reach it. When I got there, I knew that it was indeed the way out of the cave. The light also told me that it was daytime. How long had I been in that tunnel? All night? Or was it daytime in China? My eyes werenât accustomed to the light, so I had to cover them and squint. I stepped outside and immediately realized it was even colder out here. All I had on was my Stony Brook warm-up top over a T-shirt, so the wind cut through me instantly. Man, it was freezing! I took a few steps and looked down to seeâsnow! The ground was covered with snow! Thatâs another reason it was so bright. The sun reflected off the snow and blinded me. I knew it wouldnât take long for my eyes to adjust, so rather than duck back into the cave to get warm, I waited till I could see. I wanted to know where I was.
After a few seconds, I gingerly took my hands away from my eyes. My pupils had finally contracted enough to let me see, and what was there waiting for me nearly knocked me off my feet.
I was standing on top of a mountain! And this was no small ski mountain like we go to in Vermont. This was likeEverest! Okay, maybe not that big, but I felt like I was on top of the world. Craggy snow fields stretched for as far as I could see. In the far distance, way down below, I could see that the snow gave way to a green, lush valley, but it was a long, steep trip between here and there.
One question kept running through my head. âWhere in heck am I?â Good question, but I had no one to ask. So I turned to go back into the safety of the cave to get my act together and figure out some kind of plan. Just before I turned back I saw, scattered several yards away from the mouth of the cave, these yellowish, kind of smooth, pointed rocks about two feet high. They jutted up out of the snow like stalagmites. Or stalactites. I can never remember which is which. They stuck up and came to a sharp point. I had no idea what they could be, but the word âtombstonesâ kept creeping into my head. I shook that particularly morbid thought out of my brain and trudged through the snow back to the cave.
Thatâs when I saw the strangest thing of all. The sun was just rising up over the rocks that formed the cave. But I had just been shielding my eyes against the sun that was shining from the other direction! How could that be? I looked behind me to see that there wasnât just one sun. There were three! I swear, Mark, there were three suns in opposite corners of the sky! I blinked, thinking my vision was just screwed up or something, but it didnât help. They were still there. My mind locked up. I didnât know what to think, but there was one thing I knew for sureâI wasnât in China.
I stood there on top of this mountain, all alone, sneakers getting wet in the snow, staring up at three blazing suns. Iâm not ashamed to admit this, I wanted my mom. I wanted to be sitting in front of the TV fighting for the remote with Shannon. I wanted to be washing the car with Dad. I wantedto be shooting hoops with you. Suddenly the things I had taken for granted in life felt very far away. I wanted to go home, but all I could do was stand there and cry. I really did. I cried.
Then the sound came again, from inside the caveâthe same jumble of musical notes that had sucked me into the tunnel and dumped me here. Someone else was coming. Uncle Press! It had to be! I ran back into the cave, overjoyed that I wasnât going to be alone anymore. But then another thought hit me. What if it wasnât Uncle Press? What if it was that Saint Dane guy? The last time I had the pleasure of hanging with that dude, he was shooting at us. And I gotta tell you, getting shot at isnât like what you see in the movies, or with Nintendo. Itâs real and itâs terrifying. I could still feel the sting on the back of my neck where I got hit by the shattered pieces of tile.
I didnât know what to do, so I stopped in the middle
Jilly Cooper
Adam O'Fallon Price
J. D. Stroube
Loren D. Estleman
James Hannaham
Gertrude Chandler Warner
Anne Ursu
Mike Faricy
Riley Adams
Susan Mallery