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    Force Out


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      Dedication

      For Barbara Lalicki, my editor and friend

      Contents

      Dedication

      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

      Chapter 28

      Chapter 29

      Chapter 30

      Chapter 31

      Chapter 32

      Chapter 33

      Chapter 34

      Chapter 35

      Chapter 36

      Chapter 37

      Chapter 38

      Chapter 39

      Chapter 40

      Chapter 41

      Chapter 42

      Chapter 43

      Chapter 44

      Chapter 45

      Chapter 46

      Chapter 47

      Chapter 48

      Chapter 49

      Chapter 50

      Chapter 51

      Chapter 52

      Chapter 53

      Chapter 54

      Chapter 55

      Chapter 56

      Chapter 57

      Chapter 58

      Chapter 59

      Chapter 60

      Chapter 61

      Chapter 62

      Chapter 63

      Chapter 64

      Chapter 65

      Chapter 66

      Chapter 67

      Chapter 68

      Chapter 69

      Chapter 70

      Chapter 71

      Chapter 72

      Chapter 73

      Chapter 74

      Chapter 75

      Chapter 76

      Chapter 77

      Chapter 78

      Chapter 79

      Chapter 80

      Chapter 81

      Chapter 82

      Chapter 83

      Chapter 84

      Chapter 85

      Chapter 86

      Chapter 87

      Chapter 88

      About the Author

      Back Ad

      Copyright

      About the Publisher

      1

      When it came to his best friend, Joey would do just about anything. He listened quietly to the sound of his parents getting ready for bed and waited impatiently for his father to turn off the late news on their bedroom television. Noise drained from the house like used bathwater, leaving nothing but the tick of Joey’s small, battery-operated alarm clock. Even Martin, his little brother, lay still in the nursery.

      It was time.

      If Mr. Kratz had been holding Joey’s own summer hostage, he would never have crept from his bed, dressed, paused in the bathroom for a secret ingredient, and then slipped down the stairs through the empty rooms. But he wasn’t doing this for himself. He was doing it for Zach. He and Zach shared the same dream. It was a baseball dream, and one they planned on realizing together.

      It wasn’t fair, that was for sure. Mr. Kratz was the toughest teacher in sixth grade. It wasn’t just his dark, hairy knuckles and the way he snuffled and snorted at the beginnings and ends of his sentences. Stories of Mr. Kratz’s mind-bending tests, backbreaking homework, and failing final grades crept all the way down into the elementary school, rivaling Snow White’s evil witch, Jack’s giant, and Cinderella’s stepmother. Joey escaped most of Mr. Kratz’s thick-browed scowls by working harder than almost anyone in science class, but Zach wasn’t put together that way. Either things came easily to Zach, or he seemed to have little use for them.

      Throughout the year, Zach fell short, and throughout the year, Mr. Kratz gathered his bulk by adjusting the big leather belt he wore as a boundary between his massive upper and lower body and warned Zack—along with a surprising portion of the rest of the class—that failure meant summer school. No exceptions.

      Everyone knew about Mr. Kratz’s field lab on the last Saturday before the end of school. That famous trip by the morning train to the Beaver River Biological Field Station often tilted the balance between passing and failing the class because of the extra credit you got for going. When Mr. Kratz heard the news about the Little League championship game being held on the same day as his field trip, he snorted, rumbled, and asked, “What’s that got to do with me?”

      Mr. Kratz loved Beaver River. The floppy felt hat he wore every day came from the field station’s gift shop, purchased more than thirty years ago when Mr. Kratz was a college student with dreams of scientific fame. Maybe that’s why Mr. Kratz possessed such a heavy scowl—because long ago his dreams of Nobel prizes or being on the cover of Science magazine had been sent to bed without any supper.

