 Listening Library presents A Million Junes by Emily Henry, read for you by Julia Weyland. 1. From my bedroom window I watch the ghost flutter. She shifts and warbles in the dark yard, her pink sheen caught in moonlight. I wonder if she's looking up at the spread of stars or if she's facing the farmhouse, watching us. Maybe things like her don't have eyes, maybe they wander unseeing through the world. At the edge of the clearing, the sudden shuffle and bob of branches draw my eyes from the ghost. A couple of giggly sophomores I recognize break through the brush and hesitate, half-shadowed as they scour the hilltop our house sits on. They look right past the shimmering pink spirit and focus instead on the cherry tree that sprawls out in front of our porch. The trees as old as the town itself, planted by my great-great-great-great-grandfather, Jonathan Jack Alroy O'Donnell, when he first settled here. He, like Dad, could talk roots into spreading anywhere, but part of the reason Jonathan stayed in Five Fingers was the taste of the cherries that grew on this hill. Like heaven on earth, Dad used to say, like the silent world before anything had gone wrong. Within months of his arrival, Jonathan had started a farm a couple of miles from here, closer to the water, where the earth mixed with sand. For two generations the O'Donnells built a legacy of roots and branches. It's been four more since the Angerts, my family's mortal enemies, foreclosed on the farm. But the cherries from that land are still sold in grocery stores and farmers markets at festivals and fairs beneath hand-painted signs and vinyl banners reading, Jack's Tart. The sophomores, Molly Malone and Quincy Northbrook, run toward the tree now, folded in half like they're trying not to block a movie theater screen. Neither of them sees the ghost, but they both shiver as they pass through her, and Molly stops and glances back. Quincy is halfway up the tree, trying to shake down the empty branches. He hisses at Molly, and she runs to stand below him, folding her shirt up like a grocery bag as a few shriveled cherries drop. Gravel crunches then, and headlights swing up the curve of our long driveway. In the tree, Quincy freezes like a raccoon caught robbing a trash can, but Molly is already running, halfway back to the woods with her spoils. At the breathy hunk of the car horn, Quincy drops from the branches and takes off full tilt after her. Hannah rolls the Subaru's window down and shouts, Yeah, that's right. You'd better run, punks. She shakes her head. Sample complete. Ready to continue?