Grizzly Peak

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by Jonathan London




  GRIZZLY PEAK

  Jonathan London

  Illustrated by

  Sean London

  Text © 2017 by Jonathan London

  Illustrations © 2017 by Sean London

  All rights reserved. No part of this book 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, without written permission of the publisher.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: London, Jonathan, 1947- author. | London, Sean, illustrator.

  Title: Grizzly Peak / Jonathan London ; illustrated by Sean London.

  Description: Portland, Oregon : WestWinds Press, 2017. | Series: Aaron’s Wilderness | Summary: “Aaron’s latest adventure takes him river kayaking with his dad and tests his perseverance, patience and survival skills in encounters with bears, moose, and life-threatening accidents.”— Provided by publisher. | Sequel to: Bella Bella.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2016032969 (print) | LCCN 2016046781 (ebook) | ISBN 9781943328772 (pbk.) | ISBN 9781943328840 (e-book) | ISBN 9781943328857 (hardbound)

  Subjects: | CYAC: Adventure and adventurers—Fiction. | Outdoor life—Fiction. | Fathers and sons—Fiction. | Nature—Fiction.

  Classification: LCC PZ7.L8432 Gri 2017 (print) | LCC PZ7.L8432 (ebook) |

  DDC

  [Fic]—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016032969

  Editor: Michelle McCann

  Designer: Vicki Knapton

  Published by WestWinds Press®

  An imprint of

  P.O. Box 56118

  Portland, Oregon 97238-6118

  www.graphicartsbooks.com

  For Aaron and Sean and Steph, Roger and Lisa,

  and sweet Maureen. With thanks to my editor Michelle

  McCann, my publisher Doug Pfeiffer, and to the tireless

  staff at Graphic Arts: Kathy, Vicki, and Angela.

  —Jonathan London

  For Jonathan, Maureen, Aaron, and sweet Stephanie.

  Special thanks to Michelle McCann, Douglas Pfeiffer, and the

  whole team at Graphic Arts. You have all helped me grow!

  —Sean London

  CONTENTS

  PROLOGUE

  Day One: ALL THE WAYS TO DIE

  Day One: THE DAY A GRIZZLY ATE MY DAD

  Day One: FOOD FOR THE BEARS

  Day Two: THE VISITOR AND THE LUNATIC MOOSE

  Day Two: OKAY, TARZAN

  Day Two: WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE

  Day Three: THE FREEDOM TO DIE

  Day Three: THE BEAST FOR REAL

  Day Four: A GRAVEYARD OF BOATS

  Day Four: ROLLER COASTER

  Day Four: DANGER!

  Day Five: RACING BACKWARDS

  Day Five: THE END OF OUR TRIP AS WE KNOW IT

  Day Five: MOON BEAR

  Day Six: FISH BUT NO FIRE

  Day Six: THE MONSTER’S COILS

  Day Six: NOW WHAT? AND OTHER LIFE-OR-DEATH QUESTIONS

  Day Six: THE LAST MATCH

  Day Six: SAVING DAD

  Day Seven: HANG ON!

  Day Seven: A SIGNAL FROM THE WILD

  EPILOGUE

  Discussion Questions

  PROLOGUE

  Three weeks before I was to graduate from eighth grade, I got kicked out of school.

  Expelled.

  Long story short, when the principal, Mr. Hyde, rifled through my daypack and found a Swiss Army knife, he didn’t want to hear any explanations.

  Zero tolerance.

  Dad had given me the knife for my birthday. We had gone on two wilderness trips with friends in the last two years—to Desolation Canyon in the Rockies and Bella Bella off the Northwest Coast—and he thought it was time I had a knife, with a can opener, a bottle opener, scissors, tweezers, a tiny saw blade—everything but the kitchen sink.

  He had given me the Swiss Army knife when he was proud of me. But that pride had eroded over the past few months. I think it boiled down to change.

  I was changing and he was not.

  For one thing, I was getting into hip-hop, and trying my hand at writing rap songs, and one of my heroes of the moment was Macklemore. Dad liked my writing—I’d gotten good grades in school for some poems and papers I’d written.

