Authors: Lisa McMann
A
fter school Charlie made her way to the auditorium and found Mr. Anderson. Soon he had her wielding a saw, cutting planks for a train station platform. Sara, the stage manager, came by and checked her work, and the two chatted for a few minutes. But most of the time Charlie happily focused on her task and was content to listen while the others joked and sang bits of songs from the musical and talked about their plans for the weekend. Apparently some of them were going to the Phoenix Zoo, which was having a big event. It was weird to think about going there in February. She wondered if the zoo had penguins and polar bears and other animals that might prefer cold to heat. And if they did . . . did those animals miss their old homes too?
About a half hour into her work Charlie heard a familiar voice. She looked up, and her shoulders slumped. The queen had arrived.
“Hi, everyone!” Kelly said. “I just couldn't stay away when I knew you were all here working hard.” She walked to the wing, addressing a few of her adoring fans. “I'm finished rehearsing my songs with the accompanist, and I'm here to help.” She wore her blond hair down today and flipped it over her shoulders.
Kelly put down her music folder, rolled up her sleeves, and started working right away. Charlie watched her and was surprised to find that the girl seemed to know what she was doing backstage as well as onstage. And she definitely knew how to get along with everyoneâat least to their faces, Charlie thought sarcastically.
When Sara called for help sweeping up sawdust, Kelly went right over to her and grabbed a broom. Maybe Maria was right, and Kelly was a decent person. Maybe Charlie had been a little too quick to judge. Maria obviously saw something good in her.
Charlie decided she could start trying harder to be friendly next week. After all, she'd apologized to Kelly earlier. Now it was Kelly's move. Charlie quickly began sawing the next plank with renewed gusto. Things were coming along well with her work. It was going to be so cool to see the finished platform onstage during the show and know that she'd built it! She texted her dad, letting him know the set building was going well and not to pick her up on his way home from work because she wanted to finishâshe would walk home when she was done with everything.
Kelly left Charlie alone, or perhaps she didn't realize she was there. Whatever the case, their coexistence was working fine until the other crew kids started trickling out the door to go home, or to practice, or to piano lessons, or to whatever else they had going on. Charlie was finished cutting the boards for the entire train platform, and she had just a few more planks to nail into place, when Mr. Anderson called to her.
“Charlie, can you give Kelly a hand with this bed? We need to move it offstage to the back corner where all the âKim's bedroom' props will be.”
“Sure,” Charlie said. She got up and wiped the sawdust off her jeans, then pulled back the curtain and went to where Kelly waited by the foot of the bed. On top of the mattress was a frilly comforter and pillow set.
“I guess I'll take the heavy end,” Charlie said, going to the headboard side.
“Don't hurt yourself,” Kelly said sweetly.
Anger bubbled in Charlie's gut, but she remembered her vow. “I'll try not to,” she said. She bent her knees, gripped the bottom of the headboard, and on the count of three, the two girls lifted it up.
“Jeez,” Kelly said. “This thing is made of bricks.”
“Beggars can't be choosers,” sang Mr. Anderson from somewhere backstage.
“Whatever that means,” said Kelly under her breath.
“I think it means we got the bed for free,” said Charlie.
They heard the main doors to the auditorium open, and Mr. Anderson went to see who was coming in.
Charlie began to walk backward with the heavy end. “Watch your step here,” she called out as she led the way down the ramp backstage. It was dimly lit. Charlie looked over her shoulder for the glow tape that marked the corners and edges of the steps so she
wouldn't lose her footing.
Kelly struggled on the other end. “It's so dark back here. This thing is heavy.”
“Quit whining,” Charlie muttered, but Kelly wasn't listeningâher ears were attuned elsewhere.
Mr. Anderson gave a joyful greeting to whoever had entered. Kelly quit complaining long enough to listen, and they could hear the sound of a young man's voice floating through the auditorium.
