Daisy Novel
Trang chủThể loạiXếp hạngThư viện
Trang chủThể loạiXếp hạngThư viện
Daisy Novel

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Chapter Two — Emma

A typical Saturday at the Tate house, yelling optional, slamming doors required. Why did Mom have to freak out every time a storm rolled through Vandby?

Emma slid her bedroom window open. Her hands shook. With the steady movements she’d learned in gymnastics, she climbed onto the porch roof and sat on the edge, rolled onto her belly, and stretched her foot over the edge until it reached the trellis.

Hand over hand, she climbed down, jumping the final three feet. She jogged to the corner and glanced back at her house. She loped around the corner to the bus stop. She had to catch this bus. If she didn’t, she’d get caught, and mom would never trust her again, and she’d miss the march. She faltered a step, glanced one last time at the house, and drew her phone from her pocket.

No bars? “Hm.” She slid it into her back pocket. She could use Megan’s support right about now. Anything to drown out her mom’s voice in her head.

“What happens if you get stuck downtown, Emma? How will you survive? Who will you trust?” Mom was like a broken record.

No trust, that woman. What was the big deal? She was fighting for the planet, doing this for Dad. Stupid storms. Stupid car crashes.

She glanced down the street for the bus. It rounded the corner. The 102 to Vandby/Founders Square screeched to a stop in front of her. She covered her ears. Geez. Get a brake job, bud. The doors swished open, and she climbed aboard.

Four passengers? That was odd for a Saturday afternoon. She plopped in her usual seat. The bus radio sputtered unintelligible static. A guy with a leather satchel sat toward the front, his knee bouncing up and down. He must be running late.

The radio volume squawked louder, and she gritted her teeth. Was he deaf? The bus driver slowed the bus.

“High winds expected. All buses, finish routes and return to bus barn. Repeat. Finish routes—”

“10-4 dispatch. 102 out.”

“Wait. Does that mean I’ll have to walk home from downtown?” The guy clutched his bag, no longer tapping his feet. The driver pressed his lips into a thin line and nodded.

She’d have to walk home too. She glanced at the blue sky filling with dark clouds. This wouldn’t be a walk in the park.

The bus stopped at 10th and Main, and the doors whooshed open. She rose and followed a mom and her toddler son off the bus.

She stepped onto the curb and jogged across the street. The First Bank sign flashed:

Vandby, Washington 1:16 pm Saturday November 9

Storm Alert — High winds Clouds sailed overhead so low they seemed to brush the tops of buildings. That’s not right. This must be Mom’s storm. The angular lines of the bank building seemed so out of place next to the squat, old brick and stone buildings of Founders Square. Dad had been the lawyer who fought against building the high rises, yet there they stood. Emma clenched her fists. First the environment, then city hall.

Why couldn’t Mom understand? This was for Dad. The storm, the car crash, weren’t they reason enough to march? Someone had to save the environment, right? Then what was that throb at her temples? Guilt?

Note to self: No more lies—after today. She’d show Mom.

She held her phone. If she hurried, she might just make it on time. She glanced at the screen, no service. “Still?” She shoved it in her back pocket and sprinted down the street. The protest started at 1:30. Where was everyone?

Her phone vibrated. Megan, at last. She stopped and read the text.

- Protest canceled.

“What? No.” They couldn’t cancel the protest.

- but im here.

A gust of wind whipped her hair into her eyes. It stung, and her eyes watered.

- Idiot big storm coming.

Idiot? What the—

She tapped her response, hit send, and waited. She gripped her silent phone. No bars and a dead battery? Note to self: upgrade friend and phone.

She scrambled for balance as another gust hit her, pushing her against a building. She leaned into the wind and took several steps. Wow. These winds were intense.

Squaring her shoulders, she adjusted her backpack. She had to do something. She only had two blocks to go, and she’d be at Founders Square. Should she risk it?

Mom could not be right this time. There would be someone at the protest, and she’d be there to hand out flyers.

Gritting her teeth, she pressed on. There’d be another bus, and she’d be home before Mom even noticed she was gone. The wind picked up, and her knees buckled. It whistled over her, around her, through her thin hoodie. She glanced at the sky churning with dark clouds. When had they turned black?

Her phone vibrated, and she checked her phone. Bars. Finally.

get inside quick Ill catch next bus She hit send but her battery icon was red. Why did she always forget to charge her phone? Another gust of wind bumped her into a wall.

A woman struggled down the street wrestling with her umbrella. She didn’t even glance at Emma, and from her high heels and tight skirt, Emma knew she wasn’t headed to the protest.

Another blast of wind hit her, and she stumbled into the wall. Her hands flew out for balance, and her phone sailed from her fingers and across the sidewalk. It landed next to the curb in the street. Pushing against the gust, she fell to her knees and scrambled to grab it. A taxi screeched to the curb, right over her phone.

No.

The wind kicked up particles of dirt and grit, stinging her cheeks. The force of it took her breath away, whipping hair out of her ponytail. She clung to the edge of the curb and tried to stand against the wind, but it forced her to her knees.

She searched under the taxi where her phone should be. The driver leapt out, leaving his door open. Over the roar of the wind, his radio squawked: “All drivers, park immediately, seek shelter. This is not a drill.”

“Where’s your mom, kid?” The driver’s words hit her like a slap. He skirted around her and into a building. She sat stunned. Wasn’t he supposed to help her? She was just a kid.

The air was heavy and damp. She opened her mouth wide to pop her ears, pushed herself to a crouch. Megan was right. She needed to get inside. The taxi driver had disappeared through double glass doors, but what about her phone? A fat raindrop hit her forehead and rolled down her nose. Rain, really? She swiped at it.

A glint from something under the taxi made her reach under the cab. She wrapped her fingers around her dripping phone.

“Yes.” She held it to her face. “Oh no.” The screen was cracked in two. “No.” She slipped it into her pocket and struggled to her feet. The wind caught her and pushed her beyond the doors the taxi driver had disappeared through. It pushed her into Founders Square. Large raindrops pelted the top of her head, and she scanned the brick buildings for an alcove, some sort of shelter.

“Help!” The wind drowned out her voice and blew the rain sideways. The next gust swept her book bag off her shoulder. She clutched it to her chest, but the zipper had opened, and flyers scattered across the square.

She rushed toward a building and yanked on a door handle. Her wet hair slapped against her face. Locked? Was this a joke? She pounded on the glass. “Help, someone, anyone!”

The wind howled, and the rain pelted her like bee stings.

A sliver of light cut across a marble lobby floor. Emma pressed her nose against the gold lettering on the glass. A woman raced across the lobby. She unlocked the heavy wood door, and it flew open, hitting Emma’s shoulder. Emma flew back, and the woman’s mouth dropped open, her eyes round. Everything happened in slow motion. Another gust of wind knocked her against the front window, unbalanced her, and she rolled along the slick sidewalk like an empty paper cup.

“Oh my God.” The woman’s voice faded into the roar of the wind.

Emma grasped at the smooth granite foundation stones, the wind whistling down the city street. Her hip, elbow, wrist banged the sidewalk, the wall, the light pole. Her vision blurred. She reached an alley and grasped the corner of the building. A side wind caught her, and she tumbled on.

“Help!” she screamed, skidding out into the road.

Rain pelted her body, and her clothes and her hair clung to her. She dug in her heels, but nothing could stop her.

“No, no—no.” Emma tumbled down the sidewalk until down became up and a loud crack burst in her ears.

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