Chapter Four
~ Liam ~
I couldn’t get the radiator to shut up. It clanged with a wet iron echo that vibrated all the way up through the springs of the mattress and into my jaw, so even with the pillow pressed over my face it sounded like someone hitting a pipe with the flat of their hand, every six or seven heartbeats.
Sometimes it got stuck in a loop—tick, tick, tick, pause, then a rapid-fire double-tap like gunshots in the alley below. I didn’t really mind it. The noise was proof the place was still warm, and the warm was proof I wasn’t dead yet.
My room was the top floor of a former flop, a windowless rectangle boxed in by a wall on one side and the pitched roof on the other, so low at the edges you had to walk at a crouch unless you wanted a concussion.
There was water-stained wallpaper where there should have been paint, and the bulb in the ceiling hung from a cord so short that I had to stand on the bed to reach it.
The floorboards let off the scent of sun-bleached hay and whatever chemicals they used to keep mice out of livestock feed, plus the constant undertone of dust—granular, organic, slightly sweet, the way dry flour smells before you open the bag.
I lay flat on my back, ankles crossed over the threadbare comforter, one arm wedged under the pillow and the other resting across my chest where I could feel the jitter of my heart through the bones.
Two in the morning and there was no chance of sleep.
Even if the radiator had gone quiet, my body would have kept me awake, running diagnostic after diagnostic, checking for changes in the noise outside, for shifts in the weight of the air, for the subtle shifts of danger that accumulate around a man on the run.
It was easy to catalog what I owned: the jacket, which I kept on even in bed, both for the warmth and the sense of readiness; the phone, prepaid, screen dark on the mattress beside me, forty minutes of credit remaining, battery half-full; a single change of clothes, still damp from their rinse in the bathroom sink, hung over the back of the only chair in the room, sleeves and legs arranged so they wouldn’t touch the dust or brush the radiator’s rusty paint.
In the inside pocket of the jacket, folded and then unfolded so many times the edges had started to go soft and slightly furry, was the photograph.
I had trained myself not to look at it often. It was an artifact, a point of data, a reminder, and also the only piece of evidence that could connect me to the child I had given away.
The longer I went without seeing it, the more abstract Emilio became—just a name, a hypothetical, a cluster of risks and regrets mapped out like routes on the backroads atlas in my head.
But then the radiator would knock a pattern that reminded me of the old clock in my father’s study, or I would catch the flick of blond hair in the distorted glass of the window, and suddenly all I wanted was to look.
So I did. I unzipped the pocket, drew out the photo, and held it under the bulb’s cold blue eye. The image was grainy, printed by an all-in-one scanner in a pharmacy in Bozeman, the colors already starting to shift toward cyan and magenta, but the faces were unmistakable.
Emilio, cradled in my arms, eyes shut against the world, cheeks puffed out in a frown of newborn protest. My own face, looking down at him, jaw tense, hair a mess, lips caught in that weird midpoint between smile and terror.
The background was a motel bed, scratchy floral comforter and all, and the only real light in the shot came from the lamp at the edge of the frame, so it threw everything else into shadow.
I didn’t know why I kept it. I had left the note in the carrier, left the envelope with Hooper’s name on the certificate, had written the instructions so simple even a child could follow them: he is yours, I’m sorry.
I had known, from the first moment I learned I was pregnant, that none of this would end with a happy family photo, or a page in a baby book, or even a memory that didn’t throb like a bruised tooth.
I had made the calculation, over and over, that every piece of evidence left behind was another round in the chamber for Eleanor or her father to use, and that the only smart play was to burn it all.
But I hadn’t. The photograph was still here, and so was I, and the radiator kept on ticking.
I set the photo face-up on the mattress, watching it while my eyes adjusted to the light. My fingers drifted to the phone, checking the screen for notifications out of reflex.
Nothing, of course.
The last incoming text had been three days ago—a burner number, asking if I was still “on schedule.” I had not replied.
The battery icon glowed a reassuring blue-green, but the actual charge was already in freefall.
The charger I’d picked up at a gas station outside Buffalo barely kept up with the phone’s drain, and I didn’t dare go back for a better one.
