by Annie Bryant
The park ranger chuckled. “Guglielmo Marconi invented transatlantic telegraphing. Sent the very first message across the ocean from this spot in—”
“1903!” Dillon finished. “And there’s the flag!” Dillon pointed down the path to a telltale red flag planted in the middle of some old stone ruins. The Salty Cods began to clap and cheer.
“We did it!” Katani squeaked. “I feel so…so…alive!”
“Sorry, guys…about the noodle thing,” Dillon said.
“Forget it, man.” Nick slapped him on the back.
“Could you get in the picture with us?” Patrice asked the ranger. “It’ll give us an extra point!”
“Sure thing.”
As the finder of “Macaroni” Station, Dillon insisted on being right smack in the middle of the photo, and wedged himself between a rather cozy Charlotte and Nick. “Best group ever!” Dillon declared.
Patrice looked at her watch. “Come on, you guys. We only have fifteen minutes before this hunt is officially over. I say we pump it and try to get those ten points by coming in first at Drummer’s Cove.”
“Sounds like a plan!” Charlotte agreed. They raced to their bikes and poured every ounce of energy into speeding through the mile-long homestretch. Katani felt a bolt of energy surge through her and found herself cycling ahead of Patrice!
“Hey, slow down, Sis!” Patrice laughed.
“I can’t!” Katani sang. “I have no control over the speed of my legs!”
“It’s called adrenaline,” Charlotte explained, flying by both the Summers sisters. The boys, both horrified at the thought of being outdone by all three girls on their team, also began going faster and soon enough the five members of the Salty Cods found themselves in an unofficial race to the finish line.
CHAPTER
20
Onward to the Finish Line
Are you sure we’re going the right way?” Betsy demanded of Fabiana for the millionth time. “Look. There’s a four-way intersection up there!”
“Bethany showed me the set location,” Fabiana patiently reassured the panicky Bogger, “and it was a straight shot to get to Drummer’s Cove.”
“Hey!” Danny shouted. “Check out that bike group up ahead!”
“It’s Katani and Patrice!” Isabel remembered the Summers sisters’ matching orange bikes.
“And that must be Charlotte…and Nick…and Dillon!” Maeve shouted. “They just turned right on that street up there!”
“Come on, we can catch up!” Fabiana urged her team.
“But do we go straight or right?” Betsy wailed.
Just then, another group of bikers came into view in the distance, zipping toward the intersection down a battered dirt path that wasn’t even a street.
“Hey! That’s Avery!” Maeve said, more quietly this time.
“And Chelsea, Ben, Yurt, and Kiki,” Riley finished.
“They’re going…left?” Betsy let her bike fall to the ground and plopped down in the dirt at the side of the road. “What are we going to do?”
“How is this even possible?” Fabiana muttered. “Drummer’s Cove is straight ahead, isn’t it?”
“We did already get lost once,” Isabel said softly.
“And those teams probably know where they’re going!” Maeve agreed.
“They’re going in opposite directions, if you didn’t notice,” Betsy said.
Danny sat down beside her and patted her back awkwardly. “It’ll be okay. Hand over the map, Fabiana! It’s in the pack!”
The Cranberry Boggers’ leader giggled a little, and found the map on the first try.
“Okay,” Danny said. He turned the map sideways. Then upside down. Then he flipped it over and peered at the other side.
“I’ll do it!” Betsy grabbed the map, and struggled to get the thing to lay flat on the grass. “What does it matter?” she yelled. “We’re in last place anyway.”
Danny nodded. “We’ve already lost!”
“What?” Maeve folded her arms and tapped one foot. “We’ll definitely lose if you two just sit here on the side of the road moaning! Get up!”
Startled, Betsy and Danny obeyed.
“Now let’s get moving!” Maeve sped off toward the intersection.
“Which way?” Fabiana asked.
“No idea!” Maeve answered. “We’ll figure it out!”
Three Cheers for the Great Scavenger Hunt
The Cods charged into the parking lot at Drummer’s Cove in full force to the sound of applause and cheering. “Congratulations!” Mr. Moore exclaimed in delight from behind his video camera. “You are the first team back! Well done, Salty Cods.”
