Along Came Jordan (9 page)

Read Along Came Jordan Online

Authors: Brenda Maxfield

****

Two days later, on Saturday, I woke up early and could hear the rain splatting the window outside. I rolled over and snuggled the covers up to my neck. No reason to get up. I reached over for my MP3 player and clicked on Razor Wilde. Rain or not, he'd put me in a good mood. I sighed, burrowed down, and dozed back off.

"Emili!" Mom shook me awake. "Get up. Sarah's gone."

I blinked and rubbed my eyes. "What do you mean 'gone'?"

"Her bed is empty. She's gone."

Cold fear clutched my heart. I threw the blankets off and jumped out of bed. "Did you try her cell?"

"No answer. Did she say anything to you?"

"No, nothing."

Dad rushed into my room. "Not in the garage or the backyard. Where'd she go?"

"Emili, think. You're the only one she's talking to," Mom said.

"She didn't say anything. Did you call Becky or Janae or Jara? She used to tell them everything at Bates."

"All of them. They haven't talked in weeks."

Dad grabbed Mom's arm. "I'll call the police."

Mom's eyes stretched wide.

The panic inside me squeezed tighter. "Remember, Mom, when Farah was missing? She turned up fine the same day."

"Sarah's in fifth grade, Emili. Fifth grade! She's still a baby."

I sucked in my breath. "We'll find her."

I pulled on my jeans and a sweatshirt and ran out to the entryway for my coat. Dad was already on the phone. "I have a photo…"

"I'm going out to look. I have my cell. Call me if you find her!" I charged out the door into the heavy rain. My hair was drenched in seconds. I swiped at my dripping face with the back of my hand, but it didn't help. I raced toward the park at the end of the next street. Sarah and I used to hide there in a hut on the monkey bars when we were younger. The perfect hiding spot. I increased my speed. The puddles splashed up my jeans, and the muddy water seeped through to my legs.

Please be there, Sarah.

The park loomed ahead, a gray blur in the rain. My breath came in choked pants, and my lungs constricted. I was not a runner and had little endurance. The park was limp and forlorn — nobody but me was stupid enough to be out in this downpour. At the entrance, I slid to a halt. The mud oozed into my shoes.

"Sarah!" I called. "Sarah!"

No answer. I shoved my bangs from my eyes and headed over to walk around each piece of equipment.

"Sarah!"

I grabbed the slippery rungs of the monkey bars and climbed to the plastic hut. She had to be inside. My head cleared the floor, and my spirits sank. All I saw was a soggy pile of wet candy wrappers in the corner.

I wilted against the ladder and let out my breath in a long, bottomless sigh. I'd counted on her being there. I blinked through the rain spilling over my face.
Mom and Dad must be going insane by now.
I picked my way back to the ground, my shoes slipping on each wet rung. Now what?

I stood under the hut and pulled out my phone to call Mom. She picked up before the first ring finished.

"Did you find her?" Her voice was rapid, breathless.

"No, sorry. Not at the park. I'll keep looking."

"Okay." She hung up.

I slumped against the post, and the rusty metal flakes scratched against my cheeks. She was a fifth grader — I should be able to figure out where she went. The icy wind gained intensity, and I pulled my dripping coat closer around my neck. I took a deep breath and stepped back out into the worst of it.

Then in a flash, I knew. I knew exactly where she was.

I ran again, circling back around the park and turning south. I flew down the street, and the rain pelted my face like darts. I was certain I was right. Nervous excitement surged through me. I dashed around a corner and arrived at Bates Elementary. I entered through the chain link fence toward the open playground.

A tiny figure sat in the mud against the trunk of a sprawling, leafless tree. I grabbed my phone and dialed Mom.

"She's here. At Bates."

I hung up, stuffed my phone into my wet pocket, and approached the tree. "Sarah?"

She looked up at me, her eyes huge. She was shaking and her teeth chattered.

"You okay?" I knelt beside her, my knees slipping in the muddy grass. I put my arm around her. "Ready to go home?"

She stared at me and said nothing. Then she nodded.

"Come on." I got up and pulled her to her feet. I wiggled out of my soppy coat and wrapped it around her. The frozen wind cut through my sweatshirt, and I shivered hard.

