wanted to cry.
The ground here was steep, rocky. Narrow stalks—willow, maple and oak—grew out of the angular ground horizontally but obeying nature turned immediately skyward. Using them as grips, she pulled herself up the hill, toward Lake View Drive. The moon, neatly sliced in half, was casting some light now and she looked behind her for the Glock. But if it had flown from the car before the dive, the weapon, perfectly camouflaged for a dark night, was nowhere to be seen.
She picked up a rock shaped a bit like an ax head. Gazed at the weapon manically.
Then Brynn recalled finding Joey bloody and gasping after eighth-grader Carl Bedermier had challenged him after school. Acting by rote, from her medical training, she’d examined the wounds, pronounced him fine and then said, “Honey, there are times to fight and times to run. Mostly, you run.”
So what the hell are you doing? she now snapped to herself, staring at the chunk of granite in her hand.
Run.
She dropped the rock and continued up the incline to the private road. As she neared the top her foot slipped, dislodging an avalanche of shale and gravel. It fell in a huge clatter. Brynn dropped to her belly, smelling compost and wet rock.
But no one came running. She wondered if the men were deafened themselves from the shooting.
Probably. Guns are much louder than people think.
Move fast while you can still take advantage of it.
Another few feet. Then ten. Twenty. The ground leveled some and she could move faster. Eventually she was at Lake View Drive. She saw noone on it and crossed fast, then rolled into a ditch on the far side, hugging herself and gasping.
No. Don’t stop.
She thought of a high-speed chase last year. Bart Pinchett in his Mustang GT, yellow as yolk.
“Why didn’t you pull over?” she’d muttered, ratcheting the cuffs on. “You knew we’d get you sooner or later.”
He’d lifted a surprised eyebrow. “Well, long as I was moving, I was still a free man.”
Brynn rolled to her knees and stood. She slogged up the hill away from the road and into the trees, plunging into a field of tall yellow and brown grass.
Ahead of her, two or three hundred yards or so, she saw the silhouette of the house at 2 Lake View. As earlier, it was dark. Would the telephone be on? Did they even have a telephone?
Brynn gave a brief prayer that they would. Then she looked around her. No sign of the attackers. She shook her head again, swiveling it from side to side until the second water bead burst.
Which made the sudden sound—footfalls charging through the grass directly toward her—all the more vivid.
Brynn gasped and started to sprint away from Hart or his partner, maybe both, when a forsythia branch caught her foot and she went down hard, breathlessly hard, in a tangle of branches, which were covered with yellow buds bright as you’d see on wallpaper in a baby’s bedroom.
THEY WERE DRIVING
back from Rita’s, a mile away. It seemed to Graham that every place in Humboldt was a mile away from every other place.
He’d brought Joey along—didn’t want to leave him alone, because of the skateboard injury, even if he was “fine,” and because he’d ditch homework for video games, instant messaging and MySpace on the computer and texting from his iPhone. The boy wasn’t crazy about picking up his grandmother but he was in pretty good humor as he sat in the backseat and text-messaged a friend—or half the school, to judge from the volume of his keyboarding.
They collected Anna and headed back home. There, Joey charged upstairs, taking the steps several at a time.
“Homework,” Graham called.
“I will.”
The phone rang.
Brynn? he wondered. No. A name he didn’t recognize on caller ID.
“Hello?”
“Hi. This’s Mr. Raditzky, Joey’s central section advisor.”
Middle school was a lot different nowadays, Graham reflected. He’d never had advisors. And “central section” sounded like a communist spy
Peter Duffy
Constance C. Greene
Rachael Duncan
Celia Juliano
Rosalind Lauer
Jonny Moon
Leslie Esdaile Banks
Jacob Ross
Heather Huffman
Stephanie Coontz