Chapter Seven
“B
rrr,” Christina said as she unlocked the front door to Starbucks at four thirty the next morning. Four
frickin’ thirty! The sun was an hour and a half from rising, and the parking lot was a ghostly landscape,
broken up here and there by snow-covered cars. Christina’s boyfriend honked as he pulled onto Dearborn
Avenue, and Christina turned and waved. He drove off, and it was us, the snow, and the unlit store.
She pushed open the door, and I hurried in behind her.
“It’s freezing out there,” she said.
“You’re telling me,” I said. The drive from my house had been treacherous, even with snow tires and
chains, and I passed at least a dozen cars abandoned by less gutsy drivers. In one snowbank there was an
imprint of an entire SUV or some other monster vehicle. How was that possible? How did some idiot
driver not see a six-foot wall of snow?
Until the snowplow came, there was no way Tegan would be driving
anywhere in her wimpy Civic.
I stomped to dislodge the clumps of snow, then tugged off my boots and padded sock-footed to the back
room. I flipped the six switches by the heating vent, and the store blazed with light.
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