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Table of Contents
About The Book
A gift…or a curse?
Jessica Mastriani has never liked attention. All she wants is to make it to high school graduation like any ordinary girl. But when Jess is struck by lightning, she becomes anything but ordinary: suddenly she has the ability to locate missing children.
Now Jess is getting noticed in all the wrong ways and by all the wrong people. The media is obsessed with her and her story. The FBI is tapping her phone. And what’s going on with sexy senior Rob? Soon Jess learns the hard way that not everyone who is lost wants to be found….
With no one to trust, it's up to Jess to decide what to do with her new power—before it’s decided for her.
Jessica Mastriani has never liked attention. All she wants is to make it to high school graduation like any ordinary girl. But when Jess is struck by lightning, she becomes anything but ordinary: suddenly she has the ability to locate missing children.
Now Jess is getting noticed in all the wrong ways and by all the wrong people. The media is obsessed with her and her story. The FBI is tapping her phone. And what’s going on with sexy senior Rob? Soon Jess learns the hard way that not everyone who is lost wants to be found….
With no one to trust, it's up to Jess to decide what to do with her new power—before it’s decided for her.
Excerpt
CHAPTER 1
They want me to write it down. All of it. They’re calling it my statement.
Right. My statement. About how it happened. From the beginning.
On TV, when people have to give a statement, there’s usually someone sitting there who writes it down for them while they talk, and then all they have to do is just sign it after it’s read back to them. Plus they get coffee and doughnuts and stuff. All I’ve got is a bunch of paper and this leaky pen. Not even so much as a Diet Coke.
This is just further proof that everything you see on TV is a lie.
You want my statement? Okay, here’s my statement:
It’s all Ruth’s fault.
Really. It is. It all started that afternoon in the burger line in the cafeteria, when Jeff Day told Ruth that she was so fat, they were going to have to bury her in a piano case, just like Elvis.
Which is totally stupid, since—to the best of my knowledge—Elvis was not buried in a piano case. I don’t care how fat he was when he died. I’m sure Priscilla Presley could have afforded a better casket for the King than a piano case.
And secondly, where does Jeff Day get off saying this kind of thing to somebody, especially to my best friend?
So I did what any best friend would do under the same circumstances. I hauled off and slugged him.
It isn’t like Jeff Day doesn’t deserve to get slugged, and on a daily basis. The guy is an asshole.
And it’s not even like I really hurt him. Okay, yeah, he staggered back and fell into the condiments. Big deal. There wasn’t any blood. I didn’t even get him in the face. He saw my fist coming, and at the last minute he ducked, so instead of punching him in the nose, like I intended, I ended up punching him in the neck.
I highly doubt it even left a bruise.
But don’t you know, a second later this big, meaty paw lands on my shoulder, and Coach Albright swings me around to face him. It turned out he was behind me and Ruth in the burger line, buying a plate of curly fries. He’d seen the whole thing …
Only not the part about Jeff telling Ruth she was going to have to be buried in a piano case. Oh, no. Just the part where I punched his star tackle in the neck.
“Let’s go, little lady,” Coach Albright said. And he steered me out of the cafeteria and upstairs, to the counselors’ offices.
My guidance counselor, Mr. Goodhart, was at his desk, eating out of a brown paper bag. Before you get to feeling sorry for him, though, that brown paper bag had golden arches on it. You could smell the fries all the way down the hall. Mr. Goodhart, in the two years that I’ve been coming to his office, has never seemed to worry a bit about his saturated-fat intake. He says he is fortunate in that his metabolism is naturally very high.
He looked up and smiled when Coach Albright said, “Goodhart,” in this scary voice.
“Why, Frank,” he said. “And Jessica! What a pleasant surprise. Fry?”
He held out a little bucket of fries. Mr. Goodhart had mega-sized his meal.
“Thanks,” I said, and took a few.
Coach Albright didn’t take any. He went, “Girl here punched my star tackle in the neck just now.”
Mr. Goodhart looked at me disapprovingly. “Jessica,” he said. “Is that true?”
I said, “I meant to get him in the face, but he ducked.”
Mr. Goodhart shook his head. “Jessica,” he said, “we’ve talked about this.”
“I know,” I said with a sigh. I have, according to Mr. Goodhart, some anger-management issues. “But I couldn’t help it. The guy’s an asshole.”
This apparently wasn’t what either Coach Albright or Mr. Goodhart wanted to hear. Mr. Goodhart rolled his eyes, but Coach Albright actually looked as if he might drop dead of a coronary right there in the guidance office.
“Okay,” Mr. Goodhart said, real fast, I guess in an effort to stop the coach’s heart from infarction. “Okay, then. Come in and sit down, Jessica. Thank you, Frank. I’ll take care of it.”
But Coach Albright just kept standing there with his face getting redder and redder, even after I’d sat down—in my favorite chair, the orange vinyl one by the window. The coach’s fingers, thick as sausages, were all balled up into fists, like a little kid who was about to have a tantrum, and you could see this one vein throbbing in the middle of his forehead.
“She hurt his neck,” Coach Albright said.
Mr. Goodhart blinked at Coach Albright. He said, carefully, as if Coach Albright were a bomb that needed defusing, “I’m sure his neck must hurt very much. I’m quite certain that a five-foot-two young woman could do a lot of damage to a six-foot-three, two-hundred-pound tackle.”
“Yeah,” Coach Albright said. Coach Albright is immune to sarcasm. “He’s gonna hafta ice it.”
“I’m certain it was very traumatic for him,” Mr. Goodhart said. “And please don’t worry about Jessica. She will be adequately chastened.”
Coach Albright apparently didn’t know what either “adequately” or “chastened” meant, since he went, “I don’t want her touchin’ no more of my boys! Keep ’er away from them!”
Mr. Goodhart put down his Quarter Pounder, stood up, and walked to the door. He laid a hand on the coach’s arm and said, “I’ll take care of it, Frank.” Then he gently pushed Coach Albright out into the reception area, and shut the door.
“Whew,” he said when we were alone, and sat back down to tackle his burger again.
“So,” Mr. Goodhart said, chewing. There was ketchup at the corner of his mouth. “What happened to our decision not to pick fights with people who are bigger than we are?”
I stared at the ketchup. “I didn’t pick this one,” I said. “Jeff did.”
“What was it this time?” Mr. Goodhart passed me the fries again. “Your brother?”
“No,” I said. I took two fries and put them in my mouth. “Ruth.”
“Ruth?” Mr. Goodhart took another bite of his burger. The splotch of ketchup got bigger. “What about Ruth?”
“Jeff said Ruth was so fat, they were going to have to bury her in a piano case, like Elvis.”
