Read The Secret Life of Owen Skye Online
Authors: Alan Cumyn
“Leonard?” Andy called. “Are you all right?”
Leonard didn't say anything.
“You might have thrown him too far,” Andy said to Owen.
They called out again and ï¬nally Leonard said, “I see something!”
“What? What is it?”
“Shhhh!” Leonard said. They could hear his footsteps on the thin ï¬oor above them. The footsteps stopped for a moment, walked on, stopped again.
They could hear Leonard's little voice. “Who are you?” he asked.
There was no answer. Leonard took a step forward, then a step back. “Are you a ghost?” he asked.
Silence.
Leonard said, “I'm sorry about the Bog Man. Andy told me. This would have been a nice home for you.”
Leonard shufï¬ed his feet. Then he said, “Do you like candy?” Andy and Owen didn't hear a reply. But they did hear a faint sound of unwrapping. There were chewing noises for a couple of minutes.
Leonard said, “My brothers are stuck down in the basement. I have to ï¬nd a ladder for them. But there was something I wanted to ask you ï¬rst.” Owen couldn't believe that little Leonard was standing there talking to a ghost! But Leonard's voice was calm and normal and strangely polite.
“What I wanted to ask you,” said Leonard, “since you're a woman. Or you used to be a woman. Is how you make babies? I was hoping to be the ï¬rst boy to have one.”
There was silence â except for some more chewing noises â for the longest time. Andy and Owen strained to listen to what she was saying, but it was very faint â like the whisper of the wind, or the scratch of a branch against a pane of glass.
Finally Leonard said, “Oh, I see. Well, thank you very much. And I'm very sorry for your tragedy.”
He walked across the ï¬oor then, quickly, as if it was daylight, and in a moment lowered a funny kind of ladder down the hole. It had been hammered together out of leftover lumber, but Owen and Andy had never seen it lying around the haunted house before. Andy went up first and Owen pushed him from behind.
As soon as they got up, they looked around but Leonard said, “She's gone now.”
“You saw her? You saw the Bog Man's wife?”
“I saw her shadow,” Leonard said.
“We heard you talking to her. We couldn't hear anything she said.”
“You couldn't?” said Leonard.
“We just heard
you
!”
said Owen. They were looking around at all the shadows. Any one of them could have been the Bog Man's wife.
“We'd better get home,” said Leonard.
They helped Andy across the ï¬oor, then up and out of the window. It was truly a night for miracles, because the farther they got from the house, the better Andy's leg felt, so that by the time they were on the road again it wasn't broken anymore. Andy made his brothers swear an oath of secrecy to not tell their parents about the haunted house, because if they found out, the boys would never be allowed out on Halloween again.
Just before they got home, Andy stopped Leonard and said, “What did the Bog Man's wife say when you asked her how to make a baby?”
Leonard said he wouldn't tell them unless they handed over all the candies they had left. They argued and shouted but Leonard wouldn't be moved. So ï¬nally they dumped their bags into his and he ï¬lled his mouth with candy rockets and chocolate peanuts.
“Come on, a deal's a deal!” Andy said.
Leonard chewed slowly. He suddenly seemed to be a lot older.
“Please, Leonard!” Andy said ï¬nally. “What did she say? How do you make a baby?”
“It's a secret. She wouldn't tell me,” Leonard said, wiping his mouth. “'Cause I'm a boy.” And he ran inside the house before his brothers could touch him.
OWEN HAD THE
most private and terrible secret. He was in love â with a girl, of all things. Her name was Sylvia.
On the ï¬rst day of school, when the kids chose the seat that would be theirs for the entire year, Owen watched where Sylvia sat. Then he headed for the opposite corner, as far away as he could get. But as soon as the desk was his he knew he had made a terrible mistake. He sat staring at her, wishing his desk closer. For days and weeks he imagined an airplane suddenly falling out of the sky, rushing at a thousand miles an hour straight into the windows of the classroom. While all the other kids ran for the door he'd ï¬ash across and tackle Sylvia under a desk so that the plane crash would just miss the both of them. Everybody else would be killed, so she'd have to marry him.
It was not a nice school. The principal was as tall as a beanpole and bald on top except for some gray curly hairs that came straight out of his ears, and red hairs bursting from his nose. His name was Mr. Schneider. Most of the time the kids never saw him. They only heard how mean he was. Everyone knew that if you were sent to Mr. Schneider, he made you stand by his big black desk in the ofï¬ce and bend over. Then he took out the Strap. If you cried he gave you an extra whack. Mr. Schneider was so old there was pretty well only one thing left in the world that he could do well.
