The Big Dip

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The Big Dip Page 1

by Melanie Jackson




  The Big Dip

  Melanie Jackson

  orca currents

  ORCA BOOK PUBLISHERS

  Copyright © 2009 Melanie Jackson

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication 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 now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  Jackson, Melanie, 1956-

  The big dip / written by Melanie Jackson.

  (Orca Currents)

  Electronic Monograph

  Issued also in print format.

  ISBN 9781554691807 (pdf) -- ISBN 9781554694433 (epub)

  I. Title. II. Series: Orca currents

  PS8569.A265B53 2009 jC813’.6 C2009-902582-5

  Summary: At Vancouver’s Pacific National Exhibition, Joe Lumby, track star extraordinaire, finds himself caught up in a mystery involving the theft of a gallery treasure.

  First published in the United States, 2009

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2009927574

  Orca Book Publishers gratefully acknowledges the support for its publishing programs provided by the following agencies: the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program and the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Province of British Columbia through the BC Arts Council and the Book Publishing Tax Credit.

  Cover design by Teresa Bubela

  Cover photography by Getty Images

  In Canada:

  Orca Book Publishers

  PO Box 5626, Station B

  Victoria, BC Canada

  V8R 6S4

  In the United States:

  Orca Book Publishers

  PO Box 468

  Custer, WA USA

  98240-0468

  www.orcabook.com

  12 11 10 09 • 4 3 2 1

  To my sister-in-law, Lynne Jackson—MJ

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter One

  It was coming up—the big dip.

  The cars rattled to the crest of the rickety roller coaster. Usually Skip and I got the first seat. But tonight a grizzled old man had dodged in ahead of us. As the train creaked higher, the old man twisted around to grin at us. One eyelid, missing its eyeball, was squinted almost shut. With his working eye he studied me.

  “I know you. You’re that speedy feller, Mojo Lumby!” the old man exclaimed with a loud cackle.

  It was true. I’d nailed the regional and the provincial track championships. The Vancouver Sun had done a story on me just last week. Joe Lumby, Age 15: On the Track, Just Call Him Mojo, the headline said. There had been photos of me zooming around the school field.

  The old guy probably recognized me from the photos. “Yeah, well,” I shrugged. I hoped he wasn’t going to ask me about my times, not with the big dip coming up.

  Besides, the name Mojo was a sore point with me. I was fast on my feet, all right. For me, running was everything. I was almost always training or at meets. The downside was, my grades were tanking. While everyone else got to go away for the summer, I was stuck in Vancouver taking a math course. There was no mojo, no luck, about that.

  But for now, I didn’t care. The train was edging over the crest. It crashed down the big dip.

  At fifty years old, the roller coaster at Vancouver’s Pacific National Exhibition is the only wooden one left in Canada. It’s also one of the few anywhere that just has dinky metal bars. Most roller coasters have shoulder clamps to hold you in. When you drop in this one, you lurch over the metal bars.

  Skip and I leaned forward so we could stretch over the bars. In a whirl of blue sky and rushing air, we lunged, our hands reaching to the tracks.

  We always did this. It was as if we were the ride, not the riders.

  “Stay still, you idiots!” screeched a woman behind us.

  We ignored her. There were shrieks of laughter, and somebody popped the tab off a soda can. I thought that was weird— breaking out refreshments as you plunged down the big dip.

  In front of us, the old man leaned forward too. I thought it was cool, being that old and still into roller coasters. On the other hand, I hoped the excitement didn’t give him a heart attack.

  Slam! The train hit the valley. Skip and I sat back and high-fived each other. Nothing beat the big dip.

  The train zoomed up the next hill. The PNE coaster is engine-powered only up to the first big dip. After that, it spools around the twists and turns on its own momentum. Roller coaster nuts from all over the world come here to ride the coaster because it’s such a museum piece.

  I decided that the old guy in front must be one of those nuts. He was still leaning forward, ready to catch the next dip.

  I forgot about the old guy as Skip and I lunged again. Whoa! The grounds of the PNE, with their bright rides and concession stands, swirled around us. The merry-go-round was upside down. And there was the Ferris wheel, spinning straight at us…

  Seconds later, or so it seemed, the train sputtered to a stop. Skip scrambled onto the platform. He helped out the passenger behind us, a stocky woman with a large boxy purse.

  The old guy in the first seat was still leaning forward.

  “Hey, buddy,” I said. “Ride’s over.”

  He didn’t reply—didn’t move.

  “C’mon, Joe,” Skip called from the platform. “Let’s get outta here. We need our junk-food ration for the day!”

  The old man moaned. Maybe he did have a heart attack, I thought, alarmed.

  I touched his shoulder. “Hey, buddy…”

  He straightened up, gasping. His lean face was as gray as concrete. He tried to clutch my arms, but he was too weak. His hands slipped to the sides of my jacket and clenched the fabric.

  The stocky woman pushed Skip aside. “I’m a nurse,” she said. “Let me have a look at him.”

