means thereâs something rotting nearby.â
Zoey glares at the trespasser. âNothing dead better stink up our cove.â
âSooo gross,â Cole whines.
Michaela lets her sunglasses dip down the bridge of her nose and studies the feathered creature. âItâs circling over us, though,â she says matter-of-factly. I shiver again. The bird hovers twenty or thirty feet above. Thereâs a rustling in the brush behind us and the resounding snap of a branch. I whip around and stare into the gloom.
âJumpy much?â Zoey teases, but her smile doesnât reach her eyes. Sheâd never admit it, but today always spooks her, too. I sense the bird continuing to loop overhead. The shadows are thick in the woods, and itâs impossible to see more than a few feet deep. I keep my eyes trained on the spot where I heard the stick snap. It wasnât the light crackle of chipmunks scurrying over decaying leaves and acorns, but the heavy footstep of a person.
âWho is that?â Michaela whispers. I reluctantly turn from guarding against the woods. On the opposite shore, a hundred yards away, a figure stands between two tree trunks along the edge of the forest. His face is masked in shadows, but by his jeans and short-cropped hair, heâs obviously a guy. âIs he spying on us?â
Zoey jumps to her feet and yells, âHey, jerkwad. Stare much? Eff off or weâll call the cops.â Cole grabs for her hoodie and pulls it over her head. I wiggle on my jean shorts and stand with Zoey. Teeny-tiny Zoey, weighing in at not a feather over a hundred pounds, fists balled, ready to keep us all safe in her string bikini. Dread coils in my stomach. Itâs like I swallowed a viper. The stranger takes a step forward.
âWhat the . . . ?â Michaela mutters. Heâs maybe a couple of years older than us and heâs vaguely familiar. The kind of familiar that suffocates you with déjà vu, like recalling a nightmare in gruesome flashes. He isnât looking at us. Instead his eyes are glued to the vulture circling above our heads. His lips move furiously, repeating something over and over, but the words are only mouthed, not meant to reach us.
Chapter Two
I force myself to unclench my fists. Michaela and Cole frantically pack their things at my feet. Someone shoves me a step forward, and my towel is snatched from the ground. The stranger stands frozen as a statue, a foot from the trees, eyes trained on the sky. Zoeyâs shouting. Iâm not sure what. Sheâs livid. This is our secret place. This is her safe place, where she thinks nothing bad could ever happen. I know better. I know bad things happen everywhere. The slope of his cheekbones, the squared jaw, the hooded eyesâthey all add to the tension thrashing my stomach.
Zoey claws at my elbow. I tear myself away from staring at him to see that the girls have packed up our cove day, the provisions loaded in their arms. Cole and Michaela stand at the mouth of the woods, eager to escape. I snap out of my stupor and let Zoey drag me from the shore. I slip over the moss-covered rocks. Just as weâre engulfed by trees, I turn to steal one last look over my shoulder. The stranger stares directly at me, angles his head as if heâs studying me, and winksbefore turning away to be swallowed by a copse of trees. A sly wink that makes me feel like an accomplice. Like weâre sharing a joke .
âWho the hell was that?â Michaela shouts. She never swears, so I know sheâs shaken up.
Cole gushes, âI mean, it was sooo weird that he was there staring up at the sky like a zombie.â Sheâs too excited to be frightened.
âAnd he didnât even respond to us,â Michaela adds.
Zoey and I keep close behind them. Itâs only a few degrees cooler under the shade of the canopy, but Iâm freezing. Zoey is wearing her own backpack with my toteâs leather strap