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Girl Across the Water

Page 8

by Jody Kihara


  Jasper’s bed was empty, which meant I must have

  slept later than usual. I pulled on my shorts and a T-shirt

  and ran downstairs. Jasper was sitting at the table

  demolishing a stack of pancakes, while Dad stood at the

  stove flipping more.

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  “Paul!” Dad greeted me with a smile. “Just in time. I

  told Jasper to go and wake you.”

  Jasper’s eyes widened over his pancake-filled

  cheeks. “I was going to,” he said through a mouthful of

  food.

  As I slid into my chair, Dad set two more plates of

  pancakes on the table: one for me, one for him. I poured

  myself a glass of orange juice and glugged it down, then

  set about drowning my pancakes in syrup. The sugar hit did

  a lot to wake me up, but I felt like I still needed more. “Can

  I have some coffee?”

  Dad raised his eyebrows. “I thought you didn’t like

  coffee.”

  I didn’t, but with three spoonfuls of sugar it was

  drinkable, and as soon as I got it down, I felt more

  charged.

  “So what do you two want to do today?” Dad asked.

  Oh, rats. Dad was finally ready for some bonding

  time, and I needed to get to the island. Alone.

  “Um,” I said. “I was thinking of going on another

  canoe trip.”

  “You’re sure into canoeing this year,” he

  commented.

  “Well, we are at a lake,” I pointed out, strangely

  irritated.

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  Jasper, as usual, slowed down his eating to shoot

  worried looks from me to Dad. “I thought maybe we could

  play some games today,” he said. “We’ve got Monopoly,

  Cranium, Risk…”

  Thank you, Jasper. Saved.

  Dad looked torn. I could tell he wanted to go

  outdoors and get some exercise. “Well, how about we play

  games this morning, then go canoeing in the afternoon?”

  he asked.

  “Perfect!” I answered. “Uh, you two don’t mind if I

  go for a quick canoe trip right now, though, do you? Just to

  the island and back. You can start a game, and I’ll catch up

  later. I just want to, um, warm up.”

  “Well, I thought it would be nice if we all spend some

  time together,” Dad said.

  I shot him a pained look.

  “…but you won’t be that long, right?”

  “Sure.”

  After we’d cleaned up the breakfast dishes, I

  surreptitiously slid some food into my backpack and headed

  off.

  She’s there, I told myself as I canoed to the island. I

  had seen her signals the night before; she had to be real.

  And in the morning sunlight, Coralie’s story of a ghost girl

  walking into the lake didn’t seem as scary any more.

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  For some reason, though, it was Jasper’s story of the

  kids on the stairs that stuck with me. Each time my paddle

  splashed into the water, I imagined the chorus of little

  voices: We’re at the bottom of the lake…

  Stairs, I told myself. Stairs, not lake.

  I didn’t slow down enough as I approached the

  island, and the hard crunch of the canoe against ground

  pitched me forward. After righting myself, I set the paddle

  in the canoe, stepped out, and pulled the canoe up onto the

  beach. This time I headed straight for the clearing without

  calling out.

  When I reached it, she wasn’t there. Again. But

  sitting right where I’d left them, stacked the exact same

  way, were the blankets, flashlight, and note… as if they’d

  never been touched.

  Dammit! This was getting beyond annoying. I knew

  she existed. She’d signaled back last night. Plus, the food

  was gone. I sighed. Okay, this meant for sure she was just

  messing with me. And likely someone else was in on it,

  because I doubted a young girl could arrange all this by

  themselves.

  But why? Was it just a stupid practical joke?

  I wondered again about the neighbor kids. It had to

  be them. Why, though? Just for laughs? It seemed like all

  they needed for entertainment was the ability to kick dirt at

  each other. Plus, they didn’t seem smart enough to pull

  something like this together.

  But who else could it be?

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  I stood there frowning, considering the logistics of

  how someone could carry this out. They’d have to be

  staying someplace nearby. I thought of the cabin at the top

  of the lake. When we’d seen it through the binoculars, it

  had looked deserted… but I wanted to check it out to make

  sure.

  #

  When I got back to the cabin, Dad and Jasper were

  sitting at the picnic table playing Risk. “Hey, Paul! Coming

  to join us?”

  “Uh…” We all loved Risk, Dad included, but it’s such

  a long game, and I was impatient to get to the deserted

  cabin. “I guess so… are we playing right to the end?”

  “Of course,” Jasper said, looking indignant. “But the

  thing is, I don’t know how you can join in now, Paul, ‘cause

  we’ve already started. You might have to wait till the next

  game.”

  Dad’s eyes widened. Much as he loved Risk, I could

  tell he didn’t want to spend the whole day playing it.

