Torched
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
CHAPTER THIRTY
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
CHAPTER FORTY
G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS
A division of Penguin Young Readers Group.
Published by The Penguin Group.
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Copyright © 2009 by April Henry.
All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, G. P. Putnam’s Sons, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 345 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, Reg. U.S. Pat. & Tm. Off. The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content. Published simultaneously in Canada. .
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Henry, April.
Torched / April Henry. p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-440-69910-8
http://us.penguingroup.com
For Kenzie:
Thank you for sharing your name—
and the fun!
Also by April Henry
Shock Point
PROLOGUE
Hugging the sloshing milk jug to her chest with her slick vinyl gloves, Sky hurried after Meadow and Coyote. The stench of gasoline and diesel made her sick to her stomach. She was shaking, and not just from the chill of the April night.
“Now!” Coyote whispered. The three of them dashed across the street toward the car dealership. They all ran a little awkwardly, thanks to the too-large thrift-store shoes they wore, the toes stuffed with newspaper so no one could trace them by their footprints. When a pebble clattered into the darkness ahead of them, Sky flinched, even though the security guard had just driven off and wouldn’t be back for a long time.
Earlier in the week, Coyote and Sky had spent three nights in a parked car monitoring the security situation. It turned out to be pretty minimal. Every two hours the same guy wove his white and green private security car through the empty streets and then drove away. This part of town was dead quiet at night, a sea of car dealerships and long, windowless industrial buildings. Aside from the security guard’s car, there was no real traffic.
Now Coyote nudged her. He grinned and jerked his chin at the banner over their heads. HOT DEALS ON NEW HUMMERS!
The three teens set down their jugs at the edge of the car dealership lot and checked their watches. Sky’s said 3:27. She had been awake for nearly twenty-four hours, but she had never felt less tired in her life.
Coyote held up one hand, fingers spread wide. He bunched them together and flicked them out three times. They had fifteen minutes.
They picked up their jugs and scattered to different parts of the lot. The dealership was a place of light and shadows. Along the edges that bordered the road, where a passing driver might stare longingly at a new SUV, it was brightly lit. But between the rows were deep gullies of black, and Sky ran down one of them now.
When she was in the middle of the row, she put down her jug and pulled a can of spray paint from the pocket of her hoodie. To her left, Meadow’s giggle mingled with the hissing of the paint can. Sky shook her own can, then aimed the nozzle at the side of a black Hummer. She made a white wavy line along the side, wincing a little when it strayed up onto a window, feeling like a kindergartner trying not to color outside the lines.
On the hood, Sky painted I POLLUTION, then sprayed another wiggly line on the driver’s side of the car. She pressed the button to light up her watch. 3:30. Three minutes gone. She worked faster now, running from car to car. On the front of one she wrote KILLER! On another she wrote FAT LAZY AMERICANS! Other Hummers received stars and hearts and more wavy lines. On the car at the end of the row, she wrote, THE MEDICS ARE HEALING THE EARTH, although she ran out of space and had to write the word Earth kind of small.
She checked her watch again. 3:41. Almost time to light the fuse.
Sky dropped the nearly empty can of spray paint. She had never littered before, but like Coyote said, you didn’t want to get caught with a can of spray paint the same color as the one used at an action.
In the darkness, it took her several long seconds to find her jug of gasoline and diesel. Sky knelt down, the gravel poking her knees through her jeans, and felt for the homemade fuse held in place by a sponge. Crawling under one of the monstrous vehicles, she pushed the milk jug ahead of her until it sat squarely under the engine. After creeping out, she stood and shuffled backward, carefully unrolling the fuse until she was twenty feet away.
3:42. It was time.
But before Sky could move, her watch changed to 3:43.
She was late.
As she pulled the lighter from her pocket, she couldn’t believe she was really doing this. Crouched down next to a huge black tire, she flicked the lighter’s wheel. It didn’t catch. She tried again. Nothing.
“Hurry!” someone hissed from behind her. She couldn’t tell if it was Coyote or Meadow.
Desperate, she yanked off her glove and spun the lighter’s wheel hard. The tiny serrations bit into her thumb.
Finally, a small flame appeared, flickered, threatening to go out. Hands shaking, Sky cupped the lighter, managi
ng to keep the flame alive long enough to touch it to the end of the fuse. A tiny orange-blue light appeared. It began to race along the string. She stripped off the other glove and dropped it as she scrambled to her feet.