"Let's go home," I said, gritting my teeth against the cold. Sarah huddled into me, and we started across the field. We hadn't gotten far when Mom and Dad drove up and screeched to a stop on the blacktop outside the fence.

Mom bolted from the car and ran to meet us. "Sarah!" she cried.

Sarah grabbed onto me like she'd never let go. Mom peeled her away and hugged her fiercely. "We were worried sick! What were you thinking?" She leaned back and looked into Sarah's face.

Sarah blinked, the rain bunching up her lashes.

Mom ran her hand through Sarah's wet, tangled hair. She crushed her in another hug. "Doesn't matter now. Come on. Let's go home."

Dad joined us. "Sarah." He reached out to squeeze her arm. He looked at me, and I saw pure relief in his eyes. "Thank you, Emili. Oh, you're drenched. Let's hurry. I called the police, and they know we found her."

We stumbled our way to the car. The heat was blasting inside, but I couldn't stop trembling. I felt cold fingers climbing up my spine, making me shake harder. Mom crawled into the back seat between Sarah and me. Dad shifted into gear and drove us home.

None of us said a word, but I could hear every breath that fogged up the windows.

****

Mom drained the entire hot water tank running Sarah's bath. She fussed around her, finally agreeing to let her rest on my bed after she was out of the tub and wrapped into warm pajamas. I took a shower in cool-ish water. It would've been better not to take one at all. When I got out, I found Sarah in my bed, curled into a lump like an abandoned puppy.

Mom was by my desk, watching Sarah with a tired expression. At first, I thought she might be asleep with her eyes open. But when she saw me come in, she jerked slightly, nodded at me, and left.

I went right to Sarah, lay on the bed, and snuggled against her, pulling my comforter over both of us.

"You okay?" I asked, my nose inches away from her face.

"I shouldn't have left." Her voice was muffled as she talked through her fists.

"We were scared, Sarah. Why'd you go?"

"It'd be better."

"What? You mean without you?" I pulled her hands from her face and held them against my chest.

She nodded, her lashes drooping so her eyes became narrow slits.

"You're wrong, Sarah. Didn't you see how we all wanted you back?"

She closed her eyes, and I kept holding her hands. A few minutes later, we heard Mom and Dad's bedroom door slam shut.

Sarah's eyes popped open. She squirmed to get up and pulled her hands free from mine. "I want to listen."

I nodded. "Okay, but keep quiet."

We crept down the hallway and sat outside the door like we had hundreds of times. It didn't take long.

"Could it get worse?" Mom asked, her voice already shrill.

"I don't see how," was Dad's response.

"I knew it was bad, but, running away? And then sitting like a fool in a puddle of mud with rain pouring down like a flippin' waterfall? Has she lost her mind?"

"Nancy, you're not being fair. She's hurting."

"Aren't we all?" Mom's voice lowered, became calmer. "I know she's hurting. I've tried talking to her. I've tried till I'm blue in the face. She won't talk to me, won't say a blasted word. How can I help her if she won't speak?"

Silence.

Then, "She needs counseling." It was Dad.

"And how are we supposed to pay for it?" Back to shrill.

"Maybe they have counseling at her school."

"Oh, fine. She's trying to make friends, and now she'll be pegged as the crazy girl who needs counseling."

"How ridiculous. What's the matter with you? Where's your mother's heart? You've changed."

"Haven't we all?" Mom's voice was ice.

"Yes, but you… I don't know. What's going on? Something's changed."

"I'm trying to keep this family together. I'm carrying
everything
, David. Do you hear me? Everything!"

Loud footsteps pounded close to the door. Sarah and I jumped up and raced back to my bedroom. I closed the door behind us. We stood, panting, staring at each other. Sarah's eyes filled with tears.

"I'll talk," she said and put her fist to her mouth.

"It might help." I reached out my arms to her, and she hurtled into me, almost knocking me over. I held her for what seemed like forever.

 

Chapter Eight

 

Having no money became a living, breathing monster. Each day it got worse. I needed to get a job. If I could donate my wages and take off some of the pressure, maybe then Mom and Dad wouldn't be so horrid to each other.

Since our Internet was cut, I tried filling out job applications on my phone. What a nightmare. Every time I was halfway through, I'd press the wrong button and everything would become distorted, or part of the form would fall off into cyber space. I needed a computer.