  I sat down next to Dad. “Well, how about ditching

  this game, seeing as you’re not very far in, and then we

  start another one this evening? I’ve thought of something

  really cool we can do.”

  Jasper looked suspicious. “What?”

  “I want to go up to the end of the lake and check out

  the deserted cabin.”

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  Jasper blinked rapidly. “All the way to the end? Isn’t

  it really far?”

  “Not with three of us paddling.”

  “But Paul,” he whined, “We said games first! We

  said. And I don’t want to stop this one. Anyway, we’ve

  already gone canoeing. Do we have to go again?”

  We both transferred our gaze to Dad, who sat there

  looking pulled in two directions.

  “You decide,” I told him.

  Jasper got so much time with my Dad that it

  suddenly seemed unfair my stepbrother was even here. He

  had Dad all the rest of the year, and alone, apart from the

  weekends when I stayed over. I never got alone-time with

  Dad anymore. Every time I saw him, Jasper was with us.

  And he was my Dad! How come me and Dad couldn’t have

  a month together without Jasper?

  “Ah…” Dad said. “Well, it is a great day… maybe

  games would be better for the evening. We can play them

  in the living room when it’s dark out.”

  “But you said!” Jasper protested, looking like he

  might burst into tears. “Games in the morning!”

  “Jasper, we all have to compromise a bit when there

  are three of us,” Dad said.

  Jasper jumped up from the p
icnic table, knocking the

  game so that the pieces bounced. He ran for the cabin, and

  I exchanged a startled look with Dad, who, with a sigh, got

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  up to follow Jasper. I could hear Jasper running up the

  stairs. Dad disappeared into the cabin after him.

  Irritated, I walked back to the canoe. It looked like

  I’d be going on another trip by myself. And even though I’d

  wanted to be alone the last few times, this time it nettled

  me.

  Should I go now, I wondered, or wait and see if

  Jasper might change his mind? I picked up the paddle and

  drove the end into the dirt, grinding it in small circles.

  To my surprise, Dad emerged from the cabin a

  minute later. “Jasper doesn’t want to come,” he said, the

  pulled-in-two-directions look still on his face. “He’s going to

  stay and read while we go.”

  “You’re coming with me?” I asked in surprise.

  Dad put one arm around my shoulder. “Well, I

  explained to him that I don’t get much time with you, so he

  has to learn to give on these things sometimes. Plus, it’ll be

  nice for us to do something together, just the two of us.”

  “Did you tell him that?”

  “Well…” He flashed me a rueful smile. “Not exactly.”

  Through the bedroom window, I thought I could hear

  the sound of Jasper’s sobs. I felt vindicated rather than

  sorry, though — he could be such a baby! I mean, crying

  over a canoe trip?

  “Let’s go, then,” I said.

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  Dad walked to the shed where the canoe was kept

  during the winter, and got his lifejacket.

  We pushed the canoe into the water and climbed in,

  Dad sitting in the stern. We began to paddle, and it was

  amazing how fast the canoe cut through the water with two

  people doing the work. The shore passed by at speed, and I

  peered closely, looking for places a person might hide. It

  was all thick scrub and densely clustered trees, with only

  here and there little tiny beaches that had no openings or

  paths leading to them from the woods. It was an

  impenetrable wall of foliage surrounding the lake. Where

  would someone come from?

  This made me feel even more hopeful about the

  cabin.

  We continued to paddle, the sparkles on the lake

  almost blinding. Again, I’d forgotten my sunglasses. Dad

  chatted to me about all kinds of things: school, home, how

  mom was doing.

  The lake began to curve, and we followed it around.

  As we approached the end, my heart began to beat with

  anticipation: what would we find? Or who? Imagining some

  grizzled old hunter with a rifle and a bad attitude, I was

  glad to have Dad with me.

  The cabin could be seen through the scattered trees,

  its red door standing out against the surrounding greenery.

  It looked like the area around the cabin had once been

  completely clear all the way down to the lake, but now salal

  and salmonberry bushes were taking over.

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  “Here we are,” Dad said, and we gave another

  stroke. The bow of the canoe touched the beach, and I

  hopped out first, the lake water cold around my feet and

  ankles.

  The beach was longer and sandier than ours. We

  pulled the canoe up and stood looking back at the lake.

  Really, this was a beautiful spot. You couldn’t see as much

  of the lake because of the curve, but it was neat seeing it

  from a different angle. Like we were in a completely

  different place, like our own cabin didn’t exist any more.

  “Let’s take a look, then,” Dad said, tossing his

  lifejacket into the canoe. I did the same, and we headed for

  the cabin.