  Her face shoved up to mine. Her teeth, small and pointy, looked out of place in her large square face.

  “I’m a nurse,” she repeated.

  I started to move out of the way.

  But the old man kept clutching my jacket. His lips were twitching. He wanted to speak.

  I leaned closer, blocking the stocky woman.

  The old man whispered, “A plant…the Margaret rose…Get it to the police…”

  He slumped sideways. His single eye stared up at me, unblinking.

  And unseeing.

  He was dead.

  By now the next train had rolled in behind us. An attendant hurried over to see what the delay was. “C’mon,” he urged, glancing at the people waiting to get on. “Gotta move!”

  Then he saw the old man. “Jeez,” the attendant said, turning pale.

  “He must’ve had a heart attack,” I said. I was thinking of how the old guy had stretched forward for every dip. I had assumed he was doing it for fun.

  The attendant unclipped a cell phone from his belt and started barking into it about an emergency. His voice broke partway through.

  The passengers from our train and from the train behind us crowded around. There were some gasps, but nobody said anything. They just stared.

  I realized I was still holding the old man’s shoulder. I let go.

  The sides of his jacket fell back. That’s when I saw it.

  The sm
all black hole at the back of his neck. Blood spread from it like a red scarf.

  “Not a heart attack,” I breathed. “This guy was shot. ”

  Chapter Two

  That popping sound I’d heard on the roller coaster—it hadn’t been someone opening a can. It had been a bullet.

  Skip’s eyes widened. The terror in them mirrored mine. I could tell he was having the same thought. While we were leaning over the bar, the bullet had skimmed right over our heads.

  People around us were screaming. They started running away, shoving at each other in their desperation to get out. There were all kinds of people, all ages, shapes and sizes, all scared out of their minds.

  The stocky woman caught the fear too. Changing her mind about helping the old man, she used her big purse to push people aside. Behind her was a lean guy with a blue and white Vancouver Canadians baseball cap. He said something to the woman and pointed over the crowd. She kept bashing her way through.

  “There’s a shooter around here,” Skip said in my ear. His voice was choked. It was the first time I’d ever heard Skip sound frightened. Usually he was so confident, so sunny. Nothing fazed him.

  “Let’s get outta here,” he urged.

  The attendant looked like he wanted to run too. He bit his lower lip. His freckles stood out against his skin like Frisbees.

  I didn’t want to leave the attendant alone. It didn’t seem right.

  Skip gripped my elbow. “Have you forgotten, Joe? You’re breaking curfew. You’re not supposed to be here.”

  I was supposed to be home studying. I had a math test tomorrow. But my parents were visiting friends in Whistler over the next two days, and my kid sister Ellie was at a sleepover.

  Plus, in the morning Skip was heading out with his folks to their cottage in the Okanagan. The PNE would be over when he got back. Tonight had been our last chance to ride the big dip together until next year.

  Skip had free passes to the whole fair. We could take all the rides we wanted. His dad was on the PNE board of directors.

  So, I’d snuck out.

  Skip was going to tutor me when we got back to my place. Skip sailed through math. He sailed through everything. In September, he was going into an advanced class. Regular schoolwork didn’t challenge him enough.

  Mr. Too-Perfect, I called him sometimes, and he’d laugh. Privately I wasn’t sure I was joking. Skip’s being a whiz kind of got to me. I had to sweat most of my subjects just to pass.

  I should listen to Skip now, I thought. But my eyes were glued to the old man. Why would anyone want to kill a harmless guy like him?

  PNE security guards were rushing onto the platform. The attendant started to cry. I wasn’t feeling too good myself.

  The attendant could only point a shaky hand at the dead man. The guards shoved Skip and me aside.

  Sirens sounded—ambulances and police were coming.

  Skip dragged me to the exit. He urged, “We gotta get outta here. What happens when the police see you? What if somebody from the newspaper takes your picture? Your dad will know you went to the PNE.”

  Dad had threatened to pull me out of track if I didn’t improve my grades. This summer course is it, he’d said. This is your last chance.

  Still, I hesitated. The old man’s face swam up before me again. I heard him mumble his last strange words. I told Skip, “The old guy said something about a rose, the Margaret rose. He wanted me to give it to the police.”

  “What?” Skip said. “The guy was dying, Joe. He wasn’t in his right mind. C’mon. Once we’re away from here, you can send the cops a dozen roses if it makes you feel better.”

  I didn’t think the old man had been talking about bouquets. But there was no time to think. The sirens screamed closer, ripping our eardrums. Feet pounded up the entrance ramp. Police officers ran over to the dead man.

  “You can’t do anything for him,” Skip said.

  I nodded numbly. He was right. The old guy was beyond my help. He’d taken the biggest dip of all—the one that you never come up from.

  We bolted down the exit ramp.

  Skip came home with me and coached me for the test the next day. “C’mon, dude. I know you can concentrate. I’ve seen you on the racetrack. Your mind is one hundred percent on the finish line.”

  But Skip didn’t know there was a third person sitting at the table—the ghost of the old man. He was clear to me, even if Skip couldn’t see him. One minute the old man was grinning at me—the next, he was slumping sideways.

