Page 17
Cullen selected several items from the shelf. “We’ll get a variety of foods,” Archie was saying. “’Cuz we don’t know what Tot prefers since we just met her and all.”
It was comical to hear the men compare the formula labels and discuss the merits of sweet potato versus butternut squash.
“She’s not gonna like spinach,” Archie said. “No human likes spinach.”
Cullen eyed the little jar and its green contents. “Worked for Popeye.”
“He was a swabbie, not a marine.” Archie’s insult dripped with good-natured distaste.
Cullen put the spinach back. “How about peas instead?”
“Yes, peas will do. Oh, and here’s Cheerio-type things.
We gotta have that. You pour a handful of those out, and it teaches her how to grab stuff and feed herself if the Rice Krispies things are too small,” Archie insisted.
While they debated with all the seriousness of a United Nations inquiry, Kit edged past them a few paces and gathered warm outfits that appeared to be Tot’s size, socks, blankets, a jacket, a cap knitted to resemble a strawberry, and several packs of diapers.
Archie looked up from perusing a shelf. “Okay, so we got bottles and plenty of formula and food. Some clothes and a supply of diapers. She use a binky?”
Kit frowned. “A what?”
“A pacifier,” Cullen translated.
“Oh.” Did Tot use one? She hadn’t seen any in the duffel bag, but there might have been one buried in her car seat when they’d snatched her and run.
“One way to find out.” Cullen ripped open a packaged pacifier and offered it to Tot, who’d begun to fuss. She gulped it like a baby bird after a worm. All three of them watched Tot suck contentedly.
“Guess that answers the binky question,” Cullen said. “Look at her go on that thing.”
Kit rolled her eyes at Cullen. “You mean we didn’t have to listen to her wailing for hours after you dropped her off the roof?”
“What?” Archie’s eyes went as round as Oreos. “Dropped her where?”
“Uh, that sounded worse than it actually was,” Cullen said.
“No, it didn’t.” Kit enjoyed Cullen’s discomfiture.
“Never mind,” Archie said stiffly. “I don’t wanna know.” He gathered Tot closer, mumbling something under his breath. Their last acquisition was two sleeping bags for Cullen and Kit.
“We got enough for now,” Archie said. “Can always come back if things remain stable.”
Stable. The word jarred. Did that mean if the volcano didn’t go ballistic or the men didn’t show up to kill them?
On the reverse trip, she returned under her own steam to the library, lugging a bag of items that Cullen had meticulously listed on the whiteboard behind the counter along with his name and cell number.
He’d laid down the cash he had and inked the remaining amount in the form of an IOU.
The mom and pop would be astonished to know they’d supplied three grownups and a baby when they came back .
.. if there was anything left to return to.
Her cheeks went stiff in the frigid wind.
The temperature was dropping steadily. Grateful her feet were protected, she hustled inside.
As the door closed behind her, she thought of Annette.
Was she alive? Out there somewhere in the elements?
Had she been caught? By Nico? And if he was after Annette, why was he also terrorizing them?
Did the person after them think they’d recovered her after she bolted and were helping her flee with his money?
A darker thought slithered through her brain. Maybe he’d already killed her and was coming for his other property. The cash and...
Tot.
An iron band formed in her chest as she watched Archie unwrap the sleeping Tot and gently transfer her into the warmer pajamas they’d picked out, yellow with rubber duckies that reminded Kit of Cullen stuffed into her raincoat.
The cloth legs were too long, Tot’s toes not quite reaching the ends.
The baby winced, squinching up her mouth as if she would cry out, but she didn’t.
You’re no one’s property , Tot.
And she realized in that moment that she’d fight any man to her last breath if he tried to take the child.
It would be the hill she’d die on. Her truck and this baby, those were the two things that mattered, and one was out of her control .
.. but not Tot. It felt strange to have a stranger’s baby suddenly rearrange everything, but Nico had done the same when he snatched Annette away from all of her girlish plans and aspirations.
What had it felt like to Annette’s mother to worry and grieve every single day of her life for her missing daughter?
She thought of her own mother, a woman she’d come to realize was not a perfect, larger-than-life figure but a fragile human with weaknesses and flaws of her own.
The hurt of what she’d done to Kit’s father still throbbed, but maybe a bit less painfully.
They still had time to work through what had happened. Didn’t they?
Cullen was fiddling with an ancient-looking transistor radio he’d found, trying to get a news station for an update on the volcano. He twisted the metal antenna to the right and then the left before he sat back with a frustrated sigh, glancing at her.
