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Authors: Kenneth Oppel

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BOOK: Dead Water Zone
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He gazed at his reflection, studying the lines of his body. He’d worked hard for it. Hours after school, laboring at the Universal Gym—that gave
him muscle mass. Then the training for the track team, running, swimming—that gave him tone, suppleness, stamina.

The perfect man, perfectly proportioned. It was Sam who had shown him Leonardo da Vinci’s famous sketch: a man inscribed in a circle and a square, striking this same pose. Sam could name every bone in the human body, every tangle of muscle, sinew, and vein. Sam, whose own body would only ever be weak and small. My younger brother. My genius brother.

Chest heaving, Paul let his arms fall back to his sides. Why had Sam come to this place? Think it through, he told his reflection. Go through the steps again.

Sam had won early entrance to the university last autumn. He’d been wasting his time in high school. Biochemistry and microbiology had become his passions. He’d done brilliantly in his first year, of course, and this summer he’d been offered a job as a research assistant at the laboratories, working for the City’s new cleanup program.

The lake had been polluted for as long as Paul could remember. Even as a kid, there had been TV commercials by the City, advertising its cleanup program. Making Your City Shine Again. Glittering clear water, children splashing about, smiling faces.

DEAD WATER ZONE.
Paul had seen a few of the warning buoys dotting the lake, marking out a perimeter around Watertown. In his letters, Sam said the City had been developing a microorganism that would break down the pollution. A garbage gobbler, he called it. Sam’s job was to test water samples brought to the labs from around the lake.

Paul pulled his underwear back on and stretched out on the bed. The sheets seemed clean enough. He wedged his wallet under the pillow and stared up at the ceiling. It felt good to lie down. He could hear the sound of water, and he thought he felt the house rocking gently on its stilts—maybe it was just his body, still in motion after the long hours of traveling. He closed his eyes. Keep going through the steps.

The call came five days ago, his brother’s voice wreathed in pay-phone static. They had talked awkwardly about everyday things. Then, in a sudden rush, Sam had told him he was in Watertown. He’d found something unusual in the water samples. No one else knew about it. He’d gone down himself to find out more. It was the only way. And then he said, “Something wonderful is going to happen.”

Sam’s voice was unbalanced, almost fanatical. What do you mean? Paul had asked. What are you
talking about? But Sam was evasive. There was so much work to be done, he didn’t have time to be talking on the phone. Paul kept insisting on the meeting until Sam agreed.

And he hadn’t even shown up. Okay, maybe he’d changed his mind. But why Jailer’s Pier? Impossible to find, completely deserted. Except for Monica. What was she doing there?

He was too tired. His thoughts were exploding away from him, dissolving. Everything would be all right. Tomorrow morning he’d see Sam and all his questions would be answered.

“How am I doing?” he panted.

While Sam checked his math homework, Paul did push-ups.

“Pretty good so far,” his brother answered. “Only a couple of mistakes, but they were tricky ones. I’ll pencil in the answers for you.”

“Thanks. Word problems are the worst.”

“How’d you do on your last test?”

“Twenty-two out of thirty.”

“Hey, better than last time.”

Sam was already two grades ahead of him. He could bring Sam any math problem, and his brother would just look at it for a few seconds and then scribble away, explaining as he went. Paul could ask him questions on any subject, and nine
times out of ten, Sam would have the answer on the tip of his tongue. People sometimes asked him if he got jealous, having a brother who was a genius, but he was proud of Sam. And happy enough with his own marks. “Good solid work,” one of his teachers had written on his report. Somehow it didn’t matter if he didn’t get brilliant marks, as long as Sam did. Marks were something they shared. Like Paul’s muscles.

“Randy Smith was such a pain today,” Sam remarked. “Thanks for thumping him for me.”

“I like thumping Smith,” Paul replied between push-ups. “If he hassles you again, we’ll give him a working over.”

“How many push-ups are you doing?”

“Fifty.”

“The doctor gave me some new pills today.”

“Yeah?”

“They look like hamster food.”

Paul couldn’t finish his last push-up, he was laughing so hard.

“But they’re not as big as the last ones. I could hardly get those in my mouth! She says these should help me put on weight.”

“They’ll work,” Paul answered confidently. “Pretty soon you’ll be pumping iron, lifting cars, small buildings.”

Sam chuckled. “I think I am getting stronger.
Last time we arm wrestled, I held out longer, didn’t I?”

“You did,” he said—convincingly, he hoped. The truth was, Sam seemed just the same, every time. Paul had to be very careful not to twist his pipe-cleaner wrist.

