the park. I swear it.â
âNo, you werenât. Try again.â
âNot Wells Hill Park, Mom. The other one. The ravine. Up by Spadina. I was flying a kite.â
She seems to deflate a little.
âIn the rain? Thatâs dangerous.â
âI know, butâ¦â
âGod, I was so worried. The police were here, you know. They were looking for some girl. Whatâs her name?â
âLucy.â
âThatâs right. Do you know her?â
âKind ofâ¦youâre home early today.â
âItâs past eight, Terence. Iâve been home for two hours already. I donât want you out this late alone, all right? We donât know what happened to that girl.â
She
doesnât know what happened to that girl.
âI want you home at five oâclock every day. I know itâs a bummer, but I canât have you tooling about the neighborhood on your own if thereâs some freak out there. Iâm going to be coming home a lot earlier and I want you to be here.â
âThatâs not fair.â I say it to myself, but Mom hears me.
âWhatâs that?â I can feel my face getting red. Somebody needs me, and now Momâs pulling this stupid adult trip on me. A five oâclock curfew and I didnât even do anything.
âThereâs no freak out there, Mom. She ran away⦠I mean, Rico told me she ran away.â I have to be careful not to spill the beans. Iâm rocking the chair really fast now. âElys would let me stay out.â I think I hurt her feeling with that one. She sits back down again.
âWell, Iâm not Elys, am I?â she says finally. âElys has a new job and she isnât going to be around so much anymore. Thatâs why Iâm coming home earlier.â
Everythingâs changing so fast. Who am I going to watch television with? Mom? Iâm going to eat stupid hot dogs for the rest of my life because thatâs all Mom can cook.
âI guess that wonât leave you much time for Farley.â It was a stupid thing to say. I want to piss her off. I want her to feel bad like me.
She doesnât even say anything. She just stands up and walks to the kitchen.
âThereâs some lasagna for you in the oven.â
Elys must have made it for me. My favorite food and I donât even feel like eating.
I stop the rocking chair and head for the kitchen. What a rotten day this turned out to be. âAnd wipe that black gunk off your tongue. What have you been doing, eating charcoal?â
11
When I wake up the next morning, the house is empty. For once, it doesnât seem like all that many hours between nine and five. I root around the house for things to take Lucy. I should show my face up at Wells Hill Park today. Try to find out whatâs going on at Lucyâs house.
I get a big knapsack from the basement and start filling it with stuff: a pillow, a blanket, a flashlight, a big jar of cranberry juice, my Swiss army knife, a toothbrush and some toothpaste squeezed into a baggie, a pack of playing cards, a crummy harmonica I got in my Christmas stocking last year and a whole shopping bag full of cheese sandwiches (some with mayonnaise and some without).
I get halfway down the block with the whole heavy pack and turn back for some fruit and celery. Lucy should try to eat a balanced diet to keep up her strength.
I take the back way into the ravine so that I wonât have to go through the park. That way I can just cruise into Wells Hill later with no load on my back and make like I just slept in.
My knapsack jams in the mouth of the cave and I fall flat on my face.
âOof.â I crawl the rest of the way inside. I canât see anything.
âLucy?â
No answer. I open the knapsack and fish out the flashlight. I turn it on and beam it on the bed. Itâs lumpy. I go over and nudge the lump, but itâs just the sleeping bag. Empty.
Oh, no. She moved! Where
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