I upload mytest trailer to TikTok advertising my new YouTube video, <i ss="char-i">Killer in the </i>F<i ss="char-i">amily,</i> and I sit back. Within seconds the numbers under the little heart start climbing as if Jeff Bezos were watching a livestream of his bank bnce.
He’s building rockets. Malcolm Wyatt, a rich dude who invited <i ss="char-i">me</i> to his amusement park, is building inds.
Tearing open a packet of Hershey’s Kisses with my teeth, I wait. Chocte passes the time. I get a bunch ofments telling me how awesome it is that I’ve posted, but it’ll take about thirty minutes for people to head over to my YouTube channel to watch the full video, thene back to TikTok to let me know what they think.
My hard-core followersment on both. Then on Insta too.
I can wait. If I go downstairs right now, I’ll just hear my parents arguing over Malcolm’s invitation.
That invitation might just be the single coolest thing that has <i ss="char-i"><span id="page_2" title="2" role="doc-pagebreak">ever</i> happened to me, without exception, and they’re not certain they’re going to let me go.
Not. Going. To. Let. Me. Go.
When Dad initially said no, I thought I was going to pass out. I was light-headed and everything.
There is no option: I <i ss="char-i">have</i> to go.
Things got so desperate I even had to send an SOS to my brother in college to call Dad and fight from my corner. ine is much better at wrapping our parents around his little finger. It helps that he’s a literal genius and gives them excellent bragging rights.
If anyone can convince them, it’s him.
How will I be able to look at myself in the mirror if I have to stay home that weekend while someone else takes my spot?
Nope, it’s not happening.
I’m getting on that ind, even if it kills me.
Only six of us have been invited. Six influencers. An exclusive weekend on a new ind resort. An amusement park so remote that you can only reach it by boat.
It’s a freaking dreame true.
The owner, Malcolm, wants us to endorse it. Influencers are taking over the world. If I hadn’t identally made it big, I might be in a little despair over that fact.
People listen to someone online they’ve never met more than they do to their parents, teachers, doctors. It’s tragic, really, but I’m notining. I’ll be able to go to a top college and leave without any debt. I can buy a house when I’m done.
<span id="page_3" title="3" role="doc-pagebreak">I’ve already got a brand-new BMW that my brother was <i ss="char-i">so</i> jealous about. It was glorious. His was two years old when our parents bought it.
I lean back in my office chair and peel the wrapper off a chocte.
The count climbs. When it reaches more than one hundred thousand in minutes, I lock my phone and go to eavesdrop on my parents.
I’lle back in a bit to see what people are saying.
When I leave my room, Mom and Dad are still debating, as I expected. It’s been two days and my trip is all that’s been discussed. I tiptoe along the hallway and listen to Mom tell Dad that spending a weekend with other sessful influencers who aren’t focused on murder might “do me good.”
Mom’s not a fan of my content.
“She might start blogging about makeup like that girl Ellie’s obsessed with, Gregory.”
Ellie is my thirteen-year-old cousin. She’s constantly glued to her phone watching some TikTok-er named Ava dance and vlog about beauty tips, hacks, and tricks.
“I don’t think that’s going to happen, Cheryl. She’s obsessed with this death stuff. We don’t know anything about this ce or this billionaire who’s invited her. It’s perverse. Who does he think he is, asking my seventeen-year-old daughter to his ind for the weekend?”
“Oh, Gregory, be real. Malcolm Wyatt ispletely legitimate. And this trip? This is what being an influencer is. There’s <span id="page_4" title="4" role="doc-pagebreak">a group of them, all around her age. And a woman…Cami something, will be their chaperone while they’re there.”
Cami Jenkins. She’s Malcolm’s personal assistant and is apparently the one who’s coordinating everything. She’ll be watching out for us until the boat picks us up on Monday at lunchtime.
“Don’t you see an issue with the fact that you’re only pushing for this in the hope she’lle home and start doing dances online…or whatever it is these kids are posting?”
I close my eyes and cringe. Lord, shine a light.
“Even ine agrees with me,” Mom says. She’s smug; I can hear the triumph in her voice. Dad will be rolling his eyes.
See, ine is their golden child. He’s the one not reporting on crime in his spare time.
He’s at Princeton studying biochemistry.
“Oh, you know he can never say no to her. He’ll agree with whatever she wants to do. Besides, this isn’t up to ine.”
Oh yeah. My brother might be their golden child, but he’s always had my back and let me get my way.
“Forget ine. This is about Paisley. It’s a great opportunity for her, Greg. It’s no secret that I don’t love what she does, but we can’t argue that it’s taking her ces. She’ll make some good connections.”
She’s probably referring to the billionaire.
There are a couple of millionaires on our street, but anything beyond that is blocks away, deep in the posh suburbs. This kind of money isn’t part of my world. At least not yet.
Dad’s sigh travels up the stairs. That’s his sigh of resignation. <span id="page_5" title="5" role="doc-pagebreak">I know it well. It’s the same one I heard after ine and I spent a week pestering him for a puppy. Bailey, our sweet Lab, is asleep on my bed.
<i ss="char-i">Yes!</i> I leap into the air in silent celebration, punching the air above my head.
I take out the invitation from my hoodie pocket and leap again.
At the end of the month, I’ll be spending a whole weekend on Jagged Ind.