Lynn snorted and threw a handful of sand at her.

  They hit a field of wind turbines hours later, the turning white arms bright beneath the sun.

  “What’re those?” Lucy asked.

  “Kinda like a windmill,” Lynn said. “There was a farm back home had one. Stebbs took me out to see it once. They make electricity, though the one in Ohio was all broken down. It didn’t work anymore.”

  “These look like they’re working.”

  “Which means we’re close.”

  “Electricity . . .,” Lucy said, remembering Vera’s stories of light after the sun had gone down. “Fletcher said it was here, but I couldn’t hardly believe they were that well off.”

  “Could be it’s only used for the desal plants, you know. Something’s gotta run it. I doubt they waste energy on things like lightbulbs. Don’t get your hopes up.”

  “I won’t,” Lucy promised, but she couldn’t squash the flutter of excitement in her belly.

  They walked through the afternoon, their spirits dropping as unpopulated buildings rose around them. Despite her promise, Lynn clicked the safety off on the rifle, and Lucy didn’t mention it. Their footfalls echoed one another as they walked alone, past a residential district with rusted-out cars sitting quietly in the driveways.

  A new scent had found Lucy’s nose, tickling her nostrils and bringing her senses to a high pitch. “You smell that?”

  “I think it’s the ocean.”

  “The ocean,” Lucy said, taking a deep breath of the salty tang. “Yeah, I imagine it is.”

  They moved on, the buildings growing closer together as they went. Lynn became antsy and they went off the highway, picking their way through parking lots with grass growing through ever-widening cracks in the pavement, until they hit the ocean. It rose to meet Lucy, the tide nibbling at her toes as she pulled off her shoes to feel it properly for the first time in her life. The vast blue expanse met the sky, the sun making a new red road on its undulating surface, one that led to the horizon.

  “Lucy,” Lynn said quietly. “I’m sorry, little one. There’s no one here.”

  Lynn didn’t turn. “So far, no, but I don’t think Fletcher would’ve led us wrong.”

  “Me neither, but maybe something happened to them, maybe . . .”

  “We can talk maybes all day long and still not know a thing,” Lucy said, toes curling in the wet sand. “I’m heading north. If we get to Oregon, we know something’s wrong.”

  “All right then,” Lynn said, adjusting her pack. “Let’s go.”

  “Not yet,” Lucy said, as the tide swelled over her feet again. “Not just yet.”

  Lucy walked on, and Lynn followed. They’d been following the beach for miles when Lynn’s fingers dug into Lucy’s arm, nodding up ahead. Lucy pulled her gaze from the ocean to see the figure of a man on the beach. He spotted them seconds later and waved an arm in greeting.

  “Well,” Lynn said under her breath. “I guess that’s how this is done.”

  They walked toward him, cautiously leaning toward each other, their elbows rubbing with every step. Lynn kept her rifle on her back, and Lucy saw the man’s expression change when they were near enough for him to see the barrel rising above her shoulder.

  “Hi there,” he said as they approached, the sparse gray hair on the crown of his head blowing in the evening breeze. “I thought you were Bridget and Taylor heading home from fishing.”

  Lucy stood before him, her mouth feeling as if it were sewn shut. Behind her, she heard Lynn sink into the sand, her body giving out on her. The man looked between the two of them. “Well, who are you then?”

  Lucy’s lips moved, her throat constricted, but no sounds came out. Witching was insignificant next to the ocean, her precious skill useless in this new world. She had nothing to offer in exchange for a life less normal. In the end, she said, “My name is Lucy, and I walked across the country to get here.”

  “Well done, Lucy,” the man said, extending his hand. “I’m Dan.”

  She shook it. “This is Lynn.” She nodded toward the ground, as if Lynn being there were completely normal.

  “Hi, Lynn,” Dan said, nodding when she didn’t reach for his hand. “That’s a hell of a gun you’ve got there.”

  “Uh-huh,” Lynn said.

  “We’re supposed to tell you Fletcher sent us,” Lucy said. “I don’t know if that makes a difference or—”

  “Fletcher?” Dan smacked his hands together. “How is the old bastard?”

  “He’s alive,” Lucy said. “We met him in Nebraska. He said if we—”

  Dan hands rested lightly on her shoulders, stopping her flow of words. “You prove your worth by your actions, Lucy. You can relax now. You’re here.” He put his other hand on Lynn’s shoulder. “You made it, girls.”

