The Calling dr-2
Page 16
“We do.” I jabbed my finger at the paper. “Salmon Creek School. Privately owned by the St. Cloud Corporation. Our teacher’s name is Mrs. Morris. She’s the mother of Hayley, one of the girls they said died. There are thirteen kids in our class, which covers grades eleven and twelve. We’re in eleven. Look, do you have a computer? I can show you Maya Delaney’s Facebook page. Which has my photo on it. I’ll have to use my password to access it because all my details are set to private. That should prove it’s mine.”
“You kids these days are too smart for your own good,” the server said. “I’m sure you’ve got Facebook pages set up for this scheme.”
“What scheme?” Sam said, her voice rising. “What possible motivation could we have to do this?”
“Attention.” The server crossed her arms. “I bet you’ve got friends out there taping us. Make fun of the locals. Post the videos on YouTunes.”
“YouTube,” Sam muttered.
“See?” She shook her head. “Spoiled brats. You aren’t even thinking about these poor kids and how their parents must be feeling.”
“Yes.” I met her gaze. “I am thinking about how my parents are feeling. They think they just lost their only child. I need them to know that I’m alive.”
I glanced at the lone customer. He looked away quickly and focused on his lunch.
I turned back to the server. “If I can just use your phone—”
“Why? To call your friends to come and get you? Better get walking, girl. It’s a long way to town.”
She kicked us out after that. There was nothing we could do, nothing we could say. She knew the story—those kids had died in a crash on the other end of the island. DNA said it was the missing kids and everyone who watched CSI knew DNA never lied.
“It’s official,” Sam said as we walked out. “We’re screwed. The universe is conspiring to destroy us.”
“If it was, I think it could have managed that a few times by now.”
“Ah, but that’s the trick. You cheat death, it keeps trying. Didn’t you see that movie?”
“All of them, actually. Serena loved—” A brief pause. “She loved horror movies.”
“Did she? I’d have thought her more the romance type.”
“Girls?”
I glanced back to see the man from the restaurant. I slowed to let him catch up.
He was a little older than I’d first thought. Maybe forty. Sandy brown hair. Short beard. Golf shirt. Trousers. Loafers. He looked like a schoolteacher.
“I’m sorry about what happened in there,” he said. “I don’t know anything about that helicopter crash—I’m on vacation with my family, and haven’t been reading the papers. But I’ve got a girl about your age, and I can’t imagine her going to all this trouble to pull a prank. Even if she did…” He shrugged. “Kids do silly things sometimes. No excuse to strand them in the middle of a forest.”
I noticed Daniel and Corey circling around by the trees and subtly motioned for them to wait.
“Thanks,” I said. “We really just need to call our parents. If I could borrow your cell phone, that would be great.” I pulled out the twenty. “I know it might be an expensive call, but this should cover it.”
“No, no.” He waved the money away. “You make that call and you take as long as you like.” He reached into his pocket and came out empty. “Huh. My phone must have fallen out in the truck. Just a sec.”
He walked to the pickup. We waited. A couple of minutes later, he came back shaking his head.
“Phone not there?” I called.
“No. It’s the damnedest thing because my wife made sure I brought it. I hope it didn’t fall out when I was getting gas.”
“Can you do us a favor then?” I said. “Talk to the server and get her to let us use hers? I can pay, like I said.”
He shook his head. “I already tried putting in a good word for you. She’s having none of it. I’ll have to give you girls a lift into town.”
On Vancouver Island, hitchhiking is considered a perfectly feasible way to travel, prohibited only on the highway, where you could get hit. In Salmon Creek, though, we got stranger-danger classes from kindergarten. Ours were probably a little different from most—we were taught that anyone in Salmon Creek could be trusted; it was the rest of the world we needed to watch out for.
Some kids did start hitching rides into town when they hit that awkward “old enough to hang out in Nanaimo but not old enough to drive there” stage. If I’d tried it, I’m not sure who would have killed me first—my parents or Daniel.
