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Chapter no 10

Five Survive

Trapped.โ€Œ

Shut in.

Only thirty-one feet to share between them, that extra foot important enough not to round down.

โ€œWhy would he want to trap us here?โ€ย Maddy asked, her pupils too wide, dark pools eating away the color of her eyes.ย โ€œWhat does he want with us?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ย Oliver answered, pushing up from the driverโ€™s seat, one more punch to the wheel for luck.ย โ€œHe probably lives around here, and we are in the wrong place at the wrong time. I told you we should never have come down this road.โ€

โ€œLike you predicted this was going to happen?โ€ย Simon said, a surprising note of anger in his voice, an unsteadiness to his tread. Red should get him some water. He needed to sober up, fast. His instincts were dulled, his reactions, and he would need those tonight.

โ€œI said it was the wrong way and none of you listened!โ€

In the kitchen, Red opened the cupboard mounted high beside the microwave. She removed a glass and guided it to the shiny-clean sink,ย ๏ฌ‚icking on the faucet andย ๏ฌlling it near full.

โ€œWe had no service. We were lost,โ€ย Arthur said, a forced calm in his voice that no one else had right now.

โ€œHere.โ€ย Red handed the glass of water to Simon, telling him with her eyes to drink it. At least she didnโ€™t have to hold the glass for him, like with her dad sometimes.

โ€œIt was Red,โ€ย Oliver said, not looking at her.ย โ€œShe insisted we come down this road. And you two.โ€ย He pointed at Arthur and Simon.ย โ€œYou three were navigating. This is your fault.โ€

Simon stepped forward, splashing some of the water on his shirt. The other patch hadย ๏ฌnally just dried.ย โ€œBy the same logic, I could say it was Reynaโ€™s fault we got stuck here. Because she was driving and refused to turn around.โ€

โ€œI couldnโ€™t turn around!โ€ย Reyna said.

โ€œEveryone, please!โ€ย Maddy slapped her hand on the dining table three times.ย โ€œThis is not helping. Itโ€™s no oneโ€™s fault weโ€™re here. But we are, okay? And we have to work together toย ๏ฌgure out what to do.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s nothing we can do,โ€ย Simon said, near hysterical now.ย โ€œUnless someone also happened to pack a ri๏ฌ‚e for spring break and we can snipe him back.โ€

Red mimed for him to drink up.

โ€œIs there still no service?โ€ย Maddy said, answering her own question as she looked down at the lock screen on her phone.ย โ€œShit. Nothing.โ€

โ€œCanโ€™t you call emergency services without a signal?โ€ย Simon said, still not drinking.ย โ€œI swear Iโ€™ve seen it in a movie before.โ€

It didnโ€™t work like that, Red knew. Sheโ€™d asked that question before herself, years ago on a family vacation in Yellowstone.

โ€œYeah,ย โ€™cause sometimes it comes up sayingย No serviceโ€”emergency calls only,โ€ย Reyna added.

โ€œThatโ€™s only if your phone can piggyback onto another network,โ€ย Red said, her momโ€™s answer now becoming hers.ย โ€œThereโ€™s clearly no service from any network here.โ€

โ€œTry it,โ€ย Oliver said, ignoring her.ย โ€œTry, Maddy.โ€

Maddy unlocked her phone, her tongue tucked between her teeth as she concentrated. She brought up the keypad and carefully typed inย 9-1-1.

She waited for a nod from Oliver, then she pressed the green button and

raised the phone to her ear.

They waited. The seconds stretching into eternity as Maddy closed her eyes to concentrate harder. It was one of those things she did that made her Maddy. Like when they were ten and she thought you had to ring the doorbell every time you left or came home, even if no one else was in and you had the key. That shrill, insistent bell in one held note, standing outside the Lavoysโ€™ย house. Funny how Red could remember some things like that, yet she couldnโ€™t remember to call AT&T. She wondered what were the things that Maddy thought made Red Red?

Maddy exhaled, her chest sinking.ย โ€œNothing,โ€ย she said quietly, letting the phone fall to her side.

