by Mez Blume
“What are you getting up to in here?” she asked in an overly casual way. Yep. She was definitely on to me.
“Oh just… nothing.” I turned the page of The Pale Horse and tried to look caught up in the story.
“Nothing is the one thing you never do, Miss Busy Body. And didn’t you finish that book last weekend?”
“Yea, but…” I had to think fast. “You know how mysteries are. After you find out who’s done it, you want to go back and find all the clues that you should’ve picked up on the first time around.”
Mum gave me a sideways stare, then shrugged, much to my relief. The last thing I needed was for my family to discover I wrote letters to a pen-pal four centuries away. I’d never told a living soul what happened to me last summer. Sometimes I wanted to, but I was pretty sure they’d never believe it, and that would just make things worse. It’s lonely enough keeping a secret like that without people thinking you’re batty on top of it. That journal was a secret I intended to keep.
“So, what’s up?” I asked, eager to keep Mum off the scent of what I’d really been doing.
“Oh, uh…” was it just me, or was Mum the one looking slightly guilty now? “I have some bad news.”
“What?” I asked.
“Charlie emailed to say he’s been invited to go backpacking with friends. He’s really sorry to miss the camping trip.”
I turned my attention back to the page I’d been pretending to read. The Fall Break camping trip was a family tradition. I’d never gone without my older brother. This was rubbish news, but, I had to admit, not entirely surprising. Charlie had kept his word and had written to me every week since he’d gone off to university in Scotland; but lately his letters had featured a certain “friend” called Moira more than anything else. I guess I had a hunch he wouldn’t be in a hurry to come home for the two-week autumn holiday. “Oh well,” I replied, knowing Mum was holding her breath to see how upset I’d be.
“There’s some… other news,” she said after a minute’s pause.
I looked up, a little worried by the tone of her voice.
“I just got off the phone to Auntie Virginia.” She paused, taking a sudden interest in tidying up the pile of riding clothes on my floor. I smelled a rat.
“And… what did Auntie Virginia say?”
“Well,” Mum chimed as she placed the freshly folded stack of clothes on top of my dresser, “it’s rather good news, actually. I told her about our camping trip and how unfortunate it was that Charlie couldn’t make it, and how you’d be stuck with just Dad and me, and…”
“And?”
“And she decided then and there to send Imogen over from London in a couple of weeks to join us. It’s her half-term break as well. Auntie Virginia thought she’d be good company for you, and it might be a good cultural experience for her.”
The Pale Horse dropped into my lap at the same moment my mouth fell open. “You’re not serious?” I asked, sure this had to be a bad joke. If Sophia was the sister I’d never had, Imogen was the sister I’d never wanted.
“Katie!” Mum scolded as if it were any surprise I was not ecstatic about the news that my snobby cousin was coming to spoil our camping trip. “You know, I really thought you’d matured beyond this. All I ask is that you try to get on with Imogen. Auntie Ginny and I are as different as two sisters can be, yet we were still each other’s closest ally growing up. It only takes a little effort—”
“Mum, I do try, but it’s impossible to get on with her. She’s only a year older than I am, and she thinks she’s the queen of the whole world!”
“Well just bear in mind, Kit-Kat, that maybe Imogen’s had a rather harder time of it than you have.”
“But … What?”
Mum held up a hand. “I get that she’s not your ideal friend. But that doesn’t change the fact that she’s family. No matter your differences.” Mum cast me a just-think-about-that kind of look and left the room, pulling the door shut behind her.
With a groan, I face planted into my pillow. I’d think about it, all right. What did she mean Imogen’s had a harder time of it? A harder time of what? Of life? Yea, right. The Humphreys family lived in a huge mansion in London and jetted off on amazing holidays all the time. Imogen got everything she wanted and never wasted an opportunity to brag about it. She wouldn’t have survived a day against Nurse Joan or the Baron. She had no idea what it was like to leave her best friend four hundred years in the past. I was sure Imogen didn’t know the meaning of hardship. She had the perfect life, and I was going to have to spend two solid weeks hearing her rub it in.
