The Island

“We’ll break our legs,” Owen said.

“It’s sand. From the top of the jungle gym on Alki Beach to the sand, that’s about ten feet, isn’t it?” Olivia said.

“It’s not that high. And even if it were, this is twice that! And there might be rocks here we don’t know about,” Owen said.

Heather lay down flat on the ground and looked over the edge at the cliff’s face. Owen was right—it was nearly vertical, and the rock looked powdery, treacherous. She examined the sand down there on the beach. There didn’t seem to be any rocks. “Shh,” Heather said.

From deep in the sky’s silence, there was something coming. Something ringing that alarm bell in the fight-or-flight mechanism of her animal brain.

A vibration, like the twang of a longbow string, like the hum of an arrow.

She stood and listened.

“What—” Olivia began but stopped when Heather raised a finger.

Yes.

Over the barking dogs.

Over the sea.

The hunter was always finding new ways to hunt.

The prey needed to adapt quickly to survive.

What was that? What—

“Hit the deck, guys! Get cover. It’s a drone.”

They rolled into the spinifex just as the drone flew parallel to the shore, its tiny helicopter blades buzzing, its fish-eye-lens camera scanning 360 degrees around it.

It looked for them. Like a hawk looking, a hawk that knows only boredom and hostility and implacability in its tiny light-filled brain.

The drone flew lazily along the coast and looped back over the heath.

It hovered and buzzed and mocked.

Heather held her breath.

The drone did a figure eight in the sky over their position.

Had they been seen?

Perhaps.

Perhaps not.

It hung in the sky and then tilted its body toward the sun and headed east.

“Did they see us?” Olivia asked.

“I don’t know.”

Bloodhounds and a drone and an entire extended family after them on a small island—Petra’s sacrifice would buy them at most only a few hours, Heather thought wretchedly.

“We can’t go back. We’ve got to get down here,” Heather said. “There are two ways to do this. One, I lower you as far as I can and then drop you the rest of the way into the sand. Two, I jump down there first and try to catch you guys when you jump.”

“If you lower us, you won’t drop us until we say OK, right?” Olivia asked.

“I’ll hold you until you tell me to let go.”

“Then I vote for the first way,” Olivia said.

“Owen?” Heather asked.

“I guess.”

“Good. Remember to land like a paratrooper—bend your knees and roll to the side. Olivia, you first?”

Olivia walked to the cliff edge, turned around, lay on the ground, and carefully dangled her legs over. Heather held on to her arms and gradually lowered her down. Heather’s arms and Olivia’s body length took about six feet out of the drop, but it still looked like a long, long way for a child to fall.

Her mind reeled for a second or two. How the hell had it come to this? That this was the least bad choice—forcing a little girl off the edge of a goddamn cliff.

Olivia was a skinny thing but Heather’s arms were aching already. “Are you ready to drop?” she asked.

“Yes!”

Heather opened her hands and Olivia slipped and fell into the sand with a disconcerting clump.

She bent her legs but sort of splatted instead of rolling.

She lay there and didn’t speak.

“Olivia? Olivia!” Oh my God.

“Are you OK?” Owen asked.

Olivia got up and waved. “It’s OK. Come on…no! Wait! Go back! There’s someone coming. Hide! Go back!”





29



Heather didn’t know what to do. She froze on the edge of the cliff until Owen grabbed her hand.

“She said to hide!”

They dived into the long grass.

The drone appeared again in the southern sky.

The sound of dogs was getting closer.

She heard what sounded like a muffled scream.

Oh my God.

The drone zoomed out to sea and headed south.

What was happening?

She crawled to the edge of the cliff again. No sign of Olivia or anyone else.

“We have to get down there, Owen. I’m going to lower you and I’ll be right after.”

Owen shook his head. “No, Heather! You don’t know what you’re doing! You have no plan. You never did! All you’re doing is running. I’m going back the other way. Maybe in that ordnance place I can find a grenade or something and fight those people!”

“You can’t do that, Owen.”

“Watch me. I’ve had it with you ignoring all my ideas. I’m leaving! I’ll get a weapon and I’ll get Olivia and we’ll get out of here by ourselves.”

“No, please don’t,” she said, trying to grab his arm.

He snatched his hand away from her and began heading south, back the way they’d come. “You’re weak and you have no plan. You don’t…you…I can do better on my own. You’re shit! I’ll find a grenade or dynamite, and I’ll take them all on instead of us taking it.”

She watched him go, muttering to himself.

It would, of course, be easier with just her and Olivia.

Easier to hide, easier to run.

Owen had always been the more difficult of the two children. There was something unspoken between him and his dad, some unresolved anger. She was often the target of Owen’s rage and frequently got caught in the cross fire between him and Tom. She had tried to make things better but clearly had only made things worse. Part of this was her fault. She had underestimated how much the kids would dislike her. She had thought she would win them over. But it didn’t work like that. Not at the ages they were. Carolyn had warned her. Carolyn had an older sister and cousins. They are going to hate you, Carolyn had said. It was too soon after their mom…

She should have said no to Tom. But the big new house, the car, Tom’s reassurances…

And really, if you looked at it, she had done her best by all of them. She had tried her damnedest.

Without either of the kids, she would have a much better chance of survival. Perhaps she could swim over to the mainland by herself or negotiate a way out.

The distance lengthened between her and the boy.

She closed her eyes.

He would be dead by nightfall.

Oh, yes, if she were alone, her chances would increase exponentially.

She imagined it for one beat, two, three, four, five, six, seven…

She sighed, opened her eyes, and sprinted after him.

She skidded to a halt in front of him and said, “I was wrong, Owen. Wrong about the seawater distilling. I should have listened to you. We need you. Me and Olivia. Stay with us, please, OK?”

He was crying. He’d been terrified she was going to let him go. He wiped his cheeks. Sniffed.

“Will you stay with us, Owen? Will you help us?”

“OK. I guess I can’t leave my sister.”

“Thank you,” she said and put her arm around him and they went back to the edge of the cliff. Heather lowered him slowly, her left shoulder aching. Owen was heavier than his sister. The shoulder with the shotgun wound began oozing blood.

She tried to release him but Owen did not want her to let go.