looked on eagerly. It was their cave. Autumn had voiced the conclusion Johnny had been too skeptical to verbalize. But he knew what he had seen. There was no mistaking the landmarks and the way they were described in such amazing detail. Unless, of course, every waterfall-hidden-cave appeared in the woods the same way.
â Pioneers of the Western United States ââMrs. Briarman beganââby M. S. Ward, Esquire.â
Thinking their mother had made one of those jokes that adults thought were so funny, Johnny and Autumn stared at their mother. If she was joking, she hid it awfully well.
âForeword: Those who braved the treacherous journey westward, leaving their homes in search of destiny, wealth, and the unknown, faced many hardships. . . .â Mrs. Briarman looked up. âImpressive. This is some fine reading you two are doing. Iâm thinking you can go to that bookstore anytime you wish.â
The siblings were speechless, mouths agape.
âAnd whereâs this section about your cave?â
Autumn stood up cautiously and sidled next to her mom, flipping back to the opening section. 9680 Founding of Allyra had been replaced by Foreword , and the text was completely different. It was as if an entirely different book sat before her. Even the drawing was not the sameânow a grand vista of the Rocky Mountains.
âIâI donât understand,â Autumn said, perplexed.
âWhat is it, sweetie?â
âItâs not there.â Her mind was racing, trying in vain to sort it out. Johnny, too, was perplexed, thinking as fast as he could.
âGo ahead and show me,â Mrs. Briarman instructed.
âNo, I mean it was right here,â Autumn stated. She flipped the pages back and forth.
âLet me explain, Mom,â Johnny said, a bit distantly, Autumn noted. âShe thought our cave was formed the same way the Rockies were, with the plates in the earth and all. But I told her no. This is upstate New York, not Colorado. Sheâs nuts.â
Autumn looked to her brother and then to her mom, then back to Johnny. Thanks, bro , she thought. âSo . . . our cave wasnât made by the same gee-o-more-phicalââ
âGeographical,â corrected Mrs. Briarman.
â Geographical am-o-mallyââ
âAnomaly,â she helped again.
Autumn laughed in spite of herself. â Anomaly that caused the Rocky Mountains to form?â
âNot at all, sweetie,â Mrs. Briarman said. âThe Rockies formed through the collision of tectonic plates. The cave on our back property was probably formed through erosion as glaciers receded, or just from runoff as is the case with the softer sandstone.â
âOh, thanks, Mom,â Autumn said absently.
âThanks Mom,â Johnny added.
âThatâs it?â
âYeah, thanks.â Autumn folded up the book.
âWait a second.â Mrs. Briarman put her hand on the cover. âWhatâs going on with you two?â
âWhat do you mean?â Johnny asked, getting nervous.
Mrs. Briarman eyed them both for a second. âAre you playing a trick on me? Where is your father?â She stood up and looked out the window smiling.
âNo, Mom. Everythingâs cool,â Johnny assured her. âArgument settled.â
She looked to him. âYou two never resolve things that fast.â
âI guess I just wanted to hear you say it, Mom,â Autumn clarified. She pulled the book away and made for the door. âThanks, Mom!â
âYeah, thanks, Mom!â Johnny echoed as they let the screen door slam behind them.
âYou two are up to something!â Mrs. Briarman hollered after them. âWait, you arenât thinking of going into that cave, are you?â
âUh, well, no . . . not unless . . .â
But Mrs. Briarman knew better. âAt least take the dog!â
9
Lighting the Blue Beacons
âMISS SIMONSON, see me after
Sarah Zettel
Chris Platt
Peter Brunton
Howard Frank Mosher
Robert Asprin, Lynn Abbey
Tara Janzen
Margaret Atwood
Charisma Cole
Erika Ashby, A. E. Woodward
Unknown