There was only one place to go for consolation. I pulled my journal out from under my pillow and flicked open to the page I’d been scribbling on before.
Sophia, I so wish you were here right now.
I stopped writing and tried to imagine what Sophia would say in this situation. I knew the answer, and it made me wince with shame. Sophia would treat Imogen with the perfect manners and thoughtfulness with which she treated everyone, even Nurse Joan. Sophia would find a thousand reasons to be grateful rather than complain about her own difficulties.
I lay back on my pillow and watched the ceiling fan whirl round and round. “I’ll do my best, Sophia.” But as I spoke the words, a hollow ache filled the pit of my stomach. There was no escaping the dreadful truth. Sophia was not there. I would have to face two whole weeks of cousin Imogen on my own.
2
Unwanted Company
“So, Imogen, tell us about your new school. Is an all-girls boarding school as scary as it sounds?”
Dad had been peppering Imogen with friendly questions from the start of our eleven-hour car journey from Pennsylvania – where I live – to Tennessee, a journey which gave me the opportunity to observe the strange creature who sat beside me in the back. The old Imogen might have been loud and bossy, but at least she looked and smelled normal. But it’d been a whole day since Imogen had arrived from London, and I could still hardly recognise her behind the gobs of makeup, the dizzying smell of cherry lip balm and the very badly dyed hair. Also, the new Imogen had a nasty habit of rolling her eyes at absolutely everything.
In a lazy, bored sort of voice, the new Imogen finally answered. “Boarding school’s amazing, actually. I get to hang out with my friends like all the time. I share a room with my best friend, Poppy. She’s practicing to become a beautician some day. She did my hair herself.” She gave her streaky blonde and black locks a toss.
“Is that so?” Mum asked, a little too enthusiastically.
“Yea. She’s a real artist,” Imogen answered.
I snorted. I wasn’t sure the mess on Imogen’s head could be called “art.” It looked more like a practical joke to me.
“Katie’s made some nice friends at her new school too.” I caught Dad’s eye in the rear-view mirror, clearly giving me the hint that I should take over the conversation with Imogen.
“Yes, Katie. Why don’t you tell Imogen about your new school?” Mum chimed in cheerfully.
I shot a glare at my plotting parents in the mirror and shrugged. “Oh… there’s really nothing much to tell.”
Imogen smacked her cherry lip balm lips and gave me a pitying look as if I were the saddest person she’d ever seen in her life. “I’m not surprised. Primary school is so lame. It doesn’t get interesting until you move up to secondary school.”
“I’m not in primary school,” I corrected. “It’s called middle school in America.”
“Whatever.” She rolled her eyes, flicked her streaky hair and started swiping through pictures on her smart phone.
Carefully ignoring Mum and Dad’s scolding looks in the mirror, I took my detective novel out of my bag and dived in. They might force me to share our camping trip with Imogen, but they couldn’t force us to become friends. There was no getting around it. We might be cousins, but Imogen and I were as different as two cousins could be.
We stiffly made our way back to the car after lunch at a ro
adside diner where Imogen had made a show of looking disgusted at everything on her plate, then pushing it away and claiming not to be hungry. Meantime, she had gone from bored to outright cranky. “Uncle Peter, why exactly are we driving all the way from Pennsylvania to Tennessee just to go camping? I mean, people do camp closer to where you live, right?”
“Well, that’s my fault, I’m afraid,” Dad said apologetically, as he rifled through his pockets for the car keys. “My family comes from that neck of the woods. I thought it’d be a good opportunity to trace my roots.”
Imogen made her disgusted face again. “Wait, your family were like, hillbillies?”
Behind Dad’s back, I smacked myself on the forehead. I knew just what was coming.
Dad chuckled. “You could say that. Some of my ancestors were Scottish. The others Cherokee Indian. I’ve been doing some research into the Cherokee side ….”
Once Dad got started talking about his Native American roots, there would be no stopping him, possibly for hours. Before Imogen knew what had hit her, Dad had opened the trunk, dug up his family archive from his duffle bag, and was flipping through the pages of yellowed old records, photographs and certificates, completely unaware of the glazed-over look on Imogen’s face as he held up bits of scraps for her to examine.
