because all of our files—photos, movies, e-mails, everything—were all kept in big servers “up in the sky.”
Without the Network, you had no computer. You just had a blank tablet. Maybe fifteen dollars worth of plastic and scrap metal. You had nothing.
And there were supposed to be a thousand backups in place to make the Network impervious to natural disasters—to nuclear war—to anything.
“Oh, for Christ’s sake!” Brayden started railing. “If the Network’s down, who’s going to come and get us? They won’t even know where we are!”
Jake started talking in his deep, chill-out voice, telling Brayden to calm down. That everything would be okay.
But Alex slid out of the booth and started kind of screaming, “The Network can’t be down! It can’t be. You don’t know what this means!”
Alex was locally famous for being good with computers and machines. People we hardly knew dropped by with malfunctioning tablets to see if he could debug them. On the first day of high school, my English teacher pulled me aside to ask if I was Alex Grieder’s brother and did I think he would look at her car’s GPS.
So if anyone among us was going to get the implications of the Network being down, it was Alex.
Mrs. Wooly grabbed Alex by the shoulders.
“Grieder Jr.,” she said. “Go get some clothes for Grieder Sr.”
By Grieder Sr. she meant me, of course.
“But you don’t understand,” Alex wailed.
“Go get clothes for your brother. And for these other guys. Take a cart. Go right now,” she directed. “Sahalia, you go with him and get stuff for the girls.”
“I don’t know their sizes,” Sahalia protested.
“I’ll go with you,” Astrid said.
Mrs. Wooly opened her mouth to tell Astrid to sit down and then closed it again. Mrs. Wooly knew her kids, you see. She knew that Astrid wouldn’t be told what to do.
So Astrid and Alex and Sahalia went.
I drank my water.
I worked real hard on not throwing up any more.
A couple of the little kids pawed at their minitabs. They kept pressing the screens on their dead minitabs and cocking their little heads to the side. Waiting, waiting.
They couldn’t figure out what the heck was going on.
* * *
It was weird, changing with Brayden and Jake in the bathroom. These were not guys I was friends with. Jake was a senior. Brayden was a junior, like me. But they were both on the football team and were built. I was neither.
Jake had always ignored me in a genial kind of way but Brayden had been downright mean to me.
For a moment I considered going into a stall to change. Brayden saw me hesitate.
“Don’t worry, Geraldine,” he said. “We won’t look if you’re shy.”
Dean … Geral dine … Get it?
He’d started the Geraldine thing back in grammar school.
Then, when we were in eighth grade, he’d had this bit about my hair. That it needed “styling.” He’d spit in his hands and work it into my hair, like the spit was gel. By the end of the year, he would just spit right on my head and mash it around with his hand.
Real stylish.
I understood Brayden was considered handsome by the girls. He had that olive color of skin that always seems tan, and brown, wavy hair and very thick eyebrows. Kind of Cro-Magnon-man eyebrows to me, but I gathered that the girls thought he looked rugged and dangerous. I gathered this because every time he was around they’d twitter and preen in a way that sort of made me hate everyone.
What I’m saying is—me and Brayden—we were not friends.
I didn’t go into a stall, I just shucked off my dirty shirt and jeans and started washing up at the sink.
“Can you believe that hail?!” Jake said.
“It was unbelievable,” Brayden answered.
“Totally unbelievable,” I agreed.
“I know!”
Jake asked me about a particularly foul welt on my arm from a hailstone.
“It really hurts,” I said.
“You’re okay, Dean,” Jake said, and he clapped me on the shoulder. Which also hurt.
Maybe he
Ann Voss Peterson, J.A. Konrath