Gotcha Read online




  Gotcha!

  Gotcha!

  Shelley Hrdlitschka

  Text copyright © 2008 Shelley Hrdlitschka

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted

  in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,

  recording or by any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be

  invented, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  Hrdlitschka, Shelley, 1956-

  Gotcha / Shelley Hrdlitschka.

  ISBN 978-1-55143-737-8

  I. Title.

  PS8565.R44G68 2008 jC813’.54 C2008-900482-5

  First published in the United States, 2008

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2008921105

  Summary: The grade twelve bead-snatching game called Gotcha becomes

  dangerous, and Katie finds herself swept away.

  Orca Book Publishers gratefully acknowledges the support for its publishing

  programs provided by the following agencies: the Government of Canada through

  the Book Publishing Industry Development Program and the Canada Council for

  the Arts, and the Province of British Columbia through the BC Arts Council

  and the Book Publishing Tax Credit.

  Cover image and design by Teresa Bubela

  Text design by Teresa Bubela

  ORCA BOOK PUBLISHERS

  PO Box 5626, STN. B

  VICTORIA, BC CANADA

  V8R 6S4

  ORCA BOOK PUBLISHERS

  PO Box 468

  CUSTER, WA USA

  98240-0468

  www.orcabook.com

  Printed and bound in Canada.

  11 10 09 08 • 4 3 2 1

  For Cara Lee, with love, always.

  Acknowledgments

  Once again, this book would not have been completed without the gentle prodding from my dear friends and fellow writers Beryl Young, Kim Denman and Diane Tullson. Thank you for your wisdom and continued support.

  A special thank-you to the students of Seycove Secondary School in North Vancouver, especially the grad classes of ‘04 and ‘06, for inspiring the book and sharing Gotcha (bead game) stories.

  One

  From: [email protected]

  To: [email protected]

  Subject: hi

  Dear Katie,

  Just a quick note to tell you I love you and miss you and hope to see you soon. I know I shouldn’t have left in the middle of the night without saying goodbye, but it was a spur of the moment decision. I guess you knew that your mom and I were having some problems, and we need time apart. Please don’t be mad. Things are looking up for me right now. I’ve had a job interview, and I have a good feeling about this one. I am going to make you proud of me, Katie.

  Talk to you soon.

  :D/xo

  Dad

  From: [email protected]

  To: [email protected]

  Subject: Re: hi

  dad, ur right how could i NOT know u were havin problems? i’m sure all the neighbors know 2 unless they’re deaf but i AM mad!!!! u should have taken me with u! ur not the only 1 she nags 2 death u know. without u here she’s got twice as much time to rag on me. thanx a lot for that.

  Katie

  and where are u N E way???

  From: [email protected]

  To: [email protected]

  Subject: RE: hi

  Katie,

  Please don’t talk about your mom that way. She’s doing the best she can. And you’re pretty much an adult now, so I know you can handle this.

  Love you lots,

  Dad

  From: [email protected]

  To: [email protected]

  Subject: Re: hi

  ur full of it dad! im 17 not old enough 2 vote or drink (legally). if im not mature enuf 2 do those things, what makes u think im mature enuf 2 handle my parents splitting? u + mom may need time apart (thats what all divorcing parents tell their kids) but what about me? maybe i need a break from her 2! would it be ok with u if i run away in the middle of the night? would u think thats a mature way 2 handle my problems? u didnt just leave mom u left me. ur the grownup couldnt u have tried harder 2 keep r family together? i think if u loved me enuf that would have been your top priority. and u didn’t tell me where u r.

  From: [email protected]

  To: [email protected]

  Subject: Re: hi

  Katie,

  You have it wrong. I’ve got stuff to sort out, and I can’t do it under the watchful eye of your mom. We each have our own lives to lead. I may be living apart from you for a while, but I love you as much as ever. It won’t be long before you move away to go to school or work. Does that mean we won’t still be a family? We’ll get through this rough patch. You’ll see.

  xo

  Dad

  From: [email protected]

  To: [email protected]

  Subject: Re: hi

  ya right.u think u’ve got stuff to sort out? what about me! it’s hard enuf being in grade 12, w/ exams coming up + every1 asking me what im doing next year + i don’t have a clue.... + now this. + i think its weird u wont tell me where u r. afraid i might drop in and find something i dont want 2 c?

  take a hike.

  I feel like I’ve been dropped smack dead center into a beehive. The hum spinning around me is alive. Closing my eyes, I will myself to suck up some of the energy, but the empty ache gnaws inside and I still feel sluggish. I return to watching the senior-grade students jockey for position on the cold, clangy bleachers, grateful for my chair at the front of the hall, facing the crowd. It’s one of the perks of being on grad council.

  After a quick glance at me, Warren rises from his chair beside mine and lifts a warehouse-store-sized pickle jar over his head. The glossy, multicolored beads that have been handed down to us from last year’s grad class slide across the smooth inner surface. The hum in the gymnasium slowly fades away.

