Raft of Stars by Andrew Graff (good books for high schoolers .txt) ๐
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- Author: Andrew Graff
Read book online ยซRaft of Stars by Andrew Graff (good books for high schoolers .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Andrew Graff
โTiff, I just stopped by to ask if you would please watch my dog.โ
Tiffany nodded and began pouring two mugs of coffee. Cal stood and took a step toward her to receive one. Without hearing him, Tiffany turned flat up against him, nearly spilling the coffee held up between their faces. She was shorter than he was, but not by much. Cal forgot himself. Tiffany smelled like flowers, or candy. Cal couldnโt put his finger on it. She had a beautiful face. Cal swallowed and took the dripping mugs by their rims and set them on the table.
โSo, can you watch him, then?โ Cal asked, the words dry in his mouth as he wiped a small spill with his sleeve.
โSure,โ she said. โCal?โ
He looked at her.
She looked at him, and then shook her head.
โItโs good to have you over,โ she said. โIโll take good care of your dog.โ
Cal thanked her and told Jacks to stay and walked to the door. The light outside was purple now. Soon itโd be pink, and the sun would rise above the brown fields surrounding Claypot. Cal felt Tiffanyโs hand inside his elbow. She handed him a mug.
โTake it with you,โ she said. โDo good.โ
โThanks,โ he said, and smiled at her. โAnd thanks for the coffee.โ He walked down the steps and called back from his truck, โAnd thanks for watching Jacks!โ She grinned and waved at him, crossed her arms over her chest, and then she stooped to snatch Jacksโ collar to keep him inside.
As Cal drove back to Teddyโs, he found his mind still in that small kitchen. The smell of coffee, the smell of a woman, and then it came to him. Lavender. Tiffany Robins smells like lavender. He smiled at the pink light over the fields and woods. Drove with his hands loose on the wheel. He rubbed his eyes and face and cursed himself, sat upright in his cab. He was sheriff again. Two scared boys about to lose themselves in a forest were having a very bad time.
โSit tight, fellas,โ Cal said, pushing the wheel through a gravel turn. โDonโt run.โ
Six
โTHIS IS KIND OF A GOOD TIME!โ SAID BREAD. HE AND FISH knelt in the morning sun next to the riverbank with their supplies laid out on a tarp. The dew on the grass soaked the knees of Fishโs jeans, but it didnโt bother him. It couldnโt. Theyโd need to get used to discomforts from here on outโthe damp and dirt, maybe hunger tooโthey were in the wild. It surprised Fish how unshaken Bread seemed this morning after what happened the night before. But then, Fish felt less shaken too. Here they were at their favorite spot on the river, a whole mess of bushcrafting supplies before them, and they were going to build a raft and name it and take it downriver with poles. The water slid between islands and toppled over boulders. A finch sat in a tree and watched, cocked its small eye toward the boys. Yesterday was a dream. Today was a good time. They could do this.
โOkay,โ said Fish, โwhich of us is going to carry the barlow?โ
Bread pursed his lips and studied the pocketknife. In their rush to leave last night, their gear became what Fishโs grandpa would have called lopsided. First on the agenda this morning, after waking amid boulders and stumbling to the river to pee in the rapids, was fixing that lopsidedness. Itโs something Fishโs grandpa used to do when he took him hunting or fishing in these forests. When one of them lost too many lures or ate up his reserves of jerky, his grandpa would take a break on a stump somewhere and lay his vest and pack on the ground. Last thing you want in the bush, heโd say, pushing back the brim of his green cap, is lopsided supplies. Fish enjoyed the process. It meant a break from hiking. It meant he could take the brass cartridges out of his rifle, count them, and put them back in again. It usually meant heโd get more of his grandpaโs jerky. Itโs poor form, his grandpa explained, for one guy to have all of one thing and the other to have all of another thing. If one guy has all the jerky and loses his pack, then nobody has any jerky. Gotta divvy it up, and re-divvy it. Same with lures and matches and shot shells. How many you got left?
The boys had already divided the matches. They each had ten, and even tore the striker in half to share it. They each had two fishing lures, red and white bobbers, collapsible poles, two Slim Jims, one can of Bumble Bee
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