Mr. Goodhart swallowed. “That’s ridiculous. Elvis wasn’t buried in a piano case.”
“I know.” I shrugged. “You see why I had no choice but to hit him.”
“Well, to be honest with you, Jess, no, I can’t say that I do. The problem, you see, with you going around hitting these boys is that, one of these days, they’re going to hit you back, and then you’re going to be very sorry.”
I said, “They try to hit me back all the time. But I’m too fast for them.”
“Yeah,” Mr. Goodhart said. There was still ketchup at the corner of his mouth. “But one day, you’re going to trip, or something, and then you’re going to get pounded on.”
“I don’t think so,” I said. “You see, lately, I’ve taken up kickboxing.”
“Kickboxing,” Mr. Goodhart said.
“Yes,” I said. “I have a DVD.”
“A DVD,” Mr. Goodhart said. His telephone rang. He said, “Excuse me a minute, Jessica,” and answered it.
While Mr. Goodhart talked on the phone to his wife, who was apparently having a problem with their new baby, Russell, I looked out the window. There wasn’t a whole lot to see out of Mr. Goodhart’s window. Just the teachers’ parking lot, mostly, and a lot of sky. The town I live in is pretty flat, so you can always see a lot of sky. Right then, the sky was kind of gray and overcast. Over behind the car wash across the street from the high school, you could see this layer of dark gray clouds. It was probably raining in the next county over. You couldn’t tell by looking at those clouds, though, whether or not the rain would come toward us. I was thinking it probably would.
“If he doesn’t want to eat,” Mr. Goodhart said into the phone, “then don’t try to force him.… No, I didn’t mean to say that you were forcing him. What I meant was, maybe he just isn’t hungry right now.… Yes, I know we need to get him on a schedule, but—”
The car wash was empty. No one wants to bother washing a car when it’s just going to rain. But the McDonald’s next door, where Mr. Goodhart had picked up his burger and fries, was packed. Only seniors are allowed to leave campus at lunchtime, and they all crowd the McDonald’s and the Pizza Hut across the street.
“Okay,” Mr. Goodhart said, hanging up the phone. “Now, where were we, Jess?”
I said, “You were telling me that I need to learn to control my temper.”
Mr. Goodhart nodded. “Yes,” he said. “Yes, you really do, Jessica.”
“Or one of these days, I’m going to get hurt.”
“That is an excellent point.”
“And that I should count to ten before I do anything the next time I get angry.”
Mr. Goodhart nodded again, even more enthusiastically. “Yes, that’s true, too.”
“And furthermore, if I want to learn to succeed in life, I need to understand that violence doesn’t solve anything.”
Mr. Goodhart clapped his hands together. “Exactly! You’re getting it, Jessica. You’re finally getting it.”
I stood up to go. I’d been coming to Mr. Goodhart’s office for almost two years now, and I’d gotten a pretty solid grasp on how things worked from his end. An added plus was that, having spent so much time in the reception area outside Mr. Goodhart’s office, reading brochures while I waited to see him, I had pretty much ruled out a career in the armed services.
“Well,” I said. “I think I get it, Mr. Goodhart. Thanks a lot. I’ll try to do better next time.”
I had almost made it out the door before he stopped me. “Oh, and Jess,” he said, in his friendly way.
I looked over my shoulder at him. “Uh-huh?”
“That’ll be another week of detention,” he said, chewing on a fry. “Tacked on to the seven weeks you already have.”
I smiled at him. “Mr. Goodhart?” I said.
“Yes, Jessica?”
“You have ketchup on your lip.”
Okay, so it wasn’t the best comeback. But, hey, he hadn’t said he’d call my parents. If he’d said that, you’d have heard some pretty colorful stuff. But he hadn’t. And what’s another week of detention compared to that?
And, what the hell, I have so many weeks of detention, I’ve completely given up the idea of ever having a life. It’s too bad, in fact, that detention doesn’t count as an extracurricular activity. Otherwise, I’d be looking real good to a lot of colleges right about now.
Not that detention is so bad, really. You just sit there for an hour. You can do your homework if you want, or you can read a magazine. You just aren’t allowed to talk. The worst part, I guess, is that you miss your bus, but who wants to ride the bus home anyway, with the freshmen and other social rejects? Since Ruth got her driver’s license, she goes mental for any excuse to drive, so I’ve got an automatic ride home every night. My parents haven’t even figured it out yet. I told them I joined the marching band.
Good thing they have way more important things to worry about than making sure they get to one of the games, or they might have noticed a general absence of me in the flute section.
Anyway, when Ruth came to pick me up after detention that day—the day this whole thing started, the day I punched Jeff Day in the neck—she was all apologetic, since I’d basically gotten in trouble because of her.
“Oh, my God, Jess,” she said when we met up at four outside the auditorium doors. There are so many people on detention at Ernest Pyle High School that they had to start putting us all in the auditorium. This is somewhat annoying to the drama club, which meets on the auditorium stage every day at three, but we are supposed to leave them alone, and they pretty much return the favor, except when they need some of the bigger guys from the last row to move part of a set or something.
The plus side of this is I now know the play Our Town by heart.
The minus side is, who the hell wants to know the play Our Town by heart?
“Oh, my God, Jess,” Ruth was gushing. “You should have seen it. Jeff was up to his elbows in condiments. After you punched him, I mean. He got mayo all over his shirt. You were so great. You totally didn’t have to, but it was so great that you did.”
“Yeah,” I said. I was pretty stoked to head home. The thing about detention is, yeah, you can get all your homework done during it, but it’s still a bit of a drag. Like school in general, pretty much. “Whatever. Let’s go.”
But when we got out to the parking lot, Ruth’s little red Cabriolet that she had bought with her bat mitzvah money wasn’t there. I didn’t want to say anything at first, since Ruth loves that car, and I sure didn’t want to be the person to break it to her that it was gone. But after we’d stood there for a few seconds, with her rattling on about how great I was, and me watching all my fellow detainees climbing into their pickups or onto their motorcycles (most of the people in detention are either Grits or JDs—I am the only Townie), I was like, “Uh, Ruth. Where’s your car?”
Ruth went, “Oh, I drove it home after school, then got Skip to bring me back and drop me off.”
Skip is Ruth’s twin brother. He bought a Trans Am with his bar mitzvah money. As if, even with a Trans Am, Skip is ever going to have a hope of getting laid.
“I thought,” Ruth went on, “that it would be fun to walk home.”
I looked at the clouds that earlier in the afternoon had been over the car wash. They were now almost directly overhead. I said, “Ruth. We live like two miles away.”