  “Fellow grads,” Warren croons in that accomplished radio-announcer voice of his. I swear it’s that delivery that got him elected president in the first place. It certainly wasn’t his brains. Okay, maybe he’s got some charm, and he’s not hard to look at, but is that any reason to elect him president?

  “It’s that time of year,” he continues, hypnotizing an entire grade with his seductive tones, “when the graduating class of Slippery Rock High plays...” He pauses, and in that moment you can feel the hum beginning to build again. “Gotcha!”

  Bedlam erupts. I’m tempted to cover my ears. The cheering, wolf whistles and stomping of boots on metal bleachers is deafening.

  It’s not so much that I resent Warren being president. He does an adequate job. What I resent is that by coming in second I’m slotted into the position of secretary, not vice-president. How lame is that? And aren’t secretaries now called executive administrative assistants or something? Like, what year is this anyway?

  “I’m sure you all know the rules of the game,” Warren continues when the uproar begins to subside, “but I’ll review them, just to be sure we’re in sync.” He taps the side of the jar. “These beads have been passed down from many years of grad classes that have come before us. Today we’ll each receive one as well as a classmate’s name, someone else who is playing the game. We have hemp available, or you can string your bead on your favorite chain or whatever. But you must wear it somewhere on your body from now until you’re tagged.”

  I feel an elbow jab. I turn to Paige, one of the five grad council members-at-large, sitting next to me. Member-at-large. Another equally stupid term, and there’s nothing large about Paige
.

  “We’re a team, right, Katie?” she whispers. “You promise?”

  I shrug and turn my attention back to Warren. Truth is, I’ve always liked to play games by the rules, but Paige will do anything to win.

  Another elbow jab. “Katie!” Paige whispers.

  “Okay already!” A little knot of worry briefly nudges aside the empty ache. I figure I’m the only person here who’s not into this stupid game. We all know what has happened in past years, how things got right out of hand. That’s why we’re meeting at the community center and not in the school. “Gotcha” has been officially banned as a grad activity, making it that much more attractive. We’ve had a record number of grads signing up to play this year. I doubt any of them felt pressured to play, like I do. I tried talking the grad council into scrapping the whole thing, but they wouldn’t go for it, and I knew I wouldn’t get any support from the rest of the class.

  “The name you’ll be given today,” Warren says, “is the name of your victim, the person whose bead you must capture, which you do by tagging that person. When you capture a bead successfully, you string it next to your own and take the name of that person’s victim. If the person you tag already has more than one bead, you relieve that person of all of them. If you get tagged, you turn your bead or beads over to the person who tagged you and you are officially out of the game.”

  We all know exactly how the game is played, but we listen anyway.

  “And remember,” he cautions, “that you may not tag a person and take their bead while they are in the school or anywhere on the school grounds. As well, no bead can be taken from a person who is linking arms with another person who is still officially in the game.” Warren pauses, probably trying to think of more rules. Not coming up with any, he asks, “Are there any questions?”

  “How much cash does the winner get?” Tyson Remmer asks.

  Under-the-breath comments ripple across the bleachers. Tyson is the student who needs the money least of all, and not because he has rich parents or an honest job.

  “Ten dollars has been received from each of you,” Warren answers, “bringing the pot to two thousand, one hundred and twenty dollars this year. That is an all-time high and should ease the burden of college tuition for someone. Or maybe it’ll be a down payment on a car? Someone might even have a debt or two to pay off.” He winks at no one in particular and I swear I hear the entire female half of the class draw in a breath. “And those, my friends, are the rules. The game begins in exactly,” he glances at the clock on the wall, “one hour. And if there are no more questions...” He scans the faces in the bleachers. “Then come on down and get your bead!”

  This is where Warren’s incompetence becomes evident. Instead of organizing a proper queue, he does his stupid game-show imitation and a stampede of grade twelve students descends the bleachers and elbows and shoves to get close to “the pres” who holds out the jar of beads. I stand beside him, clutching a knitted ski toque that contains our names, each one on a folded scrap of paper. Paige holds out lengths of hemp for anyone who wants one.

  I suspect that in other years, when the grad council teacher rep helped out, this whole bead/name distribution thing would be run somewhat differently, but Mrs. Barter not only refused to assist us; she wouldn’t give us any advice, either.

  It’s chaotic, but eventually each person has a bead, a name and some have a length of hemp. Everyone but those of us on council leaves the community center in small groups. There are seven beads and seven names left.

  Warren extends the jar to me first. “That went well, don’t you think?” he asks.

  I dip my hand in and pull out a turquoise bead. Then I draw one of the remaining pieces of folded paper from the toque. I glance at the name—force myself to keep a poker face—and shove both into my pocket. “Yeah, it went fine,” I say.

  “You were amazing, Warren,” Paige gushes, reaching into the jar for her own bead. “Public speaking is like the scariest thing, but you make it look so easy.”

  Warren flashes Paige a smile. He could be the poster boy for a tooth-whitening product, and the cleft in his chin is so perfect I wonder if he’s had cosmetic surgery. Paige’s skin turns a flattering shade of pink.

