Girl Across the Water

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Girl Across the Water Page 9

by Jody Kihara


  cot, a night table, and an old wardrobe. I crossed the room

  to open the wardrobe. There was nothing hanging from the

  rail, but on the top shelf was a rolled-up piece of paper. I

  grabbed it excitedly.

  “Hey, look,” I said to Dad, unrolling it. It was a map!

  Dad helped me hold it open. “Neat. It’s the lake and

  surrounding area.”

  I felt like I was ten years old again, playing Spies or

  Smugglers. I eagerly scanned the map, looking for clues. It

  was drawn with those wavy lines that show height, and

  they made the area look confusing.

  “Ordinance map,” Dad said. “But no trails or cabins

  on it.”

  It did show all the islands on the lake, though, which

  our realtor’s map didn’t. Even though the map didn’t help

  my purposes, I was still excited to find it. We walked over

  to the window to look out, holding the map up at the same

  time and comparing.

  “It’s a good find,” he said. “Too bad there aren’t

  hiking trails marked on it. But we can take it with us on our

  next hike, and draw them on.”

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  We left the bedroom and headed for the other room.

  The closed door made me think again of the ghost stories,

  of the lady hiding in her bed when she heard voices from

  on the landing. We’re at the door, we’re at the door…

  My heart gave a tremble of anticipation as I pictured

  pushing open the door to reveal a skeleton in the bed. I

  opened it slowly — there was a bed, but no skeleton. But

  then as I walked into the room, something black swooped

  at me.

  I gave a yell and dropped the map as the black thing

  passed over my head. It moved in a strange, zigzag

  motion, and I ran over to the window to get away from it.

  “What is it?” I shouted. It was the size of a bird, but

  moving so weirdly that all I could see was a strange blur.

  “Dad!”

  He started laughing. “Paul, it’s just a bat.”

  I stopped. “Really?” I’d never seen a real, live bat.

  It was going crazy now, swooping around the room,

  and I ducked several times, flailing away from it as it tried

  to dive-bomb me. Dad couldn’t stop laughing ― I guess I

  was behaving like a little kid.

  “It must have got trapped in here. It probably just

  wants out. Paul, open the window.”

  The bat had already flown out the door, however,

  and was now swooping crazily around the landing. Finally,

  it fluttered down the stairs, and Dad and I ran after it. “Try

  to direct it to the back door!” he said. I did, waving the

  rolled-up map, but this seemed to make it go even crazier.

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  Dad tried to open the living room window, but to no effect.

  Finally, the bat made its way into the kitchen, and must

  have smelled the outdoors, because it zipped straight out

  the door.

  “Whew!” Dad said. “Okay, we’d better shut that

  upstairs window before we go.”

  I ran up the stairs, shivering slightly as I returned

  the bedroom. I’d had enough of this cabin, even though

  there were only mice and bats inhabiting it.

  What about the banging door? I wondered again.

  When I came back down the stairs, I looked for paw prints

  on the kitchen floor, but could see none.

  Dad was no longer there; I guessed he’d already

  gone outside. I followed him out, and couldn’t help noticing

  that the back door didn’t swing shut by itself. I closed it

  and looked around. Dad hadn’t waited for me, so I pushed

  my way through the scratchy bushes to emerge at the front

  of the cabin. Still no Dad. Where had he gone?

  I stood by the canoe waiting for him. Maybe he was

  just taking a leak or something. But when he didn’t appear

  after a few minutes, I called out, “Dad?”

  No answer. I headed to the cabin again. “Dad!” Still

  no answer. I didn’t know which direction to even look in,

  which made me begin to feel panicky. Where could he have

  disappeared to?

  “Dad!” I yelled. “Where are you?”

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  Genuine fear gripped me. We hadn’t found a single

  trace of anyone living in the cabin, but what if someone

  was living in the woods, and had just grabbed my Dad? I

  pictured a large, gloved hand going over Dad’s mouth as he

  was pulled back into the woods…

  “Dad!” I shouted, running for the back of the cabin,

  squeezing through the bushes, getting scratched all over as

  I pressed my way to the back. I stood looking around for a

  second, wondering which way to go.

  From the trees to my side, a body bolted out, rugby-

  tackling me to the ground before I could see what my

  attacker looked like. I screamed and flailed around, trying

  to loosen the arms and pry them off me. “Get away!” I

  yelled. “Dad, help, Dad!”

  The body loosened away from me and sat back,

  laughing.

  “Dad!” I bellowed in a combination of panic, relief,

  and indignation. “Don’t scare me like that! What do you

  think you were doing? I was worried about you!”

  My voice had risen considerably, and Dad stopped

  laughing. “I’m sorry Paul, I thought it would be funny. We

  used to do that all the time when you were a kid.”