The radiator gave a double knock, like a bad hand at the poker table, and I got up, crossing the cold floor in bare feet to check the window.
There was nothing to see—just the blank face of the neighboring hardware store, every window blacked out, the alley below layered in salt crust and windblown trash.
The street was empty except for the single county cop who made his rounds every hour on the hour, always slow-rolling past the feed store on the off-chance he’d catch some meth head trying to break in.
At this hour, his only company was the snow, drifting lazy against the curb, and the mechanical hum of the traffic light at the corner, changing colors for nobody.
I let the curtain fall back into place and retreated to the bed, curling up tight, pulling the jacket closer around my neck. I checked the inventory again: jacket, phone, photo, the money—thin as a dollar menu hamburger, a fold of twenties with the edges already going soft from too much counting.
The birth certificate was gone, left in the carrier with Emilio, but I knew the numbers and the names by heart, could recite the line of parentage the way a priest recites last rites.
I knew that the first thing Eleanor would do, when she got tired of running her own searches, would be to call in a favor at the county records office and start triangulating paper trails.
I knew she would burn every dollar and every hour between here and the next state to find me, and that her father’s lawyers would be waiting with a stack of subpoenas when she did.
But I had made the drop clean. I had watched, from a shadowed corner of the yard, as Hooper carried Emilio inside, cradled him like he was handling a grenade or maybe a bottle of beer, and closed the door behind them.
I had waited until the lights settled, then drove the old highway out of town until I was sure nobody was following.
And still, every night, I ran the math again: was the birth certificate a liability or a shield? Was putting Hooper’s name on it the right call or just a feint to buy time? Had I left enough of myself behind to keep Eleanor’s people busy or had I just made it easier to find us both?
I stared at the ceiling, watching the cracks in the plaster, mapping them into highways and rivers and the invisible boundaries that made up the state of Montana.
I remembered the way Hooper had talked, that first and only night in Billings—how he’d gone from clown to confessor in two drinks flat, how he’d described his ranch as the kind of place where “nobody comes looking unless they’re lost or mean to get that way.”
I remembered the rough of his hands on my shoulders, the way he’d listened to every word I said, even the ones that didn’t come out right, and I wondered, not for the first time, if he’d understood the message at all.
He wasn’t stupid. That was the thing everyone got wrong about Hooper—the arms and the size, the loud jokes, the way he shrugged off pain like it was part of the weather.
But I had watched him work a problem, watched the way his eyes narrowed and his hands went still.
I trusted him, more than I’d ever trusted anyone, to do the right thing even if it made no sense to anyone else.
I closed my eyes and counted the beats, letting my mind slip back to Emilio’s face—soft, squinting, already impatient with the world.
I imagined him asleep in the old ranch house, safe behind walls thick enough to survive a siege, his first memory not the sound of my voice but the sound of the river outside, the hush of cold wind, maybe the low notes of a guitar late at night when nobody else was listening.
I knew Eleanor would find me, eventually. That was the math that always checked out. But I also knew she would never find the baby, not as long as Hooper was there to say no.
I set the photograph face-down on the pillow, checked the phone’s battery one last time, and let the room settle around me.
The radiator ticked, then ticked again. Morning would be soon enough.
* * * *
The world at eight a.m. was a different universe from the one that existed in the small hours, but only in the sense that it was even less forgiving. By then the cold wasn’t just an absence but an organism, alive and crawling under my skin, laying eggs of ache in every joint.
I pulled on the jacket, then a second flannel shirt under it, then the stiff pair of jeans that still crackled with soap where the rinse hadn’t finished the job.
I laced up my boots, gave the radiator a reassuring pat as if I was leaving it in charge of the room, and crept down the narrow staircase that led to the back alley.
The Main Street was the opposite of busy.
There were three trucks already parked outside the hardware store, a battered Land Cruiser idling in front of the post office, and across the street, a flatbed full of feed bags being unloaded by a man whose hat looked like it had been stepped on every day since the Reagan administration.
I kept my head down and my hands in my pockets, but I kept count, and I kept my ears open.