  Finally, after wrestling with the math for ages, I started to get it.

  “You can do anything if you just concentrate,” Skip encouraged. He was so sure I could do it, it kind of infected me. I started believing that, yeah, I could pass the math test.

  The next morning, the heat wave that the weather people had warned about finally rolled in—just in time for my math exam.

  With no air conditioning in the pre– World War II school, the humidity was thick enough to cut through.

  The teacher switched off the lights. “At least we can make it shady in here,” she said, wiping a tissue across her forehead. “Now, good luck with your exam.”

  I stared at the first question. The words wriggled in the heat. If X is…what would Y…But I thought I could figure it out.

  I unstuck my sweaty arm from the page and started my calculations. X equals, Y equals…

  X…Y…

  Why would somebody want to kill a harmless oldster?

  There’d been a story about the shooting in the morning Sun. Man Shot on Roller Coaster. Ride Closed While Police Investigate. The story said the man’s name was Jake Grissom. It didn’t say anything else about him.

  There’d been a quote from the police, asking anyone who had been on the ride to contact them.

  I thought of the woman sitting behind Skip and me—the stocky woman with the big purse. Had she been in touch with the police? Maybe she told them about the two boys behind the old man. Maybe the police were on the lookout for us.

  I pushed these thoughts out of my mind, or at least to one side of it, and kept slaving away in the heat.

  When I looked up after the final question, I was the only student left.

  The teacher smiled at me. She was holding a battery-powered mini-fan that blew her hair away from her face. “Are you done?”

  “Yeah.” I handed in the test. “Thanks for waiting,” I added. I bet she wanted to escape this hothouse as much as I did.

  “It’s okay. See you next class, then.” The teacher put my test in her briefcase.

  She headed out and down the hall.

  The outside doors in this school locked behind you, so I could leave on my own. I decided to go splash some water on my face before I left.

  I headed to the basement where the restrooms were. It was cool down here, and the lights were off. Only a dim gray light filtered through the frosted windows. The basement felt like a cavern. Every squeak my runners made echoed back, amplified.

  Leaning over the sink, I ran the cold water full blast. I peeled off my T-shirt and doused my upper body with water. I washed away the sweat, the Xs and Ys from the test buzzing around in my head, the face of the dying old man…

  Nope. Him, I couldn’t wash him away.

  Should I have stayed till the cops arrived?

  What is with this rose?

  Good and soaked, I looked in the mirror and pursed my lips into a fish face. I ran my forefinger over them and made loud blubbering noises. They echoed back. Mojo Lumby, the one-man entertainment show.

  I didn’t bother toweling off, just pulled the T-shirt back over my wet skin. Out in that egg-frying weather, I’d dry off right away.

  I walked past some lockers. I knocked on the doors, one after another, to hear the hollow echoes.

  The locker at the end of the hall was open. I hadn’t noticed that when I came through before.

  As I got closer, I reached out to pull the door closed. Then I’d knock on it too. I liked maki
ng all these echoes.

  Mojo Lumby, the one-man entertain—

  The locker door slammed against me, smashing my nose.

  Then the door swung back for round two. Smash. This time it punched the air clean out of my chest.

  I fell sideways. The crash of my body inside the locker created the loudest echo of all.

  Chapter Three

  A bulky figure leaned over me. It was one big shadow, like an oversized inkblot.

  The shadow hissed, “Okay, Mojo. Talk. Where’d Jake hide the Margaret rose? What did he tell you?”

  I opened my mouth to say, I don’t know. But blood from my nose flowed in, clogging the words.

  “You’re not cooperating, Mojo.” A gloved fist rammed me into the back of the locker. This was one strong dude. He clamped me by the throat.

  Maybe I could distract him before he cut off all my oxygen.

  “Here,” I choked. I wrenched my wallet out of my pocket. “Take my money. Enjoy.”

  I threw the wallet. He let go of my throat to catch it. As he stepped back, I saw he was wearing a trenchcoat, with a ski mask pulled over his face.

  This was Trenchcoat’s lucky day. The wallet held the fifty bucks Mom and Dad gave me to order out for food.

  Trenchcoat didn’t act like it was his lucky day though. Not even glancing at it, he stuffed the money in his pocket with a curse. Maybe he’d expected more.

  Maybe, to show his dissatisfaction, he’d now squeeze the remaining shreds of air from my throat.

  No, he won’t, I thought. Not till he gets the Margaret rose.

  The thought calmed me—somewhat. I stopped gasping for air. I practiced small steady breaths—runner’s breaths.

  I edged forward and got my head and shoulders out the locker door.

  Trenchcoat tossed my wallet to the floor. My bus pass fluttered out with my mom’s instructions for taking care of the house. Don’t forget to check the mailbox each day. Always lock the door. Make sure Ellie eats proper meals. Tell her no veggies, no dessert.

  I fixed my eyes on the paper. I knew what it said—but Trenchcoat didn’t.

 

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