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Burned
Burned
Burned
Ebook127 pages1 hour

Burned

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Abby Wright, with her cute English accent and cool way of saying things, is Jeri McKane’s biology lab partner and close friend. When a mysterious explosion in their lab sends Abby to the hospital, Jeri’s sleuthing nose smells more than just smoke. Can she unravel the mystery before anyone else gets hurt, and worse yet, is the firebug at Landmark School targeting her? Danger and mystery abound for the group of middle-school friends as they are faced with the daily choice to trust God or give into their fears in the face of overwhelming challenges.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherZondervan
Release dateJan 4, 2011
ISBN9780310399650
Author

Kristi Holl

Kristi Holl is an award-winning author of dozens of middle-grade novels and six devotionals for girls. As a writing instructor with a background in elementary education, Kristi's books are on many recommended reading lists and have been nominated for numerous Children's Choice Awards. Kristi is married and has three grown daughters. She lives in San Antonio, TX. Visit wwwkristiholl.com to learn more. 

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    Book preview

    Burned - Kristi Holl

    1

    alarm!

    Today was a day for wrapping up in a warm blanket with hot chocolate—not trudging through depressing drizzle to Thursday’s biology lab. Rain, rain, go away, Jeri McKane chanted, "but don’t come again another day." She pulled open the door to Herald Hall.

    Abby Wright, in her matching blue school uniform, sprayed droplets as she shook her pink umbrella. But April showers bring May flowers, right?

    So far only April mud. Jeri plodded up the creaking wooden stairs after Abby, yawning as they reached the third floor.

    Near their lab, a fifteen-year-old boy was mopping, dragging his bucket on wheels behind him. Jeri watched three sixth-grade girls pass by. One kicked his bucket, and another knocked off his baseball cap. The third girl laughed and said, Think you can handle the job, retard? before ducking into the lab.

    Jeri clenched her jaw. Why do special needs kids get picked on all the time? Just because they have learning problems doesn’t mean they have no feelings!

    Tim stooped to grab his cap. Arms waving wildly, he slipped on the wet floor and fell hard on one knee.

    Jeri hurried to give him a hand up. Just ignore them, she said, flipping her straight brown hair over her shoulder.

    It’s okay. Overweight and pockmarked with acne, Tim Norton towered above her. I don’t mind.

    Through a jobs program for special needs students, Tim and three other teens worked mornings at the girls’ boarding school. In the afternoons they attended classes at the New Hope Academy, a school in Landmark Hills for those with mental disabilities.

    You okay, Tim? Abby asked, her light blonde eyebrows raised in concern. Those beastly girls are so blinkered.

    Jeri nodded, totally agreeing with the British word for narrow-minded.

    They just like to tease me. Tim blushed and then held out his cap. Wanna see something new? His ball cap was covered with colorful buttons with sayings like Hollyweird and Future Movie Star. He pointed to a smiling strawberry button called Merry Berry. Another one showed a dolphin with a club called Golphin’ Dolphin.

    Awesome buttons, Jeri said, turning the cap around and around to read them.

    Abby touched Jeri’s arm. I need to measure our bean plant before class. Maybe that Miracle-Gro did its magic over the weekend.

    Jeri grinned. Yeah. Hopefully it looks like the one in ‘Jack and the Beanstalk.’

    No! Jeri and the Beanstalk! Tim laughed so hard at his own joke that his eyes watered.

    With posture fit for the queen of England, Abby glided down the hall and disappeared into the science room. Because the lab was so small, only eight students were scheduled at a time.

    Tim pushed his mop in a circle, the gray strings smearing more than cleaning the mud. Somebody made tracks all over. I’m cleaning it up.

    Sorry we’re so sloppy.

    But I like to mop! I like rain too. It makes the grass grow. Tim stood taller and grinned. Mr. Rankin said I can clean the lawn mowers this week. He puffed out his chest. I like Mr. Rankin.

    Jeri tucked her lower lip in. Personally, she thought the loud, droopy-eyed groundskeeper at the boarding school wasn’t much friendlier than a snake. But if Tim liked working for him, great. She stuck Tim’s cap on her own dark hair. He swiped at it several times, but Jeri ducked out of reach.