Ruth said, all chipper, “Uh-huh, I know. We can burn a lot of calories if we walk fast.”
“Ruth,” I said. “It’s going to pour.”
Ruth squinted up at the sky. “No, it’s not,” she said.
I looked at her like she was demented. “Ruth, yes, it is. Are you on crack?”
Ruth started to look upset. It doesn’t actually take all that much to upset Ruth. She was still upset, I could tell, over Jeff’s piano-case statement. That’s why she wanted to walk home. She was hoping to lose weight. She wouldn’t, I knew, eat lunch for a week now, all because of what the asshole had said.
“I’m not on crack,” Ruth said. “I just think it’s time the two of us started trying to get into shape. Summer is coming, and I’m not spending another four months making up excuses about why I can’t go to somebody’s pool party.”
I just started laughing.
“Ruth,” I said. “Nobody ever invites us to their pool parties.”
“Speak for yourself,” Ruth said. “And walking is a completely viable form of exercise. You can burn as may calories walking two miles as you would burn running them.”
I looked at her. “Ruth,” I said. “That’s bullshit. Who told you that?”
She said, “It is a fact. Now, are you coming?”
“I can’t believe,” I said, “that you even care what an asshole like Jeff Day has to say about anything.”
Ruth went, “I don’t care what Jeff Day says. This has nothing to do with what he said. I just think it’s time the two of us got into shape.”
I stood and looked at her some more. You should have seen her. Ruth’s been my best friend since kindergarten, which was when she and her family moved into the house next door to mine. And the funny thing is, except for the fact that she has breasts now—pretty big ones, too, way bigger than I’ll ever have, unless I get implants, which will so never happen—she looks exactly the same as she did the first day I met her: light-brown curly hair, huge blue eyes behind glasses with gold wire frames, a fairly sizable potbelly, and an IQ of 167 (a fact she informed me of five minutes into our first game of hopscotch).
But you wouldn’t have known she was in all advanced-placement classes if you’d seen what she had on that day. Okay, in the first place, she was wearing black leggings, this great big EPHS sweatshirt, and jogging shoes. Not so bad, right? Wait.
She’d coupled this ensemble with sweatbands—I am not kidding—around her head and on her wrists. She also had this big bottle of water hanging in a net sling from one shoulder. I mean, you could tell she thought she looked like an Olympic athlete, but what she actually looked like was a lunatic housewife who’d just gotten Get Fit with Oprah from the Book-of-the-Month Club, or something
While I was standing there staring at Ruth, wondering how I was going to break it to her about the sweatbands, one of the guys from detention pulled up on this completely cherried-out Indian.
May I just take this opportunity to point out that the one thing I have always wanted is a motorcycle? This one purred, too. I hate those guys who take the muffler off their bikes so they can gun it real loud while they try to jump the speed bumps in the teachers’ parking lot. This guy had tuned his so it ran quiet as kitten. Painted all black, with shiny chrome everywhere else, this was one choice bike. I mean mint.
And the guy riding it wasn’t too hard on the eyes, either.
“Mastriani,” he said, putting one booted foot on the curb. “Need a ride?”
If Ernest Pyle himself, famous Hoosier reporter, had risen from the grave and come up and started asking me for journalistic pointers, I would not have been more surprised than I was by this guy asking me if I wanted a ride.
I like to think I hid it pretty well, though.
I said, way calmly, “No, thanks. We’re walking.”
He looked up at the sky. “It’s gonna pour,” he said, in a tone that suggested I was a moron not to realize this.
I cocked my head in Ruth’s direction, so he’d get the message. “We’re walking,” I said again.
He shrugged his shoulders under his leather jacket. “Your funeral,” he said, and drove away.
I watched him go, trying not to notice how nicely his jeans hugged his perfectly contoured butt.
His butt wasn’t the only thing that was perfectly contoured, either.
Oh, calm down. I’m talking about his face, okay? It was a good one, not habitually slack-jawed, like the faces of most of the boys who go to my school. This guy’s face had some intelligence in it, at least. So what if his nose looked as if it had been broken a few times?
And okay, maybe his mouth was a little crooked, and his curly dark hair was badly in need of a trim. These deficiencies were more than made up for by a pair of eyes so light blue they were really pale gray, and set of shoulders so broad, I doubt I would have been able to see much of the road past them in the event I ever did end up behind them on the back of that bike.
Ruth, however, did not seem to have noticed any of these highly commendable qualities. She was staring at me as if she’d caught me talking to a cannibal or something.
“Oh, my God, Jess,” she said. “Who was that?”
I said, “His name is Rob Wilkins.”
She went, “A Grit. Oh, my God, Jess, that guy is a Grit. I can’t believe you were even talking to him.”
Don’t worry. I will explain.
There are two types of people who attend Ernest Pyle High School: the kids who come from the rural parts of the country, or the “Grits,” and the people who live in town, or the “Townies.” The Grits and Townies do not mix. Period. The Townies think they are better than the Grits because they have more money, since most of the kids who live in town have doctors or lawyers or teachers for parents. The Grits think they are better than the Townies because they know how to do stuff the Townies don’t know how to do, like fix up old motorcycles and birth calves and stuff. The Grits’ parents are all factory workers or farmers.
There are subsets within these groups, like the JDs—juvenile delinquents—and the Jocks—the popular kids, the athletes, and the cheerleaders—but mostly the school is divided up into Grits and Townies.
Ruth and I are Townies. Rob Wilkins, needless to say, is a Grit. And for an added bonus, I am pretty sure he is also a JD.
But then, as Mr. Goodhart is so fond of telling me, so am I—or at least I will be, one of these days, if I don’t start taking his anger-management advice more seriously.
“How do you even know the guy?” Ruth wanted to know. “He can’t be in any of your classes. He is definitely not college-bound. Prison-bound, maybe,” she said with a sneer. “But he’s got to be a senior, for Christ’s sake.”
I know. She sounds prissy, doesn’t she?
She’s not really. Just scared. Guys—real guys, not idiots like her brother Skip—scare Ruth. Even with her 167 IQ, guys are something she’s never been able to figure out. Ruth just can’t fathom the fact that boys are just like us.
Well, with a few notable exceptions.
I said, “I met him in detention. Can we move, please, before the rain starts? I’ve got my flute, you know.”
Ruth wouldn’t let go of it, though.
“Would you seriously have accepted a ride from the guy? A total stranger like that? Like, if I weren’t here?”
I said, “I don’t know.”
I didn’t, either. I hope you’re not getting the impression that this was the first time a guy had ever asked me if I wanted a lift or anything. I mean, I’ll admit I have a tendency to be a bit free with my fists, but I’m no dog. I might be a bit on the puny side—only five two, as Mr. Goodhart is fond of reminding me—and I’m not big into makeup or clothes or anything, but believe me, I do all right for myself.
