The Hurricane Season

Children's Story · Reading Level E · 8 pages · GoReadling
The Hurricane Season illustration 📖 Read & Listen Free

Mara had lived in Florida her whole life, which meant she had spent every August and September watching weather maps and listening to adults talk about storm tracks and storm surges and emergency preparedness. Most years nothing came close. The summer she was eleven, one did.

The storm was named Ida and it was a Category 2 when it made landfall. Their neighborhood was not in the evacuation zone, but the family still prepared carefully — filling bathtubs with water, charging every device, buying extra canned food, and boarding up the biggest windows.

Dad explained each step as they did it, not to frighten her but because, he said, understanding what you are doing and why makes you feel less powerless. Mara wrote down every step in a small notebook she kept in her pocket.

The storm arrived at night. Mara lay in her bed listening to the wind build from a hum to a howl to something that rattled the walls and made the whole house feel like a boat on an enormous dark ocean.

She was not exactly scared. She was something more complicated than scared — intensely aware of how small the house was and how large the world outside it was, and how extraordinary it was that four walls and a roof could hold against something so vast.

The power went out at midnight. They sat together in the living room by flashlight, playing cards and telling stories. The wind reached its peak at around three in the morning. Then slowly, over an hour, it began to ease.

In the morning they walked outside to assess the yard. A large oak branch had crushed the garden shed. Shingles were scattered across the lawn. A neighbor's trash can sat in the middle of their driveway. But the house was intact, and everyone was safe.

Mara looked at her notebook full of preparation steps. She thought about adding a new page — one about what it felt like to sit inside a storm and know you had done everything you could. Some lessons, she decided, were too important to leave unwritten.


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