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"Which rooms your dad has strategically placed the hidden cameras."
I laugh. "That's ridiculous. My dad doesn't have any hidden cameras in this house."
"He sounded pretty convincing, but I have an idea."
We get ready for bed, like a married couple except for the fact that we're just two trusting teenagers in complete love with each other. Avi's bed is still the couch in the living room, but this time I snuggle under the covers with him because my overprotective father isn't home watching our every move.
"I like this," I say. "So what's your idea?"
Avi pulls the covers over our heads so we're cloaked in complete darkness.
I finger his stubble with my fingertips.
"This is your big idea?"
"It was either under the blanket or inside the hall closet."
"It's all s ababa," I say, and Avi laughs.
"Yeah, it is."
I will tell you that under the covers was an excellent choice and VERY sababa, although I'm one hundred percent sure my dad does not have any surveillance cameras inside the house tracking our every move. I know this because although my dad came home an hour later and I ran to my room and pretended to be fast asleep, those cameras would have caught Avi and I in some very compromising positions despite our attempt to keep the covers over us.
Oh, don't get all worried ... I'm still a pure seventeen-year-old. I'm just ... well ... more knowledgeable about certain things. (Things I'm more curious about now than I ever was.) In the morning, Tarik picked up Avi and drove us all to the airport. I was crying the entire time, although I tried to keep it together. Our goodbye kiss held more promise than last time, although we both know we have to go on and live our lives.
Don't ask, don't tell. We're going to take it one day at a time and see what happens.
Hopefully this summer when I go to Israel it'll be the same as last night ... well, without the fighting.
I purposely didn't bring up Jessica to Tarik, although now Tarik and I are sitting at Perk Me Up! and Jess could walk in at any time.
Marla brings me hot chocolate with the whipped cream overflowing because she knows how upset I am. Do you think my bloodshot, teary eyes give my upsetness away? Marla hugs me, a warm hug my mom would give me if she were here.
An idea pops into my head. I can't believe I hadn't thought of it before.
"Marla, what do you think of my dad? You know, if he smiled more and got a good haircut?"
Marla laughs and walks back to the register, ignoring my question. I think I saw her blush a little, though. My dad loves her coffee; he never drinks it anywhere else. In fact, I think he got me this job just so he could see her more and have an excuse to hang out at Perk Me Up! Hmm ...
The door to Perk Me Up! opens and guess who walks in ... yep, Jess. Along with Miranda and a very sad Nathan. Poor Nathan. Poor Jess.
It's time I stop making a mess of my own life and focus on everyone else. I can do it.
There's nothing that says I have to be a Disaster Girl all the time. I can live a squeaky-clean life while helping others un- screwup their lives. No more getting in trouble for Amy Nelson-Barak.
My cell phone is ringing. It's my dad.
"Hey, Aba, what's up?"
"What's up? Please tell me what a pair of plastic handcuffs are doing in the back seat of my car."
Oops. Everything is so not sababa.
How to Ruin Your Boyfriend's Reputation.
1.
A vacation without parents is like a chocolate brownie without the nuts- absolutely perfect!
Hi, my name is Amy Nelson-Barak. My mom is a Nelson and my dad is a Barak and just in case you were wondering, I'm aware I have two last names. If you don't know me, I'm a seventeen-year-old American teenager with red, white, and blue blood running through my veins.
You're probably wondering why right now I'm on a bus in Israel on my way to an Israeli military boot camp.
Yes, I did say I'm in Israel. No need to rub your eyes and reread that.
And yes, I did say boot camp.
And before you think it's a boot camp for teens with behavioral disorders, I volunteered for this summer program all on my own. (Although my parents often accuse me of being a total drama queen, I don't think that counts as a true behavior disorder.) My friends signed up, too.
Normally I wouldn't go anywhere near a program with the word "military" in it, especially during the summer between my junior and senior years of high school, but when I realized what military base the boot camp is held at, I jumped to sign up-as a volunteer trainee.
You see, my boyfriend Avi is Israeli.
He's in the IDF-Israeli Defense Force- and since I live in the good ol' US of A (Chicago, to be exact), I haven't seen him since he visited me over five months ago.