Okay, yeah, I’m no supermodel: I keep my hair short so I don’t have to mess with it, and I’m fine with it being brown—you won’t catch me experimenting with highlights, like some people I could mention. Brown hair goes with my brown eyes, which go with my brown skin—well, at least, that’s what color my skin usually ends up being by the end of the summer.
But the only reason I’m sitting at home Saturday nights is because it’s either that, or hanging out with guys like Jeff Day, or Ruth’s brother Skip. They’re the only kind of guys my mother will let me go out with.
Yeah, you’re catching on. Townies. That’s right. I’m only allowed to date “college-bound boys.” Read, Townies.
Where was I? Oh, yeah.
So, in answer to your question, no, Rob Wilkins was not the first guy who’d ever pulled up to me and asked if I wanted a ride somewhere.
But Rob Wilkins was the first guy to whom I might have said yes.
“Yeah,” I said to Ruth. “Probably I would have. Taken him up on his offer, I mean. If you weren’t here and all.”
“I can’t believe you.” Ruth started walking, but let me tell you, those clouds were right behind us. Unless we went about a hundred miles an hour, there was no way we were going to beat the rain. And the fastest Ruth goes is maybe about one mile an hour, tops. Physically fit she is not.
“I can’t believe you,” she said again. “You can’t go around getting on the back of Grits’ bikes. I mean, who knows where you’d end up? Dead in a cornfield, no doubt.”
Almost every girl in Indiana who disappears gets found, eventually, half-naked and decomposing in a cornfield. But then, you guys already know that, don’t you?
“You are so weird,” Ruth said. “Only you would make friends with the guys in detention.”
I kept looking over my shoulder at the clouds. They were huge, like mountains. Only, unlike mountains, they weren’t stationary.
“Well,” I said, “I can’t exactly help knowing them, you know. We’ve been sitting together for an hour every day for the past three or four months.”
“But they’re Grits,” Ruth said. “My God, Jess. Do you actually talk to them?”
I said, “I don’t know. I mean, we’re not allowed to talk. But Miss Clemmings has to take attendance every day, so you learn people’s names. You sort of can’t help it.”
Ruth shook her head. “Oh, my God,” she said. “My dad would kill me—kill me—if I came home on the back of some Grit’s motorcycle.”
I didn’t say anything. The chances of anybody asking Ruth to hop onto the back of his bike were, like, zero.
“Still,” Ruth said, after we’d walked for a little while in silence, “he was kind of cute. For a Grit, I mean. What’d he do?”
“What do you mean? To get detention?” I shrugged. “How should I know? We’re not allowed to talk.”
Let me just tell you a little bit about where we were walking. Ernest Pyle High School is located on the imaginatively named High School Road. As you might have guessed, there isn’t a whole lot of stuff on High School Road except, well, the high school. There’s just two lanes and a bunch of farmland. The McDonald’s and the car wash and stuff were down on the Pike. We weren’t walking on the Pike. No one ever walks on the Pike, since this one girl got hit walking there last year.
So we’d made it about as far down High School Road as the football field when the rain started. Big, hard drops of rain.
“Ruth,” I said, pretty calmly, as the first drop hit me.
“It’ll blow over,” Ruth said.
Another drop hit me. Plus a big flash of lightning cracked the sky and seemed to hit the water tower, a mile or so away. Then it thundered. Really loud. As loud as the jets over at Crane Military Base, when they break the sound barrier.
“Ruth,” I said, less calmly.
Ruth said, “Perhaps we should seek shelter.”
“Damned straight,” I said.
But the only shelter we saw were the metal bleachers that surround the football field. And everyone knows, during a thunder storm, you’re not supposed to hide under anything metal.
That’s when the first hailstone hit me.
If you’ve ever been hit by a hailstone, you’ll know why it was Ruth and I ran under those bleachers. And if you’ve never been hit by a hailstone, all I can say is, lucky you. These particular hailstones were about as big as golf balls. I am not exaggerating, either. They were huge. And those mothers—pardon my French—hurt.
Ruth and I stood under these bleachers, hailstones popping all around us, like we were trapped inside this really big popcorn popper. Only at least the popcorn wasn’t hitting us on the head anymore.
With the thunder and the sound of the hail hitting the metal seats above our heads, then ricocheting off them and smacking against the ground, it was kind of hard to hear anything, but that didn’t bother Ruth. She shouted, “I’m sorry.”
All I said was “Ow,” because a real big chunk of hail bounced off the ground and hit me in the calf.
“I mean it,” Ruth shouted. “I’m really, really sorry.”
“Stop apologizing,” I said. “It isn’t your fault.”
At least that’s what I thought then. I have since changed my mind on that. As you will note by rereading the first few lines of this statement of mine.
A big bolt of lightning lit up the sky. It broke into four or five branches. One of the branches hit the top of a corn crib I could see over the trees. Thunder sounded so loudly, it shook the bleachers.
“It is,” Ruth said. She sounded like she was starting to cry. “It is my fault.”
“Ruth,” I said. “For God’s sake, are you crying?”
“Yes,” she said, with a sniffle.
“Why? It’s just a stupid thunderstorm. We’ve been stuck in thunderstorms before.” I leaned against one of the poles that held up the bleachers. “Remember that time in the fifth grade we got stuck in that thunderstorm on the way home from your cello lesson?”
Ruth wiped her nose with the cuff of her sweatshirt. “And we had to duck for cover in your church?”
“Only you wouldn’t go in farther than the awning,” I said.
Ruth laughed through her tears. “Because I thought God would strike me dead for setting foot in a goyim house of worship.”
I was glad she was laughing, anyway. Ruth can be a pain in the butt, but she’s been my best friend since kindergarten, and you can’t exactly dump your best friend since kindergarten just because sometimes she puts on sweatbands or starts crying when it rains. Ruth is way more interesting than most of the girls who go to my school, since she reads a book a day—literally—and loves playing the cello as much as I love playing my flute, but will still watch cheesy television, in spite of her great genius.
And, most times, she’s funny as hell.
Now was not one of those times, however.
“Oh, God,” Ruth moaned as the wind picked up and started whipping hailstones at us beneath the bleachers. “This is tornado weather, isn’t it?”
Southern Indiana is smack in the middle of Tornado Alley. We’re number three on the list of states with the most twisters per year. I had sat out more than a few of them in my basement; Ruth, not so many, since she’d only spent the last decade in the Midwest. And they always seemed to happen around this time of year, too.