Even I glazed over when Dad got going like this. I had to do something. “Dad, don’t you think we should get back on the road?”
The spell was broken. “Good point, Kit-Kat,” he said, gingerly closing the dusty old scrapbook. “Tell you what. You girls can finish looking through this on the drive. It’ll make those last six hours fly by.”
I grimaced as Dad dumped the weight of his dusty, treasured scrapbook into my arms.
Imogen leaned away from it as if the thing might strike out at her with a tomahawk. “Uh, I get carsick. Maybe I can look at it another time.”
“Don’t worry about that, Immy.” Dad patted her on the shoulder. “There will be plenty of time once we get to Tennessee.”
It was dinner time before Dad announced we’d arrived in the small town near our campsite. The scrapbook lay on the seat between Imogen and me, carefully untouched for the whole six hours. I pulled myself out of my mystery novel to take a look out the window. We’d been on country roads past farms and through dense forest for the past couple of hours at least. Now we’d pulled into what was almost a patch of civilisation… not exactly a town, but a street lined with diners, motels and shops advertising local crafts, baked goods and hiking gear. Dad stopped the car in front of a small country convenience store.
“Thought we’d stock up with some survival supplies before we head to the campsite,” he said over his shoulder. “You know, things like Twizzlers and Twinkies.”
Imogen groaned and rubbed her eyes. “Ow.” She winced. “My foot is completely dead.”
“Why don’t you girls stretch your legs?” Mum suggested. “You can explore the Native American craft shop while we grab some supplies.”
At that suggestion, Imogen, of course, rolled her eyes.
A bell jingled as we entered the door of a dimly-lit shop that smelled strongly of incense. I turned on the spot, letting my eyes adjust and taking in the odd assortment of objects that covered the walls and shelves, everything from animal hides to beaded jewelry, toy bows and arrows and neon-dyed feather headdresses.
“This is so primitive,” Imogen muttered into a basket full of cornhusk dolls.
“Can I help you?”
We whirled around in sync to face the man who had crept up behind us so silently. He wore a long ponytail and a very serious expression. Had he heard Imogen’s remark? Maybe that’s why he looked so surly.
“No thanks,” I answered as brightly as I could. “We’re just having a look around.”
“You’ve been to Cherokee Country before?” he asked in a tone as serious as his expression.
I shook my head. “First time. My dad’s family come from here. He’s part Cherokee.”
At that remark, the man raised an eyebrow. “A red-headed Cherokee. It happens in a blue moon.” He sauntered over to a counter and picked up a thin booklet. “Here.” I took the booklet and read the cover. Cherokee Legends, it said. “You’re part Cherokee. You should learn our stories. It helps you understand the people.”
“I’ll have to ask my dad for some money…”
“It’s a gift,” he said flatly. “To learn your Cherokee heritage.”
I thanked the man for the gift and followed Imogen back out into the still-warm evening sunlight.
“Find anything interesting?” Dad called out over the brown paper bag in his arms. “Some Indian jewelry perhaps?”
“Not really my cup of tea,” Imogen muttered under her breath.
“The shopkeeper gave me this thing.” I held out the booklet and examined the cover again. In the light, I could make out the weird illustration of a vicious-looking snake with horns on its head encircling a Native American man with a stone raised high in one hand.
“Ah, Cherokee Legends, huh? That’s great, Katie! You can read us some stories around the campfire tonight.”
I didn’t even need to look to know Imogen was rolling her eyes as she climbed back into the car. I stuffed the Cherokee booklet into my rucksack, pulled out my mystery novel instead and disappeared behind its cover. I still had two whole weeks of her rolling eyes to look forward to. I would just have to find ways of ignoring them.
3
The Cave
“Isn’t this just what heaven must look like? How about those bright red sugar maples, eh, Katie?” Dad plopped down on a stump and put his hands behind his head with a satisfied sigh. I plopped down on a mossy patch of earth beside him feeling exhausted. Camp had gone up quickly enough, but with no help from Imogen. While Dad and I pitched the tent and Mum collected firewood, Imogen had walked around in circles trying to track down a satellite signal for her smart phone.
