they turned in their places so that Patricia was now facing Kellyâs back. It was difficult to stop the boat from going in a circle, but eventually she was able to keep it on a fairly straight course.
âYouâre really doing well!â Kellyâs expression was one of undisguised admiration. Then she looked embarrassed, as if she hadnât meant to sound so friendly. âNext time, Potty, Iâll let you try taking it out alone. Letâs switch again. Iâll take us to the Main Beach and back.â
All the way there Patricia matched her strokes to her cousinâs. Every time she lifted up her paddle it left spinning whorls in the water. Her arm was getting sore, but she kept going. I can paddle a canoe! she thought. Like Kelly ⦠like Ruth.
âWhy is this canoe called the Loon ?â she asked.
âBecause loons come here. Our grandparents must have named itâitâs a really old canoe. Christie and Bruceâs is lighter, but this oneâs steadier.â
âWhat do loons look like?â
âDonât you know?â A trace of familiar scorn came back into Kellyâs voice. âLoons are wonderfulâbig birds with black heads and speckled bands around their necks. They used to nest on this lake but now itâs too noisy, so they just come here to feed. You hear them mostly at night. They sound like theyâre laughing. Thatâs why people say someoneâs loony. Itâs a weird, laughing sound.â
But beautiful, too, Patricia remembered. She wished she were in the canoe with Ruth again. She wondered what Ruth was doing. Being in the Loon with Kelly, who looked like Ruth but wasnât, made her long for the other girl.
T HAT EVENING Aunt Ginnie sent them to the store as usual to get the paper. On the way they called on Christie and Bruce. Patricia cringed when Uncle Rod came into the backyard and boomed a greeting.
âWell, hereâs our little Easterner! Why are you still so white, when the others are as brown as berries?â
âI donât know,â whispered Patricia. She examined him fearfully. All that was left of his boyhood hair was a grey fringe above his ears. His expression was still patronizing; he looked at her in the present the way he did at Ruth in the past.
âReady to show me your teeth, now?â Uncle Rod loomed over her.
âDaddy, we have to go!â said Christie impatiently. Patricia scuttered down the driveway after her cousins.
When they neared the store she looked around eagerly for the pump. It was still there, but it was rusty and half-buried in weeds.
âDoes that old pump still work?â she asked Bruce.
âNo,â Kelly answered for him. âThey boarded up the well years ago because the water was contaminated.â
Patricia walked on sadly, her mouth recalling the waterâs tang. Then she brightened, remembering that she could go back and taste it again.
The Other Enders were sitting around the store. They read comics and chewed gum just as they had thirty-five years ago. Two of them even resembled the Thorpe girls from the past. For an instant Patricia forgot what time she was in.
Kelly walked by the group without a word.
âHey, Kelly!â called one of the Cresswell boys, putting down his comic. His sister stared haughtily at them.
âWhat you want?â Kelly said coolly.
âJust to remind you to leave our boat alone or Iâll tell my parents.â
âDonât worry,â retorted Kelly. âI wouldnât touch your stupid boat. I just wanted to see how flimsy it was and I was right.â
Her words sounded lame. The row of eyes observed her with pity, then dropped to their reading.
âSomehow weâve got to get them!â said Kelly on the way home. âTheyâre one up on us now.â
Patricia sighed guiltily; Kelly was probably remembering how she had let her down at the Cresswells.
Maggie ran to catch up with
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