  “Well it isn’t funny any more!” I yelled, a build-up of

  pressure behind my eyes as if I might burst into tears.

  “Hey, I’m sorry. Really.”

  I sat there gasping, trying to act normal. For a

  second, I was tempted to tell him all about The Girl. That

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  I’d seen her, that she was coming and going, that she’d

  been on the island at night…

  “Paul, is everything okay?” he asked as I sat there

  panting.

  “Uh,” I said, still trying to decide. “It’s this… girl. I’m

  kinda… jumpy…. ‘cause…”

  “A girl?” he asked. “Oh, Mandy, right?” He grinned.

  “The girl in the grocery store. She’s got you all het up?

  Gee, Paul, I didn’t think girls made you so nervous.” He

  grinned and reached out to ruffle my hair.

  “No… no, I mean… I saw this girl.”

  “You saw her again?” He raised his eyebrows. “What,

  is that why you’ve been sneaking off on canoe trips? You

  had a date?” Dad grinned again. “A tryst in the woods?”

  “No,” I said, shaking my head. “I mean…” I was

  about to say, ‘ I saw this girl on the island,’ but suddenly it

  sounded stupid. Dad was still grinning and ready to make

  jokes, so I got the feeling he wouldn’t take me seriously.

  “It’s nothing,” I told him.

  But I’d set him off on a theme, because as we

  canoed back down the lake, I had to listen to endless

  joshing about me, girls, Mandy, dating…

  “Dad, enough, okay?” I snapped at one point.

  “Okay!�
�� he answered in bemusement.

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  “Let’s go over to the left more,” I said, “I want to get

  a better look at the shore.”

  “Port, not left,” he corrected. “What are you looking

  for, more girls?”

  “Dad!” I snapped.

  “Okay, okay.”

  Without looking back, I could tell he was grinning.

  Dad was always good for a laugh but I’d forgotten how

  irritating it could get when he kept doing it even when he

  knew I’d had enough. I could feel myself getting grumpier.

  We steered the canoe toward the shore and I peered

  closely, but this side seemed even more overgrown than

  the other. As we passed between the shore and the island,

  I whipped my head back and forth, looking at both. There

  were no traces of anyone, and I couldn’t see where anyone

  might stash a canoe or kayak.

  “Do you mind if we keep going?” I asked. “All the

  way down to the other end of the lake?”

  “Well, I would love to, but I think we’d better get

  back to Jasper. He’s all alone. Plus, it’s lunchtime. Maybe

  we could do the other end of the lake… tomorrow

  morning?”

  He’d been about to say ‘this afternoon,’ I could tell,

  but had figured Jasper would throw a hissy-fit if we went

  off without him a second time.

  “Okay,” I said begrudgingly. Maybe I could continue

  to search the shore by myself after lunch. My stomach gave

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  a rumble ― going back to the cabin suddenly didn’t seem

  such a bad idea.

  The day had grown hotter, and I was sweaty and

  itchy under my lifejacket. Or maybe I was just irritated with

  not finding anything at the cabin, or from Dad’s stupid joke.

  Not to mention the whole thing with The Girl.

  We reached the cabin, pulled up the canoe, and

  called out for Jasper.

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  Chapter 9

  There was no answer, so I went into the cabin and

  headed upstairs. Jasper was probably sulking on his bed.

  To my surprise, however, he wasn’t in the bedroom.

  “Hey Dad,” I called out.

  “Yeah,” came the muffled reply from the other

  bedroom. I poked my head around the door. Dad was

  changing his sweaty T-shirt.

  “Jasper’s not here.”

  “Must be outside, then.”

  I ran back down stairs. “Hey, Jasper!” I called from

  the porch. Then I hopped down the steps. “Jasper?”

  Dad came down the stairs.

  “He’s not here,” I walked to the picnic table and

  stood there, looking around.

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  “Well, he’s probably gone for a walk.”

  We glanced at each other. Jasper? A walk?

  I ran to the bottom of the hiking trail, cupped my

  hands around my mouth, and yelled, “Jasper!” If this was

  an exact duplicate of Dad’s prank on me, it wasn’t

  impressing me.

  Rather than going for a walk, Jasper was probably

  sitting a few feet away, sulking behind a bush. It just

  wouldn’t be like him to voluntarily do something that

  involved exercise… especially at lunchtime.

  “He wouldn’t have gone swimming, would he?” I

  asked when Jasper still didn’t appear. Dad’s frown turned to

  one of genuine worry. Jasper and I had been instructed

  when we arrived at the cabin that we were never, ever to

  go swimming by ourselves.

  But then he shook his head, his expression relaxing.

  “This is Jasper we’re talking about.”

  I wanted to smile, but neither of us knew what to do

  apart from stand there looking around.