  Paige may be my best friend, but I have no doubt that if the position of class president had come down to a tie-breaking vote between Warren and me, Warren would have got her vote.

  Two

  “So, we need a plan,” Paige says. We’ve come back to the school to collect our homework. Paige takes a long suck on a juice box while I select the books I need from my locker. She crumples the empty box and tosses it toward a garbage can across the hall. It misses. She doesn’t bother to retrieve it.

  “Mrs. Kennedy recycles those,” I tell her. I can’t help myself. Paige may be my best friend, but sometimes she just doesn’t get it.

  “Only Mrs. Kennedy would collect garbage.” Paige sighs. “But stay focused, Katie. What about a plan?”

  “She doesn’t collect garbage.” I shut my locker and slip the lock in place. “She returns them for a refund and then buys stuff for the art room. I like her fundraising ideas.”

  “You would.” She shakes her head. “So?” she glances down the deserted hallway . “Whose name did you draw?”

  “Yours.”

  “Get out!” For a moment she believes me. I can’t help but laugh at the look on her face. “You brat!” She smacks my arm. “Seriously. Who did you get?”

  “I’ll never tell.” I walk across the hall, scoop up the empty juice box and slide it into the pocket of my jacket.

  “Then how can we help each other?” Paige whines. “Katie, you promised we’d be a team!”

  I start walking down the hall without her. “Yeah, but if I tell you, you’ll tell someone else, who’ll tell someone else and so on until it gets to the person I’ve got. No one can keep a secret, especially you.” And especially with the name I’ve drawn, I think but don’t say.

  “I’m crushed, Katie! I thought we were best buds.” Paige catches up to me and I notice her dramatic hangdog expression.

  “Cut it out, Paige. It’s got nothing to do with us being friends. I just know you too well.” I glance at her pouty face. “And you know you can’t keep a secret.”

  “I can too!” Her head snaps up. “What are you talking about?”

  Hmm. Which secret that she didn’t keep should I remind her of? I make my decision. “Remember the butt incident?”

  “What butt incident?”

  Paige feigns innocence, but I know by the way she averts her eyes that she remembers only too well. I decide to rub it in. “I innocently mentioned that Matt’s looked particularly good in a new pair of jeans he was wearing, and you just had to tell Mariah, who didn’t think you’d mind if she told Rachel, who didn’t think Mariah would mind if she told Tanysha, and Tanysha thought it would be such a big joke if she told Matt.”

  “Yeah, well, I said I was sorry about that, and so what if Matt knows you like his butt?”

  “Paige! You’re missing my point.”

  “The point is you like Matt, but you’re too chicken to do anything about it.”

  “Right.”

  “Oh c’mon, Katie. It’s like on Survivor. We need alliances. You know how the game works.”

  “I haven’t been able to make eye contact with Matt since.”

  “Who cares? It’s his butt you want to look at anyway.”

  “Paige!”

  “Just think of what we can do with all that money.”

  “But only one person can win, Paige, so I don’t see what good forming a team will be.”

  “Omigod, Katie. For someone who gets straight A’s, you can be so thick. We’d split the money fifty-fifty. Duh. One thousand and sixty a piece. How cool is that? I know you can use the money, and I can help you win. Now, tell me who you got.”

  “Nope, not telling. But I will walk home with you, arms linked. Safety in numbers.”

  “Oh jeez,” she m
utters. “This is gonna be so scary.”

  As we pass a group of grade ten boys, I toss the empty juice box toward a recycling container that sits in a corner. I miss, and as I’m bending to pick it up, I see the boys checking Paige out. She’s too busy worrying to notice, but I glare at them. They act nonchalant but make a hasty retreat when they read my face. That’s another perk of being on grad council. People treat you with more respect, though I haven’t really figured out why.

  “What if I forget to lock my doors?” she whimpers.

  “You won’t.”

  “And what if you’re busy and I have to walk home alone?” I can hear the familiar panic rising in her voice, and when she turns to me, I see her eyes beginning to bug out.

  Her arm roughly links with mine, even though we’re still safely on school property.

  “You’ll find someone else. Maybe even Warren.”

  Either she doesn’t hear me or she chooses to ignore my attempt to distract her. “I just have to find out who has my name so I can protect myself.”

  “You’ll be fine.”

  “I can’t stand it!”

  “It’s just a game, Paige. Jeez.”

  I may be acting unconcerned, and Paige may be getting unnecessarily hysterical, but I do know what she means. It is kinda creepy, knowing you’re being stalked. Knowing someone has your name. And knowing what has happened in years gone by.

  “I pulled Elijah Widawski’s name.”

  “Huh?” I glance at Paige.

  “For Gotcha. That’s the name I drew.”

  “Oh.” The timer on the microwave bleats, so I remove the bag and pour the hot popcorn into a bowl. We’ve only made it as far as my house from the school. Paige is afraid to walk the remaining three blocks alone, so she’s waiting for her mom to get home from work and pick her up, or for the cover of dark to protect her. “Who’s he?”