“When’s your next track competition?”

“End of the month.”

“Show me your muscles.”

Paul stood and flexed his bare arms, watching his biceps harden, the veins swell. He liked doing this for Sam. To the right of his brother, he could see his own reflection in the mirror. But he must have stood up too quickly. For just a moment, as he glanced from Sam to the reflection and back, it seemed that his brother’s head rested atop his muscular shoulders and his own body was suddenly frail and wizened.

He couldn’t sleep. He was all wound up. With a sigh, he angled his watch face to the moonlight: 2:18. He stood, pacing the room, trying to relax. At the window he paused: a clear sky littered with stars and a half-moon reflected brilliantly in the black lake water. Someone was there, on the pier.

Monica. Her long hair fell free against her back. Her skin seemed luminous in the moon’s light. She paused at the edge of the pier, knelt,
and stared down at the water. Her hands dipped in and came back cupped with water. She held it up to her face, then let it slither through her fingers, trailing in silver rivulets down her wrists and forearms.

Without warning, she pivoted and looked up at him. Their eyes met. He quickly turned away.

P
AUL GAZED DOWN
at the opaque green water swelling against the boat’s side. He shivered in the sharp morning chill. He wished he’d brought a sweater. Tendrils of mist swirled around them like miniature tornadoes, and overhead, a pale sun was waiting to burn through.

The water was strewn with debris, but Monica nosed the boat expertly around jagged timbers, car tires, plastic canisters, oil-slicked wooden spools.

He’d slept poorly—like some machine that wouldn’t shut itself off—and this morning his body ached, and the inside of his mouth felt like cheap carpeting. He found himself sneaking glances at Monica’s face. In the diffuse white light of the mist, she didn’t look as pale as she had last
night on the pier. He felt like a voyeur, peeping through windows, hoping for a bit of excitement. He should mind his own business.

“So why’d he run away?” she asked, her eyes fixed on the water.

Paul hesitated, then said, “Things weren’t good for him at home.”

That much was true. Sam had been so eager to get away from Governor’s Hill, from Mom and Dad. From him. It was a kind of running away.

“He skipped a lot of grades at school. He didn’t have many friends. He was way smarter than anyone his age but too small to mix with the older kids. He was always getting beaten up.”

“So you were the bodyguard.”

Paul nodded slowly, pleased. “I was always running interference for him on the way back and forth from school. Couldn’t be with him all the time, though.” He paused, uncomfortable. “A lot of it was his fault. He was lippy, pissing everyone off. If he’d have shut up, it would have been better for him.”

“It must have been a pain, babysitting.”

“It wasn’t babysitting,” he snapped angrily. But she was right; how many times had he used the same word himself?

Babysitting. It was a complicated feeling. He’d always felt like Sam’s protector. Sometimes
he’d have been happy to let him fend for himself. But whenever he thought of that one time, his throat contracted. They’d made him watch. No. He’d be seeing Sam soon, and everything would be all right.

Dark shapes loomed, then broke through the mist, a long line of decaying boathouses, some half submerged.

“That’s the one,” said Monica, pointing.

“How many times did you see him around here?”

“A couple,” she answered.

“What was he doing?”

“Looking around. That’s how I knew he was a stranger. It was funny, because at first…” She trailed off.

“What?”

“Nothing. You sure don’t look like your brother.”

“You never talked to him?”

“Why would I?”

She maneuvered slowly through the tangle of broken jetties. The outer doors of the boathouse were wide open, and she pushed the gears into neutral and swung inside. At the back, a set of stairs led up to a loft, partially concealed behind a low wall.

Monica nudged against the deck, looping the
painter deftly around a rusted metal cleat.

Paul was over the side at once.

“Sam!”

No answer.

“You sure this was the place?” he asked.

“This is it. Watch the planking. It looks rotten.”

“Sam!”

He climbed up to the loft.

It was the disorder that sent the first shriek of alarm through his head. Clothes were scattered about, jeans, shirts, socks, underwear—he even recognized one of the T-shirts he’d given Sam on his last birthday. Sam never left anything lying around.

Paul’s eyes picked out the broken remains of laboratory glassware. Several metal racks and some small lab implements were strewn nearby. Surely he’d brought more equipment than this! Where was it? And what about a sleeping bag? Food? He’d been down here for weeks. What was he living off?

“Looks like he cleared out,” Monica said behind him.

But then he saw his brother’s glasses, lying on the floor. Sam was almost blind without them. He’d never leave them behind.

