The Trouble with Destiny

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The Trouble with Destiny Page 17

by Lauren Morrill


  Huck looks over at Andrew and Clarice, who are trying to pretend they’re focused on their waffles and not on the conversation we’re not having.

  “Eyes on your own paper,” Huck snaps, and they quickly slide their plates down three seats, still not making eye contact with me. “Okay, now for real. What happened last night?”

  “What are you talking about?” I ask, but my voice cracks and croaks.

  “Liza, knock it off. Everyone’s seen the picture.”

  Picture?

  All the blood rushes from my head, leaving my cheeks feeling icy cold. The pineapple in my stomach feels like it’s made of lead. Or possibly a living creature that’s now trying to crawl its way back up. I barely remember the events of last night, but what I do remember tells me that if there’s a picture, it’s of something embarrassing. Like maybe me eating off a discarded room service tray? Or me looking totally wasted hanging off Russ?

  The memory alone turns my stomach.

  Huck takes one look at me, and the playful grin melts from his face, replaced by a sort of wide-eyed seriousness. “So there’s good news and bad news.” He reaches into his pocket and pulls out his phone, with a large spiderweb of a crack spreading across the screen. He taps a few buttons, and the screen fills with a picture. At first glance, I breathe a sigh of relief. The picture shows an expansive, inky-black sky lit by an incredible half-moon that’s hanging low over the glittering ocean. It’s a pretty impressive picture to have been taken with a phone.

  “Uh, okay, so is this the good news or the bad—” And that’s when I see it. In the corner of the picture, just barely in the frame, is a sleeping form, cuddled up in a fetal position, brown hair spread out in a cascade of curls on the blue lounge cushion. The glowing moon casts a beam of light over the face, making it crystal clear, even if it’s not the focus of the photo. And draped on the end of the deck chair is a blue-and-black Holland High sweatshirt, one sleeve extended so the viewer can read what’s printed down the length of it: quarterback.

  And the person sleeping peacefully, a slight grin playing at the corner of her mouth?

  It’s me.

  The room starts to tilt to the left, and I have to place both my palms flat on the white tablecloth to keep from falling right out of my chair. Heat rushes to my cheeks, and I press my cool hands against them to block the rising blush.

  “Please tell me that was the bad news,” I whisper, “and there isn’t anything worse.”

  “Well, that was bad. But not that bad. I mean, you’re not naked or anything. You weren’t naked, right?”

  “Huck!” I say, and he nods.

  “Of course not. So see? It could be way worse.”

  “How did you get that?”

  “Uh, well, I guess that’s the bad part. Now that we’re close to Nassau, we’ve got cell service again, so the picture is …” He trails off, giving his phone a spin on the tabletop.

  “Everyone got it?” My voice is coming in breathy gasps, and I can feel Andrew and Clarice staring at me, even from three seats away.

  “Not exactly,” Huck says. He clicks the screen, so the picture disappears and is replaced by his home screen, a picture from freshman year of Huck and me dressed as Harry and Hermione. “One of the Athenas, probably Missy, texted it and it went viral.”

  I glance back around the dining room, where it suddenly feels like everyone I know is bent over screens and sliding phones across tablecloths. Even up in the buffet line, Jared is balancing a plate of bacon and eggs on one hand while scrolling through his phone with the other.

  So that’s why Lenny is trying to avoid me.

  Of course he thinks I’m with Russ. Russ has done everything but fly a banner over the ship that says back off, lenny! From his high fives and tackle hugs to the picture, it could make me think we’re dating, when it’s the last thing I’d want to do. But Lenny doesn’t know that. And what’s worse, he’s got Demi in his ear telling him it’s all true.

  I take a deep breath, because unlike the photo going public, this is one problem I can solve. And I can solve it right now. I start to rise from my chair, but Huck throws his arm around my shoulder to keep me from bolting.

  “The good news! You need the good news,” he says. “While you were snoozing on the Starlight Deck, I talked my way into the crew’s nightly poker game. Apparently the Sail Away Cruise Line has been a bit negligent when it comes to inspections and repairs. A jerry-rigged engine repair blew, requiring a visit from a repair boat with replacement parts. The engine is powering back up as we speak, which means full power should be restored by nightfall.