  It appeared as deserted up close as it had through

  the binoculars. The cabin itself and the front door looked

  solid, but the window to the right was boarded up, and the

  left one, which was opaque with dirt, had a hole in one

  corner like someone had thrown a rock through it.

  The three front steps were weathered and cracked,

  so I treaded up them carefully while Dad waited on the

  grass. The top step gave a loud creak. We’re on the stairs,

  we’re on the stairs, I thought again, then shook my head,

  trying not to concentrate on ghost stories as I closed my

  fingers around the door handle. I pulled, but the door didn’t

  budge, not a millimeter.

  “It think it’s nailed shut,” I said. If it was locked, it

  would have moved a tiny bit.

  “Let’s go around back, then. Probably a door there.”

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  Just as I stepped back on the ground, a loud bang

  like a door slamming came from the back of the cabin. I

  glanced at Dad. “What was that?”

  “I don’t know.” He went to peer through the front

  window, and I followed.

  All I could see was a dusty room with one straight-

  backed chair in it, and nothing else that I could make out

  through the grimy glass. I turned to Dad. “Do you think we

  should go around back? It sounded like someone’s here.”

  I must have looked more scared than I realized,

  because he gave me a reassuring grin and said, “Probably

  just a raccoon or something.” I remembered, then, the

  raccoon from the other night, and tried to relax my

  expression.

  “Oh, right, yeah.”

  Could a raccoon bang a door, though?

  We walked to the side of the cabin and began to

  make our way around. Dad went ahead, pushing long,

  thorny strands of salmonberry bush out the way, holding

  them for me so they didn’t snap back into my face. Some

  smaller ones scratched against my arm, and we had to

  squeeze close to the cabin to get through.

  Behind the cabin was more overgrown than the

  front. I wasn’t sure whether there had once been a yard or

  not, but now only a small clearing surrounded the back

  door. There was a window beside the door, and I peered

  into a bare-looking cabin. Already, the place made me

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  shiver. I felt like we were doing something wrong. “Do you

  think it’s okay to go in?”

  “I don’t see why not. If it’s deserted, we’re not

  disturbing anyone or trespassing.” Dad pulled hard on the

  back door, and to our surprise, it opened so easily that he

  staggered back. He flashed me a grin ― “Well, that was

  easy!” ― and held it open for me.

  Taking a deep breath, I climbed the steps and

  entered.

  The room I was standing in was a small kitchen. It

  smelled of dust and mice. There were cupboards, an old,

  broken-looking stove, and a warped table with one chair.

  No refrigerator, no heater.

  “No lock,” Dad said, indicating the side of the door

  before letting it swing shut. “It was probably just banging

  in
the wind.”

  Except there was no wind.

  I walked over to the cupboards and slowly opened

  one, wondering if I’d find food. That would be the surest

  sign of someone living here. I peeked in, and then gave a

  shout and stepped back.

  “What is it?”

  “Uck. Dead mouse. No wonder this place smells.”

  Dad grinned. “Not afraid of mice, are you Paul?”

  “No,” I said, flustered. “It just surprised me, that’s

  all.”

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  “Well, there are probably more of them. You sure

  you want to go on?” He winked.

  “Very funny,” I snorted. I closed the cupboard and

  stalked into the living room. Apart from the straight-backed

  chair I’d seen from outside, there was a lumpy old two-

  seater sofa covered with fuzzy grey fabric that looked like it

  was beginning to decay. Probably the sofa was an

  apartment building for mice.

  I swung around to look through the back window

  again, feeling like there were eyes watching us from

  outside. All I could see was trees, though; I guess I was

  just jumpy.

  My footsteps were loud against the wooden floor as I

  made my way to the front door. It wasn’t nailed shut, as I’d

  thought, but locked with a deadbolt. Why deadbolt it if the

  back door didn’t even lock? Opposite the front door was a

  staircase, and beside it, another door. I pushed the door

  open to reveal a study or a bedroom, I couldn’t tell which;

  there was nothing in it other than an empty set of

  bookshelves.

  Dad was behind me, looking around, examining the

  walls and ceiling with a bemused expression.

  “Upstairs?” I suggested.

  “Sure, but be careful on the stairs. This place looks

  like it’s falling apart.”

  It looked pretty solid to me, but nevertheless, I put

  my hand on the wall rather than the banister as I began to

  climb the stairs.

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  The words ‘we’re on the stairs, we’re on the stairs’

  echoed through my mind again. This time I smiled. It was a

  pretty good story — the kind you thought of every time you

  climbed a staircase.

  There was a small landing at the top, with a door to

  each side: one shut, one ajar. I headed for the ajar one and

  pushed it further, revealing a bedroom with an army-style

 

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