Epic Sins (Epic Fail #1)

Then nothing.

Nothing.

“Ma’am?” the operator asks. I then hear her say to someone off in the distance, “The line has been cut off.”

A few moments later.

“Explosion reported in a subdivision off of Route Three-Thirty-Two. All units in the area, respond immediately.”

I sink to the floor, holding my breath, hoping to hear my mother’s voice one more time.

Nothing.

When my legs give out, I hit the floor with a thud and all six heads in the kitchen turn to look at me, eyes wide and worried. Sad and full of pity.

“Sam!” My aunt gasps as she rushes toward me.

“Somebody get some water.” Detective Michaels’ voice is distorted, and his face blurs as I try to focus.

“Sam, stay with us, okay?” Aunt Peggy’s voice is soothing, and I feel her cradling my head in her lap. I throw up all over her as I close my eyes.

I don’t want to know.

I didn’t want to know.

Please let this be a dream.

It has to be a dream.

I try to picture the day as any other day. If I try hard enough, maybe I’ll wake up from this awful nightmare. I close my eyes and see my mom in the kitchen, planning a quiet dinner at home after a hectic day. She’s smiling and doing what she loves. My father is at her side, helping prepare my birthday meal. They’re in love. Happy. Perfect.

And then they are gone.

Boom.





Garrett

Past

Newtown, Pennsylvania

Age 7



“GARRETT, DINNER’S READY,” my mother calls from downstairs. I kick over the Lego tower that I was almost done building, watching the pieces fly all around my room. Hundreds of colorful Lego bricks spread across my floor and get stuck in places I know I won’t be able to reach.

“Stupid Legos,” I say and stomp down the stairs.

I climb up onto a stool and rest my elbows on the center island while my mother fills the dinner plate in front of me. Roasted chicken, mashed potatoes and cauliflower. The only thing I like on this plate is the chicken, and I pick at the skin before she’s finished putting the rest of the food on my plate.

“Garrett, can you be patient?” my mother scolds me, but gently.

“Yes, Mom.”

When she’s finished, she fills her own plate with food and covers everything else with tin foil. I don’t know why she’s doing this; Dad never comes home for dinner. In fact, I haven’t seen him in over a week.

She smiles at me and takes a clean plate and utensils out of the cabinet and drawer, setting them neatly next to the warming leftovers.

She pulls her stool around the other side of the island and sits across from me.

“How was school today?” she asks. The same question she asks every single night.

“It was fine.”

I pull the remaining skin off the chicken and drag it through the pile of ketchup on my plate, tossing it into my mouth. “Chicken’s good, Mom.”

“Thank you, sweetie, I know it’s your favorite.”

I finish the chicken and swirl the cauliflower into the mashed potatoes. She’s watching me mess with my food, so she knows I’m not eating it. “Can I be done?” I ask.

“You didn’t eat any of your vegetables. Have at least two pieces of cauliflower and four spoonfuls of potatoes.”

Every night she tries to get me to eat more, especially things that I don’t like. She’s trying to make a deal with me. “How about one and three?” I say.

“No, Garrett, eat what you’re told.”

“Okay, Mom,” I whine.

We both jump when the laundry room door flies open. My father comes in, throwing his briefcase on the floor in the corner of the kitchen.

“Dad!” I say excitedly. I can’t believe he’s home.

He says something I can’t hear and my mother pushes her plate away. She quickly grabs his clean plate and covered meal. “John, thank goodness you’re home.”

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