Running Behind

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Running Behind Page 6

by Sylvia Taekema


  Everyone looked at Spencer.

  “I tried to get to you. I thought you might be hurt. But then I saw you get back up again, and your friend was with you. I didn’t want to slow you down. From what I hear, you almost caught that guy at the finish.” He shook Spencer’s hand. Then he turned and shook Jake’s too. “That’s the spirit, fellas. That was some great running.”

  “So that’s where you got the scrapes on your hands and the gash on your chin?” asked Coach Dave. “Why didn’t you say something?”

  Spencer shrugged. “I’m okay. Jake was there.”

  “Well, I’m impressed. Especially considering how you two still came flying across the finish line like twin tornados.”

  “That’s the way to do it,” said Mr. Solomon. “Right, Spencer? You might get knocked down, but that doesn’t mean you quit.” He paused. “I used to run myself. Absolutely loved it.”

  There was an awkward moment in which no one said a word. Spencer looked down at the dirt. Jake felt his chest go tight.

  Mr. Solomon smiled. “But I also loved watching Spencer and the rest of you boys run today. I hope you keep it up for a long time. Being out on the trail with friends like this—there’s nothing better. Sometimes the course we’re on takes an unexpected turn, but we find a way keep on going.”

  “Just be sure you duck when you need to,” said Shawn, rubbing his forehead. Everyone laughed.

  “That was the best pizza I have ever tasted,” said Tony as they walked out of Perry’s Pizza.

  “I’m surprised you tasted anything at all, you were eating so fast,” said Shawn.

  “I slowed down after the first four slices.”

  “We sure did make that party pop,” said Simon.

  “It was cool they gave us sundaes for free,” said Sam.

  “Hot as lava, cool as ice cream,” said Coach Dave. “So, gang? Time to head home?” He slid the door of the van open. Spencer and Jake went over to the Jetta with their dads, but the rest of the team climbed in.

  “Hey, did you know that a group of spiders is called a clutter?” asked Sam with a grin.

  “No!” said Shawn. “If you don’t cut out the spider talk, I’m going to sing all the way home.”

  “Would you rather,” said Tony, “listen to Shawn sing one hour every day for the rest of your life or die right now from a poison arrow?”

  “Poison arrow!” they all cried.

  Spencer helped his dad into the Jetta. Jake folded up the wheelchair and put it in the trunk. His dad gave him a high five and climbed into the driver’s seat. “I really enjoyed watching the race, Jake. See you at home.”

  “You too, Spencer,” said Mr. Solomon. “Have a good ride.”

  “You’re sure you don’t want me to ride home with you?”

  “No, you should go with your friends. Have fun.”

  “I guess that worked out,” said Spencer as the Jetta disappeared from view. “My dad asked if we had any more races coming up. He and your dad are all ready to plan another road trip.”

  Jake smiled. He looked down at his medal. “You really are a great runner, Spencer. Thanks for coming. We really needed you.”

  “No, Jake,” said Spencer as they made their way over to the van. “I’m pretty sure it was the other way around.”

  The door slid open again. “Enter if you dare,” said Simon.

  “If we dare?” Jake looked at Spencer. “We are not afraid!”

  “I am,” said Coach Dave. “The way you guys eat, I can’t afford to buy any more food. Come on, we’ve got to get Tony home before dinner.”

  Acknowledgments

  Many thanks to all the young readers who asked for this story to be written; to all the runners, coaches and parents who were its inspiration; to the amazing team at Orca Books who worked to bring it to print; and to my family, who always cheer me on.

  Sylvia Taekema’s first novel, Seconds, was voted a Silver Birch Express Award Honour Book. Sylvia enjoys visiting classrooms and libraries and meeting with readers and writers of all ages. She also loves to read, bake cookies and go on camping adventures with her family. She lives in Chatham, Ontario. For more information, visit sylviataekema.wordpress.com.

  Chapter One

  A hotdog.

  No, it was worse than that. A healthy hotdog.

  A six-foot, all-natural, high-fiber, low-fat, live-in wiener. I couldn’t believe it.

  When Uncle Hammy called to ask if I’d like to work for him at the Food Fantasia Fun Fair, I was actually kind of excited. I mean, who wouldn’t be? The job offered the two things fifteen-year-old boys care most about in life: food and money.