There were endless possibilities here. You could slip from a pier, dash your head to pieces on
the timbers below. You could drown, get mugged, murdered for an empty wallet. But none of these things explained the glasses. Sam would have been wearing them. Broken equipment, clothes all over. Signs of a struggle? Maybe. With whom? Sam, what happened here?

“Maybe he’s planning on coming back.”

Paul slipped the glasses into his pocket.

“No. He’s not coming back.”

What was Sam doing down here, holed up in a deserted boathouse with test tubes and beakers, like some kid on a demented school field trip? Maybe if he’d come right after Sam’s phone call, instead of waiting a few days. Maybe it would have made a difference, maybe, maybe. He took a deep breath. There was nothing else to see here.

He gathered up the clothes. They still smelled of Sam. He brushed past Monica and headed down the steps, numb.

“We should have come last night,” he muttered, knowing it was unfair.

“You saw what the waters are like around here,” she said dispassionately.

“Something’s happened to him!” he shouted. “He could be dead! And you didn’t want to scratch your crappy boat!”

“Paul, I’m sorry! But it’s not my problem!”

“Not your problem! That’s great, that’s just—”

He hit the last step and felt it give way. The crack of splintering wood sounded in his ears as he lurched headlong toward the water, the bundle of clothes spilling out ahead of him. Suddenly Monica’s hand closed around his right arm, snapping him back. He was less surprised by the strength of her grip than by its coldness—an uncanny chill through the fabric of his sweatshirt.

He toppled clumsily to the deck, wrenching his foot free from the rotted wood. Sam’s clothing floated atop the filthy water, already sodden. He started snatching it out with furious determination, slapping it against the deck. He hardened his face, biting back tears.

Monica knelt beside him and fished out a few T-shirts and socks. Paul couldn’t look at her. He felt like a fool. He was captain of the track team, he could bench-press his own weight and more, and here he was, tripping on steps. She’d had to pull him back like a mother grabbing a little kid who’d wandered too close to the deep end! It wasn’t his fault. This whole stinking place was rotting under his feet.

They carried the clothes back to the boat in silence.

“Thanks,” he said grudgingly. “I’m sorry.”

“You missed something up in the loft.”

“What?”

She handed him a small square of plastic. It was a computer diskette. He blew off the dust and examined the label: S. B. Sam.

“Where was it?”

“Jammed against the wall.”

The motor shuddered to life. Her pale hands tapped the steering wheel as she stared straight ahead. “Look, I hope you find your brother, really I do. Where do you want to go? I’ll dump you anywhere you want.”

Paul was still looking at the diskette. “Do you have a computer?”

“Paul, this is really none of my business.” She hesitated, then said evenly, “What I mean is, I don’t want to do this anymore.”

He couldn’t blame her. He was a total stranger and she’d already done a lot. He rubbed his arm. It was sore where she’d grabbed him.

“Yeah, I’m sorry,” he said. “I really appreciate everything you’ve done.”

She shrugged, avoiding his eyes. “Where do you want to go?”

“Can you take me back to the main pier?”

“Done. Get in.” She started backing the boat out but then flipped it into neutral. “What are you going to do at the main pier?”

“I’ll try to get a computer.” He had no idea how.

“I can’t stand people like you, Paul,” she muttered. “I really can’t. You are so damn helpless. How is someone like you going to get a line on a computer in Watertown? Yellow Pages?” She gave a snort of irritation. “I can’t stand it. Ask Armitage about the computer when we get back. Maybe he’s got something kicking around. If not, I want you out of my life for good.”

Paul couldn’t help smiling in relief.

“And I don’t want another one of your suburban thank-yous.”

The last of the morning fog was burning off. Monica reached for a pair of sunglasses and perched on the back of her seat for a better view of the debris-strewn water. Paul turned the diskette over and over in his hands, as if it would suddenly offer up secrets. It might give him an idea of what Sam was doing down here, what had happened to him.

“Bad news.”

“What?” He scanned the water for menacing debris.

“Listen.”

Paul heard nothing but the growl of their engine. Monica pulled the boat around in a sharp turn and opened up the throttle.

“What’s going on?” Paul asked uneasily.

It was a few seconds before the rhythmic
thumping of rotor blades reached his ears. Then the helicopter broke through the veil of mist and drifted lazily over the boathouse roofs, in their direction.

A piece of debris knocked against the boat’s hull, then deflected off the propeller with a sharp grinding noise. Monica swore but didn’t slow down. But the helicopter had overtaken them, hovering low, shattering the water’s surface. Paul clamped his hands over his ears, wincing.

“Who are they?” he shouted.