He's a commando, he's nineteen years old, and is just about the hottest, most gorgeous gift G.o.d has ever put on this planet. And he's all mine. Well, to be technical, the Israeli military owns his body until he turns twenty-one, but I own his heart. And he owns mine.
So I got this letter from Avi a few months back. He told me that after parachute training he's going to be at Base Nesher. He said if I was visiting Israel this summer, unfortunately he didn't think he could get any time off.
Then, when my best friend Jessica, along with this girl Miranda and my best guy friend Nathan (who I kissed once ...
okay, three times ... but we're just friends), told me they were signing up for a program in Israel that included ten days in basic training boot camp, I laughed at them. I mean, what kind of idiot would go to a military boot camp on purpose?
But guess what? It's at Base Nesher- the same base Avi is at! When I figured that out, I begged my father to sign me up. I haven't told Avi that I'm coming-it's a surprise. I can't wait to see his reaction when he sees me. He's going to be as excited as I am!
I'm so thankful this bus is air conditioned and we have big, cus.h.i.+oned seats for the three-hour ride. We're on the bus with forty other American teens (half are girls, half are guys). The trip is called Sababa, which translates to "cool, awesome, a great way of life" or something like that. The tour starts out with the boot camp, then the rest of the summer is spent exploring and touring the country.
The director of the Sababa program gave me special permission to sign up for the boot camp portion of the trip only, because after boot camp I'll be staying at my aunt and uncle's house on their moshav (kinda like a community farm) in the Golan Heights. So I'll be with family while Miranda, Nathan, and Jessica spend the rest of the summer on the Sababa tour.
"Amy, I think Miranda is gonna puke,"
Nathan tells me. He's sitting next to Miranda, who has had anxiety about the boot camp part of the vacation. She's been stressing about it since we took the plane from Chicago to Tel Aviv (with a ridiculously long layover in New York).
Miranda's a tad bit, uh, I don't know how to say this in a politically correct way ...
let's just say she's in the upper sixtieth percentile on the weight chart hanging in the nurse's office at our high school.
(Probably closer to the seventy-fifth, but who's counting.) She's afraid they're going to ration her food at boot camp and make her run until her extra, overflowing m.u.f.fin- top disappears.
I lean over my best friend Jessica, who's blocking my view of Miranda.
"Miranda, it's not going to be like Camp Meltaway. I promise."
Miranda's parents sent her to a fat farm between seventh and eighth grade and she's never gotten over it. The girl cannot survive on granola for snack food. Believe it or not, during her second week at Camp Meltaway, meek and timid Miranda got caught trying to hitchhike into town in search of fast food.
Miranda smiles a little at the sight of a candy bar I pulled from my backpack.
Seriously, one day I'll teach her that moderation is "the key" to weight loss. She can have a candy bar every day ... just not three of them in one sitting.
Now for me, personally, if I could only get "the key" to smaller b.o.o.bs (without surgery, since I'm not a fan of getting my little pinky parts cut off and reattached, thank you very much), I'd be the first in line. Yes siree, we all have our little personal issues, things we'd like to change or need to change about ourselves.
"I brought extra Kit Kats," I say, holding up the candy bar. Okay, so the label says Kif-Kaf in Hebrew, but it's the same thing.
Jessica slaps my hand down. "Don't show her that."
"Why not?"
"Because she wants to lose weight, Amy. Don't sabotage her."
I roll my eyes. Sometimes my best friend has to be enlightened. "Jess, you heard Nathan. Miranda is so scared she's about to puke. I'm just trying to comfort her."
"So comfort her with words and friends.h.i.+p, not candy bars," Jess whispers.
"That stuff is poison."
Is she kidding me? Chocolate is my favorite comfort food. Well, it's actually #2 because everybody knows sus.h.i.+ is at the top of my list. Not all sus.h.i.+, just spicy tuna rolls with little pieces of tempura crunch inside. Nothing, not even chocolate, beats that.