    Two girls passed them. One whispered, You two make such a cute couple. The girls dissolved in laughter. A match made in heaven, the other one said.

    Jeri’s face grew warm. Normally she wasn’t bothered by what people thought about her, but those girls’ teasing bugged her. She was suddenly embarrassed about befriending Tim—but why? Why care what they thought now?

    She handed back his cap, waved, and followed the girls to the science room. Something wispy caught her eye, and she glanced up. Gauzy gray strands floated out the transom window above the door. Was that smoke?

    Before she could decide, an explosion blasted her eardrums. The heavy wooden door rattled on its hinges. Glass from the transom shattered, raining down like sleet. Several shards skittered across the black-and-white tile and hit Jeri’s feet.

    Fire! someone screamed in the lab. Simultaneously, the fire alarm sounded. The clanging was deafening. Abby! She had to find her! Was she hurt? Tim clutched her arm, but Jeri peeled him off. He covered his ears and twisted from side to side.

    Smoke poured into the hall. Five or six students ran from the room, coughing and choking. Their biology teacher, Ms. Todd, sprang from her office next door and raced to the lab. She herded the coughing students to the exit at the other end of the hall.

    Jeri pressed back against the wall, out of the flow of traffic. Next to her, Tim rolled his eyes while rubbing his knuckles against his mouth. Jeri squinted through the smoke and peered into the lab, hunting for Abby. Where is she? Overhead sprinklers were spraying the room, soaking books and papers. Abby! she called, her eyes stinging.

    Within seconds, Lyndsey Powers staggered out, tears streaming down her flushed face that was streaked with black. Her short brown hair was plastered to her head, making her brown eyes look enormous.

    Don’t worry, she said, gasping. I’m the last one out.

    No, you’re not, Jeri said. I haven’t seen Abby! She started into the room.

    A hand grabbed her. Don’t go in there! Ms. Todd ordered, her slender fingers digging into Jeri’s arm.

    But Abby—

    Stay here. The teacher entered the smoky lab, and Jeri watched her search the small room. Despite the sprinklers, the fire had spread from the metal wastebasket by the window and was consuming everything on the teacher’s desk. Dashing to her file cabinet, Ms. Todd knelt down and helped Abby up from the floor. Supporting her around the waist, they stumbled from the lab, coughing. Both were dripping from the sprinklers. Jeri put her arm around Abby’s other side.

    Suddenly Lyndsey pushed Tim aside and wheeled his sloshing bucket of water into the science lab.

    Come back! Jeri shouted.

    Lyndsey ignored her and rolled the bucket across the lab’s tile floor. She hoisted the bucket in her arms and dumped some of the water in the trash can. A long hiss was followed by more smoke billowing out the door. She poured the rest on Ms. Todd’s burning desk.

    Jeri turned from the smoke in time to see Abby and Tim going down the stairs together. Good. Covering her mouth and nose, Jeri stepped just inside the lab.

    Two windows were blown out, helping the smoke to clear. The fire was extinguished, thanks to Lyndsey’s quick thinking, but the overhead sprinklers continued to rain in the lab. Student experiments and papers were soggy, the microscopes were wet, and water dripped from the skull of a life-sized skeleton hanging on a hook.

    Ms. Todd dashed past Jeri and ushered Lyndsey out. "What were you thinking?" the teacher demanded.

    A trickle of blood ran down Lyndsey’s arm, but she didn’t seem to notice. "I was feeding my minnows when there was this boom," she said, her voice hoarse. Glass flew everywhere, and your papers were on fire.

    The fire’s out now, Ms. Todd said, "but you should never have run back in there. The teacher’s freckles stood out distinctly against her milky-white skin. Leave firefighting to the firemen!"

    Sirens wailed in the distance as Jeri followed Lyndsey and Ms. Todd down the stairs. She felt sorry for Lyndsey, getting chewed out by their teacher. She’d put the fire out way faster than those dinky sprinklers, and the building could have burned down before the firefighters got there.

    Jeri stopped at the second floor landing. "Oh no. I forgot my

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