“Don’t know,” she yelled back. “But I don’t think they’re tourists.”

With a sudden burst of speed, Monica aimed the boat straight at a high pier.

“Hey, what are you doing!” he shouted in alarm.

She hunched tighter over the wheel. Paul’s fingers dug into the plastic upholstery of his seat. The boat veered crazily around pilings and timbers and then shot underneath the pier and into shadow, with about two feet of clearance overhead. The boat slowed to a gentle glide.

“How did you know we’d fit?” Paul asked weakly.

“I’ve done it before. If there’s one thing I hate,” Monica muttered, steering the boat carefully between the pilings, “it’s unmarked helicopters.”

“I think I saw that one yesterday.”

“Me, too.”

“It took a good long look at me.”

She glanced over at him. “Armitage is not going to be happy.”

 

“It’s probably just some cops on their lunch break,” said Armitage easily. “I wouldn’t worry about it.”

He was sitting cross-legged in the boathouse, a laser disc player in his skinny lap, a metal file in one hand. He paused to study his handiwork.

“What do you think?” he asked Paul. “Can you read that?”

Paul obligingly peered at a metal plate on the back of the machine. The serial number was completely filed away.

“Looks good to me.”

“Take it from the expert,” said Monica with soft sarcasm. Paul felt his face flush. The closest he got to the world of crime in Governor’s Hill was the movies.

Armitage waved his file at the diskette in Paul’s hand. “Runaways don’t usually drag around portable computers.”

“Sam’s a strange guy,” Paul replied awkwardly, hoping Armitage wouldn’t pursue it.

Armitage replaced the laser disc player in its
box and stood up, dusting metal filings from his trousers.

“I don’t have anything here right now,” he said. “Tell you what, though, I’ve got to go into the docklands today for business. Why don’t you let me take it in? I can get a hard copy run off for you.”

Paul desperately wanted the magnetic secrets, but he knew he couldn’t give the diskette to Armitage.
Tell no one
: Sam’s words.

“I’d rather keep hold of it,” Paul said. “If you don’t mind.”

Armitage looked at him for a long time.

“You don’t trust me, Paul?”

Paul shuffled his feet awkwardly. “It’s just that—”

“You’re smart,” Armitage said. “It’s safer not to trust people. But I’m a busy man, Paul. You can’t really expect me to bring back a computer, just for you.”

“No.” He’d overstepped again. “If you can’t do it, you can’t do it.”

“I didn’t say I can’t do it. The question is, Will I do it? I can get anything I want out there.”

“I’m sure you can,” Paul said quickly; he didn’t want any raised hackles.

“You don’t believe me?”

“I do. Really.” He didn’t want a scene.

“I can get anything I want out of this town. I’ll get your computer. I’m going to further your education, Paul. You can do a project on it when you get back to school—something on bristol board maybe. But it might take a day or two.”

Paul couldn’t help smiling. “Um, all right.”

But Monica was shaking her head angrily. “Forget it, Armitage. It’s time for him to go.”

“What are you talking about?” asked Armitage.

“I’ve got a bad feeling about this. There was an unmarked helicopter out there. He said it spooked him yesterday as he was coming here. And there it was again when we were leaving the boathouse. Am I the only person who sees a connection? For all we know, this brother of his could be wanted by the cops.”

“He’s not—” Paul began to protest.

“They got a good look at me, Armitage, and I don’t like that. You shouldn’t either. If they trace him here, we go down.”

“Paranoid,” her brother said dismissively.

“What the hell’s wrong with you?” she demanded.

“They were probably just standard pass-overs.”

“You’re getting careless.”

“I’m not getting careless. I know exactly what
I’m doing! I’m staying real sharp. All you have to do is go through people’s pockets, okay? The rest is for me to worry about!”

“What about your rule? No strangers on the pier.”

“You brought him, Monica.”

“For one night. I felt sorry for him, okay? And now I’m getting edgy.”

Paul could only watch, mortified. He’d grown up with tense silences, unspoken words, dark looks at the dinner table. People weren’t supposed to fight like this, especially not in public. People were supposed to keep it in.

“You’re talking crap!” Armitage said. “I haven’t screwed up yet. I’m holding things together for us—better than Mom ever did.”

“Shut up, Armitage!”

“Mom’s not here anymore! Good thing, too, ’cause she was useless!”

“She taught you,” Monica said coldly. “Stealing—and lots of other things, too.”

“Yeah, she did. And then she let it all fall apart!”

Monica seemed to lose all her fire. She shrugged indifferently. “So you want me to stick around here all day, that it?”

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