Julian for
three days in a row
—and two nights—was a major reason that I was nervous
about this whole trip. So now without him there, I could really just relax and not worry
about anything.
We got to the nature reserve at around noon. The first thing we did was put our stuff
down in the cabins. There were three bunk beds to every room, so me and Jack did
rock, paper, scissors for the top bunk and I won. Woo-hoo. And the other guys in the
room were
Reid and Tristan, and Pablo and Nino.
After we had lunch in the main cabin, we all went on a twohour guided nature hike
through the woods. But these were not woods like the kind they have in Central Park:
these were real woods. Giant trees that almost totally blocked out the sunlight. Tangles
of leaves and fallen tree trunks. Howls and chirps and really loud bird calls. There was
a slight fog, too, like a pale blue smoke all around us. So cool. The nature guide
pointed everything out to us: the different types
of trees we were passing, the insects
inside the dead logs on the trail, the signs of deer and bears in the woods, what types
of birds were whistling and where to look for them. I realized that my Lobot hearing
aids actually made me hear
better than most people, because I was usually the first
person to hear a new bird call.
It started to rain as we headed back to camp. I pulled on my rain poncho and pulled the
hood up so my hearing aids wouldn't get wet, but my jeans and shoes got soaked by
the time we reached our cabins. Everyone got soaked. It was fun, though. We had a
wet-sock fight in the cabin.
Since it rained for
the rest of the day, we spent most of the afternoon goofing off in the
rec room. They had a Ping-Pong table and old-style arcade games like Pac-Man and
Missile Command that we played until dinnertime. Luckily, by then it had stopped
raining, so we got to have a real campfire cookout. The log benches around the
campfire were still a little damp, but we threw our jackets over
them and hung out by
the fire, toasting s'mores and eating the best roasted hot dogs I have ever, ever tasted.
Mom was right about the mosquitoes: there were tons of them. But luckily I had
spritzed myself before I left the cabin, and I wasn't eaten alive like some of the other
kids were.
I loved hanging out by the campfire after dark. I loved the way bits of fire dust would
float up and disappear into the night air. And how the fire lit up people's faces. I loved
the sound the fire made, too. And how the woods were so dark that you couldn't see
anything around you, and you'd look up and see a billion stars in the sky. The sky
doesn't look like that in North River Heights. I've seen it look like that in Montauk,
though: like someone sprinkled salt on a shiny black table.
I was so tired when I got back to the cabin that I didn't need to pull out the book to read.
I fell asleep almost as fast as my head hit the pillow. And maybe I dreamed about the
stars, I don't know.
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