into an eternity o
ysical weight, pr
eps receded. She ha
voice, muffled, from th
drafts... No, she's... she says she's not feeling well, but the air conditioning is on u
tioning?
ndow. Jessica's lie abou
racy of
. My las
nd weak, fumbled wit
ll con
emergency?" A ca
t. "Basement... can't
need you
..." My voice faded
anced in fro
ma El
ved in Florida, by the ocean.
find her contact. My
connected
lick. Dis
rom my own number, to Grandma: *"Sorry,
weird, might not get texts
ss
somehow. She'd been asking about setting up a new photo-sh
ked my onl
ess was c
ng me a hidden latch on the old coal chute door, now boarded u
in the far corner, behi
inch by ago
ed against the
ed, stiff. But the
fresher air. Not m
ce to the tiny
tside. A siren. Faint
gile thing,
oser, then stopp
the porch.
en up!" A m
. Then, a spl
reaking dow
sement stairs as the
houetted against i
Emily
football buddy. He knew about my asthma. He'd
ed to yell, but it w
the coal chute,
im. "Oh, Emily.
is uniform felt rou
the line was open, sounded like a kid in distress," he m
was like a punch to th
g. Oxygen mask, questi
e into the ambul
a, pulling into the
ooked
commotion?" Dad demanded, str
ll, gaudy trophy. "We're back! I w
ltering for a microsecond before becoming a mask