Blown Away!
Page 1
BLOWN AWAY!
Also by Joan Hiatt Harlow
Midnight Rider
Thunder from the Sea
Shadows on the Sea
Joshua’s Song
Star in the Storm
Margaret K. McElderry Books
Margaret K. McElderry Books
An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com
This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2007 by Joan Hiatt Harlow
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
Book design by Sammy Yuen Jr.
Map by Niki Marion
The text for this book is set in Lomba Book.
Manufactured in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Harlow, Joan Hiatt.
Blown away! / Joan Hiatt Harlow.—1st ed.
p. cm.
Summary: In 1935 on the Florida Key of Matacumbe, thirteen-year-old Jake makes new friends during an idyllic summer, only to have everything change when a hurricane threatens their island.
ISBN-13: 978-1-4169-0781-7 (hardcover)
ISBN-10: 1-4169-0781-5 (hardcover)
eISBN 13: 978-1-439-13189-3
[1. Family life—Florida—Fiction. 2. Hurricanes—Florida—Florida Keys—Fiction. 3. Florida Keys (Fla.)—History—20th century—Fiction. 4. Friendship—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.H22666B1 2007
[Fic]—dc22
2006018130
Dedicated with love from Noanie to: Anthony Edward Bilodeau, age three, and Richard Lee Clayter, age two
“Sweet little sleepyheads, close your eyes
To dream of a bright tomorrow,
With blue balloons and merry tunes
And never a tear or sorrow.”
CONTENTS
MAP
1 SHARKEY
2 A CHALLENGE
3 KEY WEST
4 GOOD THINGS COME IN PAIRS
5 MARA
6 RUINED PLANS
7 MARA’S SOLUTION
8 THE BONEFISH
9 TROUBLE FOR RUDY AND JEWEL?
10 PANTHER TALES
11 MARA’S SNOW
12 JEWEL’S CORRAL
13 DANGER IN THE TREETOPS
14 MARA’S FISHING LESSON
15 HARSH WORDS
16 MOM’S GENUINE AMERICAN ORIENTAL RUG
17 A BAD FEELING
18 TRAPPED!
19 “STAY SAFE”
20 THE KILLING MONSTER
21 THE RESCUE TRAIN
22 MONSTER FROM THE SEA
23 THE PROCESSION
24 “MORE THAN THE WORLD”
25 GOOD-BYE, GOOD DOG
26 CHANGES
27 UNFINISHED
28 THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WORD
EPILOGUE
AFTERWORD
1
SHARKEY
As I wandered along the shore of Islamorada that July morning in 1935, I didn’t notice that I had reached the mangroves and sheltering seagrape trees of the cove where old Sharkey lived. I was so intent on watching a manatee glide through the calm water that before I realized it, I was on the stretch of beach near Sharkey’s place.
I was about to make a hasty exit when I saw a clearly defined row of turtle tracks in the sand and heard a familiar scratching noise. My gaze followed the tracks to the place where the sandy beach abutted the jungle-like foliage, and there I saw a huge raccoon eagerly digging, tossing the sand aside with his claws. He was after the turtle eggs.
“Scram! Get away from there!” I yelled, waving my arms and racing toward the raccoon. The animal hesitated, then turned and lumbered off into the brush. I bent down and smoothed the sand over the nest.
“Hey you, Jake Pitney! Leave that nest alone!” I looked up and there was Sharkey hobbling toward me and gesturing with his cane, a knotted stick of mahogany. His face was as red as a boiled crayfish.
Instinctively I put my arms up in front of me. “I wouldn’t hurt the nest. I was just chasing a raccoon away from the eggs.”
Sharkey glanced toward the nearby mangroves. “He’ll be back. I’ve been trying to get rid of that robber for a long time. I tell you, between the coons and the cannery, there won’t be a sea turtle left in a few years,” he complained.
I stood there feeling guilty and not knowing what to say. At the lunch counter in our family’s general store we served turtle soup from the cannery.
