“It’s gonna be rough tonight. Y’all might want to head out early. Earl got his plow stuck in a ditch again.” Tinsel rolls her eyes. “Now Brandon is trying to pull him out of the ditch with his tow truck, and they look like a bunch of dumbasses even if it’s kinda funny.” Tinsel laughs.
“Shouldn’t you be helping?” I mean, she is the only cop in town. If you call for help, she’s who shows up.
“I did. I told them both to go the hell home till tomorrow. They aren’t getting anything out of anywhere with how the snow is coming down out there. Plus, snow is blowing down off the mountain too. Everyone needs to bundle in for the night, and we’ll clean up tomorrow.”
“So we should head home early?” Now I can really avoid North. This is perfect. I can spend my night googling boots and convincing myself not to buy new ones because screw him if he doesn’t like them.
“I’d plan on it. I suppose you could walk, but there’s no way North could make it to his place without the roads being cleared.”
“All right, I’ll let him know,” I say as I stand from behind my desk.
“I can hear you both,” North says from inside his office. Since he got off the conference call, he left the doors open.
“Cute boots,” Tinsel says to me out of nowhere, and my mouth drops open. Oh my god, did he tell her to say that?
“I swear I didn’t tell her to say that!” North jumps up from his chair.
“Whoa there, Mayor. That’s the most emotion I’ve seen out of you since I threw your Star Wars toy out the window on the highway.”
“That was a collectors’ edition, and it was still in the box.”
“Well, you shouldn't have done whatever it was you did to make me toss it out the window.” She shrugs.
“You don’t even remember what it was I did,” he hisses at his sister.
“Neither do you.” She glares right back.
“Because I wouldn’t have done anything to warrant that kind of behavior.” Tinsel rolls her eyes, but North is probably right. I don’t see him as the type to pick on his little sister. I bet he was serious even as a kid.
“You were probably boring me to death, so I tossed it for something to do.” Tinsel swings her attention to me. “Then he was a snitch-ass and told Mom and Dad on me.”
“They saw you do it! They were driving.” North is getting heated now.
She repeats his words in a whiny voice, mimicking him, and I have to bite the inside of my cheek so that I don’t laugh. I need to step in here, and giggling will not help.
“Since the roads are going to be bad tonight, I’ll send out an alert,” I cut in because they could do this all day.
“It would be much appreciated,” Tinsel says. “Love you, bro.” She smirks at him before she’s back out the door. I follow after her and flip the new lock before entering the code since we’re closing early. We changed everything to keyless entry a few weeks ago. That way, if we need to, we can change the code instead of having to get new keys.
I go back behind my desk and start to send out the alerts. We have a mass text line along with a newsletter and city phone messaging center.
“Don’t wait for me,” I tell North. He always thinks he has to walk me out. Sometimes I drive to work if I have plans to go somewhere after work or during lunch, but today I didn’t, so I decided to walk.
“I’m not leaving you here alone.” He comes to stand next to my desk and towers over me. I try not to fidget under his gaze as I work on the newsletter and put in all the information.
“It’s fine. I’m walking home, and you have to drive in that.” I nod toward the front, not taking my eyes off my computer screen.
“I’m not letting you walk home alone in a blizzard.” I glance up from my computer to look out the windows. It’s really coming down now.
“That’s crazy. I’ve never seen it that bad.”
“Only happens if the wind is really rough. You get the mountain snow on top of the normal snow storm.” I let out a small gasp when ice chunks start to hit the window.
“Crap, let me get this out.” I quickly finish the newsletter, and the second I hit send, the power in the building goes off and my screen goes black.
“Shit.” North walks over to the door and enters the code to try and open it. There’s no sound, and the lock won’t budge.
“Are we stuck, sir?!” I pick up my phone and try to call Tinsel, but it shows no service. “Why isn’t my phone working?” North has a pissed-off expression on his face, and I realize I’ve called him sir again. “North?”