other guys all looked at each other. âShit,â said the Ramone guy. âHarrison.â
I bent to brace my shoulder against the back of the car.
Purple Girl threw me a grateful look. âThank god,â she said. âSomeone who has half a brain.â
I didnât even know her name then.
âYou guys going to help or what?â I asked, looking up.
It was like my words broke them out of their spell. They took off, leaving the girl and me behind. I had to push the Smart Car off her foot by myself.
Which wasnât that hard, really.
What was hard was getting treated like a criminal for trying to be a nice guy.
Mr. Harrison didnât care that I wasnât in on the plan. Heâs a dick like that, I discovered. All that matters is his own view of things. Smash through bushes. See two kids standing next to car. Car in wrong spot. One kid looks like heâs maybe the wrong color. Must punish. Hard. I guess it didnât help that Iâm new this year and he doesnât know me. He had his own conclusions to jump to.
I can see why youâd want to hide his car. The guyâs a jerk.
That was a week ago. And now here we are.
Shannon didnât rat out the other nerds who were in on the prank, even though she had every right. I guess thatâs respectable in some circles.
But it doesnât make me any less pissed off.
Chapter Three
The faded red boathouse looms up in front of us, eerie in the dying daylight. A padlock hangs from the ring on the door.
Low-grade anger simmers in my gut as my cold fingers fumble with the keys. Mr. Harrison handed them to me with a little sneer when I reported to the office after school today.
âLetâs see if youâre as good at cleaning as you are at messing with private property, Owens.â
I didnât trust myself to try and explain it to him. Again.
I just took the keys, looked him in the eye and gave him a nod. Let him figure out in time how mistaken heâs been.
I select a key that looks like itâll fit the big padlock. But before I can slide it in, the shackle swings open. Not even locked.
I pocket the key and pull the door open.
That old-wooden-building smell hits me.
âWatch your step,â I say over my shoulder. The boathouse is raised on concrete blocks. I point to the space separating the floor from the ground so Shannon doesnât trip on her way in. I donât want to have to carry her out of here if she falls and breaks something.
âLights?â Shannon asks. Sheâs standing beside me in the doorway.
I fumble around for a switch. âI donât think there are any,â I say.
âThatâs weird,â she says. Our eyes adjust to the darkness. âItâs creepy in here.â
âNah,â I say. But I donât mean it. I just want to disagree with her, even though sheâs right. The place is creepy as hell.
Whatâs left of the daylight streams in through a high window. I set the heavy padlock down on a shelf. Something scuttles across the roof. Our heads turn toward the sound.
âSquirrels?â Shannon asks.
âMaybe. Or rats.â
âRats?â Her voice comes out small.
I nod. âTheyâve probably made nests in the eaves.â
She shivers. I wouldnât have thought a punk like her could be nervous. She seems so sure of herself.
Maybe sheâs afraid of nature. Sometimes people like that are. Itâs easier to feel rebellious in the city. You can fool yourself into thinking youâre strong when youâre surrounded by concrete and skyscrapers.
I decide to ask her what Iâve been wondering. âWhat did Harrison do, anyway, that made you guys want to take off with his car?â
She shoots me a look. âHeâs a prick. Youâve seen that for yourself.â
Thatâs the truth.
âAnd he muzzles free speech. It sucks.â Her voice is hard. âI get it all the time with the newspaper.