  But rap? No way! “Too many swearwords,” he’d say. It all sounded the same to him. This made me angry. He always wanted me to listen to his music, but he never wanted to listen to mine.

  And now my grades were going down. The teachers droned on and on, and I got bored. Dad said: “No TV until you start bringing your grades back up.” Thanks, Dad.

  And I was staying out too late. Hanging with my friends at their houses—where their parents were chill. Listening to hip-hop. Even laying down some beats. Or skating on our boards ’til way past dark. Dad said: “You should be doing your homework, Aaron. Not wasting your life!”

  What makes him King? King of what’s good and what’s right?

  When I quit the flag football team and soccer, that made Dad angry, which made me angry. I liked sports, and wasn’t bad at them. But I’d moved on. Those things just didn’t interest me anymore. My little brother, Sean, was great at sports. And good at school.

  Good for him.

  But I was gravitating toward new things, new friends. I think maybe I was kind of rebelling. When my dad was my age, he was a hippy. I guess that was his way of rebelling, way back then. But now he’s like most dads. He wants his kids to excel—NOT rebel.

  He didn’t like the kids I was hanging with. They didn’t do sports. They wanted to make music. I couldn’t do anything right. Dad’s like, “How’s school, Aaron?” and I’d just mumble something and shrug. Or he’d ask why I don’t like sports anymore, and I’d shrug. It was too hard to explain. He just didn’t get it.

  So when I got kicked out of school it was the last straw.

  Oh, he knew that I wasn’t going to do anything with my knife, and that I’d just forgotten about it still being in my daypack since our fishing trip over spring break. What he couldn’t understand was: how could I forget?

  Like I said, it was the last straw.

  Okay, maybe it was the last straw for the principal, too. I kept getting sent to the office for little things.

  Wearing my baseball hat in class.

  Eating snacks in the library.

  Putting my feet up on the desk.

  Arriving late.

  Not paying attention.

  Not doing homework.

  I wasn’t hurting anybody. I didn’t understand what the big deal was.

  But Dad—he said it was an attitude problem. “Right,” I said. “Your attitude, dude!” He didn’t like me calling him “dude.” I’d started to call him that after hanging out with my friend Cassidy on those wild trips we’d taken. Cassidy said “dude” just about every other word. It drove Dad nuts.

  He said: “You’re acting like a teenager!”

  I said: “Dude, I am a teenager!”

  I think what was really ticking me off the most was that now Dad was always around. Here. The house. The textbook company he worked for started letting him work from home.

  Suddenly he was always here when I got home from school. But either Dad was too busy to even notice me, or—worse—he was in my face.

  Turn down that awful thumping sound!

  Clean up your room.

  Clean up your act!

  Maybe you should join the chess club.

  You get the picture.

  The day after I got expelled, Mom got me a counselor. Sam Somebody. Ponytail and goatee. Old hippy, like Dad. Nice guy. But after I ignored him for a while, he got this crazy idea that he thought would be “go
od for me.”

  He told Mom about a camp out in Montana—Camp Wonderland—where they teach “non-recalcitrant (look it up!) juveniles” wilderness survival skills. “Turns them around,” the counselor says. “Builds their self-confidence.”

  Mom didn’t know, but I’d heard about camps like these from Cassidy. He said they are guarded and fenced in with barbed wire, and are out in the middle of nowhere.

  I freaked out when Mom told me about it. “I think it might be for the best, sweetie.” I knew she loved me but this was really, truly, twisted!

  “I’m not going! You can’t make me go!”

  That’s when Dad stepped in. “Here’s the deal, Aaron. You don’t want to go to this camp? Then we’re going to our own wilderness survival camp. Just you and me.”

  “Dad! I wouldn’t go with you to Disney World! You can’t control me! You two are always trying to control me!”

  “Stop it! Both of you!” Mom jumped up from the kitchen table.

  “Unless you two can work something out, and real soon, you, sweetheart, are going to Montana. I’m sorry. You know I love you. We love you, but. . . .” She started to cry. Dad hugged her. I felt bad for Mom, but there was no way I was going off to some camp with guards and barbed wire.

