Deep in trouble,
Deep in the canyons
Fourteen-year-old Dylan Sands has come all the way from North Carolina
to Big Bend National Park, on the Texas/Mexico border, to paddle the
fabled Rio Grande. His partner in adventure is a local river rat, his
cousin Rio. As the two are packing their boats for ten days in the
canyons, six Black Hawk helicopters appear overhead and race across the
river into Mexico.
The army won't tell the boys what's happening, but they are given a
weather advisory: A hurricane is approaching the Gulf of Mexico. Dylan
and Rio have their hearts set on their trip and can't give it up. Rio
believes that their chances of running into border troubles or a major
storm are slim to none.
By canoe and raft, Dylan and Rio venture into the most rugged and remote
reaches of the U.S./Mexico border. You may well not see another human
being during the duration of your trip, the guidebook tells them. They
don't, until a man stumbles into camp with a seven-year-old boy. A storm
is brewing as the man who calls himself Carlos begs for help . . . and
the boy is trembling with fear.