She turned and ran. At one point she tripped over her too-big shoes and scraped one knee, but in less than a second she was back on her feet. Her ears strained for the first sound. When it came, it was so loud that it was more of a physical sensation than noise.
Whoomp! Thick air pushed past her, slapping her left ear. And then another explosion, even louder, this time on her right. Sky ran harder, her breath coming in gulps. She had to get out of the lot before the whole thing was a fireball.
Behind her she heard smaller explosions as gas tanks added their own fuel to the fire. She burst across the street to where Coyote and Meadow gestured frantically. Coyote had just pulled her behind the shelter of a Dumpster when the third explosion came.
She peered around the corner at the dealership.
My God, she thought, we did that. Three kids did that!
Even across the street, it was like standing in front of an open oven. The three fires had grown into one, its long orange flames licking the sky. Above it, a pillar of thick, black smoke floated up to blot out the stars. The whole thing was strangely beautiful.
All Sky’s fear was now gone. She soaked in the sensations, the heat tightening her skin, the hungry growl of the fire, the bright flames, the dusty taste of ashes and the mingled smells of gasoline, plastic, leather and rubber, all of it burning.
“Run, Sky! Run!” Meadow shouted. She jerked Sky’s arm, breaking the spell. They bolted away from the dealership. The long blank buildings ahead of them glowed as if lit by a summer sunset. They cut through parking lots, keeping close to the edges of buildings, and then through another dealership, zigging and zagging. Behind them, Sky heard sirens.
They threw themselves into the car. Meadow grabbed the shotgun seat. Coyote shoved the key in the ignition, and they took off.
“Woo-hoo!” he shouted. “We did it!” In his excitement, his voice broke, but he didn’t seem to notice, or care. It was the kind of thing that had made Sky fall in love with Coyote.
Meadow turned in the seat and shot Sky a look from underneath her straight black bangs, one that Coyote couldn’t see.
“What took you so long, anyway, Sky? I was worried you were going to be toast. Literally.” As she spoke, Meadow pulled off her dark sweatshirt. In addition to their shoes, the top layer of their clothes had come from thrift stores and would now go into a grocery store’s Dumpster.
“I couldn’t get the lighter to light,” Sky said. “The glove made my thumb too smooth. Finally I just took it off.”
“You took off your glove?” Meadow pulled her T-shirt down into place. “So where’s your lighter?”
“I left it there.” As soon as Sky said it, she realized this was the wrong answer.
Meadow’s mouth fell open. Coyote turned to stare, whipping his head back when a police car came barreling toward them.
The cop car passed without slowing down. “I had to take it off,” Sky said. “I couldn’t get the lighter to work.”
“You better hope it got burned up,” Meadow said, looking half scared and half triumphant at Sky’s mistake. “What if the cops pull your fingerprints off it?”
Sky tried to look worried, but she knew it wouldn’t matter.
Because it was the cops—really, the FBI—who had asked her to be part of this in the first place.
CHAPTER ONE
I stood in the hallway and listened at the closed living room door. It was my turn to cook dinner, but I didn’t know how many people to make it for. There were too many voices to count.
The doorbell had rung an hour earlier while I was upstairs doing my English lit homework. Now it sounded like Laurel and Matt were having some kind of meeting. I wondered what they were involved in this week. Saving the whales, expanding gay rights, lobbying for universal health care? Every week there was another cause.
It wasn’t that I disagreed with their choices. I mean, it was a lot better than if they were picketing abortion clinics. But it never really seemed like any of Laurel and Matt’s signs and petitions made much of a difference.
Laurel and Matt were my parents, but they didn’t like to be called Mom and Dad. They believed the terms “Mom” and “Dad” were “constructs of a hierarchical society.” Or something like that. The way they said the words, you could tell they had quote marks around them.
There were times when I secretly wished they were like normal parents. That they both wore suits to their office jobs and on Friday nights we went to the Olive Garden for dinner. But instead of a job in an office, Laurel volunteered for various causes, grew most of our own food in the backyard and put in stints at the food co-op. Matt was a freelance computer programmer who dressed in flannel shirts and jeans and worked from home. Both of them wore Birkenstocks, and Laurel never wore a bra. We never had much money, but according to them, we didn’t need much.
Years ago, my parents had lived in a commune, and they still believed in sharing whatever they had. Our dinners usually felt like a casual church potluck or a communal table at a vegetarian restaurant. There might be an antiwar activist at our table one day, or some people Laurel had met at the food co-op the next.
