To Sylvia
1
THE WATER by the shore smells like the bottom of the garbage pail right after I take out the trash. I scrunch up my nose and head down the wooden boards of the T-shaped dock. A dad with a small child points across the lake, while a man in a dirty Twins cap blasts country music from an old radio. Leaning my elbows on the dock’s railing, I watch the gray-green fish dart and glide below me.
“What are you doing?” asks a loud voice. It’s the purple-haired girl I noticed at day camp this morning.
“Quiet,” I say. “You’ll scare the fish.”
“Oh, and that thing won’t?” She nods her chin toward the radio.
She has a point.
“Look.” She leans close—too close—and points at a flyer stapled to the dock next to where I’m resting my elbows. The flyer has a picture of a smiling fish fishing. A speech bubble coming out of its mouth says, Catch me if you can!
I recognize that fish from somewhere.
“What is it?” the girl asks, as if I know.
“I’m not sure—” I start to say. But then I realize I am sure. “It’s a fishing contest.”
“You’re right.” She taps the words on the paper and reads aloud, “ ‘The Fourteenth Annual Arne Hopkins Dock Fishing Tournament. Enter for your chance to win the five-thousand-dollar prize.’ ” She whistles through teeth that stick out like a bunny’s. “That’s a lot of cash. Who’s Arne Hopkins?”
“No idea. I never heard of him until a couple of weeks ago when I found this.”
I pull a smooth disc out of my pocket. It’s a medal—orangish pink, like it’s trying to be bronze. Third place. On one side is a picture of the same smiling fish holding a fishing rod, and the words “2nd Annual Arne Hopkins Dock Fishing Tournament” are squeezed in around the circle.
The girl leans in, and I realize that her hair isn’t completely purple, just the ends. Most of it’s blond, making her look kind of like a sunset. She grabs the medal from my hand and flips it over. I don’t need to look at it to know that it says Eduardo Aguado León in faded engraved script.
“Who’s Eduardo Aguado León?” she asks, mutilating the pronunciation.
“My dad.”
“Your dad won this contest?” The girl stares at me like I’m giving away the secrets of the universe.
“I suppose.” I don’t feel the need to tell her that I barely remember him, much less know if he really won some fishing tournament.
“You going to enter?” she asks, handing me back the medal.
I snap my fingers shut around the disc. “It says you have to have a team—at least two people.”
“Why don’t you and your dad enter?”
I ignore her question. Instead I say, more to myself than to her, “If Liam were still here, he would’ve been my partner. But he just moved away.”
“I don’t know who Liam is, but you’re in luck,” the girl says. She squints her eyes and places one hand behind her back and the other flat against her stomach. She isn’t smiling, but she winks at me as she bows deeply at the waist. “I guess I moved to Minnesota just in time. I’ll be your partner.” Upright again, she holds out her hand like a grown-up. “Pleased to meet you. I’m Cameron.”
I look at her hand. The nails are bitten down, and her wrist has a stain of green marker, probably from the nametag decorating we had to do this morning. Kamp Kids day camp—also known as summer day care—is just as pointless as I thought it would be. This morning we were forced to play name games in big circles. I wasn’t in Cameron’s group. Then we ate our bag lunches under trees while getting dive-bombed by flies. I’m desperately counting the minutes until my half brother arrives from Colombia and I don’t have to go to camp anymore. Just seven more days.
“Well?” Cameron is looking at me expectantly. “Aren’t you going to tell me your name? That’s what people do, you know.”
“People call me—” I decide I don’t want to tell her what people call me. “Eddie,” I say, because it’s true. Short for Edward Aguado. Like my dad’s name, only different. Our names aren’t the only things that make us different.
She squints at me. “Where are you from, Eddie?”
“Here.”
“No. Where are you—”
“Like I said, here. Minneapolis,” I interrupt. “What grade are you in?”
“Going into sixth. Starting Central Middle School in the fall.”
