But Leo’s duck, whom he named , had a problem. Pockets quacked constantly. For everything. Quack! (Your shoelace is loose.) Quack! (That cloud looks slightly weird.) Quack! (You’re holding the map upside down.) The other kids laughed. “Your duck’s broken,” they teased.
Leo soon learned that wasn’t a camp—it was a survival course. Each kid was paired with a “QWack” (Quantum Waterfowl and Chaos Kinetics) duck. The duck’s quack could do one thing: prepare . Not predict the future, but prepare you for it. If a branch was about to fall, the duck would quack twice, sharp. If a storm was brewing, three slow quacks meant “tie down your tent.” If a rival camper was sneaking up behind you… well, that was a single, sarcastic-sounding quack-ack-ack .
Leo blinked. “Duck… QWack… Prep?” duckqwackprep
During the final trial—the —the rules were simple: follow your duck’s preparations through a dark, foggy swamp to reach the floating nest at the center. One by one, the other kids entered. Their ducks quacked sparingly, giving just enough warning to dodge a log or step over a hidden root.
The ground gave way without warning—no cracks, no tremors. The other ducks hadn’t quacked because they only prepared for the obvious . But Pockets had been quacking about everything , including the tiny, unnatural silence of the crickets near that spot. But Leo’s duck, whom he named , had a problem
Then came the clearing. And the sinkhole.
In that moment, Leo understood. Pockets wasn’t broken. He was over-prepared . And as Leo slid toward the mud pit, Pockets let out a final, deafening —not a warning, but a command. Leo dropped low, spread his arms like wings, and slid flat across the collapsing earth, using his jacket as a makeshift sled. He rolled to safety just as the sinkhole swallowed a whole tree stump. (You’re holding the map upside down
Coach Mallory handed him a worn, golden egg. “DuckQWackPrep isn’t about the quietest quack,” she said. “It’s about the one who listens—even when the world sounds like noise.”