The Trap Read online




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Acknowledgements

  Sample Chapter from THE WRAP-UP LIST

  Buy the Book

  About the Author

  Copyright © 2015 by Steven Arntson

  All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

  www.hmhco.com

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

  Arntson, Steven, 1973–

  The trap / by Steven Arntson.

  p. cm.

  Summary: In 1963, when twins Henry and Helen and their best friends, Alan and Nicki, try to find Alan’s missing brother, Carl, they stumble into the knowledge of their “subtle forms” that can separate from their physical bodies, and into a criminal’s plot to make himself immortal—at any expense.

  ISBN 978-0-547-82408-6

  [1. Supernatural—Fiction. 2. Best friends—Fiction. 3. Friendship—Fiction. 4. Brothers and sisters—Fiction. 5. Twins—Fiction. 6. Family life—Iowa— Fiction. 7. Iowa—History—20th century—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.A7415Tr 2015

  [Fic]—dc23

  2014010211

  eISBN 978-0-547-82412-3

  v1.0415

  THE LAST DAY of summer break before the start of my seventh grade year was the first time I ever got punched in the face.

  It was August 1963 and a hot, humid summer afternoon outside of Farro, Iowa. I don’t know if you’ve been to southeast Iowa, but in summertime going outside here can be like walking into a lung. I once saw a guy in a grocery store parking lot faint into his own shopping cart.

  “Why are we spending the last day of vacation trying to help Carl?” I complained, wiping sweat from my brow as we four (me and my sister Helen with our best friends Alan and Nicki) pedaled along an easy slope. “He beat up Ernest last week.” Ernest wasn’t a personal friend of mine, but he was a good example of someone Carl Dunn had recently clobbered. Every kid around Farro was anxious about Carl, and not in the sense of worrying about his welfare. He was the worst bully in Johnson County, and he’d gotten twice as bad this summer, almost like he was taking lessons. I was terrified of him, and plenty nervous about scouting around for his secret hideout. But I was willing to, all the same, mainly because Carl was Alan’s older brother, and Alan was my best friend.

  Alan and Carl were mostly opposites. Carl was tall and Alan was short. Carl was dumb; Alan was smart. Carl was a bully who ruled the whole town of Farro with threats and violence. Alan was a nice kid, friends with almost everyone. The only things the two of them shared were their dark summer tans and high batting averages—the first because they were both part Nez Perce Indian, and the second because they both took after their dad when it came to baseball. Myself, I was terrible at baseball. Also I never tanned, only burned.

  There was one other reason I was out here today—Helen’s best friend Nicki pedaling beside me as we turned onto North Half, a dirt lane that edged the lip of Longbelly Gulch.

  Nicki’s bike was blue, with red tassels on her handlebar grips. Her tires were the kind with white sidewalls, streaked with dirt from a busy summer. I studied her bike because I was too nervous to study her. She was right there, wearing sandals, muscly smooth brown legs, red shirt, shiny black hair, button nose, but I couldn’t take more than a sidewise glance, because I would’ve crashed.

  I had a crush on her. I’m not sure when it started, and at this point maybe it didn’t matter. It took a lot of energy for me to act normal around her, so I focused on that.

  When Nicki put on a burst of speed, I followed. We came neck and neck with Helen and left Alan trailing. Alan’s bike was in sad shape. He’d inherited it from Carl years ago. There were broken spokes front and back, and the rear axle didn’t have any lug nuts so sometimes the wheel fell off. It was less of a bike and more of a bike accident.

  Helen and I rode brown ten-speeds, identical except mine was boy’s style with the straight top bar and hers was girl’s style with the angled top bar so she could ride while wearing a dress. (Not that she was wearing a dress. She never wore one during summer vacation.) Identical bikes are one of those things that happen when you’re twins, even girl and boy twins. Two of everything. Twins are always plural, like pants or scissors. Nobody thinks of a single pant, or just one scissor.