“I think you’re more likely to pick up smoke signals out here than phone signals, Immy,” Dad called to her as she desperately waved the phone towards the sky. “You know, I can just about hear the river in the distance. Why don’t you girls go explore? You can bring back some water while you’re at it.” He handed me a bucket and the water purifier. “I’ll chop these logs and get a fire going before you get back.”
I threw my rucksack over my shoulder and scooped up the bucket and filter. “Ready?”
Imogen looked like she’d rather sit in poison ivy than go exploring, but she finally pulled herself up and moseyed after me.
We trudged down a pebbly, fern-lined path that wound its way down a slope through yellow poplars, feathery hemlocks and jungly rhododendron bushes, all the while following the course of a little brook. Eventually, where the slope levelled out, the brook tumbled into a river that ran through the wooded valley.
I looked up and down the river until I spotted a shoal that jetted out over the water. “This looks good,” I said, stepping gingerly over the moss-covered rocks with the bucket in hand. I squatted down and lowered the water filter into the glassy, churning water, shuddering as the shock of coldness rose up my arm.
Imogen kept a good distance between herself and the water, swatting at gnats and jumping at every little noise, from crows cawing to squirrels scurrying up the trees. She could not have looked more out of place in the middle of a forest if she’d been a red telephone booth.
“Is this your family’s idea of a relaxing holiday?” she asked, taking a few wobbly steps closer across the river rocks.
I let my eyes travel up and down the tranquil, sparkling river and took in a deep, earthy breath of mountain air. “Yup.”
“Last year we went to Dubai. Mum and I did tons of shopping, and Dad went to meetings or did work by the pool.” She paused to smack at the gnats attacking her legs. “It’s so weird, isn’t it?” Smack. “I mean, our parents are nothing alike. Your dad is so… rugged.” Smack.
“Well,” I shrugged, though inwardly expanding with
pride, “he used to be a mountaineer, back when he met Mum. He pretty much lived in the woods back then.” Now she pointed it out, it was strange Imogen’s family and mine should be so different considering our mums were sisters. “Doesn’t your dad ever take you camping?” I asked.
“Pfff. My dad?” Smack. “My dad’s an investment banker. He never camps unless it’s on the floor of his office.”
There was another minute of buzzing and slapping before she asked, “So how did your dad get to be a mountain man, or whatever?”
“A mountaineer,” I corrected. “He’s always felt more at home in the outdoors. I guess it’s his Cherokee blood.”
“I can’t believe your dad’s like, an actual Indian. That’s so … bizarre.”
I didn’t answer. Truth be told, as much as I love my dad, I didn’t have that much of an opinion about our Cherokee heritage. Those shops of Indian knickknacks had nothing to do with me, and I certainly had no plan of digging through Dad’s musty old family archives.
“This is seriously not fun,” Imogen whined, contorting to smack herself on the shoulder blade. “At this rate, there’s not gonna be anything left of me after two weeks.”
“There will be if you use bug spray instead of hair spray,” I said under my breath. Part of me almost enjoyed watching Imogen suffer. Swatting gnats, her face flushed and sticky, she certainly didn’t look like the Queen of the World now. So what if she attended a posh school or could run circles around me on a hockey pitch? For once, she was the helpless one, and I was in charge, no longer the pathetic little cousin.
My bucket was full. I wrapped up the filter and stuffed it into my shorts pocket, then bent down and heaved the bucket. As I hoisted it, water sloshing out the side onto my legs, I had a sudden flashback to last summer and my brief but painful career as a water maid. The memory felt sharp as a bee sting, as if I’d suddenly been whisked back to Otterly Manor, and it was Sophia standing there with her radiant smile and golden curls instead of Imogen looking cross and flustered. With a twinge of shame, I thought of Sophia’s motherly care when she first found me, hot, muddy and completely out of my depth in her world. She had reached out and been a true friend without even knowing me.