And, though I didn’t want to say anything to upset Ruth any more than she already was, this gave all the signs of being twister weather. The sky was a funny yellow color, the temperature warm, but the wind really cold. Plus that wacked-out hail …
Just as I was opening my mouth to tell Ruth it was probably just a little spring storm, and not to worry, she screamed, “Jess, don’t—”
But I didn’t hear what she said after that, because right then there was this big explosion that drowned out everything else.
© 2001 Meggin Cabot
They want me to write it down. All of it. They’re calling it my statement.
Right. My statement. About how it happened. From the beginning.
On TV, when people have to give a statement, there’s usually someone sitting there who writes it down for them while they talk, and then all they have to do is just sign it after it’s read back to them. Plus they get coffee and doughnuts and stuff. All I’ve got is a bunch of paper and this leaky pen. Not even so much as a Diet Coke.
This is just further proof that everything you see on TV is a lie.
You want my statement? Okay, here’s my statement:
It’s all Ruth’s fault.
Really. It is. It all started that afternoon in the burger line in the cafeteria, when Jeff Day told Ruth that she was so fat, they were going to have to bury her in a piano case, just like Elvis.
Which is totally stupid, since—to the best of my knowledge—Elvis was not buried in a piano case. I don’t care how fat he was when he died. I’m sure Priscilla Presley could have afforded a better casket for the King than a piano case.
And secondly, where does Jeff Day get off saying this kind of thing to somebody, especially to my best friend?
So I did what any best friend would do under the same circumstances. I hauled off and slugged him.
It isn’t like Jeff Day doesn’t deserve to get slugged, and on a daily basis. The guy is an asshole.
And it’s not even like I really hurt him. Okay, yeah, he staggered back and fell into the condiments. Big deal. There wasn’t any blood. I didn’t even get him in the face. He saw my fist coming, and at the last minute he ducked, so instead of punching him in the nose, like I intended, I ended up punching him in the neck.
I highly doubt it even left a bruise.
But don’t you know, a second later this big, meaty paw lands on my shoulder, and Coach Albright swings me around to face him. It turned out he was behind me and Ruth in the burger line, buying a plate of curly fries. He’d seen the whole thing …
Only not the part about Jeff telling Ruth she was going to have to be buried in a piano case. Oh, no. Just the part where I punched his star tackle in the neck.
“Let’s go, little lady,” Coach Albright said. And he steered me out of the cafeteria and upstairs, to the counselors’ offices.
My guidance counselor, Mr. Goodhart, was at his desk, eating out of a brown paper bag. Before you get to feeling sorry for him, though, that brown paper bag had golden arches on it. You could smell the fries all the way down the hall. Mr. Goodhart, in the two years that I’ve been coming to his office, has never seemed to worry a bit about his saturated-fat intake. He says he is fortunate in that his metabolism is naturally very high.
He looked up and smiled when Coach Albright said, “Goodhart,” in this scary voice.
“Why, Frank,” he said. “And Jessica! What a pleasant surprise. Fry?”
He held out a little bucket of fries. Mr. Goodhart had mega-sized his meal.
“Thanks,” I said, and took a few.
Coach Albright didn’t take any. He went, “Girl here punched my star tackle in the neck just now.”
Mr. Goodhart looked at me disapprovingly. “Jessica,” he said. “Is that true?”
I said, “I meant to get him in the face, but he ducked.”
Mr. Goodhart shook his head. “Jessica,” he said, “we’ve talked about this.”
“I know,” I said with a sigh. I have, according to Mr. Goodhart, some anger-management issues. “But I couldn’t help it. The guy’s an asshole.”
This apparently wasn’t what either Coach Albright or Mr. Goodhart wanted to hear. Mr. Goodhart rolled his eyes, but Coach Albright actually looked as if he might drop dead of a coronary right there in the guidance office.
“Okay,” Mr. Goodhart said, real fast, I guess in an effort to stop the coach’s heart from infarction. “Okay, then. Come in and sit down, Jessica. Thank you, Frank. I’ll take care of it.”
But Coach Albright just kept standing there with his face getting redder and redder, even after I’d sat down—in my favorite chair, the orange vinyl one by the window. The coach’s fingers, thick as sausages, were all balled up into fists, like a little kid who was about to have a tantrum, and you could see this one vein throbbing in the middle of his forehead.
“She hurt his neck,” Coach Albright said.
Mr. Goodhart blinked at Coach Albright. He said, carefully, as if Coach Albright were a bomb that needed defusing, “I’m sure his neck must hurt very much. I’m quite certain that a five-foot-two young woman could do a lot of damage to a six-foot-three, two-hundred-pound tackle.”
“Yeah,” Coach Albright said. Coach Albright is immune to sarcasm. “He’s gonna hafta ice it.”
“I’m certain it was very traumatic for him,” Mr. Goodhart said. “And please don’t worry about Jessica. She will be adequately chastened.”
Coach Albright apparently didn’t know what either “adequately” or “chastened” meant, since he went, “I don’t want her touchin’ no more of my boys! Keep ’er away from them!”
Mr. Goodhart put down his Quarter Pounder, stood up, and walked to the door. He laid a hand on the coach’s arm and said, “I’ll take care of it, Frank.” Then he gently pushed Coach Albright out into the reception area, and shut the door.
“Whew,” he said when we were alone, and sat back down to tackle his burger again.
“So,” Mr. Goodhart said, chewing. There was ketchup at the corner of his mouth. “What happened to our decision not to pick fights with people who are bigger than we are?”
I stared at the ketchup. “I didn’t pick this one,” I said. “Jeff did.”
“What was it this time?” Mr. Goodhart passed me the fries again. “Your brother?”
“No,” I said. I took two fries and put them in my mouth. “Ruth.”
“Ruth?” Mr. Goodhart took another bite of his burger. The splotch of ketchup got bigger. “What about Ruth?”
“Jeff said Ruth was so fat, they were going to have to bury her in a piano case, like Elvis.”
Mr. Goodhart swallowed. “That’s ridiculous. Elvis wasn’t buried in a piano case.”
“I know.” I shrugged. “You see why I had no choice but to hit him.”
“Well, to be honest with you, Jess, no, I can’t say that I do. The problem, you see, with you going around hitting these boys is that, one of these days, they’re going to hit you back, and then you’re going to be very sorry.”
I said, “They try to hit me back all the time. But I’m too fast for them.”
“Yeah,” Mr. Goodhart said. There was still ketchup at the corner of his mouth. “But one day, you’re going to trip, or something, and then you’re going to get pounded on.”
“I don’t think so,” I said. “You see, lately, I’ve taken up kickboxing.”
“Kickboxing,” Mr. Goodhart said.
