brought his eyes back on them, it was as though Prince had disappeared and heâd been transformed into Mickey again. âWhatâs
up
, dudes?â
âWho are all these people?â
âI dunno. Didnât you invite them? I had to hear about your party from Greta. Which, no offenseââ
âNone taken.â
ââwas lame.â
âDude,
I
didnât invite them. I just invited Arno and I was going to invite you and Jonathan, andââ
âOh, speaking of J,â Mickey said, âdid you ever find Suki?â
Greta shook her head.
âThey definitely got left on Mallorca,â Patch said.
âHoly shit.â
Just then, Arno came through the door.
âWhere the hell have
you
been?â Mickey asked, shaking his head in disgust because he already knew the answer. It had been about an hour since Arno left.
âSara-Beth got, um ⦠sick â¦â
âSara-Beth Benny?â Patch asked.
âYeah, I had to take her back to her cabin.â
They all took this in for a minute.
Then Patch said: âAnyway, though, I was just saying that weâve looked everywhere they could possibly be on this ship, and weâre pretty sure that both Suki and J got left on Mallorca.â
âThatâs impossible,â Arno said, laughing to himself. âThereâs no Prada on Mallorca.â
âThere is, actually,â Greta offered. âI read about it in
W
.â
âOh.â
âI think itâs going to be okay, though. But we should get all these people out of here, and come up with a plan.â
Greta cleared her throat and stepped forward. The guys watched in surprise as she cupped her hands around her mouth, and screamed: âAll right, everybody. This is a raid. Anyone still in this room in ten minutes will be subjected to drug and alcohol testing â¦â
The kid with the iBook slammed his computer shut and dashed for the door. The room fell silent; then everybody started to run. The stampede forced Patch and Greta to one side of the door, and Mickey and Arno to the other. As they watched the last of the party-goers go off in search of another cabin, Mickey leaned over and whispered to Arno:
âSukiâs friend is kind of really hot.â
My nightmare has just begun
âThis isnât
so
bad,â Suki said, after we finally jammed open the door to our room. I wasnât sure if she was trying to patronize me or make me feel better. Number eighteen was on the top floor, in a dank corner that smelled of cigarette smoke. The room looked like some monk or other had just spent his final years slowly dying here. The walls were dark wood, the floor was linoleum, and the windows were shuttered. Over the smallest double bed Iâve ever seen hung a simple and gigantic cross. Iâm not particularly religious or anything, but crosses like that still weird me out a little. I sat down on the bed, and then I realized that everything was going to get much worse.
âThis bed is so uncomfortable.â
âHey, at least we got a room,â Suki said, undoing the window latch and pushing open the shutters.
âHave you touched the bedspread?! Touch it.Itâs like sandpaper.â
âIt canât be that bad.â Suki leaned out the window and looked at the scene below. âThis is actually pretty. Come look. Thereâs a little square down below.â
The last thing I wanted to see was a pretty little square. It was just going to remind me that we had been abandoned in a foreign country with no finances and no clean clothes.
âMaybe later,â I said, and went into the bathroom and flipped on the light. As the neon lights stuttered on, I was met with a very harried, cranky-looking vision of myself. I tried to give my reflection a little talking-to:
This is an adventure, itâs romantic.
If only I had a few credit cards, a plane ticket out of here, and Flan, it could actually be
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