Brant, age 18
âJuneâs gone.â
Theo and I both jolt from our places in front of the television, our Final Fantasy marathon long forgotten. Yoshi scrambles off the bed, nails clicking against the hardwood floor while he darts from the bedroom, as if heâs equally daunted.
âWhat?â I blurt.
I heard her the first time. Maybe I just didnât want to hear her.
Samantha Bailey pulls a blue ink pen out of her hair and begins clicking the end of it, over and over, as if that might tell her where June went. âShe wanted to go to the mall to meet up with her friends, but I told her no, because of the snowstorm, andââ
âIâll head to the mall.â Iâm already pulling a wool sweater over my head and beelining toward the doorway. Itâs the first snow of the season, and itâs coming down fast and hardâbut Iâll drive all over this town until I find her, shitty tires be damned.
Theo is right on my heels. âWho was she meeting there?â he calls over his shoulder to his mother. âIâll see if she left her phone behind.â
âSheâs a preteen,â I remind him. âShe didnât leave her phone behind.â
Samantha trails behind us, panicking under her breath. âLord help me⦠Iâll call Celesteâs mother again. I already tried twice, and it went to voicemail.â
I pop my snow boots on, one by one, nearly tipping over in the foyer. Theo tosses me my car keys, and I catch them easily as I say to him, âShe could have walked down to Celesteâs. Itâs not far. And if sheâs not there, we can split up. Cover more ground.â
âAye-aye, Luigi.â
âIâll stay here in case she comes home. If sheâs not back within the hour, Iâm calling the police,â Samantha says worriedly as we zip up our puffy coats. She places a hand over her heart, gripping the fabric of her cardigan with glossy eyes. âPlease, be careful.â
Nodding, I signal at Theo and we both make our way out into the December blizzard. Big, fat flurries rain down from a pearl-gray sky, almost as fast as my heart is jackhammering inside my chest. I stomp through the several inches of freshly fallen snow, and we both hop into my Corolla, hoping the squealing belt I need to replace doesnât snap and get us killed.
Where the hell are you, Junebug?
Sheâs growing up fast.
God⦠sheâs growing up too fast. Sheâll be a teenager in six short months, and weâve already been getting a taste of whatâs to comeâthe hormones, the sass, the emotions.
The boys.
Jesusâthe boys are going to kill me. She has a crush on a kid named Marty, and I donât even know Marty, but I already want to sit Marty down and interrogate the crap out of him in regard to his intentions with June.
I realize heâs twelve.
Of course, he will only have twelve-year-old intentions, like going to the junior high dance, or eating pretzel bites and ice cream cones at the mall food court. Possibly ice skating down at the rink.
But hell, you never know, and sociopaths can be identified early these days.
What if heâs a miniature Ted Bundy in the making?
What if heâs a Dexter enthusiast?
What if heâsâ¦
What if heâs just like my father?
âYouâre thinking about her, huh?â
I flip on my wiper blades and ruffle the snowflakes out of my hair, trying to reverse out of the un-shoveled driveway. The car reeks of Wendyâs Newport cigarettes. âArenât you?â I counter, craning my neck to look out the rearview window.
âOf course I am. Peach is taking the whole âprincess in perilâ thing to a very realistic level.â He throws a slushy boot up on my dashboard, shaking his own head of sandy brown hair before slinging it back against the headrest. âSheâs too smart for her own good, you know.â
âYeah, I know.â Stepping on the gas, the tires resist, tossing up sheets of white. I make three more attempts, then smack the wheel when we donât budge. âDamnit.â
âHell, Iâll shovel under theââ
âNo time. Weâre walking.â
Theo falters. Thereâs a fleeting pause, but itâs not hesitation I see when our eyes connect, my hazel locked on his dark blue. Itâs a common thread. Itâs a bond weâve shared since I was six years old, when we stood at the edge of my driveway and made a promise to protect a little girl.
âLetâs go,â he says, swiftly moving from the vehicle and throwing up the hood of his oyster-toned coat. âSave Peach, then celebrate by kicking your ass at Mario Kart for old timeâs sake.â
Shoving the car keys into my pocket, I shuffle up beside him and adjust my hat over my ears. Theoâs nose, slightly convex and dotted with a light spattering of freckles, is already turning pink in the upper-twenties temperatures, while little plumes of smoky breath dance through the air as he walks. We trudge down the secluded street toward the more populated neighborhood where Celeste lives, nearly shoulder to shoulder.
âYou know, Iâve been thinking,â Theo muses, sifting through his pockets for the cigarettes he quit smoking two months ago. As if suddenly remembering, he tenses up, his jaw ticking. âI think itâs time I finally figure my shit out. Take those first steps. Get out of my parentsâ house.â
My own breath transforms into icy tendrils as it hits the air. âIâll help with whatever you need.â
âI know you will.â We share a quick glance before he ducks his head. âShit, Iâve been a mess since Monica went off to college. Wallowing, you know? I really thought she wanted to stay local and make it work, so I put my own dreams on hold. Then I was too devastated to care about my dreams⦠but itâs time, man.â Theo lifts his chin, exhaling deeply into the winter draft that rolls through, glancing up at the clouds. âI want to be a cop.â
Iâm instantly transported back in time, camped out beneath the wooden treehouse in our backyard with Theo and June. She was transfixed by a whimsical ladybug dancing across her brotherâs finger as I blew raspberries onto her chubby belly, and it was the very first day I called her Junebug.