  “And that’s not even the best part,” Huck goes on, his devious grin back. “I found out that more than half the ship’s security cameras are fakes! Just for show, to make people feel safe. They’re not even plugged in. The only ones that work are up near the luxury cabins and around the ship’s railings. I guess so they’ll know who to arrest if anyone gets thrown overboard.”

  I hear the words, but they don’t mean anything to me. The security cameras are fake? Okay. How about the fact that thanks to a series of random and weird events that could only happen to me, it looks like I’m dating the star of the football team. Because that would happen. Seriously, Huck, security cameras?

  When I don’t respond, he spells it out for me. “Which means if the bowling ball did cause the engine problem, there’s no way for them to know it came from us! We’re free and clear, and we can get away with whatever we want!”

  I nod, relaxing for a bit. “That’s great, Huck,” I say. “Good work.” And then I steel my shoulders. I have to do it. I have to tell Lenny that Russ and I are in no way an item. It’s going to be awkward and weird, but maybe then, he will stop avoiding me.

  “Are you still thinking about the picture?” Huck asks, searching my face for signs of panic.

  “Yeah, but it’s going to be fine,” I reply, my voice full of steely resolve. I see Huck cock an eyebrow at me, not expecting strength in the face of this moment. I rise from the table. Maybe I can get Lenny to sit with me, have a bite, and I can straighten this all out.

  “I have to go,” I say. I snatch my plate off the table and head toward Lenny’s table. I keep my head down to avoid answering any questions and scurry off as fast as I can without looking like I’m making a run for it. With my head down, I won’t see the sideways glances or the giggling, or the picture plastered on phone screens in cupped palms or hidden under tables.

  Lenny’s at a table by himself near a window, a beam of sunlight turning his strawberry-blond hair a rich coppery color.

  As I walk up, I’m beset with a sudden urge to turn tail and run far away, but looking at his camera on the table, the old tapestry-style strap in a tangle next to his fork, I know what I have to do. If I stand any chance with Lenny, I have to make sure he knows I’m not with Russ.

  “Um, hey, Lenny,” I say, then clear my voice so it’s not so rattling. “Can I talk to you for a second?”

  He glances up at me, head cocked to one side, and I can see his gray eyes giving me the once-over. With one hand in my pocket, I cross my fingers and run a silent please oh please through my head.

  “Yeah, no problem,” he says, an easy smile spreading across his face that makes the tension dissolve out of me like air rushing from a balloon. “But do you mind if we do it later? I’m supposed to meet up with my dad.”

  “Oh yeah, totally, of course. Later is great. I’ll talk to you later,” I say, then bite my tongue to keep my nervous babbling from taking off in earnest. I give him a bright smile and step aside as he stands and winds his camera around his neck.

  As I watch him disappear into the hall, I hope that it’s a good sign, and that later I’ll still have the guts to say what I need to say.

  Chapter 17

  With Lenny queued up for later, the next item on my list of things to make my life not so dis
astrous is to get Nicole back in the band. Our progress the other night was great, but I know once she’s back, we really have a shot at that $25,000. Rachel, our second-chair flute player, is good, but she just doesn’t have Nicole’s expressive phrasing or her impressive vibrato. And those fine details are what we need to really impress the judges.

  The Island Oasis spa boasts facials, mani-pedis, hot stone massages, mud baths, and pretty much every other bizarro treatment designed to help your skin glow and your Zen release. Between the stone water feature in the corner of the lobby, the copious potted palms, and the semi-soothing sound track of birds and crickets piping through a set of invisible speakers, I feel like I’m in a tropical rain forest when I enter looking for Nicole, who, as far as I’ve heard, has been basically living here. I’m sure there are some people who must find this place soothing, but I’m not one of them.

  “Can I help you, ma’am?” a smiling attendant asks from behind the bamboo counter.

  “I have a friend in there. Can I just look—”

  The attendant, still smiling, shakes her head. “No entry beyond this point unless you are here for a treatment.”

