Authors: Pam Withers
“I'm afraid I bought into Vargas's businessâhook, line and sinker,” my father says, frowning. “I never suspected
it was an illegal operation; I thought your mother was being overly paranoid.”
“When you cried so much, I thought maybe you knew â¦,” Mother says.
“Knew?” I echo when she pauses.
“Knew you'd been stolen, if you were. Knew I wasn't your real mother. Hated me for what we'd done.”
“Hated you?” I turn to face the mother who has raised me, the mother I now realize has loved me fiercely all my life. “Seriously, Mother, Dad, David, I've learned this week who my real family is. It was stupid to go chasing after some fairy-tale mom. Who turned out to be worse than an evil stepmother.” I grin weakly.
“Told you so,” Raul inserts helpfully.
“Not so evil,” Mother says, stroking my hair. “First of all, she gifted us with you sixteen years ago. Second, she tried to save your life in the cave. Third, she made you a nice hat. She's quite a talented knitter. Maybe I will have to take up a new hobby.”
She fingers my new blue hat thoughtfully. “I'm sorry for heaping so much guilt and blame on myself that I've never been much of a mother to you, Andreo.”
“That is not true, Motherâ
er
, Mom. Can I call you Mom instead of Mother? Mother is so formal.”
She laughs and says, “Of course, Andreo.”
I turn and wrap my arm around her with a force that surprises both of us. I lean my wet face into her wet face and whisper, “I love you. And I'm so, so sorry for all this.”
“Hey,” Dad pipes up. “What about me?”
I wrap my other arm around him, and we have a bear hug. A grizzly bear hug. David says, “Family love-in, huh? Well, guess I'd better jump in.” And he does.
The skinny girl serving as the hotel receptionist gawks, but I don't care.
“Okay, this is getting way too soppy for me,” Raul states.
“About that note you left on the bikes,” Dad says as we release one another.
I feel my face flush red. “I flat-out lied,” I admit. “I'm really sorry. I lied in order to buy Raul and me more time in Torotoro while you finished the race. I knew how important it was for you to finish. I figured unranked was better than nothing.”
“You thought finishing the race was more important than being a family?” Dad shakes his head in disbelief. “You thought finishing was so big a deal we'd still do it after you had run away?”
“IâI guess I did.”
Dad looks devastated. “Andreo, Andreo, my son. I know I was angry earlier, but only because I hadn't had time to think it through. I should have realized how wrong it was to act like you weren't adopted and hide your birth information from you. I thought I was protecting your mother's feelings. But surely you know that neither David nor I meant what we said about time-outs and going unranked.”
“That was my fault,” David cuts in. “I knew you guys had been sneaking around, and I felt left out. I shouldn't have snooped in your backpack, but the whole birth certificate thing really threw me when I did. I was shocked and crazy-angry at what you and Raul had been doing. And super scared that Mom was going to be hurt when she found out. So what did I do? Something even stupiderâI got into a shouting match with you that
made
her find out. And I said things I really, really didn't mean, like telling you we could go unranked and that you didn't fit into our family.”
He walks over to me and places his hands on my shoulders. “You have no idea how freaked out I was when I realized you really had taken off. Andreo, I know I can be a total pain of a brother, and I'll try to be nicer if you will. But, well, I don't really want to be an only child.” He cracks a half-smile.
I nod and punch his shoulder lightly. He drops his arms back to his sides.
“Don't you dare run away again,” he says in a tight voice, “Â 'cause you know I'm not as fastâI won't be able to catch you.”
“That's true,” I kid him.
“So, after David left with Police Chief Ferreira and Sheriff Savedra,” Dad continues, “the rest of us came to the hotel here, booked two rooms and waited for word.”
“You can't imagine how relieved we were when Chief Ferreira phoned to say he'd found you two,” Mom says. “Then we had to wait here forever until the police were done questioning you.”
Everyone goes quiet for a few minutes, totally spent.
“Well, it has been one hell of an adventure race for your team,” Ferreira finally says. “And a very successful day for me. May I be so bold as to ask whether you, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, might be willing to make a statement on adopting through Hugo Vargas?”
“Yes,” Mom and Dad say together. I feel a surge of pride.
Ferreira turns to Raul. “And you, Raul, did you find anything in that notebook I confiscated from you about your birth parents? Unfortunately, Colque and the Vargases categorically refuse to answer that question.”
Mom, Dad, David and I turn to study Raul's face, which has fallen.
“
Nah
. I knew it wasn't in the cards. Like I said, they're probably worse than myâ”
“What is your birth mother's name, son?” Savedra asks.
“Adriana Apaza.”
The sheriff's eyes widen. His mouth opens slightly. “And your birth date?”
Raul mumbles his answer.
Savedra turns to Ferreira. “Excuse me for a moment.” He rises and lopes out the hotel's front door, watched by the bored receptionist.
“So, David,” I say, “I guess while we're doing apologies, I'm sorry I spent my life being jealous of you for being the favorite, natural-born son.”
“Jealous? Favorite?” David scratches his head. “I've spent my whole life being jealous of your being so good at sportsâwhich I imagined made you Mom and Dad's favorite.”
“We don't have favorites!” Dad declares, extending his long, strong arms to the backs of both our necks and pretending to slam our heads together.
“That's true, David and Andreo,” Mom says, her tone serious. “And we've got the rest of our lives to do better at demonstrating it.”