The teachers got their kids so jittery with stories of Mr. Schneider and the Strap that as soon as the teacher left the classroom, somebody would jump up on a desk and yell out, “Don't do anything, or you'll get the Strap!”
Then someone else would jump up on a desk and scream, “But you're already doing something! He's going to give us
all
the Strap!” And then nearly everybody would be up on their desks, yelling and ï¬ghting, and someone would yell,
“Shhhh! Someone's coming! It's Mr. Schneider!”
Then they'd all crash down from their desks and sit up straight in their chairs with their hands folded, holding their breath. And the footsteps would go
click click click
down the hall. If nobody looked in, there would be this terrible moment of silence when everyone knew they should just keep sitting there with their hands folded. But how could they? It was inhuman. First one kid would breathe and then another and before they knew it those kids would be up on their desks again, dancing and screaming.
At recess time they ran screaming from one end of the schoolyard to the other and back again. The girls chased the boys and kissed them if they caught them. The girls were bigger than the boys. There was a white line painted across the schoolyard to keep the girls from chasing the boys, but it didn't work. The girls took one look at that line and then ran right over it. And the teachers didn't care. They stayed in the staff room smoking at recess time. You could see the smoke pufï¬ng out of the window even though it was closed and the drapes were drawn. Those teachers didn't want anything to do with the kids at recess. Sometimes they forgot to ring the bell and the girls would chase and kiss boys for hours.
But Sylvia never chased. That was part of what was so impossible about her. Owen saw her once when he was walking back from a hockey game at night with Andy. It was wintertime by then, cold and black, and their footsteps made
crunch crunch
noises in the packed snow. They carried their hockey sticks and skates over their shoulders and walked silently in single ï¬le, cutting through the schoolyard on their way back from the rink.
Owen happened to look up at just the right moment. There was a light on in one of the classrooms where some kids were taking piano lessons. One little girl looked up just as Owen was passing by. She had long pale blonde hair and blonde eyelashes, and skin so soft it felt heavenly just to look at it. Her eyes were blue with light speckles, like the summer sky made into a jewel.
That was Sylvia. She lifted her eyes from the music book and looked directly at him as he walked past the window. It was a second and a half in a very bright light.
There's a funny thing about windows at night. When the lights are so bright inside, then outside people can see in perfectly. But the inside people only see a black window, with a reï¬ection of themselves. Sylvia never saw Owen, though he didn't know that until much later, when he'd taken out this memory and examined it from every angle. But that night he felt like he'd pushed his ï¬nger into a light socket and given himself an electric shock. He was doomed.
On Valentine's Day all the kids had heart-shaped cardboard mailboxes taped to their desks. If you wanted to give somebody a Valentine you had to walk up and slip it in. Owen didn't want anybody to think that he was hopelessly in love with Sylvia, so he made cards for everyone in the class. When it came time to make Sylvia's card his hand shook with nervousness and it became difï¬cult to breathe.
Owen wasn't a good cardmaker anyway. He had a hard time coloring inside the lines, and he wasn't good at spelling. He didn't know how to spell Sylvia. He spelled Dear and Love and his own name perfectly, but instead of starting Sylvia with an S, he started it with a C because he knew sometimes C could sound like an S and maybe this was one of those times. Then he walked around to everybody's heart-shaped mailbox and put in the cards.
When he got near Sylvia's he could barely make his feet move, and his face was a burning tomato. Just as he was putting the card in her box he read her name and noticed that it started with an S instead of a C. But it seemed to him impossible to stop putting the card in since he was there already and his arm had started moving and she was sitting right beside her box and if she turned and looked at him from such a close range he might die instantly. So he shoved it in, then rushed back to his seat and thought about what Sylvia sounded like if it started with a C. If you thought it was a soft C then it would just be Sylvia, the same. But if you thought it was a hard C then it became Kill-via, which might send the wrong message.
He had to get the card back. But how could he just walk up and put his hand in her heart-box and pull it out again? How could he be sure it was the right one? Her box was bulging with cards. She would take them out at three o'clock and read them one by one, then get to the one from Owen and his life would be over.
Owen rose to his feet. All the kids were back at their desks now because it was time for quiet reading. You weren't supposed to be walking around anymore.
The teacher was writing something on the blackboard, her back turned to the class. She was a lumpy, gray-haired woman named Mrs. Harridan, and she hated children.
