PROLOGUE
The Elder’s Diary
August 5, 8 P.M.
No. I’m not doing this.
August 6, 8 P.M.
Seriously. Not gonna.
August 7, 8 P.M.
Mom, Dad: you can shove this blank book and a pen in my
face every evening for the next fifty years, and I’ll never write
more than twenty words. Okay, thirty.
Also, we’re out of milk. Also also, I hate how powdered
milk tastes. I know we’ve got to make sacrifices. But I dislike
milk in powder form. Just sayin’.
August 8, 8:30 P.M.
Phllllbt.
August 9, 1 P.M.
Honey—this isn’t entirely about you. As your father has
told you, it’s important to tell your story. People are counting on
you. Not just now, but in the future. They need to see what you’ve
seen, learn the lessons you’ve learned. It may not seem fair, but
you owe them that.
August 9, 8 P.M.
MOM!!! YOU READ MY DIARY! AND YOU’RE WRITING IN IT! WHAT
KIND OF MOTHER DOES THAT?!? DO YOU EVEN UNDERSTAND HOW COMPLETELY
TWISTED THAT IS, OR ARE YOU TOO BUSY BEING A PSYCHO TO GET
IT?
August 10, noon
Hey, ace. Don’t be mad at your mother. She knows this is
important to me—to all of us, really—and she volunteered to sneak a
peek at what you’ve done so far. Can’t say either of us are totally
impressed; but we’re still hoping you’ll come around. You know, almost better than any of
us, how deep the abyss is that we’re all staring down. (This
isn’t Seventeen magazine, ace, and your privacy isn’t more important than
our survival.) I don’t believe this town can last through another
winter. What may be left of us is on these pages. So what say you
crank it up a notch and write a note or two for
posterity?
August 10, 12:30 P.M.
Ugh, I knew I should have moved this thing to another
hiding place after Mom invaded my privacy. (’Scuze me, the privacy
that isn’t as important as our survival, vomit vomit vomit.) No
point now—both parental slugs have left their eternal slime in this
journal, and now there’s nothing to be done.
I’d burn this thing tonight if I didn’t think we’d need to
save every bit of paper to make it through another
winter.
August 11, noon
Jennifer, I guess you’re going to be totally annoyed that
I’m writing in here; but your parents begged me so I’m writing this
while Gautierre and I came to visit you today. You just stepped out
of your room to take a pee break. Did you know you take forever?
(How long can it take, Jenn? I mean, geez.) Gautierre thought it
was weird, but I said it was a girl thing, so he dropped the whole
thing. They have a point. Your folks, I mean. You gotta do this.
Gautierre agrees. Okay, you flushed so I gotta go;
good-bye!
August 11, 12:03 P.M.
Having thrown Susan, the artist formerly known as my best
friend, and her boyfriend out of my room for conspiracy to commit
phenomenal embarrassment, I would like to state for the record that
I, the Ancient Furnace, do NOT pee or flush. I am more powerful
than that. I can simply will my urine away.
Away, urine! See? (I’m no longer pretending this is any
sort of a private document.)
Okay, everyone, I’ll make you a deal. If you can all go
twenty-four hours without molesting my journal, I will start
serious entries tomorrow. Deal?
August 12, 12:04 P.M.
All right. Thanks, everyone, for refraining from sharing
further tales of my bathroom habits. Guess I should keep my end of
the deal.
My name is Jennifer Caroline Scales. I live in a town
called Winoka with three major problems.
First, those of us who turn into dragons don’t call it
Winoka. We call it Pinegrove, because that was the name it had
before a woman named Glorianna Seabright led an army of
beaststalkers here, wiped out the inhabitants, and renamed it. That
was about forty years ago.
Second, last November Mayor Seabright died, and on that
night a barrier rose that blocks off this town from everything else
around it. It’s enormous and translucent and blue and round, like
my ass when I’m in dragon form.
The only thing that makes it through is weather—snow,
rain, sun, wind, okay you probably know what weather is! For a
while, electricity made it through fine, too—but then
a bad January storm knocked out more of the
grid than we could repair with what we had. The town began
rationing fuel. Since then, it’s gotten harder.
Third, everyone outside this barrier appears content to
wait for us to die. More on that tomorrow.