  The water pulled at Lucy’s toes, dragging the sand out from under her feet and making her sink inch by inch into the wet, comforting muck. Weeks after their arrival she still couldn’t resist the sea, reveling in it every evening outside the small house she and Lynn had claimed for their own on the edge of town.

  Even though there were hundreds of people here, no one was thirsty. The windmills powered the plant, which made the ocean water flowing into their homes drinkable. Solar panels meant electricity. On their first night in their new house, Lucy had found Lynn in the living room with a book in her hand and tears on her cheeks. “I can see,” she’d said in explanation. “First time in my life I’ve ever been able to see after the sun went down. This is how Mother lived once.”

  Soft footsteps sounded in the sand and Lynn crouched beside Lucy, away from the tide.

  “Have a seat,” Lucy said, gesturing to the sand.

  Lynn shook her head. “I don’t feel like I ever get the sand off me, once I do.”

  Lucy shrugged, watching the moon rise above the ocean to send a white path pointing toward her over the rippling water. “How can you not like it?”

  Lynn sighed and sat down anyway, her face contorting with displeasure as her pants got wet. “I learned to hate it young, little one. When I was a kid I found a globe and showed it to Mother, thinking I’d found something that would save us yet, that we didn’t have to live the way we did. She told me it was all salt, and no relief in it—‘Water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink.’ I broke the damn thing and swore to never find comfort in anything too good to be true again.”

  “But it is true, Lynn. And it’s different here. It’s good,” Lucy argued.

  “You like it, that’s all I need to know to believe it’s a good thing.”

  “Like it? Lynn, it’s more than liking it. You should come to the plant with me sometime. When Dan showed me how to monitor the salinity, I felt like . . . like I was doing something that mattered. He said they’ll teach me how to clean the membranes too, next time I come.”

  “Which I imagine will be tomorrow,” Lynn said slyly.

  Lucy went on, barely hearing Lynn. “Dan said he’ll have a spot for me to be there all regular like, with real duties and everything after Taylor’s baby comes. You should hear the sound the seawater makes when it’s pressured through the—”

  “I prefer to hear rain fall on my own roof,” Lynn interrupted.

  “But you can’t count on rain,” Lucy shot back. “The ocean is always there, and now we can take advantage of it.”

  Lynn looked out over the undulating waves, her jaw tense. “I know that, but Mother didn’t. And I can’t help but think maybe if she had, her life would’ve been longer, and mine much different. That doesn’t make me like this damn sea any better.”

  Lucy nodded, the image of her own dead mother never far from her mind. “I understand.”

  “So how can you like it so much? “Lynn asked. “After the desert and the mountains and the bigness of everything that frightened you? And now this—you a tiny speck on the edge of the sand, happy to sit by a Goliath?”

  Lucy was quiet for a full minute, letting the tide touch her toes
and recede while she thought. “You’re not the only one who can quote poetry, you know.

  “I heard or seemed to hear the chiding Sea

  Say, Pilgrim, why so late and slow to come?”

  “Ralph Waldo Emerson,” Lynn said immediately. “I’m impressed.”

  “Don’t be. It’s the one poem I read during the last blizzard.”

  “It stuck with you though. The words meant for us can do that, stick to the crevices inside and come out when we least expect it. Why those words?”

  Lucy dug deep to find her own words, new ones that tasted like hope and not the misery of the road. “The desert and the mountains and the plains all felt like they were in my way, stopping me from getting to somewhere I was supposed to be. But this is salvation. Every drop in that ocean can be made to save you or me, and every other soul in this town. I can only wish it were bigger.”

  “I don’t think the ocean’s different from those things, little one. What’s different is you.”

  “How do you mean?”

  “When we left Ohio, you were scared as a rabbit, jumping at the shadows and hiding in my footsteps. We walked across the country and you changed into a woman who could walk up to a stranger on the beach with nothing more than her own name in her mouth, and you did it.”

  “You were with me.”

  “You walked ahead of me,” Lynn said. “That whole last stretch of beach you were the one in front. You wanted this place and this ocean, and you’ve made it your own.”

  “But you can’t, is that what you’re going to say?” Lucy asked, a deep hole of fear she’d thought she’d left behind her opening inside her gut again.

  “I can’t . . .” Lynn trailed off, her eyes on the watery horizon. “Lucy, I can’t see around me here, do you understand? To one side there’s water and to the other there’s buildings. I just . . . I feel like I can’t see everything like I did back home.”

  “You never said so on the road.”

  “I didn’t feel this way on the road,” Lynn countered. “Then we were always moving. If I didn’t like something it didn’t matter, ’cause it’d be different the next day.”

