Chapter 2
DUFF
Stacia. That was the name she'd given me, standing in the dirt with her chin up and her tent in ruins around her.
She'd driven an old sedan up a logging road that would have given a truck trouble, pitched camp in the right spot for none of the right reasons, and ripped her own tent trying to win a fight with a pole sleeve.
And she was still out here. Hadn't quit. Hadn't called anyone. Just kept going, sunburned and stubborn and completely out of her depth.
I liked her immediately.
That wasn't the right word. Liked was what you felt about a neighbor or a dog that didn't bark.
What I felt when I walked into that clearing and saw her crouched over the wreckage of a tent she refused to surrender to—that was something else.
Something that hit low and settled in and had no plans to leave.
She was younger than me by a good stretch. Mid-twenties, maybe. Dark hair that had lost its fight with the humidity, brown eyes that tracked me with a wariness I recognized. Assessing. Deciding what I was.
I could work with that.
Her water situation was the first thing I clocked after the tent.
Two bottles left out of what looked like it had been a six-pack, both sitting on the cooler lid in the sun.
No filter. No refill plan. She'd packed a reasonable amount for a normal overnight—the problem was this wasn't a normal overnight.
In this heat, at this elevation, she'd burn through what was left in a matter of minutes, and I was guessing she had no idea where the nearest water source was.
"You're going through water fast," I said.
She looked at the bottles, then at me like I'd pointed out a stain on her shirt she'd been hoping nobody would notice.
"I brought six. I didn't think I'd go through them this fast."
"The heat does that. You don't feel how much you're losing until you're behind." I dropped my pack by the edge of the clearing. "There's a creek about two hundred yards east of here. Runs year-round. Cold, clean, drinkable. I'll grab some and bring some back."
She opened her mouth—the argument already building—and I shook my head.
"Drink what you've got. I'll be back in ten minutes."
I didn't wait for the pushback. I turned toward the tree line and started walking.
The creek was where I knew it would be—a rocky run about four feet wide, moving fast over a bed of smooth stones, shaded by a canopy of hemlock and mountain laurel. The water was cold when I filled my canteen, and I crouched there for a minute, letting the sound of it settle my head.
Flint had asked me to check the ridge trail above the logging road.
Washout after the last rain—the Wildwood River Co.
crew wanted to know if it was passable before they sent a guided group up later in the week.
Flint was the kind of man who planned for things that hadn't gone wrong yet, and I respected that enough to hike up here on a day when the heat index was pushing triple digits.
I hadn't planned on finding her.
I'd seen the car first—hood up, driver's side door hanging open, parked crooked on the logging road like it had stopped mid-thought.
I'd listened to the starter when I turned the key she'd left in the ignition.
It clicked without catching. Alternator belt, most likely.
Not something I could fix out here without the part.
Then I'd heard the swearing. Faint, emphatic, coming from somewhere off the road through the rhododendron. I'd followed the sound and found her—crouched over the tent, fighting it like someone who’d decided this was a battle she was going to win even if it killed her.
The heat hadn't touched me the way it had touched her. I'd been in worse—summers in the backcountry where the air didn't move for weeks and the ground radiated heat back at you like a second sun.
But she was wrecked by it. Flushed, damp, her shirt dark between her shoulder blades, but she was still going. Still fighting. That was the thing that got me. Not the way she looked—though the way she looked was doing plenty on its own—but the refusal. The absolute unwillingness to quit.
I filled my canteen and headed back.
She'd finished the last of her bottles by the time I returned. She'd also pulled her cooler into the shade and repositioned the tent so the door faced east—away from the afternoon sun. Smart adjustments. She was learning in real time, taking in information and applying it without being told.
"Your car's not starting tonight," I said, setting the canteen down. "Alternator belt. I'd need the part and a socket set."
"I know." She said it steady, but her fingers picked at the hem of her shorts. "I figured I'd deal with it in the morning. Walk down to the main road, get a signal and call someone."
"Main road's about four miles down."
"That's fine. I can walk four miles."
She could. That wasn't what concerned me.
What concerned me was the long night between now and morning, the heat that wouldn't break until well after midnight, and the fact that she'd packed like someone who expected to drive home tonight if things went south.
I'd looked at her gear while she was repositioning the tent.
A sleeping bag she wouldn't need because it was too hot to zip into anything.
A flashlight with no backup batteries. A cooler with ice that had already melted, holding a sandwich, two apples, and the water I'd given her.
No bear hang for the food. The cooler was sitting on the ground like a welcome mat.
"I'm going to stay," I said.
Her head came up. "What?"
"Your car's dead. You're low on water. And you don't have a bear hang for your food."
"A what?"
"You hang your cooler from a tree branch so bears don't come into your camp looking for it."
She stared at me. "Bears?"
"Black bears. They're not aggressive, usually. But they'll get into anything that smells like food, and your cooler's sitting right there in the open."
She looked at the cooler. Looked back at me. I could see the calculation happening—pride versus practicality, independence versus the thing she was only just now realizing she didn't know.
"I can handle it," she said.
But her voice had shifted. It was softer at the edges.
"I know you can." I meant it. Whatever she lacked in skills, she made up for in refusal to fold. That counted for more out here than most people understood. "But I'm staying anyway. I'll set up over there." I pointed to the far side of the clearing. "You won't even know I'm here."
She looked at the spot I'd indicated, then back at me. The late sun was catching her face through the canopy, light falling across the angle of her cheekbone, the damp skin at her temple, and the set of her mouth as she made her decision.
"Fine," she said. "But I'm making my own dinner."
"Wouldn't dream of stopping you."
She went to her cooler, and I pulled my bedroll from my pack and laid it out where I said I would. Far enough to give her space. Close enough that if anything came through this camp in the night, I'd hear it before she did.
I strung the bear hang while she ate—her cooler up on a branch using a rope and a system of knots she watched without asking me to explain.
Then I sat against the tulip poplar at the edge of the clearing and watched the light change through the canopy, the gold going amber going copper as the sun dropped toward the ridgeline.
The heat was still heavy. It would be a warm night—the kind where the air never fully let go of the day and the dark just made the heaviness worse. The cicadas were already starting up, a low electric hum that would build as the light faded until it was the only sound in the world.
Flint would have done the same thing—stayed without making it a negotiation. The difference was that Flint would have looked like he was standing guard. I just looked like a man who wasn't in any hurry to leave.
Which was the truth. I wasn't in a hurry. I had nowhere else I wanted to be.