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Authors: Michael Winerip

The Last Reporter

BOOK: The Last Reporter
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“Adam, are you there?” Jennifer banged on the van. “I know you are!” she shouted. She cupped her hands around her eyes and stood on tiptoe to see through the tinted windows. He
was
in there, his legs stretched out on the floor by the backseat, motionless.

Her
legs had goose bumps. The wind was blowing off the river, and it seemed more like early March than early May. “Come on, Adam. . . . You can’t do this. You knew I was coming over!” She banged on the van several more times. “We’ve been planning this for a week . . .
Adam!
” She peered in again. Not a twitch.

Jennifer was standing in Adam’s driveway, screaming at his locked van.
“Adam Canfield, you birdbrain, you know we have to see the Ameche brothers! Wake up! AAAAAAAAAA-dam!”

“Jennifer, sweetie. Stop.” It was Adam’s mother, standing at the front-porch door. “You’re dealing with an Olympic-class sleeper. You’ve got to pull out the big guns.” She stretched her arm toward the van and pressed her key, unlocking the doors. “Go hard,” she called.

Jennifer slid the side door open. She grabbed Adam’s ankle and shook it. Nothing. She did it again.

“Come on,” she said. “I know you’re awake.”

“I’m not. Go away.”

“How come you’re talking if you’re not awake?” she said.

There was a long pause.

“Only my lips are awake.”

Jennifer climbed up onto the middle seat of the van. She was on her knees, facing the back, elbows resting on the seat top, staring down at Adam on the floor. She made a hocking sound.

“Adam Canfield, if you don’t wake up right now — and I mean all of you, not just your lips — I will spit this loogie right on your head. One . . .”

She made a hocking sound again. He was sure she was bluffing. Jennifer’s manners were way too good for her to spit on her coeditor.

“Two . . .” A double hocking sound. No way she could hold all that loogie in without gagging. She was definitely bluffing. He wished he could take a peek to be sure, but then it would be hard to argue that he was asleep.

“Three.”

He felt something wet.

“Gross!” he screamed, sitting bolt upright and using his sleeve to wipe the side of his face.

She held up a water bottle and let a few drops fall. “Faked you out.”

“You are a terrible person,” Adam said. “I wasn’t hurting a fly, taking a little Sunday afternoon nap. . . .”

“A nap?” Jennifer said. “You take naps in your van?”

“Lots of people sleep in the car,” said Adam.

“Not when it’s parked in the driveway.”

Did he have to explain himself every second? On a chilly afternoon with lots of sun, the van was the coziest place he knew. He’d been minding his own business, playing Bubble Struggle on the computer for maybe two hours at most, when his parents started making a big thing about how he was wasting his life on “stupid” computer games and then staying up past midnight to finish his homework. Somehow that calm discussion had turned into a yelling match. So he’d stomped out of the family room to prove his point, ducked out the back door by the boiler room, and circled toward the front of the house, trying to think of a plan. There was the van, looking warm and friendly. He’d climbed in for a minute.

“Close the door,” he said to Jennifer. “It’s freezing out.”

“Your mom says you’ve been conked out for more than two hours.”

His mom knew he was in the van? What was she, the FBI? Just for one second, couldn’t she be like other moms and feel terrible because he’d run away?

“I had the strangest dream,” Adam said. “I dreamed that we had no school tomorrow because they came out with a new flavor of Brown-Sugar Wallops.”

Jennifer just stared at him.

“Your hair’s different,” he said.

She smiled. She’d put it in braids, and she wiggled her head back and forth to bounce them.

“They look like the flying swings at Tri-River Adventure Park,” he said. “I love that ride.”

“I guess that’s a compliment,” she said. “We’ve got to go. I told the Ameche brothers we’d be there by now. I need you to take this seriously, Adam. I really think they’re our best chance to save the
Slash.

“Right,” said Adam. He was thinking of the long list of people who had tried to save the
Slash
— their school newspaper at Harris Elementary/Middle School — and how all of them had failed.

Mrs. Quigley, the acting principal, hadn’t been able to save the
Slash,
and she loved Adam and Jennifer.

Mr. Brooks, his favorite teacher, hadn’t been able to save the
Slash.

A letter from the National Scholastic Press Association on official stationery defending freedom of the press hadn’t been able to save the
Slash.

A story in the
New York Times
that praised the
Slash
hadn’t saved the
Slash.

How were the Ameche brothers going to save the
Slash
? They were just kids. Adam had said all of this to Jennifer more than once, but the girl would not quit.

“You’re the one who’s dreaming,” he said.

