Brigid Kemmerer

Storm


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need an ambulance.”

      “I need a damn rainstorm.” He seemed to laugh, but it choked him. “A drizzle. Fog even.”

      He was delirious. “Can you get into the car? I can drive you to the hospital.”

      “No. Home.”

      “Whatever. Climb in the car. Those guys could come back, and I’m not—”

      A hand closed on her arm, hot and meaty and painful. A voice spoke from the darkness. “Did you think we wouldn’t wait and see?”

      “Big surprise.” The other voice now. “No sirens.”

      That hand swung her around. This guy didn’t go to her school. He looked older. College, maybe. Short blond hair framed a severe face, all angles and lines.

      Something scraped on the pavement. “This is going to suck,” said Chris.

      The other one was dragging him to his feet.

      Becca knew how to swallow pain and keep emotion off her face. “Let me go. I didn’t call the cops, but he did.”

      Those sharp features cracked into a smile. “We took his phone.”

      “Good try,” said Chris. He coughed again. The other guy punched him in the side, and he dropped to the pavement.

      The one on her arm shoved her up against her car. It hurt. She squealed before she could help it.

      “You should have driven away, sweetheart.”

      “Nah,” said the other, his dark hair making him look sinister. “That right there is dessert.”

      Then she recognized his voice. Seth Ramsey. A senior. And part of the reason she’d been in that self-defense class.

      His friend reached out to cup her chin. “Yeah. Dessert.”

      Maybe it was Seth’s presence; maybe it was the implication in their words. Whatever, her mind didn’t think, her body just moved. The water bottle went flying and her arm swung.

      Eye gouge.

      Something squished under her fingers. He dropped her arm like a hot potato, shoving her away, flying back to put a hand to his face. “Bitch! You bitch!”

      Holy crap! It works! She was choking on her breath, but she was free.

      “Shut up, Tyler,” Seth hissed. “She might not have called the cops, but you’re gonna—”

      “Freeze. Right there.”

      At first she thought the cops had shown up. But it was Chris, her water bottle in his hand. He’d found his feet somehow, and though he looked a little unsteady, their assailants went still.

      Chris drew a shaky breath. “Back off. Or I’ll mean that literally.”

      Mean what literally?

      “Yeah, right,” said Seth. “It’s one bottle.”

      Chris shook it. The water sloshed. “Try me.”

      He had to be out of his mind.

      But they backed off. “Chill out, man,” said Tyler. “We’re just screwing around.”

      “Yeah.” Chris gave that harsh laugh again, then swiped at his swollen lip. “Feels like it. Take another step back.”

      They did.

      She stared at Chris, as if her water bottle had somehow morphed into a gun, or a switchblade, or anything more intimidating than a plastic cylinder that read Aquafina.

      “Becky,” he said. “Get in the car.”

      “Becca,” she corrected automatically. Her voice was breathy, her hands still clenched in fists.

      “For god’s sake—” His eyes slid left. “Just get in the car.”

      She scrambled into the driver’s seat, her hands fumbling for the seat belt. Just when she wondered if he was going to get in, he yanked the back door open and almost fell into the car.

      “Drive.”

      Her foot smacked the accelerator and the car shot forward, swerving toward the building. Her heart beat on the back of her tongue, and she yanked the wheel. The car fishtailed before straightening out.

      Chris swore. “Drive without killing me.” He coughed. “I should have clarified.”

      She swung the car out of the parking lot and onto the main road, accelerating like a bank robber. Her breath was loud in the confines of the car. Houses whipped by, but she had yet to pass another vehicle.

      She barely hesitated at the stop sign at the end of Old Mill Road, screeching through the turn.

      “Hey.” Chris’s voice was quiet. “Take it easy. Their car was on the other side of the cafeteria. You can slow down.”

      She eased her foot off the pedal. “What did they want? That one guy doesn’t go to our school.”

      “Not anymore.” He paused. “Thanks.”

      She swallowed. What was the right response? “You’re welcome” didn’t quite seem to cover it. Then again, his “thanks” didn’t, either. “Do you want me to take you to the hospital?”

      “Nah. Home.” His breath hitched, and she took a glance at him in the rearview mirror. His eyes were half closed, his voice ironic. “If you don’t mind.”

      She didn’t think that was a good idea, but what was she going to do, wrestle him into the ER? “Aren’t your parents going to freak when they see you?”

      That rough laugh again. “I’d probably freak if I saw them.” A peal of thunder interrupted his words. Raindrops appeared on the windshield. “Figures,” he muttered. “Now it rains.”

      Maybe he had a head injury. “Where do you live?”

      “Just north of the fire station. On Chautauga. We’re the blue house at the end of the court.”

      She nodded, her knuckles white on the steering wheel. He fell silent for a while, and she glanced in the rearview again to find his eyes on her. Blue eyes. Nice eyes, she noticed, sharp and intelligent under that fringe of dark hair.

      Then he smirked. With the cuts and bruises on his face, it made him look a little scary. “You’re probably thinking I owe you my life.”

      She jerked her eyes back to the road. “No,” she snapped. “Just sixty bucks.”

      “You charge for the hero act?”

      His voice sounded light, but she still heard the wheeze behind the words. Another quick glance in the mirror revealed his head had fallen back against the seat.

      “I really think I should take you to the hospital. You probably have broken ribs.” And a concussion. “They can call your parents from there.”

      “Why? You think they have a Ouija board?”

      She glanced at him worriedly, and his eyes opened fully. “My parents are dead, Becca. Do you think you could open a window?”

      Maybe the fresh air would help. She pushed the button to drop his window a few inches, not wanting to let the rain in.

      He sighed. “Thanks.”

      He fell silent for a mile, and when they came to the red light by the community college, she turned in her seat. His eyes were closed.

      “Chris?”

      He didn’t answer.

      “Chris.”

      Nothing.

      “Damn it,” she whispered.

      CHAPTER 2

      The blue house at the end