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The View from Rainshadow Bay by Colleen Coble (9)

When was the last time she’d allowed herself to remember that horrible day? Shauna couldn’t recall. She sat on the sofa, and Apollo settled at her feet. She sipped the water and stared into the fire, then began to recount the events to Zach.

Mommy, I want to go play.” Shauna tugged her hand out of her mother’s grip and took hold of Connor’s hand. “I’ll look out for Connor.” At eight, it was her responsibility to take care of her baby brother, who was six years younger.

The market had tables, blocks, and other toys in the back corner of the building, right next to the candy department, though Mommy didn’t often buy it for them. She said it would rot their teeth, but Shauna didn’t see how that could be true. The kids at school sometimes had candy bars in their lunch pails, and their teeth all looked fine. She’d even asked to look in her best friend’s mouth once after she had a Snickers bar.

Her mother was the most beautiful person in the world, even with her belly sticking out. Her hair was the color of the night, and she was always smiling. Shauna sometimes put her ear on Mommy’s tummy to see if the new baby would talk to her, but she never heard anything other than her mommy’s tummy gurgling. Little Peanut was supposed to be here anytime, and Shauna was hoping for a baby sister, just because she didn’t have one.

Mommy touched her head. “Okay, stay in the play enclosure. I’ll come fetch you when I’m ready to check out. I have to get a lot of groceries so it might be a little while.”

That was just fine with Shauna. She led Connor through the aisles of canned goods and bags of chips. She stopped by the purple flowers lining the windowsills. Mommy loved lavender, and Shauna had brought her allowance. She touched the lavender, then buried her face in it. She’d buy her some after they played.

She and her brother hopped onto the small plastic teeter-totter. He shrieked with laughter as Shauna bounced down and lifted his small rear end into the air.

But in the next moment, she catapulted off the end. She bounced to her feet. “You pushed too hard.”

But Connor was on the floor too. And the carpet was moving. There was some kind of low rumble that made Shauna want to hide under the small table covered with puzzles. Was it a T rex about to come eat them? She wasn’t supposed to watch scary movies, but she’d seen a little bit of Jurassic Park last week at a friend’s house. The shaking intensified and kept her and Connor on the ground.

She hugged her brother as Connor began to cry. All around the store things crashed to the ground, and people were screaming and calling out to each other. “Mommy!” Her scream sounded like a whisper with the awful noise going on all around.

Then her mother was there. She covered them both with her body. “It’s going to be okay, little ones. Stay still.”

The ceiling started to cave in, and big chunks of wood fell. Shauna peeked past her mother’s arm and saw blue sky above. What was happening? She was too frightened to even cry. Pieces of the ceiling hung over them like some kind of tent, and there were only small tunnels here and there.

Her mother gave a strange oomph sound, then didn’t move. Shauna shook her, but she didn’t respond. Connor was still crying, and Shauna tried to move to hug him, but she was trapped under her mother’s heavy arm.

“Mommy!” She tried again to get her mother to open her eyes, and finally Mommy stirred a little and looked at her. “Mommy, you scared me.”

A little bit of red dribbled from Mommy’s mouth, and she licked it away. “My good girl. Lie still. It’s an earthquake. Someone will come to help us soon.”

An earthquake? Didn’t those only happen in California? But Mommy didn’t seem too scared, so Shauna tried not to cry. The rumbling that seemed to last forever finally stopped. “Can I get up, Mommy?”

Her mother winced as she moved her arm far enough for Shauna to crawl out. She turned and helped her brother up too. The place was a mess, and she heard water running from somewhere. “Let me pull you up, Mommy.”

Her mother’s eyes closed again. “I can’t move, honey. There is something on top of me. We have to wait for someone to come help us.”

“I’ll get help!” Shauna climbed through the tunnels formed by the concrete and fallen beams, sometimes coming to a dead end until she retraced her path and found another way. A man with a green shirt lay motionless on the floor with blood on his head. She was afraid to move closer, and her chest started to feel tight. She had to find help.

She crawled through the tunnels until she found a woman seated in the crumbled concrete with her head cradled in her arms. Shauna touched her wrist. “My mommy is trapped. Can you help her?”

The woman had blonde hair and looked friendly, and she put her hand on Shauna’s arm. “Where is she, honey? I’m a paramedic.”

Shauna pointed. “Back in the play area with my little brother. It’s not easy to get there, though. I can show you.”

The woman peered through the tunnel Shauna had exited. “I think the worst of it is over, but there might be aftershocks. We’re trapped here until someone comes.”

Shauna led the way back and only went down the wrong tunnel once before emerging into the small, cramped space where her mother lay with Connor.

Shauna pointed out her mother, who wasn’t moving. “There she is.”

The paramedic lady made her way to Mommy and touched her shoulder. “Let me see if I can move this beam off your legs.”

She grabbed another broken piece of wood and propped it under the big beam on a piece of concrete. Grunting, she pushed on the thing until the big beam rolled off Mommy.

