#FreeDailyReadingFix - Wild Child 1, Part 5
Chapter 1.3
Kyle sat slumped in the boat’s passenger
seat, in a daze, while Briana drove back to the marina. He kept looking at the water bottle, then
back at her, trying to make some sense out of what had happened.
As they approached the marina, Kyle snapped
part-way out of his stupor and decided to take the wheel himself. He trusted her to drive around the lake, but
not where she could do any damage. The
summer before, she had driven the boat too close to some rocks and had broken
the propeller, which was one of many reasons Kyle’s father didn’t want him out
on the lake with her. Of course, Kyle
had lied to his dad and said that he had been driving the boat, but Kyle Senior
seemed to have a sixth sense about that kind of thing.
Kyle pulled the throttle back to a fast idle
and they glided past the rows and rows of sailboats that lined the left side of
the cove. She picked up the water bottle
and peered at it, turning it this way and that.
“I think it’s losing its glow.
Don’t you?” She held the bottle
out to him.
“I don’t know,” he said, barely glancing at
it. He was so upset and confused that he
couldn’t seem to think at all.
They soon reached the dock and he turned off
the engine. Kyle stepped off the boat to
tie it up.
“I
feel greeeeat!” Briana yelled.
It was so loud and unexpected that Kyle
almost fell into the water. Several
fishermen who were launching a bass boat turned and looked in their direction.
“Shhh!” Kyle hissed at her. “What’s the matter with you?”
“But I do feel great, Kyle. If I knew who ran me over, I’d kiss them for
it.”
Kyle wondered when the euphoric effects of
whatever was in the water would wear off.
She picked up the bottle and inspected it
again. “It’s definitely losing its glow,”
she said, with obvious disappointment.
She flipped the top up and sniffed it, then crinkled up her nose and
held it out to Kyle. “Smell.”
He cautiously leaned over and took a whiff. He almost gagged—it smelled vaguely like
rotten eggs.
“I better pour it out,” she said.
“No,” he said, glancing over at the
fishermen. For all he knew, it might
froth up the water or turn the whole lake green. “Put it in the cooler and we’ll dump it
later.”
She snapped the lid back in place and did as
he told her. After they got the boat
tidied up, they carried the cooler and life jackets over to his jeep and got
ready to leave. When Kyle started the
engine, Briana said, “I can’t wait to tell Tanya about this.”
He immediately turned the engine off. “You’re not telling Tanya anything, Brie.”
“Because nobody in their right mind will
believe you. I want to forget this whole
thing ever happened. You seem to be all
right, and that’s all that matters.
Okay?”
“I’m not going to just forget it! How can you say that? I want to take someone else back there
tomorrow, someone who’ll appreciate it.”
Kyle felt himself becoming angry. “You’re not taking anybody back here...” A couple of little boys carrying bamboo
fishing rods walked in front of the jeep and eyed them curiously. Kyle waited until they were well out of
earshot before he continued. “Look, Brie...I
don’t know—or even understand—what happened here today. What I do know is that if my father finds out
about it, I’m in deep trouble. I’m not
even supposed to be hanging around with you, let alone taking you out on his
boat.”
“Thanks a lot,” Briana said, crossing her
arms.
“Well, I can’t help how he feels about you.”
“Maybe not, but you don’t have to let him run
your life.”
“I don’t let him run my life.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“You know exactly what it means. You could have gone away to college with me,
but you’re staying here because of Daddy.”
“No I’m not.
I’m staying here because I can go to school for free, because he works
there.”
She rolled her eyes, then looked away. “Well, I think there’s another reason.”
“What’s that?” Kyle asked, feeling a little
uneasy.
Kyle felt a sharp pain in the pit of his
stomach. In a way, she was right. It may not have been the only reason he had
decided to stay in town to go to college, but it was certainly one of
them. He had been pretty wild himself
when he had met her back in the tenth grade.
But over the last couple of years, he had mellowed a lot. Not that he was conservative like his father,
but he had begun to be concerned about his future—he didn’t want to end up
working in a McDonald’s or a Walmart the rest of his life. Briana didn’t seem to be concerned about
anything but having a good time from one moment to the next.
But of course, he couldn’t tell her
this. Instead, he searched for something
to say to her that wouldn’t hurt her feelings, but was still honest.
“You’re my best friend, Brie. You know that.”
She eyed him warily. “If that’s true, then how come we never do
what I want to do?”
“What are you talking about?” I brought you out here on the boat, didn’t
I? Even when I’m not supposed to.”
“Yeah.
But you wouldn’t drink the green water.”
Kyle shrugged. “You’re right. I wouldn’t.”
“Well what?
I’m not going to just drink anything anybody shoves in my face.”
“But look what it did for me,” she said,
pointing to the scar on her stomach. By
now, it was only a vague, pencil-thin white line that could have been nothing
more than a well-healed cat scratch.