Owen stepped toward Sylvia's desk. It was all the way across the classroom. The other kids started whispering but Owen couldn't stop. His feet were moving and his brain had stopped thinking. No danger seemed too great. He had to get that card back!
When he got to Sylvia's mailbox, Sylvia turned to him and said, “What are you doing?” Those were her ï¬rst words directly spoken to him, even though he had saved her from countless plane crashes. Mrs. Harridan turned around and Owen thrust his hand into Sylvia's heart-box. He tried to grab the card near the top, but somehow all of them came bursting out and spilled on the ï¬oor. A staple broke on the side of her box as well, and part of the lace trim came off.
“Owen Skye!” Mrs. Harridan yelled. The classroom became completely silent.
Owen didn't know what he was doing anymore. Every card he looked at had Sylvia spelled correctly. He picked them up by bunches and tried to stuff them back in, but more staples gave way and now the heart-box was in tatters.
All the kids started laughing except for Sylvia, whose face was ï¬aming. She had such delicate skin anyway, and was so quiet. He knew that to have everybody laughing like that was the worst thing imaginable.
As he was ï¬oundering with all her cards, Owen tried to say, “I'm sorry,” but the sounds came out more like,
“Sworry.”
Mrs. Harridan sent Owen to the principal, Mr. Schneider. He had to walk, by himself, down the hallway past three classrooms, then turn right and go up the stairs. Everyone knew where the principal's ofï¬ce was but it was like the Bog Man had captured Owen and turned his brain to soup. He went down the hallway and turned right but nothing looked familiar. He'd never been in the hallway when it was completely empty like that. He went past class after class of kids sitting in rows and teachers talking with pointers in their hands.
Finally, when he knew he was lost and would never reach Mr. Schneider's ofï¬ce, he found it. He stood trembling in front of the big brown wooden door and knocked. Then he waited. His face and ears were still blazing red and everything seemed to be spinning slowly around him.
There was no answer. He knocked again, louder, and heard footsteps coming to the door.
Click click click.
It was Mrs. Lime, the principal's secretary. She had big shoulders and small eyes and wore glasses with a black strap to keep them from falling down.
“Yes?” she said.
“I have⦠I am⦠uh⦠” Owen said.
“Have you been sent to see Mr. Schneider?” she asked.
“Yes, ma'am.”
“What did you do?”
Owen had to think hard how to say what he'd done in just a few words. Finally he said, “I made a spelling mistake.”
Mrs. Lime nodded, then told him to sit in one of the black chairs outside the door of Mr. Schneider's real ofï¬ce, which was inside the secretary's ofï¬ce. Owen sat with his back straight and his feet almost reaching the ï¬oor. For the ï¬rst time he noticed that he was clutching a Valentine's card that had been in Sylvia's heart-box before he destroyed it. It wasn't his card, though. It was from Michael Baylor, and it said, “I loev you.”
Owen read it over and over. So Michael Baylor was in love with her too! It was terrible to think about. When that plane came tumbling out of the sky there would be two of them rushing over to save Sylvia. And Michael Baylor sat a lot closer, so what was the point? Owen would probably arrive just in time to be hit by the landing gear.
Mr. Schneider came out of his office. He was even taller than usual, and his gray suit smelled of old cigarettes. He looked down from the clouds at Owen and said, “What is your name?”
Owen stood up, cleared his throat and said, “Michael Baylor.”
“Well, now, Michael Baylor. What have you done?”
Owen told him the whole story. He told him how he was in love with Sylvia but had made a spelling mistake on her card and so went over to try to correct it even though he should have been sitting in his seat since it was quiet reading time. He didn't leave out any details. In fact, being Michael Baylor seemed to give him a reckless kind of courage. He ï¬nished up by saying, “You can give me the Strap if you like. I deserve it!”
Mr. Schneider scratched the hair in his ears and his nose. Then he cleared his throat. His face was grim.
But before he could speak, Mrs. Lime said from her desk, “It's Valentine's Day, sir.” And Mr. Schneider said that he must promise not to make any kind of commotion again and Owen said no, sir, he wouldn't. Then Mr. Schneider sent him back to the classroom.
Owen walked in with his shoulders back and his head up. He pretended to sit down gently so all the kids would think he'd had the Strap. There were whispers up and down the rows but Owen looked unconcerned. He opened his notebook and wrote line after line â LOVE LOVE LOVE â getting the V and the E in the right order, just like Michael Baylor couldn't. He did not look at Sylvia and Sylvia did not look at him, and when he got home he threw Michael Baylor's card in the garbage and didn't tell anyone about it.