  Then Dad e-mailed this place he’d heard about from our friends Roger and his daughter, Lisa. Bowron Lakes Provincial Park. Way up in British Columbia, not too far from where we’d gone island-hopping in sea kayaks last year, starting in Bella Bella. Bowron Lakes is a seventy-two-mile round-trip chain of lakes in the Cariboo Mountains, which parallel the Canadian Rockies to the east. Dad made reservations to put in a kayak on May 15. First day of the season.

  Then this amazing thing happened. Dad met with Mr. Hyde, the principal, and Ms. Dunn, my English teacher, and worked out a deal. Instead of getting expelled, I got suspended for two weeks. And here’s where my English teacher comes in: for missing two weeks of school, I agreed to keep a journal, then shape it into a story. With characters, problems, a climax, and some kind of resolution.

  Or fail to graduate from middle school.

  I complained to Ms. Dunn, “But I don’t know how to write a story!”

  She nodded, “When you’re about to begin a story and you’re staring at that blank page and then you start writing, it can feel like leaping off a mountain . . . or plunging down a waterfall in a tiny kayak.” This image made her smile.

  I don’t know why, but when she said “leaping off a mountain,” GRIZZLY PEAK popped into my mind. Maybe a title for my story?

  But I didn’t have a story.

  “You might not know where you’re going,” she continued, “but you keep going until you come to the end. Stories have a beginning, a middle, and an end.”

  Through this big writing lecture I’m thinking one thing: Sweet! No school for two weeks! Kayaking and camping out in a mountain wilderness. Roasting marshmallows over an open fire. And fresh-caught fish!

  Then I think: Wait! Two weeks with Dad! Just the two of us. Three days in the car—each way!—with him listening to old-time jazz or classical music. And he’d already warned me: “No electronics, Aaron. No cell phone, no texting, no Facebook or Twitter or Instagram. No iPod.”

  We fought back and forth.

  Finally, I said, “Okay! I’ll go. But only if I can listen to my iPod in the car. I won’t take it kayaking. Just in the car.”

  He had to think about that for a while.

  Finally he agreed. “Deal. Now are we good to go?” He wanted to bump my fist, all buddy-buddy, but I turned away.

  But the trip was a go! Somehow I’d have to survive two weeks alone with my dad, and become a writer!

  DAY ONE

  ALL THE WAYS TO DIE

  Okay, let’s zoom ahead. The next three days we drove—from our house near the coast in Northern California, clear up through the Northwest, across the border, and into western Canada. I didn’t talk to my dad and he didn’t talk to me. I listened to Macklemore and Jay Z and Eminem on my iPod and he listened to Frank Sinatra and Tony Bennett and Miles Davis.

  He’d go to bed early and I spent the late hours catching up on my journal. I was actually starting to enjoy it. The writing I mean. And I have to admit I was beginning to get psyched about our kayak trip. Another adventure! A scarier adventure though, because it would be my first time ever river kayaking.

  Only I wished I were going with my buddies Roger and Lisa and Cassidy instead of my dad. We drove within sixty miles of Roger and Lisa’s house in Oregon, but he wouldn’t stop and visit. No matter how much I begged him. Lisa and I follow each other on Twitter and Instagram, but I couldn’t wait to see her again. In the flesh.

  Now it’s late in the morning of May 15. We’ve been on the road two and a half days—ten or eleven hours each of the first two days, and we got up just after dawn this morning to get here before noon.

  Finally, we rattle down the clattering gravel road to this remote outpost of civilization. Bowron Lakes Provincial Park. Four hundred and fifty miles north of the US border. Eleven lakes—linked in places by rivers and streams—carving a rectangular circuit through the glacial Cariboo Mountains of central British Columbia.

  You can Google it. But you can’t know how it feels to be here.

  It’s complicated. I’ll try to explain it.

  I’m impatient to get going, and yet I’ve never done any river kayaking before. I was great at sea kayaking by the end of our Bella Bella trip last summer. And pretty good going down the Green River through Desolation Canyon, but that was in a rubber raft.

