“What are you doing?” Olivia asked.
“I’m going to climb this tree as high as I can and I’m going to try really hard this time to get help on the radio.”
“This tree?” Owen asked.
“Yeah.”
“I’m not sure that’s how radios work. I just covered that in my science homework. You don’t need to climb a tree. I think radio signals bounce off the atmosphere,” Owen said. “Did you do physics, Heather?”
On Goose Island, Heather had done physics with her mom for a few days in the trailer-park classroom whose big windows looked across Puget Sound to the snowcapped mountains of Olympic National Park. She’d taken in nothing. Her mind had been over there walking through the snow, through the rain, learning the tracks of cougar, black bear, elk, and black-tailed deer.
She’d never learned about radio waves or how radios worked. In fact, she had failed the science section of the GED exam. A classmate at South Seattle Community College had called her “simple” once. She knew she wasn’t simple. She did well in stuff she liked. She’d gotten all the biology and botany questions right. Even here, ten thousand miles from home in a landscape utterly unlike her own, she could identify lyrebirds and bowerbirds. A short-tailed shearwater was flying over the hill to her left, the same type of shearwater she had seen many times on the Sound.
The little shearwater gave her comfort.
“I’m going to climb it anyway. It won’t hurt to try this again,” she said.
“I think it’s a good idea,” Olivia agreed.
Heather looked at her. Olivia returned her gaze. Olivia’s mouth creaked up into an encouraging smile. Their relationship had changed between sundown yesterday and sundown today.
Heather climbed halfway up the big eucalyptus tree and turned on the walkie-talkie. “This is an SOS. This is an SOS. My name is Heather Baxter, I’m on Dutch Island in Victoria, Australia, and I need help as quickly as possible!” she said into the device.
She listened for a reply but all she got back was static.
“What did they say, Heather?” Owen yelled.
“Nothing yet.”
Wind was blowing through the leaves. Black bark crumbled under her toes. It was good to be in a tree in this little wood. Trees were older brothers; trees turned sunlight into food; trees were gateways to other places.
She pressed the Talk button again. “If you can hear this, please contact the police. My name is Heather Baxter, I am on Dutch Island in Victoria, Australia. My husband, Tom, has been murdered here by members of the O’Neill family. I have escaped from them and am hiding out on the island with two children, Owen Baxter and Olivia Baxter. We are in great danger. Please send help.”
She repeated this message several more times and listened for a response but there was nothing but white noise.
She tried all nine channels.
The battery life on the walkie-talkie showed only two bars out of four. She’d better conserve it. “Kids, do either of you know what the emergency channel is on a radio?”
“In America, channel nine is what truckers use for emergencies,” Owen said.
She turned back to channel 9. “My name is Heather Baxter, I’m on Dutch Island. I need help. I need someone to call the police and help me. Please. My life is in danger. Please. My name is Heather Baxter, I’m an American on Dutch Island near the city of Melbourne.”
A voice crackled through the static. “Heather, is that you?”
She grabbed hold of the tree trunk to stop herself from falling. “Matt?”
“It’s Matt…that you, Heather?”
She didn’t know whether to answer now or not.
“Heather…still there?”
She let the static be her reply.
“Heather…must have found one of our walkie…don’t know if you can hear me…only a half-watt rechargeable from Bunnings…range is on the back,” Matt said, his voice fragmentary in the blizzard of static.
“So?” she said.
“…bad news for you is that a half-watt radio transmitter only…range of a kilometer at most in the…no one coming to help you.”
“I’ll try anyway,” she said.
“…need to talk…serious conversation about Tom,” Matt said before his voice disappeared into the static.
She pressed Talk. “What about Tom?” she asked. Static. “Matt?” Static. “Matt?”
No answer.
She listened and listened but it was only hiss now on every channel.
The battery light began to waver, so she turned off the walkie-talkie and climbed down out of the tree. They must realize now that she had killed Jacko. How else could she have gotten his walkie-talkie and why hadn’t he shown up at the farm?
“I’ve broadcast our message and hopefully someone heard it,” she told the kids.
“I’m not feeling so good,” Owen said.
They were both starving. The kids had water but they hadn’t eaten anything for nearly three days. Food. She had to get them food. She looked west. Black clouds were heading in their direction.
She handed Owen the pamphlet she’d taken from the prison, which had been squashed in her back pocket. “This can help with our kindling. Let’s get leaves and wood to rebuild the fire,” she said. “I think a storm’s coming.”
33
The rain was hammering on the corrugated-iron roof so hard, it woke her. Carolyn shivered. She had fallen asleep in the recliner under the blanket. The big-screen TV was frozen in front of her. She forgot what episode she’d been watching. Janeway was taking the mood of the senior officers of the Voyager about some problem they had encountered. Heather would probably know which episode it was just from the pause screen. Her knowledge of Trek lore was encyclopedic.
Carolyn wondered if Heather’s new husband knew about that side of her. The geeky, fun, sci-fi side. Heather had not responded to Carolyn’s previous text about Voyager. Maybe she was trying to downplay that part of herself and become the perfect doctor’s wife. Perhaps all the Goose Island bits of her would start drifting away until the old Heather was gone forever.
Carolyn fumbled on the carpet until she found her coffee and vape pen. She pushed the button and the light blinked, and she sucked organic marijuana oil grown right here by her own fair hands on Goose Island. She sold it to medical-marijuana dispensaries for two hundred dollars an ounce. It had a very high THC content. She coughed for a few seconds and then sipped the cold coffee.
She noticed that there was a new voice message on her iPhone.
She played it.
“Hi, this is a message for Carolyn Moore,” an Australian woman said. “Carolyn, this is Jenny Brook, I’m one of the ICOM reps here in Melbourne. One of our speakers is Dr. Thomas Baxter. He’s got his wife down as his emergency contact and she’s got you down as her emergency contact. The Baxters aren’t answering their phones and I wondered if they’d gone to country Victoria or somewhere where there’s no Wi-Fi. We’ve got a couple of things we need Dr. Baxter to do and we’d like him to give us a call. Thank you.”
No doubt they were still at that fancy winery.