  All I had to do was hand out samples from his hotdog stand for an afternoon. I could eat as much as I wanted from the other food stalls plus he’d pay me ten bucks an hour.

  Ten bucks an hour!

  I couldn’t believe my luck. Happy little money birds twittered around in my head. Up to that point, my luck had only come in one variety: rotten. Now it looked like something good was actually going to happen for me.

  The offer came at exactly the right moment. Just before Hammy called, I’d been having a little “discussion” with my mother. I really, really needed a personal trainer, but she refused to pay for one. She wouldn’t even talk about it.

  “Dan,” she said and laughed into her cup of coffee. “What do you need a personal trainer for?”

  I’m sure the answer was obvious to everyone but her.

  Girls. That’s the other thing most fifteen-year-old boys care about. With the way I looked, though, I knew I didn’t stand a chance with them. I couldn’t do much about my glasses or my braces or my all-around nerdy vibe. But I figured I might be able to do something about my scrawny physique—or at least a paid professional could.

  I did the math and took the job on the spot. If I worked the whole afternoon, I figured I could afford a couple of hours of training—maybe more. After all, Hammy had mentioned the possibility of tips.

  What he apparently forgot to mention—at least until I showed up at the Metro Center a week later, all ready to go—was that I had to wear a costume.

  “I didn’t tell you about that?” Hammy tried to sound innocent. “Funny. You wouldn’t think I could forget something…like this!”

  He whipped a giant pink-and-yellow foam hotdog out from behind his stall. Its rubbery arms flailed at me like a little kid in a fistfight.

  My dork instinct immediately kicked in. I raised my hands up in front of my face for protection.

  “It’s not going to bite you,” Hammy said. “It’s a hotdog, Dan. If anything, you bite it.” He had a good chuckle over that, but I didn’t join in.

  “You must be kidding. Wear that?” I brought my arms down and folded them across my so-called chest. “Forget it. Not a chance.”

  Hammy leaned against the hotdog and draped his hand over its sesame-seed shoulder as if they were long-lost brothers. The truth was, they did bear a remarkable resemblance to each other. They both had goofy grins, wiry red hair and mustard dribbling down their fronts. The only obvious difference was that the hotdog also came with relish.

  Hammy picked up the hotdog’s three-fingered hand and wagged it at me. “C’mon, Dan! Where’s your sense of humor?”

  Where’s my sense of humor? This was the guy who decided to call himself “Hammy” because he thought it would be funny with the last name Hogg. Trust me, the name Hogg doesn’t need any help getting laughs. I know that from personal experience.

  “It’s my dignity I’m worried about!” I said. “What would my friends say if they caught me parading around dressed like an enormous frankfurter?”

  Hammy’s face went serious. “I thought about that, actually. You know what I think they’ll say?” He paused while he came up with an answer. “They’ll say you look taller.”

  I glared at him. He knows I’m sensitive about my height.

  “And stronger too!” Hammy held out one of the hotdog’s arms. “Look. Built-in biceps!”r />
  I rolled my eyes. “Yeah. Right. Like anyone is going to mistake those tennis balls for muscles.”

  “The kid’s got no imagination either.” Hammy seemed to be talking to the hotdog now. It gave him the same blank-eyed stare I did. “Oh well.

  Doesn’t matter,” he said and patted me on the back. I relaxed.

  “Phew,” I said. Hammy always was a joker. “For a second there, I actually thought you were going to make me wear that stupid thing!”

  That got the biggest laugh yet. “Course I am! I mean it doesn’t matter what other people think. No one’s going to see you. You’ll be completely hidden. All they’ll see is a big delicious Hogg’s Dogg. Now let’s get this show on the road! And by the way, you’d better strip down. It’s hotter than a barbecue grill inside this thing.”