  Now we’re heading off on a seventy-two-mile river kayak trip through the Canadian wilderness. As I learned rafting the Green River, rivers can have rapids and tight curves and waterfalls. It’s a totally different thing from sea kayaking. Trust me.

  While Dad’s signing in and getting permits and maps at the visitor’s center, he’s left me to haul the kayak off the roof by myself. And to get all our gear together. Already he’s giving me all the work.

  And the kayak is a monster. Seventeen feet long! It’s really a “tracking” or lake kayak, with a rudder that you can drop in—to help you going straight ahead—or pull out when you don’t need it. It’s not near as sleek and light as a real river kayak. And it doesn’t have a pedal-and-cable operated rudder that swivels, like the sea kayaks we used, island-hopping off Bella Bella last summer.

  But I look around and I’ve got to admit: it’s beautiful here. Totally. Snowcapped peaks everywhere. You can inhale the scent of pine trees and feel the hugeness of the wilderness here. Last night we saw three wolves leaping across the road in front of our car. That image will burn in my memory forever.

  And now I hear what sounds a little like a wolf. But I know from our Bella Bella trip, it’s the crazy yodeling call of a loon.

  I look up. The sun is playing peekaboo with the clouds. There’s no way to know which way this day will go. We’re in the mountains. The weather could flip like a coin. It could be smooth sailing under the sun. Or misery under a cold, crashing rain.

  That’s how it feels. It feels like the unknown. And I love it and fear it at the same time.

  But I’m not going to show it. To show it is to open myself up to my dad. And that can be dangerous. For both of us.

  So when Dad comes walking toward me with a big smile on his face, I don’t smile back. I wipe the cold sweat from my face to let him know how hard I’ve been working.

  “Good news!” he says. “The season has just opened and so far we’re the only ones who’ve signed in. The first ones, Aaron! How cool is that? The ranger said the snows here were pretty heavy this winter, so the rivers are up and moving fast. That’s good, but could be scary too. It’s gonna be a real challenge, Aaron, but that’s why we’re here.”

  You’re the challenge, I want to say. And I’m here because I got kicked out of school for no real reason, and you made me come. But it beats going to a locked down camp in Montana.

  But whatever.

/>   I start pulling more stuff out of our car when a ranger comes out of the station toward me. She’s tall and totally gorgeous and when she smiles my insides soften. She looks around eighteen but is probably a lot older, and has freckles and long red hair and when the wind blows her hair across her eyes she reminds me, just a little—just for a moment—of Lisa.

  “Welcome to Bowron Lakes!” she says. “You’ll be the first ones in this season. You’ll have the whole wonderful wilderness to yourselves. But I hope you’ve had some experience. The snow in the mountains is melting and the rivers are high. The forecast shows high winds and thunderstorms, which can turn to snow flurries this time of year. Wind can cause standing waves on these lakes. That can be a real hazard, as I guess you know. Best to get going while the going’s good!”

  “Um, thanks.” I want to say something clever but I can’t think of a single clever thing to say. Why am I suddenly so tongue-tied and shy?

  “Aaron!” Dad calls from the far side of the car. “Let’s boogie!”

  Geez, Dad! I’m thinking. Do you have to say boogie?

  “Have an awesome trip!” the ranger says.

  I’m already turning away and I give her the thumbs up without turning around.

  Dad’s stuffing wet bags into the fore (or forward) cargo hold of our kayak. I start stuffing gear into the aft (or stern or rear) cargo hold.

  We loaded up with food for a little over a week at a supermarket back in Seattle. Lots of canned goods and freeze-dried and pepperoni sticks and gorp. Everything goes into these rubber “wet bags” that you roll up at the top and snap shut to keep watertight. So why aren’t they called “dry bags?” Random!

  “You better stuff your sleeping bag at the bottom of the wet bag, Aaron, not the top,” my father says. “In case water leaks in.” (Yeah, like it did when I capsized on our Bella Bella trip.)

  “I’m not about to repack the whole bag, Dad.”

  “Okay,” he says. “It’s your sleeping bag.” Scowl scowl.

  “Dude! Why are you always all up in my face?” I click the bag shut and cram it into the hold.

 

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