checked the family room and went upstairs to peek in Tobyâs room.
âHave you seen Toby?â she asked Elizabeth, who was reclining on the couch in the family room and flipping through channels with the remote. âBy the way, donât you have any homework?â
âNope. Tomorrow is âSmart Kids, Smart Choices.ââ
âWhatâs that?â
Elizabeth pulled a wad of folded paper from her pocket. âDonât read the back, OK?â
âScoutâs honor,â said Lucy, carefully prying the layers apart and studying the Xeroxed notice.
âSmart Kids, Smart Choices,â she learned, was made possible by the Tinkerâs Cove Police Department and the PTA. This traveling troupe of reformed alcoholics and drug abusers, none older than twenty-five, would present a âhard-hitting, graphic accountâ based on their own experiences. The rest of the morning would be spent in discussion groups and in the afternoon the entire school population would work together to create message murals that would be displayed in the halls.
âThis is taking all day?â asked Lucy. âWhat about French and chemistry and algebra andâ¦â
âOh, Mom,â groaned Elizabeth in a world-weary voice. âIf they actually taught us chemistry, weâd probably just cook up our own drugs. Thatâs what they think, anyway.â
âWell, maybe if they taught you some solid reasoning skills, they wouldnât have to indoctrinate you and you could figure out for yourselves that drinking and using drugs isnât very smart.â
âInteresting, Mom,â said Elizabeth. âVery interesting.â She studied her fingernails, which were painted light blue. âBut hopelessly retro.â
âThatâs me. Hopelessly retro,â agreed Lucy, who had received a solid prep-school education and could still conjugate her Latin verbs, even if her inability to comprehend percentages had been the despair of the entire math department. She resolved to call the principal for a little chat, in which the schoolâs declining SAT scores would definitely be mentioned.
Failing to find the boys in the house, Lucy concluded that they must be outside. She stood in the kitchen doorway and yelled for them. Their heads popped out from behind the shed, only to disappear immediately.
What are they up to? she wondered, pulling on her jacket. She marched across the yard, straight to the shed.
âWhat are you guys doing? Are you smoking?â she asked, suspiciously.
This last was met with gales of laughter. Laughter that didnât stop, but rolled on, eventually forcing the boys to clutch their stomachs and sides. There was also a sweet, familiar scent in the air.
âPot!â exclaimed Lucy. âYouâve been smoking pot!â Suddenly Tobyâs odd behavior made sense, including the disappearance of her Dee-Liteful Wine Cake.
âShhh, Mom. Not so loud.â Still shaking with laughter, Toby put a finger over his mouth to caution her.
âI canât believe it!â She shoved Toby in the direction of the house. âHow stupid are you? Donât you know you could get in big trouble?â
Eddie and Toby glanced at each other and dissolved into giggles.
âWhere did you get it?â
âItâs all over the school, Mom,â said Toby. âYou can get whatever you want.â
âYou can? Like what?â
âUppers, downers, heroin, crackâ¦â
âCrack!â
âYeah, Mom. Crack.â
âYouâve actually seen crack?â
âWell, no,â admitted Toby. âBut Iâve heard about it.â
âAnd whoâs the person whoâs got all this stuff?â
Now the boys werenât giggling. Their glance was an agreement not to reveal any names.
âOkay, okay,â said Lucy, backing off. She shook her head. âBoy, your dad is not going to like
Nikki Ashton
Rebecca Godfrey, Ellen R. Sasahara, Felicity Don
Alistair MacLean
Mark Terry
Erin Hayes
Benjamin Lorr
Nancy Friday
John Grisham
Donald Hamilton
Marie Ferrarella