Ghoster 4 Excerpts

THERESA

Welcome to Camp Sapuki!

After two hours of nothing to look at but pine trees, even my dad cheers as he steers the rented SUV under the big hand-carved โ€œWelcome to Camp Sapukiโ€ sign. A very cute teenaged boy with a bandage on his forehead and eyes that match his powder-blue STAFF tee-shirt steps over. Smiling, he signals for Dad to roll down this window.

โ€œWelcome! I sure hope you all enjoyed the drive.โ€ White teeth gleaming, he passes Dad a map, then notices my best friend, Kerry, sitting in the front passenger seat. โ€œYou ready to have some fun?โ€

Suddenly in the spotlight, Kerryโ€™s goofy grin makes me doubt if she could repeat what the boy had asked her. But then, Dad saves her by asking where to park. After some quick directions, we start moving again, and Kerry immediately turns back to look at me, eyes sparkly.

โ€œDid you see the look he gave me? What a hottie!

We all laugh, and the boys donโ€™t stop teasing Kerry until we rumble past a big yellow and red circus tent and down the gravel drive to the edge of the big grassy field where several other cars have parked.

โ€œFinally,โ€ says my little brother Joey. Reaching across me, he high-fives his best buddy,

Elbie. 

โ€œI canโ€™t wait to swing on the trapeze,โ€ says Elbie, his brown fingers already working the seatbelt button.

โ€œI canโ€™t wait to walk the tightrope,โ€ says Joey, still eyeing the big tent through the back window. โ€œAlthough that tent did look bigger in the photos.โ€

We pile out of the SUV into the brilliant sunlight, and I squint hard after our long drive through the deep and shady forest.

โ€œI need my sunglasses,โ€ says Joey, not bothering to run his fingers through his dark tweaked-out hair. Yawning and stretching, he sees me putting on my own sunglasses and says,

โ€œAre those mine, Theresa?โ€

โ€œYou packed yours,โ€ I say, feeling a little crabby. 

And who wouldnโ€™t be? Having rock-paper-scissored my way into sitting on the bump between Joey and Elbie, Iโ€™d just spent the last two hours with one or both boys flopped up against me, their snores steaming my ears and probably frizzing my already curly hair.

Seeing Dad has already popped open the carโ€™s back hatch, Joey heads over to help unload the luggage. โ€œGive us a hand,โ€ he tells Elbie who had bent to tie his sneakers. โ€œI need to find my sunglasses before I go blind.โ€

As the guys sort out the bags, I brace my back with my hands, arching it.

โ€œSore?โ€ Kerry asks in her lilting British accent. Of course, she isnโ€™t. A full head taller than me and slightly taller than Dadโ€™s six-feet, one, she had guilted me into letting her take the front passenger seat.

โ€œYeah, Iโ€™m a little sore.โ€ I do a few squats, making her giggle. โ€œHey, I have to get the blood back into my butt somehow.โ€

Tired but a bit more limber, I straighten and have just drawn in a big lungful of sweet forest air when Dad wheels up with our suitcases.

โ€œBeautiful place, isnโ€™t it?โ€ He turns a circle, taking in the view. โ€œExactly like when I was a kid.โ€

Since Iโ€™ve never been, all I know is what Iโ€™ve seen on the website. But Dadโ€™s definitely right about the place being beautiful. Of course, we canโ€™t see the river from where weโ€™re standing, but the log cabins seem freshly stained, and the big grassy playing field we parked next to is clipped and gorgeous. In fact, the huge tree on the far side is even more lush and green than I remember from the pictures.

The only difference I can see is that instead of kids playing organized games, today half the people on the field are grownups. These happy family groups are either milling around with their fold-out maps or standing in the check-in line in front of a canopy-style shade tent. Beneath the tent, an older man and woman sit behind a folding table, talking with some people. A sign reading CAMPERS CHECK IN HERE is staked into the nearby ground.

Dad looks at his watch. โ€œWe should get in line.โ€

โ€œAre you going to be late?โ€ I ask, knowing he would be driving straight back to the airport to head out on another one of his book tours.

โ€œWell, that roadwork we ran into set us back thirty minutes. Letโ€™s just say I shouldnโ€™t hang around here too long.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t worry about us,โ€ Joey tells him. โ€œI memorized the map, and this time weโ€™ll be supervised by highly-skilled professionals.โ€

Ooops. Since Joeyโ€™s on the autism spectrum, he doesnโ€™t always know when his honest comments arenโ€™t appreciated. Wincing, I look to Kerry. From the look sheโ€™s cutting him, she must guess what heโ€™s referring to.