“Yes,” I said. “I have a DVD.”
“A DVD,” Mr. Goodhart said. His telephone rang. He said, “Excuse me a minute, Jessica,” and answered it.
While Mr. Goodhart talked on the phone to his wife, who was apparently having a problem with their new baby, Russell, I looked out the window. There wasn’t a whole lot to see out of Mr. Goodhart’s window. Just the teachers’ parking lot, mostly, and a lot of sky. The town I live in is pretty flat, so you can always see a lot of sky. Right then, the sky was kind of gray and overcast. Over behind the car wash across the street from the high school, you could see this layer of dark gray clouds. It was probably raining in the next county over. You couldn’t tell by looking at those clouds, though, whether or not the rain would come toward us. I was thinking it probably would.
“If he doesn’t want to eat,” Mr. Goodhart said into the phone, “then don’t try to force him.… No, I didn’t mean to say that you were forcing him. What I meant was, maybe he just isn’t hungry right now.… Yes, I know we need to get him on a schedule, but—”
The car wash was empty. No one wants to bother washing a car when it’s just going to rain. But the McDonald’s next door, where Mr. Goodhart had picked up his burger and fries, was packed. Only seniors are allowed to leave campus at lunchtime, and they all crowd the McDonald’s and the Pizza Hut across the street.
“Okay,” Mr. Goodhart said, hanging up the phone. “Now, where were we, Jess?”
I said, “You were telling me that I need to learn to control my temper.”
Mr. Goodhart nodded. “Yes,” he said. “Yes, you really do, Jessica.”
“Or one of these days, I’m going to get hurt.”
“That is an excellent point.”
“And that I should count to ten before I do anything the next time I get angry.”
Mr. Goodhart nodded again, even more enthusiastically. “Yes, that’s true, too.”
“And furthermore, if I want to learn to succeed in life, I need to understand that violence doesn’t solve anything.”
Mr. Goodhart clapped his hands together. “Exactly! You’re getting it, Jessica. You’re finally getting it.”
I stood up to go. I’d been coming to Mr. Goodhart’s office for almost two years now, and I’d gotten a pretty solid grasp on how things worked from his end. An added plus was that, having spent so much time in the reception area outside Mr. Goodhart’s office, reading brochures while I waited to see him, I had pretty much ruled out a career in the armed services.
“Well,” I said. “I think I get it, Mr. Goodhart. Thanks a lot. I’ll try to do better next time.”
I had almost made it out the door before he stopped me. “Oh, and Jess,” he said, in his friendly way.
I looked over my shoulder at him. “Uh-huh?”
“That’ll be another week of detention,” he said, chewing on a fry. “Tacked on to the seven weeks you already have.”
I smiled at him. “Mr. Goodhart?” I said.
“Yes, Jessica?”
“You have ketchup on your lip.”
Okay, so it wasn’t the best comeback. But, hey, he hadn’t said he’d call my parents. If he’d said that, you’d have heard some pretty colorful stuff. But he hadn’t. And what’s another week of detention compared to that?
And, what the hell, I have so many weeks of detention, I’ve completely given up the idea of ever having a life. It’s too bad, in fact, that detention doesn’t count as an extracurricular activity. Otherwise, I’d be looking real good to a lot of colleges right about now.
Not that detention is so bad, really. You just sit there for an hour. You can do your homework if you want, or you can read a magazine. You just aren’t allowed to talk. The worst part, I guess, is that you miss your bus, but who wants to ride the bus home anyway, with the freshmen and other social rejects? Since Ruth got her driver’s license, she goes mental for any excuse to drive, so I’ve got an automatic ride home every night. My parents haven’t even figured it out yet. I told them I joined the marching band.
Good thing they have way more important things to worry about than making sure they get to one of the games, or they might have noticed a general absence of me in the flute section.
Anyway, when Ruth came to pick me up after detention that day—the day this whole thing started, the day I punched Jeff Day in the neck—she was all apologetic, since I’d basically gotten in trouble because of her.
“Oh, my God, Jess,” she said when we met up at four outside the auditorium doors. There are so many people on detention at Ernest Pyle High School that they had to start putting us all in the auditorium. This is somewhat annoying to the drama club, which meets on the auditorium stage every day at three, but we are supposed to leave them alone, and they pretty much return the favor, except when they need some of the bigger guys from the last row to move part of a set or something.
The plus side of this is I now know the play Our Town by heart.
The minus side is, who the hell wants to know the play Our Town by heart?
“Oh, my God, Jess,” Ruth was gushing. “You should have seen it. Jeff was up to his elbows in condiments. After you punched him, I mean. He got mayo all over his shirt. You were so great. You totally didn’t have to, but it was so great that you did.”
“Yeah,” I said. I was pretty stoked to head home. The thing about detention is, yeah, you can get all your homework done during it, but it’s still a bit of a drag. Like school in general, pretty much. “Whatever. Let’s go.”
But when we got out to the parking lot, Ruth’s little red Cabriolet that she had bought with her bat mitzvah money wasn’t there. I didn’t want to say anything at first, since Ruth loves that car, and I sure didn’t want to be the person to break it to her that it was gone. But after we’d stood there for a few seconds, with her rattling on about how great I was, and me watching all my fellow detainees climbing into their pickups or onto their motorcycles (most of the people in detention are either Grits or JDs—I am the only Townie), I was like, “Uh, Ruth. Where’s your car?”
Ruth went, “Oh, I drove it home after school, then got Skip to bring me back and drop me off.”
Skip is Ruth’s twin brother. He bought a Trans Am with his bar mitzvah money. As if, even with a Trans Am, Skip is ever going to have a hope of getting laid.
“I thought,” Ruth went on, “that it would be fun to walk home.”
I looked at the clouds that earlier in the afternoon had been over the car wash. They were now almost directly overhead. I said, “Ruth. We live like two miles away.”
Ruth said, all chipper, “Uh-huh, I know. We can burn a lot of calories if we walk fast.”
“Ruth,” I said. “It’s going to pour.”
Ruth squinted up at the sky. “No, it’s not,” she said.
I looked at her like she was demented. “Ruth, yes, it is. Are you on crack?”
Ruth started to look upset. It doesn’t actually take all that much to upset Ruth. She was still upset, I could tell, over Jeff’s piano-case statement. That’s why she wanted to walk home. She was hoping to lose weight. She wouldn’t, I knew, eat lunch for a week now, all because of what the asshole had said.
“I’m not on crack,” Ruth said. “I just think it’s time the two of us started trying to get into shape. Summer is coming, and I’m not spending another four months making up excuses about why I can’t go to somebody’s pool party.”
I just started laughing.
