she saw I hadnât touched my fries yet. âToo salty?â she asked. âOh.â I looked down at my plate and popped a fry in my mouth. âNo, no. Theyâre perfect.â Bridget paused. âI couldnât help but overhear. Are they expanding the mall? I havenât been shopping there since the spring.â âYeah. Theyâre putting in a new wing and landfilling the back part by the shore.â I looked down at my plate imagining each load of dirt going into the tidal pool. What would happen to Mom if we didnât get to her on time? Chelse called over from her perch. âIs that what all those trucks are for? I could barely find a parking spot last time I was there.â âItâs too bad theyâre filling all that in.â Bridget poured the old coffee in the sink and began to make a fresh pot. âItâs really pretty back there with the pond and everything.â âYou know where I mean?â I asked. My eyes stung. I wiped a tear away. âYeah. Hey.â Bridget reached out and touched my arm. Chelse looked over from the ice cream counter. âWhatâs the matter?â âItâs justâ¦â How could I explain why I was so upset without revealing the fact that Mom was floating in the mallâs tidal pool? âThat place isâ was âreally special to my mom.â âIt is pretty special,â Bridget said thoughtfully. âEspecially when the Monarch butterflies are migrating.â âOh, I have a picture of that.â I scrolled through the pictures on my phone to find the one of Cori from the day before. I held it up for her to see. Bridget smiled as if remembering a similar time. âHow can they just landfill a place like that?â Chelse took my phone in her hands and studied the picture. âWell, they shouldnât really ,â Bridget said slowly. âConsidering.â âConsidering what?â A hopeful feeling rose in my chest. âMonarchs are a âspecies of special concern.ââ Bridget finger-quoted the last bit. âKind of one step away from being endangered.â âI didnât know you were such a nature lover,â Chelse said. âKind of a sucker for a good cause, more like.â Bridget pressed the button on the coffee maker and wiped down the counter with a cloth. âI actually tried to get that area protected by the town a few years ago.â âWhat happened?â I tried to keep cool, but the possibility of protecting the tidal pool somehow was the first glimmer of hope Iâd had all day. âI couldnât get enough people behind it.â Bridget rinsed her cloth in the sink and hung it to dry over the faucet. I sighed, unable to hide my disappointment. Chelse looked from me to Bridget, a look of disgust on her face. âAre you kidding me?â Chelse asked. âOver a thousand people will watch a stupid video on Facebook but you couldnât get enough people to speak up for an almost-endangered species? What is wrong with people?â Then a smile grew on her lips. âOr maybeâ¦â âWhat?â I looked from Bridget to Chelse. âMaybe what?â Chelse pulled out her phone. âIâm friending you on Facebook. Send me that picture?â She nodded to the picture of Cori with the butterflies. âSure, but what are you going to do with it?â âIâm going to attempt to restore my faith in humanity.â
By dinnertime, Chelse had set up a Facebook page and had 37 likes. Dad was reheating Mrs. Blakeâs lasagna in the microwave while I filled Cori in on the news over the phone. âButterflies versus Boutiques.â I read the title of the Facebook page as I surfed the web at the kitchen counter. âShe used my butterfly arm. Cool!â Cori said. Chelse had cropped the picture from my cell phone to show just Coriâs arm and a dump truck off in the