Dizziness rolled like a wave over her body. She couldn’t help the small moan that escaped her lips.
“Mom, are you okay?”
“I’m a bit sore, but don’t worry about me.”
“We have water at least,” Colton muttered. “I saw on a survival show that we have to have water or we’ll die—”
“We’re not going to die, Colton.”
“—so we have to ration the water bottles until we’re rescued,” he continued as if she hadn’t interrupted.
She wondered if he was going into shock. “We can do that, honey. Ration the water.”
“And any food.”
“Okay. Now let me think for a minute.”
She was pinned behind the steering wheel with possible broken ribs and a useless hand. Colton couldn’t move because his leg was trapped. Ella was unconscious, maybe with a concussion. And Rebecca’s cell phone was either in her purse on the floor or somewhere else in the car.
The phone was their only answer. She had to find a way to get it. But how? She would need something long, something she could hook her purse with.
“Colton, can you reach your hockey stick?”
“Yeah.”
“Good. Pass it to me.”
She had to take the stick with her injured hand and gasped at the agony this caused. Stretching her left arm over the steering wheel, she transferred the stick to her good hand and stretched as far as possible, ignoring the throbbing in her ribs. The tip of the stick rested on her purse.
“You can do it, Mom,” Colton said.
She hoped to God he was right.
Another wave of faintness swept over her. Her head felt thick, and the hand holding the hockey stick shook. How long could she hold out before she passed out?
The purse slid inches closer. She prodded the handle, attempting to slide the tip of the stick underneath. “Got it!”
From the back seat, Colton let out a relieved breath. “Careful not to drop it.”
She pulled the purse up from the floor and over the passenger seat. With a deep breath, she reached out with her other hand. “Damn.” She couldn’t reach the purse. The window blocked the other end of the hockey stick, and there was no way she could maneuver it enough. “I can’t reach my purse.”
“Hold the stick up more so your purse can slide down it.”
She smiled. “You’re a genius, Colton.”
There was hardly enough room in the front for Rebecca to hold the stick out and tip the end up. With a few light flicks of her wrist, the purse began to slide down the stick. When it was close enough, she switched hands and slipped the purse off the stick.
“Got it.” She let out an exhausted sigh.
Since she was pinned by the steering wheel, she had to change hands again, although her right hand was numb. With her good hand, she opened the zipper and reached inside. She felt her bank book, credit card holder, lipstick tubes.
“Check on your sister again,” she said, wanting to keep him busy.
She shoved her hand deeper into her purse. No cell phone.
When she was sure she’d checked every inch of the purse, she muffled a small cry. Where was her phone?
She swallowed hard. “My phone’s not in my purse. It must be on the floor somewhere. I’ll check up front, and you try to wake Ella so you can give her Puff.”
While Colton called his sister’s name, she leaned forward as far as she could. On the floor of the passenger seat was an assortment of empty bank envelopes and a notebook. She grabbed the hockey stick and poked at the envelopes. Nothing underneath them. She pushed aside the notebook. Her cell phone lay underneath.
“Found it.”
“Mom, Ella’s wheezy, and she’s still sleeping.”
“Try to give her a puff anyway.”
She wasn’t sure that would do much since Ella wouldn’t be inhaling the medication like normal, but they had to do something to keep her breathing under control.
She tried to ease the tip of the hockey stick beneath the phone, but it only pushed the phone farther away. What she needed was something tacky.
She stared at the tape wrapped around the blade of the hockey stick. It was something the players did to give the blade extra support. Something Wesley had shown Colton. One of his good fatherly deeds.
“Colton, where’s your hockey tape?”
“I had it.” A few seconds went by before he shouted, “Found it!”
“I’m going to hold your hockey stick out toward you, and I want you to put some tape on the end. But as you wind it, twist it so the sticky part is facing out. Understand?”
“No problem, Mom.”
She maneuvered the stick toward him once more. Minutes later, the task was completed and she drew the stick back and over the passenger seat. Then she carefully held it out so the tip of the blade hovered over the floor of the passenger seat.
Her vision swam and she paused.
“Did you get it?” Colton asked.
“Not yet.”
A few more inches and the stick made contact with the phone. Now all she had to do was navigate it so the sticky part of the tape would rest on the cell phone.
“Almost got it. There!”