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42
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Ebook
2009
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Publié par
Date de parution
01 octobre 2009
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781554694860
Langue
English
Publié par
Date de parution
01 octobre 2009
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781554694860
Langue
English
In the Woods
Robin Stevenson
o rca s o undings
ORCA BOOK PUBLISHERS
Copyright 2009 Robin Stevenson
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Stevenson, Robin, 1968-In the woods / written by Robin Stevenson.
(Orca soundings) ISBN 978-1-55469-201-9 (bound).--ISBN 978-1-55469-200-2 (pbk.)
I. Title. II. Series: Orca soundings
PS8637.T487I565 2009 jC813 .6 C2009-902578-7
Summary: When Cameron discovers a baby abandoned in the woods, he tries to discover whether his sister is the mother.
First published in the United States, 2009 Library of Congress Control Number: 2009927571
Orca Book Publishers gratefully acknowledges the support for its publishing programs provided by the following agencies: the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program and the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Province of British Columbia through the BC Arts Council and the Book Publishing Tax Credit.
Cover design by Teresa Bubela Cover photography by Getty Images
ORCA BOOK PUBLISHERS PO BOX 5626, STN. B VICTORIA, BC CANADA V8R 6S4
ORCA BOOK PUBLISHERS PO BOX 468 CUSTER, WA USA 98240-0468
www.orcabook.com Printed and bound in Canada. Printed on 100% PCW recycled paper. 12 11 10 09 4 3 2 1
To my grandmother, Mormor, with love.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter One
I m in the living room watching TV when the phone rings.
Hello? I am trying to sound casual in case it s this girl from school, Audrey, who I happen to have this huge crush on. And who just happened to ask for my phone number today. Only because she got stuck with me as a partner for a social studies project, but still
Cameron? It s Katie.
Not Audrey. My sister. My twin sister, though people generally find this hard to believe. Mom s not home yet, I tell her, flopping down on the couch.
I know. I just wanted to talk to you.
Me? Since when does Katie voluntarily talk to me? Listen, I tell her, I m sort of expecting a call.
Oh. Well, okay. Um I guess I better let you go then.
I m about to hang up, but something stops me. Something in her voice.
Where are you? I ask her. Is everything okay? I make a face to myself. In Katie s universe, something going wrong would mean getting an A-minus instead of an A. It would mean coming second at the swim meet instead of first. Katie is Miss Gifted and Talented.
Miss Most Likely to Succeed.
Katie gives a weird, unfunny laugh.
I m fine.
I sit up. You don t sound very fine. There is a long silence, and I start to feel nervous. Katie? Are you still there? What s going on?
I just I can hear her take a deep breath, almost a gasp. There s another silence. I m about to say something when she clears her throat and says, sounding almost normal, I need you to do something for me, okay?
What?
Um you know that trail around the lake?
Sure. Some of the kids from school party out there, but I haven t been for ages. Not since last summer. Me and some of the guys from the football team went out there in August to drink beer and barbecue burgers and swim in the lake. What about it?
Could you go there?
What? Now? We used to go there for picnics when we were kids, with Mom and Brian the Pervert, but a trip down memory lane seems unlikely. We don t talk about that time period, ever. Also, Katie and I do not hang out together. Not that we don t like each other-we re just very different people.
Yeah. Now.
Why?
There s a long silence, like it hadn t occurred to her that I might want a reason.
Anyway, I tell her, I can t. I don t have a car, remember?
Take Mom s.
I snort. That d go over well. I had a fender bender last year. It wasn t my fault-the other driver had slammed on his brakes right in front of me-but Mom muttered something about safe following distance, like that was even possible in rush-hour traffic. She told me her car was off-limits. It sucks. Of course, things like that never happen to Katie. She is allowed to use Mom s car whenever she wants.
Not that she needs to anymore. Mom bought Katie her own car a couple of months ago. Me? I got a new bike.
Cameron. She sounds impatient. Please.
Mom drove to work today, so I couldn t even if I wanted to. Which I don t. Anyway, what s the big deal? What s going on at the lake?
