had chanced upon a common whore.â
Ugh! My jaw dropped, but only for a moment.
âWell, one would really appreciate it if one didnât use language like that in front of the children.â
âI know what a âwhoreâ is,â one of the girls piped up. âItâs a dental hygienist. Like my dadâs girlfriend.â
âThat actually wasnât what I meant. I was referring to your completely unintelligible syntax, Miss Fennyweather.â I mean really, she sounded like Yoda. I wanted my girls to be grammatically correct. âGood day.â
I waved her off and returned to the pansies, leaving Miss Fennyweather to shut her parasol briskly and walk, mouth opening and closing like a fish, away down the lane. And the other thing: âRobin, thatâs not a nice word. Iâm sure your dadâs girlfriend isnât a whore.â
âBut my mom
said.
â
I dealt with this the rest of our flower-picking excursion, trying not to dissolve into giggles every time my eyes met Camâs, as Cam tried not to choke on his cake, shaking as he was with suppressed laughter. Once the girls had picked enough flowers, they filed inside.
âHey.â Cam straightened and dusted the cake crumbs off his hands, making his way over to me. âI should really get back to the ship. Iâll see you at the Showdown tonight. You know where the beach is?â
âNope.â I shook my head.
âThen Iâll pick you up outside your shipâthe
Lettie Mae,
right?â
âRight.â I nodded.
âSweet.â Checking that the girls were inside, he kissed me quickly. âUntil tonight,â he said, making it sound like a promiseâa promise of what, I wasnât sure, but I couldnât wait to find out.
âTonight.â I breathed in the beautiful words, magical
West Side Story
orchestra popping back into my head. âTonight, tonight, thereâs only you tonight,â I sang softly as I ducked back into the house and Cam hopped the fence.
Â
We had just enough time to get everyoneâs flowers in the heavy wooden press before two oâclock rolled around and it was drop-off time at the Welcome Center. On my way back, I heard a familiar voice flagging me down.
âLibby! Libby!â I turned. It was Roger, the museum publicist. âIt
is
Libby, right?â He caught up with me, wheezing slightly as he placed his hands on his knees to catch his breath.
âYes, hi, Iâm Libby,â I introduced myself.
âOne of Maddieâs interns, right?â I nodded. âI thought so. But I left a message for you with the other one and I had no idea what she was saying, so I wasnât sure if you got it.â
âYou mean Ashâuh, Susannah Fennyweather?â
âYeah.â I detected the hint of an eye roll. âDid she tell you about the costumes? For the Sea Shanty Showdown?â
âSort of. I mean, she told me but in her own special way.â
âThatâs what I was afraid of.â Definite eye roll. âWeâve got a pirate wench costume waiting for you down at the shack. I thought we could take some nice publicity shots, for some promotional literatureâbrochures and stuffâand kind of work the pirate angle. Pirates are fun. People see pirates, they think fun, they think the museum is fun, yadda, yadda, yadda. And the
Camden Crier
is coming to do a piece on it too, so we can get a nice color shot of you in there. You donât mind, right?â
âUm, no, I guess not.â
âThank God.â He mopped some sweat off his brow. âI was afraid I wasnât gonna get a wench. The other one wouldnât do it, but she told me âwenchingâ would be âjust your cup of tea.ââ
Jesus. Thanks, Ashling. âUm, just so you know, Roger, Iâm doing this to help the museum, not because I have a particular affinity for âwenchingâ or sundry
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