“I’ve got a panther prowling around here too. See those tracks?” He pointed to another set of prints in the damp earth beneath the trees.
I had to look closely to make them out in the mud. “Could those be a dog’s?” I asked.
“There’s no dog around here that size,” Sharkey snorted. “Besides, if they were dog tracks, there’d be claws showing in the tracks. Cats have retractable claws. I’ve heard the panther caterwauling at night. He’ll probably go after the eggs too. This is the second nest that turtle’s laid since the coon ransacked the last one.”
Sharkey looked around and pointed with his cane at a broken-down rowboat. “Give me a hand with that old tub. I sure can’t stand around here day and night guarding that nest.”
I wanted to get out of there, so I quickly grabbed the bow end while he took the stern and we turned the boat upside down over the turtle nest. “That should protect it for now. But when the hatchlings head for the water, the gulls will probably swoop down and grab ’em anyway. It’s a losing battle.” He sat on the boat and glowered at me from under his bushy eyebrows.
That was my signal to leave. I knew firsthand how Sharkey yelled and chased kids off his property with his cane, and I wasn’t going to stick around to see it again. I began to back away toward the path to town.
“Hey, wait just one darn minute!” Sharkey ordered. I stopped dead still as he opened up a pocketknife. “What do you do in your spare time?”
“I—I fish a lot,” I stammered.
Sharkey reached into his shirt pocket, pulled out a small piece of wood, and began whittling. “I need someone to help me out with work,” he went on, “like caulking my boats and throwing some paint on my house.” He gestured behind us with his thumb.
I glanced back and could see the roof of his place through the brush. Sharkey’s home was an old boxcar that had been abandoned years ago, while Sharkey was working on the overseas railroad from Miami to Key West. The story goes that when the railroad was finished, the boxcar was forgotten, tucked away in the brush. So Sharkey just helped himself to it and moved on in. Folks said Sharkey had some money from his veteran’s pension and could probably afford a bungalow somewhere, but he seemed content in his freight car.
The boxcar wasn’t much to look at, but it sheltered Sharkey from the crosswinds that blew from the Atlantic on one side and Florida Bay on the other. Where it was rusted, Sharkey had slapped on a few coats of leftover paint he got from our general store. It was smeared with bright yellow and red and a few streaks of blue here and there. We must have had a sale on one color, because most of the car was now a sickening pickle green. One good thing about that shade was that it blended in under the big round leaves of the seagrape trees.
It was strange. Although we kids were scared of Sharkey, the grown-ups around town all liked and respected him. Even my dad. I remember how he stood up
for Sharkey when our neighbor, Mr. Ashburn, complained about his ugly old freight car. Dad had reasoned, “Hey, Sharkey worked hard for years putting that railroad through. If it weren’t for guys like him, that overseas railway from Miami to Key West would have never been built. Since no one from the railroad ever claimed that boxcar, why shouldn’t Sharkey put it to some use?”
Sharkey blew the dust from the piece of wood he was whittling. “I was hunting gators in the glades last week, but I came back early to nurse my leg along.”
I’d always wondered what was wrong with Sharkey’s leg. He had been a wrecker, so I thought he might have been hurt diving down into sunken ships to retrieve merchandise. Dad said he was wounded in the Great War, while some of the other kids said Sharkey had been a pirate and was injured in a fight. We pictured him in his earlier days with a patch over one eye, brandishing a sword. More reason to believe he was a pirate was that gold-coin necklace he always wore. Tough guys like Sharkey didn’t wear necklaces, so we were pretty sure it was part of his pirate stash. When I mentioned it to Mom, she said it was probably a religious medal, but Sharkey didn’t seem like the religious type. We couldn’t get a good look at it, but we’d seen it glitter on his hairy chest, and it looked like real gold.
