orca currents
Copyright © Pam Withers 2006
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
Withers, Pam
Daredevil Club / Pam Withers.
(Orca currents)
ISBN 1-55143-618-3 (bound) 1-55143-614-0 (pbk.)
I. Title. II. Series.
PS8613.R367P53 2006 iC813'.6 C2006-903444-3
Summary: Kip struggles to maintain his status as a daredevil
in spite of his disability.
First published in the United States, 2006
Library of Congress Control Number: 2006928965
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: Lynn O’Rourke
Cover photography: Getty Images
Orca Book Publishers Orca Book Publishers
PO Box 5626, Station B PO Box 468
Victoria, BC Canada Custer, WA USA
V8R 6S4 98240-0468
www.orcabook.com
Printed and bound in Canada
09 08 07 06 • 4 3 2 1
Climbing the old water tower was number five on our list. We chose to do it during a downpour. Not just ’cause the cops were onto us after our first four stunts. They’d almost caught us on number three.
The fear of getting caught was part of the excitement. The police in our little town, assuming they’d heard rumors of our “seven dares,” had to be waiting for us to tackle the old tower on the hill at some point. We’d also chosen a dark and stormy night ’cause the tower was dry inside. Our town’s water tower is shaped like a giant toilet-paper roll wearing a funnel cap. We figured since it had a roof, the tower should be dry inside. That meant the ladder running up the inside wall shouldn’t be too rotten.
We couldn’t know for sure, because no one had been inside the tower for years, not since the town had declared it an “impure” source of water and boarded it up. All the place was good for was being broken into. And who better to grab the honors than the Daredevil Club? Besides, what else was there to do during a rainstorm?
A hundred yards from the tower, Fraser, Vlad, Caleb and I dropped to our stomachs and slithered through the mud under the barbed-wire fence. Did the townsfolk of Peever really think a mere barbed-wire fence would stop the mighty members of the Daredevil Club? Not even our competitors, the Wildmen, would pause for a barbed-wire fence.
“Shoot,” I muttered as the back of my rain jacket caught on a barb.
“I’ve got it,” Caleb said, reaching down and freeing me. Then he grabbed my hands, pulled me through the last few feet, and handed me my cane. For someone half a head shorter than me, Caleb is pretty strong. Too bad he’s not as gutsy as he is strong. He only got into the club ’cause I recommended him, and he knows it.
“Don’t need your help,” I protested as I sat up. I used my finger to take a layer of mud off my cane. I wiped the fingerful of slime on the fencepost. Then I shoved my cane deep into the mud and leaned on it to rise. Caleb knew not to reach out to help me.
“Hold on, guys,” he was calling softly to the others. “Wait for Kip.” They were halfway to the tower. They were visible only by the pricks of light from their flashlights.
“We’ll catch them,” I said, lifting my left foot into place with my hands and aiming it toward the tower. I didn’t expect the guys to wait up for me. I had to prove I could keep up. It was part of tonight’s test: the test to see if I could stay in the Daredevil Club after my accident.
“Stop hovering,” I commanded Caleb. He was annoying me. Maybe I was just grumpy from the shot of pain that came with trying to put myself back into motion. I had to move faster, or I was a sitting duck for the police. The guys knew that. It was amazing they had even let me come along on number five. But I’d insisted, and I’m pretty strong-willed. Plus, the whole club had been my idea. Fraser and Vlad had just enough guilt about the accident that they wouldn’t keep me from trying at least one more stunt.
I also knew that if anyone chased us, Fraser and Vlad would disappear. Only Caleb would stick around to keep an eye out for his gimpy friend. That was an unspoken part of the deal: a rotten deal that stemmed from rotten luck on stunt number four. But I started this club. I helped build the list of seven dares. And I was going to finish it with the team. Even if Fraser had taken over as the leader.
I’d already coped with months of pain and torturous physio exercises. I also knew my friends weren’t okay about the accident. Sure, they came to my house at first. My overly cheerful mom would lead them into my bedroom, where I lay with my leg elevated. They’d glance nervously at the pain pills cluttering my bedside table. Then they’d sit on the edge of chairs that my mom dragged in, their eyes darting out the window. They’d try hard to make small talk. Pretty soon we’d run out of stuff to say. Then they’d rise and punch me gently and say—quietly so my mom wouldn’t hear—“Can’t wait till it’s all mended, dude, so we can finish the dares.”
Every day I feared they’d say, “Dude, we can’t wait anymore. We’re going to finish those dares without you, okay?” Trying to keep that from happening was everything that drove me after the accident.
By the time Caleb and I reached the water tower’s door, Fraser and Vlad had tugged its wet boards off with their crowbars. The inside of the tower was dark and smelled like rotten eggs and mold. I scrunched up my nose.
“Good place to shoot a horror movie,” Fraser muttered.
“Get a load of the pigeon droppings,” Vlad said, kicking piles of white muck, then coughing. I didn’t bother telling them that it was poisonous.
Four flashlight beams arced around the place. Fraser’s beam raced along walls weeping with humidity.
“Black as tar,” Vlad said. He reached out to touch the black and withdrew his hand quickly.
“Weird. It’s loose like coffee grounds.”
“Cockroach droppings,” I informed them, prompting Vlad to wipe his hands vigorously against a pant leg.
One by one, we raised our beams to the underside of the roof. It was dark. But even in the dim light, we could see that the darkness was moving. It undulated like “the wave” at a hockey game. The cockroaches protested our entry by releasing their hold on the ceiling and flying down at us.
“I’m outta here,” Caleb said, heading for the doorway.
“Not so fast,” I said, my fingers closing tightly on his collar. “Pull your hood up, Caleb, and get on that ladder. I’ll go last.”
I hoped that last sentence didn’t sound too bitter. I also hoped that all the weights I’d been pumping would help me haul my nonworking leg up. I gripped the ladder beneath my three buddies and hung my cane on one of the lower rungs.
My breathing was heavy, my hands were sweaty. But with one pull after another, I kept climbing.
“Keep your eyes and mouth shut,” Fraser called down. “The cockroaches are epic up here.”
Caleb threw me an alarmed glance, but he knew I blocked his retreat.
Wimp, I thought. And he has four operating limbs. I set my jaw and kept going. The others were waiting when I reached the top. Fraser and Vlad tried to mask their impatience. Caleb was too distracted by the battery of bugs and protesting pigeons to address me. I got no slap on the back or words of encouragement. You’d hardly know I used to be leader of this group. They either had no idea what a feat the climb had been for me, or they were only tolerating my presence.
I started down with no rest. I’d made it. Did that mean they’d let me do the next two? If I could do this, I could probably do the drainpipe crawl, number six, and the abandoned grain elevator just outside town, our number seven. There was no going back to the guy I had been three months earlier. But surely, I hoped, it was enough that they’d held off doing number five until I’d mended enough to come along. Hanging from one rotten rung after another, dangling my useless leg beside my working foot, I descended as fast as I dared. Pigeons’ wings fanned my face, rain pounded the thin walls of the tower, and cockroaches dive-bombed my ears. Three pairs of feet above me adopted a stop-and-go descent to accommodate me.