He frowned. “We forget something at the store? I can go back.”
“No.” She busied herself unbagging the groceries. “Mind wandered is all.”
Archie laid the sleeping Tot on a mat in a section of floor in the children’s library that was padded with foam tiles. Kit wanted to cover her with blankets, but that urge had to be resisted. Hopefully Archie’s generator would keep the heat at a reasonable comfort level.
She organized the foodstuffs on the counter in the break room, baby foods, baby supplies, adult snacks, water bottles neatly lined up. When she’d finished, the radio crackled, and Cullen gave himself a silent fist in the air as he adjusted the volume.
The broadcaster’s voice was tinny and distant.
“As Mount Ember steams under her snowy blanket, scientists sent up choppers again this morning to get new aerial photography of the summit. Most ominous of the findings was that the bulge on the east side of the mountain continues to grow. This bulge has already moved some three hundred feet up and out from where it was at this date last year. Couple that with swarms of earthquakes numbering into the thousands, and the alarm levels are increasing. Local county sheriffs have enacted blockades on the two major roads leading to the mountain, and the FAA has extended their no-fly zone from five miles to ten. All residents are urged to evacuate immediately due to... ”
The radio dissolved into static. Cullen grumbled under his breath. No amount of fiddling with the dials brought it back. He stared at the device, fists on hips.
Archie slurped from a cup of instant coffee he’d prepared. “Much as I am loathe to admit it, seems you were right, Cullen. Ember’s gonna burst. I should have departed last week.”
“You and me both.”
“Make that three of us,” Kit said. “But if we hadn’t stayed...” Her gaze went to the sleeping baby.
“The Lord knows what he’s about, that’s sure,” Archie said quietly. “Planning time?”
“Planning time,” Cullen confirmed.
Kit exhaled slowly as they gathered around the check out desk. “Our best chance of survival is to make it to the evacuation zone?” It was more a statement than a question.
“Because we’re on borrowed time here.” Cullen sought her gaze.
She nodded. “Everything I’ve been reading predicts that when the bulge fails, it will unleash a massive mudflow that will inundate everything downslope, including this town.”
“Now that’s a downer of a forecast,” Archie said.
“With the ATV we have a chance.” Cullen arched a brow at Archie. “Fuel?”
“Twenty gallons at best.”
“It’ll do.”
It would have to. Otherwise ... what? They’d die miles away from the evac zone? Stranded in poisonous gas clouds? Crushed by falling trees? She glanced again at Tot, so small in her fuzzy pajamas.
“Guess I should come along,” Archie said. “You all need a nanny, appears to me, or you might be dropping her from roofs again.”
Cullen grinned. “Yes, sir. We surely do.”
Archie went to a high, dusty shelf crammed with different-sized packets, selected one, and unfurled a brittle paper topographical map. Since they’d turned off most of the lanterns, Cullen held one out.
Archie slipped on a pair of thick glasses. “All subject to change thanks to Ember’s shenanigans, but the fire trails are our best bet to clear out with the ATV. Evac zone is where now?”
“Gideon said south, twenty miles,” Cullen said.
Archie pressed a calloused finger to the paper. “That’d be here, Lodgepole Meadows. Three main routes to get there, ’cept one is already obliterated thanks to the earlier landslide.” He snagged a pencil and followed each route with the tip. “Which way you think?”
Kit absorbed the tiny lines and squiggles. She prided herself on being able to read a map since GPS wasn’t always 100 percent reliable. “This one looks fastest but closer to the fallout zone.”
“Right. Flame Ridge is a straighter shot, but parts are already obliterated.” Archie refocused on the second route.
“Silver Canyon is our other option. Connects the town of Twinfork to the old lumber mill where Granddad used to work. I went with him a time or two. They built a tunnel from the town to the mill so the workers could have a shortcut underground. Used to pretend I was one of Snow White’s dwarfs when I’d pop out from behind the waterwheel and scare the workers. ” He chuckled.
“Dad put the kibosh on that quick. Bad idea to be giving men a fright when they’re working with saws.
Anyway, they bored that tunnel because otherwise it’d be a steep journey, so that’s what we’re in for.
Steep.” He smoothed the map. “Key here indicates there’s four thousand feet of elevation change, forested mostly in the beginning, and there’s lava boulders. ”
“Sounds like a good time to me,” Cullen said, rubbing at his elbow.
Table of Contents
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- Page 17 (Reading here)
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