  “What are you saying to me?”

  Lynn was quiet, and Lucy counted seven revolutions of the tide before she spoke.

  “I’m going home.”

  Even though she’d been expecting it, Lucy cried out, burying her head into her hands and sinking her fingers into her own hair as if covering her ears could force the words out of her mind. “Don’t do that to me, Lynn. I can’t do it—I’m not like you!”

  “Not like me?” Lynn asked, her hands probing into the mess of Lucy’s hair and finding her fingertips, pulling the girl’s face up to look into her own. “Now who would want to be that, anyway?”

  “Me,” Lucy said desperately through her tears, “me, me, me.”

  Lynn pulled Lucy to her, wrapping her arms around the girl who refused to be a woman. “Don’t you see it, little one? You’re where you belong now, next to the biggest thing in the world and loving every second of it. The people here are hopeful, with a spark of life about them, just like you. It’s not like the city behind us, where they were living off the dead. These people are alive for the love of it.”

  “And you don’t like that? How can you not, Lynn?”

  “Oh, I envy them, through and through, don’t get me wrong on that point. But I learned hard lessons long ago, and they’re so ingrained in me I can’t drop ’em now. Like it or not, I’ve picked up the knack of feeling responsible for others, and you don’t need me anymore. There are those back home who still might. Last time I saw Stebbs, his finger was none too steady on the trigger.”

  “I do need you, I do,” Lucy cried, clinging to her. She buried her face into Lynn’s neck and made her confession. “I’m like my mother. I need other people, and you most of all.”

  Lynn pushed Lucy’s face back from her own and looked at her in the moonlight. “You’re not me, child. You’re not me and you’re not your mother either. You’re Lucy, my little one, and that is no small thing.”

  And Lucy cried as the tide came in, her salty tears making the ocean bigger.

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  Epilogue

  Lynn waited until spring to go. It was close to a year since they’d left Ohio when Lynn stood on the outskirts of town, holding the reins of a horse that had been given to her by a rancher in thanks for having shot the mountain lion depleting his sheep. Her rifle was strapped to her back, a heavily penciled map in her pack, and enough bottles of fresh water to keep her on the road for a while before she would have to refill.

  Lucy stood beside her with clear eyes but dried tear tracks on her face.

  “You sure about this?” Lucy asked, even though every line of Lynn’s body ached with her need to go home.

  “You know I am,” Lynn answered, giving Lucy a hug. “And don’t be so sad-faced about it. Dan planned a route for me that goes south before east. He said it’ll keep me as low as possible, so no worries on the nosebleeds.” She swung up into the saddle and cleared her throat. “I don’t know what else to say. I’m ready to go, but leaving you is tearing a Lucy-shaped hole in my heart. Don’t think anybody else can ever fill it.”

  “I know it,” Lucy said, her hand reaching up for Lynn’s. “But I’ll be all right here. Stebbs and Vera need to know we made it. You tell . . .” Lucy swallowed hard, having promised herself she was done crying. “You tell my grandma I love her, and that I’m happy.”

  Lynn sighed. “This caring about people is for the birds. ’Specially when they gotta live so far apart from each other.”

  Lucy swiped at her eyes. “What do you want me to tell Fletcher, should he show up?”

  Lynn shrugged. “He knows where Ohio is.”

  “The way he was making eyes at you on the road, I wouldn’t be surprised if he accidentally crosses your path before you get there.”

  “My luck I’ll find his wife instead.”

  Lucy smiled, shaking her head. “You’re a hell of a woman, Lynn.”

  Lynn reached down to touch the crown of her bright-yellow head. “You’re a hell of woman too, Lucy.”

  She kicked her horse and was gone, a trail of dust marking the beginning of a long path she was willing to travel again, if her pond lay at the end. And the sun rose higher, warming Lucy’s face and reflecting off the ocean into a million points of light.

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  Acknowledgments

  [TK]

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  About the Author

  MINDY MCGINNIS is the author of Not a Drop to Drink and a teen librarian who lives in Ohio. You can find her online at www.mindymcginnis.com or on Facebook and Twitter @MindyMcGinnis.

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  Also by Mindy McGinnis

  Not a Drop to Drink

  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

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  Copyright

  Katherine Tegen Books is an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.

  IN A HANDFUL OF DUST. Copyright © 2014 by Mindy McGinnis. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in
or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  [TK]

  ISBN 978-0-06-219853-2

  EPub Edition March 2014 ISBN 9780062341365

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