Authors: T. R. Burns
Abe hands me the K-Pak, and I field a few more questions,
like what our teachers will do when we don't show for assignments, what the Good Samaritans might do if anyone reports us, what we'll do if we're caught. I wait until my classmates are done asking, and then I give one answer.
“I don't know.”
“What?”
Eric asks.
“How could I?” I ask. “We've never done this before. But I do know one thing: Annika will
love
it. And she'll probably reward us better than she ever has.”
This does it. At the idea of credits and Kommissary shopping sprees, I can tell all doubts have been erased.
Just to be sure, I ask, “Are you in?”
“YES!” they shout.
“Great,” I say. “We'll meet on the beach in an hour. See you then!”
I hang up. Gabby and Abe dash to their rooms to get ready. I check in on Lemon, who's just getting up and promises he'll be ready in time. He also reminds me that he won't be attacking anyone, least of all his parents, but that he'll station himself outside the cafeteria and be on the lookout for potential surprises.
Then I go to Elinor's door, which is closed. When we told her about the plan, she said she had no reason to participate, since her mom's not here. Gabby's the only one she's really been talking to ever since I told her about Abe suspecting she was working for the Incriminators, and she tried to convince her to play long anyway, but Elinor refused.
Now, feeling a little bolder after rallying the troublemaking troops, I knock gently on her door.
No answer.
“Elinor?” I ask. “Are you up?”
Nothing.
I'm about to knock again when my K-Pak buzzes. Reminding myself I'm not the happiest when someone wakes me up from a sound sleep, I reluctantly leave Elinor alone. Then I return to the living room to read the new message.
FROM:
[email protected]
SUBJECT:
Training Session?
Hey, Seamus!
Any interest in a quick prebreakfast lesson today?
âIke
I press reply and start typing.
FROM:
[email protected]
SUBJECT:
RE: Training Session
Hi, Ike!
I'm always interested in hanging out with you, but I kind of have plans this morning. Big ones. I'll tell you all about them ASAP!
Also, I wanted to thank you for getting back to me the other day. I'm really sorry to hear that your Kilter career hasn't gone the way you wanted it to. Whoever you hoped to help is really missing out. I know if I were in trouble, you'd be the first guy I called.
And thanks for the warning about Annika. She's been a hard one to figure out, so I definitely
appreciate the feedback. I'll proceed with caution and tell my friends to do the same!
Can we meet later today? Let me know!
âSeamus
I send that note, then remember I owe another.
FROM:
[email protected]
SUBJECT:
Spots
Dear Miss Parsippany,
Thanks for your e-mail. I've thought a lot about what you said about leopards not changing their spots. Mostly I've thought about if I think that's true. Or if I want it to be.
Take me, for example. For years, I was a really good kid. Then, on the day of the Unfortunate Apple Incident, I suddenly became a bad kid. It was like a switch flipped from off to on. I've been getting into trouble ever since.
My parents are other examples. For the longest
time, Dad was nice and Mom was . . . well, Mom. Not mean, but definitely not warm and caring like Dad. But recently their switches flipped too. Now Mom's nice and Dad's not. I never could have imagined them acting the way they've been acting lately if I hadn't actually witnessed the weirdness with my own eyes.
So if a leopard CAN change his spots, then I can be a good kid again. And my parents can go back to normal. But if a leopard CAN'T change his spots, then maybe I was never really a bad kid, and Mom and Dad's new behavior is just a strange phase. BUT, what if a leopard can do both? Like, change his spots once, and then never again? What if my parents and I are stuck in these new roles forever? Is that good? Bad?
I don't know . . . but I might be about to find out.
Will keep you posted!
Sincerely,
Seamus
P.S. There's no question about Bartholomew
John. When it comes to him, once a bad leopard, always a bad leopard!
I send the note. Then I finish gathering my stuff. A half an hour later, Lemon, Abe, Gabby, and I meet at the elevator.
“Ready?” I ask.
“Absolutely!”
Gabby sings into her megamicrophone.
Abe winces. “Always.”
“If I have to be,” Lemon says.
We head aboveground. Once outside, I'm struck by how normal everything seems. The sun shines. The turquoise lake sparkles. Our classmates talk and laugh as they head for their boats. It's a morning just like any other we've experienced since arriving at Kamp Kilter.
Until, a few minutes later, it isn't.
My friends and I still climb into our boat. Lemon still pulls us while swimming. The boat still leaks. Abe, Gabby, and I still fill plastic cups with water to keep from sinking. All across the lake, our fellow Troublemakers do the same.
But then, when we reach the other side of the lake, something changes.
Instead of sprinting down the beach, my classmates stop. At first I think something's wrong, or that they've changed their minds about the plan. After all, we told them we're surprising our parents in the cafeteria. I assumed they'd run right there.
But then I step out of the boat. And I realize they've stopped . . . because they're waiting for me.
M
y last name starts with
an H. That's the eighth letter in the alphabet. Whenever my class back at Cloudview Middle School traveled the halls together, there were always nine people ahead of me. I was never a line leader. I was never
any
kind of leader.
“Seamus?” Gabby whispers.
“Hinkle?” Abe hisses.
“If we're hanging out awhile,” Lemon says, “I'm going to grab a nap on that beach chair overâ”
“No.” The word pops from my mouth. I stand up a little straighter, speak a little louder as I address the group. “We left early. The Good Samaritans and our teachers are probably on their way. We need to get off the beach before they see us.”
“Our teachers teach us how to make trouble,” Alison points out. “If they knew what we were about to do, why would they stop us?”
