From: cheryl492@aol.com To: alt-ql-creative@cisco.com Subject: Twist in Time - Part 7 Date: Thu, 03 Jun 93 18:18:07 EDT Message-Id: <9306031818.tn11515@aol.com> Twist in Time Cheryl A. Bellucci Part 7 Sam glanced at Al and then looked back at Walt. "I just used that phone." "It's dead now." Walt replaced the receiver. "Get out of here, Wayne. Go home." Sam nodded, then carefully stepped through what was left of the showroom door. Al met him outside. "Okay, Al, what am I supposed to do?" "Uh, Sam, Ziggy still isn't sure - " "What do you mean, you don't know why I'm here?" Al shook his head. "Great." "There's still the 65 percent probability that whatever it is you have to do will occur between here and home. So, Ziggy suggests that you head back to the apartment." Al summoned the imaging chamber door. "We're still checking, I'll be back in a little bit." And then he disappeared. Sam crossed the street. True to Al's words, the music store was damaged, the roof completely gone. He stuck his head through the frame of the front door and called out. "Anybody here?" "Yes." An older man came from the back of the store. "But we're all okay." "You sure?" When the man nodded, Sam turned and continued his walk. The school across the street didn't look too bad on the outside, but Sam could tell the structure was badly damaged from peeking in through a broken window. Pieces of the ceiling lay on the floor, and deep cracks ran up the walls. Turning around, he saw what he took to be teacher and a couple of students coming out of the building. "Everyone okay?" "Yes," the teacher answered. "We've accounted for everyone." "Miss Little, I got scraped." One of the students held up his arm. Sam looked at the scrape, but it wasn't too deep. "You'll be okay, just make sure you clean it real well." Then he remembered and quickly added, "But you'll probably need a tentanous shot." The young boy made a face, and the teacher put her arm around him. "I'm sure the police or someone will be here soon," Sam said. In fact, only seconds after the tornado went through, the sounds of sirens from various rescue and police agencies began, and would continue throughout the night. "Where do you live?" "I live over there." The boy pointed toward the direction that Al had told Sam to take the day before. "I'll stay here with Cindy," the teacher assured Sam, "Can you take Tony home?" "Yeah, I'll walk him home." As Sam led the boy across the street, he noticed damage to a few more buildings. Tony noticed it too. "Pretty scary, huh?" Sam asked him. "I saw it, it was big." Tony was shaking. "There!" He stopped and pointed at an undamaged house. "There's my house, and it's okay!" Sam walked Tony up to the front door and knocked. A woman answered. Before Sam could say anything, she grabbed Tony and hugged him. "Tony, are you okay? I was so worried." "Mom, I'm _fine_," replied the boy, embarassed by the attention. "He's got a scrape on his arm, but it's not too bad. He'll need a tetanous shot, though," Sam told the worried mother. "Thank you for bringing him home." She shook his hand. "No problem, I'm trying to make my way home, myself." "Good luck. From what they're saying on the radio, there's more destruction just north of here." Sam left Tony with his mother and continued down the street towards the park. He stopped just in front of the high school. Yellow buses lay in the middle of the building like discarded toys, and half the building was flattened. Police and rescue workers surrounded what was left. "Is everyone okay?" Sam asked a nearby cop. "We're pretty sure everyone got out okay. We've got crews in there checking it out." "Anything I can do to help?" "Not here, we don't want anymore people in the building than is necessary." Sam turned to see Al standing on the corner, and he raised his shoulders in question. Al shook his head. "There were some kids in there practicing a play or something, but they're all okay." As Sam walked toward Al, he noticed the destruction in the park. What few trees were left were wrapped in debris, and all of the glass was broken out of the pavillion. People were standing in front of the houses across from the park. "Well?" he asked Al. "Sam, I don't know..." "Well, I'll just keep helping people until you do know. Go ask Ziggy again." Sam watched his friend disappear once more behind the imaging chamber door. Sam asked everyone he came up to if they were okay. Most of the people looked a little dazed, but responded that they were fine. "But I want to find her now." Sam came upon a girl, about thirteen, apparently arguing with her mother. "You are not going back in that house," the older woman answered. "What's wrong?" he asked the woman. "Is someone missing?" He glanced up at the house they were standing in front of. The entire roof was gone, as was the left side wall. The house looked like someone had thrown down and smashed a doll house. "We're all okay, but she insists she wants to go back in and find her cat," the mother answered, indicating the girl. Behind her stood two young boys, wide eyed and scared. Sam looked back up at the house, then at the girl. Everyone looked shocked and dazed. "What if I go in the house with her?" "Are you sure it's safe?" The mother looked at the house. "I think so. We won't go in if it doesn't look, uh, safe." Sam wasn't sure what he was saying, it didn't look too safe from the outside. "Be careful." Sam followed the girl up to the front door, which was standing wide open. He grabbed her shoulders before she could go in, and he noticed she was shaking. "Wait, we go in together." Once inside, he noted that the staircase ran along the right side of the house, opposite from the missing wall. "Where do you think your cat is?" "The basement. That's where we were. I couldn't find her before the storm hit." Sam followed the girl along the wall to another set of stairs that ran under the first, down to the basement. "My name is Wayne, what's yours?" "Carol." She was still shaking. "Okay, Carol, we're going to go downstairs, me first. But we're going to take it slow, okay?" She nodded. Sam started down the staircase, carefully testing each step before putting his full weight on it. Once at the bottom, he stopped and looked around. "Come here." He motioned for her to step in front of him, and he took her by the shoulders again. "Now, where do you think she is?" Carol shrugged. "I'm not sure." They took a couple of hesitant steps toward the center of the basement, looking around to the corners. But they both jumped when they heard a loud pop. Carol froze. "What was that?" Sam looked down. He had stepped on a small bag of potato chips and the bag had burst beneath his foot. He started laughing. So did Carol. "I think we needed that bit of comic relief." They stood there for a couple of seconds, then Sam asked, "Any ideas?" "She hides behind the stairs sometimes." "Okay." Carol led him to the back of the stairs they had just come down. There was a set of shelves there that led to a hole in the wall. Sure enough, when Sam looked up just beyond the highest shelf, a pair of eyes looked back at him. He reached up and pulled the cat out and handed her down to her owner. "Thank you." "No problem. Now, let's get out of here." He followed the girl up the stairs and out of the house. 'I couldn't have been here to save a cat,' he thought as headed back towards the street. Then he saw Al across the street, motioning to him.