“Me too,” I say.
She pulls a phone out of her jeans pocket and snaps a picture of the flyer. I wish I had a phone. My mom and her rules.
“I went to Catholic school before,” Cameron says as if I had asked her. “Yep. Moving from California. Switching to public school. Life is really something, isn’t it?”
As a matter of fact, it really is. I pat my pocket where Papa’s medal is safely tucked away. Two weeks ago I’d never heard of the Arne Hopkins Dock Fishing Tournament, and now I’ve seen it twice.
“What do you say?” Cameron puts her phone away. “We should enter. What do we have to lose? Don’t you want to win five thousand dollars?”
Five thousand dollars? Last week the repair shop told Mama that something needed to be replaced in her car. Something expensive. I don’t know what. She asked how long she could wait to fix the Honda. “You got a couple months, sweetheart,” the mechanic said. She rolled her eyes. She hates when people talk to her like that.
“Twenty-five hundred each.” Cameron slaps the flyer.
Two thousand five hundred dollars sure would help. I bet that would be enough for the mechanic to fix Mama’s Honda.
“What do you say, Eddie? Partners?”
My fingers grip the medal in my pocket. I think of Papa. What if I could win a medal just like he did?
“Let’s fish,” I say.
2
THERE’S ONLY one problem: I don’t know how to fish. As we walk back from the lake, I find out that Cameron doesn’t either.
“I’m not saying I’ve never fished,” she says. “Because I have. Once.”
I wonder if I ever went fishing. If I did, I don’t remember.
“Before my parents split up,” she adds, her voice low.
I want to ask what happened after they split, but she changes the subject, saying, “It can’t be that hard.” She hangs her arms down at her sides and starts walking like an orangutan. “I smart. I catch fish. How about you?”
I hang my arms down too. “I catch fish.” We laugh and make monkey sounds and jump around like a couple of goofballs. Then we run to catch up with the other Kamp Kids campers heading back to the Lake Madeline Rec Center.
As we follow them, the straggly line reminds me of Little Tykes Preschool, where all the toddlers used to hold knots in a rope during walking field trips. And that reminds me of the day when Mama’s friend Sarah picked me up while I was playing with the plastic whales at the water table. I remember I didn’t want to leave.
While we wait for our rides home at the end of the day, Cameron clicks to the flyer picture on her phone and we look at the rules again. We have a week to pay the entrance fee and six weeks to get ready to win.
“What about the money for entering the tournament?” she asks. “Do you know where we can get fifty bucks?”
“No.” I practically have to shout because now that the counselors have decided they’re not in charge of us anymore, four of the Kamp Kids boys have started a wrestling match and the second-grade girls run in circles around me and Cameron like we don’t even exist. “That’s a lot of money.”
The horn of a burgundy sedan honks from the street, and Cameron waves. “That’s my dad,” she says. “We’ll think of something.” She holds her hand above her eyebrow in a salute.
“What about fishing pole
s?” I call after her.
“They’re called rods,” she yells as she climbs into the car. Two small heads bob up and down in the backseat. “Fishing rods. We’ll need those, too.”
So, it turns out there are three problems: I don’t know how to fish, I don’t have fifty bucks, and I don’t have a fishing pole—I mean, rod. I toss the three things around in my brain. Which to worry about first?
* * *
That night I ask Mama about the fifty dollars I need to enter the contest to win the money and a medal of my own. “Can I have fifty bucks?”
“Set the table.” She concentrates on the carrots and green onions she’s chopping for our salad.
It was worth a try.
I get two forks out of the drawer. “Do you know how I can get fifty bucks?” I say.
“Most of us earn our money.”
Mama just got her RN license—that stands for “registered nurse”—and a good job at the hospital, so she’s feeling pretty proud right now. Her new salary is the whole reason we could move out of the rotten apartment and into our house. Well, not a house, a duplex. (Someone else lives on the other side of the two one-car garages.) But since I always lived in an apartment before now, the duplex feels like a mansion to me. It has a front and back yard, space for Mama’s art supplies, a garage for her car (and all our stuff), and three bedrooms—one for me, one for her, and one for my half brother, who arrives next week.