I didn’t trust this guy. I didn’t like his story about the cell phone. I didn’t like his excuse for not helping us with the server. Even if I totally believed him, I wouldn’t have gotten in the truck. So why was I considering it?
Because he had a truck. And we needed it, and if he did turn out to be a creep, even Daniel wouldn’t argue about abandoning him by the roadside.
“I’m … not sure. Can we…?” I glanced at Sam. “Can I talk to you?”
I pulled Sam aside and told her what I had in mind. As I did, I motioned for Daniel and Corey to move through the woods, closer to us. Then we went back to the man.
“Okay,” I said. “We’d really appreciate a lift. My friend here has to, uh, go to the bathroom before we leave. She’s been holding it a long time. I know they won’t let her use the one inside, so she’s going to use the woods.”
Sam had already taken off, loping toward where Daniel and Corey were hiding with Kenjii. There, she’d tell them the plan—we’d get into the truck, and make sure the guy paused at the exit, so they could jump into the back.
While Sam was gone, I asked the man about his vacation, to keep him occupied. Sam talked to the guys, then gave them time to make their way over near the exit.
When she came back, we climbed into the truck. I sat between the guy and Sam. As I settled in, I reached for the radio, then said, “Is this okay?”
He smiled. “Sure. You might not like my station, but you can change it.”
I left it on his—country music—and cranked it up loud enough to hide any noise the guys and Kenjii were about to make.
The pickup pulled to the roadway. There was a stop sign, but around here, most people just roll up, glance around, and pull out, and that’s exactly what he was going to do until I said, “Sam! Your ID. Do you have it?”
He stopped. She checked her pockets and I checked mine, bouncing in our seats, hoping to cover any other movement as the guys got in the truck bed.
“I think you left it inside,” the man said. “It wouldn’t be any good anyway.”
“I guess you’re right.” Sam sighed, as if resigned to the loss.
He pulled out onto the road and turned north.
“Um, isn’t the town south?” I said.
“Southwest, actually. This is quicker.”
He pulled onto the first side road—little more than a rutted trail.
“Are you sure you should take this?” I said. “Your truck looks really new.”
He laughed. “That’s what trucks are for, hon. No sense buying a four-by-four if you don’t plan to go off-road. Just hold tight. We’ll be there before you know it.”
He had no idea where this road led. That was obvious as he drove along, leaning forward, straining to see. Was he looking for a place to pull over?
I swallowed a bubble of panic. I knew this might be what he had in mind. The guys were in the back. Everything was okay.
He turned off onto another path.
“Um, I don’t think this is a road,” I said.
“Sure it is. It comes out at—”
The truck lurched a couple of times … as he surreptitiously tapped the brakes.
“Uh-oh,” he said. “Come on. Please don’t—”
A sudden stop had us all hitting our seat belts.
“What happened?” I said.
He shook his head and cranked the engine, making it whine. He pretended to hit the gas, muttering,
“Come on, come on.” Then he swore when nothing happened.
“Can you fix it?” Sam asked.
“I can try. Got my tools in the back.”
“Great!” we said in unison.
He got out. We did the same. I stood beside Sam and she grinned at me. The man reached for the back door on the truck topper. As I braced for the cry of surprise, I couldn’t help grinning myself. We were about to have transportation. And this time, I wouldn’t feel bad about taking it.
Only there was no cry of surprise. No scrabbling of claws. No shout from Daniel or Corey. The back was empty. The guys hadn’t made it in.
“Run!” I whispered.
I dove into the forest. That was instinct for me—avoid open areas, take refuge in dense woods. I heard Sam’s running feet. But there was no crashing of undergrowth behind me. I looked over my shoulder to see her racing along the open trail.
A shot fired. A rifle shot. Grow up in the forest, and you recognize that sound the way an inner-city kid recognizes pistol fire.
“Stop or I shoot again,” the man said. His voice had changed. Not calm and jocular now.
I looked around frantically.
“I said stop!”
A second shot. A yelp.
Sam dropped out of sight.