Ms. O’Reilly and Mrs. Moore joined them with a cooler full of chilled juice boxes and ice-cream sandwiches—in cow-patterned paper, of course. “This was the bonus reward for the lighthouse clue,” Mrs. Moore shared.
The Cods hadn’t realized how famished they were. “These taste so délicieux!” Charlotte exclaimed, smacking the ice cream off her lips. “Especially now that we can relax and appreciate the creamy goodness!”
“Do you always talk like that?” asked Dillon.
Charlotte was puzzled. “Like what?”
“You know…like a writer?”
Nick put his arm over Charlotte’s shoulders, making her cheeks turn a deep cherry. “She is a writer. Can’t help talking like what she is.”
Charlotte reminded herself to chronicle this moment in her journal as one of the more romantic instances in her life, when suddenly a chorus of rowdy whooping burst into the parking lot…led by (big shocker) Avery Madden.
“BARNACLES! BARNACLES! WHOOOO-HOOO!” Avery hollered. She ran around her teammates, high-fiving everyone, so absorbed in her victory dance that she didn’t even notice that the Cods beat her to the punch.
“Aw, man!” Yurt exclaimed, seeing the other group at the far end of the lot. He jogged over, stopped before his classmates, and bowed dramatically. “You may have won the battle, but we shall see who wins the war…when Mr. Moore tallies the points. Wah hah hah!” he bellowed, in a fake, evil laugh.
“You’re nuts, man. We’re gonna cream you!” Dillon assured him and, winking at his teammates, added, “fair and square.”
The rest of the Beach Barnacles joined them. Charlotte, using her incredible observation skills, immediately knew that something was off. “Hey, why does it look like you were out in the rain?” she asked.
“You get splashed riding in a boat,” Kiki replied. “We took my Boston Whaler over to the Wildlife Sanctuary. It’s an awesome shortcut.”
“You can’t do that! Using a boat is against the rules.” Katani looked at the teachers. “Isn’t it?”
Mr. Moore pondered this for a moment and finally pronounced, “Well, technically there was no rule against alternate modes of transportation. I’ll allow it.”
The Beach Barnacles cheered and the Salty Cods groaned. “Well, there should be a rule against not working on the scavenger hunt at all!” Katani fumed. “We know what you guys did.”
Mr. Moore looked at the kids. “What’s this all about?”
When no one answered, Katani—who had become good and heated—continued, “They spent all of yesterday playing on the beach, and didn’t even start working on the scavenger hunt until today!”
Ms. Reilly looked the Beach Barnacles in the eye. “Is this true?” she gravely confronted them.
Kiki, Avery, Chelsea, and Yurt hung their heads in shame as Ben Briggs stepped forward. “I admit…it’s true. We were all having so much fun at the beach…well, we made a mistake.”
“But we spent all day today working really hard on the scavenger hunt!” Kiki defended. “It’s true, I swear.”
Mr. Moore sighed. “Ben, kids, I must say, I am disappointed in you.”
Charlotte, who had been dreading this moment all day, found she had no idea what to say. There was only one person on the team who she was really disappointed with. Charlotte turned to Chelsea and in a soft
voice asked, “After how hard we worked to make this weekend perfect…how could you…sell out like that?”
Chelsea opened her mouth to explain, but before she even had a chance to get a word out, her big brother intervened, “Now, hold on just one minute! This was not Chelsea’s idea. She didn’t want to hang out on the beach, and was the only one who spent all day yesterday looking for clues on that bonus-list thingy. In fact, if it wasn’t for Chelsea, I think this team would have just given up all together. She’s the reason we tried to win.”
Chelsea blushed and looked up adoringly at her brother. “Thanks,” she whispered.
Ben shook his head. “Whatever. It’s true. I’m just sorry I didn’t listen to you yesterday.” The rest of the Beach Barnacles nodded in agreement.
Charlotte felt terrible. “Yikes. I’m sorry, Chels. I had no idea.”
Chelsea waved her hand. “Forget about it.” She beamed at her brother, relishing the sensation of being recognized for doing the right thing.
“We worked really hard today,” Avery offered. Charlotte gave her a disappointed look. “And I’m really, really sorry….”
