the one to blame.”

Jimmy shot him a panicked look, and Granville shook it off. This was the kind of announcement that could get an inmate beaten to shit, but Jimmy should have thought of that before.

“You’re a kidnapper,” Granville said to his charge as they arrived at his cell door. “And you’re the guy who cost every inmate a lot of privileges. I’d be careful if I were you.” Jimmy’s eye grew large as the truth sank in. “If I were you, I might think about cooperating a little.”

Something happened behind the kid’s eyes, but it was gone as quickly as it arrived. Fear, maybe? Perhaps just a grim acceptance of what lay ahead. “Well, I tell you what, Deputy George. If I was you, I’d have killed myself a long time ago. Now, why don’t you just quit worrying about me?”

Granville opened the cell and let Jimmy inside.

As he pushed the door closed, he glanced to his left and saw another prisoner, Antoine Johnson, grinning widely as he strained to see what was happening.

“What are you looking at?” Granville barked.

Antoine gave a little giggle. “I’m just happy to learn that I’m smarter than I thought I was,” he said.

Evan Guinn knew that he was moving.

He couldn’t see or hear anything, and his head hurt like it had been pounded with a hammer, but he knew he wasn’t lying still anymore. He had the sense of floating. Maybe the sense of spinning. It wasn’t a good feeling like the ones you get when you dream about flying on Harry Potter’s broom. This was a sick-making feeling, not unlike the morning after the night when Powell Andersen had treated a bunch of the RezHouse crew to the moonshine that had been sneaked into the dorm via his Uncle Ed. Evan had always thought that Father Dom had suspected something that day, but he’d never called the question.

Even as he was floating, though, he had the sense that he was somehow anchored down. He couldn’t feel any ropes or chains, but as he tried to move, his arms and legs felt as if they weighted a hundred pounds apiece.

He needed to run. But why?

Men in the dark. Men with tape and heavy hands. The foul-smelling rag over his face.

He’d been kidnapped. Kidnapped. Was that possible?

Who would want to kidnap him?

The more he thought about it, the more his head boomed. He wanted to move, to run; but he was paralyzed.

Except his eyelids. If he really struggled against the weight that burdened every part of him, he could get them to open. First his left eye, all by itself, and then his right. It was hard to focus, but when he forced himself, he could make the scenery come together.

He lay on his back, staring up at a low ceiling that had knobs and things he’d not seen before. They cast shadows that cut straight across at a sharp right angle, and from that he knew that the light was coming in at him from the side, instead of from above, as he would have expected. He turned this head to the right-carefully, to keep the hammers inside from beating against each other-and he saw an oval window that looked out on the sky. It was a little thing, nowhere big enough to climb through.

He was on an airplane. He’d never been on one before, but he’d seen enough of them in movies. The fact of being airborne made him feel fear for the first time since awakening. There’s kidnapped, he thought, and then there’s kidnapped. If they flew you to where you were going, you’d be gone forever, right?

Moving his head to the left, he confirmed his suspicion. This was definitely an airplane.

“He’s waking up,” a voice said, and Evan feared he’d done something wrong. If he could have made his vocal cords work, he would have apologized.

“Not for long,” said another voice.

The shadows shifted, and a man appeared in his field of vision. “You must have a hell of a liver, kid,” the man said. He bore the faint scent of garlic.

Unable to do anything-to talk or scream or even roll over-Evan watched as the man lifted a plastic tube and stuck a needle in it.

He had the fleeting thought that the other end of the tube must be stuck in his arm someplace, but then his thoughts and his mind went blank.

CHAPTER TEN

A stick cracked.

While it could have been caused by anything, Harvey knew that someone was coming to kill him.

He’d dozed in the camp chair, leaving the sleeping bag and the air mattress for Jeremy. He hadn’t intended to sleep deeply. He hadn’t intended to sleep at all. Hell, he hadn’t intended a single moment of what had happened during the last twenty-four hours.

It didn’t matter, because he was wide awake now, and so was the new day, the sun hanging low and golden in the east. Without moving his body, he opened his eyes and scanned as far to the sides as his eyes could shift. The morning revealed nothing.

Another crack. Rustling.

From the darkness of the tent, Jeremy whispered, “Harvey?”

The words were barely audible, but they registered on Harvey’s ears as a shout. “Shh,” he hissed. “I hear it.”

The boy’s face appeared in the triangular opening of the tent. “Who is it?”

“Maybe it’s just a deer,” he hoped aloud.

“But I heard a car,” Jeremy said.

Harvey’s stomach fell. He hadn’t really believed that it was a deer, anyway.

Jeremy crawled out farther. “It’s them, isn’t it?”

Keep it together, Harvey told himself. Losing it now wouldn’t help a soul.

“Harvey?”

“Shh!” This time, the hiss was emphatic. More than anything else, they needed silence. Silence and invisibility. A trip back in time to undo his decision to get involved in this crap would be good, too.

“I’m scared, Harvey.”

What part of “Shh” did the kid find confusing?

Jeremy kept coming. He crawled all the way into the open, and then over to Harvey, where he crouched next to the camp chair. He clutched Harvey’s arm.

He expects me to protect him, Harvey thought. What a stupid move that was. Harvey Rodriguez had room for exactly one important person in his life, and that was Harvey Rodriguez himself. If Jeremy-a stranger-thought for an instant that he would risk even momentary discomfort for some larger, nobler cause, then he was woefully mistaken.

The sounds of movement grew steadily clearer. Within a minute, he could hear voices. A few seconds later, he could hear what the voices were saying.

“…no goddamn sense.”

“When was the last time this job made sense to anybody?”

“So I gotta pay for it? This shit just ain’t right.”

Both voices were male, and both sounded neither young nor old-a conclusion confirmed just a few seconds later when Harvey got his first glimpse of them. Thirty yards away, they both wore jeans and T-shirts, and as they waded toward the tall grass, they headed directly toward the spot where Harvey had discovered the unconscious boy.

Jeremy’s hand tightened on Harvey’s arm. “It really is them, isn’t it?” he squeaked.

“Don’t move,” Harvey said. With the sun rising over the tent, into the eyes of the visitors, there was a chance that they could remain unseen if they just didn’t move. These guys weren’t moving with any sense of danger, which meant that they were likely to accept their surroundings as is. It’s human nature to accept a first impression as normal-making it possible to literally hide in plain sight. But thousands of years of evolution still had not erased the

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