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The Castaways

Page 1

by Jessika Fleck




  Table of Contents

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Discover more Entangled Teen books… Island of Exiles

  Fanning the Flames

  Garden of Thorns

  In Truth & Ashes

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2017 by Jessika Fleck. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

  Entangled Publishing, LLC

  2614 South Timberline Road

  Suite 109

  Fort Collins, CO 80525

  Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.

  Entangled Teen is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.

  Edited by Theresa Cole

  Cover design by Erin Dameron-Hill

  Cover art from iStock and Shutterstock

  ISBN 978-1-63375-918-3

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  First Edition April 2017

  For the Olive Gagmuehlers of the world.

  Just be.

  Chapter One

  A Name

  I used to have a smile. A real smile. All teeth. All cheeks. The kind that makes your eyes go squinty and pinches your nose.

  But I lost it.

  I’ve tried finding it—really I have—but it always comes off fake and forced, or, as my mom reminds me, like I’m in pain.

  I blame my name.

  My smile disappeared slowly, over time, like the old Jackson farmhouse in the field east of downtown.

  God knows how long the place had been there. The fence was nothing but broken posts poking out of overgrown weeds. The once jolly red paint on the house had peeled and chipped away, leaving only rotting wood.

  It had started with kids daring each other to go in and steal old doorknobs, broken dishes, and other unidentifiable, rusted treasures. Then the windows went—a fun Friday night in Hillings was a drinking game of throwing rocks at the glass: you miss, you drink.

  The thick front door disappeared. Next, the shutters went missing, along with much of the interior, forcing one side of the roof to collapse in on itself. Before long, the place was gutted—its joy snatched away plank by plank during the night. What was once someone’s home had become a moldy, decomposing shell. Then it was bulldozed to dust. Gone. Nothing to show for its existence except an empty, weedy, weedy field littered with soda cans and chip bags. Now it’s a super-market attached to a mega church with a Subway sandwich shop in the lobby.

  That’s how it happened with me. First, they picked and prodded, threw stones, and pulled at my hair. Then, piece by piece, they stole it—my smile, my joy. Now I’m being bulldozed.

  All because of a name: Olive Gagmuehler. A smelly food plus the word “gag,” which quickly morphed into Olive McGaggy for funsies.

  My middle name is Maxi. Once they got wind of this information, I was all variations of Maxi Pad from grades six through eight.

  They’re family names. I know—I should feel honored. But couldn’t I have paid tribute to my great grandmothers in some other way? One that didn’t predetermine my social fate?

  Olive Maxi Gagmuehler.

  Thank you, Mom and Dad.

  Chapter Two

  A Norman Rockwell Moment

  It’s forty-five minutes before school, and my brother, my dad, and I sit at the breakfast table eating overcooked waffles that are basically large crackers. The sun casts a spotlight through the window, so I’m forced to squint across at my brother through the blur of my eyelashes.

  “O-live! Stop hogging the syrup!”

  My little brother’s going through a growth spurt. At least, that’s how Mom justifies his constant need for food.

  “Jeez. Chill, buddy. Here, it’s all yours.” I push the syrup across the table. Lucky grins at the bottle, gazing at me through the amber glass, one eye scrunched shut. The weirdo then proceeds to pop the lid, dump the thing upside-down, and drown his waffle. Taking a heaping, sticky bite, he stops mid-chew, examining me with suspicious eyes.

  “Hey, where’s your black sweater? You’re supposed to wear it today!” Damn it. Cute as he is, the eight-year-old sneak notices everything. It’s spirit week. Today is “black sweater day.” Something about “black out the Wrens.” “You know I don’t get into that stuff.”

  He snorts. “Well, I would.”

  “Then you can when you’re in high school. But today, I’m wearing my white sweater.” What he doesn’t know is that my black sweater was stained with mustard when they tried to squirt it in my eyes.

  “You know Olive’s a rebel, Luke. She’s not at all about the status quo,” Dad cuts in, trying to relate to my “angsty teenage ways.” I roll my eyes. He winks. I smile back.

  Mom peeks her head in from behind the pantry door. “Where is your black sweater?” Great. Double interrogation. “I haven’t seen it in a while.”

  “I-I must have left it at school in my gym locker.”

  “Olive—”

  “I’m sorry. I forgot to grab it, but—”

  “Oh! Wait—” Lucky jumps up, runs past Mom and straight to the hook where we keep our backpacks, furiously digging into his. He comes running back, waving a flier in his hand. Mouth still half full of slimy, syrupy waffle, he mumbles, spewing crumbs, “Look!” and thrusts the paper in my face. Then, pulling off his shoe and dumping whatever lives in there into his hand, he reveals a gold coin. “I also got this! It’s a doom-bloom.”

  I hold my hand out and he tosses it in. “It’s doubloon, weirdo. Pirate money.”

  “Yeah! Well, yesterday, we had assembly, and the carnival pirate guy said I could use it to get into the ship or the maze! Can we go? Pleeease?”