“I see that, but there’s no reason I should
drink it. There’s nothing wrong with me.”
“That’s not the point!” she said with
exasperation. “It’s how it makes you feel, Kyle. It’s what it makes you able to do.”
She looked out the window, as if searching for something to convince
him. “Remember when we did the coke?”
“Remember how you said you felt like you were
so powerful you could do anything?”
“Yeah.
I didn’t like it.”
“Ha!
You wanted to buy some more the very next day!”
“That’s right. That’s exactly why I didn’t like it.”
“Well, this is different. It’s not addictive, and it doesn’t make you
feel bad afterwards. It’s good for you.”
“Oh, really?
And how do you know that?”
“I just know, that’s all. It’s healthy.
It’s natural.” She nodded to her
scar again. “How could something bad for
you do that?”
She had a point, he had to admit. And there was a part of him that was tempted
to try it. He turned and glanced at the
cooler, where they had put the water bottle.
“I’ve got an idea,” he said.
“I could get my dad to take it to school and
have it tested. We could find out what’s
in it.”
“Who cares what’s in it?”
“I care.
I’m not touching the stuff unless I know what the ‘active ingredient’
is.”
“I’ll bet there isn’t any active
ingredient. I think it’s just
water. Wonderful water.”
“Well, if I am, will you drink it, too?”
She rolled her eyes. “Major Snooze. No, I’m giving you a promotion for that
one. Colonel Snooze.”
Kyle ignored her and started up the
jeep. They drove for a few minutes in
silence.
“Damn it,” Kyle muttered.
“We left our phones on the boat.”
Briana shrugged. “I don’t care.” She turned and looked at the cooler. “Where are you going to tell your dad you got
that stuff? I don’t want a bunch of
nerdy professors to mess up our secret.”
“I don’t know,” Kyle said. “But I’ll think of something.”
Chapter 1.4
When Kyle got home, he found Kyle Senior
sitting at the kitchen table, absorbed in one of his engineering journals. That’s how he always thought of his
father—Dr. Kyle Dunlap, Senior, big-shot university professor. Kyle was only Kyle Dunlap, Jr.
Kyle set the cooler down by the sink.
“How was school today?” Kyle Senior asked,
without looking up.
“Fine.”
Kyle opened the cooler and dumped out the melting ice, keeping the
plastic water bottle out of his father’s line of sight.
“How was the beer you stole from the
refrigerator?”
Kyle started to answer “fine” automatically,
but stopped with his mouth half-open.
His face flushed.
Kyle Senior put down the journal. “It’s all right, Kyle. I’m not mad.
But I don’t like the idea of you operating the boat while you’re
drinking.”
He peered at Kyle over the top of his reading
glasses. “Honest?”
“Yeah.
Daniel had two, but he didn’t drive the boat.”
His father looked skeptical. “You didn’t ski today?”
“On a great day like this was? I’ll bet the water was smooth as glass out
there.”
“It was,” Kyle said, remembering how the lake
had looked before he and Briana had taken their fateful swim.
“Well, if you didn’t ski, what did you do?”
“Nothing,” Kyle said, with a shrug. “Just laid around a while and swam a
little. I wasn’t in the mood to ski.”
Kyle Senior looked his son over more
closely. “Are you feeling all right?”
“I’m fine, Dad,” Kyle said, turning his back
towards the sink.
“You look like you might be a little shaken
up or something.”
“I’m fine,” Kyle repeated. “I might have gotten a little too much sun,
that’s all.”
Kyle simply shrugged again. He wasn’t surprised that his father had
noticed something amiss—he had that spacey, washed-out feeling you get from
staying up all night studying for a test, only this was a lot worse. He tried not to think about what had happened
on the lake. It seemed so unreal. He turned on the water and started rinsing
out the cooler, aware of his father’s eyes still on him. After a long moment, he finally heard the
pages of the journal turning again.
Kyle pulled out the plastic bottle, still
keeping it out of his father’s sight.
Now, the water looked completely ordinary—there was no glow
whatsoever. He snapped the top open and
carefully inhaled. To his surprise, he
could only faintly smell the previously intense rotten odor.
He turned to face his father again. “Dad?”
“Yes,” Kyle Senior said absently, looking up from
his journal.
“I was wondering if you could have this water
checked at school.”
Kyle’s father looked surprised. “Why?
What’s the matter with it?”
“I don’t know if anything’s the matter with
it. It’s from a spring out by the lake
that some of the kids are drinking from, and I didn’t want to drink any unless
I knew it was okay.”
Kyle Senior smiled. “That’s smart, son,” he said, getting that I must have done something right look
that parents get from time to time. “I’ll
give it to Hal Litchfield over in chemistry in the morning. Set it by the front door so I won’t forget
it.”
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