Oh God, he’d shot Sam.
TWENTY-FIVE
I FOUGHT THE URGE to run to Sam and instead picked my way through the trees, heading in her direction.
“Don’t worry,” I heard the man say to Sam. “I just winged you. Now you wait right there while I go find that pretty little Indian friend of yours.”
He jogged down the trail, passing Sam where she lay. Good. Keep going. Please keep going.
I crept through the trees until I was alongside Sam. I could still see the man. He stood a few meters away, peering down the empty stretch of trail.
Sam tried to wave for me to get the truck. I shook my head and motioned that he had the keys. Then I mouthed, “Where are you hurt?” She pointed to the side of her leg. I could see it now, blood darkening her calf. A long way from the femoral artery. Good, but she wasn’t racing out of here anytime soon.
“No way your friend got to the road that fast,” he said. “So where is she…?”
He scanned the forest. I stood perfectly still, and his gaze passed over me.
I’d screwed up. Really screwed up. It’d been too complicated a plan. Too easy for something to go wrong. I’d looked at this man—clean-cut and quiet—and at worst I’d seen a garden-variety pervert who’d take us into the woods, maybe try to feel us up and hope we might like it. Not a dangerous predator. Just a middle-age guy with a creepy fantasy.
The gun changed everything. The gun meant I had, yet again, been too confident in my assessment and, this time, wagered lives on it.
The man walked back to Sam, who still crouched on the ground, hand pressed to her wounded leg.
“Where did your friend go?” he asked.
“I don’t know.”
“I asked you once. I won’t ask you”—he kicked her—“again.”
I had to grip the tree to keep from running at him. Heat raged through me, and I thought it was fury until I saw my arms pulsing.
Oh, yes. God, yes, please!
The man pulled his foot back to kick Sam again.
“I didn’t see!” she yelled. “You shot me, remember? She was in front of me and then you fired and I fell, and I’m guessing she didn’t stick around.”
“You’re a little smart-ass, aren’t you?”
“No, I’m just smart enough to know that she’s smart enough to hide after you shot me. And I’d think you’d be smart enough to know that if I had seen where she went, I’d point you in the opposite direction.”
Keep talking, Sam. Please keep talking.
I crouched and closed my eyes and focused. I imagined myself changing into a cougar as I got down on all fours and tried to move my arms and legs into what seemed like the proper position.
I felt the fever ripping through me and saw my skin bubbling, muscles underneath contorting, but no matter what I did, nothing changed. I didn’t change.
“Just go look for her,” Sam was saying.
“You’d like that, wouldn’t you, girl? Give you a chance to get away.”
“Tie me up then. You’ve got rope, don’t you? All you guys have rope.”
“All you guys?” The man kicked her again. I gripped a tree and squeezed my eyes shut and prayed for my body to change. “You think this is something out of a movie? You don’t get it, do you?”
“Oh, I get it. Your mommy was mean to you, so now you hate women. Can’t face ones your own age, so you chase teenage girls.”
The man let out a snarl of rage and kicked Sam so hard she started choking.
“Does that make you feel better?” she sputtered when she got her breath back.
What the hell are you doing? I wanted to shout. Now is not the time to cop an attitude. You’re pissing off a psycho with a gun—
The man grabbed Sam and heaved her up, and it was then that I realized he wasn’t holding the gun anymore. It lay beside him, tossed down in his fury.
I crawled toward the rifle. The man held Sam up and swung her against a tree. He pulled back his fist and hit her in the stomach.
I sprinted for the weapon. He heard me coming and dropped Sam. As he spun, I hit the ground, skidding until I snatched the rifle. Then I rolled out of the way and leaped to my feet.
When I pointed the gun at him, he laughed. “Do you even have a clue how to fire that?”
I lined up the sight on a tree fifty meters away, and I pulled the trigger. Splinters flew from the trunk. The man paled and grabbed for Sam, but she’d already staggered out of reach.
“You won’t shoot me,” he said.
