Chapter 12 Cap #2
He cracked his knuckles, a noise like old wood shifting. “Then they’re ours for a minute.” He glanced up the road where the utility lines ran. “Sheriff’s boy been hungry for a collar. He doesn’t come this way if there’s not a reason. I won’t give him one.”
“We won’t leave one,” I said.
The woman wrapped two hard-boiled eggs in a napkin and slid them into Ariel’s hand like contraband. “For after you remember to breathe,” she said. “Bandages too. I won’t ask why. I already know the answer, and I prefer my coffee hot.”
We led our people in on foot, slow in case the old man needed time to change his mind.
He didn’t. He looked at Juno first and his face did something careful and then gave up being careful.
The shotgun stayed down. The porch door swung.
The house took them in the way a house should: without asking them to justify being alive.
I gave Juno my name then, the first name, not the one men shout across rooms. “You’ll have mine,” she said, “when I get it back from myself.” Fair.
The hoarse man found a chair like it had always been his and sat very still and didn’t cry where I could see him.
Juno touched the tin rooster on the way in like she had always done so. The old woman let her.
“We’ll be back,” Ariel told them, voice steady, hand briefly on Juno’s shoulder. “You do exactly what they say, and no one gets to take you anywhere ever again.”
The old man cut his eyes at me over their heads. “You building a war?”
“I’m finishing one,” I said.
He grunted, a satisfied little noise. I remembered the stories Amanda’s aunt had told on the porch last Fourth, this couple had been young once in a town that didn’t like their kind of stubborn. Stubborn ages well.
We left our two with blankets and a porch and a pair of eyes that would count cars before anyone else did. The moment the screen snapped shut behind us, the day brightened by a degree and then pretended it hadn’t. Ariel walked beside me in silence for twenty steps and then bumped my hip with hers.
“Good choice,” she said.
“They were always the choice,” I said. “I just had to decide how honest to be about it.”
We cut back into the woods, lighter and heavier at once.
Without two bodies to shepherd, we could move meaner.
Without two bodies to shepherd, we had fewer excuses.
The path narrowed and the trees did us the courtesy of minding their business.
I left one last breadcrumb at the edge of a cut cornfield; a washer tied with a twist of hay on a thistle stalk.
Wrecker would see north pull, danger east. Everyone else would mutter about trash and keep moving.
By noon the silence got older. Birds did the math and decided we weren’t interesting.
The world allows you to pass if you pass correctly.
We did. We still left marks. Everyone does.
It’s arrogance to think otherwise. The work is in choosing which marks you intend and which ones you make them ignore.
I spotted the boot sign at the same heartbeat Ariel reached for my arm.
Heels dug in deeper than the toes, a long man, patient stance.
Not ours. The tread was cheap and regular, big box store tactical, the kind of sole you buy when you want to look like you know things.
A second print overlapped the first, smaller foot, quicker, toe turned a hair inward on the return.
The same inward hitch I’d catalogued in the basement above the cracked fourth step.
“Watcher’s right-hand,” I said, almost to myself.
“Here?” Ariel breathed.
“He likes circles,” I said. “He’ll leave men where he thinks a man would go if he had anything to save.”
Which is what we were doing.
I sank to my haunches and laid my palm beside the print without touching it.
The dirt told me what it always tells when it’s had to hold a man it didn’t invite: time passed, weight shifted, a decision not to smoke because someone smarter said not to.
The print was newer than comfortable. Not brand-new.
Morning-new. The dog hadn’t been here. You could smell the difference.
That meant men with glass, not noses. It meant angles, not awe.
Ariel looked up through the branches. The sky had gone from bruise to the color of a turned pocket. “They’re ahead?”
“They’re angling,” I said. “He knows the ridge. He’s trying to cut the line we’d take toward the bay if we were stupid.”
“We’re not,” she said.
“We’re not,” I agreed, and still the print made the part of me that counts other people’s mistakes take its weapon out and lay it where my hands could find it in the dark.
I straightened, every old ache in my legs complaining like old friends.
I scanned the trees. Named my choices without moving my mouth: drop into the creek and let it take our scent to the wrong bend; climb the rock face and blow our calves for twenty minutes of being ghosts; or cut the corner between their circle and ours and write a new line on the map the watcher thinks he owns.
Ariel’s hand found my sleeve and tugged once, a little signal we’d taught each other without meaning to. Choose hard now so it’s easier later.
“Left,” I said. “We’ll paint him a picture he’ll believe.”
“Breadcrumb for Wrecker?” she asked, already moving with me.
I smiled without heat. “Wreck will be here before we’ve time to miss him. I gave him enough bread to throw a sandwich.”
Her mouth tipped, half a laugh, half a promise. “Then let’s make sure he has someone to feed.”
We turned into the thicker stand, where laurel makes men think twice and the ground starts keeping secrets for you. The print behind us stared up at nothing. The day held its breath like a man trying to hear his own heart over the noise he made learning to be a hunter.
We went quiet as the next bad idea and faster than his plan could account for.