  Mom, coffee cup in hand, joins us to investigate. “What’s all this?”

  Phew. If the sneak was good at anything, it was diversion. Black sweater forgotten. For now.

  I tear a piece of waffle off with my fingers and dip it in syrup, staring down at the flier. “The frickin’ Castaway Carnival.” I nearly choke.

  “Olive…” Mom motions to Lucky like he’s never heard such
vulgar language.

  Dad snorts behind his mug.

  “What?” I lower my voice. “That place is a death trap.”

  The Castaway Carnival is held one weekend a year and is known for its over-the-top pirate themes and world record-holding corn maze where children disappear. Last year, it was a nine-year-old boy. But he wasn’t the first. Back in the sixties, when the carnival had first opened, two high-school boys also went missing. The same way. Vanished.

  She gives me her evil eye, tucking a piece of dark, short hair behind her ear. “We promised him,” she sing-songs. “Besides, there’s a logical explanation for where those kids went. They just haven’t found them yet.” But the worry lines between her eyes say otherwise.

  “Yeah… Death trap,” I sing-song back. She takes my plate away. I pull Hazel, our ten-year-old cat, up onto my lap and let her lick syrup drips off the table. Mom groans. She hates it because it ruins any hope she has of a Norman Rockwell moment.

  “Can we go, Olive? Can we?” Lucky is literally licking his plate clean. Mom groans again. “You pro-missss-ed,” he begs, stretching the word out as far as possible.

  Yes, I had. Months ago. I’d needed his last piece of gum before school. Total desperation move. I breathe in, then release a long exhale before I answer. “All right.” I hand the paper back to him. “When’s the big day?”

  “Tonight!”

  I stare at my parents.

  They stare back.

  The three of us know they’re working late.

  Perfect.

  I sigh. “Fine. I guess I can take you by myself. It’ll be a first for both of us.”

  “Yes!” Lucky makes a fist, yanks his elbow in, then flings himself away from the table.

  The coin, still in my hand—and heavier than a piece of junk like it should be—has a skull and crossbones embossed into it, and the word CASTAWAY along the top. I hold it up between my thumb and forefinger. “Forgetting something?”

  Lucky stops in his tracks, pivots on his heels, and faces me.

  He holds out his hands, smiling, all teeth.

  I toss the coin back to him. “For the pirate ship, not the maze.” No way will Lucky be the next kid lost to the Castaway Carnival.

  Chapter Three

  The Girls Bathroom

  Three hours later…

  I’m not here. I’m somewhere else. Anywhere else.

  “Smash it in her face!” Hannah screeches through her teeth.

  No. This isn’t happening.

  “Shove it up her nose, Les!” Dillon chants.

  Laughter. Snickering. Evil heckling.

  No.

  I cough, choke, and shake my face from side to side to avoid the blood clots that formerly resided in Lesley’s upper vag region.

  Oh God.

  The thought tugs a familiar heat up from my stomach.

  Lesley’s straddling me with her volleyballer’s thighs, waggling her used tampon across my face. Hannah and Dillon stand sentry on each of my wrists, their wedge-heeled shoes smashing my hands into the floor, pinching my fingertips.

  Lesley squeezes the tampon.

  It drips.

  Small red tears plunk along the bridge of my nose. It’s all rust and sour, and that acidic warmth rises higher into my throat.

  “Stop!” I scream.

  “What’s that? I couldn’t hear you, Olive. You know, over all of the gagging!” Lesley has that trademark sneer stretched across her face.

  “Get off—”

  The tampon’s jabbed against my mouth. Thank God I clamp my lips closed. But the damage is done.

  Stringy, wet cotton sticks to my face. I twist my head to the side to get it off me.

  Then I puke.

  A chorus of “Ewww!” is followed by the scattering of two pairs of wedges and one pair of lime green Chuck Taylor’s.

  I force myself up off the floor and wipe my mouth with my sleeve. The three of them stand in a line facing me like a firing squad. They’re blocking the door. I realize there’s a greater plan and I’m about to find out all about it.

  In a split-second decision (probably my animal instincts to flee impending danger), I bound between them, shoving through Lesley and Dillon with my shoulders.

  I don’t make it far before my arms are grabbed. I’m not super tall or super strong, and I’m definitely not athletic, so they far outweigh me on all counts. Despite the losing battle, I jerk my arms, trying to rip free of their claws, when something snaps inside me. Maybe it’s that animal instinct again, because, for the first time, I fight back.

  “What?!” I scream. “What do you want from me?!” I shout with everything I have from someplace deep down inside me. It must unnerve them because there’s a pause.

  Somehow, I pull one arm free, ball my hand into a tight, solid fist, and punch Lesley straight in the nose. Sheer shock pales her face and she stumbles several steps back.

  Blood dribbles out both of her nostrils.

  My hand stings with electricity and pain.