“Well, you could say we're your twins again, Mom,” I joke, pointing to David's and my black-and-blue eyes.
“
Hmmm
,” she says. “Not my idea ofâ”
“Good family dynamics,” Dad fills in, winking at Raul.
“Right,” Raul says, looking at David. “I apologize for punching you in the face.”
“Apology accepted. And I promise not to hit on any of your girlfriends again. Though you have better taste than I imagined.”
The lobby door flies open, and Ardillita and Juan Pedro bustle into the room, their five-year-old boy in Juan Pedro's arms. They're trailed by Savedra. The couple look from one to the other of us, then move to stand in front of Raul.
“You must be Raul.” Ardillita drops to her knees and takes Raul's hand in hers.
He looks at her like she's nuts.
“They told me you were a girl just out of spite,” she says in a shaky voice. “They told me that to make my search more difficult. And I believed them.”
Raul's face has frozen in shock. “But the birth certificate saysâ”
“Adriana Apaza. Ardillita is short for Adriana; it's a nickname. Apaza was my maiden name. And Juan Pedro ⦔
She breaks off as Juan Pedro sets the little boy down, grabs both of Raul's hands and pulls him to his feet. “Son, we're so happy to finally find you.” His voice is deep and emotional. He pulls Raul into a man-to-man hug. From the corner of my eyes, I see the hotel lobby receptionist
grimace like she's about to make a phone call to admit us all to an insane asylum. When Raul falls back into his seat, the five-year-old climbs into his lap, looks at him with big eyes and runs a finger through his dreadlocks.
Ardillita laughs. “Moises, this is Raul, your brother. Raul, meet Moises.”
“Brother,” Raul repeats, testing out the word.
“Mrs. de los Angeles is looking after the rest. This one wouldn't go to sleep so we brought him with us.”
Raul's face transforms from shock to glowing. He lifts a finger and brushes the boy's hair away from his eyes, then hums Bob Marley to him. Soon, the boy falls asleep, allowing Raul and his birth parents to talk in low tones.
If anyone deserves a fairy-tale ending, it is Raul
, I think to myself, only a little choked up.
Ferreira coughs. “Um, not to break this up, but it's getting close to midnight and I have to head back to Cochabamba early in the morning. I need to be there in time to greet the first finishers.”
“The first finishers,” Dad muses.
“Hey, we could hitch a ride with you and get there in time to
be
the first finishers!” David jokes.
Ferreira laughs. “Not sure about that, but you could get there in time to see your friend Maria McLeod come in. I can even make room for the bikes.”
Raul's head comes up at the sound of Maria's name. Juan Pedro grins like he knows why. “I have an idea,” he says to his birth son. “How about we collect Mrs. de los
Angeles and our kids at first light and head up in my truck for a day in Cochabamba? Mrs. de los Angeles can see her sons and granddaughter come in, and you can ride with us.”
“Yes, please!” Raul says. “Maybe we can join in the post-race party.”
“I'm all for that!” Dad says. “We earned the party, even if we didn't finish, did we not?”
“I'll vouch for you,” Ferreira says.
“We finished high in the family category,” Mom declares, squeezing my hand.
Everyone stands. I stretch, yawn and amble over to Raul. “Looks like we're going our separate ways,” I say. “I mean to Cochabamba tomorrow morning.”
“Yeah,” he says, doing a lousy job of hiding a goofy smile. “But it's been real,
mon
. See you at the finish line.”
“Have a good ride up, Raul Espada. You've been a first-class partner in adventure and crime.
Misión completa
.”
“Mission complete,” he agrees.
Above all, I am indebted to my researcher, Richie (Jonathan Borda Gutierrez) of Cochabamba, Bolivia, a runner/bicyclist/hiker/Bob Marley fan and adoptee who has unbridled enthusiasm for life and adventure. Through months of e-mails, he patiently answered my questions, helped choose the racecourse and sports and named many of the characters. He also supplied me with a six-page, extensively detailed (from geology and climate to people's dress)
diario
and almost a hundred photos of his ten-hour, super-bumpy round-trip bus ride to Torotoro National Park and his stay there. In the region, he spent several days caving in some of the dozens of caverns (there really is a matrimonial cave) and exploring surrounding villages and terrain (including the fiberglass dinosaur in Torotoro's village square). Later, when I arrived in Cochabamba, he accompanied me to Villa Tunari and Sucre, serving as guide, Spanish tutor, translator and all-round, fun-loving friend.
That being said, I'd like to make it clear that parts of the racecourse in this novel are fictional and that no oneârepeat no oneâshould even think about bicycling the highway between Cochabamba and Villa Tunari. (Driving it is hair-raising enough!)
Sincere thanks also go to adventure race organizer Bryan Tasaka (Mind Over Mountain, Vancouver, Canada), who made himself available to answer many questions about the sport. Also to Martin Sellens, expert orienteer; Malcolm Scruggs, my valued teen editor; Silvana Bevilacqua, my sharp-eyed friend; Steve, my husband and fellow adventurer; and Ren Gregoire and her family, Jord and Ayrton.
Last but certainly not least, sincere thanks to my literary agent, Lynn Bennett; to editor Sue Tate and all the team at Tundra Books; to my speaking tours agent, Chris Patrick (
www.pamwithers.com
); and to my readers.