Dance Team
Page 5
“Sure,” I said. “I’d like that.”
Olivia let out a sigh of relief. “Oh, Izzy,” she wailed over the phone. “I’m so sorry I didn’t believe you from the beginning. I should have trusted you.”
“It’s okay,” I said. And it was, too. “Nothing Camilla did was the kind of stuff you’d expect from someone you look up to, someone you want to call a friend.”
Joel and Eli wanted to know all the details when they arrived with Olivia.
“It was Camilla’s little brother who bumped Leah at the mall,” I said. “And her cousin Alex helped her and Amelia and Jaci do the graffiti, just like you thought, Joel.”
“Camilla, Jaci, and Amelia tinkered with Leah’s bike brakes,” Olivia added. “They heard us talking about going biking. They drove by Leah’s house the Friday before, and Jaci snuck in to mess with the brake cable.”
“I kind of have to hand it to Camilla,” I said. “She confessed to everything, but she didn’t drag in Jaci or Amelia.”
“But then they confessed on their own,” Olivia added. “They didn’t leave Camilla hanging.”
Loyalty is a funny thing.
“So what happens now?” Joel asked.
“Camilla, Jaci, and Amelia are suspended for two weeks. Leah’s family doesn’t want to pursue criminal charges, but Camilla and Alex will still have to deal with the illegal drugs stuff,” Olivia said.
“And dance team’s disbanded for the rest of the year,” I said sadly. “Ms. Geiger said they’d have to review everything before they decide if we can perform and compete next year.”
“I bet you will,” Joel said encouragingly. “It’s not like the rest of you did anything wrong. And you were so good at regionals!”
“You were there?” I said, surprised.
“Of course we were!” Eli answered. “Where else would we be?”
Suddenly I felt a little better. “Maybe with someone like Cate or Trez as captain, Mrs. Nuñez will let us keep going,” I said. “Most of the team didn’t know anything about what Camilla was up to. We still have three years to win regionals!”
“And nail my leg-hold turns,” Olivia said.
I smiled. “And my triple pirouettes!”
Charnan Simon lives in Seattle, Washington, and has written more than one hundred books for young readers. Her two daughters are mostly grown-up, and she misses having teenagers running in and out of the house.
Table of Contents
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
About the Author