Crazy for the Storm Read Online Free Page B

Crazy for the Storm
Book: Crazy for the Storm Read Online Free
Author: Norman Ollestad
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wind I searched for my dad. As the mist cleared I looked back toward the funnel section. Dad’s figure appeared just above my seat, just above where I was a few minutesago—the pitch so steep and the fog so thick that I had not seen him there crumpled behind my seat. He was hunched over. The crown of his head pressed against the back of my seat. His face between his knees.
    Dad had come forward and across to my side. Did he lunge to protect me, or was he thrown?
    What are we going to do, Norman? cried Sandra.
    Another surge of fog swept over me, passing quickly, then I saw that Sandra’s shoulders were crooked like a wilted puppet. Her hair was tangled around a wound in her forehead and it stuck to the tacky blood clumped there. She kept talking and I turned to study my dad’s body again, trying to figure out how he ended up against my seat. His arms were limp resting on his thighs and his hands dangled over his knees.
    Oh God, Norman, said Sandra.
    He might just be knocked out, I said.
    No. No. He’s dead.
    I refused to accept this. It was impossible. Dad and I were a team, and he was Superman. Sandra wailed and her right shoulder hung too far below her collarbone and I realized that it was dislocated, like she was, and that gave me confidence that she was wrong about my dad. She put her other hand over her face, sobbing like a madwoman.

CHAPTER 6
    N ICK CAME HOME after dark and my mom served my favorite honey chicken. She ate on the couch and Sunny and I ate on the floor and Nick ate in his rocking chair with a jug of wine. I was feeling clever, having told my mom that the scrape on my arm was from falling on my way up the creek. Her easy acceptance of my story, which seemed airtight, made me feisty for some reason. And after dinner, when Nick insisted on watching a news special about Watergate, I had the nerve to protest.
    I want to see what sordid facts they’ve picked up over the years, said Nick.
    Oh Jesus, said my mom. Do we have to?
    Fucking-A right we have to.
    I leapt up and turned the channel and looked back at Nick.
    Turn it back, Norman, or I’ll play Chi-cow-ski.
    It’s Tchaikovsky, said my mom.
    Nick’s listless expression made it clear that he was not amused by her correction. His curly hair was standing up off his forehead and combined with his tired dull eyes, it made him look slightly derelict.
    Turn it back, he said.
    No, I said.
    He rocked forward and rose out of the chair in one motion. He took a swig of the wine.
    Chi-cow-ski!
    I ran back to Sunny and slid down behind her. Nick moved Sunny over and straddled me, fastening down my shoulders, and Sunny squirmed on her back and licked his arm and my face. Nick forked his fingers like a mad piano player and jabbed my chest.
    Dum dum dum dummm, he sang, his wine-breath making me gag, and I turned my head.
    His knees pinched my arm skin and his fingers rammed my chestbone and ribs.
    Dum dum dum dummm! Chicowski plays until you promise to change the channel, he said.
    Mom, I can’t breathe. Tell him to stop!
    Nick. He can’t breathe. Stop.
    Repeat after me, said Nick, still playing.
    Okay. Okay.
    I will never defy Nick again.
    I will never defy Nick again, I said.
    He drew his upper body back and his wrists went limp and he stared off into the distance.
    Get off so I can change the channel, I said.
    Nick looked down over his nose and his eyes focused far beyond as if some apparition could be seen deep in the rug. I wasn’t going to wait for him to get up and I twisted away.My shorts slid off my waist and my raspberried hip caught his attention. His eyes flared open.
    I quickly pulled up my shorts, avoiding eye contact, and turned the channel to the Watergate special.
    There, I said. Should I do the dishes?
    Well that’s nice of you, Norman, said my mom.
    Then you guys can watch the special, I said.
    Nick was still on his knees, arms hanging down, head tilted forward. He didn’t turn or move or speak. All I saw was his back inhaling and exhaling.
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