29
Jonah hit hard, the chilly water a huge shock against his sweaty skin. He slipped beneath the surface but gave a fierce kick and came up sputtering. His legs were already cramping; it seemed to take a huge amount of effort just to keep his head above water.
This is why they always made us wear life jackets at camp, Jonah thought. Be prepared, and all that.
Jonah would have to settle for a backup plan.
Let’s see. Find something to grab on to, something that floats, to hold yourself up?
Jonah had fallen out of the canoe in the middle of acres and acres of water. He was so far from shore that finding a random branch or log floating nearby would require divine intervention. Or Second’s intervention, and Jonah wasn’t going to count on that. But he had been holding on to a paddle when he’d fallen into the water…
Jonah actually lifted his hands up in front of his face, looking at them carefully. Maybe he was still holding on to a paddle?
Nope. His hands were empty.
“Jonah!” Katherine screamed, the sound distorting because of all the water in Jonah’s ears. “Swim back to the canoe!”
Oh. Well, that would do. That would be something to hang on to.
Jonah had surfaced with his back to the canoe, but it was a little odd that he’d practically forgotten it was there. Maybe his mind didn’t want to deal with the weird thing that had just happened to him in the canoe?
Jonah took a deep breath and whirled around.
The canoe was several yards away now, getting farther and farther ahead of him. But it had turned back into two separate canoes again-or maybe one and a half? One and three-fourths?
Jonah decided this wasn’t one of those times when precise numbers mattered.
The tracer version of the canoe was starting to break away again-not in a straight line, but off at an odd angle, swinging wildly back and forth. No, it was the real canoe that was swinging so wildly, as if paddled by maniacs.
In the front of the real canoe, in the spot where Jonah had sat only moments earlier, was a boy with short dark hair and pierced ears and a T-shirt that said, Sarcasm-just one of my specialties. The boy was staring down at the paddle in his hand with a baffled expression on his face.
From the back of the canoe, Andrea was yelling at the Sarcasm boy, “Keep paddling! We’ll explain everything later. But for now-keep paddling!”
Jonah hoped Andrea would be able to explain everything to him later too.
When she wasn’t yelling at the boy at the front of the boat, Andrea was arguing with a boy-or was it two different boys?-sitting practically on top of her. Jonah blinked and squinted, trying to correct the double vision. The boy he could see now, like the one he thought he’d seen only a moment before, had dark skin. His hair was cut quite close to his head, almost shaved, and he wore a Beatles T-shirt. Jonah blinked again, and suddenly that boy was gone, replaced by the other boy. This boy was naked from the waist up-the only part Jonah could see-and his hair was cut in a strangely familiar style.
Oh, yeah. He looks like one of those tracers we’ve been following around…
While Jonah watched, the back end of the canoe lurched to the side, and Beatles T-shirt boy was back, with only the tracer version of naked-chest boy beside him.
“No, no, you’ve got to paddle exactly the same way as your tracer!” Andrea screamed. “You’ve got to sit in the same place! You’ve got to keep it together so I can go help that guy in the front!”
She shoved the boy to the right-an amazing feat, since he was taller and bigger than she was. And then she wrapped her hands around the boy’s hands on the paddle and plunged it into the water, trying to pull the canoe back into place, lined up with its tracer. And… to pull the boys into their places, lined up with their tracers?
That’s who those boys are, who appeared out of nowhere, Jonah thought, his brain finally starting to catch up. Sarcasm T-shirt boy and Beatles T-shirt boy-they’re the real versions of our tracer buddies, the fake Indians.
Jonah did nothing but tread water for a few seconds, basking in the glow of actually having figured something out. He refused to let any more questions into his mind-certainly not any of the disturbing, unanswerable questions that threatened to creep in.
“Jonah, would you stop goofing off out there?” Katherine screamed. “We need your help!”
Oh, so she wasn’t interested just in saving his life? She wanted him to solve all the problems with the canoe?
“Katherine, you go to the front and paddle!” Andrea yelled. “We’re losing the tracers!”
“Not until we rescue Jonah!” Katherine screamed back.
Okay, so maybe she did care about saving Jonah’s life.
Did Andrea care so little that she was willing to leave him behind?
Jonah slipped slightly lower in the water, his cramped legs shooting with pain, his exhausted arm muscles barely compensating. The water was over his chin and mouth now; he had to tilt his head slightly to keep his nose above the waterline. For the first time in his life, he could understand how someone who knew how to swim might drown anyway.
“Jonah, swim!” Katherine commanded. “Stop treading water and swim!”
Treading water was easier-and he was so tired-but Jonah obediently launched his body toward the canoe. His flutter kick did nothing-how about a frog kick? Scissors kick? Butterfly kick?
It turned out that Jonah was worthless at everything right now except a modified dog paddle. Still, he struggled forward. Katherine leaned dangerously over the side of the canoe, holding out her hand.
“Don’t tip us over!” Andrea hollered, real panic in her voice.
“Lean… other… way…,” Jonah panted.
Andrea and Katherine both leaned away from Jonah. Even Dare scrambled back as Jonah grabbed the side of the canoe and, with his last burst of energy, lunged up and over the edge.
For a moment, everything seemed like it could go in any direction. Jonah could pull too hard, tipping the canoe toward him. The girls could lean too far the other way and overturn the canoe in the opposite direction. For all Jonah knew, a hundred more boys could suddenly land in the canoe out of nowhere, completely sinking it with their weight.
But what happened was that Jonah landed inside the canoe, sprawled slightly on top of John White. The canoe rocked, Dare barked… and Jonah closed his eyes, completely spent.
The canoe’s rocking settled into stillness.
“Katherine,” Jonah heard Andrea say, softly.
“I’ll paddle now,” Katherine said.
Jonah was barely aware of anything for a while after that. The canoe sped forward, but it was like gliding now, smooth and seemingly effortless. Effortless for Jonah, anyway-he had no effort left in him.
Once he thought he heard Katherine say, “Oh, so that’s what the rake is for,” and then he thought something wet and slimy hit his ankle. But he might have been dreaming. He was dreaming a lot. He dreamed that he was at Boy Scout camp, and there were four new water sports instructors, some guys named John, Paul, Ringo, and George. Jonah thought they looked kind of familiar.
He dreamed that he was in art class in school, and the teacher, Mr. Takanawa, was announcing that they would draw nothing but Native Americans for the rest of the year.
He dreamed that he was at a fish fry, and the air was full of the smell of smoke and cooked fish. And even though Jonah was starving, he couldn’t make himself wake up to eat. But Katherine was shaking his shoulders, and she wouldn’t give up. She just kept shaking and shaking and shaking, and her “Jonah, wake up! Jonah, wake up!” kept getting louder and louder and louder…
Wait. That dream wasn’t a dream. It was real.
Jonah managed to open his eyelids a crack.
“Finally!” Katherine exploded. “You were starting to scare us!”
“Huh?” Jonah mumbled. He’d been asleep-how was that scary?