I decided to go to the library. They were open from noon to four on Sunday. The library was a ways from our house, but I didn't want to ask Mom or Dad to drive me. They didn't need to know about my job search — I wasn't going to risk any negative input. Instead, I dug through a pile of rakes, shovels, and old car tires until I found my bicycle. The tire pump was hanging next to the hot water heater, where I'd left it two years earlier.

I squeezed the flat tires, and the rubber felt decent. Hopefully, they'd still hold air. I hooked up the pump and filled the first tire. It plumped up nicely, and I filled the other. I couldn't find my helmet anywhere. Mom would kill me if she saw me riding without it, so I made sure she was in her bedroom when I left.

The cold air slapped my face the minute I took off. It was supposed to drop to twenty degrees, and it felt it. I tried to scrunch my head down into my scarf for protection, but it didn't help. It took fifteen minutes to arrive at the library, and already my fingers and toes were frozen. I placed my bike against the stair railing and took the stairs two at a time. I pushed through the doors, and the warm blast of air gave me instant relief.

I pulled my scarf off and walked toward the teen computer area. I couldn't help but think of the last time I'd been at the library. I'd made secret plans to meet my then-boyfriend. We were going to sneak off to his brother's apartment. What a disaster. When Mom caught me, I got majorly grounded. Not to mention the huge fight I had with my boyfriend, plus his brother walking in on us making out. I shuddered. Worst plan ever.

I padded across the dark brown carpet to the computers in the teen area. I turned the corner around a freestanding bookshelf and gasped, jerking back behind the books with my heart whapping against my chest. My hand shook over my mouth.

It was Marc Rounder — the one I'd traded in for the creep who had betrayed me. He wasn't alone; my old friend Jeannie was with him. They sat all romantic-like in front of a computer screen as if cozying up to a blazing fireplace.

Had they seen me? I didn't think so. Maybe I could I slink toward the door and they'd never be the wiser.

I shook my head. I had a mission. I couldn't worry about Marc or Jeannie. I needed a job, and if I didn't get one, my family would sink further and further into a black hole.

I could use a computer in the adult section. The librarians frowned on teens using them, but this was an emergency. I took a deep breath and walked backward around the shelf, but I wasn't fast enough.

"Emili." At Marc's voice, I froze mid-step. He came around the books to find me, his steady blue eyes locking onto mine.

"Hey, Marc."

"We thought it was you."

I shrugged and dropped my shaking hand to my side. "Yeah, it was me."

"What are you doing?"

"Applying for jobs."

Marc raised his eyebrows and seemed relieved to have something to discuss. "Where are you applying?"

"Anywhere. Everywhere."

He ran his hand through his hair. "A job, huh? Well, you might find something at Burger King or Cagnie's Fish Basket."

Standing with Marc and talking about job applications was too weird for words — I was in a parallel universe.

"Yeah, I was going to check all the fast food places. Thanks." My words came out calmly, and I nearly fainted with relief.

"No problem."

We looked at each other, and a terrible silence yawned around us. I used to tell Marc everything. Even after my huge mistake, I could talk to him. It'd been weird, but we'd managed to forge a wobbly friendship again. Now, I wanted to throw myself in his arms and spill the mess of my family. I wanted to tell him how I planned to patch the family back together with the money I'd make from a job.

I missed him with an ache that shook every bone in my body. I missed his steady advice and calm perspective. I missed his peacefulness. I'd only seen him nervous once — right after he got my breakup text. I still felt like a total sleaze over that text. Shame grabbed me again as I remembered my spineless breakup.

My foot rubbed in circles on the carpet, and I couldn't seem to stop it. "You and Jeannie studying?"

"Not exactly. We're messing around."

"You guys together now?"

Marc dropped his eyes, and a faint red colored his face. "Yeah."

"How great. Yes, super." My heart cracked as I pasted on a smile.

He blinked, and I saw confusion clouding his eyes. "You're happy about it?"

"Why wouldn't I be? Jeannie used to be my good friend. She's nice. I'm glad you're together."

"I didn't think you'd take it so well. I never mentioned it when we talked the other day because I thought it'd hurt you."

I spread out my hands palms up and, with sheer will, kept them from trembling. "See, not hurt."

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