  I swear Lesley’s eyes go red. “Oh, you’re gonna pay for that, Olive McGaggy!” she yells, blood running over her top lip and into her mouth so her teeth are a horrible shade of pink-red.

  Stunned at what I’ve done but knowing I should run for my life, I hesitate a beat too long. They catch me as I flounder, pinning me to the floor and assuming their usual and perfected positions of restraint. Lesley straddles my thighs and leans over, her face inches from mine, her blood, for the second time in mere minutes, dripping down my nose.

  Then her eyes switch from wild to wide. I’m not sure which is more terrifying.

  She clears her throat, spitting a bloody chunk to the side.

  The bell rings.

  “Time’s up,” she says, and Hannah and Dillon move away from me.

  Lesley moves off me, but not before clutching hold of my jaw. “You just wait—” She smirks. “You won’t even know what hit you.”

  Shoving my face away so my head hits the floor, she stands and leaves, her minions following.

  I lay there, dazed.

  The door swings shut.

  I’m alone.

  The stained, aquamarine tile of the girl’s bathroom is hard and cold beneath my back. A pile of vomit sits festering much too close to my face, a bloodied tampon the cherry on top. Just as the stink oozes toward my hair, I manage to sit up with a grunt.

  I glance down. A rusty red stain streaks across my uniform. I stand, wobble, then stagger toward the mirror and gasp.

  It looks like I’ve slaughtered a pig with my bare hands and eaten its entrails. Instead, it’s Lesley’s period spattered all over my face and chest, on my lips.

  I dry heave into the sink, my hands shaking, clutching the sides of the porcelain.

  My throat tightens and my breath wheezes.

  Not daring to make eye contact again with the mirror, I turn on the water, swiveling the knob all the way to the left. Steam rises from the sink as I work to lather the soap into a thick foam. I then slather my face, rubbing it raw. The water burns, but I don’t care. The hotter the better.

  More soap… In my mouth, my eyes, my neck, I scrub between wheezing and hyperventilating. I spot my necklace, the one I never take off, the one I got from my favorite market stand in Portland. There’s a splattering of blood across the simple, silver disk and the sight sends a coursing rage through my body. Using the sleeve of my sweater, I wash it clean. Then I cup my hands under the faucet and dump soapy water over my head and scrub, scrub, scrub with my nails until my hair is drenched and my face is so red my freckles vanish into my skin.

  I stop and clutch my chest, trying to catch my breath. A string of high-pitched hisses leaves my throat in fast succession like a blocked flute. The painful tune continues but soon slows until I’m just breathing heavily, the whistling in my throat gone.

  “Okay… Hhhh… I’m okay…” I’ve managed to tame the attack. The monster.

  Hair wet, it sticks to my scalp, soap suds showing where I d
idn’t rinse well enough. My sweater, the white one, the one with the expensive, embroidered emblem on it (of course) is now soaked. The stains smear and seep outward like a bad tie-dye job. I reach into my backpack and switch it out for my maroon gym T-shirt, throwing the soiled sweater into the trash. Mom won’t be happy—that’s two sweaters in one semester—but the stains will never wash out, and I don’t want any reminders of this moment.

  Balancing on my toes, I step over the spreading puke, Lesley’s tampon bleeding red into the chunks. The image of her with a bloody nose flashes behind my eyes.

  What the hell did I just do?

  Made things one hundred times worse, that’s what.

  At the door, I grab a couple paper towels and dab my face, hoping for more of a fresh-from-the-shower glow instead of the I-just-ran-a-few-miles-and-puked look I’m probably sporting. But when I go to toss them in the trash, I see a large clear tube smeared with red liquid. I lift it out. Across the front are the words “Stage Blood,” and in smaller print, “Realistic qualities, including: metallic scent, deep color, and medium flowing viscosity.” Then, under that, “Warning: Will stain most light materials and fabric. Test first. Not for use in mouth. Do not ingest.”

  Great.

  I might be poisoned, but I’m oddly relieved.

  Chapter Four

  Asshats!

  When I enter English outlandishly late and wearing a gym shirt, Lesley sneers at me from the back row.

  “Why’s your hair wet, Olive?” she calls out. “Oh. Did you just get out of gym?”

  Everyone looks at me. Some laugh. Others whisper. Because they all know gym isn’t until the end of the day.

  I skulk to my seat, the desk behind Tawny. Wide-eyed, my best friend stares at me with her sweet, round face, cheeks flushed from walking across campus, sweat beading her forehead.

  “What happened?” The familiar rasp of her voice hugs me.

  “Trio.”

  “Again?”

  I nod.

  Throughout class, she keeps her eyes narrowed on Lesley, who only responds with eye rolling. Luckily, about the time it seems Tawny’s taken her last eye roll silently, the bell rings.

  “Asshats! They’re total asshats!” Tawny has a mouth like a sailor, asshats being one of her three favorite expletives.

 

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