Remember when
everyone else thought they knew you? Remember when everyone else thought they
knew better?
Layla’s a small-town teen trying to be herself and is
misinterpreted at every turn. She’s not popular
because her dad’s a minister and her interests never seem to match those
around her. She’s learned to keep to herself and her music – big mistake. When
her love of classic rock makes her parents wonder if she’s “getting ideas” she
finds herself shipped off to church camp. There she’s faced with horrible food
and her day is planned out by the millisecond. To make matters worse her
bunkmate is the cheery, tow-the-line sort and Donna, her nemesis, is at the
same camp and is determined to make things hard for her. The only thing Layla
has left to cling to is her music, but when her interests and character are
challenged will her faith in herself and her shaky trust in something more be
strong enough to see her through?
About the Author:
Never one to run from uncomfortable or unusual subject
matter, Zillah Anderson is an author of the speculative, the dark, and the sexy
– and sometimes all three at once. She is the author of The Inheritance and the
young adult title Knocking Down Heaven’s Door with No Boundaries Press, the
erotic short Power Chord with Rebel Ink Press, and has also had her work
included in the Wicked East Press Anthology Halloween Frights vol. III. She
resides in the Midwest, loves all things crafty and nerdy, and writes while she
bides her time for her true purpose: total world domination.
Excerpt:
After getting checked in, I headed out to my cabin to dump
my gear before orientation. No, cabin was an optimistic word. I can still see
that building in my head: an enormous brown wooden structure that looked more
like a workhouse or a barrack than a happy little camp house. Like the main
buildings my home away from home could have used a coat of paint and some
insecticide. It was amazing that the wooden structure hadn’t rotted away from
being stuck back in the damp forest so long.
The inside of my cell didn’t give me a reason to be any more
optimistic. Besides the obligatory sections of bunk beds there were wooden
chests of drawers and a couple wobbly tables and chairs. It was all very
Berenstain Bears meets Camp Crystal Lake. Still, it wasn’t like I had a choice
in the matter. All I could really do was make the best of it and wait things
out.
Common sense ruled that most of the beds in the room were
occupied, or else they’d grown their own bedding out of boredom. Sighing, I dragged
my stuff to the one empty lower bunk and began to make myself at home. I was so
wrapped up in self-pity that I was only interested in getting my bed made so I
could escape the humid, musty-smelling place.
“Wow, you’re new aren’t you?” a perky voice chirped. I
jumped hard enough to slam my head into the rickety bunk above mine.
“Wild observation,” I hissed through the throbbing in my
skull. A girl the size of my forearm slid gracefully off the top bunk and
dropped to the floor without a sound. I’d been in high school long enough to be
an expert profiler and there was no doubt in my mind that she was a
cheerleader. The summer just kept getting better.
“I’m Missy; I’ve been coming here ever since I was nine,”
she added then beamed a smile any dentist or orthodontist would probably be
tempted to frame. I was tempted to ask if she wanted a medal for the
accomplishment but held my tongue. I’d been around youth group enough to know
that if there was something to count attendance for, there were pins and badges
to commemorate it. Sure enough, on the crisp white polo shirt she sported was a
small gold pin with a series of added bars to show off each year she’d returned
to the asylum.
“I’m Layla,” I managed as I gracefully slammed my stuff onto
the bottom bunk in an effort to encourage her to leave me alone.
“Isn’t that Hebrew for something?” she asked with a tilt of
the head that was probably meant to show off her blonde locks. It just made her
look like a curious Labrador retriever.
“Dunno. I think my parents’ gave me the name because they
were listening to Derek and the Dominoes when I was conceived,” I said as I
busied myself tucking clothes away and dutifully slid my Bible under my pillow.
It was an outright lie, but it was worth seeing Missy’s baffled expression.
Having an unusual name meant you got tired of explaining it really quick. I’d
already come to the conclusion that as soon as I was old enough to get a tattoo
I would get my name, its pronunciation, and its meaning inked someplace really
visible so I’d never have to have that conversation ever again.
“Are you planning on wearing that to the orientation?” she
asked in an attempt to change the subject, and nodded to my Led Zeppelin shirt.
As she stared her expression grew dubious. I wasn’t a size zero blonde
cheerleader, but I wasn’t anything to sneeze at. Still, it seemed she was more
interested in the strange, presumably satanic writing scrawled across my chest
than my chest itself. At least I hoped so.
“Sure, what’s wrong with it?” I asked, my raised eyebrows
practically daring her to say it. In those days, I had fun antagonizing girls
like Missy. They were all for preaching peace and acceptance and knew they
should lead by example. Despite that philosophy, quite often the synapses just
didn’t connect the saying to the doing, especially once Sunday was over.
“Well, it’s just that…we don’t really wear stuff like that
here. What’s ‘Stairway to Heaven,’ anyway?”
“You’ve never heard of that?” I blanched and slid my bag
under the bed. “Oh, wow, Missy; you’ve never heard that song? I mean, it’s
‘Stairway to Heaven!’ It’s like one of the best Christian rock songs ever, all
about God’s forgiveness and salvation and stuff! You have to climb the Stairway
to Heaven if you’re gonna be saved, right?”
I could see her ticking through her mental Bible retention
in the silence that followed. Luckily, most Sunday school lessons focus on the
same ten to twelve stories over and over again. It was one advantage of being a
pastor’s kid – I could do far more than hold my own in a fight over the Bible,
though I hated to get into those types of arguments. No one ever won and it
wasn’t about the book or spirituality, itself, but about proving that you were
right. No thank you. “Yeah, I think I remember reading that somewhere. I’ll have
to go looking for that song…though Led Zeppelin doesn’t really sound like a
Christian group.”
I shook my head in pity. “C’mon Missy, you’re forgetting
where it talks about the absence of faith causing one to descend from salvation
with the strength of a zeppelin crafted from lead,” I went on, more and more
amazed when she nodded somberly. That was the trouble with all the new,
watered-down translations; for all I knew there was a verse that had been
retranslated as such.
“You’re so right, Layla. You’re so, so right,” Missy nodded
and placed one of her perfectly-manicured hands on my shoulder. She looked like
she was nearly in tears, moved as she was. “I’m so glad you’re my bunkmate.” I
followed her numbly towards Harmony Hall.
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