Authors: R. A. Spratt
Friday and Melanie were waiting with their classmates by the edge of the swamp. A Year 10 class, including Christopher, was milling around as well. Mr Maclean, their geography teacher, was about to stage his annual autumn term assignment. He was forcing the students to take part in orienteering. There was a general air of glumness about the group. Geography was bad enough already without adding physical exercise into it.
âAh, good morning, geographers,' called Mr Maclean as he strode across the field, a warm cup of coffee in one hand and a bag full of athletic equipment in the other. âAre you ready to put theory into practice in the great outdoors?'
âNo,' said Mirabella sullenly.
âCan I be excused, sir?' asked Peregrine. âI'm allergic.'
âTo what?' asked Mr Maclean.
âNature,' said Peregrine.
âMe too,' said Melanie.
Other students started putting up their hands.
âWe all are,' claimed Judith.
âThis is sooo not relevant to our lives,' said Mirabella. âThe only type of map I want to be able to read is the floor plan at the mall. Why can't we do orienteering there?'
There were murmurs of agreement amongst the group.
Mr Maclean ignored them. âYou will each be given a map of the school grounds and an orienteering card,' he explained. âYour job is to use your map to find five markers. At each marker is a unique
punch. You use the punch to put a hole in your card. When you have all five punches you return here.'
âAnd this constitutes how much of our final grade?' asked Friday.
âOne hundred per cent,' said Mr Maclean. He was very proud to have thought up a way of grading two whole classes of his students all at once, and without having to read any examination papers. (He'd been taking tips from Mrs Cannon.) âI've prepared a list of teams. Step forward to see who you're partnered with, then collect your equipment and you can start. The first pair back here with their card fully punched automatically gets an A++.'
Before Friday had time to react, Ian leapt forward. He glanced at the list. âMelly Pelly, you're with me.'
âGoodness, no,' said Melanie. âCouldn't I swap and get someone slower-moving?'
Ian ignored her, snatched up the equipment, grabbed Melanie by the hand and took off into the forest at a sprint.
âPoor Melanie,' said Friday. âI don't think she's going to enjoy this.'
âCome on, let's go,' said Christopher as he turned to Friday.
âGo where?' asked Friday.
âOrienteering,' said Christopher with a smile. âWe're a team.'
âWe are?' Friday noticed Christopher was already holding a map, compass and card. âOf course, sorry, my mind stepped out for a moment.'
âShould we follow Ian?' asked Christopher.
Friday took the map and looked at it. âWe could if we wanted to fall off a cliff in about three minutes' time. If we want to get to the first marker alive, better to take a slightly longer route and go this way.' Friday led Christopher into the swamp.
âAre you as good at reading maps as you are at everything else?' asked Christopher as they walked swiftly through the bush. Friday was not going to run anywhere, not even for an A++.
âYes,' said Friday.
âLet me guess,' said Christopher, âfrom years spent in the Girl Scouts?'
âGoodness, no,' said Friday. âI would never be involved in an organisation whose sole motivating philosophy is based on acquiring cloth patches. No, I learned how to read maps on summer holidays with my family.'
âReally?' asked Christopher.
âMy mother read an article on the educational benefits of an outdoor experience,' explained Friday. âSo she arranged for our whole family, including my four older brothers and sisters, to go on a two-week kayaking holiday.'
âYou could cover a lot of ground in two weeks,' said Christopher.
âMy mother is a conscientious woman,' said Friday. âShe made sure to find a very long river.'
âSo what happened?' asked Christopher.
âA helicopter dropped us up river,' explained Friday. âWe were meant to spend the entire holiday paddling down to the estuary. But there was a flash flood on our second night and all our kayaks were swept away.'
âAnd you took charge of the situation?' asked Christopher.
âYou have to understand,' said Friday, âmy parents and my brothers and sisters all have PhDs in theoretical physics, so they have absolutely no practical life skills at all. If they had to guide a rocket to Pluto using the gravitational pull of Jupiter as a slingshot, my family would have no problem doing the
mathematics. But moving in a straight line through non-theoretical obstacles is beyond them. I walked out, found a town and called the helicopter back to pick up the rest of the family.'
âDramatic,' said Christopher.
âWe never went on a family holiday ever again,' said Friday. She didn't know why telling this story brought a lump to her throat. The last thing she wanted to do was cry in front of Christopher.
Christopher nudged Friday so that she would look up at him. âYou know, sometimes you seem older than I know you are,' he said softly.
âSo do you,' said Friday, looking into Christopher's eyes.
âAh, that's because of my wicked past.' He grinned.
âYou were wicked?' asked Friday, smiling at Christopher's attempt to lighten the mood.
âI had to repeat Year 8 because of “behavioural issues”,' said Christopher unrepentantly.
âWhat behavioural issues?' asked Friday.