“Fine,” Charlotte sighed. “It’s not just you, though. It’s—”
At that moment the group was interrupted by an uproar of heaving and guffawing as the Cranberry Boggers shakily rolled into the lot. “Oh…my…goodness!” Maeve groaned. “I have never been so tired in my life!”
“Water! Somebody, quick! I’m dying of thirst,” Danny proclaimed, panting like a hungry Labrador.
“You can cut the act,” Katani informed them. “Or should I say…continue it?”
“Whatever do you mean?” Fabiana feigned innocence.
“We saw you at the movie set today,” Patrice declared.
“Um, uh…” Betsy stuttered. “There’s a really great explanation for that…. See, we, uh…” The crowd was shocked—they had never seen Betsy Fitzgerald speechless before in their lives.
Mr. Moore folded his arms and tapped his foot. Fabiana took a deep breath and stepped forward. “Okay, here’s the story. Yesterday on the scavenger hunt we got lost, and accidentally found ourselves on the set of the Black Sam Bellamy movie…. You know,” she said, glancing at Ms. O’Reilly, “the one with Simon Blackwell?”
“You met Simon Blackwell?” asked Ms. O’Reilly in a squeaky voice. She coughed and revised, “I mean, go on, Fabiana.”
“They asked us to be movie extras,” she confessed.
“And consultants,” Danny added proudly.
Fabiana nodded. “It all happened so fast. We had copies of our photo release forms and the next thing we knew we were in costumes and makeup and Riley even had a couple of lines.”
Fabiana, completely enraptured in the story, became more animated. “Lola Lindstrom—she was playing the female lead—quit right in the middle of the last scene. And guess who they filmed to replace her…ME! Oh, we knew we should have been working on the scavenger hunt and everything, but this seemed like a real once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and…well, it was…like a dream.”
“It was. It really was,” Maeve seconded. She got down on her hands and knees before Katani, Charlotte, and Avery, and in a cracking voice implored, “Please, you guys are my bestest friends in the whole world. You have to forgive me. Say you will! Please!”
“Would you get up?” Katani said gruffly, but pointed at the Beach Barnacles. “They kind of blew off the scavenger hunt too.”
Avery bit her lip guiltily.
“If it’s any consolation, the scavenger hunt seemed totally awesome,” Isabel assured Nick and Charlotte. “I would have loved to do it.”
Charlotte sighed. “I just feel like everyone has been lying for two days….”
“Well, technically speaking, we weren’t lying,” Avery explained. “We just weren’t telling the complete truth.”
“Have you ever heard the concept of lying by omission?” asked Mr. Moore.
Maeve was puzzled. “What do you mean?” she asked nervously.
“Omission. It’s when you purposely leave out a part of the truth to trick people into thinking something untrue,” Mr. Moore said and glancing at Avery added, “It’s technically the same thing as a lie.”
Avery shrugged and admitted quietly, “Yeah, my inside voice kind of already knew that. But I was so busy surfing and telling that voice to be quiet…I’m sorry, guys.”
Fabiana looked at her little brother. “I’m really sorry, too, Nick. I got caught up in the moment and I wasn’t a good team leader. An awesome movie extra, maybe, but a bad team leader. Please forgive me?”
Nick shrugged. “Yeah…you are my big sis, after all.” He kicked the dirt with his sneaker and added, “But when you become a mega famous Hollywood star, you owe me a Porsche.”
“Deal!” Fabiana extended her hand and they shook on it.
“I’m sorry too, Chels,” Ben said. “For all the things that she said”—he pointed a thumb at Fabiana—“and also for being a big jerk on the beach yesterday. You were right, and we were the lame ones.”
Chelsea whipped out her camera and took a picture of her big brother looking like a big, sorry goofball. “I wish I had that on videotape!” She giggled, giving Ben a giant hug.
“Want to film it?” Mr. Moore joked, offering his camera. “I think some of us have had enough of filming for one weekend!” Fabiana said, looking around at her team, who all nodded in agreement.
“Are we cool?” Avery meekly asked Charlotte.
“I’m not mad,” Charlotte acknowledged. “We just worked so hard to make the Outdoor Adventure Club’s first field trip exciting for all you guys. And no one had a good time doing what we planned.”
