The Cedarville Review 2025

28 THE CEDARVILLE REVIEW “Go back to bed,” Dad responded grumpily. As one can probably deduce, you do not tell an 8-year-old to do the impossible when the world around him is alien. But I crawled back to my sheets, gathered them tightly around me like chainmail, and let the twisted lullaby of my staccato heartbeat sing me to sleep. I awoke to the familiar cries of parrots soaring over our home, as they always did (they had escaped the zoo years earlier and moved into the neighborhood). The hallway windows outside my room outlined a fresh morning that glistened brightly and suggested that nothing out of the ordinary had happened overnight. The roiling wind seemed but a dream. The branches littering our backyard like battlefield corpses suggested otherwise. Mom tried to make toast for breakfast and learned that our power was gone, but the gas blessedly still worked. Dad got out the emergency radio and learned that thousands of trees were downed everywhere. LAX had grounded all flights. The area had experienced constant 97 miles per hour winds, with gusts up to 167. A state of emergency had been declared for the entire 385 square miles of the San Gabriel Valley. The Catholic school called and announced school was canceled. My brother Laurence and I giddily celebrated the break from school. We ate buttery scrambled eggs while overlooking the carnage in our backyard.

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