“They deliberately covered their tracks. Which suggests a reasonable degree of intelligence. Are you sure it was hostiles?”
“Yeah.” He goes quiet for a moment. “I saw one of the captives. The woman. It was a year later. She … she’d become one of them. A hostile. She still wore some of the clothing she took, but it wasn’t more than rags. Her hair had been hacked off. One of her ears had blackened from frostbite. A couple of her fingers, too. It was … hard to take. I knew her. She’d been a biologist down south, and we used to talk about that. Just talk. She was nice. Smart and kind and nice. And when I met her in the forest? She attacked me. Hitting, biting, clawing. I thought I was going to have to shoot her. Later, I wondered if maybe I should have, if that wouldn’t have been—” He squeezes his eyes shut. “Fuck, I don’t mean that. I don’t. That’s not my decision to make. But seeing her like that, it was hard. What she’d been. What she’d become.”
I entwine my fingers with his, move against him, and stay close, listening to him breathe.
“How did she get that way?” I ask gently.
He looks at me.
“This is the question I’m trying to work out,” I say. “How do hostiles become hostile? Was she tormented and abused until she just lost her mind? Can that happen in a year? Someone like Nicole pulls through—mentally intact—and someone else doesn’t? And if so, then what about the others? The ones who captured her? How did they get that way?”
I tell him about my talk with Mathias. When I finish, he’s quiet. Then he says, “I never thought of it. Hostiles just … they are, you know. For me, there have always been hostiles in the woods. My parents—my birth parents—warned me about them from the time I was able to wander. Asking how they got that way would have been like asking why bears or cougars would attack if I got too close.”
“Just another kind of animal.”
“Yeah. Which they aren’t, and they weren’t born that way, so…” He turns onto his back. “I’m going to need to think about this.”
*
It’s the middle of the night when we wake to Kenny banging on Dalton’s door. Sutherland is conscious. Kenny takes the puppy to Petra’s while Dalton and I yank on clothes and hurry out.
Sutherland is still groggy and feverish. Interviewing him in that state feels almost as cruel as interviewing Nicole, but it must be done. We manage to keep him awake long enough to get a semicoherent account.
After he ran from Rockton—“I can’t believe I was that stupid”—he’d heard us coming after him on the sleds and veered into the forest—“I wanted to get back to town on my own, figured I’d get in less trouble.” He’d been making his way in the direction of Rockton when someone hit him in the back of the head—“I never heard a thing. Just felt it and then everything went black.”
Sutherland woke in a makeshift shelter that offered no more than basic protection from the elements. He drifted in and out of consciousness—“I don’t know how long. It was so cold, and my head hurt, and all I wanted to do was sleep.” Finally, he woke to realize he was bound and gagged.
His captor watched him. Like with Nicole. Only in Sutherland’s case, that’s all he did. He watched and then he left, saying nothing, not feeding his captive or giving him anything to drink.
Sutherland found a slab of broken wood on that makeshift shelter and used the sharp edge to slowly hack through the rope on his wrist, which explained the splinters. He escaped and oriented himself by the mountains. Eventually, he stumbled onto one of the paths, followed it, and began to recognize landmarks. That’s when his captor found him again. Sutherland fled into the woods, hoping to lose him. He ran until he passed out, not realizing how close he was to town.
I ask if he knows where he was kept, if he could get me back to the spot. It might provide some clues. But while he says he’ll try, his tone tells me he has no idea where to go. He’d escaped and run blindly through the woods.
“The guy who captured you,” Dalton says. “Can you describe him?”
Sutherland nods. “A little taller than me. Dark hair. Dark beard. I—I’m not sure of his eyes. Dark, I think. He’d wear one of those hats that goes right over your head, with the eye and mouth openings.”
“A balaclava,” I say.
“Right. One time, when he thought I was sleeping, he raised it to drink, and I saw a beard. Oh, and he wore winter coveralls. What’s the word? The things you guys wear on the sleds?”
“A snowmobile suit?” I ask.
“Yes. He wore a snowmobile suit.”