Mommy cried out a little and put her hand to her tummy. “I think the baby’s coming.”

Shauna backed away and reached for Connor’s hand. He didn’t move his fingers. Maybe he was sleeping. It was dark by the time she heard a baby cry. The paramedic lady soothed the baby, then everything fell silent.

Her cheeks wet and her vision blurry, Shauna looked across at Zach’s stricken face. “We were stuck there for hours. I think my mom died as soon as Brenna was born. I named her and held her, but my mother never spoke. The paramedic found some formula and bottles in the debris and managed to feed Brenna. I heard her cry a couple of times. Some aftershocks struck and another beam fell on Connor. I thought he would die before help arrived. He was in terrible pain. My dad found me at the triage center, but he never found Connor and Brenna. I told him they died, but I didn’t know that for sure. I just felt it.”

The grief in her chest was a mountain too big to ever move off her. She wiped at her cheeks. “I can understand why Pop fell headlong into the bottle. I couldn’t do that, though.”

Zach leaned forward. “You lost your entire family that night.”

She grabbed a tissue and blew her nose. “So that necklace being found now makes no sense.”

“Was she wearing it when she died?”

“I don’t remember. She hardly ever took it off, so probably.” She moved the cat off her lap and leaped to her feet. “I have to go to bed now. This is too hard.”

He wouldn’t sleep for hours, not with the horrific details of that night still lingering in his brain. Zach went to his room and pulled his laptop from his backpack. Maybe there was an article about the tragedy online. He settled on the side of the bed and scanned through news reports of devastation from the quake with pictures of damaged buildings. The death toll had been thirteen, and he finally found a list, but the only Duval he saw listed was Theresa, Shauna’s mother. The children’s names were missing.

Frowning, he read through the article more closely.

Pandemonium still rages through the small town of Lavender Tides, Washington, after a 7.8 magnitude earthquake ripped through the community on Tuesday. Numerous buildings were destroyed, including a school and the town grocery store. The children left wandering the streets were of particular concern to authorities who called in Child Protective Services for help. Two days later some parents are still trying to locate their children.

There was more, but he stopped reading and frowned. Lost children? Did they actually find the bodies of Brenna and Connor? It was a delicate question to ask, so maybe he should talk to Shauna’s father. He’d always gotten along well with the older man, at least when he found him sober.

This probably wasn’t something Shauna would appreciate him poking into, but the story was so horrendous he couldn’t let it go. Had anyone tried to locate the paramedic who delivered Brenna and took care of them all? She might be able to shed more light on what happened when the authorities showed up. Connor was injured, so perhaps he really did succumb to injuries, but what about the baby? She had been fed and cared for, so what happened to her?

Maybe Zach was reading too much into it, but the nagging feeling that something was off wouldn’t leave him. He glanced at the time on his phone. It was eleven, and most normal people might be heading for bed, but Lewis Duval, Shauna’s father, was probably sitting in his living room only halfway through his beer stash for the night. Zach found his name in his contacts and placed the call.

“’Lo.” Lewis’s voice was only a little slurred, which was a good sign.

“Hey, Lewis, it’s Zach Bannister. How you doing?”

“Zach.” The older man’s voice grew more alert. “Haven’t heard from you in a while, boy. Doing just fine.”

Lewis lived in a cabin in the Olympic Forest. The place had been falling down around his ears for years, but he did what he had to do, and no one could budge him from the place his grandfather had built. At one time it had been a vacation retreat for the family, and from what Zach remembered of the story Jack had told him, Lewis moved in permanently when Shauna was a kid. The guy seemed to get crazier by the year, probably from the alcohol.

“That’s good to hear. Listen, I have a question and it’s personal, but I’m going to ask it anyway if that’s okay.”

“Got no secrets, boy.” He slurped on a liquid, then cleared his throat. “Ask away.”

“It’s about your other children. Were you able to retrieve their bodies after the earthquake and bury them?”

“Bury them, you say? Who you been talking to? Shauna? She don’t remember that time even half right.”

“What do you mean?”

“My poor babies were dead when they were hauled out of the ruins. It just took a few days, maybe a week, to get confirmation.”

“But did you identify their bodies?”

“I didn’t have no money for burials, so the state took care of it.”

“But did you see the bodies?”

A long pause followed. “You implying I’m lying, boy?”

“Of course not. But I was reading about the disaster, and CPS had trouble finding the families of some of the children. I just wondered if it was possible there was a mix-up is all.” He held his breath and waited.

Something in Lewis’s vehement denials left a bad taste in his mouth. Zach had expected Lewis to grow maudlin about the family he’d lost, but he’d been, well, defensive. That was the only word to describe his tone.

Lewis let loose a long round of cursing. The next moment the phone went silent.

“Hello? Lewis, you there?” Zach pulled the phone away and looked at it. No connection. Lewis had hung up on him.

Lewis’s reaction struck Zach as odd. He was determined to get to the bottom of it.