youâre going to smother us.â
She laughed and eased off a bit. âSorry, guys. Iâm just so happy to have my Kesh home, safe and sound.â
When the scrum broke up, Officer Wolfe shook both parentsâ hands and crouched down to Keshâs level to look into his eyes. He said, âYouâre going to be fine, but keep your eyes open, and keep a quick wit. Youâre going to need it.â Kesh nodded. Then the policeman added, âThe best thing you can do is tell your parents everything. Trust me on this one.â
Kesh let out a very quiet, private gasp. He had just met this man, and he was hesitant to trust anyone, even a cop. He shot the policeman a look.
The officer winked. âI know itâs hard and itâs going to get a lot harder before itâs over, but you need to have faith, young man. Have faith.â
Once again, Kesh caught his breath for a moment. As the big man got back into his squad car, he whispered, âIâll try.â
âWhat were you thinking, Kesh, running off like that in the middle of the night? We were worried sick.â Kesh could see that his parents were angry, as parents tend to be at times like this, but they were also relieved and visibly sorry for their part in the whole mess. Still, he wasnât sure of what that part was. How could they have ignored the terrifying scene in the living room? Then again, he thought, maybe that part was just a dream, or, even worse, maybe he was hallucinating.
He just might be going crazy. Crazy people see things that arenât there. He thought, Maybe Iâm schizophrenic! He didnât know that much about mental illness, but heâd seen enough movies to know it looked a lot like what he was experiencing. Something had driven him into the cold last night, and nothing about the night was normal.
For now, though, Kesh was exhausted and relieved to be home and glad to be safe in his fatherâs arms. Although he was twelve years old, and he knew he should have been embarrassed, he let his head settle onto the strong shoulder, and his attention drifted off to the yard directly across the street, Taylor Georgeâs house. Mrs. George and Taylor were just getting off to school. Kesh blinked. Next to Mrs. George, where Taylor had been just a moment before, was now a low, flat, broad creature with a white stripe blazing up a black forehead and down its back all the way to the tip of its tail. Kesh shook his head and tried to blink away the hallucination, and suddenly it was just Taylor again smiling and waving.
That night, as he lay in his bed, Kesh tried to sort everything out in his mind. He had a hunch that the badger he had seen in Taylorâs yard was the beginning of a lot of problems. Maybe, he thought, he had actually seen Taylorâs animal spirit. He knew badgers had a reputation for being pretty feisty, even nasty, so it fit his classmate to a tee. Then again, he couldnât help but wonder if he was seriously nuts. If he was going to be seeing animals all over the place, he needed to know why. As he stared at the dark ceiling above his bed, he imagined he heard, off in the distance, the strangely familiar howl of a coyote.
He lay awake, unable to sleep, his mind racing across a landscape of darkness and danger and wonder. And he kept thinking about what the policeman had said. âTell them everything.â
Finally, he turned over, opened his journal, and began writing.
Â
Okay, so Iâm supposed to believe I saw a python and a panther in my living room last night. Then I spent the night following a talking muskrat to a meeting with a talking spider. And Iâm supposed to tell my parents about this? Theyâd think I was out of my frigginâ mind. The whole thing is way too weird. If I try to tell them what really happened they wonât believe me. And why should they? I donât even believe me. At least I donât know if I do. Theyâll smile and
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