“She’s not asking because she’s hungry,” Dalton says.
“Right. Sorry. I didn’t take any of the chocolate peanut butter.”
“What about old stock?”
“Old stock?”
“There was a box of chocolate peanut butter that went missing a while ago. Do you know anything about that?”
Dalton’s gaze cuts my way, but he says nothing. I’m bullshitting about the missing box. The truth is that we don’t monitor the bars that tightly, figuring if the militia want to sneak a few extras, that’s a perk for their help.
When I say that, though, Kenny looks uncomfortable.
“Kenny . . .” I prod.
“Someone took a bunch of old stock,” he says. “I don’t know what flavors. I just know that when I did inventory a while back, we had out-of-date bars and I put them aside to ask Will what to do with them, and they went missing. I decided not to say anything. They were old stock.”
“You have no idea who took them?”
That uncomfortable look again. “I . . . No. I don’t.”
He’s lying. I don’t know why, but I need this answer. I study Kenny—the set of his jaw, the look in his eye—and I see it’s not time to press the matter.
“Eric?” I lift Kenny’s boot, and he nods.
When I pass Storm’s lead to Jacob, Dalton’s ready to argue, but I say, “I’ll be quick,” and I get a reluctant nod.
I take off at a jog back to the footprints. They’re just around the corner, and when I reach them, I look back to see Dalton. He’s moved about ten steps from Kenny, his gun still on the suspect but staying within sight range of me.
I crouch with the boot in hand. First, I confirm, beyond a doubt, that the tread is correct. Eyeballing it, I’d also say the size is, but when I lower the boot below the prints, I see that the ones in the soft earth appear to be a size smaller.
I prod the edge of the print. While the ground is damp, it doesn’t seem wet enough for the print to have contracted a size. That’s possible, though. Soft ground shifts. If the boot is the right type and almost the right size . . .
Wait.
It’s not the same boot. Closer examination shows that the wear pattern doesn’t match. Kenny’s are worn, with an uneven tread, maybe the result of unsupportive boots and high arches. The prints look like new boots, the tread very distinct.
I check the tag inside Kenny’s. Then I look at the prints again.
New boots. Rockton-issue. Size-seven men’s. Small for a man’s shoe.
Not small for a woman’s. Not unreasonably large either. That works out to maybe a nine. While we have women’s boot sizes, many choose to wear the guys’, finding them sturdier.
I work through Jacob’s description of the person he spotted with Brady. Clean-shaven. Shorter than Brady. A bulky jacket, which would hide breasts.
There is a person with Brady. This person showed up at some point between day one and last night. This person is from Rockton, as evidenced by the clothing and the bars.
Someone has betrayed us. That person does not seem to be Kenny.
One name keeps coming to mind.
My other suspect for the poisoning, for Brady’s accomplice.
Jen.
I’m working through how much of it fits when Dalton calls, “Casey?”
I’ve been bent over and out of his sight too long, and it’s a testament to his self-control that he didn’t shout “Butler!” the second I disappeared.
I rise and see him farther down the path, anxiously straining to spot me, resisting the urge to run and check. When I wave, I swear I hear him exhale from thirty feet away.
I glance down at the prints one last time, but they aren’t telling me anything new. I’m turning from them when I see a flicker in the bush. I drop Kenny’s boot and raise my gun.
Dalton gives an alarmed “Casey?” and his boots thump as he runs toward me. In the bushes, I can see a form big enough to be dangerous, and I back against a tree, my gun raised.
A woman steps out. She’s filthy with snarled hair and ragged clothes, and I think of Nicole. A woman, lost in these woods or taken captive, escaping and hearing voices and making her way toward us.
Then I see the knife. A rusted one with a broken blade and a makeshift handle. When I see that, I realize I’m looking at a hostile.
I have not seen one since I arrived in Rockton. I have heard some stories from Dalton and read others in the archives, but I am still not prepared. This woman could have just crawled from a pit after a decade of captivity. Matted hair. Dirt-crusted skin and clothing. When she draws back her lips, I see chipped and yellowed teeth. But she has not crawled from a pit. She has not been held captive. She has chosen to do this to herself.
And yet . . .
And yet I am not certain she has chosen. Deep in my brain, tucked away into the morass of “things I will pursue later,” I have a theory. A wild theory that I used to joke sounded like I’d been spending too much time with Brent. I will never make that joke again, but the truth of it remains—that I have a theory about the hostiles that I am ashamed to admit to anyone but Dalton because it smacks of paranoia.
A theory for which I have zero proof, and that only makes it worse, makes me fear it is truly madness arising from hate and prejudice, a place no detective can afford to draw from.
My theory is that the hostiles are not Rockton residents who left and “went native” in the most extreme way. That such a thing is not possible, not on such a scale, because that is not what happens to humans when they voluntarily leave civilization. Jacob is not like this. The residents of the First Settlement are not like this. To become this, I believe you need additional circumstances. Mental illness. Drug addiction. Medical interference.
My theory is that the council is responsible for what I see here. I don’t know why they’d do that. I have hypotheses, but I won’t let them do more than flit through my brain or I may begin to believe I truly am losing my mind in this wild place.
I see this woman. I see what she has done to herself. And it’s not just dirt and lack of care. Those only disguise what Dalton’s stories have told me to look for. The dirt isn’t from lack of bathing. It has been plastered on like war paint. Under it, I see ritualized scar patterns. And the teeth that appear chipped have actually been filed.
I see a woman who should not exist outside of some futuristic novel, a world decimated by war, ravaged by loss, people “reverting” to primitive forms in a desperate attempt to survive, to frighten their enemies.
Which would make perfect sense . . . if people up here had enemies. If there was not enough open land and fresh water and wild game that the only force we need fight is the fickle and all-powerful god of this world: Mother Nature.
I stare at this woman . . . and she stares back.
I point my gun; she brandishes her knife.
Dalton is running toward us. Running and paying no attention to anything except me and this woman. Movement flashes in the trees, the bushes rippling.
“Eric!” I shout. “Stop!”
He sees something at the last second. He spins, gun rising, but his back is unprotected and there is another movement behind him. Then something white flying toward him. I yell “Eric!” and he dodges, and what looks like a sliver of white flies past his head.
It’s a dart. A bone dart.
He’s turning, and then there’s a figure, in flight, leaping from a tree.
Dalton lashes out with his gun. A thwack, and the man goes down, howling. Another figure lunges from the forest. Jacob races around the bend, and Storm barrels past. And I fire. I lift my gun over my head and fire.
52
When I fire overhead, everyone stops. Even Storm.
The man who was charging at Dalton sees the dog, and he raises something in his hand, and Jacob drops on Storm, covering her.
“Stop!” I say.
I don’t know if it will do any good. I believe they are capable of understanding the word; I do not believe they are capable of caring about it. I’m not even sure the guns matter, if the shot didn’t just startle them.