyes, the color of seawater. Often, Allie Jo poured black shells and yellow seeds into small wooden houses on poles; birds fluttered to the little shelters, eating greedily.