Sharkey shifted his leg, and I could see he was in pain. “Dang leg! I need to be able to fish by fall when the rich guys come back,” he said. “Those millionaires tip well when they have a good fishing catch.”
Sharkey worked as a guide for the Millionaires Club, a resort on the ocean side of our town, Islamorada. He was a popular guide because he knew where the bonefish or tarpon would be running.
I was still wondering if Sharkey wanted me to work for him, when he finally came right out and said, “Anyway, I could use a hand with my gator hides.” He wiped the small sculpture in his hand with a handkerchief, and I could now see that it was a first-rate likeness of an alligator. “I need someone to go to Key West on the train with me tomorrow.”
“Are you offering me a job?”
“Of course I am. What do you think I’m talking about here?”
“You said you needed someone. You didn’t say who,” I retorted.
Sharkey shook his head. “Well, I meant you.”
I wondered if he would pay me. Then, as if reading my mind, Sharkey said, “I’ll pay you as soon as I sell the hides. It won’t be a lot, but I would think a kid like you could use some spare change. So, what’s your answer?” he demanded. “Are you taking the job or not?”
Did I really want to go to Key West with someone as cantankerous as Sharkey? “I need to ask my folks.”
“I’ll go over to the store later today and talk to your dad.”
“Okay,” I said, still in shock. A trip to Key West with Sharkey might be a real adventure. Why not?
I raced back along the overgrown path and onto the dirt road, leaving Sharkey standing by the beach watching me.
Wait until the other Islamorada kids hear this, I thought as I made a beeline toward town. They’ll never believe that I’m going to Key West with old Sharkey himself!
2
A CHALLENGE
I raced onto the porch steps of our store and burst through the screen door, letting it slam behind me. We had a lunch counter and a few tables in our general store, and Mom was serving coffee and sandwiches to a couple of the veterans who’d come to work on the new highway from Miami to Key West.
“Jake! Where have you been?” she called out to me. “I’m real busy, and I need you to watch Star.” She nodded toward a table where my three-year-old sister was finishing up her lunch. “She’s been fussy this morning and needs to take a nap. Take her upstairs.” Mom handed me a bologna sandwich and a glass of milk. “Here’s your lunch. Eat it up in the kitchen. And don’t spill anything on—”
“On the rug. I know, I know.” Mom’s most valued possession was the “genuine American Oriental rug” that covered our living room floor. She’d had it shipped here all the way from her home back in Georgia when she moved to the Keys. “Mom, can I go to Key West tomorrow with Sharkey?”
Mom looked at me in surprise. “With Sharkey? Did he ask you?”
“Yes. He needs me to help him carry his gator hides.”
“No. I need you here.”
“Please, Mom. He’s going to pay me, and I can use the money.”
Mom shook her head. “Not tomorrow.” She wiped Star’s face with a cloth and pointed her toward the stairway.
“Come on, Mom,” I begged.
“Aw, let him go, Louella,” said Milt Barclay, one of the Bonus Marchers, as the veterans working on the highway were known.
“Yeah, a kid his age needs to get around more,” his buddy, Harry Webber, agreed. He turned to me. “How old are you. Fifteen or so?”
“I’ll be fourteen in December,” I told him.
“If you don’t let a boy loose once in a while, he’ll break free on his own one of these days,” Milt said.
“And then you’ll have a real problem on your hands, Louella,” Harry added.
Mom’s mouth tightened. If looks could kill, both those men would have fallen over dead right there and then. Scowling, she wiped off the counter with a vengeance. Then she sighed. “I guess it’s okay with me. But you’ll need to ask your father.”
I gave the two men a grateful smile as I headed toward the stairs with Star. Now I only had Dad to deal with.
Once upstairs I took off my shoes so I wouldn’t track dirt onto Mom’s precious rug. While I ate my sandwich in the kitchen, Star brought her book, Wind and Stars and Bright Blue Skies, for me to read to her. She climbed into my lap and opened the book.