âI'll tell you later. Look, there's the first marker,' he called, having spotted the orange and white flag up ahead. They hurried towards it.
âIt looks like we're going to be first,' said Friday.
âNo, you're not,' said Ian as he brushed past at a sprint, beating them to the flag, finding the control punch and punching a hole in his card.
âHey, where's Melanie?' asked Friday. âYou didn't lead her over the cliff, did you?'
âNo, I asked her if she wanted to sit under a tree taking a nap while I ran around getting all the punches,' said Ian. âUnsurprisingly, she agreed.' He raced off again. But as he ran he brushed past Christopher, causing him to drop his compass, then Ian, far from accidentally, ground it underfoot.
âHey, you broke our compass,' Christopher yelled. But Ian had already disappeared into the bushes. âI'm going to get him.'
âDon't worry,' said Friday, âI've got a wristwatch. We can use that and the sun as a compass.'
âHow?' asked Christopher.
Friday took off her watch and laid it on her palm. âIf we line up the twelve with the sun, then north is halfway between the twelve and the hour hand. That way!'
Using Friday's careful assessments of the best route to take across the landscape and her accurate map reading, she and Christopher had all five holes
punches in their card in under one hour and ten minutes.
There was a slight delay at the fifth marker because Friday could not get the punch to work properly. It didn't help that she had sweaty palms as a result of unaccustomed exercise combined with unaccustomed proximity to a very handsome boy.
Fortunately, Christopher had big strong hands (one of the characteristics of his attractiveness) and he was able to take a firm hold of the punch, cutting through the card with a minimal amount of squeezing and wrestling on the handgrip.
âCome on,' said Christopher, âlet's run back to the finish. Perhaps we'll win.'
âI'm sorry,' said Friday, âI'm not very good at running.'
Christopher smiled. âYou can do it. I'll help you.' He took Friday by the hand.
Friday was surprised. No boy had ever held her hand before. It didn't tingle like in the romance novels, but it did feel nice in an explicable, visceral way. Christopher's hand was large and rough compared to hers. He tugged her hand and took off running. Friday found she quite enjoyed being dragged through the forest.
The terrain wasn't difficult. There was a fire track to follow, which they ran along for five minutes. Friday had never run for so long in her life. She seriously began to worry that she might suffer from some sort of cardiovascular failure.
âStop,' cried Friday, yanking her hand free and coming to a complete halt.
âWe can't stop now,' said Christopher, âwe're so close. Look over the treetops, you can see the top of the flagpole on the main building.'
It was a struggle for Friday to speak while she was breathing or, rather, attempting to breathe, so hard. âNo,' panted Friday. âI mean â' more panting ââ it'll be quicker if we go directly through the bush.'
âAlso more dangerous,' said Christopher.
âI like to live dangerously,' said Friday, finally having some control of her respiration.
Christopher smiled and grabbed her hand again. âLet's go!'
They started thrashing their way through the undergrowth. Six minutes later, they stumbled out the other side of the forest onto the edge of the football field. They were both covered in mud, scratches and
insect bites. And Friday's brown cardigan had so many pulled threads it was even uglier than usual.
âWe made it,' said Friday.
They looked about. Mr Maclean was standing on his own.
âWe're going to win,' said Christopher. âCome on!'
Friday and Christopher started running again. But they had only taken a few steps when Ian and Melanie burst out of the bushes ahead of them. They both had leaves and dried grass all over their backs. Ian was actually carrying Melanie, and he was running full tilt. Friday and Christopher ran as fast as they could, but even with the large weight to carry, Ian had such a big lead he easily reached the finish line first.
âWell done, Mr Wainscott. Miss Pelly, interesting approach,' said Mr Maclean. âBut I suppose all's fair in love and geography. The A++ goes to you.'
âThank you, sir,' said Ian with a smile. âI'm just sorry that in the noble pursuit of academic excellence there has to be winners and losers. And yet there does.'
Friday rolled her eyes.
âHe cheated,' accused Christopher.
âThat's a shocking allegation,' said Ian. âSir, surely
you must dock his mark for making defamatory statements.'
Mr Maclean confronted Christopher. âCan you prove that?'
âNo,' said Christopher. âBut I know that he did.'
âIf you can't back it up, don't make the accusation,' chided Mr Maclean. âOr you'll end up with a B.'
âI can prove it,' said Friday.
âIf you've got proof that Wainscott cheated, then spit it out,' said Mr Maclean. âOtherwise, I'm giving you both a C for unsportsmanlike behaviour.'
âJust look at him,' said Friday. âThe course is eight kilometres over difficult terrain. He isn't puffed or sweaty. Even with moderate exercise, the human body will start to sweat after just ten minutes.'
âWhat can I say,' smirked Ian. âI'm in superb physical condition.'
