Storm Girls (The Juniper Wars Book 4) Aaron Ritchey (read a book .txt) đ
- Author: Aaron Ritchey
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âI call dibs on the wool one,â Sharlotte said. âTry on the down coat.â
I hated pink, but I put it on. The left cuff had melted, and my wrist would likely get chilly. Still, it didnât leave my middle freezing like the Regio coat did, and it would certainly keep me warmer than the wool blanket Iâd had to suffer through.
I found pants and jeans, but the girl had been slender, so neither I nor Sharlotte would be able to squeeze into them. Dang, seemed like no one in the Juniper had hips except for me and Sharlotte.
In what had been the closet was another pile of clothes, mostly burned up, but I did find a black wool sweater, a matching black skirt, and a thick but tattered New Morality dress, hand-sewn. Sharlotte held up several pairs of black leggings, while Wren found gloves, hats, scarves, and even a pair of hiking boots.
Like the jeans, the hiking boots didnât fit me nor Sharlotte. We put them in a pile. Sharlotte got the New Morality dress, and I got the skirt and wool sweater. The leggings were made of a material that was stretchy enough we could pull it up over our thighs; it made things about a million times warmer. I was actually kind of warm in the leggings, skirt, and sweater. It wasnât comfortable, though. Too itchy.
I found the .45 caliber bullet Iâd tucked into the seam of my silky dress. Wren had thrown that fateful bullet at Micaiah the night Iâd first stood up to her. I kept it as a grisly souvenir of our adventures, but a part of me also knew having an extra bullet around was a good idea. Like the placard Mama had hung on the wall of our home, Waste Not, Want Not.
In the New Morality dress, Sharlotte looked like sheâd just come out of her bedroom.
Wren held up a pink diary with a lock and handed it to me. On the front was a name, Eryn Lopez. âWe should read it,â Wren said. âMight be something on who attacked the condo. Or maybe information on Aspen.â
I held the diary, felt the weight of Eryn Lopezâs most secret thoughts. I put it on the desk. I couldnât go through it like Iâd gone through her clothes.
âI canât,â I said. âPoor girl has passed on, and I wonât disrespect her like that. We know enough. Marisolâs family and friends were all killed by raiders, and she wasnât here, so she lived. The end.â
Wren picked it up. âSorry, Cavvy, but if sheâs gone, she wonât mind. Iâll do it. Donât you fight me on this. Not right now.â
I let her have the diary but still felt bad.
Sharlotte cleared her throat. âWe donât have time to bury those bodies, but we should say some words, Cavvy. You want to?â
I glanced around the ruined room and kept coming back to the James-Young Gang poster. Decades old, the ink had grown faded, but the boys were cute. Eryn had been in love with boys who were middle-aged men now. Even her love life was salvage. I knew that feeling. Other than my time in Cleveland, all my life, Iâd been living off the leftovers of a better age. My very life now depended on her things, more salvaged clothes on my back, smelling like smoke. Dead peopleâs clothes. Iâd grown up wearing dead peopleâs clothes. I felt the tears hit my eyes, for me, for Eryn, for Juniper girls livinâ hard from New Mexico to Montana. Even Wind River girls.
âI canât, Shar,â I muttered.
Sharlotte nodded. âWell, me and the Lord have been fightinâ, so He may not listen, but Iâll try. Come on.â
With our bundle of salvage, we left Eryn Lopezâs room and returned to the yard where Dutch still held Marisol.
âShar is going to say some words,â I said. âLike a funeral, for Marisolâs people.â
Dutch didnât stay a word. He just helped Marisol stand, while Wren came over and held his hand.
Sharlotte stood before the bodies for a minute, cleared her throat, then spoke in a prayer. âGod, lots of people died here. And this girl, Eryn Lopez, she died, too, but we thank you for sparing Marisol. Sheâs helped us over and over, and weâre doing some desperate things âcause weâre chasing after some bad people who took our boys. And as you know, weâre on a quest. A quest ... I guess thatâs the right word, though it sounds a little too fancy for the likes of us. Anyway, you said be fruitful and multiply, but the whole human race is having trouble doing that. So, weâre going to deliver the cure and do your will. Yet we are but cottonwood fluff traveling on a troublesome river of woe.â
She paused.
Leave it to Sharlotte, our cowgirl poet, to come up with such words.
Then she continued. âBut thatâs for us, the living. As for the dead, Lord Jesus, take their souls into your arms and hold them, hold them like Erynâs mother held her, like Marisolâs mama did too, when both were born and the wind blew. Bless them and bless us, soften Marisolâs pain, and watch over Micaiah and Pilate, until we can be reunited once more. We ask this in your name, Lord Jesus, in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.â
We then said the Our Father. Dutch said it, and I knew he meant it. Had I been wrong about him? It seemed so.
âThat was nice, Shar,â I said, having to wipe my eyes on the right sleeve of my new smoke-damaged coat. It was like wearing a campfire around, it smelled so strong.
Wren nodded. âIt was beautiful, Sharlotte. âWe are but cottonwood fluff traveling on a troublesome river of woe.â Never knew you had such pretty words in you.â
Marisol suddenly threw herself into Sharlotteâs arms.
We all were quiet. Snow fell in soft plinks on our clothes. A winter bird flitted
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