Before the Storm. Diane Chamberlain
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“Um,” she began, “I just wanted to let y’all know that I’m coordinating the fund-raising to help the fire victims.” The paper she held in her hand shivered and I admired her for getting up in front of so many people when it obviously made her nervous. “The Shriners have come through like always to help out with medical expenses, but there’s still more we need to do. A lot of the families have no insurance. I’m working with Barry Gebhart, who y’all know is an accountant in Hampstead, and we set up a special fund called the Drury Memorial Family Fund. I hope you’ll help out with a check you can give me or Barry today, or you can drop by Jabeen’s Java anytime I’m working. Barry and I are thinking of some fund-raising activities and we’d like your suggestions in that…um…about that.” She looked down at the paper. “We’ll make sure the money gets to the families who need it the most.”
She sat down again at the end of our row. I saw Ben, his head still bandaged, smile at her.
Trish stood up once more at the podium.
“Thank you, Dawn,” she said. “We have a generous community with a generous spirit and I know we’ll do all in our power to ease the suffering of the families hurt by the fire.
“Now I’d like to recognize the firefighters and EMS workers who did such an amazing job under grueling circumstances. Not only our Town of Surf City Fire Department, but those firefighters from Topsail Beach, North Topsail Beach and the Surf City Volunteer Fire Department as well.”
Applause filled the building, and as it ebbed, I saw Trish drop her gaze to us.
“And I’d like to ask Andy Lockwood to stand, please.”
Beside me, I felt Andy start.
“Go ahead, sweetie,” I whispered. “Stand up.”
He stood up awkwardly.
Before the mayor could say another word, applause broke out again, and people rose to their feet.
“Are they clapping for me?” Andy asked.
“Yes.” I bit my lip to hold back my tears.
“Why did they stand up?”
“To honor you and thank you.”
“Because I’m a hero?”
I nodded.
He grinned, turning around to wave at the crowd behind us. I heard some subdued laughter.
“Can I sit down now?” Andy asked finally.
“Yes.”
He lowered himself to his seat again, his cheeks pink. It took another minute for the applause to die down.
“As most of you know,” Trish said, “Andy not only found a safe way out of the church, but he risked his own life to go back in and lead many of the other children to safety. Our loss is devastating, but it would have been much worse without Andy’s quick thinking and calm in the face of chaos.”
Andy sat up straighter than usual, his chest puffed out a bit, and I knew he was surprised to find himself suddenly the darling of Topsail Island.
Chapter Seven
Andy
MOM PUT HER VITAMINS IN A LINE by her plate. She ate breakfast vitamins and dinner vitamins. Maggie and I only ate breakfast ones. Maggie passed me the spinach bowl. Dumb. She knows I don’t eat spinach. I tried to give it to Mom.
“Take some, Andy,” Mom said. “While your arm is healing, you need good nutrition.”
“I have lots of nutrition.” I lifted my plate to show her my chicken part and the cut-up sweet potato.
“Okay. Don’t spill.” She put her fingers on my plate to make it go on the table again.
I ate a piece of sweet potato. They were my favorite. Mom made sweet potato pie sometimes, but she never ate any. She didn’t eat dessert because she didn’t want to ever be sick. She said too many sweet things could make you sick. Maggie and I were allowed to eat dessert because we weren’t adults yet.
“Andy,” Mom said after she swallowed all her vitamins, “your arm looks very good, but maybe you should skip the swim meet tomorrow.”
“Why?” I had to swim. “It doesn’t hurt!”
“We need to make sure it’s completely healed.”
“It is completely healed!”
“You’ve been through a lot, though. It might be good just to take a rest.”
“I don’t need a rest!” My voice was too loud for indoors. I couldn’t help it. She was pressing my start button.
“If your arm is all better, then you can.”
“It’s better enough!” I wanted to show her my arm, but I punched it out too hard and hit my glass of milk. The glass flew across the table and crashed to the floor. It broke in a million pieces and milk was all over. Even in the spinach.
Mom and Maggie stared at me with their mouths open. I saw a piece of chewed chicken in Maggie’s mouth. I knew I did an inappropriate thing. My arm did.
“I’m sorry!” I stood up real fast. “I’ll clean it up!”
Maggie catched me with her hand.
“Sit down, Panda,” she said. “I’ll do it. You might cut yourself.”
“I’ll get it.” Mom was already at the counter pulling off paper towels.
“I’m sorry,” I said again. “My arm went faster than I thought.”
“It was an accident,” Mom said.
Maggie helped her pick up the pieces of glass. Mom put paper towels all over the milk on the floor.
“My arm did it because it’s so strong and healed,” I said.
Mom was scrunched on the floor cleaning milk. Sometimes when I talk, she looks like she’s going to laugh but doesn’t. This was one of those times.
I put my napkin on top of the spinach to clean off the milk.
“Andy,” Maggie said, while she got five or maybe six more paper towels. “I know you’re upset that you might not be able to swim, but you’ve got to think before you react.” She sounded exactly like Mom.
“I do,” I said. That was sort of a lie. I try to think before I act, but sometimes I forget.
Mom stood up. “We’ll check your arm again in the morning.” She threw away the milky paper towels. “If it still looks good and you feel up to it, you can swim.”
“I’ll