I wish I could say I’d never witnessed a windshield shatter before, but I’d been in a terrible car
accident a few years back, so I knew exactly what it looked and sounded like.
There’s a weird silence that happens immediately after something like that, in which everything seemed
to occur in slo-mo. I forced my mouth to move.
“Gunshot!” I shouted, because I could see both Cal and Garrett looking wildly around, trying to
process exactly what that noise was and what had just happened. “Bullet to car window! Over to the
right.”
The broken windshield belonged to a beat-up sedan parked two slots down from us in the Sav’A’Buck lot.
Someone had fired a gun, just once, probably from somewhere near the grocery store’s front doors,
judging from that broken front window. Shards of glass made tinkling sounds as they careened off the
front of the car and onto the pavement.
“Gunman at the store door, get down get down get down!” Calvin shouted, and I stupidly turned to look
instead of diving onto the floor of his car, and he grabbed me by the shirt and yanked me down just as
the shooter must’ve flipped the switch from one shot to massacre, and the gun began going off, popping
bullets through the air.
BOOM BOOM BOOM POP BOOM!
I braced for them to hit Cal’s car, covering my head as I prepared for a rain of glass, but the man
with the giant gun must’ve been pointing it in a different direction, because I heard the ping of
punctured metal and breaking glass, but it wasn’t from our car.
I could hear someone screaming—high-pitched and frantic—even as Garrett yelled, “Calvin, drive!”
“Don’t,” I told Cal as I closed my eyes and focused on that glimpse I’d seen before he’d pulled me to
relative safety.
Single gunman. Carrying…
A big gun. And something else…?
I focused on calling up the image, and yes, he was carrying some- thing under his left arm, some kind
of brightly colored sack, with his assault rifle tucked into his right elbow—this tall, broad man,
maybe twenty years old, buzz cut, scar above his eyebrow.
That screaming—it had been a child’s voice. She was silent now, but I realized with a flash that I
hadn’t seen a colorful bag but instead the cheerfully patterned clothing of a little girl. That man
with the gun was abducting a little girl. And I bet I knew why.
“Gimme!” I said and reached back to grab one of the water guns from beside Garrett.
“Sky!” Cal exclaimed. “Don’t—”
I didn’t wait to hear what he thought I shouldn’t do. I’d yanked my hood up over my head, hiding my
red hair and as much of my face as I could, and I was already out of the car and on the asphalt,
heading toward the man who was still firing that gun. He was using it not to kill, thank goodness, but
to keep the little girl’s family from following him. I could see with just one glance that she was
unconscious, as he tossed her none too carefully into the passenger seat of his shiny black Bimmer. He
had a nice car. And I was pretty sure I knew how he’d paid for it—by kidnapping little girls like this
one, like Sasha, too, and selling them to the Destiny makers.
Mother. Effer.
“Hey! ” I belted out. But my voice was buried beneath the cacophony of his weapon. I had to
move fast, or he was going to get into his snazzy car and that little girl would be gone.
I took a deep breath and concentrated. Water versus bullets? Not normally much of a contest there.
But I could do this. Couldn’t I?
Suddenly, I heard Dana’s voice in my head, shouting Fail! Fail! What are you doing, Bubble Gum? You
have no backup, you have no plan!
What was I doing? This was insane.
Still thoughts. I closed my eyes and pictured Milo. I breathed him, I felt him, I heard him.
Still thoughts, Sky. Just let it go…
And in that moment in which I was specifically not thinking about what I was about to do or
what the consequences would be if I failed, I felt and then saw my enormous pile of plastic water
pistols—there were sixteen of them total—shoot out from the backseat of Calvin’s car and through the
passenger side window that I’d left open. They streamed toward me like metal particles toward a
magnet.
Then, just as quickly, all but one—a little green one—swooped in front of me before lining up and
hovering in midair.
The little green plastic water gun zoomed over to the man with the real gun and smacked him in the
face.
“What the hell…?” He fumbled his weapon as he turned to see me standing there—me and that collection
of water guns—and his eyes widened.
“Holy shit, Sky!” With the noise from the assault weapon silenced, I could hear Garrett shouting, and
I winced inwardly because he’d used my name.
But whatever he said next was muffled, and Cal’s voice rang out instead. “Hoshitski, look out!”
It was an intentional misdirect, and I tried to stand like a Hoshitski might, no doubt surly from
years of being teased. I pitched my voice lower and ordered, “Drop it! Now!”
The gunman’s wide eyes narrowed, and we both knew he wasn’t going to drop his weapon, so before he
could turn and kill me, I let loose my TK and blasted him. All of those plastic guns shot water from
their barrels with the intensity of sixteen narrow but powerful fire hoses, and it sent the man down
onto the ground so hard that I heard his head as it smacked against the pavement.
The gun he’d been holding clattered to the ground.
All of my weapons ceased water-fire and dropped onto the pavement in front of the unconscious shooter.
The silence that followed was eerie. I felt a little dazed, standing there with a single, silly-
looking pink water gun still in my hand, staring at the downed man and his big real gun, and then over
at the bullet-riddled storefront of the Sav’A’Buck.