âHe doesn't have scratch marks on his legs or insect bites,' continued Friday. âBut he does have dirt, leaves and dried grass on his back. In fact, so does Melanie.'
âI do?' said Melanie.
âNeither of you look like you've been running through the bush for the last hour,' said Friday. âInstead, you both look like you've been lying on your back amongst leaf litter and dirt.'
âI have,' agreed Melanie. âFriday is very clever with her deductions, isn't she?'
âYes, she is,' said Christopher.
âThat's ridiculous tosh,' said Mr Maclean. âWainscott has every square punched on his card, using the different unique control punches.'
âMay I see his card?' said Friday.
Ian smirked. âBe my guest.'
Friday studied it intently. His card certainly did have all five squares punched.
âI think you'll find everything in order,' said Ian.
âChris,' said Friday, âlet me see our card.'
âOh, it's “Chris” now, is it?' said Ian, raising his eyebrows. âI saw you two holding hands as you burst out of the bushes. Perhaps we should be asking what you two were doing in the bush for over an hour.'
Friday ignored Ian and looked at his card. âI suspected as much,' she said. âMr Maclean, did you organise the same end of term assignment for your class last year?'
âYes, of course,' said Mr Maclean. âI always send my class out orienteering in the autumn term.'
âSo Ian knew that this test was coming up,' said Friday. âHe's had plenty of time to contact an orienteering organisation and order his own set of control punches, then hide them in the bushes so that he could leave Melanie, make a show of arriving at the first marker then sneak back to his hiding spot, punching the other four holes, before going back to Melanie and finishing the challenge.'
âThat's very farfetched,' said Mr Maclean.
âAnd entirely unprovable,' said Ian.
âLook at his card,' said Friday. âEvery single punch mark is cleanly cut.'
âProving I went to every marker,' said Ian.
âNo,' said Friday. âProving that you
didn't
. Because the punch on the fifth marker was blunt, it chewed the card. We had to punch it several times to get the chad out. You did not punch this hole with the same punch we did.'
âI can't be punished because I was able to make a tricky punch work better than you did,' said Ian.
âNo, perhaps not,' said Friday. âBecause Mr Maclean is a lazy man who would prefer not to take this further.'
âExcuse me?' said Mr Maclean.
âI don't mean it as an insult, sir,' placated Friday. âJust an observation of fact. But definitive proof would be if I found where you hid your box of control punches.'
Ian just laughed.
âIt would be like trying to find a needle in a haystack,' said Chris.
âHarder,' said Ian. âBecause in this case, the needle is not there.'
âPerhaps,' said Friday. âBut it must be hidden somewhere fairly obvious. Near a landmark that is easily identifiable from a distance, or any angle.' She scanned the treetops. One tree stood higher than the others. It was the Great Oak. The first tree planted by Sebastian Dowell when he founded the school.
âThere,' said Friday. âThe Great Oak.'
âYou mean, we've got to go bushwalking again?' asked Melanie.
âYou didn't do it the first time,' said Friday.
âNo, but if I had,' said Melanie, âI'd be most put out.'
âI am not going traipsing through the forest, looking for hypothetical false punches,' said Mr Maclean.
âWhy not?' asked Friday. âIt would be good exercise for you.'
âI have to wait here for all the other students to return,' said Mr Maclean.
Just then Peregrine and Mirabella burst out through the bushes. They were both bedraggled. They looked like they'd spent a month living rough, not an hour going for a walk.
âThe others aren't coming back,' announced Mirabella.
âWhat?' asked Mr Maclean.
âThey've all given up,' said Peregrine. âThey're refusing to move until you send in a helicopter.'
âThere you go,' said Friday. âThe best use of your time now would be to call the emergency services on your mobile. Get them to send a helicopter to start looking for the missing students. While we're waiting, we can nip over to the Great Oak and look for the punches.'
Even with the apathy of Mr Maclean and Melanie
to contend with, it only took the group five minutes to hike over to the Great Oak.
âThis is quite the goose chase, Barnes,' said Ian. âI'm thinking of lodging an official complaint for harassment.'
âYou set me up on terrorism charges,' said Friday. âYou can hardly get on your high horse when I simply call you out for cheating. Which I know you did, by the way. That's the difference. You've been naughty, IÂ haven't.'
âJust because you don't actually make ricin in your dorm room doesn't mean you aren't extremely irritating in many other ways,' said Ian.
âI don't know how you have the breath to bicker,' said Melanie. âAll this walking is exhausting.'
âSo where are these punches then?' asked Mr Maclean.
Friday scanned the clearing around the Great Oak. âWe have to think like Ian,' she said.
âI doubt you have the imagination to conceive what goes on in my brain,' said Ian.
âI don't need to know all the goings-on,' said Friday. âJust the bits about where you would hide a set of punches.'
âIn the ground,' suggested Chris.