Isabel tilted her head and said thoughtfully, “You know, the point of the Outdoor Adventure Club is to have amazing adventures, right? And I think we can all agree that everyone had amazing adventures this weekend. So I think the trip was a smashing success, Char.”
Charlotte contemplated her friend’s positive outlook. “You know, Izzy, I like thinking of it that way.” She grinned. “Now that I think about it, we had a blast too. So if everyone had fun…”
Katani, who had been talking to Mr. Moore, suddenly bounded over and clasped Charlotte’s hands. “WE WON!” she shouted. The Salty Cods stopped what they were doing and starting jumping up and down and hugging each other. (Charlotte was secretly thrilled that Nick hugged her first.) “Mr. Moore just tallied the points. Five clues, six bonus pictures, and first place finish gives us thirty-one points!”
Patrice shrugged and smiled. “What did I tell you?”
Katani looked up at her sister with newfound admiration. Yesterday, she would have expected Patrice to be the most obnoxious winner of all, but as it turned out, her sister was rather gracious about the whole thing. Not only that, but Ben and Fabiana had both let their teams go astray, and Patrice had stayed true to the mission the whole time. As a team leader, she pretty much rocked it…and led the Cods to victory.
“Who came in second?” Avery demanded.
Mr. Moore looked at his sheet and shared, “The Beach Barnacles. Three items, including Yurt—I liked your creative thinking; ten bonus pictures—thanks to Miss Chelsea; and second place finish is a whopping twenty-four points. Well done.”
Avery glanced at her teammates and, her eyes glimmering with mischief, asked, “Can you imagine if we’d actually tried both days?”
“But you didn’t!” Dillon sang joyfully.
“What about the Cranberry Boggers?” Isabel bleakly asked.
“Six bonus pictures…six points,” Mr. Moore said. “Might I ask how you all thought you were going to get away with this?”
The Cranberry Boggers sheepishly looked at each other. “We hadn’t exactly gotten that far,” Maeve confessed.
The futility of the Cranberry Boggers’ non-plan was so completely ridiculous that pretty soon the entire group was in stitches. Betsy Fitzgerald tried to explain. “Technically, we did manage to learn the pirate h
istory….” but she was shouted down. Fabiana laughed good-naturedly and shouted, “Three cheers for the Great Scavenger Hunt!”
When the noise died down, Mr. Moore presented the Salty Cods with their prize: a whole month of free treats from Montoya’s Bakery and two free tickets each to the Movie House. Charlotte and Katani rejoiced, as Montoya’s was far and away the most delicious bakery in all of Massachusetts.
“Oh, now I’m kind of jealous,” moaned Maeve. She might have loved movies more than anything in the world, but hot chocolate from Montoya’s was a close second.
Katani leaned over to Charlotte and whispered something in her ear. “Well…if you say so!” Charlotte agreed. She turned to Avery, Isabel, and Maeve. “We’ve decided to share the prize with everyone. After all…what’s the point of winning if you can’t use your powers for good, right?” She looked at Patrice and winked.
EPILOGUE
How to Make an Entrance
Though looking fashion-savvy movie-star perfect certainly didn’t come as naturally to Charlotte as it did to Katani or Maeve, she felt that she’d done a rather splendid job of pulling an outfit together. She’d picked out a silky, plum-colored dress (Katani’s advice) to complement the lavender shades in her eyes, and borrowed Maeve’s heating curlers. “They work on curly and straight hair,” Maeve had assured her after an hour-long Hair Care 101 session in the Tower. All the BSG had to look their best for the big occasion!
Charlotte strapped on her new black dress shoes with the tiny heels and examined her reflection in her closet mirror. Okay—I’m ready to walk the red carpet…. I think. She had a sudden vision of herself lying in a big klutzy purple heap while cameras flashed all around.
Thankfully, a loud BEEP-BEEP from the driveway interrupted those thoughts. Of course that was followed by the overexcited yodeling of Marty and then her father shouting, “Charlotte! They’re here!”
Excited, Charlotte quickly smeared on some light pink lip gloss and dashed down the stairs. “I’m off!” she declared while Marty eagerly danced and yipped around her.
“You look absolutely perfect!” Mr. Ramsey proclaimed, “Except…”