“Got to live your dreams,” said Jennifer, jumping out of the van. Adam did not move; he seemed to be struggling with a large lump in his pocket. He finally pulled out a plastic grocery bag with a smooth, rock-hard white sphere inside, almost as big as a tennis ball.

“My God, what is that?” asked Jennifer. “It looks like a giant eyeball.”

Adam took it from the bag and stuffed it into his mouth. His eyes bulged from opening his jaw so wide. After a lot of loud slurping, he popped the ball back into the bag with his tongue.

“Want a suck of my jawbreaker?” he said. “It’s delicious.”

Adam and Jennifer biked together, racing much of the way.

“Passing on the left!” he yelled, streaking by her.

“Au revoir, mon chéri,”
she called when she overtook him.

The e-mail from the Ameche brothers had said they lived in the West End, which was on the other side of the downtown area. It was a pretty long ride, twenty minutes even biking hard, but Adam loved this time of year, when he could bike everywhere. His bike was his freedom. He loved riding to the West End and often wished he lived there. It was a beachy neighborhood by the river that had once been a summer community of little cottages. Over the years, city people had moved out to live there full-time, winterizing the cottages, adding porches and decks and second and third floors.

Houses in the West End were crowded in so close that backyards were just narrow strips. Most houses did not have garages or driveways, so the streets and alleys were crammed with parked cars.

That’s what Adam loved: everything was more squeezed together than in River Path or River Bluffs, where he and Jennifer lived. Every block had restaurants and bars and delis and pizzerias. And real shops: a butcher, a florist, a tailor, along with ice-cream and hardware stores and even a baseball-card store. And people were always walking around, even late at night. Kids in the West End had no trouble getting up wiffle ball or touch-football games or finding other kids to kick around a Hacky Sack. To Adam, the West End seemed like one big sleepover.

All the West End streets and alleys were named for months or states. February Path. Minnesota Walk. The Ameche brothers’ e-mail said they lived on May Way West, in the middle of the block.

“That must be it,” Jennifer said. “The e-mail said to look for a basketball hoop painted in zebra stripes with a neon-orange backboard.”

Adam perked up. Zebra stripes? Neon-orange backboard?

Who were these Ameche brothers?

The house had stairs leading down to a basement and up to a front porch. “To the cave or the mountains?” asked Adam.

“Neither,” said Jennifer. “They said to follow the yellow wire along the side of the house to the back. They said their headquarters is out back.”

“Headquarters?” repeated Adam.

Who
were
these Ameche brothers?

The coeditors walked around the side, along a concrete path, to a high fence in back. Adam reached over the gate and undid the latch.

It was stunning to take in so much clutter at once: old motors, engine parts, used tires, gardening tools, a ripped hockey net, half a kayak paddle, several buckets of muddy golf balls, three broken fishing poles, a power mower with no wheels, a deflated blow-up raft, divers’ wet suits, assorted boots. The yard was mostly cement, and along the back fence were stacks of orange plastic storage containers that reached past the top.

Adam noticed that it smelled a little bad. The odor seemed to come from the garden, which was against the house, but it wasn’t like most gardens Adam had seen. There were three tiers of soil climbing upward like stairs, each bordered by long wooden beams. If Adam wasn’t mistaken, they were filled with tomato plants. Adam could see little bones sticking out of the soil. And there seemed to be — could it be? — lots of bird doo?

“Maybe this is a mistake,” said Jennifer. “I think we should go.”

“No,” said Adam. “This is great. How did you find these guys again?”

“I told you ten times — online,” Jennifer whispered. She’d been trying to think of some way they could raise money to put out the
Slash
all by themselves, now that the paper had been closed down by the school board for causing too much trouble. She’d found the Ameches’ ad on TremblesList, under “Business Start-Ups/Kids.” The listing said that they were kids themselves, experts at starting up businesses for fellow kids. They said that they’d started a bunch of businesses, including a computer-repair business, a motorbike-repair business, a motor-scooter repair business, a model-airplane repair business, a cookie sales business, a golf-ball sales business, a lemonade-stand franchise business, an iPod music-download business, a toy-repair business, a spaghetti-sauce business, a tomato-paste business, a ketchup business, a pickled-tomato business, a tomato-soup business, a diced-tomato business, a stewed-tomato business, and a fresh-tomato business.

When Jennifer wrote, they’d messaged back saying that they’d never started a newspaper but would be happy to try one.

“I thought it would be nicer,” Jennifer said. “More official-looking. We should go.”

BOOK: The Last Reporter
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