Скачать книгу

Jeffrey Parks and I have had words before. We aren’t exactly the best of friends. He once teased me about the wrong thing in grade five (I’d recently had a very bad haircut), and I punched him so hard he cried every time he saw me for days afterwards.

      But really, today, this particular incident is nothing personal. I have no control over myself, this time. My eyes get really wide. I am not going to float up to the ceiling in the middle of my grade eight English class. It just isn’t going to happen.

      I jump up so fast that my desk falls over. My pencils and papers go flying, which is just as well, because it distracts everyone. They’re all running around trying to pick up my stuff. I run toward the door, and all I can say to Mr. Marcus as I run by is, “Sorry, sir, I think I’m going to throw up!”

      That’s the kids’ “get out of jail free” pass. No teacher is going to make you stay and talk if they think you are about to barf your breakfast all over their shoes.

      He just nods and opens the door extra wide for me. I leave that room really fast, believe me. So fast, that no one notices that as I run away, my feet aren’t actually touching the ground.

      THREE

      I run down that hallway as fast as I can and burst into the staff supply room, the nearest room I can find with a lock on the door. It’s really odd, running without touching the ground. It feels a little like when you try to run in those bouncy inflatable castles you find at rich kids’ birthday parties, or at the town fair.

      I slam the door and lock it behind me. Technically, I’m not supposed to be in the staff supply room, but this is an emergency. Gail Todd came in here last year when she had her period and didn’t want everyone to know. I figure this is at least as serious as that.

      I hold on to the door handle, not sure what to do. I’m breathing fast and my heart is pounding. To make matters worse, my feet gently start to float toward the ceiling. I don’t want to let go of the handle for anything, so I float horizontally for a while, then as my feet rise toward the ceiling, I’m head down with my toes pointing skyward. It isn’t very comfortable. As the blood rushes to my head, I start to feel dizzy, so I have to let go of the door handle.

      As soon as my body is free, it floats lazily toward the ceiling, where it bounces around for a few moments, then settles gently, bumping up and down against the ceiling tiles.

      I realize that I’m now talking about my body like an “it,” like it’s no longer connected to the rest of me. But that’s what it feels like. As if my body is totally in charge, and I’m just going along for the ride.

      Which I guess I am.

      I edge away from the hot light fixture on the ceiling. No sense getting third degree burns all over me. I look around.

      The supply room is where the teachers get their extra pencils and paper and their classroom supplies for arts and crafts. It’s filled with shelves of coloured paper and huge, econo-sized buckets of non-toxic paint. It’s also filled with strange classroom leftovers, like giant papier-mâché puppets that were too good to throw away, but not good enough to display in the school foyer.

      This is why, as I float around on the ceiling, I come face-to-face with a huge clown puppet that the grade nines made for a play last year. The clown was creepy then. It’s even creepier now, looming out at me, grinning in the dark. A red nose, pointed eyebrows, and huge red mouth grin as I spin by in the air current.

      “What’s so funny?” I demand as I float by, but I suddenly worry that the clown is going to giggle and answer me in clown-rhyme: “TEE HEE HEE! You’re a freak, Gwendolyn Golden, just like MEEEE!”

      That would likely finish me off for good.

      After that, I just try to avoid the stupid clown.

      I float for about half an hour. I’m beginning to wonder if I will slowly deflate, like a helium balloon, before I can touch down again. It took my little brother’s Batman balloon almost three days to deflate and sink to the ground last Halloween.

      I can’t wait three days. I’m starting to get a little panicky. What am I going to do?

      Finally there’s a knock on the door and I hear our principal, Mrs. Abernathy, calling through the crack.

      “Hello? Are you in there, Gwendolyn?” Mrs. Abernathy says.

      She sounds very sympathetic and nice. I’ve always liked her. She’s really good in a crisis. Once she had to take Christopher to the hospital when he needed stitches in kindergarten, and my mom had to meet them there. But this isn’t exactly a case of stitches. A crisis, perhaps, but probably not one that can be fixed with a quick visit to the hospital. Although that would be nice.

      “Uh, yes! It’s me in here,” I say. I hope she doesn’t notice that my voice is coming from the ceiling.

      “Oh, is everything all right, dear?”

      I can sense the worry in her voice. I reach out to steady myself, and as soon as I touch the door, I crash to the ground. It must have been loud, because I hear her gasp.

      She rattles the doorknob. “Gwendolyn! Gwen! Are you okay?” she calls.

      I stand up, brush off my shirt and jeans, straighten my long hair, and open the door.

      Mrs. Abernathy and Mr. Marcus are both standing there.

      “Are you okay, Gwen? We’ve been looking for you everywhere,” Mr. Marcus says. He really sounds worried.

      “Yeah, I think I’m fine now. I should go home, though.”

      The truth is that I feel fantastic. I try to look like I have been throwing up (but I don’t have to lie because no one asks me if I did or didn’t), but I actually feel incredible, better than I have in ages.

      I can’t explain it, but floating around on the ceiling seems to agree with me.

      FOUR

      I get my backpack and sign out at the office. I call my mom to come and get me, but she can’t because she’s in a meeting.

      I have to walk home. Which poses an interesting problem.

      What am I going to do if I start floating outside? In my bedroom, and in the staff supply room, there was a ceiling to keep me from floating off into space. What am I going to do if I start to lift off on Main Street, or in the park, or on the driveway, or in the millions of other places that I could use as a launching pad? Will I float along just off the ground or will I keep going, like a lost weather balloon, higher and higher and higher until I freeze, or pop?

      For the first time, I start to feel truly scared.

      I’m too young to float away into space. My family will miss me. I have to graduate from middle school in a few weeks. I want to go to high school! I want to learn to drive a car, and kiss somebody other than my mom, and watch a high school football game and cheer for a boy I secretly have a crush on.

      It starts to rain and I stand outside the school under the front door overhang pondering the problem. There is no one around, so I decide to do a little test. I’ll take a quick jog out into the rain and back under the overhang to see if I have any floating tendencies.

      So I dash out into the raindrops, dance around a little, then run back to safety. My feet are very much planted on the ground. They are so planted on the ground that my shoes are wet and my socks are soaked through.

      Okay, so no floating so far.

      I do it again a few more times, dashing into the rain and out from the safety of the overhang, a little farther each time. Nothing happens. So I decide it’s safe to try walking home.

      As an added precaution, I find a large rock, which I put in my backpack. It’s pretty heavy. I’m not sure if it will help to weigh me down if I start floating again, but I figure it can’t hurt.

      I step out from the overhang just as it starts to pour. I take the main

Скачать книгу