  Our bikes were a little small. We were supposed to get new ones this year for our birthday, but Mom and Dad couldn’t afford them. Dad’s job at the rail yard was giving him fewer hours, and we were having to “tighten our belts,” Dad said. Keeping two old bikes was the equivalent of two notches on the family financial belt, I believe.

  Helen’s bike had a racing stripe and flames painted on, which she’d done when she got it, angry about it being girl’s style. She said I should have gotten the girl’s-style bike, and maybe she was right, since she liked to go off jumps and I didn’t. Helen was also always quick to point out that she was twenty minutes older than me. In general, she was the boss of us. For instance, when this plan of seeking out Carl’s hidden campsite was first presented by Alan, I’d said, “We should think about this first,” which is what I usually say. Then Helen had grabbed my ear and dragged me outside—her usual reply.

  North Half reeked of oil because around here they oil dirt roads in the summer to keep the dust down. I’m not sure which is worse, the stench of the oil or the dust, but I guess the people who spread the oil must hate the dust.

  We juddered over the potholes and Alan’s wheel fell off, but he caught himself and replaced it so quickly I don’t think he ever came to a full stop. The juddering made me feel more nervous. I’d meant it when I’d said I wanted to think this through, and I would have felt a lot better if we’d taken a few moments at the kitchen table to brainstorm a quick pros and cons list. Writing things out always helps me. But for Helen it seemed like the opposite. Writing things down, for her, was like standing around after hearing the starting gun.

  North Half was widely known by kids around here, an abandoned track along the gulch’s edge. It went, ultimately, nowhere. I mean, it probably had a purpose once, but that once and that purpose were ages gone.

  Eventually, the road became too rough to ride. We stashed our bikes in the brush and continued on foot.

  “How far, Alan?” Helen asked.

  “Past the gulch, I think. In the forest,” said Alan.

  I walked next to Nicki. Out of the corner of my eye I studied her sandals, which showcased her two perfect sets of toes.

  “Whew!” I said, conversationally. In avoiding a direct gaze, I caught other glimpses—a knee shining with sweat, her upper arm, her black hair stark against her graceful brown neck. She seemed to glow when she sweated. When I sweated I felt like a baked potato.

  “Hurry,” said Nicki. “Helen’s running!”

  Helen was way ahead of us in her eagerness to get into t
rouble.

  To our left, Longbelly Gulch opened up, and to our right, Longbelly Prairie, a wide bowl on the shaded north-facing slope. Although it was afternoon, a thin mist hovered over the grasses out there. I saw some cardinals and bluebirds, and heard a woodpecker whacking a trunk.

  You might think Iowa is just a big corn farm full of tractors, but in southeast Iowa there are beautiful gulches and hillsides of prairie. Longbelly Gulch was so called because it looked like a big long belly pressed into the hillside. At the bottom ran Longbelly Creek.

  Once we passed the field and entered the maple forest, we came to a berm at the edge of the road, covered in clumpy seeding grass that was beaten into a trail. I looked at Helen to see what she made of it, since she was our lead adventurer.

  My sister is about my height, and I guess she and I look similar. People say so. We’re blond and skinny and we tend to dress the same, especially during the summer. That said, I often feel like she’s better than me. She doesn’t look awkward in her body. Her ears don’t stick out as far as mine (and she grows her hair over them anyway). I’ve always thought that for the twenty minutes after Helen rushed out to be born, I was sitting in the womb, debating whether or not to follow.

  Helen led the way off-road into the forest. As we walked, an eerie sound came up. It was a little like a violin, a steady tone that went up and down in pitch, caused by two branches somewhere overhead scraping against each other. Right after we heard the sound, we found what we were looking for—the campsite. We ducked down and peeped through the trees.

  There was a dirty mattress on the ground and two black scars of old campfires with white hubs of ash. Behind a tree I saw a corner of blue fabric, maybe a sleeping bag, shoved into a stump. Next to that, a cardboard box stained with water. I definitely did not want to meet Carl out here.