I rummage through my backpack. "Have you seen these ?" I say, creating suspense as I slowly pull out a Kif-Kaf bar wrapped in a white package instead of the usual red one. "It's a Kit Kat bar in white chocolate, Jess. They were almost sold out at the store, but I found this one lonely package mixed in with the regular ones. I know you love white chocolate as much as I do." I wave it in front of her nose. "Smell the white chocolate ... crave the white chocolate."
"I can't smell anything. It's still in the wrapper."
"I'm saving it for a special occasion."
Before I can stick my rare white chocolate find back in the special zippered compartment in my backpack, Nathan reaches across the bus aisle and s.n.a.t.c.hes the Kif-Kaf out of my hand. "Cool, white chocolate Kit Kat. I've always wanted to try one of those. Thanks!"
"Give that back!" I yell.
Nathan, who is a total and complete dufus 90 percent of the time, rips the package open and takes a huge bite from the top. He doesn't even snap off one of the four sticks like any normal, decent person would do. No, he bites a quarter off the top, so now all the bars have a chunk out of them. "d.a.m.n, that's good."
My mouth is open wide in shock. "I can't believe you just did that."
"What?"
"First of all, I was just telling Jess I'm saving it for a special occasion. I only have one white chocolate, and you ... you ... you ... " I can't even express how p.i.s.sed I am at him.
Nathan shrugs, then holds out the rest of the uneaten bar. "Here, you want a bite?"
Yuck! "You bit off the whole top.
You're supposed to snap off the sticks one at a time. Everyone knows that. Now the entire thing is tainted with your saliva germs."
"Come on, Amy. You've been exposed to my saliva germs before." He makes a smooching noise, then grins. "So what's the big deal?"
I pretend to gag. "Don't remind me."
You probably think I hate Nathan. I don't. Next to Jessica, he's my best friend and the most entertaining thing I have in my life, especially when Avi and I are apart.
Nathan is like my very own live Elmo doll that walks, talks, and farts. Maybe that isn't the greatest a.n.a.logy, but you get the idea.
"I'll have a bite," Miranda sheepishly chimes in, leaning toward the half-eaten chocolate.
Nathan sticks his tongue out at me and moves the chocolate closer to Miranda.
She takes a bite, then Nathan finishes it off by popping the rest in his mouth. Miranda can be my guest and swap germs with Nathan all she wants.
"You owe me another Kif-Kaf," I tell him. "A white chocolate one."
"Whatever," he says, licking his fingers one by one, making those little sucking sounds on each one to annoy me.
"Keep doin' that, big guy. You forget that my strong, military commando boyfriend will kick your b.u.t.t once I tell him you mutilated my white Kit Kat without my permission."
Nathan stops licking his fingers.
"Seriously, tell that guy to stay away from me. I think I still have bruise marks on my face in the shape of his fist."
"Avi only hit you because you attacked him first," I remind him.
"You told me to, Amy," Nathan says defensively. "You know, during your stupid Operation Get-Avi-Back on the Northwestern campus."
Nathan's right-but it was only to stall Avi so I could let him know I was devastated we broke up during his trip to Chicago. I was desperate to get back together. It wasn't a stupid plan. It was brilliant, especially because it worked.
"Well, that's old news. Avi doesn't even remember you."
Okay, so that's not exactly true.
Sometimes Avi will ask about Nathan when we talk on the phone. He knows Nathan and I kissed ... he doesn't know it was three times, though. To be completely honest, the first time was awful, the third time was fake (it was actually last month- to make his ex-girlfriend Bicky believe he was dating me so she'd stop dropping into his life), but the second time ...
I don't want to think about that second time. So Nathan knows how to kiss when he puts a little effort into it. It's not a big deal.
It doesn't matter, anyway. Avi is the only guy I ever want to kiss. He knows nearly everything about me (of course, he's never heard me on the toilet because I run the water when I'm in the bathroom, and he has no clue I have a fear of spiders), and the guy still loves me. My dad warns me not to wait around for him, because he's in Israel and we have a long-distance relations.h.i.+p. He also says we're too young to say we'll be together forever.
As if my dad knows about love. My dad is single and has just started dating Marla, the woman who runs the coffee shop in the building next to our condo. I admit I set them up ... one night I invited her over, and when my dad came home I had Nathan come up with an excuse to get me out of there so they could have some alone-time.