Chapter 1: Up To Me
"Maybe you are the prophecy!"
"Anna, don't say that to your sister!" I said in response.
"I am NOT the prophecy! Argh!" with Elsa's grunt, she sent icicles hurdling at Anna and I. I got thrusted back at the wall of Elsa's castle and I started to feel my right arm go numb. Not being able to move my arm and being in a lot of pain, I started to fall unconscious. I tried to stay awake, but alas, no luck.
It felt like hours before I began to wake up. This time, however, my surroundings were completely different. I was at home and had fallen off my bed, now laying on my right arm. It hit me like a speeding car: It was all a dream! An awesome dream with Elsa in it! Sure, it was painful and scary, but I had gotten to meet Elsa in my dream, and therefore was well worth it!
Anyway, the radio was on (that's my alarm to wake up every school day). Idina Menzel was singing Let It Go on my favorite station, Portland's Z100. Well, that explained my Frozen dream.
I got on with my daily routine of brushing my teeth, combing my hair, and a variety of other things. Eventually, my dad started driving me to my school, Westview High. I was in for quite the shock when I got there, though.
KATU newscasters everywhere I looked! My dad questions what they were all doing there, so I told him that I figured I'd find out when I went inside and that I'd text him about it later. He dropped me off in the front of the school, at the rotunda and I walked inside.
As I opened the doors, I felt a strong breeze of freezing air touch me. There was a huge crowd surrounding something in the middle of the Student Center. I had to go find out. Pushing through everyone, of which I had a lot of experience with at the Meadow Park Middle School hallways, I saw something that didn't make any sense to me.
It was an incredible sight! Something you would see in some sort of movie, or possibly even some sort of fanfiction! But it was there before my very eyes. She was there before my very eyes. Elsa. In the flesh. Yeah, that, Elsa. The one from Frozen.
I didn't know what to do. What could I do? What could I say? Then, I noticed all the newscasters around her. That wasn't good. I had seen these kinds of shows and read these kinds of "fiction in real life" stories. The media getting to them? Yeah, that wasn't a good thing. They would get poked and prodded around in a science lab. Someone had to do something to help her. I didn't see anyone jumping to anything or trying to save her. Just people staring and recording. It looked like that at this point, the only person who was actually concerned about her safety, whether she was fictional or not, was me. It was gonna be difficult, but I was the only one who could save her now.