      In the back corner of the fridge, Joey found a ziplock bag. He fiddled around, doctoring up its contents, then crammed the bag into the pocket of his jeans before slipping into the garage. Joey’s garage smelled like concrete. The sound of his feet scuffing across the floor filled the darkness. He located a second baggie on his father’s workbench and tucked that into his back pocket along with a flat-head screwdriver.

      He then lifted his bike over the threshold of the side door before walking it down the driveway. He avoided the bright cone of light from the streetlight that marked the line between his yard and the Guthries’ next door. With a final glance back at his quiet house, Joey mounted the bike and took off into the night. The thrill of the darkness, the quiet, and breaking the rules fueled his pumping legs. The clank of gears only increased his speed. Like a rocket, he shot past the low stone walls marking the entrance to his development.

      It wasn’t often people turned left out of Windward because Windward was the last major home development before the roads turned rural and the homes were a hodgepodge of run-down saltboxes, trailers, and old farmhouses, bent and staggering under the weight of time. After Windward, things quickly turned country.

      County Road 347 went due south, and if you kept on it for several miles, you’d run smack-dab into the Bickford State Forest Preserve. If you followed 347 and its eastward jog around the forest, you’d see a red mailbox marking the long dirt road that led to a cabin tucked away in the woods like a hidden kingdom for wood elves, fairies, or goblins. Joey knew where Mr. Kratz lived because Joey’s mother had been a customer for years, buying lots of the great man’s wild blackberry jam and a case of his honey at the end of each summer.

      Joey pumped his legs in the dark, keeping to the shoulder of the road and shivering at the inky blackness between the trees on either side of the road. Above, the light of a full moon struggled through a thick mist like a flashlight behind a bedsheet. Droplets almost too small to matter had begun to drift down, and they tickled Joey’s face if he held up his chin. At the corner where Route 347 met Cherry Valley Road stood an abandoned church with a steeple stripped of its paint by time and whitened by the sun. The empty socket where a bell once hung stared down at Joey, and the doorless entrance gaped wide like an ogre’s mouth. Joey slowed and got down off his bike, walking it into the weedy lot where churchgoers long ago probably parked their wagons.

      “Zach?” Joey’s voice died quickly in the mist. He cleared his throat and barked louder. “Zach, are you here?”

      No reply, and that annoyed him because Zach was always late. He peered down Cherry Valley Road in the direction of Zach’s house, straining his eyes and huffing impatiently. Then he froze.
    From inside the pit of that empty doorway came the sound of groaning, creaking floorboards.

      The hair on Joey’s neck jumped to attention. Goose bumps riddled his arms. He opened his mouth to scold Zach, but if it was Zach inside the church, his bike should be somewhere, standing in the weeds. There was no bike in the moonlight.

      Joey’s mind spun like a top. Had their secret plan been discovered? Had Zach spilled the beans? If so, who was in the church?

      “Hey!”

      The voice coming from the belly of the church was low and gruff. Fear grabbed Joey by the throat because he could think of only one person who it might be: Kratz, the giant ogre.

      The footsteps kept coming, stomping now.

      A figure stirred in the deep shadows of the doorway. Joey’s brain screamed to run, but his legs stood frozen in the damp weeds.

      2

      A shadowy figure leaped from the doorway and bolted down the steps straight for Joey. “Boo!”

      Joey shrieked and his legs found their way. He dropped his bike and bolted for the road. His feet hit the pavement, heading for home, when the mad cackling from the church steps became a howl of delight.

      Joey spun and screamed. “Zach! Are you nuts? Are you kidding? I’m out here in the middle of the night to try to save your butt and you’re goofing around?”

      Zach staggered toward him, wiping the tears from his eyes and snaking an arm around Joey’s neck, hugging him close and shaking with delight.

      Finally Zach’s laughter subsided enough for him to speak. “Did you . . . did you pee your pants, bro?”

      “Stop laughing. It’s not that funny.”

      “You had to hear your voice. Bro, you were killing me.” Zach caught his breath and let out a ragged and satisfied sigh. Black hair spiked the top of his head, as always, and his small dark eyes gathered enough of the hidden moon to light up. “Awesome.”