  Titles in the Series

  121 Express

  Monique Polak

  Ace’s Basement

  Ted Staunton

  Agent Angus

  K.L. Denman

  Alibi

  Kristin Butcher

  Bad Business

  Diane Dakers

  Bear Market

  Michele Martin Bossley

  Benched

  Cristy Watson

  Beyond Repair

  Lois Peterson

  The Big Apple Effect

  Christy Goerzen

  The Big Dip

  Melanie Jackson

  Bio-pirate

  Michele Martin Bossley

  Blob

  Frieda Wishinsky

  Bones

  John Wilson

  Branded

  Eric Walters

  Bullies Rule

  Monique Polak

  Bungee Jump

  Pam Withers

  Cabin Girl

  Kristin Butcher

  Caching In

  Kristin Butcher

  Camp Disaster

  Frieda Wishinsky

  Camped Out

  Daphne Greer

  Camp Wild

  Pam Withers

  Caught in the Act

  Deb Loughead

  Chat Room

  Kristin Butcher

  Cheat

  Kristin Butcher

  Chick: Lister

  Alex Van Tol

  Cracked

  Michele Martin Bossley

  Crossbow

  Dayle Campbell Gaetz

  Daredevil Club

  Pam Withers

  Death Drop

  Melanie Jackson

  Destination Human

  K.L. Denman

  Disconnect

  Lois Peterson

  Dog Walker

  Karen Spafford-Fitz

  Explore

  Christy Goerzen

  Eyesore

  Melanie Jackson

  FaceSpace

  Adrian Chamberlain

  Farmed Out

  Christy Goerzen

  Fast Slide

  Melanie Jackson

  Finding Elmo

  Monique Polak

  Flower Power

  Ann Walsh

  Food Freak

  Alex Van Tol

  Fraud Squad

  Michele Martin Bossley

  Gold

  John Wilson

  Hate Mail

  Monique Polak

  High Wire

  Melanie Jackson

  Hold the Pickles

  Vicki Grant

  Horse Power

  Ann Walsh

  Hypnotized

  Don Trembath

  In a Flash

  Eric Walters

  In the Buff

  Vicki Grant

  Jungle Jitters

  Lisa Dalrymple

  Junkyard Dog

  Monique Polak

  Laggan Lard Butts

  Eric Walters

  Leggings Revolt

  Monique Polak

  Living Rough

  Cristy Watson

  Lost

  John Wilson

  Manga Touch

  Jacqueline Pearce

  Marked

  Norah McClintock

  Maxed Out

  Daphne Greer

  Medusa’s Scream

  Melanie Jackson

  Mirror Image

  K.L. Denman

  Nine Doors

  Vicki Grant

  On Cue

  Cristy Watson

  Oracle

  Alex Van Tol

  Out of Season

  Kari Jones

  Payback

  Deb Loughead

  Perfect Revenge

  K.L. Denman

  Pigboy

  Vicki Grant

  Power Chord

  Ted Staunton

  Pyro

  Monique Polak

  Queen of the Toilet

  Bowl

  Frieda Wishinsky

  Quiz Queens

  K.L. Denman

  Rebel’s Tag

  K.L. Denman

  Reckless

  Lesley Choyce

  Rise of the Zombie

  Scarecrows

  Deb Loughead

  Running Behind

  Sylvia Taekema

  See No Evil

  Diane Young

  Sewer Rats

  Sigmund Brouwer

  The Shade

  K.L. Denman

  Shadow

  Mere Joyce

  Shatterproof

  Jocelyn Shipley

  Siege

  Jacqueline Pearce

  Skate Freak

  Lesley Choyce

  Slick

  Sara Cassidy

  The Snowball Effect

  Deb Loughead

  Special Edward

  Eric Walters

  Splat!

  Eric Walters

  Spoiled Rotten

  Dayle Campbell Gaetz

  Stolen

  John Wilson

  Storm Tide

  Kari Jones

  Struck

  Deb Loughead

  Stuff We All Get

  K.L. Denman

  Sudden Impact

  Lesley Choyce

  Swiped

  Michele Martin Bossley

  Tampered

  Michele Martin Bossley

  Taz’s Recipe

  Diane Tullson

  Three Good Things

  Lois Peterson

  Unity Club

  Karen Spafford-Fitz

  Vanish

  Karen Spafford-Fitz

  Watch Me

  Norah McClintock

  Wildfire

  Deb Loughead

  Windfall

  Sara Cassidy

  Winter Road

  Kristen Butcher

  Wired

  Sigmund Brouwer

  For more information on all the books in the Orca Currents series, please visit

  orcabook.com.

 

 

 


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