Chapter 15 Ariel
ARIEL
Morning never quite arrived; it seeped. The sky went from black to the color of a used bandage, and the trees took it personally. We moved anyway, packs light, steps careful, every sound a question the woods might answer wrong.
Cap set the pace the way he always did: not fast, just inevitable. He had the look he gets when he’s doing two things at once, walking and counting, breathing and remembering. I matched his stride and let the rhythm of him make a metronome out of my fear.
“We’re not running anymore,” I said, mostly to hear it out loud.
“We’re choosing,” he said, and the word landed with a weight that settled something in me that had been rattling since the basement. “Choosing is louder than running if you do it right.”
A fallen birch made a bench nobody asked permission to sit on. We took it like a classroom, backs against the trunk, knees up, paper balanced where thighs turned into a desk. He handed me the stub of a carpenter’s pencil from the cabin drawer. It wrote like a blunt truth.
“Show me your house,” he said.
I drew it from the middle out, not the edges, because that’s how it lives in me.
The basement first: the single run of twelve steps left of the room, the cracked tread that pops, the bare bulb over the well, cages along the right wall with doors facing the aisle.
My cage second from the stairs. Cap’s. Sunshine’s across from me.
Tess two down. The hoarse man farther back.
I sketched the drain grate, the way the aisle gave you exactly two strides of width and no extra for mistakes.
I added what Cap didn’t know because he hadn’t lived it: the feel of the zip on my ankle strap, the way the strap chewed, the sound a key makes when a hand that doesn’t care fumbles for it.
I shaded where the bulb had swung after he shot it and turned everything into a bad strobe.
I put a small cross where Sunshine had said Now and where the cage had slammed on her hands.
I wrote alive in the corner of the paper and underlined it once.
“Upstairs,” he said.
I drew the hall at the top of the stairs, left to the mudroom, right into the table room with the men and their lists.
I drew the closet that opened like a mouth and the ladder down to the crawlspace where a girl with the hard eyes had waited because hiding was the bravest thing she had that day.
I drew the mudroom with the cracked conduit where the tape curled back from cheap plastic, the back door that swung in on bad hinges, the alley that pitched east, the dip in the fence where wood sagged with age.
I drew the bay, roll-up door, strapped pallet jack, the box truck nosing arrogance into the yard, and colored the corner where concrete chipped under their bullets.
I made a little sun behind a little ear on the truck bed and pressed the pencil too hard. The paper dented.
He watched my hands more than the map, the way you watch someone take apart a watch you thought was broken and realize it still ticks.
When I finished, I turned the paper sideways and traced a line from the basement to the mudroom to the alley to the fence to the bay, our path, their path, the places they crossed and might again.
“We go back,” I said.
“We go back,” he said, like his mouth had been waiting for me to give it permission.
We moved again, deeper. The trees started whispering in a language they use when they’re about to tell on you.
Cap angled us along a low deer run and then cut hard left to step on rock where rock remembered less.
We passed a stand of saplings someone had thinned with a machete.
The cuts were too clean for storm damage and too recent for county hands.
Farther on, a ribbon of orange survey tape fluttered on a stake that didn’t belong to a surveyor.
Men who pretend to be official like bright colors.
Men who know their business prefer shadows.
I reached up and slipped the tape free, wrapped it twice around my fingers, then slid it into my pocket. “No,” I said to the tree quietly, like teaching a toddler a word it didn’t want.
Cap’s mouth did the thing it does when he approves without saying so. “Good.”
By midday the light had given up trying to be helpful.
The path forked at a fallen oak, the log so big it made its own weather.
We halted together because something about the break in the trail looked…
curated. A washer had been twisted onto a thistle stalk just where a lazy eye would miss it.
One of ours? The tilt was right. The knot was wrong.
The hay twist had been tied by someone who learned knots from a YouTube video, not a grandfather.
“Not Wrecker,” Cap said. He crouched, hands on his knees, eyes level with the sign. “And not a hunter either.”
“Watcher?” I asked.
He didn’t commit. “Somebody mapping somebody.”
I took our own language out of my pocket, a loop of wire and a safety pin, and walked twenty yards off the trail to a sapling Wrecker would check without thinking.
I left a note our people would read, two small scratches in the bark where the growth ring swells.
Not ours. Don’t trust the fork. When I came back, Cap had his head tilted, listening the way he listens to trees, like they owe him a little truth.
“Right,” he decided. “Left feels like someone else’s idea of a shortcut.”
We went right and started leaving our own breadcrumbs quieter than before, nothing shiny, nothing proud.
A scrape on the underside of a root where boots wouldn’t see it.
A pebble turned so the wet face hid. A pinecone rolled once and then rolled back as if the ground had rejected it.
I wanted to believe Wrecker was already reading us, like a big hand fitting over a small one, matching fingers to fingers.
The track dove into laurel and slowed us to a careful crawl. That’s where I saw it: a trunk with a long, clean vertical mark taken out of the bark. Not storm. Not deer. Knife. The cut had dried at the edges and wept sap in the middle, a wound that hadn’t decided whether to close.