      “Where’s your bike, anyway?”

      Zach walked over to the corner of the small wooden building, reached into the damp weeds, and righted his machine. “It’s soaked, bro.”

      “Good, so’s mine.” Joey raised his own bike, his voice dripping with disgust. “Now let’s go.”

      Joey pumped his pedals and burned off the annoyance he felt at Zach’s foolery. The mist built up on his face so that he had to lick his lips and wipe his eyes. The road stayed dark and except for the quiet click of their bike sprockets and hiss of their tires on the wet pavement, they might have been in a silent dream. They pedaled without speaking for a couple of miles, winding through the trees, up and down hills, until they came to a dirt cut in the road and the red mailbox.

      Joey got off his bike and Zach copied him.

      “Man, is that creepy.” Zach stared at the hole in the trees where the dirt road quickly melted away. Spanish moss hung in limp strands, and evil little nooks and crannies infected the trunks and limbs of the twisted old trees leaning out and over the dirt driveway.

      “I don’t think he even has electricity.” Joey spoke in a whisper. Even though it felt like he and Zach were the only two people on the planet, he knew Mr. Kratz lay—hopefully asleep—in the heart of this darkness, tucked into a snug corner of his cabin like an overgrown weevil.

      Zach shook his head. “Guy is such a freak.”

      Joey hid his bike in the wild hedge on the other side of the road.

      “You don’t want to ride?” Zach asked, even though he followed Joey’s lead.

      Joey crossed the road and started down the path. “This driveway is too bumpy. We’re better off walking.”

      Zach stayed close, and quickly the moonlight was gone. Joey took the cell phone from his pocket, opened it, and used its meager light to avoid the biggest ruts and stones. It seemed like forever, but finally a fuzzy patch of light appeared and Mr. Kratz’s cabin materialized. Joey pocketed the phone and stopped at the edge of the small clearing. The barn loomed even bigger than Joey remembered it, dwarfing the log cabin. Between the two buildings, Mr. Kratz’s rusty red compact pickup slept like a guard dog in a dirt patch.

      Zach shivered. “Oh, man.”

      Even a whisper sounded too loud, so Joey barely spoke.

      “You should have studied for the last test like I told you.” Joey bit down on his lower lip, scared and angry that he was even here doing this.

      “I tried. Not everybody’s as smart as you,” Zach hissed quietly in Joey’s ear. “Is this gonna work?”

      “You got a better idea?” Joey asked in a hushed voice.

      Zach shook his head, and Joey crept forward toward the pickup truck and into the pale light of the moon. Joey studied the setting carefully, looking for any kind of movement and listening for any sound. The homestead was still and lifeless. From his back pocket, he removed the screwdriver and the baggie from his father’s workbench. He knelt down in front of the truck, took one final look around, then lay on his back in the dirt and squirmed underneath the engine.

      Zach squirmed in beside him and without speaking Joey opened his phone and handed it to Zach, pointing at the fuel pump, where he wanted the light. Joey fumbled with the clamp he’d taken from his father’s workbench, fished it around the fuel line, then inserted the loose end into the little collar and began to cinch it down with the screwdriver. Zach’s breathing grew heavy and excited. Joey wanted to tell him to be quiet; he was afraid of making too much noise. Being wedged in under Mr. Kratz’s truck in the darkness with his legs sticking out was the scariest thing he’d ever experienced or imagined.

      That was until he heard the low, guttural snarl at his feet, a wet snort, and the killer snap of big sharp teeth.

      A pathetic whine escaped Zach’s throat and his eyes bulged. “Joey, is that a dog?”

      3

      Not only was it a dog, it was one of the biggest, nastiest dogs Joey had ever seen. Kept on a thick chain fastened to an old mill wheel during the summer, the dog Mr. Kratz called Daisy snarled and slobbered and howled at Mr. Kratz’s customers until he emerged from the workshop in his barn and uttered one inaudible word. Daisy then wilted like the flower he was named after.

