During the eternity that blizzard winds had forced them inside, however, some of their hut mates hadn’t kept their eyes to themselves, the same dumb assholes who’d been unable to fashion a marriage of their own. Jealousy fueled nasty rumors despite everything that Cam and Sawyer had done for them—
“You’re hurting me,” Erin said. And smiled.
* * * *
Once upon a time Erin D. Shifflet-Coombs must have been gorgeous. Her eyes were the color of gems, Anglo sapphires, and Cam fantasized often of what her rear and long thighs had looked like in tennis shorts, expensive skirts, soft rumpled sweats. If the two of them had gone to his parents’ home for dinner, his father would have puffed up like a bullfrog and pressed Cam for details all night with hard, manly nudges.
Arturo Najarro had named his sons Charlie — not Carlos— and Tony, Cameron, and Greg. The boys were sixth-generation American and only Mom spoke more Spanish than mas cervasa.
Erin had been a college girl, a junior, majoring in business communications at UC Davis and up with five friends for a little weekday snowboarding. Now she refused to cut her hair, insisting that it helped keep her warm, and her face was permanently lost in a sandy blond tangle. Sleeping beside this mane had probably started Sawyer’s new shaving habit.
There was no question that the changes in Erin’s appearance had contributed to the change in her heart. Her jawline was a ripple of old blisters and her thighs were melted, anorexic. Worse, the smile came at the wrong times.
Over breakfast she actually laughed. “But why?”
Cam had brought her to his favorite cliff, favorite because no one else ever came here; they couldn’t stand the view; the town nestled along the creek far below looked too much like their past, a square-cornered grid of color amidst the panorama of dusky forest, black lava formations, and dull granite. Typically the two of them ate with Sawyer but he had never come to bed last night and was gone when they woke.
She said, “If this guy doesn’t have some kind of antidote— why would he hike over?” The corner of her mouth curled up. “Do you think they threw him out?”
Cam shook his head. “They wouldn’t have used all that wood setting so many fires.”
Four ravens circled less than a mile to the south, riding a thermal. He watched to see if they’d dip into the valley or come toward his peak, though they never had much meat on them. The last catch had been scabby, molting, no doubt lured below 10,000 feet on a regular basis by swarms of insects.
What remained of the ecosystem was badly out of whack, with only lizards, snakes, frogs, and fish left to whittle down the surging insect populations. On his most recent trip below the barrier, Cam had glimpsed what looked like threads of smog farther down the valley. Bugs. So far the high altitude had kept biting species away, except fleas, and until recently their scavenging parties down the mountainside had been protected by winter cold. No more.
There wasn’t any wind today and the morning sun felt strong enough to bare his skin. The sensation was so clean, so erotic, that goose bumps broke out over Cam’s entire chest, which Erin mistook as a reaction to cold. He had to tickle her before she’d even roll back her sleeves. Then she pulled off her shirt without looking to see if anyone else was around, which sent a thin chill through him. The huts offered zero privacy, and she had been having sex with two men for most of a year, but Erin Coombs was never an exhibitionist. In fact, she used to brave the elements she hated so desperately just to avoid peeing in the common pot. The tinkle, she said. Everyone looks.
It upset him that suddenly she seemed uncaring. Too many of them were less than they had been, numbed by experience. Cam felt more attuned to his surroundings and to himself than ever before. He felt raw and aware.
He had grown as pale as a Latino could get, but Erin was pure ivory, except the purplish scars. Cam snuck glances at her body and small breasts as they shared a sticky mush of bone meal, bitter lichen, and gritty specks of the rock from which the orange fungus had been scraped.
When he jammed his bad tooth she kissed him and kissed him, skin on warm skin. It was as good a moment as they’d ever had.
He kept one arm tight around her shoulders as he studied the opposite peak. She watched his face. Finally she gestured across the valley and said, “Take me with you.”
3
The newcomer told them his name was Hollywood and only Price had something to say about that: “Oh yeah, I knew people there!”
Cam thought Hollywood frowned. Tough to say. The young man had been partially eaten alive from the inside, and wet agony drew his expression in too many different directions. Blotches and rash had sprouted over his temple. Adding to the deformation were swelling bug bites, including three disgusting, whitened clusters on his neck and cheek. Cam tried to imagine how many hundreds of insects it took to inflict such damage.
“I’m here to bring you all across,” Hollywood said. The hut stayed silent. He frowned again, gazing up from his bed at their crowded faces. Barely nineteen years old, in good shape, he was Japanese, black-eyed, black-haired — and pure surfer-boy California, drawling his vowels, tipping his chin up to emphasize every pause in his speech.
Cam couldn’t help but think of his brothers, dark-skinned yet no different than the Joneses next door. Here on the Coast, a great nation had truly worked as a melting pot, many cultures blended into one by unprecedented freedom and wealth.
“I mean across the valley,” Hollywood explained. “We’ve got a doctor, some farming stuff. And like, way more space.”
Erin said, “Why?”
“Just lucky.” He had a brave grin.
“I mean, why do you care so much you’d risk your life?”
He had a deliberate shrug, too, though the motion made him wince. He must have pictured this scene over and over in his mind. “We couldn’t just leave you here.”
Sawyer said, “Is there a two-way radio?”
Cam glanced around, surprised. That was a question he’d expected from Price. What did it matter? Colorado wouldn’t send a plane even if there was somewhere to land.
Hollywood nodded. “Yeah. Shortwave.”
“CB or ham?”
“Ham, I think.”
“How many of you are there?” Sawyer continued, too quietly, and Cam decided that the radio questions had been an attempt to disguise his real intent. Cam tried to signal him but Sawyer seemed blind to everything except Hollywood’s expression.
“Nine,” Hollywood said, “including me.”
Less than us.
Sawyer couldn’t leave it alone. “You have food? Houses?”
“There’s a cabin with like an apartment in back and a big propane tank. It got us through winter. And we want to grow as much food as we can, you know, that’s why we need your help. There’s only four other grown-ups.”
Sawyer’s hand twitched, closed shut.
“Actually we’re totally impressed you guys made it, stuck over here on this little peak. You must have raided down below the barrier all the time, huh?”
Too many faces turned away and Hollywood’s gaze shifted over them, worried, wondering.
Cam said, “Yeah, we’re pretty tough.”
Hollywood grinned again. “We couldn’t just leave you here.”
* * * *
After Jorgensen they murdered Loomas — Chad or Chuck or whatever Loomas, sales manager, hairy-chested like a dog with a fat platinum ring on his fat finger. Cam distracted the lazy hijo de puta with a shout as Sawyer rushed up from behind and put a hammer in his skull. Loomas whined, down on all fours. Always whining. Cam hurt his foot and both shins kicking the man until Sawyer pushed him back and finished it.