“Ruth,” I said. “Nobody ever invites us to their pool parties.”
“Speak for yourself,” Ruth said. “And walking is a completely viable form of exercise. You can burn as may calories walking two miles as you would burn running them.”
I looked at her. “Ruth,” I said. “That’s bullshit. Who told you that?”
She said, “It is a fact. Now, are you coming?”
“I can’t believe,” I said, “that you even care what an asshole like Jeff Day has to say about anything.”
Ruth went, “I don’t care what Jeff Day says. This has nothing to do with what he said. I just think it’s time the two of us got into shape.”
I stood and looked at her some more. You should have seen her. Ruth’s been my best friend since kindergarten, which was when she and her family moved into the house next door to mine. And the funny thing is, except for the fact that she has breasts now—pretty big ones, too, way bigger than I’ll ever have, unless I get implants, which will so never happen—she looks exactly the same as she did the first day I met her: light-brown curly hair, huge blue eyes behind glasses with gold wire frames, a fairly sizable potbelly, and an IQ of 167 (a fact she informed me of five minutes into our first game of hopscotch).
But you wouldn’t have known she was in all advanced-placement classes if you’d seen what she had on that day. Okay, in the first place, she was wearing black leggings, this great big EPHS sweatshirt, and jogging shoes. Not so bad, right? Wait.
She’d coupled this ensemble with sweatbands—I am not kidding—around her head and on her wrists. She also had this big bottle of water hanging in a net sling from one shoulder. I mean, you could tell she thought she looked like an Olympic athlete, but what she actually looked like was a lunatic housewife who’d just gotten Get Fit with Oprah from the Book-of-the-Month Club, or something
While I was standing there staring at Ruth, wondering how I was going to break it to her about the sweatbands, one of the guys from detention pulled up on this completely cherried-out Indian.
May I just take this opportunity to point out that the one thing I have always wanted is a motorcycle? This one purred, too. I hate those guys who take the muffler off their bikes so they can gun it real loud while they try to jump the speed bumps in the teachers’ parking lot. This guy had tuned his so it ran quiet as kitten. Painted all black, with shiny chrome everywhere else, this was one choice bike. I mean mint.
And the guy riding it wasn’t too hard on the eyes, either.
“Mastriani,” he said, putting one booted foot on the curb. “Need a ride?”
If Ernest Pyle himself, famous Hoosier reporter, had risen from the grave and come up and started asking me for journalistic pointers, I would not have been more surprised than I was by this guy asking me if I wanted a ride.
I like to think I hid it pretty well, though.
I said, way calmly, “No, thanks. We’re walking.”
He looked up at the sky. “It’s gonna pour,” he said, in a tone that suggested I was a moron not to realize this.
I cocked my head in Ruth’s direction, so he’d get the message. “We’re walking,” I said again.
He shrugged his shoulders under his leather jacket. “Your funeral,” he said, and drove away.
I watched him go, trying not to notice how nicely his jeans hugged his perfectly contoured butt.
His butt wasn’t the only thing that was perfectly contoured, either.
Oh, calm down. I’m talking about his face, okay? It was a good one, not habitually slack-jawed, like the faces of most of the boys who go to my school. This guy’s face had some intelligence in it, at least. So what if his nose looked as if it had been broken a few times?
And okay, maybe his mouth was a little crooked, and his curly dark hair was badly in need of a trim. These deficiencies were more than made up for by a pair of eyes so light blue they were really pale gray, and set of shoulders so broad, I doubt I would have been able to see much of the road past them in the event I ever did end up behind them on the back of that bike.
Ruth, however, did not seem to have noticed any of these highly commendable qualities. She was staring at me as if she’d caught me talking to a cannibal or something.
“Oh, my God, Jess,” she said. “Who was that?”
I said, “His name is Rob Wilkins.”
She went, “A Grit. Oh, my God, Jess, that guy is a Grit. I can’t believe you were even talking to him.”
Don’t worry. I will explain.
There are two types of people who attend Ernest Pyle High School: the kids who come from the rural parts of the country, or the “Grits,” and the people who live in town, or the “Townies.” The Grits and Townies do not mix. Period. The Townies think they are better than the Grits because they have more money, since most of the kids who live in town have doctors or lawyers or teachers for parents. The Grits think they are better than the Townies because they know how to do stuff the Townies don’t know how to do, like fix up old motorcycles and birth calves and stuff. The Grits’ parents are all factory workers or farmers.
There are subsets within these groups, like the JDs—juvenile delinquents—and the Jocks—the popular kids, the athletes, and the cheerleaders—but mostly the school is divided up into Grits and Townies.
Ruth and I are Townies. Rob Wilkins, needless to say, is a Grit. And for an added bonus, I am pretty sure he is also a JD.
But then, as Mr. Goodhart is so fond of telling me, so am I—or at least I will be, one of these days, if I don’t start taking his anger-management advice more seriously.
“How do you even know the guy?” Ruth wanted to know. “He can’t be in any of your classes. He is definitely not college-bound. Prison-bound, maybe,” she said with a sneer. “But he’s got to be a senior, for Christ’s sake.”
I know. She sounds prissy, doesn’t she?
She’s not really. Just scared. Guys—real guys, not idiots like her brother Skip—scare Ruth. Even with her 167 IQ, guys are something she’s never been able to figure out. Ruth just can’t fathom the fact that boys are just like us.
Well, with a few notable exceptions.
I said, “I met him in detention. Can we move, please, before the rain starts? I’ve got my flute, you know.”
Ruth wouldn’t let go of it, though.
“Would you seriously have accepted a ride from the guy? A total stranger like that? Like, if I weren’t here?”
I said, “I don’t know.”
I didn’t, either. I hope you’re not getting the impression that this was the first time a guy had ever asked me if I wanted a lift or anything. I mean, I’ll admit I have a tendency to be a bit free with my fists, but I’m no dog. I might be a bit on the puny side—only five two, as Mr. Goodhart is fond of reminding me—and I’m not big into makeup or clothes or anything, but believe me, I do all right for myself.
Okay, yeah, I’m no supermodel: I keep my hair short so I don’t have to mess with it, and I’m fine with it being brown—you won’t catch me experimenting with highlights, like some people I could mention. Brown hair goes with my brown eyes, which go with my brown skin—well, at least, that’s what color my skin usually ends up being by the end of the summer.
But the only reason I’m sitting at home Saturday nights is because it’s either that, or hanging out with guys like Jeff Day, or Ruth’s brother Skip. They’re the only kind of guys my mother will let me go out with.
Yeah, you’re catching on. Townies. That’s right. I’m only allowed to date “college-bound boys.” Read, Townies.