      Joey knew about the dog but had no idea what Mr. Kratz did with it at night. That’s why he’d carefully surveyed the homestead before trapping himself and his best friend under the front end of the pickup. From what he’d seen and heard, he had concluded the dog must be put inside at night.

      Now he knew different.

      “Joey. Oh my God.” Zach was practically crying, and he grabbed Joey’s wrist so that Joey had to twist it before he could yank it free.

      “Let go of me, you bonehead.”

      Joey’s hand snaked into his other pocket. His fingers groped for the cold baggie, yanking it free and tearing it open with his other hand. With a low whistle, he tossed a ball of ground meat out into the dirt.

      “Good boy,” Joey whispered. “Here, boy. Here, Daisy.”

      He tossed another scrap. Daisy snarled louder and sniffed the air, then padded around behind the front tire to gobble up the meat.

      “That’s a good boy.” Joey emptied the entire baggy to the tune of snapping teeth, snorting, and slobbering.

      “How much of that stuff do you have?”

      “I’m out.”

      “Now what?” Zach asked, still paralyzed with panic.

      “Relax.”

      Daisy paced back and forth, sniffing at their feet before he came around by the tire, gave one final snort, then lay down in the dirt so they could see his wet muzzle and the glow of front teeth. He put his head on his front paws, then rolled over on his side, twitched a bit, then began to snore.

      “You killed it?” Zach asked in an excited whisper.

      “No. Don’t you hear it snoring?”

      “Okay, let’s go.”

      “I’m not finished.”

      4

      Zach stayed rigid. The cell phone trembled in his hand, but its light was steady enough for Joey to complete the job. He cinched the clamp down tight enough to strangle the fuel line when Mr. Kratz drove to the train stati
    on in the morning.

      “Okay, let’s go.”

      They wiggled their way out from under the truck. Daisy’s barrel chest heaved up and down peacefully. They tiptoed slowly and quietly for the first few steps, but the farther they got, the more panic overtook them and soon they were both sprinting as fast as their legs would carry them down the dirt driveway, heading for the road, each holding his phone in the air to light the way. Joey went down once, tripping on a tree root, but hit the ground, bounced, rolled, and came up running.

      When they reached the road, they yanked their bikes from the hedge, mounted them on the run, and pedaled away like mad.

      At the crossroads they dismounted in the church’s weedy lot and slapped high fives. Zach arched his back and tilted his head to the hidden moon, letting out a howl to scare a wolf. They both laughed and Zach hugged Joey until Joey had no choice but to hug him back.

      “My best friend is the greatest!” Zach yelled at the moon. “The best ever!”

      Joey’s face grew warm. “Let’s hope it works.”

      “Of course it will work. How could it not work? You choked off his fuel line. You’re a genius.”

      Joey could think of about ten things off the top of his head, most of all if the truck didn’t get far enough from the cabin, or if it got too close to civilization, or if it conked out in some small pocket where there was cell service so that Mr. Kratz could somehow get another ride and make what was the last train in the morning on time. But instead of going through the list, he shrugged and said, “I guess you’re right. It should work.”

      “It will work. V for victory.” Zach held up his first two fingers and spread them wide in a V.

      “Well, we better get going.” Joey kicked up the stand on his bike.

      Zach did the same. “Yup, we got trophies waiting for us tomorrow. You’re the man.”

      “Make sure you’re at the train station,” Joey said. “If it doesn’t work, you sure don’t want to be in summer school. You can’t play for Center State select if that happens.”

      “Stop worrying. We’re both gonna make the all-star team, even if we don’t win the championship.”

      “But if we win it, it’s a lock. The champion team gets two automatic spots on the all-stars, and if you miss the championship game? It might hurt your chances with the voting.”

     


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