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After a while, Gaby said, “Do you remember Peter Brolin?”

Josh had to think about it. “Peter Brolin? He went to our school, right?”

“Yeah. He graduated when we were juniors.”

“Big guy? With a big nasty mole under his chin?”

Gaby giggled. He thought that was the sweetest sound he had ever heard, and it made him happy for some reason. “Yeah, him,” she said.

He frowned. His memories of Peter Brolin, a.k.a. Mole Man, were not filled with happy moments. In fact, they were downright torturous, and the only reason it took him a while to recall the kid was because Josh had purposefully scrubbed the guy’s existence from his mind.

“What about him?” he asked, almost afraid of the answer.

“He was the one who came to my house that night,” Gaby said softly. “When everything first happened. He attacked my dad. He had changed a lot already, but I still recognized him. I don’t know if he came there on his own, or…for some other reason.”

“You think he came to your home on purpose?”

“I don’t know. Maybe. He liked me,” she said, and he could see she was reliving that night all over again.

So we share that now, too. Our mutual nightmares about Peter “Mole Man” Brolin. Fuck you, Mole Man.

“Anyways,” she said, and that was it.

It was quiet again, except for the sounds of crunching. Josh was already on his second bag. Even stale, the noodles tasted damn good. Or maybe he was just really hungry. It was in those long moments of silence that Josh finally remembered the radio. Betts’s radio, that he had grabbed before they left the semitrailer yesterday. He got up and went over to the backpack, opened it, and took out the radio.

“What’s that?” Gaby asked.

“Betts’s radio.”

“Why did you bring it? There’s no one out there but them.”

“Exactly,” he said, and sat back down and turned on the radio. He made sure not to touch the frequency dial or do anything but turn on the power.

They listened, but the only sounds they heard were static.

“Are we supposed to hear something?” Gaby asked.

Josh shrugged. “I was hoping to hear them talking over the radio.”

“They might not know you took it,” Sandra said from across the room.

Josh nodded. “Hopefully.”

“And if they do?” Gaby asked.

“Then they’ll probably try to trick us,” Josh said. “Lure us into an ambush or something. I don’t know. I just thought it might come in handy.”

Gaby gave him an approving look. “It’s quick thinking.”

“Thanks.”

“Can we use it to call anyone for help?”

He shook his head. “I wouldn’t know where to begin. I mean, there are a lot of frequencies out there. For someone to hear me, they’d have to be tuned into the same frequency and listening at the same time, and what are the chances of that?”

“Not very good, I guess.”

Suddenly the static disappeared and for a second Josh thought the radio had turned off by itself. But it hadn’t. Instead, it squawked loudly, and he heard, loud and clear, Folger’s voice: “Are you done?”

“I’m finishing up the subdivision now,” a male voice answered through the radio.

Each time someone else talked, there was a loud squawk.

“You took your sweet time,” Folger said.

“Fuck off,” the other voice said.

“Does anyone recognize who Folger’s talking to?” Josh asked.

“Manley,” Sandra said. “I think that’s Manley.”

“Which one is he?” Gaby asked.

“The one with the scary eyes.”

“Oh.”

Josh said, “Shhh.”

“They’re gone,” another voice was saying through the radio. Del, Josh thought, recognizing the voice. “We’re wasting our time. Let’s get out of here.”

“This place is a gold mine,” Folger said. “We’re not going anywhere until we pick it clean.”

“Who put you in charge?” Del wanted to know.

“I did,” Folger said.

Josh thought he heard Del snort, but maybe that was just static.

They went back and forth like that for a while, further convincing Josh that Folger was only in command because the others didn’t want the job. Or didn’t care who had it. They didn’t respect him in the slightest; that was obvious now.

They kept listening and discovered that Folger had the others running around town looking for them. Unless, of course, Folger had figured out that Josh had the radio and all of this was one big ruse for their benefit. Josh didn’t completely ignore the possibility. Anything was possible with men like Folger. So Josh reminded himself to be careful, to take everything he heard with a grain of salt. Even so, he started to feel better about their situation the more Folger and his flunkies seemed to be getting farther and farther away from them in their search.

“They don’t know where we are,” Gaby said, looking as happy as he had seen her in the last few days.

“Seems that way,” Josh nodded.

“You think they’ll leave eventually?”

“Eventually.”

“How many of these did you find?” Gaby asked, holding up her empty bag of Kung Fu noodles.

“There’s a stack of them in a drawer in the kitchen. I’ll go back up and get more later.”

“More of this goodness?” Sandra said. “Do you think I’ll suddenly know Kung Fu if I eat enough of this stuff?”

Gaby and Josh chuckled, and Sandra smiled. It was the first time they had seen the older woman smile, and Josh realized Sandra was actually very pretty. His friend Hank would say a woman like Sandra had “curves in all the right places.” Not that Hank knew anything about a woman’s curves other than what he saw on the Internet. Hank was a virgin when Josh knew him, and he probably died a virgin, too.

Died? He wishes. He’s probably one of those bloodsuckers right now.

Morning had turned into noon, and the sun outside ceased to feel soothing against their skin. The basement was turning hot again, and without an air conditioner or any ventilation, they started to sweat. They had been lucky last night, he realized, to find the basement just as it was cooling off in the evening. And then night had come and it had cooled off even more.

“Maybe we can cover up the window,” Sandra suggested.

“That might not be a good idea,” Josh said. “Manley drove past earlier today. He might have glanced at the basement and seen the window. What if he comes back and sees that it’s now covered, unlike before? It might make him suspicious.”

“That’s a big if,” Sandra said.

“It’s just something to consider.”

Sandra seemed to think about it. “You’re probably right. Those creatures might notice a covered basement window, too. They’re not stupid. I used to think they were dumb animals, but they’re not. They’re clever.”

Josh nodded. “They would have to be, to have done what they did.”

“God, stop talking about them,” Gaby said. She wrapped her arms around her chest reflexively. “They already scare me shitless as it is. I don’t need to know they’re smart, too.”

“Sorry,” he said.

“How old are you, anyway?” Sandra asked him.

The question caught him off guard. “Eighteen.”

“You sound older.”

“I do?”

“You think older, I guess is what I mean,” Sandra said.

“Thanks, I guess.”

“Like back there, in the semitrailer. I would never have thought of baiting Betts like that. But you did. How did you know he would fall for it?”

“I guess I know how guys think.” He smiled. “We’re kind of sick motherfuckers, you know.”