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I wouldn’t be surprised if one day we wake up to find her lifeless body hanging from a rafter in the barn, with a handwritten note that says “I came, I came again, and now I’m bored”. People like Kayla don’t usually live that long.

Today is Saturday, December 15th.

The Porters weren’t happy with our plan to bring along one of the Tremblays, but they relented when I made it clear that it wasn’t a suggestion.

They chose Alain, which didn’t surprise me, since I’m sure he’s less trouble than Marc.

The Porters left with their new helper early yesterday morning, while the sky was still dark. I saw them off before going back upstairs to sneak in a few more minutes of sleep.

Sara woke me up just after sunrise, and after a quick breakfast Graham and I hitched up the cart for the trip into town. We didn’t have a truck of our own anymore, and while we may decide to look for a new one, I didn’t want to do that just yet. We don’t really have enough fuel to run our own truck right now, anyway.

Marc arrived just as we were about to go looking for him.

“So I’m your new pet,” Marc said as he climbed onto the cart, a hunting rifle slung over his shoulder. “What happened to all the work I’m supposed to be doing around here?”

“This is more important,” I said. “We want to find and bring over an electric tractor before the roads get any worse. We may end up trying to tow it somehow.”

“You should have done it before winter, then.”

“We were too busy saving your life,” Graham said. “Maybe you should keep that in mind.”

“Maybe you should watch what you say, motormouth.”

“Maybe all of us should just shut up for a while,” I said. “The best way to find ourselves in some real bad shit is to get so wrapped up in bitch-slapping each other that we’re not keeping an eye out for trouble. As much as I hate the both of you, I hate the idea of dying with you idiots that much more.”

That got them quiet, either because they were both thinking of how much of an asshole I am or because they’d realized once again that we’re on the same goddamn team. If things go bad, and I know one day they will, we’ll only have each other for backup. That’s a pretty important thing to remember. People who forget that are the ones who don’t make it back home.

The busy season for dead bodies is in the winter, and we were getting close enough to winter to make me nervous. The body count isn’t just from people freezing to death in minus forty, but from bad guys who start getting a whole lot more active once the leaves fall and the snow starts to fly. Back in Toronto crime season was summer, and if there was ever a time when you’d lock your doors and be a little more careful where you went after dark, it was June ’til September. Around here those are the safer months.

Justin Porter told me once that marauders are a little like Vikings. He said that they’ll come to your home and kill you anyway they can, and they’ll gladly take your women if they get the chance, but that during the summers they act just like everyone else, growing vegetable gardens and mending fences. He said that you could work alongside a man for a whole summer and never suspect he’s a marauder until winter comes and he slits your throat while you sleep.

This may sound strange coming from me, but I think Justin may have a problem trusting people.

Graham drove while Marc and I kept our eyes open for movement; I was on the bench beside Graham while Marc kept to himself near the back of the cart. He’d brought a travel mug along, and I’d noticed him nipping more than a few times already; I knew enough about Marc Tremblay to know that he had more than coffee in there.

The Porters had left the gate on Nelson Road wide open, and not for the first time. I hopped down and closed it behind us and made a mental note to kick their asses.

When we arrived at the bridge over the Abitibi, Marc hopped down to unlock the West Gate. He held up his hands like they were a catcher’s glove and gave me his trademark smirk.

“I need the keys and dongle, boss,” he said. “If that’s okay with you.”

I threw the key ring down to him.

“And you’re a real pleasure to have along with us, Mr. Tremblay,” I said.

He shot me the finger before tackling the locks.

It pisses me off how some people are about the damned keys. Everyone wants their own copy, but everyone has a chance of losing them. So I keep all of the keys and alarm dongles, and parcel them out as needed, kind of like how a car dealership handles test drives; if one goes missing, I’ll know before the day is out, and I’ll head over to the gate and change out whichever locks are compromised. Just like the safes, it’s a pretty low tech solution, but like always those are the ones that work. Between the locks and the tripwire alarm we’ve controlled the bridge for well over a year; aside from the sanctioned trade runs between the Walkers and Detour Lake, no one from outside our team has crossed through that gate since Ant put it up.

Marc unlocked the gate and waited with a couple shots from his mug as Graham drove the cart through. He reattached all three locks and reactivated the alarm, then slowly climbed back up.

“Do you really think this will stop anyone?” Marc said as we got underway again. “I mean there’s a dozen other ways to get across the river, especially once it’s frozen.”

“We can’t stop people from crossing the river,” I said, “but we can stop people from carrying much of anything across with them.”

“I’m sure they can carry over enough firepower to finish us off.”

“That’s not why we put the gates up.”

“Then what the hell are all these goddamn gates for?”

“If a bunch of marauders want to come over and try to kill us while we sleep, a gate isn’t going to stop them. But it does stop a bunch of assholes from backing their truck up to our cottages and cleaning everything out while we’re not home.”

Marc just laughed at that.

We kept riding for a few more minutes in silence, but I knew that he hadn’t really dropped it.

We passed by a stretch of scorched forest next to a small muddy pond; I remember the family that lived in the metal-roofed and fire-ravaged farmhouse beside it. They’d had four kids, two of them the funniest twin girls, about ten or eleven, who’d interrupt the town meetings and make a roomful of people laugh as they did it. That family had believed Fisher Livingston, when he said that there was a safe road that ran around the barricade, the one that Souls of Flesh had set up at Fletchers Lake to pick out indentures and kill the remainder, that if they followed him they could make it all the way to Temiskaming, where good people were waiting with open arms and more food and fuel than they knew what to do with. They were on that so-called safe road when the fires came.

They’d have been better off surrendering at the roadblock. I’m sure the father and his sons would have gotten dropped in the pit, but maybe the two girls and their mother could have survived.

I think of those twin girls every time we pass by that burnt-out house, and I think of those girls every time I see that smug bastard’s face. It still makes no sense to me that he could have survived when everyone who believed in him is dead.

I heard Marc give us a snort.

“So listen,” he said. “You’re telling me that we have no real protection against people trying to kill us?”