Jack really felt. âHey, whereâs your lantern?â
âThere,â Sammy answered, pointing to a spot a few feet away.
Picking up their own lantern and holding it above her head, Ashley peered into the darkness. âWhere?"â she asked. âI donât see it.â
âIn the h-h-hole.â
âWhat hole?â She took a few steps down the trail, swinging the light from side to side. âOh my gosh! Look!â she shrieked. âJack, come here!â In an instant Jack was on his feet and next to his sister. Close enough behind her that one misstep could have spelled tragedy, Jack saw a drop-off, a black pit that yawned so deeply there was no way to see the bottom.
âIn there?â he asked Sam. âYou dropped your lantern down there?â
âI didnât m-m-mean to. I f-f-fell.â
Jack pictured it in his mind: Sam running away across this rough cave floor, barely able to see in the wavering light of a single candle, then tripping. The lantern would have flown out of his hand into that chasm that seemed to have no end. What if not only the lantern but also Sammy had fallen into that pit! Maybe he really would have died. Jack shuddered, and not just from the 56-degree coolness of the cave.
âItâs all right, Sam,â Ashley told him, her voice soothing him the way Olivia would have done. âYouâre OK. Thatâs whatâs important. Stand up and hold my hand. Itâs time to get out of here.â
âJ-J-Jackâs hand,â Sam insisted.
âFine,â she sighed. âJackâs hand. This time, Iâll lead the way. I think I can remember which way we came.
We should have been dropping breadcrumbs or something so we could find our way out.â
âI th-th-thought you c-c-couldnât leave things in a c-c-cave.â
âI know. I was joking, Sam, about something in the tale of Hansel and Gretel. But even without crumbs I can do this. I think I know exactly where we are.â She smiled a half-smile, but Jack wasnât fooled at all. How could she know anything after all the wrong turns theyâd made? Were other chasms waiting to catch them, to trap them as they stumbled through the darkness? How lost could they get in this maze of tunnels? The truth was, neither one of them knew which path would lead them out, and that meant they could be walking deeper into the bowels of the cave instead of toward the main path. He could already feel his stomach rumble, a reminder that he should have eaten more for lunch, especially since there was nothing back here to chew on but dust. Dust and the few cave crickets he might be lucky enough to catch. Donât be stupid, he chided himself. Theyâd be out of Left Hand Tunnel and into the cafeteria in a matter of minutes. An hour, tops. Let Ashley lead the way. She couldnât do any worse than he had.
They trudged silently, Ashleyâs lantern bobbing with each step and Samâs sweaty hand firmly grasping Jackâs. Sam was one step behind, following Jack as though he were a dog and Jackâs arm the leash. The hand-holding made Jack feel slightly off balance, so after a while he tried to pry Sam free, but Sam clung even tighter until his nails bit into Jackâs skin like tiny teeth.
âHey, not so tight, Bud,â Jack told him. âWait a second, Ashley.â
His sister stopped and turned.
âYou can walk alone, canât you?â Jack asked Sam.
Sam shook his head. âI d-d-donât want to f-f-f-â He took a breath, and tried again, his face twisting as he struggled to get out the word. âF-f-f-f-â
âFall?â
Sam nodded.
âFollow right where I walk, and youâll be fine. Just donât run. Thatâs how you lost your lantern.â
âWhy did you take off and run like that in the first place, Sam?â Ashley asked. âIs it because we didnât believe you about
Laura Powell
Nancy Holder, Debbie Viguié
Abbie Zanders
Dayna Lorentz
Marc Reisner
Toni Anderson
Lavinia Lewis
Christine Echeverria Bender
Dennis O'Neil
Timothy Zahn