Kelly's eyes opened wide. She stopped walking, which nearly pulled the bed out of Charlie's grasp.
“What theâ” Charlie began, fuming and trying to get a better grip on the bed, but Kelly shushed her.
“It's Hickory James!” she hissed. “Last year's Gaston from
Beauty and the Beast
. He's in high school now. Oh my gahâhow's my hair? I have to go say hi! Dropping this now, bye!” And with that she let go of the bed and ran to the stage.
Charlie lunged forward, cringing.
Rude!
Then she stared at the bed, stunned, as she realized something even more horrifying than Kelly's behavior.
Kelly's end of the bed hadn't fallen to the floor.
Charlie was holding itâall of it. The entire bed.
All by herself.
C
harlie stared at the bed, held suspended by her own two hands. “What theâ!” She let go of it and instinctively jumped backward as it thudded to the floor. She stood there a moment in shock. Had that really just happened? Had she been holding an entire bed by herself? It wasn't possible.
A cold sweat broke out on her forehead, and her stomach roiled. She whirled at the sound of Mr. Anderson and Kelly laughing in the auditorium. “I have to get out of here,” she murmured. She took off out the stage right exit, went down the hallway, and ducked into the girls' bathroom.
Once inside, Charlie ran into a stall and slammed the door behind her so hard that the top hinge broke off. The door swung wildly and came to an abrupt stop, hanging limp and at a strange angle from the bottom hinge. Charlie didn't notice. She dropped to her knees in front of the toilet, hands shaking as she gripped the seatâshe felt sick. She closed her eyes and felt her heart pounding, her breath becoming more labored, her stomach churning as she thought about all the strange things that were happening to her. Because they
were
strangeâvery strange. Running faster
than she'd ever run before. Healing from a serious injury virtually overnight. Being strong enough to hold that entire bed by herself? That was insane! She couldn't brush the incidents off anymore. They weren't normal. Nothing about her was normal lately.
She clenched her jaw, wanting to scream. What was going on? Her grip tightened on the toilet seat as the frustration grew inside her. Her skin burned, and she could feel herself losing control. “Why is this happening?” she whispered. “Why? Why?” With each plea, she gripped the toilet seat tighter, and with one final cry, she pounded it with her fists.
The seat shattered, and the pieces fell all around. Water splashed up in her face.
Charlie stared. “How is this even possible?” she cried. “What is happening to me?” She backed out of the stall and lunged toward the sinks, grabbing hold of one and staring at herself in the mirror above it. A stranger with her own face looked back at herâor at least it felt that way. The girl in the mirror looked normal. Scared, sure, but ordinary. Yet inside Charlie felt like some strange force had taken over her body.
She twisted the faucet so she could splash clean water on her face, but the handle broke off in her hand and a stream of water sprayed from it. “Ugh! No!” she cried. With a surge of strength and frustration coursing through her, she slammed her hands down on the sink. It gave a loud groan and broke loose from the wall, coming away in her hands. Water spurted out of the pipe
behind it. Charlie's jaw dropped as she stared at the devastation, barely comprehending what was happening.
The water continued to spray everywhere, soaking her, but Charlie hardly felt it. Instead she threw the sink against the wall, yelling incoherently. The sink cracked and fell to the floor, breaking in half.
The shock of the noise finally brought Charlie to her senses. She put her hands up to her face and pushed her wet hair from her eyes. Water kept coming down on her. What was happening? Her left arm ached. At first she thought she'd injured it. She pushed up her soggy sleeve to examine it but soon realized it was throbbing with heat beneath the bracelet.
“The bracelet!” she whispered. She punched the button to release the clasp, but it wouldn't open. She tugged at it as hard as she could, but it held fast. At the same time, with water streaming down her, she finally realized the full extent of the damage she had caused. She knew she had to get out of there before someone saw her.
She raced to the door and flung it open with far too much strength. The handle hit the wall, leaving a chunk of tile crumbling to the floor. But Charlie didn't stop to look at it. She ran.
