Luke cleared his throat, watched the exhaust fumes tumble out around his father’s feet.
“Maybe it was that pic-ture,” Pa said, mockingly. “You got a hankerin’ for some wrinkled ’ol cunt, that it?”
“Luke,” Aaron cried out, his voice unsteady. “What you doin’?”
“Fixin’ to run,” Pa answered. “Ain’t that it? He’s ready to turn his back on us. On God.”
Luke’s heart thumped so hard against his ribs he figured they could all hear it, even over the engine. His breath shuddered out of him, as he slowly brought his hand down to the gearshift and jerked it out of neutral, keeping his foot planted firmly on the brake. The vehicle rocked. The engine started to choke, and for one heart-stopping moment, Luke thought it was going to stall. But it coughed once and ran steady.
“You ain’t gettin’ far boy.”
Luke knew he was right. But then, he hadn’t far to go.
“Now why’nt you just cut that engine and step out here where we can talk face to face?”
His father’s eyes refused the light, but Luke leaned forward a little to peer into them for a moment. He had transcended fear now, the adrenaline in his veins burning through him, lapping at his brain, trying to force him over the border of that place he had kept away from all his life—the place where the truth, and his sister, were buried.
He pressed his other foot down on the gas, the other still on the brake. The engine whined, the sound deafening. The smoke from the exhaust rose like fog around the truck. When his father spoke, he did not hear the words, but understood the message on the lips that formed them.
“You ain’t leavin’ here alive.”
The faint trace of a smile faded from Papa’s face as if he too realized what was going to happen, what had to happen if he expected to maintain control of his children. Unlike the doctor, his grip was dead steady, the black hole of the muzzle targeting a point somewhere in the trembling oval of his son’s face.
From the light side of that secret place in his mind, Luke heard his sister whisper to him, and could almost smell her perfume assailing his senses. We was wrong, Luke. What he taught us was always wrong, and we are the sinners.
Swallowing back the tears, “Who said I was leavin’?” Luke said, and took his foot off the brake. The truck lurched forward, closing the distance between him and his father in a heartbeat. Just long enough for a whispered prayer, a plea for forgiveness, for Luke to shut his eyes, the image of Papa-In-Gray’s livid face made chalk-white by the lights branded onto his retinas as he pulled the trigger.
-12-
“You like to sing?” Pete asked, drumming his fingers on the steering wheel to some imaginary tune. “My Pa don’t. Second Ma—I call her that because she weren’t my birth Ma—was a great singer, and even my first Momma weren’t too bad, but Pa can’t carry a tune for nothin’. I ain’t so bad myself, though I always forget the words, so I don’t much like to sing. Prefer to hum. Don’t need the words to hum.” He smiled broadly, and wished he didn’t have to watch the road, but every time he stared into the mirror at the girl lying swaddled in blankets in back, he heard Doctor Wellman’s no-nonsense voice warning him, And don’t you keep leering at that girl like you’re doing now, you hear me? You’re not going to do her much good if you run yourselves right into a semi. So he limited himself to short glances and resisted the urge to pull over for a while, just to sit in the peace and quiet and listen to the girl’s breathing, just so the false breeze of their passage didn’t keep creeping in the window and stealing away the smell of her. But the cranky old doctor had warned him about delaying too, said the girl mightn’t make it if he dawdled, so he kept the truck moving steady through the night, the high beams picking nothing out of the dark but gray ribbon and yellow stitching, and the occasional mashed up bit of roadkill.
He couldn’t believe his luck.
He’d fully expected an earful from his father, especially after the old man had grabbed him and all but flung him into the truck after catching him spying on the girl. Then he’d watched him get drunker and drunker, which was never a good thing, and guessed things were going to get even worse. But to his surprise, his father had told him he was sorry for what he’d done, for the way he’d been to him over the years, and that he wanted to make things right while there was still time. Pete had listened, not entirely sure he wasn’t dreaming it all, but when his old man stood, put his arms around him and gave him a stiff awkward hug, he’d known it was happening for real. A change had come upon his father, as sudden and unexpected as snow in summer. Pete had stayed quiet, afraid if he opened his mouth he’d say something dumb enough to undo whatever had brought about the transformation. Instead he’d just sat by his father, and basked in the kind of attention and affection he’d only ever seen between other kids and their daddies, and had given up expecting for himself. He liked it a whole lot, so much so that, as overjoyed as he was to be entrusted with the girl, he couldn’t wait to get home again.
But for now it was just Pete, the road, and the girl, and he was plenty proud of that.
Go to Doc Wellman’s, his father had told him, a strange look in his eyes. He’ll know what to do. And tell him I’m sorry.
Pete hadn’t really understood what there was to be sorry about. They had, after all, done the sensible thing. But he didn’t want to ruin his father’s newfound kindness toward him, so he’d wordlessly accepted the task and hightailed it over to the doctor’s house. There he’d found Wellman a little nervous, as if he was expecting a tornado to come down and pull away everything he owned. He’d hustled Pete and the girl into the truck, hardly saying anything at all, except to give Pete some stern instructions.
Here’s her address. Listen to me carefully. You give that to the orderlies so they’ll know who to contact. Now get moving, and don’t stop for a goddamn thing, Pete. Not a thing, you hear me? She might die if you do.
At the memory of those words, Pete checked the speedometer and figured it wouldn’t hurt to pick up the pace a bit. Wellman had told him it would take him the better part of an hour to reach the hospital. They’d only been on the road for half that, and the last thing Pete wanted was for the girl to die. They’d say it was his fault, that he hadn’t driven faster, and his father would go back to being angry all the time again.
Pete had his own reasons for wanting the girl to survive. He wanted to hear her voice, to hear her say his name. When they’d loaded her into the truck, she’d been asleep, and still hadn’t woken up. He wished she would, if only just for a few minutes. So he talked to her, keeping his voice low, hoping she might grab onto his words like a drowning man might grab a tossed rope. He wanted her to see who had carried her away from whatever bad things had happened to her in Elkwood. He wanted her to see her rescuer and know his face so she would know who to look for when she was able.
It was not until later, when the road widened and split into four lanes, the sulfuric radiance of the sodium lights jaundicing the horizon, the stars erased from the sky and pulled down to form the glittering lights of the Mason City skyline, that the girl spoke. Slack-jawed by the sheer size of the sparkling canvas overlaid on a horizon he seldom saw uncloaked, Pete at first didn’t realize he was hearing a voice other than his own in the confines of the truck’s cab, but when at last he registered her soft whisper, he jerked in his seat and almost lost control of the vehicle. Forcing himself to be calm, he eased the truck back into the correct lane, held his breath, stomach jittering madly, and raised his gaze to the mirror.