The Lost Causes of Bleak Creek(28)



Luckily, Rex had a connection.

As he passed the tilled-under tobacco fields that flanked the country road on the way to his destination, he couldn’t stop thinking about how different freshman year would be without Alicia. In the Triumvirate, she’d always been the one who knew how to navigate the weird social pitfalls of school. Now, he and Leif would have to face their most daunting challenge yet—becoming high-schoolers—on their own. And, thanks to him opening his big stupid mouth about his feelings for her, he’d made everything even worse than it already was.

Sure, Leif had given his blessing in the moment, but things had been slightly off between them ever since. Rex should’ve known that liking Alicia would be a threat to Leif; the same thing had happened the summer between sixth and seventh grades with Julie Adams. Rex had fallen fast and hard, spending nearly all his time with her. They’d even started calling each other “babe.” Because Alicia had spent a good portion of the summer in Virginia with her sick grandmother, Leif had been alone a lot, taking up a series of sad hobbies including metal detecting and soap carving. Rex pictured Leif, alone in his bedroom holding a duck made from a bar of Irish Spring, and felt like a jerk.

On top of all that, earlier that day, he and Leif had made the gut-wrenching decision to pull the plug on PolterDog.

“But don’t you think Alicia would want us to finish it?” Leif had asked, standing in front of his bathroom mirror wearing a curly brown wig he’d found in the plastic bin in his garage labeled PROPS. He was hoping Rex would agree that he would make a suitable Alicia replacement for the remaining scenes.

“Unless we want to write in a part for a bad Richard Simmons impersonator,” Rex had said, plucking the wig off Leif’s head, “I don’t think it’s gonna work.”

“What if we find another girl to play her role?” Leif had asked. “Like how Elisabeth Shue replaced Claudia Wells as Jennifer in Back to the Future Two?”

“First off, you’ve always put that on your long list of why the second movie sucked. Also, that’s a switcheroo in between movies. We’d be making the switch in the middle. Wouldn’t fly.” Rex had directed his gaze down to the wig in his hands. “Listen, Alicia won’t be at Whitewood forever. We can finish it when she’s out. We’ll make Sundance next year.”

He hadn’t really believed that. In truth, he’d developed an abiding sense that nothing would ever be the same.

Rex now turned in to a gravel driveway, the small wheels of his scooter grinding to a crunchy stop on the loose rocks that led to the house of Travis Bethune.

Not only was Travis the nicest person Rex and Leif had ever met, seemingly never disparaging anyone, but he had an untold number of jobs: landscaper, septic tank pumper, chimney sweep, house painter, and, most important, volunteer fireman. He traveled from job to job on his bright red moped and wore a thick black leather belt that held a walkie-talkie, two beepers, a flashlight, a large bowie knife, and a giant key ring loaded with what looked to be thirty keys or more. The teenagers around Bleak Creek regularly referred to him as Redneck Batman. He didn’t seem to mind the moniker, and Rex and Leif didn’t know if that was due to his unwavering positivity or just the general allure of being compared to Batman.

They’d met Travis a couple of years earlier, during one of Rex’s dad’s barbecue exploits; his grill fire had gotten out of control, accidentally igniting a backyard tree, and Travis was on the team who’d shown up to put it out. Rex and Leif were outside filming the fire, thinking it could be incorporated into their first movie, a messy series of comedy bits—way less cohesive and ambitious than PolterDog—entitled The Bleak Creek Boyz. Once the blaze was extinguished, Travis struck up a conversation with them. Even though they were only twelve and he was in his thirties, Travis took them seriously as filmmakers and mentioned multiple times that he’d be down to do stunts if they ever needed someone. They took him up on it right then and there, filming him jumping out of several different trees once the other firefighters left. He’d been their stuntman ever since.

Suffice it to say, when Rex realized he needed a fire extinguisher, he’d immediately thought of Travis, who’d called Rex back three minutes after he’d beeped him.

Rex walked the rest of the way up to the single-wide trailer, which Travis referred to as his “ranch-style house,” despite the wheels under the mobile home being only somewhat obscured by the wood lattice skirting. Travis opened the door before Rex even reached the front steps.

“Hey, man!” he said, flashing his signature grin. “Come on in. My casa, your casa!” Rex didn’t often see Travis without his utility belt. He seemed smaller.

“Thanks, Travis,” Rex said, hit with the smell of solder wire and bacon grease as he stepped onto the brown shag carpet. He’d only been to Travis’s house once before, as he always seemed to be out and about.

Rex had decided to make this a solo trip. Over the years, he’d learned that the best way to get his often-tentative best friend on board with an idea was to just start doing it. He was confident that if he went through the trouble of gathering the items by himself, talking Leif into meeting up with Ben again would be that much easier. He’d already retrieved three of Ben’s requests: a metal rake (from his dad’s shed), hot dogs (from the meat drawer in the fridge), and Cheerwine (from the shelves of the Piggly Wiggly).

Rhett McLaughlin & L's Books