She, Lucky, was perfectly adapted to her environment, the northern Mojave Desert, and she knew that the sameness of her coloring was exactly right. It was the Second Sign, as significant and thrilling as the secret eye-smiling First Sign on the bus.
Just after lunch, when Lucky thought she could not bear to wait until three fifteen for the school bus to arrive for the ride home, the principal came to Room Four. Lucky sat forward in her seat to stare at Ms. Baum-Izzart, who was eight months pregnant and wore black pants and a tight-fitting flowered shirt that showed exactly the shape of her pregnant stomach. Ms. Baum-Izzart smiled at Ms. McBeam and at the fifth graders. She put her two hands on her shirt, holding the sides of her stomach. Lucky noticed that there were slightly darker marks where Ms. Baum-Izzart put her hands, like the dark stains on the sides of Miles’s pants where he wiped his hands. She figured Ms. Baum-Izzart spent a lot of time feeling the interesting huge round ball of her stomach.
A part of Lucky wished the principal would suddenly start having the baby so they could all watch. Maybe Lucky could even help in some very important way, like if they needed mineral oil and only she had some at the last minute.
Instead of going into labor, Ms. Baum-Izzart said, “There’s a pretty big dust storm coming off the dry lake. We’re sending the children from outlying areas home early. I want those of you who ride the school bus to take all your belongings and meet your bus outside right now.
The kids who lived in Sierra City groaned because they had to stay till the normal end of school. But for Lucky this was the Third Sign that of all possible days to run away, today was the exact right one.
“…fifty-five-mile-per-hour winds in high-desert areas…” the tinny voice of the radio announcer was saying as Lucky climbed on the bus. “…trailers and campers should avoid Highway 395 in the passes due to high winds.” Sandi jerked her head, to show Lucky that she should hurry up to the rear, which Lucky already knew from having Sandi as her bus driver since kindergarten.
Miles and Lincoln followed her down the aisle, past a few kids who got off at Talc Town, and Sandi started up. Usually Lucky worried about dust storms because all you could do was go inside and close all the windows, no matter how hot it was. Dust came inside anyway, and when the storm was over, she and Brigitte had to vacuum and wipe down everything. Brigitte always said the devil left his back door open and let all the dust of hell blow into her kitchen.
But today Lucky
“Lucky,” said Miles as he flung his plastic bag on the seat. “When is Ms. Baum-Izzart going to have her baby?”
“Pretty soon,” said Lucky. “Maybe in about three weeks.”
“Will the storm be over when she has it?”
Lucky clicked her tongue and rolled her eyes at him. “Of
“What about Chesterfield’s baby?”
“What about him?”
“Well, where will Chesterfield and her baby go during the dust storm?”
“Oh, probably to the dugouts, where they’ll be nice and protected. They’ll wait there till it’s over,” said Lucky.
“My grandmother said you could die in a dust storm,” said Miles.
“But not Chesterfield or her child.” Lucky peered out the window. The sky had turned brownish and seemed lower, like a giant dirty blanket drifting down to cover everything. It was growing dark because the thick dust blocked the sun. She turned back to Miles, who was looking up at her worriedly. “Burros help each other. They stand head to tail with another burro and each one’s tail swishes the flies from the other’s face. In a dust storm they all stay close together. Besides, they have long thick eyelashes to protect their eyes. Chesterfield is totally adapted to her desert habitat. Do you want me to explain about habitats?”
“No,” said Miles, and opened
Lincoln rolled his eyes at Lucky, which she considered Part B of the First Sign. She knew he meant that listening to Miles sound out
Even though she was tempted to tell Lincoln about her decision to run away, the valve that kept secrets locked up in Lucky’s heart was clamped shut. Lucky’s heart would have liked to share her secret with Lincoln, but his knowing could wreck everything. So the heart-valve stayed closed, and Lucky kept her dangerous secret to herself.
16. Getting Ready
to Run Away