It was also the same day Theo announced his dream.
âI want to be a saver.â
Emotion rockets through me. A full-circle feeling. âThatâs incredible, Theo,â I say, turning to look at him through the angry drizzle of snow. âI mean it. Thatâs really incredible.â
âGotta maintain my Mario credibility, eh?â A smirk curls along his lightly stubbled jaw. âMy trusty sidekick can hold down the fort here with June. For a little while, anyway.â
I nod tersely, and we quicken our gait.
The truth is, I donât have much going for myself, either. I graduated high school this past spring with a dead-end job at a convenience store and an on-and-off again girlfriend I only like half of the time. Maybe I should start thinking about college.
Culinary school.
Hell, even a line cook position at a local diner would be a start.
Something has been holding me back, thoughâ¦
Fear.
Fear that something will happen to June if Iâm away at college or working long hours. Fear that sheâll start dating the wrong guy in a few years, and I wonât be around to keep an eye on her. Fear that sheâll get into an accident, or meet some predator on the internet, or start doing drugs.
Fear that I wonât be able to protect her.
Itâs a senseless fear that has me spinning my wheels and chasing my tail⦠but, damnit, itâs real. Itâs persuasive. Itâs all-consuming.
Wendy keeps telling me to move out, to move in with her, but Iâm not ready for that yet, and she doesnât understand why.
And I donât have an answer that holds any weight.
Itâs hard to explain something that feels intangible.
As weâre about to cross the busy road into the suburban subdivision on the opposite side, a familiar car slows down at the mouth of our street, and we hop backward to avoid getting showered with wintery sludge.
Itâs Andrew Bailey.
He inches his window down, his head and elbow poking out. âYour mother called me, so I left work right away. I already checked Celesteâs house, and sheâs not there.â
âShit.â I kick at the snow, my anxiety spiking. âWhere could she have gone? I know sheâs been moodier lately, but itâs not like her to run awayâ¦â
Theo moves around the hood of the car to the passengerâs side, his feet sliding over the wet snow. âWherever youâre going, Iâm going with. We can head to the mallâmaybe a friendâs mom picked her up.â
âYou coming?â Andrew wonders. He looks at me, the worried glaze over his eyes surely reflecting my own.
I consider it.
But I shake my head, knowing weâll be more productive if we split up. âIâll search on foot. She couldâve wandered off to the park or the sledding hill.â
A nod. âYou have your phone? Keep me posted.â
âYeah, I will.â I give the top of the vehicle a pat, then step back while Andrew does a three-point turn and drives off toward the mall.
Cold wind whips me, shooting a chill down my spine. I tug my hat down farther, rub my gloved palms together, then start walking.
McKinley Park is only a few blocks away, and June would ride her bike there frequently when the weather was milder. Iâd go with her on occasion. Even when my high school friends were out partying and socializing, Iâd be at the playground with June, shooting hoops, roller blading, or tossing a football back and forth.
Thatâs always how itâs been, though.
When she calls me, Iâm there. If she needs me, Iâm hers.
I was the one who missed the schoolâs homecoming dance because it fell on the same night as Juneâs dance competition.
I was the one cheering the loudest in the stands when her team scored first place in the regional division.
I was the one who took her out for ice cream to celebrate that night, then walked with her to the park where we sat on the swings and sang Over the Rainbow together beneath a sky of stars and moonglow.
And Iâm still the one singing her lullabies.
I will be until she outgrows them.
My heart skips as I pick up speed, dodging mud and slush as tires whiz past me.
Where the hell are you, Junebug?
She knows better than to just take off in the middle of a blizzard.
But sheâs twelve, and I suppose twelve-year-olds donât always consider the consequences.
Not all adults do, either.
My boots march through the accumulating snow until I veer off to the left and breach the entrance of the park. When I round the corner, past the giant mound of snow that doubles as a sledding hill, past the clusters of squealing children and bundled-up parentsâ¦
I see her.
I see her. I found her. Sheâs okay.
Junebug.
Her cheeks are windburned, her long, light chestnut hair fluttering beneath her earmuffs. She brushes snow from her blue snow pants as she watches a group of kids skip stones across the surface of the frozen pond. Her Grams had bought her those same snow pants in purple for her birthday⦠but June knows I hate purple.
So, she begged her mother to take her to the department store to exchange them for a different color.
Just the image of her wearing them for the first time causes my heart to stutter.
I take a moment to catch my breath, bending over, hands to my knees. The relief of finding her, alive and well, is overwhelming and nearly cripples me.
But that relief is quickly replaced by niggling alarm when I notice who the other kids areâor rather, the fact that theyâre not really kids at all. Sheâs surrounded by a bunch of seventeen and eighteen-year-olds, most of them unsavory.
One of them the worst of the worst.
Wyatt Nippersink. Wendyâs treacherous twin brother.
What the hell?
