“So do I,” she whispered. “But that can’t be, could it? Not at both our houses.”

“Yeah. No way. I know it’s my imagination, but I still hear it.”

She was quiet for a long moment and then said, “What are we going to do?”

“I’m not sure, but you could kiss me some more tomorrow.” He couldn’t believe he had said it.

She laughed. “Ok. It’s a date.”

“I’m glad you did it first. You were right. I probably never would have gotten up the nerve.”

“I figured, but what I can’t figure is why? Do I scare you that bad?”

“How long have we known each other now?” he asked.

“Oh…let’s see…third grade…about five years. Why?”

“We’ve gotten to be pretty close friends, right?”

“The best.”

“I guess I was scared to mess it up. What if you got mad at me? I couldn’t stand the thought of you hating me.”

“How long have you felt this way Lucas Harrison?” she asked.

“Since you called me a ‘Goofy Goober.’”

She laughed at him and he realized if he couldn’t hear that laugh all the time, he would feel lost.

“I could never hate you,” she said quietly.

“Ok. Promise?”

“Promise.”

“I feel better,” he said. “Don’t you?”

“Yes. I think I can sleep now.”

“Me too.”

“See you tomorrow?” she said.

“I can’t wait.”

They both hung up and he was asleep before he could count to ten.

All four were in the backyard of Luke’s house looking at the ground. The white snow made everything new and clean, and it was hard to feel threatened in the crisp, white world that now surrounded them. The sun was out, shining bright, and everything sparkled and twinkled.

“The snow has covered any tracks he made,” Jimmy said, more to himself than anybody specific.

“There’s nothing in the bushes,” Luke yelled from the side of his house where the hedge they hid in stood covered in snow.

“Let’s check by the pool,” Ellie said and they all trekked down the hill in Luke’s backyard toward the hole in the fence that led to the sports complex.

Luke’s fence backed up to the tennis courts and pool complex that belonged to the neighborhood. The homeowners would pay a yearly fee and have use of all the amenities for everyone in the family. There were tennis teams, swim teams, diving classes, water aerobics, a kiddie pool, and swimming classes. Just about anything you could think of.

Cotton Court’s entrance was all the way on the other side of the main street into the neighborhood and was a pretty good walk to the pool area, but Luke’s backyard lay right up against it. There was a path that ran down the side of his house and through the backyard to a hole in the fence. Everyone in the court cut through it to get to the pool.

Luke’s Dad was upset about this at first, but now he didn’t seem to care. Nobody hurt any of his shrubs or grass and it was convenient for him also. Just a quick jog down the short path, slip through the hole between the fence and the giant hedge of honeysuckle, and you were right there.

Ellie peeked through the hole in the fence and then slipped through. The rest of them followed and they squished through the snow toward the pool about a hundred yards away. The empty and quiet tennis courts were to their left, and not a single footstep, or animal track, marred the new snow as far as the eye could see. The heavy snowfall had wiped everything clean.

They came up to the fence that encircled the pool and peered through the chinks at the iced over water.

Ellie suddenly smiled and said, “Let’s try to walk on the ice.”

“I don’t know,” Jimmy said. “Could be too thin.”

“Let’s see,” she said and started climbing the fence.

Luke shrugged at John and Jimmy, and then followed her over the fence onto the deck. All the pool furniture was covered in snow and the ice in the pool had a ghostly layer over top of it.

Ellie stood at the edge and said, “Hold me.”

Luke grabbed her arm and John held onto her coat. She put one foot on the snow covered ice and slowly put more weight down. Luke kept expecting to hear a loud crack and watch as Ellie slipped from his grasp, sinking into the freezing water. She had all her weight on one foot now and she lifted the other leg off the ground, standing solely on the ice. She looked up and grinned. That’s when the ice broke and her leg slid into the water. She let out a little cry as Luke and John held her tight, but not before her right leg went into the icy water up to her thigh. They quickly pulled her up and onto the pool deck. She was laughing as she fell onto Luke who had tripped trying to pull her out. He didn’t think it was so funny.

“That didn’t work,” she said.

“No crap,” Jimmy said.

“If you had fallen in, I don’t know if we could have even seen you,” Luke said.

“You wouldn’t jump in after me?” she teased.

“You know I would,” Luke said. “I wouldn’t like it, but I’d jump in.”

She leaned over and gave him a peck on the cheek. “Thanks for saving me.”

“Hey!” John said. “What about me?”

“Thank you, John,” and she kissed him on the cheek too. Luke felt a little twinge of jealousy, and it bothered him that he would feel that way toward his best friend.

Jimmy was studying the pool, lost in thought, when he said, “You know, if somebody fell in this thing, I don’t think anybody would find them ‘til spring.”

“Nah-somebody would see,” John said.

“Wanna bet?”

“How’re you going to prove it?” John asked.

“I got an idea.” And Jimmy explained his plan. They all grinned.

That evening, at dusk, they met together on the side of Luke’s house with the items they had collected. Jimmy had his dad’s giant MagLite flashlight, and John had an ice pick along with some old clothes. Luke and Ellie had brought old clothes too. They sat in the snow and put together a stuffed dummy with the clothes and rags. The only things missing were shoes and hands. Luke didn’t think it would matter.

Ellie held the stuffed dummy up and said, “He needs a name.”

“How ‘bout George,” John said.

“George it is,” Ellie said. “Come on George, let’s go swimming.”

It was full dark now, no moon, and Jimmy led the way through the wooded backyard with the flashlight shining the way. It was very quiet and Luke kept thinking he would hear the voice again, but nothing made a sound.

When they got to the pool fence, they tossed ‘George’ over and climbed after him. Jimmy doused the flashlight and they worked in the dark. John took the ice pick and chipped the ice around the hole Ellie had made earlier until it was big enough for ‘George’ to fit through.

“Get the lifeguard pole, John,” Jimmy whispered.

John grabbed the pole that was hanging by brackets on the fence and brought it over. Jimmy used it to stuff the dummy up under the ice and push it out deeper into the pool. He then took the hook end and pushed the snow around on top of the ice, clearing an area so they could see the dummy through the murky thin ice. From their point of view, ‘George’ looked exactly like a body that was trapped under the ice.

“Come on,” Luke said and giggled at the sight. “Let’s go!”

They all quickly climbed back over the fence, laughing nervously and trying not to make too much noise. Luke

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