โ€œHeโ€™s not blaming your gran,โ€ I whisper, remembering what happened the last time Dad went on one of his book tours. Knowing Joey and I would need a place to stay, Kerry had invited us to join her on a trip back to London where her grandma and aunt live. Weโ€™d barely been there a day when poor Mrs. Declan landed in the hospital with a ruptured appendix. But things worked out. Having lived in London most of her life, Kerry knew how to get around, and we even managed to help a pair of very famous ghosts.

โ€œOkay,โ€ says Dad, waving us all in. โ€œEverybody gather up your stuff and head over to the tent. Iโ€™ll run ahead to get us a spot in line.โ€

Joey and Elbie pull their suitcases along behind them. Kerry and I grab ours and follow a few feet behind the boys.

โ€œHey, check out that little white girl,โ€ says Elbie.

Joey looks around, then back at his friend. โ€œThere are quite a few little white girls on this

field. Can you please be more specific?โ€

โ€œBetween the tree and that cabin behind it.โ€ Elbie points his chin. โ€œSee? Sheโ€™s got real long hair, and sheโ€™s wearing some sort of weird scout uniform with a torn shirt pocket.โ€

โ€œWhich girl?โ€ Kerry shades her mismatched eyes with her hand. โ€œThe one with ginger-colored hair?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ says Elbie. โ€œHers is really pale. Whitish even. Like her skin. Plus, sheโ€™s hecka pretty.โ€

โ€œStanding under that big tree,โ€ I say. โ€œCanโ€™t you see her? I think that outfit is some sort of camping uniform.โ€

โ€œI see her,โ€ says Joey. โ€œBut her clothes arenโ€™t like what the kids were wearing in the website pictures. These are more like what those twins had on in that old movie you guys made me watch last month.โ€

โ€œRight,โ€ says Kerry. โ€œThe Parent Trap.โ€ She nudges me with her elbow as she continues to look. โ€œThose girls looked super smart in those uniforms, didnโ€™t they? You know, with the matching shorts and neck thingies?โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re called neckerchiefs,โ€ says Joey. โ€œBut you can stop looking for her now, Kerry.โ€ โ€œWhy? Has she run off? I donโ€™t see her.โ€ Seeing Elbie wink at Joey, her cheeks flush red, and her hand drops to her side. โ€œItโ€™s a ghost, isnโ€™t it?โ€

I focus on the little girlโ€™s sneakers and sigh. Sure enough, they donโ€™t quite meet the ground. โ€œGreat. Thereโ€™s like a million campgrounds in the country, and I pick the one thatโ€™s haunted.โ€

Being way out in the middle of nowhere, Iโ€™d hoped to focus on having a good time. Doing things like swimming, canoeing, taking a few cooking classes. Fun stuff with nothing to do with spirits.

โ€œOh, well,โ€ says Kerry. โ€œWelcome to Camp Sapukiโ€”or should I say, Camp Spooky?โ€

Ugh. Hoping this ghostโ€™s happy where she is, I focus on the grass in front of me and keep walking. 

We reach the end of the line where Dadโ€™s busy sorting through the forms weโ€™ve filled out. Having missed the whole ghost conversation, heโ€™s just happy because the line has started

moving.

โ€œThings are looking good,โ€ he tells us. โ€œin a few minutes, youโ€™ll be picking out bunkbeds, and Iโ€™ll be on my way back to the airport. With any luck, Iโ€™ll drop off the rental car and have plenty of time to grab a latte before my flight leaves.โ€

โ€œBrilliant!โ€ Kerry gives me a wink. โ€œI canโ€™t wait to see our cabin!โ€

Beneath the shade of the tree a few yards away, Elbieโ€™s pretty little ghost girl raises a pale white hand and waves.

Yeah, brilliant.

Kerry must see something on my face. Smiling, she follows my gaze to the tree. โ€œSheโ€™s

still there, isnโ€™t she?โ€

I let out a deep sigh. โ€œYeah, sheโ€™s still there. Think the Murphys know about her?โ€

โ€œProbably,โ€ says Elbie. โ€œThereโ€™s a picnic table under the tree.โ€

โ€œAndโ€ฆ?โ€ says Joey. 

Elbie shrugs. โ€œSo, why didnโ€™t they use that for a sign-in table? Why bother with a tent?โ€™

I look over at the perfectly good picnic table sitting empty in the shade. โ€œThat is kind of weird.โ€

โ€œNot if that oak tree makes one of them sneeze,โ€ suggests Joey.

I suppose thatโ€™s possible. And itโ€™s also possible that the ghost is perfectly fine with spending eternity here in the forest.

But I doubt it.

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