“We need knives, too,” she adds.
“Okay. I’ll make a deal with you,” I say as I lay the forks and knives on the folded paper towels we use for napkins. “I’ll do extra chores; you pay me.”
“What does a kid need fifty dollars for?” Mama looks at me and smiles. She runs her fingers through her short blond hair, and a carrot shaving gets stuck in it.
I reach up and brush the shaving out. “Did Papa fish when he was a kid in Colombia?”
The kitchen goes as quiet as the hospital room was the day Papa had his heart attack. Mama slops whole-wheat spaghetti into two bowls and then sets the salad on the table.
I sit down before I say anything else. “Did he?” My voice is as tiny as a pebble.
She sits down. She lifts her fork. Then she puts it down like she can’t decide what to do. “Colombia has amazing fish. Huge ones, little ones, colorful ones. I used to see stingrays and the shadows of jellyfish when the waves landed on the beach.” She closes her eyes and takes a bite of spaghetti smothered in the green sauce she likes so much.
I look at my plate. This is how it always is. Mama talks about Colombia—where Papa was from and where my half brother lives—but she won’t really talk about my dad. Eduardo Aguado León. He had two last names because that’s what people have in Colombia. One is their father’s and one is their mother’s. It makes sense to be named after both parents, if you think about it. After all, I have my dad’s black hair and brown eyes and my mom’s short fingers and small nose. My skin is a mixture of both of them, the color of the coffee ice cream Mama orders at the concessions stand by the lake.
Later that night, while I’m reading about boats in the B volume of my encyclopedia, Mama comes into my room.
“How long have we lived here? Two weeks?” She sits on the edge of the bed. “Now it’s summer and we still haven’t unpacked everything, much less organized.”
I lean against her warm shoulder. We moved the week before school got out. Last year I stayed at Liam’s for most of the summer, but now that he and his sister and mom have moved to New York, it’s Kamp Kids for me, like everyone else whose parents won’t let them stay home alone. But I only have to do it for one more week. Until my brother gets here.
“The garage is a disaster. If you tell me what you need the money for, I’ll let you earn it by organizing in there.”
“The money is just an entrance fee for a contest. For me and… someone I met at camp.” I’m embarrassed to admit it’s a girl.
“What kind of contest?” She sounds suspicious.
I don’t tell her the name of the fishing tournament. She doesn’t know I have Papa’s medal. I found it when we were packing to move, and I’m afraid it’ll make her sad, like when she found her sketchbook. The book was in a long-forgotten storage box at the apartment, and when she saw it, she immediately sat down crisscross-applesauce on the floor of her bedroom and pored through the drawings, as if she weren’t the person who’d sketched them in the first place. There was one she had drawn of me as a toddler sleeping on the ratty floral couch we used to have, and drawings of vases with flowers, swirling seashells, hands and fingers. When she turned to the last page, she gasped. It was an unfinished sketch of Papa lying on the rumpled sheets of the hospital bed. Half of his face was drawn with her neat, even lines and shaded with a charcoal smudge. The other half was just a faint sketch, almost like he was disappearing, even then. Mama cried so hard that day, her tears left blots on the drawing. I hugged her with all my might, but there wasn’t anything I could do to make her stop.
“It’s a fishing contest,” I tell her now.
“A fishing contest? But you hate fishing.”
“I’ve never been fishing,” I say.
“Yes, you have,” Mama says. “Your dad took you when you were little. You and your brother when he visited one summer. You were probably, what, three years old? Or not quite. But you hated it.”
I shake my head. “At the dock? I would remember that,” I say. I want to hold up my hand like people do when they want the other person to stop talking.