“They work for Annika,” I say. “This wasn't her idea. At the very least they'd hold us up while they tried to reach her and ask what was going on. Who knows how long that could take? Our parents could be gone by then.”
“My parents would wait at least a week for a million dollars,” Carter says.
“Not if Annika or our teachers got there before we did and told them they're waiting for no reason,” I say.
“Good point,” Carter says.
“Any other questions?” I ask.
My classmates, holding backpacks and duffel bags of troublemaking supplies, are silent. A few of them look nervous. Most look anxious to get to work. I try to figure out how I feel as I press one finger to my lips, reminding everyone to be quiet, point to the woods behind the beach, and start walking.
Excited. Halfway to the cafeteria, I decide that's how I feel. I'm nervous, too, and a little uncertain . . . but I'm mostly excited. But not because we're about to launch a sneak attack on our parents. On Dad, who might have fun battling back. And on Mom, who deserves whatever she gets for conspiring with Bartholomew John, the son she wishes she'd gotten instead.
No. I have butterflies in my stomach and a smile on my face because my classmates listened to me. When I started across the beach, they followed. Even Abe, the most competitive Troublemaker I know. And I'm not on some sort of power trip. It's just nice to be taken seriously by my peers. That never happened at Cloudview Middle School.
If she could see me now, Mom might even be proud.
But she won't. Invisibility is key when it comes to troublemaking. That's why, when we reach the large cabin housing the Kamp Kilter cafeteria, I duck down, dart to the back of the building, and wave my classmates closer.
“Okay,” I whisper. “They're in there. Do what you can, and remember: Don't let them see you! As soon as they do, our jobs get a lot harder. And the longer we last, the more fun we'll have,
the more impressed Annika will beâand the more credits she'll give us!”
Eyes light up. A few girls clap quietly. A few boys exchange silent high fives.
“Ready?” I ask.
Their heads bob up and down.
“Let's go!”
Troublemakers bolt left. Right. Around the sides of the building. In front of the building. A few even scale walls and climb onto the roof.
I stay where I am. Ike loaned me his Kilter Katcher, which folds up for easy storage. I take that from my backpack, assemble it quickly, and step onto a large rock beneath a cafeteria window.
“You sure about this?” Lemon asks.
He's standing next to me. His hands are empty. His face is serious.
“It was partly your idea,” I remind him. “So that I might be able to stay at Kilter after telling Annika the truth.”
“I know, but now that we're here, I'm wondering . . . what if
none
of us stayed at Kilter?”
I grab the wall to keep from falling off the rock. “You want to go home? Like, for good? And never see each other again?”
“We'd see each other,” he says. “Friends make it work. You said that yourself.”
“ACK!”
Now I fall off the rock. Then I jump back up, stand on tiptoes, and peer inside the cafeteria. That's where the shriek came from.
“Abe,” I report. “When his dad wasn't looking, he turned his pancakes, eggs, and bacon into a 3-D head. Like a breakfast snowman. That looks like Abe.” I smile. “Mr. Hansen's totally freaking.”
“Do you see my family?” Lemon asks.
I scan the large room. As predicted, no parent wanted to miss out on a million bucks, so it's packed. Mr. and Mrs. Hansen are sitting at a table near the back. Mr. Ryan, Mrs. Ryan, and Flora are sharing a table with another family I don't recognize. Dozens of other moms, dads, brothers, and sisters fill their plates at the long buffet, pour coffee and orange juice at the beverage standâand hardly eat or drink as they talk and check their Kamp Kilter computers. My guess is they're
awaiting news or instructions related to this morning's imaginary prize. They don't seem to mind the wait, though. There's a lot of smiling and laughing. Even by Mr. Hansen, who, after recovering from the shock, seems to think edible Abe is a sign of good things to come.
Until edible Abe explodes, sending butter, syrup, and bacon flying.
The Hansens squeal, leap from their seats, and wipe the goo from their faces. In his hiding spot under their table, Abe grins.
“Silent, happy niiiight . . . holy birthday briiiight  . . .”
“Gabby,” I announce.
“I hear her,” Lemon says.
Thanks to her special microphone, so does everyone else. As our musical alliance-mate belts out “Silent Night” mixed with “Happy Birthday” in a country twang, Mr. Ryan clamps his hands over his ears. Flora stuffs napkins into hers. Mrs. Ryan looks all around the room, searching for the song's source.
“She's behind a Kilter cook,” I say. “Moving when he does so no one sees her.”
“She's not bad,” Lemon says. “I wonder why her family doesn't like her singing?”
“Maybe too much of a good thing?” I guess.
“Maybe. How about my parents? And Finn?”
I scan the rest of the room. “They're here. Having muffins and tea.”
“Are they okay?”
“I think they're better than that. Your mom's dancing in her seat while she eats. She must like Gabby's entertainment.”
“Can you watch them while I'm out here? And make sure Troublemakers leave them alone?”
“You got it,” I say.
“Thanks. Keep your K-Pak on. I'll let you know ifâ”
Lemon's cut off by a long, loud whistle. It comes from Carter Montgomery, who's just launched a Kilter Kanary at his parents' table. That's a remote-controlled robot bird that releases an ear-piercing warble each time it zings past its target. Peering through the window I see Mr. and Mrs. Montgomery jump up and swat at the small metal creature swooping down and around their heads. I also see Carter off to the side, wearing the same gray shorts, shirt, and apron the
cafeteria employees wear. He must've found an extra outfit somewhere. And it's working; he's standing ten feet away from his parents, in broad view, but he blends in so well no one gives him a second glance.