  I was hoping Nicole would just be sort of, I don’t know, hanging out in the lobby, but no dice. It looks like I’m going to have to do some undercover work if I’m going to find her. I realize this is exactly what Huck was probably planning anyway when he suggested I go look for Nicole at the spa. He was hoping I’d “chill out” for a bit. Hoping the spa would do me some good. And you know what? Maybe he’s right.

  “I’d like a massage, please,” I say, figuring if I have to, I’ll just go with whatever is lowest impact. Maybe they have those ones where you sit up in the chair like at the mall. I could probably deal with that. It’ll give me a little more time to figure out what I’m going to say to Nicole, anyway.

  Down the hall over the attendant’s shoulder, I spot Nicole. She strides out of a frosted-glass door just off the lobby, clad in a fluffy white terry-cloth robe and those flimsy spa sandals on her feet.

  “Nicole!” I say. I let my eyes gaze over her, from her newly highlighted hair to her tanned skin to the way she stands at full attention, tall with her shoulders back. For as long as I’ve known her, Nicole has carried herself low, curling her shoulders, rolling her back, and dropping her head, as if she’s constantly running through a rainstorm and trying not to get wet. It takes her from five feet tall to practically garden gnome–sized. But now, with her shoulders back and her chin up, she looks like she’s grown a foot. Despite her diminutive stature, it looks like she’s ready to strut the catwalk in Milan or stroll down the Champs-Élysées on a sunny spring day. I call her name again, but she either doesn’t hear me or doesn’t want to, because in a flash, she disappears through another door.

  The attendant smiles and hands me an appointment card, then gestures for me to follow her. I stuff it into my back pocket and follow her down a pristine white hallway with soft glass lighting and the sound of gently rushing water coming from hidden speakers. She leads me into a small room with a massage table in the middle. Panels of silk hang from the walls, and lush potted plants peek out from every corner. She shows me where to put my clothes, then hands me a towel so fluffy it feels like it should have a marshmallow center.

  “Just undress, drape yourself with the towel, and hop up on the table. The masseuse will be in in a moment with the menu.”

  The mention of a menu has my stomach growling. This morning’s fiasco at breakfast kept me from the plate of waffles, and now all I can think about is food. Well, food, and the fact that my crush thinks I’m sleeping with someone else, and according to my friends, that someone else is the enemy. And pretty soon I’m going to have to tell him that’s not happening, which is pretty much going to be me saying, Uh, hi, Lenny. I’m not dating Russ. I’m telling you this because I like you. Do with that what you will. Ack. Maybe I do need a massage. But the attendant is gone before I can ask what she means by “menu.”

  The door clicks shut quietly behind me, and I figure I have only a few minutes before the masseuse comes in. The last thing I want is for her (or him!) to walk in while I’m half naked, so I set about undressing as if there’s a million-dollar prize at the end. I shove my underwear into the pocket of my jeans, throw them on the wooden bench against the back wall, and then leap onto the table. I fling the towel around my front, tucking it under my butt so I don’t feel quite so, well, naked.

  But with the NASCAR pace at which I threw off my clothes, I’m left sitting naked on the table for what feels like forever. Of course there’s no clock in a room meant for relaxation, but I can’t help myself from counting off seconds. I shudder to think what this massage could be costing me, so instead I start passing the time figuring out how I can get this bill to go to Dad.

  The door opens with a whispered whoosh of air, and my thoughts are put on pause by the masseuse, who looks like she travels with her own makeup artists and lighting director. The soft light bounces off her high cheekbones and full lips, and her ice-blond hair is in one of those twisty braids that looks as if it’s effortlessly wound around her head, but that would take me thirty-six bobby pins, a can of hair spray, and three extra hands to achieve. A gold name tag pinned to her chest reads ilsa, a name as exotic as she is, and beneath it, in smaller type, brunna, sweden.

  “ ’Allo,” she says, her Nordic accent thick. “I am Ilsa. ’Ow are you?”

  “Um, fine,” I reply, wondering how long this small talk is going to continue. I kind of just want to zone out for a bit and then find Nicole, not trade meatball recipes with the Swedish goddess.

