telling her the family vacation was cursed. The closer to Redlands Beach they got, the louder the rain beat on the car.
With her dad driving and her mom in the passenger seat, Lindsay sat in the back, listening to music on her iPod and texting with her friend Kate. The drive had exhausted her and the storm was doing nothing to improve her mood. She knew the vacation was important to her parents, especially her dad, but Lindsay had spent the lastfew weeks dreading the trip. It couldnât have come at a worse time. Sheâd been helping Kate with a totally important party, and now she couldnât even go! Of course, her dad was quick to point out that Lindsay had always enjoyed trips to her uncle Louâs place. But sheâd been a little girl then. At sixteen, Lindsay wasnât feeling any glee for the retro.
She was certain her dad just didnât get it. Sheâd grown up. She was in high school. She was popular and received good grades. Though her teachers sometimes flinched at her often harsh humor, they couldnât help but see the intelligence behind it. Oh, she could be snide and sarcastic, and more than once a friendly burn had been taken as meanness by kids who didnât know her, but it usually only took a few kind words to mend those feelings, and often enough Lindsay found herself with another friend. Plusâand Lindsay felt certain her father did not get thisâshe could take care of herself. When she was faced with a problem, she found a way to fix it. She didnât let it stress her out or piss her off; she just made it work. Lindsay Morgan was practical that way. But sheâd tried to fix this tripâhad done everything she could toavoid itâand it hadnât worked.
She might not have been so bummed if her parents were taking her to a happening beach like Cancún or the Hamptons or even Atlantic City. But they werenât. They were going to her uncleâs house on Redlands Beach, and though it had sand and ocean, it fell way short of an A-list destination. True, Lindsayâs memories of the place were a bit fuzzy, but that didnât mean she was wrong. She remembered her uncle and other men standing on the shore with their fishing lines sunk in the ocean (which was probably why his house always smelled like fish guts). There were noisy children racing from the surf toward their chain-smoking mothers and their beer-drinking fathers. The âgoodâ restaurant in town served fried clams in a plastic basket. On reflection, she considered the beach some kind of trailer trash econo-resort, but her folks said it was an up-and-coming town.
Sheâd asked to stay home, arguing rationally at first. When logical pleas tanked, Lindsay resorted to a more emotional approach. Tears were involved. They didnât work. Anger soon followed, but it didnât get her anywhere. There was no way she could get out of the trip. Her parents hadalready taken the time off work. So Lindsay was faced with ten days in her uncleâs houseâaway from her friends and an epic party.
Just thinking about it made her sad. Everyone from school was going to be there. BlackBerrys and cell phones had been buzzing about it for weeks. All the cool and cute would be gathering at Kateâs house. ( Her parents were vacationing in Paris!) It would be a red carpet event with beer and banging tunes, and Lindsay was going to miss it.
Lindsayâs motivations werenât totally selfish either. Yes, she badly wanted to goâwho wouldnât?âbut Kate needed her, really needed her, and that was important, too.
Lindsay loved her friend like a sister, but Kate was about as organized as a chimp, not to mention the fact that she was panic waiting to happen. Lindsay knew the second one little thing went wrong with the party, Kate would freak like a meth head on Cops . She had said a billion times she couldnât pull the party off without Lindsay.
The invitation tragedy was a