Seconds counting down.
Five-minute drive from the farm to the prison.
Three hundred seconds.
As soon as Matt and Kate arrived, it was the end of days.
Owen would die in the wee hours.
The others wouldn’t last much longer.
Ticktock.
Ticktock.
Shotgun.
Iron sight.
Three moths.
Four flies.
Sweat.
Lunge at him. Just go for it. Jump.
No. He’ll shoot you.
He won’t; he was a policeman.
That was a lifetime ago.
Yellow light.
Moths.
Flies.
Sweat on Rory’s upper lip.
Ticktock.
Ticktock.
Was that a car engine?
It was.
Shit.
She was dead. Kids were dead. Go, Heather. Go. Now.
“I’m going to get up now. I’m going to get my bagful of water bottles and I’m going to walk out the front door and I’m going to go, OK?”
“Don’t you bloody move!”
Keeping her hands above her head, she slowly got to her feet. She swayed there for a moment.
“Don’t do it!”
She walked across the living room and picked up the bag of water bottles. She walked to the front door and fumbled with the lock.
“Don’t! I’ll shoot.”
She opened the door and pushed on the screen door.
“Come back here!”
The hairs were standing up on the back of her neck.
Her legs were rubber.
The screen door opened.
“This is your last warning!”
She stepped into the night. Onto the veranda.
Just a few…
Fire. Light. Noise.
Something struck her arm and shoulder.
Pain. Heat. A hot scarlet flame.
She fell to the ground, dropped the bag, got up, and ran as hard as she could into the darkness.
There was another shotgun blast, this one nowhere near her.
She ran and ran over the dry grass and red dirt.
At a hundred and fifty yards, she turned and looked back.
A Jeep arrived. Matt, Kate, Ivan, and Jacko got out.
Rory was reloading the shotgun, pointing into the darkness. Pointing in the wrong direction.
It was then she realized that he had deliberately missed.
There was heated conversation before Jacko walked off the veranda. “Yeah, run, you bloody mingy bitch! See how far you get! I’m enjoying this!” he yelled.
Kate aimed her shotgun into the darkness and fired both barrels.
Heather ducked down and, trembling, watched the white-hot buckshot rip the air.
“When I catch you, I am going to skin you alive like one of me foxes!” Kate screamed.
Heather crouched in the darkness trying to ignore the burning sensation in her shoulder and upper arm. It was like trying to ignore a hot iron rod being pressed into your flesh.
The O’Neills were talking to Rory. Heather crawled a little closer so she could hear.
“Yeah, mate, she’s crafty, all right, sleekit wee skitter, so she is. And fast—she just ran out of here like a mad thing. I shot at her twice,” Rory said, his voice carrying in the still night air.
“Did you hit her?” Matt asked.
“I’m not sure.”
Matt climbed down off the porch and looked at the ground for a minute or two. He dipped his fingers into the soil and examined them. He stared into the dark and rubbed his chin.
“I think you did hit her, mate. With a couple of pellets, at least,” Matt said.
“Good on you, Rory!” Jacko said.
“Yeah, she’s fast as Shergar, the, uh, Derby winner, but I gave her a good go,” Rory said.
“She won’t stand a chance tomorrow,” Jacko said.
“With the dogs?” Rory asked.
“Yeah, Davey Schooner’s dogs. Trains ’em for the cops. Kelpie-hound crosses. They’ll find them all in a couple of hours. They don’t smell like anything else on this island,” Jacko said.
“Bloody bitch. I knew she was bad news,” Kate muttered.
“Nah, no worries, Kate. Bit of fun and games. She’ll be right in the end,” Ivan said.
“Well, we should go. Lock your windows and doors, Rory. Board up that top window. I doubt she’ll be back, but you never know. I’ll tell Ma you did OK. She’ll be proud of you, mate,” Matt said.
“Thanks, Matt.”
“If you see so much as a bloody shadow, shoot first, ask questions later,” Kate said.
“I will do. She’ll not get the drop on me twice.”
Kate, Ivan, Matt, and Jacko got back in the Jeep.
Rory waved to them and then sat down on the rocking chair on the veranda. The shotgun was across his lap.
He sat there rocking himself back and forth until the taillights of the Jeep were long gone.
When it was quiet, he stood.
“I know you’re out there,” he said.
Heather flattened herself in the dirt.
“I’m going to leave this bag of water bottles here. I’m going to bring it in in the morning. So if you want it, you’re going to have to take it tonight. Do you hear me?”
Heather said nothing.
“Smart. Keep being smart. If you ever come back here again, you’re a dead woman. I will blow your bloody brains all over the place. This is your one Get Out of Jail Free card. Everybody is entitled to one and this is yours. Just one, mind. I will shoot you. I can’t afford to miss again. Not with them lot. Not with Ma.” Rory put the shotgun over his shoulder, opened the front door, and went inside.
A few moments later the house lights went off.
Heather waited.
And waited.
Then she began crawling, fast, through the long grass. The red soil was dry and rough, and she had to be careful not to kick up too much dust.
She crawled as carefully and as quickly as she could, circling the house. Checking the windows, checking the lights. In ten minutes, she was facing the front porch again. The grass was lower and the cover was sparser.
With scraped knees and hands, with her left shoulder hurting and bleeding and her left arm on fire, she inched her way back to the house.
The bag was sitting there with all that precious water.
Dust trail ghosting her.
Twenty-five feet between her and the porch.
He could be waiting at some darkened window with a rifle. There was no guarantee he was not.
“Hell with it,” she said. She got up, ran to the porch, grabbed the bag, and sprinted back into the wee hours.
24
Heather walked through the night with the bottles. She walked under the stars and moon in the same filthy skin of fear, but at least now she walked with hope. Northwest toward the shore. She heard the sea. It was so unfair for Tom and the kids. After the year they’d had. But if she could keep it together and make it back, the children at least might have a— Oh my God, what now?
Something to her left.
A biped. Walking. Loping through the grass.
Tall and dark in the spilled moonlight, a white snout sniffing the air, like a bear that smells you before it sees you in your yard.
Heather fell to her knees. It must have seen her. How could it not?
It was close.
Forty yards to her—
And then, to her right, she saw that there were two of them.
That same white skull. Hollows for eyes.
Even without making any noise, she was giving everything away.
Her arm throbbed. Her shoulder hurt. Blood rolled down her fingers into the parched grass. She was trembling all over. It was as if a spotlight were on her.