  Helen stepped in like she owned the place, and the rest of us followed. The musical branches called down from overhead, as if to warn that whatever happened from here on out would be our own fault.

  “What do you think he’s doing out here, Alan?” said Helen.

  “I don’t know,” said Alan. “But I think he’s getting into something he shouldn’t be.”

  “I hope we can help out,” I said. Of course, helping Carl was a priority for me only because Alan was worried about him. But that was enough.

  “The thing is, you guys,” said Alan, “I, um, found his diary. And read some of it.”

  “Carl keeps a diary?” said Helen. That’s what we all were thinking—Carl didn’t seem like the diary type.

  “More like notes to himself,” said Alan. “In a yellow spiral notebook. He’d hidden it, but I almost think he wanted me to find it.”

  “What was in there?” I asked.

  “He mentioned this place,” said Alan, “and other stuff, too. Weird lists of numbers, like ‘1, 1, 2, 3, 5 . . . ’ Then there was a label, ‘Stakeout,’ underlined, with stuff like ‘Left home 1 p.m.’ or ‘Grocery store 3 p.m.’ The last was ‘Ambulance arrived 5 p.m.’”

  “He was spying on someone?” I said.

  “Yeah,” said Alan. “And he was doing it for someone, I think. Because there was one line that said, ‘Meet Abe 7 p.m., Old Road.’”

  “Where’s the notebook now?” Nicki asked.

  “Carl found me reading it,” said Alan. “He didn’t get very angry, but he took it, and I haven’t been able to find it again.”

  Helen and Nicki walked to the old mattress, and Helen gave it a kick. Alan and I went to the dead campfires. “How long you think these have been burned out?” he asked.

  “Not long,” I said. I had no idea how to estimate the age of a campfire, but sometimes it just feels good to sound smart. I picked up a stick and poked the ashes. “Maybe two days,” I said.

  “Hey you guys,” said Helen, beckoning to me and Alan. She’d just reached into the cardboard box next to the mattress, and now held a pile of damp-looking paperback books in one hand.

  I stepped over and picked one off the top. The sweet smell of moldy pages wafted up. The cover showed a man in a space suit aiming a laser gun at a giant drooling centipede. The title, in capital letters that looked like lightning bolts, read AIRMAN CRUSADER VERSUS THE CENTIPEDE KING. The author was A. Møller—the “o” with the slash through it that happens with Norwegian names, which always makes me think of the empty set from math class.

  “These are all the same series,” said Helen, looking at the spines. Nicki took the next one, whose title was AIRMAN CRUSADER VERSUS THE BAT CREATURES, and she said, “You ever read these kinds of books, Henry?”

  “Sure,” I said. I liked pretty much any kind of adventure book. I read lots, and no sooner did I see these than I wanted them, especially because Mom had been limiting my trips to the bookstore for the past few months, as a belt-tightening measure. “Do you think they’re Carl’s?”

  “Who knows,” said Helen. “Let’s take ’em.” She shoved them at me to put into my rucksack, which I did. I always carry a rucksack. Helen never does. I guess I’m her rucksack.

  She glanced a final time around the site and said, “All right, we’ve seen it. Let’s go.”

  I was relieved. We left quickly and returned to the road, then to our bikes.

  Where Carl was waiting for us.

  GETTING HIT IN THE FACE made me feel suddenly thoughtful. I sat down. This often happens with me. When I have a new experience, I need to take a minute to mull it over. Decide how I’m going to react.

  First question: What happened?

  Answer: Carl’s big knuckles had come at me, his pimply face looming behind them. Then there’d been the stretchy sensation of the skin of Carl’s knuckles shoving the skin of my nose and cheek. My nose and cheek backed up—right into my brain, and my brain retreated down my throat into my stomach. My stomach hadn’t expected that, and became upset.