  She flashes a grin that temporarily blinds me in the otherwise dim room. She walks over to a wooden stand and plucks a heavy piece of cardstock off the top. She hands it to me.

  “Zis ees our manu,” she says, and it takes me a moment to translate in my head. As soon as I see the listing on the page, I realize she means “menu.” Each service is listed in a loopy bold script, and like a fancy restaurant, there are no prices anywhere to be found. Nor are there descriptions, only euphemistic titles like “Ultimate Bliss” and “Rejuvenated Relaxation.”

  I squint at the page as if maybe by looking a little harder, the thing will just talk to me.

  “You ’ave question?”

  I can feel the knot of tension beginning to retie itself inside me, so instead I shake my head and jab my finger at a title near the middle of the page. I get another dazzling smile from my masseuse, who directs me to lie facedown on the table (using gestures, thank God). I settle in as she adjusts the towel low on my back. Within minutes, I feel warm, firm hands working out the knots in my back.

  Okay, now I get the spa thing.

  Suddenly all sense of time or trouble is melting away like hot butter in a skillet as Ilsa digs the heels of her hands into my muscles. I take deep, cleansing breaths and focus on the sound of the water and the soft piano melody that seems to drift through the room like a fog. But my relaxation shatters as I realize the music is a piano version of a Copland piece we played in concert band last year. It was in our final spring concert, and we totally killed it. And Molly played a clarinet solo that totally didn’t suck. I wonder if I could find the sheet music online somewhere and get it polished up tonight. I bet we could win with the Copland. I bet if I just run an extra practice or two …

  “Turn over, please.”

  I open my eyes and stare through the hole in the massage table down to the spotless white canvas of Ilsa’s sneakers. She wants me to do what, now? Please let that have been a misinterpretation due to her accent.

  “Come now, turn over,” she says, her words precise and clear for the first time since she entered the room. There’s no mistaking it. And to avoid even a hint of any, she lifts the towel and gives my bare hip a nudge with the palm of her hand.

  “Um, I don’t think that’s, uh, necessary?” I squeak, still firmly planted facedow
n on the table.

  “You ordered full-body package. Ees time for you to turn over now.”

  Look, I’m not a prude.

  Okay, I am a little bit. I just have no interest in showing all my business to a woman who looks like Anna Wintour custom-designed her in the Vogue offices. Why did I think this could possibly be a good idea? Why do I ever listen to any of Huck’s suggestions?

  “Could we maybe, um, skip—”

  “Nonsense,” she clucks. “Turn. I weel close my eyes if you are nervous. We keep towel, okay?”

  I lift my head slightly and glance up at her to see that, true to her word, her eyes are closed. So quick as a flash, I flip over and jerk the towel back down over me, tucking it under my armpits and pinning it with my arms.

  “Good?” I ask.

  Ilsa opens one eye and peers down at me. She’s a professional, so I can barely see the sigh she lets out.

  “You need to relax, my dear,” she says, but she doesn’t push me further. She sets about massaging my arms, neck, and shoulders, and the Zen comes creeping slowly back. The massage continues for what feels like hours, but is probably only minutes. I may have even drifted off for a moment. I’m so concentrated on breathing in the warm air and letting it out in deep, cleansing breaths.

  Before I know it, the massage is done. I open my eyes to prepare to climb off the table, but Ilsa is coming at me with what looks like a tongue depressor covered in chocolate pudding. I shrink back even though, plastered to the table, there’s really nowhere to go.

  “Ees mud mask. Part of service,” she says, and before I can protest, I feel the warm goop splat on the side of my cheek. She plops a matching dollop on the other cheek, and one on my forehead, then begins smearing it across my face until I’m covered in a thick coating of mud. She takes a steamy warm towel and wraps it around my face with only a small opening for me to breathe out of. Then she covers my whole body with an airy white sheet, pulling it right under my chin. If I were claustrophobic, this would surely send me over the edge, as the weight of the mud and towel makes me feel like I’ve been sunk deep into the bayou.

 

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