Where was I? Oh, yeah.
So, in answer to your question, no, Rob Wilkins was not the first guy who’d ever pulled up to me and asked if I wanted a ride somewhere.
But Rob Wilkins was the first guy to whom I might have said yes.
“Yeah,” I said to Ruth. “Probably I would have. Taken him up on his offer, I mean. If you weren’t here and all.”
“I can’t believe you.” Ruth started walking, but let me tell you, those clouds were right behind us. Unless we went about a hundred miles an hour, there was no way we were going to beat the rain. And the fastest Ruth goes is maybe about one mile an hour, tops. Physically fit she is not.
“I can’t believe you,” she said again. “You can’t go around getting on the back of Grits’ bikes. I mean, who knows where you’d end up? Dead in a cornfield, no doubt.”
Almost every girl in Indiana who disappears gets found, eventually, half-naked and decomposing in a cornfield. But then, you guys already know that, don’t you?
“You are so weird,” Ruth said. “Only you would make friends with the guys in detention.”
I kept looking over my shoulder at the clouds. They were huge, like mountains. Only, unlike mountains, they weren’t stationary.
“Well,” I said, “I can’t exactly help knowing them, you know. We’ve been sitting together for an hour every day for the past three or four months.”
“But they’re Grits,” Ruth said. “My God, Jess. Do you actually talk to them?”
I said, “I don’t know. I mean, we’re not allowed to talk. But Miss Clemmings has to take attendance every day, so you learn people’s names. You sort of can’t help it.”
Ruth shook her head. “Oh, my God,” she said. “My dad would kill me—kill me—if I came home on the back of some Grit’s motorcycle.”
I didn’t say anything. The chances of anybody asking Ruth to hop onto the back of his bike were, like, zero.
“Still,” Ruth said, after we’d walked for a little while in silence, “he was kind of cute. For a Grit, I mean. What’d he do?”
“What do you mean? To get detention?” I shrugged. “How should I know? We’re not allowed to talk.”
Let me just tell you a little bit about where we were walking. Ernest Pyle High School is located on the imaginatively named High School Road. As you might have guessed, there isn’t a whole lot of stuff on High School Road except, well, the high school. There’s just two lanes and a bunch of farmland. The McDonald’s and the car wash and stuff were down on the Pike. We weren’t walking on the Pike. No one ever walks on the Pike, since this one girl got hit walking there last year.
So we’d made it about as far down High School Road as the football field when the rain started. Big, hard drops of rain.
“Ruth,” I said, pretty calmly, as the first drop hit me.
“It’ll blow over,” Ruth said.
Another drop hit me. Plus a big flash of lightning cracked the sky and seemed to hit the water tower, a mile or so away. Then it thundered. Really loud. As loud as the jets over at Crane Military Base, when they break the sound barrier.
“Ruth,” I said, less calmly.
Ruth said, “Perhaps we should seek shelter.”
“Damned straight,” I said.
But the only shelter we saw were the metal bleachers that surround the football field. And everyone knows, during a thunder storm, you’re not supposed to hide under anything metal.
That’s when the first hailstone hit me.
If you’ve ever been hit by a hailstone, you’ll know why it was Ruth and I ran under those bleachers. And if you’ve never been hit by a hailstone, all I can say is, lucky you. These particular hailstones were about as big as golf balls. I am not exaggerating, either. They were huge. And those mothers—pardon my French—hurt.
Ruth and I stood under these bleachers, hailstones popping all around us, like we were trapped inside this really big popcorn popper. Only at least the popcorn wasn’t hitting us on the head anymore.
With the thunder and the sound of the hail hitting the metal seats above our heads, then ricocheting off them and smacking against the ground, it was kind of hard to hear anything, but that didn’t bother Ruth. She shouted, “I’m sorry.”
All I said was “Ow,” because a real big chunk of hail bounced off the ground and hit me in the calf.
“I mean it,” Ruth shouted. “I’m really, really sorry.”
“Stop apologizing,” I said. “It isn’t your fault.”
At least that’s what I thought then. I have since changed my mind on that. As you will note by rereading the first few lines of this statement of mine.
A big bolt of lightning lit up the sky. It broke into four or five branches. One of the branches hit the top of a corn crib I could see over the trees. Thunder sounded so loudly, it shook the bleachers.
“It is,” Ruth said. She sounded like she was starting to cry. “It is my fault.”
“Ruth,” I said. “For God’s sake, are you crying?”
“Yes,” she said, with a sniffle.
“Why? It’s just a stupid thunderstorm. We’ve been stuck in thunderstorms before.” I leaned against one of the poles that held up the bleachers. “Remember that time in the fifth grade we got stuck in that thunderstorm on the way home from your cello lesson?”
Ruth wiped her nose with the cuff of her sweatshirt. “And we had to duck for cover in your church?”
“Only you wouldn’t go in farther than the awning,” I said.
Ruth laughed through her tears. “Because I thought God would strike me dead for setting foot in a goyim house of worship.”
I was glad she was laughing, anyway. Ruth can be a pain in the butt, but she’s been my best friend since kindergarten, and you can’t exactly dump your best friend since kindergarten just because sometimes she puts on sweatbands or starts crying when it rains. Ruth is way more interesting than most of the girls who go to my school, since she reads a book a day—literally—and loves playing the cello as much as I love playing my flute, but will still watch cheesy television, in spite of her great genius.
And, most times, she’s funny as hell.
Now was not one of those times, however.
“Oh, God,” Ruth moaned as the wind picked up and started whipping hailstones at us beneath the bleachers. “This is tornado weather, isn’t it?”
Southern Indiana is smack in the middle of Tornado Alley. We’re number three on the list of states with the most twisters per year. I had sat out more than a few of them in my basement; Ruth, not so many, since she’d only spent the last decade in the Midwest. And they always seemed to happen around this time of year, too.
And, though I didn’t want to say anything to upset Ruth any more than she already was, this gave all the signs of being twister weather. The sky was a funny yellow color, the temperature warm, but the wind really cold. Plus that wacked-out hail …
Just as I was opening my mouth to tell Ruth it was probably just a little spring storm, and not to worry, she screamed, “Jess, don’t—”
But I didn’t hear what she said after that, because right then there was this big explosion that drowned out everything else.
© 2001 Meggin Cabot
Product Details
- Publisher: Simon Pulse (September 7, 2010)
- Length: 560 pages
- ISBN13: 9781442406292
- Ages: 12 - 99
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- Book Cover Image (jpg): Vanished Books One & Two Trade Paperback 9781442406292(1.2 MB)
- Author Photo (jpg): Meg Cabot Photograph by Lisa Russell(0.1 MB)
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