You could ride your bike, she says. It s not that far.
I snort. It s a good half-hour ride, minimum, and that s pushing hard.
Cameron?
Yeah. There s something freaky about this. Katie s not the type of girl who creates big dramas and mysteries about everything. She s usually ultra-sensible. Maybe she s had some kind of psychotic breakdown from too much studying. Tell me why and I might consider it.
Or not. Audrey might call. She could be trying to call right this minute. I stand up and glance out the window. It s starting to rain.
It is? Katie s voice breaks, and she sounds like she might start to cry. Oh god please? Cameron, I swear I ll never ask you to do anything again. Ever. Just do this one thing?
I glance across the room and catch my reflection in the hallway mirror. I don t know why, but I am nodding to myself.
Apparently some part of me has already decided to do this crazy thing for her.
Whatever. I could use a workout anyway, and I have a brand-new mountain bike that I ve barely ridden. Okay, okay,
I say. I ll go.
Don t tell anyone, she says.
Then she hangs up, and I wonder what exactly I have just agreed to.
Chapter Two
I scrawl a quick note for Mom- Gone for a bike ride, back by 6 pm. It s May and not that cold, but when you re cycling and the rain is coming down, you get pretty chilled. I m wearing an undershirt and a light sweater under my cycling jacket, but I forgot to put gloves on. By the time I hit the highway, my fingers are practically frozen to the handlebars. Damn Katie. I don t even know what I m supposed to do when I get to the lake. Cycle around the trail and come home? I can t believe I agreed to do this.
The wind is blowing straight down the highway, against me. I duck my head and pedal faster. Story of my life: I always have the wind against me, and Katie always has it behind her. While she s pulling straight A s and applying to universities for fall, I m still having trouble with just about every subject. Learning disability, the teachers and consultants and learning assistants call it. Screwed up, I call it.
A truck zips past me and sends a sheet of dirty water up in my direction. I flip the driver the bird. Damn Katie, I think again. My fingers ache with cold. I debate turning around and heading back home, but for some reason-stubbornness maybe, or curiosity-I don t do it. I take the turnoff toward the lake and think about the times we came here when we were kids. Fourth-graders. It was a year after Mom and Dad split up, and Mom was seeing Brian the Pervert. We didn t call him that then, of course. He was her first boyfriend after the divorce, and Mom said part of the reason she fell for him was that he was just so great with us kids. Ha bloody ha.
Not that he ever tried anything with me.
I pull into the empty parking lot and glide to a stop. Katie s car isn t here. I hunch my shoulders and wonder again exactly what she expects me to do now.
Even though Brian the Pervert has been out of our lives for years, I still think about him whenever I come to the lake or ride my bike by where he used to live. Even though I was just a kid at the time, I feel kind of guilty about not knowing what he was doing to Katie. Eventually she told some kid at school, who told her mom, who called social services, and it all blew up. At first Mom didn t believe it. She didn t quite accuse Katie of lying and ruining her life, but that was how Katie took it. We all had to go for counseling, and Brian the Pervert left. Somehow it eventually blew over, and life went back to normal.
It s so strange that Katie would want me to come here. I don t think she s been back here since those picnic days. She s not the party type anyway. She has her friends, but she s not hugely social. The school swim team was her big thing, but she quit that back in January. Needed more time to study, she claimed. As if. Katie could pull off A s without ever cracking a textbook.
I wonder if Katie was here when she called me, and if so, why she took off. Nothing about this makes any sense, but since I ve come all this way, I figure I might as well ride the loop around the lake before I head back home. I cycle across the gravel of the parking lot and onto the packed reddish dirt trail. Tall trees stand green and slick-wet, branches dark against the gray sky, and the air smells like dirt and rain. Ahead I can see the lake, as flat and gray as the sky above. I slow down as I ride past the picnic area. It s a large grassy expanse with a muddy beach and half a dozen graffiti-scarred tables and a public washroom that s always locked.
At that party back in August, Audrey and I had this incredibly intense conversation at one of those tables, and I thought mayb