“I’m only reading one poem,” I told her. I flipped the pages looking for the shortest one. “This is nice.” I pointed to the illustration of a child in bed with fairies dancing around. I hoped Star would get the point and go to sleep. “The soft breeze through the window makes the gauzy curtains dance,’” I read quickly, “’while all across the ceiling the nighttime fairies prance.’”
“That’s a nighttime poem,” Star whined. “Its not nighttime!”
“Okay, okay,” I said, reading the verse again rapidly. “The soft breeze through the window makes the gauzy curtains dance, while all across the ceiling the naptime fairies prance.’” I slammed the book shut. “Now go to bed.”
“You didn’t read it right, and you only read one verse.” Star began to cry loudly.
“Jake!” Mom yelled from downstairs. “Be good to her!”
“Go to your bedroom, Star,” I said. “I’ll read you another poem in there.”
She slipped off my lap and toddled into her bedroom. I followed her, and she climbed into the bed. Then I opened the windows and closed the blinds. The soft, salty breeze swept in from the ocean and puffed her white curtains like a cloud.
“See?” Star whispered with a yawn. “The wind is making my curtains dance too.”
“Pick out another poem,” I said, passing her the book.
“This one,” she said. “I love this one.” She pointed to the picture of a boy sending a toy boat off onto the water, then handed the book back to me. “Don’t read fast.”
I sent my boat upon the waves;
The breeze filled up her sail.
Then far away it took my ship
Into the wildest gale.
My little craft moved bravely out
Over the stormy sea.
I wonder if my ship will find
Its way back home to me.
Star’s eyes began to close. Her hair was damp with sweat and stuck in little curls around her face. She burrowed into her pillow and closed her eyes.
I tiptoed quietly out of her room, grabbed my shoes, then flew downstairs two steps at a time. “Star’s asleep,” I told Mom, who was clearing the table where the veterans had eaten their lunch. They were gone now, and the store was empty. “Where’s Dad?” I asked, putting on my shoes.
“He’s meeting the one o’clock train. We’re
expecting a shipment of supplies from Homestead.”
A small white building up the road had served as the Islamorada post office until the overseas railroad from Miami to Key West began chugging through back in 1912. Since then, it had served as both the post office and the train station. Now folks could send and trade supplies back and forth from Islamorada down to Key West or up to Miami by boxcar instead of by boat. Soon the vets would have our new highway built too, and we’d be able to go up and down the string of islands by car.
Dad was standing by the tracks, his hands on his hips, as the train pulled into the station. I ran to join him just as a railroad man began piling boxes by the side of the tracks. Dad and I stacked them in the back of the truck. “Good,” Dad commented as he checked the stenciled information on the cartons. “We needed this merchandise. And the Ashburns have been waiting for their new fishing gear.”
“Dad … ,” I said breathlessly. “Can I go to Key West with Sharkey tomorrow? Mom said to ask you.”
“I just bumped into Sharkey on my way here, so I’ve already talked with him. I said it would be all right if your mom gave permission.”
“I can go, then!”
“You’re going to help Sharkey, so don’t get the idea it’s a joyride.”
“I won’t. I’ll help Sharkey cart the gator hides and do whatever else he needs.”
“I’ll tell Sharkey you can go,” Dad said. He got into the cab, started the engine. “Want a ride back?”
“No, I’m going to see Roy and Billy.” I headed down to the ocean side, where the Ashburn family lived. Their house was on the south side of the famous Millionaires Club, which was maintained by Leon Ashburn, Billy and Roy’s father. As caretaker, Mr. Ashburn was able to hitch up to the club’s electricity, and this gave them refrigeration, electric fans, and other luxuries year-round. They even had real toilets inside the house, not out-houses like most of the bungalows on the island. The Ashburns also had a nice tomato crop, a grove of lime trees, and a tract of pineapples. They packaged the fruits and sent them by train to the farmers’ market up in Homestead, fifty miles or so north of us.