to hear it,â he said. âPeace be with you.â
Having an explanation for Courtneyâs disappearance helped. Sarah felt relieved as she hurried to work. It made her sad that Courtney hadnât bothered to say goodbye. But that didnât matter as long as her friend was safe. Sarah was used to being forgotten.
âSelf-pity is a sin,â she reminded herself as soon as the âforgottenâ thought passed through her head. Then she said a prayer of thanksgiving for a Savior whomade it possible to repent and change. As she stepped inside the cinder-block cheese factory, she decided she didnât care what her leaders did. As long as her heart was pure, her soul would be saved.
Or was it a little more complicated than that? Did she have more of a responsibility to make sure her leaders were being honest than she wanted to acknowledge?
Â
Rachel rubbed her temples as she stared through the windshield at a white single-wide trailer. Judging by the dents and the rust and the broken picket skirt, it had to be at least thirty years old. There was a dog pen on one side, also broken in places, and a rock pile in an area Rachel couldnât even call a yard. It all sat at the end of a dirt drive. Theyâd actually been driving on dirt for a while. The only way to reach Portal was to go around the mountains or over them, and the road over was dirt. Taking the pass meant you risked running into one of the thunderstorms that could happen so suddenly during monsoon season, but Nate had insisted on the direct route, and Rachel hadnât been surprised. He was in his beloved ramshackle truck; that was what he felt such a vehicle was for. âThis is it? â
âIt is if we can trust our directions.â Nate didnât sound any more enthusiastic than she was.
âWow.â Thanks to her job, sheâd lived in plenty of dumps. Sheâd tolerated soggy, water-damaged ceilings, threadbare carpet, cockroaches, cigarette smoke clinging to drapes, bedding and furniture, leaky plumbing and paper-thin walls in motels where she could hear headboards banging, courtesy of her prostitute neighbors. But sheâd always had electricity and running water. This place had a generator, if it worked, and anouthouse made of sun-bleached wood that listed to one side.
Taking a deep breath, she studied the surrounding area. As Nate had promised, the Chiricahuas were close by. They rose like islands from the desert âsea,â which was why, according to Nate, these mountains and others like them were called âsky islands.â Rachel was happy that this part of the state wasnât quite as flat as the land theyâd crossed coming from L.A. In addition to creosote and cacti, they now saw some oak and pine.
The sunset resembled taffy melting on the mountain peaks in stunning layers of red, orange and gold. It was one of the most spectacular displays Rachel had ever seenâbut all she could do was gape at the remote outpost sheâd be sharing with Nate for God knew how long.
âHow much is Milt paying in rent?â she asked.
â I lined this up. I knew I was getting taken even at the time, butâ¦shit,â he grumbled. Then he was gone, carrying their luggage to the front door as if they might as well get on with the task at hand.
Nate had mentioned snakes. If Rachel had her guess, there were plenty of scorpions, tarantulas and lizards, tooânot to mention the odd mountain lion. She could picture the Apaches whoâd holed up here with Cochise and Geronimo in the 1860s and â70s. Two of the last bastions of the Old WestâTombstone and Douglasâwerenât far away. Nate had talked about the areaâs history as theyâd passed the grocery store/café constituting the center of town. Apparently, there wasnât even a gas station in Portal. You had to drive seven miles to Rodeo, New Mexico, in order to fill up.
If Wycliff had wanted a remote
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