“Someone’s marking,” I said. I stepped closer and put my palm an inch from the scar.
The sap was sticky and honest. Not hours old, longer.
Not days, either. The knife had cut yesterday, maybe last night.
The height of the mark matched my shoulder.
The hand that made it belonged to someone who understood how to set a sightline in a hurry without looking like he was doing it.
Cap’s jaw flexed. He didn’t touch the tree. “Not mine,” he said. “Not ours.”
“Then whose?”
“Men who want to find this place again in a hurry,” he said. His eyes went to the canopy, then back to the earth. “Or men who want other men to think they’ll want to.”
“Layered lies,” I said, because the watcher liked to teach lessons in the same syntax over and over. Hold your fire. Box first. Calm as a catechism.
Cap rubbed mud between his finger and thumb like a priest weighing communion. “I want Wrecker to see it. I don’t want the wrong eyes to think we’ve noticed. Leave it. For now.”
Leaving it felt like walking away from a rattlesnake you didn’t have time to move. I did it anyway. The trail bent a little and the mark vanished behind the armor of leaves, but it followed us for the next hundred yards like a stare. My scalp itched like someone had said my name behind glass.
We hit the ridge shoulder by afternoon, the air cooler, the ground meaner.
The world opened enough that you could see the runt of a town in the valley, water tower, diesel smoke, a pair of trucks pretending they weren’t going to the same place.
Cap kneeled and took the glass out, not to point at people but at distance, reading light in the way soldiers read the preface to a fight.
“Two possibles at the service road,” he said. “One old Chevy with no vanity. One box truck with a limp.”
“The missing lug,” I said, and wished for the thousandth time that memory didn’t work as well as fear thinks it does.
“Looks like.” He tucked the glass away and considered the map I’d drawn folded into his pocket. “We won’t go on the road. We Ghost it. We use the ditch and the trees and their laziness against them.”
“We go back,” I said, and it wasn’t bravado. It was a vector.
He nodded once. “We go back.”
We dropped off the shoulder and the ground smelled like old rain and iron.
I ran my fingers along trunks as we passed, tasting bark for the feel of knives.
Twice more we saw scars, clean, vertical, efficient.
Once we found a set of boot prints that zagged between trees like a man testing lines of sight.
One toe dragged a hair on the return. Not Cap’s old scar gait.
Familiar, though. A shrug of memory I couldn’t name.
We started covering our own steps harder, not just hiding but lying with intent.
Cap placed a heel mark where a boot that wasn’t his would expect to find it, then breezed it with a spray of pine needles to make it look careless.
I angled a scuff into a patch of moss so it would bloom back wrong and tell on anyone who followed it too literally.
If the watcher’s men were reading, we wanted them to read the wrong chapter.
“Do you think Sunshine knows we are coming back for her?” I asked.
“I’m not sure,” he said. “But I hope she does.”
“And if we can’t?” My mouth asked before cowardice could make it behave.
He didn’t flinch. “Then we break the place about the ears until the men responsible can’t hear their own names without tasting dirt.”
I breathed, and the breath was ugly and good.
Late light found us under a stand of tall pines that had lived too long to be impressed by anything we were doing.
We stopped because moving farther would make noise we couldn’t afford before dark.
Cap skimmed his palm along his thigh and looked me over the way he does when he’s checking that I’m still in there and not just a brave Ghost.
“Tomorrow, we reach the outer road,” he said, voice low, pitched to live only between us. “We put eyes on the bay and the alley. We find their shift. We find their slack. We write the hour we’ll steal.”
“And tonight?” I asked.
“Tonight, we plan it twice and sleep once,” he said. His mouth softened. “And you draw me the fence dip again, because I like watching you turn danger into a diagram.”
I smiled without meaning to. “Bossy.”
“Accurate,” he said.
We made a low camp without a fire, just our backs against bark and a slice of sky to count.
He unrolled the map from my knee, and we went over it like we could memorize ourselves into winning.
Mudroom, conduit tape, closet ladder, roll-up door, pallet jack, fence dip, cracked fourth step, bulb and its chain.
The things that hurt and the things that saved us both went on the page. Paper held it without complaint.
As the dark closed and the ridge learned our breathing, my mind kept circling back to the knife-scar on the tree. A mark left by a hand that wanted to come back or wanted us to think it did. Either way, an intention. A sentence we hadn’t finished yet.
When the last light lost its argument with the pines, I folded the map and slid it inside my jacket like a second heart. Cap put his palm over it for a beat, sealing it, sealing us.
“Tomorrow,” he said.
“Tomorrow,” I echoed.
Somewhere behind us, beyond the laurel and the birch bench and the fork we hadn’t taken, a tree bled sap where a knife had taught it a lesson. we'd read it again in the morning, and then we'd decide whether to answer.
For now, the woods went quiet enough to hear the math.