T. M. Goeglein
Cold Fury
PRELUDE
My name is Sara Jane rIspoli.
Several short weeks ago, I turned sixteen.
So far there has been nothing sweet about it.
I have braces, the thick, transparent type-they make my teeth appear too large for my mouth and my lips too small to contain them.
I have good hair and acceptable skin but my nose is Roman, as in it’s roamin’ all over my face, and I plan to do something about it someday.
I have a learner’s permit but no license, but I’ve been driving my dad’s old Lincoln Continental since I was thirteen, so big freaking deal.
I have a boyfriend-well, a boy who treats me like a friend instead of how I want to be treated, so BFD again.
I also have a steel briefcase, and inside that briefcase is ninety-six thousand dollars in cash, an AmEx Black Card in my name, a Sig Sauer.45 conceal-and-carry, and an old leather notebook stuffed full of so many unusual facts, indecipherable notes, and unlisted phone numbers that it’s held together with masking tape and rubber bands.
The notebook is why I have the gun.
What I don’t have anymore are my parents or little brother.
They’re either dead and gone, or just dead, or just gone.
I don’t have a Friendbook page.
I don’t have space on ISpace.
I threw my cell phone into Lake Michigan weeks ago.
I’m being watched, stalked, tapped, and spied on, and if the opportunity arises, the watchers and stalkers will try to snatch me, and the tappers and spies will try to kill me.
As long as I keep moving, I should be okay.
As long as I keep the notebook with me, I should stay alive.
This is not what I thought life would be like when I turned sweet sixteen.
1
A requirement of students at Casimir Fepinsky Preparatory (Fep Prep, as everyone calls it) is to keep a journal of their high school career.
I just reread the first two pages of mine, and so far it’s a doozy.
After all, how many sophomores can record their lives as a fugitive-slash-vigilante?
The truth, though, is that I wouldn’t keep a journal if I didn’t have to. I’m not naturally compelled to share the details of my life. That’s why blogging seems self-centered and tweeting is just, I don’t know, borderline insane. Does the world really care that I just ate an onion bagel and now I’m laughing out loud about it? Isn’t that something a crazy person would say?
Then again, I keep up with it partly because writing everything down helps me stay sane.
The other, more important reason is that it may help me find my family.
My English lit teacher, Ms. Ishikawa, is one of my favorites. She’s wise and tiny, like an energetic hamster wearing glasses. In guiding our journal writing, she quoted William Shakespeare’s
That’s why I’ve decided to mine the past for information and use this journal as a storehouse-the place where I put the facts in order right up to the moment my family vanished.
The bloody, broken night marked the beginning of a quest-to find them and to discover who and what we really are. To do that requires patience and concentration, but it also requires context, of which I have very little. Tracking them down without knowing what occurred before that night is as impossible as trying to put a puzzle together with pieces missing-you look at jigsaw fragments and see a pair of piercing blue eyes but no head, and a hand but no arm, and the intelligent smile of a young boy but no boy. No dad, no mom, no little brother. Only chunks and shards that don’t fit, since, as Ms. Ishikawa and Shakespeare taught, a human life is not made up only of the present. It’s constructed from dead slices of time, fading memories, and long-ago whispered conversations. So now I’m examining times gone by like a forensic pathologist, dissecting it for clues about my home torn apart and family ripped free of the living world.
The terrible thing that happened to them didn’t occur in a void.
It wasn’t a wayward meteor or supernatural act that destroyed our lives and put me on the run.
It occurred because other terrible things happened before it. I’m determined to understand what they were, and the best way to do it is by taking a hard, honest look at my family.
My grandfather, my dad’s dad, was Enzo Rispoli, a tiny, soft-spoken man who was in charge of the family business, Rispoli amp; Sons Fancy Pastries. Grandpa had many nicknames. “Enzo the Baker,” which was self- explanatory, and “Enzo the Biscotto,” which was my favorite since
I really do despise Uncle Buddy.
Funny, because I used to adore him.
I can’t deny that my uncle was my best buddy, and my parents’ too-or so it seemed. Uncle Buddy was always around since, to be honest, he didn’t have much of a life of his own. There’s a word I hear in old movies now and then-
There’s an old familiar story my parents tell-they take turns telling it-about how they met. My mom was working in a department store as a hand model, displaying diamond rings, when my dad noticed her. Very smoothly, he asked to see a ring, inspected it, and then, as he slipped it back on her finger, said, “Will you marry me?” Months later, he took her to Italy to pop the question for real and had a ring made for her there, in a little hilltop village called Ravello. It’s a gold signet ring with an
Uncle Buddy loved that story a little too much.
I know now that he was viciously jealous of who my dad was and what he had, but hid it beneath a thin layer of false good nature.