I slid open the pocket door to the living room. “Excuse me for interrupting. How many should I make dinner for?”
The conversation stopped in midstream. Eight heads swiveled in my direction. This wasn’t the normal group of ex-hippies my parents usually hung out with. A couple of them seemed about my age, sixteen, and the rest didn’t look that much older. I didn’t recognize any of them from Wilson High. Which was good. It would have been way too embarrassing.
The room reeked of pot. God, sometimes I couldn’t believe my parents. They grew their own weed in the basement and would light up with just about anyone—people they barely knew, old baby boomers like them and now kids my age. I kept telling them that someday they were going to get caught, but they said they had been smoking pot for thirty years and they weren’t about to stop now. Sometimes I felt more like I was the parent and they were the kids.
The only person from Wilson that I let come over was my best friend, Marijean. Kids at school thought my parents were weird enough as it was. It would be infinitely worse if they thought they could score off them.
“This is our daughter, Ellie,” Laurel said into the sudden silence. She waved her hand at the people in the room. “These folks are working on, um, an environmental campaign.”
“So is everybody staying for dinner?” I asked. “I’m making pasta, so it can get stretched pretty easy.”
Before anyone answered, they all looked at this guy with black hair combed straight back. Even from fifteen feet away, I could see that his eyes were a piercing blue. He was probably the oldest of the group, but still thirty years younger than my parents. He nodded and then Laurel said, “Of course everyone is staying! Thank you, honey.”
But I barely heard Laurel, because my eyes were caught by a guy with tight golden ringlets that just brushed his shoulders. God, he was gorgeous! He was tall and slim, but with wiry muscles. His tanned skin was set off by his white T-shirt. On the front, it said WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND with a picture of a green recycling symbol. He looked a year or two older than me.
His eyes met mine, and then he smiled. It felt like a bolt of lightning flickered between us. My cheeks flushed, and I quickly looked away.
Telling myself to calm down, I counted heads. My parents and I made three. The gorgeous guy was four, the older guy was five, a girl with red dreads was six, a tiny girl with blond pigtails was seven (she grinned at me, and I returned it), a creepy-looking guy with eyes that seemed too big for his head was eight and a girl with black bangs cut straight across made nine. But it was the cute guy with the ringlets I couldn’t stop thinking about.
Remembering that old saying—the way to a man’
s heart is through his stomach—I hurried into the kitchen. I diced some onions and started sautéing them, then got out our battered old Joy of Cooking. From the fridge, I pulled milk, butter, eggs and three pints of strawberries. I had planned on making pasta and a salad, but strawberry shortcake wouldn’t take that long.
An hour later, dinner was served. There wasn’t room enough for everyone around the table, so I got a folding chair from the closet and set my plate on my knees. My heart started pounding when I saw the cute guy pick up another chair and carry it in my direction.
He opened it up and set it down next to me. “So you’re Laurel and Matt’s daughter, huh? My name’s Coyote.” His eyes were a light yellow-green, like a cat’s. I realized that I was staring and looked back down at my plate.
“Coyote?” Thank God my parents didn’t name me anything weird, like so many of their friends did with their kids. “My name’s Ellie.”
“Coyote’s kind of my stage name,” he said.
“Are you guys actors?”
“All the world’s a stage,” Coyote said, and laughed. I laughed, too, although I didn’t really get the joke. I snuck a quick look at him again. One of his front teeth had been broken and mended, leaving a line of bright white in the center. Every time Coyote spoke, that flash of white drew my eye.
The girl with red dreadlocks opened up another folding chair and sat down next to Coyote, so close their thighs touched. She wore one of those hand-knit imported sweaters that you can buy at Portland’s outdoor Saturday Market from some Peruvian-looking guy who also sells panpipes. Was she trying to tell me something? Probably. Well, it had been nice while it lasted.
“This is Liberty,” Coyote said. “Liberty, this is Ellie.” Liberty tilted her head a teeny bit, looking bored, like a queen forced to meet the commoners. Coyote introduced me to the rest of them: Meadow was the girl with the black bangs. The friendly girl with the blond pigtails was Blue. The guy with the too-big eyes was Hawk. And the older guy that everyone had looked to when Laurel asked about dinner was Cedar. I noticed how everyone catered to him—making a place for him at the center of the table, handing him the first plate of food.