“No?” I aimed at his chest. “Whatever you had in mind for us, I think it deserves a bullet or two.”
“Does it? I think you girls deserve whatever you get. You know better than to get in the car with a stranger. If you do it, then that tells me you want something.”
“The only thing we wanted was help. Now toss me your keys.”
He grumbled and spat insults, but after a moment, he reached into his pocket and pulled them out. Then he pitched them at me, hard and fast, and lunged, hoping to startle me so he could get the gun.
I saw the keys coming. He was already charging, though, and I knew I had to shoot.
Shoot him in the chest. Kill him because that would guarantee our safety. I felt the impulse. Same as I had with Nicole at the tent. Same as I had with Antone.
I fired. The bullet hit him below the shoulder. He fell, his mouth working, eyes wide with shock.
“It might not be fatal,” I said. “Depends on how long it takes you to find your cell phone.”
I emptied the rifle’s magazine. Then I laid down the gun.
“I’d suggest you tell the police it was a hunting accident. Otherwise I’ll have to tell them the truth.”
I helped Sam to the truck. As she got in, she winced, then glowered at the man lying on the ground.
“If I could kick him without falling on my ass, I would,” she said.
“Hopefully, he’s hurting worse than you are. See if you can find a license or registration in the glove box. The cops are going to get an anonymous tip about this guy.”
Sam grinned as I started the truck. “You can be seriously awesome sometimes, Maya.” She paused. “And I mean that in a totally non-girl-crush kind of way.”
“You don’t have to clarify that.”
“Yeah, usually I do.” She exhaled in pain and leaned back. “Let’s get the guys, get me fixed up, and get out of here.”
I might not have my learner’s permit yet, but I could drive. Dad had taught me a couple of years ago so I could take the Jeep back to Mom after dropping him off across the park.
We didn’t get far before we saw three figures running toward us.
Daniel and Kenjii were in the lead. I don’
t know who looked more worried—or more relieved when I pulled over.
“Thank God,” Daniel panted. “We couldn’t get the damned latch open.”
Corey jogged up. “Guy sent Daniel flying when he pulled away. We tried waving and yelling, just to get him to stop, but he didn’t hear us. Luckily, we saw where he turned. Took us awhile to get here, though.”
“I screwed up,” I said. “I’m sorry.”
“You got the truck,” Corey said. “Seems like it worked to me.”
“Yes, please make her stop,” Sam called from the truck. “She’s been apologizing since we got away and it’s really getting on my nerves.”
“Sam was shot,” I said, lowering my voice. “I really screwed—”
“Make her stop!” Sam yelled. “I got shot a little. He got shot worse. We now have a truck. Mission accomplished. It was your plan, Maya, but we all agreed to it. Stopping to whine is only going to get us nabbed by the cops when that bastard calls 911.”
“I wasn’t whining,” I said.
“Close enough.”
Daniel took the driver’s seat. Corey and I got in the back with Kenjii. I directed Daniel to take the next side road, where it would be safer for us to stop so I could get out and take a better look at Sam’s injuries.
The bullet had gone clean through her calf muscle, missing the bone. The bleeding had stopped and I could remove the tourniquet. I cleaned the wound as best I could, then bound it with bandages from the glove box first aid kit. I wanted to find a town and a drugstore, clean and dress it properly, but Sam refused. We were only a couple of hours from Salmon Creek. Plenty of supplies there.
So we went home. God, it felt good to say that. After three days of hell, home was so close it was almost surreal.
Except we couldn’t actually just drive into town, because there was a very good chance the Nasts had Salmon Creek staked out. Or the St. Clouds could also be there. That meant we had to get to someone’s house without cruising down Main Street. So we took the long way in, circling around the north and coming in from the west.
I wanted to go home. To my park. To my parents. Maybe I was being selfish, but I thought they’d be our safest point of contact. The others agreed, but there was no way to drive into the park without going down Main Street. Any other route was a few kilometers’ hike and Sam couldn’t do that. I wasn’t sure any of us could.