“Not the dock. It was at a friend’s cabin. Papa’s friend from graduate school, great guy. Anyway, they took you out on a boat. You cried the whole time, he told me, from the moment the worm went onto the hook.” She knocks her shoulder against mine again. “I can’t imagine you in a fishing contest.” Then she laughs at me.
Moms aren’t supposed to laugh at their kids, but they do sometimes. The way Mama is laughing at me now reminds me of when Liam and I let his little sister, Clara, play video games with us. She could never get the hang of moving her avatar around. She was always stuck staring at the sky or at her own feet. Liam would grab her controller until he got her situated again. And we would laugh at her because she was cute and also clueless. That’s how Mama is laughing at me now.
“If you want to do it, though, I’m happy to help. Papa’s poles are probably in the garage somewhere.”
She gives me a sideways squeeze that reminds me of that day when I was in preschool. When Mama’s friend dropped me off at the hospital, Mama was waiting for me at the entrance. She hugged me as if I were going to float away and it was her last chance to hang on.
“They’re called rods,” I say.
“Okay, rods. Maybe your brother can fish with you when he gets here.” My half brother is going to live with us while he takes classes at the university, a special summer school program for people like him, students from other countries. He’s studying bioengineering just like Papa did.
I think of Papa’s fishing gear somewhere in the garage. I think of my brother. “Do you suppose he knows how to fish?”
“You’ll have to ask him yourself,” she says, standing up.
“And if we win, Mama, we can fix your car.”
“Don’t worry about my car,” she says, even though she knows I will because I worry about a lot of things. I worry about our cat that ran away three years ago. I worry about not having a best friend in middle school since Liam moved away. I worry about whether my brother will want to hang out with me.
The one thing I’m not worried about right now is winning a medal of my own.
3
I DON’T KNOW what kind it will be, but I am going to catch a big fish. The biggest fish. And I’ll win that award. The money. The medal. It’ll be perfect.
I’m telling Cameron this the next day as we walk toward Lake Madeline with the other campers. When we get to the lake, the Kamp Kids counselors hand out cups of lemonade, and a bunch of kids start dumping it on each other. While
the teenagers are busy trying to stop the mayhem, Cameron and I sneak onto the dock again. She slips her nametag inside her T-shirt, and I do the same—being in day camp when you’re eleven is embarrassing enough without the nametags.
“Guess what? My mom is going to pay us to clean the garage,” I tell her. “Earn the money for the tournament fee.”
“Really? Me too? Your mom doesn’t even know me.”
It’s true that Mama doesn’t know Cameron, but then again, I never had many friends other than Liam. Mama has been best friends with Liam’s mom since before me and Liam were born. He and I have known each other forever, but now… now that he moved away, I don’t know if we’re going to always stay best friends.
Right before Liam, Clara, and Sarah packed up their moving truck to leave for New York, he and I were in his room sitting between all the cardboard boxes—his collection of stuffed penguins, his Xbox, even the skateboard that he was so bad at riding, were getting packed. Clara ran in and out of the room, yelling “Boo!” each time. Sometimes she’s the cutest little girl ever, and sometimes she makes me so glad I don’t have a sister.
Liam couldn’t stop talking about New York and the new stepdad and stepbrothers he would have. I couldn’t stop staring at the dust bunnies and a teddy-bear-shaped button caught under a baseboard.
“The older one, Enrique, he’s going into eighth grade, so we’ll be at the same school. And Pedro is seven, almost the same as Clara.”
“Will you ride the bus to school?” I asked Liam, thinking of our hideout in between the dark green seats of the Minneapolis school bus. Ever since kindergarten we’d been riding the same bus to and from school.
“No, man. We walk,” he said with a different rhythm to his words. He never used to say “man” like that. “Isn’t that cool?”
He shimmied under the bed and dug around like he was a paleontologist. Then he popped back out, his shirt coated in dust.
“Got it!” he announced, holding up a plastic brontosaurus.
What If a Fish Page 1