I straighten, my muscles locking. Then I move in closer, until the sound of her sweet voice captures my ears.
âI should go home, now,â she tells the crowd of notorious troublemakers. A few other children, various teens and preteens, float around the edge of the pond, dipping the toes of their boots onto the ice, then jumping back with laughter. Juneâs expression looks apprehensive as she glances around. âI only wanted to make snow angels. My brothers donât like you.â
Wyatt sucks on a cigarette, his ears red and irritated from the cold. âGo on, Juney. Itâs your turn. You canât chicken out on us.â
My hackles rise. I have no idea what Wyatt is up to, but the asshole has had it out for me ever since I broke up with Wendy that first time in the middle of junior year. Heâs always been a bully, but he took it to a highly personal level that night, almost breaking down our door, yelling about Wendy and her broken heart.
I suppose I couldnât entirely blame him for looking out for his twin sister. June and I arenât even related, and Iâd do the exact same thing for her.
But this is different. This is crossing a line.
I advance on the group, a good ten yards away.
âI donât want to,â June argues, stepping up to the iced-over water and peering down. âItâs too slippery.â
âDonât be lame. Iâll go right after you, promise.â
My pace quickens, and I call out to her, âJune!â
She snaps her chin up so fast, her earmuffs fall back on her head. Crystalline eyes that parallel the frosty pond widen when she spots me running toward her. âBraââ
Wyatt snatches her by her puffy coat sleeve, then slings her onto the ice, laughing. She slides on her knees to the center of the pond, scrambling to stand.
My stomach drops.
âGo on, little ballerina,â Wyatt taunts. He flicks his cigarette butt by his shoe, blowing ribbons of smoke out his nostrils. âShow big brother your pretty twirls.â
One of his friends mimics a ballerina, tiptoeing in a dainty circle in the snow, and everyone erupts with laughter.
June canât keep her balance on the ice, her feet sliding everywhere. âYou jerk!â she shouts, cheeks reddening with outrage. âWhy did you do that?â
I barrel down the final hill that separates me from the group. âJune, donât move! Iâm coming.â
âBrant to the rescue,â Wyatt sneers. He spits near my boots when I slide to an erratic stop. âJust having some fun.â
Ignoring him, I look around for an object to hold out to her. A large stick. Something.
I donât trust the iceâitâs not stable. It hasnât been consistently cold enough yet.
Juneâs legs splay when she tries to steady herself, her arms flailing, and then she plummets backward, her bottom slamming down hard on the icy surface.
My blood freezes.
Everyone laughs.
June looks like she wants to cry.
âJune, hold stillââ I start to tell her, but as a tear slips down her cheek, she tries to pull herself up anyway.
And thatâs when I hear it.
Crack.
We all hear it.
Itâs a mere fissure at first, but itâs enough to cause everyone to go deadly silent. Juneâs eyes flare. She stares at me from a few feet away, completely still, and I feel like time stops in that moment. Itâs the pause button on a movie reel. An eerie intermission. The wind howls with a timbre of terror, and the snowflakes sting my skin, and everything feels heavy. Or weightless. Or both.
The ice continues to splitâugly veins branching out, contaminating piece after piece.
âBrantâ¦â
June murmurs my name from the middle of the pond, and itâs the frailest whimper, a fearful plea.
Itâs the last thing she says before the ice collapses underneath her.
âJune!â
Her scream tears through the park, then she plunges into the ice water.
I donât think.
I just move.
Wyatt rambles beside me, âI didnât know, dude, I just thoughtââ
I donât listen.
I. Just. Move.
I race onto the ice, hoping it holds me long enough to reach her, but it crumbles quickly, disintegrating into slush.
âBrant!â Her head pops up long enough to choke out my name again, her arms thrashing wildly, and then she disappears underwater.
I follow. I crash through the arctic surface, nearly suffocating on the cold. My bones chatter. My skin goes numb. My blood swims with ice.
But I keep moving.
Itâs not deep, but June is already sinking from shock. Sailing toward her in one fell swoop, I wrap my arms around her middle and drag her up to the surface. Her skin looks discolored. Blueish⦠almostâ¦
Purple.
I feel sick.
Dizziness tries to yank me back under, but I plod forward to the snowy edge, where Wyatt and his friends have already vanished, replaced by worried onlookers. Cold water and ice chunks lap at my torso, and I feel like I canât breathe. My lungs have shriveled into glaciers.
Iâm shivering. Close to blacking out. Everything is fading.
June, June, June.
Itâs a miracle I reach land, somehow finding the strength to pull her up onto the snow. A man runs over and assists, bringing her out safely before helping me from the water.
I collapse.
I collapse beside her, shaking uncontrollably, rolling until Iâm nearly blanketing her small frame. âJunebugâ¦â I croak out. Tapping her cheek, my fingers twine through her icicled hair. âJunebug, please. Please, please.â
She twitches.
She splutters.
She starts coughing up water, her body convulsing, then instinctively reaches for me as she gasps for breath. June tremors with cold, her deathlike fingers curling around my wet coat.
Itâs all I need.
Itâs all I need to know before I buckle on top of her with frigid exhaustion and slip away.