  Second question: What should I do?

  Answer: I should barf.

  I leaned over and pitched my lunch into the dirt. As I took an extra moment to see if my brain was in there, I heard a voice yelling at me. “C’mon, Henry,” it said. It was Helen. A special urgency in her tone pulled me out of my own situation to take a new look around.

  Things had changed since I got hit. I was pretty surprised. I’d assumed that everyone else had taken a break, like I had, to think it all over, but this wasn’t the case.

  Nicki was next to me on the ground. Her long black hair was in tangles, and tracks of tears smeared with dust blotted her cheeks. A few feet away, Alan was getting up from where he’d been knocked down. He was yelling, and at first his words made no sense to me. I’d have expected him to say something like, “Leave us alone, Carl,” but what he actually yelled was, “Leave him alone, Helen!” This brought me to the final element of the scene.

  Carl was a big kid, over six feet tall and with arms as thick as my legs. He looked like he’d been forged in a steel mill. At the moment, though, he was on one knee, gasping for air around Helen’s chokehold. She was latched onto his back, her feet dangling. She was yelling at me because I was sitting so close I could easily have punched him right in the gut, which probably would have ended the fight.

  But I’m not that guy. I just can’t react quickly in stressful situations, and so I wasted the few seconds I had by staring stupidly as Carl gurgled and slung my sister around like a cape.

  The one who finally acted was Alan, and he did not do what Helen was hoping for. Instead, he rushed to his horrible brother’s defense, dragging Helen off of him and falling into the dirt with her.

  Carl sprang to his full height, triumphant as a jack-in-the-box. He hadn’t even noticed how close he’d come to losing, or that he would’ve been strangled if his brother hadn’t rescued him. No, he was deciding that he’d just cleaned our clocks. He held up his long arms and bellowed, at the top of his lungs, “I’m gonna live forever!”

  It was a weird thing to shout, but the victor can choose his victory cry. Then he turned and ran off along the
old road, probably out toward his campsite. I think he had no idea that we were just coming from there.

  We were wrecked. All of us, except Helen, were in tears. I felt ashamed because my only contribution to the fight had been to puke. Nicki hadn’t fared much better, but she also hadn’t been positioned right in front of Carl’s exposed belly and missed the chance.

  Alan was the first to speak, even as we were all still pushing hair out of our eyes and spitting grit. “You could have really hurt him,” he growled at Helen.

  “I was trying to save you!” said Helen, aghast.

  Alan cursed under his breath and took a step away as if he were about to storm off.

  “Alan,” I said, grabbing his arm, “c’mon. We’re all mad. We gotta calm down.”

  Alan shook my arm off but he didn’t leave. “I hate him,” he said finally, which was a little more in line with how the rest of us were feeling. He took a handkerchief from his back pocket and wrapped it around the bloody knuckles of his right hand.

  “Um, anyone want an orange soda?” I said. “Cold orange soda at our house.”

  I TALKED UP the orange soda as we rode back through the sweltering afternoon. I described the cool glass bottles in our fridge, rattling in the door, and the refreshing sensation of orange soda bubbling down a parched throat. Then I remembered that we were out of orange soda. Orange soda had been declared a casualty of belt-tightening.

  Our home is an old farmhouse with a white picket fence out front. Not much to say, it’s nothing special, especially when it’s got no orange soda.

  We parked our bikes out front and I led the way in through the kitchen screen door, calling to see if Mom or Dad was home. Neither answered.

  “I wish my house was empty like this sometimes,” said Alan. I wasn’t sure if he was referring to his brother Carl or to his father. Could’ve been either.

  I rushed to the back of the kitchen and threw open the refrigerator door, and saw, to my surprise, a ton of orange soda on the second rack. Dad must have bought it just to be nice. We each drank a whole bottle in a gulp. As our blood filled with fizz, we opened a second round and sat at the kitchen table.