around here consider Saturday date night, which is why I was thinking it would be a good idea if we went on one.â Iâd said it so fast I didnât know if Went could possibly have understood me.
He laughed softly, but it didnât feel like he was laughing at me. âSure. But Iâm not going to Millet Movies.â
Relieved, I smiled at Amber and gave her the thumbs-up sign. âDonât tell me youâve seen both movies already?â
âNo. But I rejected both movies already, like two years ago. Besides, Big Barry creeps me out. What else is there to do around here?â
I looked to Amber. She was smushed next to me, her ear to the phone. What was there to do in Millet besides go to a movie?
Amber swooshed her arm in front of her. She did this until I realized she was mimicking bowling.
âI guess thereâs a bowling alley, but Iâm really lousy at bowling.â
âNo bowling. If my buddies back in L.A. heard that Iâd gone bowling, I could never return to California.â
That made me want to bowl with him. No way I wanted him returning to California. âHey!â I was getting another idea. âYou like animals, right?â
âDonât tell me you want us to walk Adam on our big date.â
I ignored that. âAny chance you could get your dadâs car?â
âI think so. Whatâs in that pretty little head of yours?â
Pretty little head? I liked that, coming from Went. âThe zoo. Thereâs a zoo in Larkfield. Itâs not L.A. or San Diego, but itâs fun. Went Smith, would you go to the zoo with me tomorrow?â
âBailey Daley of Ukulele Lane, it would be an honor.â
âYes!â Amber exclaimed, jumping to her feet and doing a little dance.
âWhat was that?â Went asked.
âNothing. So, weâre on?â
âIâll be by for you tomorrow morning. Night, Bailey.â
When he said that, I melted inside.
9
âYou were never this excited when I took you to the zoo,â Mom observed. She was still in her penguin PJâs, worn in honor of my zoo date.
âWas too excited about the zoo when you took me.â But I knew she was right. Iâd been up since 6:00 A.M.âon a Saturday. I glanced at the clockâagain. It was almost 10:00. âWhat time does the zoo open?â
Mom kept cutting something out of a magazine, probably a contest. âI canât remember, Bailey. Maybe ten? When did Went say he was picking you up?â
âWe just said morning.â Which was idiotic. Why didnât I nail down the time? Clearly, I needed girlfriend practice.
An hour and a half later, I was a wreck. Iâd worn a path by the window, watching for Went. Iâd changed clothes twice and shoes once. Mom hit garage sales and came back to find me eating cereal out of the box, a nervous habit Iâd developed in third grade.
âCall him,â Mom pleaded. âIf you donât, I will.â
âHeâll be here. Itâs still morning, right?â
Finally, at ten minutes past noon, Went drove up and honked.
âAbout time,â Mom muttered.
I hurried out the door and ran to the blue Buick. I thought about giving Went a piece of my mind for making me wait all morning. I thought about tearfully explaining how hard it had been on me to wait and wait. But when I saw him behind the wheel, his muscled arm sticking out of a white tee, all I could think was how grateful I was that this hunk was mine. My boyfriend.
Wentâs tanned face lit up when he saw me. âHey, Bailey! Ready to party with the animals?â He reached across the front seat and opened my door.
I slid in and kissed him. The kiss kind of missed and landed on his chin. âOn to the orangutan!â
He revved the engine. âHip, hip, hippopotami!â
I buckled my seat belt. But if the Buick hadnât had bucket seats, I canât say how close I might have gotten to
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