âNo,' said Friday. âDigging would be too much like hard work.'
âUnder a bush,' suggested Melanie.
âNo,' said Friday. âToo easy to stumble across. The best hiding spot would be somewhere only Ian could find it. And what unique skill does Ian have?'
âHandsomeness,' suggested Melanie.
âIn addition to handsomeness,' said Friday. âHe is a superb acrobat.'
âReally?' asked Chris.
âOh yes,' said Melanie. âHis father was a graduate of the Barnum and Bailey Circus Skills University. That was a key fact Friday used to prove he committed a bank robbery and have him thrown in jail for seven years.'
âYour dad is in jail,' said Chris. âWhich jail?'
âI'd prefer not to discuss my personal issues with anyone at any time,' said Ian. âBut particularly not with you now.'
âHe thinks of such clever, rude things to say,' said Melanie. âFriday, you're so lucky to have found him.'
âGiven his acrobatic skills,' continued Friday, âthe best place for Ian to hide the punches would be somewhere high up in the tree.'
âAnd how are you going to prove that?' asked Ian. âWe all know you're barely capable of jogging, so you aren't going to be able to climb the tree yourself. You can't cut down the tree either, because it's heritage-listed. So what does that leave? You'll have to train a squirrel to search for you.'
âI'll be your squirrel,' volunteered Chris.
âThis is getting better than a Mills and Boon plot,' said Melanie.
Ian made a scoffing noise.
âAre you sure?' asked Friday. âThe lowest branch is eight feet off the ground. And you are pretty â¦'
âShort,' Ian finished off her sentence.
âI may not be an acrobat, but I do know a thing or two about climbing,' said Chris. He walked over to the trunk and stared at the bark for a few moments.
âAre you trying to out-think the tree?' Ian asked.
Chris ignored him. He kicked off his shoes, reached up and wedged his fingertips into the small gaps in the bark, then pulled his feet up off the ground and tucked his toes into the bark. After a few swift decisive movements, he had pulled himself up to the lowest branch.
âWow!' said Melanie. âHe must have really strong fingertips.'
âAnd toe tips,' agreed Friday.
âClimbing is a hobby of mine,' called Chris. âIt's all just a matter of working within the laws of physics.'
âI think he's using science talk to flirt with you,' said Melanie.
Once Chris was in the branches, climbing became much easier and he soon disappeared from sight.
Friday glanced across at Ian. He was starting to look sullen.
âI've found a bag,' called out Chris. âIt's tied to a branch.'
âWhat's inside?' asked Friday.
âA box,' called Chris.
âAnd what's in the box?' asked Friday.
There was a rustle of leaves and suddenly Chris dropped to the ground, landing with the agility of a cat, right in front of them.
âSee for yourself,' he said, handing Friday the box.
She opened it. Inside was a brand new shiny set of orienteering punches.
âYou can't prove they're mine,' said Ian. âI was framed. She planted them up there.'
âWhat I don't understand,' said Friday, âis why on earth you would want to cheat. If you'd just done
the orienteering properly, you probably would still have won.'
âMost people at this school don't care about grades,' added Melanie.
âI have to,' said Ian.
âWhat does that mean?' asked Friday.
âI need all the As I can get,' said Ian. âI have to maintain my grade-point average or I lose my scholarship.'
âBut you're the second smartest student in the year, after Friday,' said Melanie. âSurely your grade-point average is fine.'
âSecond smartest isn't good enough, is it?' said Ian. âWhen there's only one scholarship.'
âI don't need the scholarship,' said Friday. âI've already got $10,000 towards next term's fees.'
âOh, and you think you'll keep stumbling across crimes to solve and be rewarded for, do you?' asked Ian. âOne per semester for the next five-and-a-half years?'
âI don't see why not,' said Friday. âIt's worked this far.'
Mr Maclean sighed and rubbed his eyes while he tried to figure out what to do. âBarnes, you
and Gianos will get the A++ for finishing first,' he finally said.
âYes!' exclaimed Chris.
âWainscott and Pelly,' said Mr Maclean, turning to Ian and Melanie, âI'm giving you a B+.'
âWhat?!' exclaimed Chris. âAren't you going to send Ian to the Headmaster? He cheated!'
âHe did have sufficient geographic knowledge and initiative to seek and purchase a set of orienteering punches. Most students wouldn't even be aware that such a thing existed,' said Mr Maclean. âAnd he managed to go into the forest, find the oak tree and his way back without getting lost, which may very well turn out to be the second best result in the class. And I can't give everyone Fs.'
âThat's ridiculous,' protested Chris.
âActually, I think it shows remarkable good sense,' said Friday. âVery uncharacteristic for Mr Maclean. Well done, sir.'
âI'd say thank you, Barnes,' said Mr Maclean, âbut I don't think that was really a compliment.'