Oliver swiped at her arm, grabbing the phone.ย โ€œNo network connection,โ€ย he read from the alert on the screen.ย โ€œFuck.โ€ย He dropped the phone back into Maddyโ€™s hands, worthless to him.

Well, Red did say.

โ€œSomeone might have called the cops, though,โ€ย Maddy said, not ready to give up yet.ย โ€œI know itโ€™s late.โ€ย She glanced at her phone.ย โ€œItโ€™s four minutes past midnight, and most people are probably in bed. But someone must have heard the gunshots and called the police, right? There were farms and houses not too far back.โ€

โ€œThe shots werenโ€™t loud,โ€ย Red said.ย โ€œEven we couldnโ€™t tell what it was atย ๏ฌrst. Just the sound of the tires bursting.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a ri๏ฌ‚e?โ€ย Maddy doubled down.

But Red had heard these guns before, a memory she tried to push away. The three-volley ri๏ฌ‚e salute at the funeral. A line of o๏ฌƒcers in uniform, aiming over theย ๏ฌ‚ag-draped casket. The road beyond the cemetery blocked with what felt like every squad car in the city, top lights spinning, painting the world red and blue.ย Ready to aim. Fire.ย Three times. A crack like thunder, riding through the sky, shaking the bones inside you. And those had even been blanks. So loud. Unmistakable. Piercing through the bagpipes as they

playedย โ€œAmazing Grace,โ€ย which was funny in a way because her name had been Grace. The Lavoys should know; they were all there too. Catherine standing with one hand on Redโ€™s shoulder, squeezing when the ri๏ฌ‚es went o๏ฌ€. Redโ€™s dad didnโ€™t even cry, standing on her other side. No, he saved all his falling apart for after.

โ€œRed?โ€ย Arthur said.

Oh no, theyโ€™d been talking without her.

โ€œI think Redโ€™s right,โ€ย Simon said, the glass in his hands only half full now.ย โ€œIt wasnโ€™t even loud enough for us to know it was a gunshot. I think he must be using a suppressor.โ€

โ€œA what?โ€ย asked Reyna.

โ€œA silencer,โ€ย Simon explained.ย โ€œAnd yes, all of my worldly knowledge does come from movies, but that doesnโ€™t mean it isnโ€™t valid.โ€

โ€œSo you think nobody heard?โ€ย Maddy de๏ฌ‚ated even more, if that was possible.ย โ€œNobody called the cops?โ€

Simon shrugged.ย โ€œI think we canโ€™t count on it.โ€

โ€œNo, we canโ€™t count on it,โ€ย Oliver repeated, picking up the sentiment, chewing on some silent thought.ย โ€œWe make our own luck,โ€ย he said to Maddy alone, a Lavoy expression that often got wheeled out. Which must mean that Red was terrible at making hers.

Maddy looked back at her brother, a new glint in her eye.ย โ€œMake our own luck,โ€ย she said.ย โ€œWell, if no one heard the gunshots, then maybe theyโ€™ll hear this.โ€

Before anyone could say anything, Maddy charged to the front of the RV, leaned across the driverโ€™s seat and pressed her thumb into the wheel.

The horn screamed, rupturing the quiet of just-past-midnight. One long note, then four short bursts.

โ€œMaddy?โ€ย Red said. She didnโ€™t like her standing so close to that bullet hole in the driverโ€™s seat. On the other side, the shade over the smashed window swayed in the wind, like a silent threat from the outside world. No, not Maddy.

Maddy leaned the heel of her hand into the horn, as though she could make it louder that way.

โ€œMaddy,โ€ย Arthur said, a tension in his jaw as he eyed the broken window.ย โ€œMaybe we shouldnโ€™tโ€”โ€

Three loud beeps cut him o๏ฌ€.

โ€œSomeone will hear!โ€ย Maddy shouted, determined.ย โ€œSomeone willโ€”โ€

Red felt it more than she heard it. A rush of air to her right. The shade shuddering, dancing against itsย ๏ฌxings, a new hole ripped through it.

Maddy screamed.

โ€œNo, Maddy!โ€ย Red screamed harder.

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