She went past the distant voices of Mr. Anderson, Kelly, and the high school guy. Past the dark box office window and the banner that hung overhead, greeting visitors. Charlie pushed through the exit doors and out into the cool evening air, but she didn't stop.
She ran across the empty parking lot, over the track and soccer field, through the line of mesquite trees that bordered the municipal football field. Finally, when she was safely far away from school, she stopped running and began pawing madly at her wrist, trying to get the bracelet off.
It wouldn't budge. It was stuck.
If she was strong enough to rip a sink out of a wall, why couldn't she get this stupid bracelet off her arm? Charlie didn't know what to do. She didn't know where to turn. All she knew was that ever since she'd started wearing the bracelet she had somehow gained ridiculous speed, extraordinary strength, and the power to heal herself. She dropped to her knees, put her face in the grass, and yelledâshe had to yell. She had to get out her frustration. She could only hope that the earth muffled her yells enough to keep others from hearing her, because she was totally OOC right now. Out. Of. Control.
After a few minutes of breathing deeply and trying to get a handle on things, Charlie sat up. She got to her feet. There was no one around. Slowly she continued walking toward home. Guilt flooded her when she thought of the damage she'd done to the girls' bathroom. It was so insanely impossible that she wondered if she'd only imagined it. Maybe she was so stressed out from moving that her mind was messing with her. How could this be happening? And how could she make it stop if she couldn't get the bracelet off?
She'd have to cut it off somehow. Maybe the saw that she'd used to make the platform would be sharp enough. On second thought, that was probably a really bad idea. Maybe her parents had a safer tool that could break through the metal band. Though the location of the toolbox in their garage at the moment was anybody's guess.
As Charlie neared her neighborhood, she grew calmer, and her thoughts began to come together. Who could even make a device like this? And why would someone send it to her? She shook her head, marveling at the abilities she'd gained from it. Superspeed, amazing strength, crazy healing powers . . . it sounded good when she thought about it, anyway. But it wasn't so great if she couldn't control it.
By the time she neared the driveway she was calm enough to realize she'd have to explain her sodden appearance. Not to mention her missing backpack, which she'd left backstage, filled with the weekend's homework assignments. As she began to think of an excuse, she looked up and stopped short. Sitting on her front step was Maria, who was staring incredulously at her phone screen.
“Oh,” Charlie said. Her hand flew to her hair to smooth it. “Hi. I, um . . . you found my house.”
Maria looked up and studied her, a strange expression on her face. “What happened to you?” she asked. She stood as Charlie approached.
“I got a little wet,” Charlie said.
Maria frowned and folded her arms. “Explain.”
“Iâwell, I was working on the set for the play.”
“Yeah?”
“And I got hot,” Charlie said carefully. It wasn't a lie.
Maria tilted her head.
“And, uh, I got sprayed with water, and I feel cooler now. Gotta stay hydrated here in the desert. I'm learning.”
“Is that right?” Maria stared her down.
“Yep,” Charlie said weakly. “So, what are you doing here?”
Maria clicked her phone off and shoved it into her back pocket. “I got a text message from Kelly that the girls' bathroom by the auditorium exploded. And there was water everywhere.” She crossed her arms.
Charlie blinked. “Oh, really?” she said, feeling the blood drain from her face. “That's horrible.”
Maria didn't waver. “She said you'd been there, but you just disappeared.” When Charlie didn't offer any further comment, Maria uncrossed her arms and put her hands on her hips. “Spill it, Chuck,” she said. “I'm on to you. I know what's up. You might not read comics, but I do.” Her eyes threw out a challenge. “And I know exactly what you are.”
Charlie's heart thudded. Her voice faltered. “Y-you do?”
“Please. I'm not stupid,” she said. She leaned forward, a joking smile playing at her lips, and said quietly, “You're a superhero.”