‘He couldn’t possibly sneak up on us,’ Vivian added.

    ‘Jim’ll be our bait,’ Cora said. ‘He’ll be down in the lobby in plain sight. When Hank goes over to him…’

    ‘Bang!’ Finley blurted.

    ‘It sounds like a good plan,’ Abilene admitted. She liked, very much, the idea of being above it all. Out of reach. Even if Finley should miss, she’d have plenty of time to reload before Hank could climb the stairs and get to them - especially if they were all the way at the far end of the balcony.

    ‘The trick,’ Finley said, ‘will be getting Hank into the line of fire.’

    Cora nodded. ‘We’ve got no idea where he might enter the lodge. He might come in anywhere; through the pools or even on the second floor. But we want to get him down there in the lobby area.’

    ‘I’m gonna call out to him,’ Jim explained. ‘Soon as I figure he’s around, I’ll start callin’ out. I’ll get him to come on over to me.’

    ‘And then it’s adios, asshole.’

    ‘Sounds really good,’ Abilene said. ‘If it works.’

    ‘It’ll work,’ Finley said.

    ‘What if he has a gun?’ Vivian asked.

    The question stunned Abilene. She hadn’t even thought of that.

    From the looks on the faces of her friends, they hadn’t either.

    After a moment, Finley said, ‘I’ll just have to nail him before he brings it into play.’

    ‘Will he have a gun?’ Abilene asked, frowning at Jim.

    ‘Maybe. We got us some rifles. But he didn’t take one along last night. Just went out with his knife, is all.’

    ‘And he left that in Helen,’ Cora said, her voice grim.

    ‘Oh, he’s got more. He’s got lotsa knives. That’s what he likes… to cut on folks. I don’t spect he’d wanta ruin all his fun by shootin’ any of ya.’

    ‘Isn’t that charming,’ Finley muttered.

    They were silent for a while.

    Thinking about Helen? Abilene wondered. Or wondering how it might feel to have a knife blade shoved into them?

    A hot, shocking thrust into the belly.

    Or maybe it’d feel cold. Ice cold.

    And maybe it wouldn’t be your belly he stuck it in.

    ‘We’d better get at it,’ Cora said, and Abilene was glad to have her thoughts interrupted. ‘The sun’s down. He might already be on his way.’

    The lodge was much darker than the evening outside. Abilene, entering first, halted and swept her flashlight across the lobby. Here and there, support posts blocked its beam and cast shadows that flitted over the floor. She felt goosebumps scurry up her spine and the nape of her neck. Her scalp prickled.

    ‘Don’t just stand there,’ Cora said.

    ‘Pretty sure he ain’t here yet,’ Jim said.

    Abilene hurried to the left, shining her light on the stairway. It looked clear. But she didn’t like the shadows thrown by the banister. She sidestepped and looked at the others. Jim was close behind her, Cora riding on his back. Following them was Finley with the shotgun. Vivian entered with the second flashlight and eased the door shut.

    Abilene started to climb the stairs backward, lighting the way for Jim.

    ‘Are you doing okay?’ she whispered as she made her way higher.

    ‘Ain’t bad.’

    ‘Just don’t fall.’

    ‘I’ll second that,’ Cora said.

    They were several stairs below her when she reached the top. She wanted very badly to swing her light away and check the balcony, imagined herself doing just that and imagined Jim tripping in the sudden darkness. A gasp and he’s falling backward, Cora screaming, both of them colliding with Finley and the three of them tumbling down the stairs, taking out Vivian, all four coming to rest in a broken heap at the bottom of the stairs.

    Just because I was scared somebody might be up here.

    She managed not to check behind her. Even after Jim made it to the top of the stairs, she kept her light trained on the floor in front of him while she backed her way along the balcony.

    Hoping no one would grab her.

    Then the balcony rail was there for Jim, so she whirled around.

    The bright beam showed only a long empty stretch afloat with dust motes between the banister and the wall with its three closed doors.

    Satisfied, she lit the way for Jim and sidestepped, keeping her back near the wall.

    He could heave Cora right off here, she thought.

    Finley’d probably shoot him, though.

    Hell, he’s been untied for hours. He’s had plenty of chances to jump us. Or make a break for it. He’s in on it with us, just like he says.

    Unless it’s just that he’s scared of the shotgun.

    Scared of his big brother, Hank, that’s what he is. Wants us to do the dirty work for him.

    And Finley’ll be glad to comply.

    ‘Okay,’ Cora said. ‘This is far enough.’

    Abilene halted only a few strides from the end of the balcony. Jim lowered Cora. She released her hold, got her good foot on the floor, pivoted and grabbed the top of the split log railing.

    ‘This’ll be perfect,’ she said.

    Vivian squeezed past Finley. She and Jim clutched Cora by her upper arms and eased her down. She sat with her legs outstretched and hooked an arm around one of the uprights.

    Finley brought the shotgun to Abilene. ‘Keep us covered, okay?’

    ‘Don’t mess around down there. He might be anywhere.’

    ‘Won’t take long.’ She started away. ‘Let’s go,’ she said, and gave Jim a pat on the flank. Vivian went first, lighting the way.

    Abilene watched the three of them hurry along the balcony. She lowered the shotgun until its stock bumped softly against the floor. Its barrels felt cool and slippery in her hand. She hoped she wouldn’t need to use it, but knew that she could if she had to. Her dad, immersed in the lore of the Old West, had trained her not only in the art of the quick-draw, but in how to hit what she aimed with sixgun, rifle and shotgun. He’d even taken to calling her ‘Dead-eye.’

    Good thing Finley never caught wind of that, she thought as she watched her friends descend the stairs, Jim between them.

    They came back through the lobby, the light swinging from side to side like the headbeam of a miniature locomotive. Abilene kept her eyes on it, half expecting it to reveal Hank leaping out from behind a support.

    Then the light darted up at her. She squinted and turned her face away from its glare.

    ‘Right about there’s fine,’ Cora said.

    The light slid away. Abilene stepped closer to the railing and looked down. They were directly below her, eight or ten feet beyond the balcony’s overhang.

    Jim leaned back against a support beam. He hitched up his drooping cut-offs, then put his arms behind the post. Finley pulled a rope from a front pocket of her shorts. The one they’d used before? The last time Abilene had seen that rope was when she’d untied Jim down in the outside pool.

    Maybe someone had gone to get it while she’d been asleep.

    One more thing I missed, she thought.

    Finley stepped behind the post. Vivian aimed the light back there while Finley tied Jim’s hands.

    ‘Not too tight,’ Vivian said.

    ‘I know, I know.’ When she was done, she asked Jim, ‘How’s that?’

    ‘I guess okay.’

    ‘If it was any looser, it’d fall right off.’

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