  “Do you want to wander around and look for him

  while I start lunch? I’m sure he won’t have gone far. Hey,

  maybe if he went to visit the neighbor kids?”

  I frowned again. This seemed unlikely ― he hadn’t

  liked them any more than they’d liked him. Unless he’d

  been that lonely, or bored, or sulking…

  Then, just as I took a few steps towards the trail to

  the neighbors’, Jasper emerged from it.

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  “Oh!” he said, looking surprised and guilty. “You’re

  back!”

  “We said we’d be back for lunch,” Dad replied,

  smiling. “Glad to see you, we were starting to get worried.”

  Jasper looked even guiltier. “I just went for a walk,”

  he said quickly.

  “Where?” I asked.

  His eyes darted around. “Um… nowhere. I went

  down the trail a bit then turned back.”

  “Did you run into the neighbor kids?”

  “No!” His eyes grew huge, but they still held the

  guilty expression.

  “Well, I’m going to get the barbecue fired up,” Dad

  said. “How do hamburgers sound?”

  “Awesome!” Jasper said, his expression transformed

  to one of happiness.

  Dad wandered off, clearly not bothered by Jasper’s

  strange behavior. But Jasper was the world’s worst liar, and

  I could tell he’d been lying about something.

  I followed him to the picnic table. “So what did you

  do all morning?” I persisted.

  “Um, nothing. I mean, went for a walk.”

  “How come? You don’t like walks.”

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  “Yeah, I do!” He looked up, wide-eyed, and said,

  “I’m going to read comics till lunch,” before fleeing to the

  cabin.

  Weird. Oh well, I had more important things to deal

  with than Jasper’s strange moods.

  Sitting down at the picnic table, I put my chin in my

  hands and thought again about the neighbor kids. Coralie’s

  surliness, the boys’ crazy, giggling energy, the sudden

  silence and seriousness as Coralie told us the local ghost

  story…

  Wait a minute, I thought. How would they know a

  local ghost story? They weren’t from here.

  I drummed my fingers on the table. This was

  important! If it was a story from the area, and this was

  their first time here… then who had told it to them? It

  would have had to be someone from town, and as far as I

  was aware, they didn’t know anyone there. They’d only

  been here a few days longer than us.

  Stories had a way of getting around among kids,

  though… maybe on one of their trips into town, they had

  talked to some local kids.

  But the idea nagged me, and I wanted an answer.

  Also, how true was the story? Maybe I should go into town

  and find out. Where could I go? …Mandy, I thought, and

  hoped she was working today. Growing up here, she’d

  know any local tales. So, my option for the afternoon was

  to go into town and ask about the story, or canoe down to

  the other end of the lake, looking for where The Girl might

  have come from.

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  Soon the smell of hambur
gers wafted my way, and I

  stopped thinking about all that stuff so I could enjoy lunch.

  While Dad had been barbecuing the burgers, Jasper had

  chopped up vegetables and grabbed a bag of potato chips,

  and was now wobbling towards the table with plates and

  napkins in his hands. I jumped up to help.

  I went and got lemonade and cups, and we all sat

  down to eat, silent as we bit into the thick burgers,

  barbecue sauce oozing out and smudging our faces.

  We were so focused on our food that we didn’t even

  notice the weather clouding over, and it was only when a

  raindrop bounced off the table that we all stopped and

  looked up.

  “Wow!” Dad said. “Wasn’t expecting rain today!”

  The sky had turned a gloomy grey, but only random

  drops were falling. One bounced off the dirt near me, and

  some could be heard hitting the trees, but we were dry.

  Nevertheless, we darted more glances up at the sky as we

  finished our food, and, just as we were gathering up the

  plates and cups, the rain started pelting down. By the time

  we made our way to the cabin, it was pouring, and we

  dashed inside. After dumping the dishes in the kitchen, we

  all went upstairs to change. The air was suddenly cold, and

  we were in our shorts.

  I gazed out the bedroom window at the lake. It was

  socked in with grey clouds, and the island was a greenish-

  grey blur. Well, there’s no girl out there, I told myself,

  transferring my gaze to the rain that hammered down.

  Drops ricocheted off the dirt around the picnic table below.

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  By the time we came downstairs in our jeans, it had

  stopped.

  Dad peered out the window. “Hm. Can’t tell if it’s

  stopped for good, or if it’s going to start up again.” He

  turned to Jasper. “Well, guess it’s games time!”

  Jasper beamed.

  Drat… now there was no option of going canoeing or

  going into town. Much as I wanted to get both done, I

  didn’t like the idea of canoeing or walking when the air was

  clammy and it was likely to rain again. But even if the

  weather suddenly cleared, no way would Jasper let me

  abandon the next game of Risk, which meant I was stuck.

  He appeared with the box and set it on the floor. I

  sighed, resigning myself to the fact that my investigations

 

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