The Island(69)
“What if there’s poo in it?”
“It’s good, drink it,” Olivia said.
He dipped his finger in and licked it. “It’ll do,” he said.
Heather smiled.
“It’s cold down here. I’m actually cold,” Owen said.
“Are you ever happy?” Olivia said.
“I’ll get our stuff,” Heather said. “We’re going to hide here. I’ll start a small fire and then I’ll go try to lay a scent trail for the dogs. I’ll be back in an hour.”
Heather got a quick fire of moss and eucalypt going for the kids and went back outside. She got the rifle and the canteen and put them in the cave mouth. She rearranged the moss over the hole and ran down into the heath away from the hill. She rolled around in the grass, trying to get as much scent on the ground as possible, and then she ran to the beach. She left a ton of prints on the sand and was about to wade into the surf when the drone came zipping in from the sea and found her.
It hovered ten feet above her head.
She threw a pebble at it, but it just moved out of the way.
She wasn’t going to lead it back to the cave, and she couldn’t lose it on this damned beach.
It buzzed and zipped above her.
She could imagine Matt looking at her through his laptop or phone or whatever it was he used to control it.
She sat down on the sand and looked at it.
She wasn’t going to panic.
She was going to think.
Those four little rotor blades must use a lot of energy keeping that thing in the air. And the battery couldn’t be very big. How long could one of those things stay up there without needing to recharge?
She had no idea. An hour? Twenty minutes?
More likely closer to the latter.
The drone looked at her.
She looked at the drone.
It had to be at least a ten-minute flight back to where Matt was with the dogs. It had been hovering here for five. If he wanted to keep it, surely he would have to fly it back soon.
He’d made a mistake, showing himself. He should have hovered a couple of hundred feet up. Trailed her from the sky as long as he was able.
She smiled at the drone’s camera.
“What do you call a boomerang that doesn’t come back?” she said.
The drone bobbed in the wind.
“A stick,” she said.
The drone dived toward her; she ducked, and it soared into the air and headed south.
“Must have heard that one before,” she muttered as she waded into the surf. She swam nervously north for two hundred yards and carefully walked onto the shore via rocks. The sharks had spared her.
She circled back to the heath the long way and took an even longer way back to the cave entrance.
The dogs were definitely coming. They would spend a lot of time on the beach.
That little diversion might buy her and the kids a few hours. Perhaps enough to get them through to nightfall. She hoped so.
She entered the cave. “Kids?” she said.
No answer.
“Kids!”
“We’re here. Is that you, Heather?” Olivia said, coming around the cave dogleg and holding the rifle.
“It’s me.”
They sat together by the pool and waited and watched the fire’s embers, and time continued on its silver arrow toward the end of the universe.
They couldn’t hear dogs or people or anything.
The O’Neills could be just overhead, or they could be a mile away.
They waited. And waited some more. Waiting in the sand by the pool in silence.
It was like one of those submarine movies. The men in the tin can bracing for the ship to drop a depth charge…
Finally, when she thought perhaps three hours had gone by, she crawled back to the cave mouth with the rifle.
The sun was going down.
No sign of anyone.
She listened.
No yelling.
No dogs.
She scanned the horizon with the binoculars. No one. She went back to the underground spring and told the kids that they were safe for the night. They would be back tomorrow. The dogs would not be so easily fooled by her swimming and would certainly find them tomorrow.
But that meant they had tonight.
32
The sun was setting on their third day, going down in a gaudy blaze of red and gold. Sinking on the people in their cars and in their houses and in restaurants and bars; on the rich and the poor, on the runaways and the forsaken and the nameless and the lost.
Above them, the first stars were coming out.
“We need food, Heather,” Owen said in a quiet voice.
“I know.”
She took off her shoes and handed them to Olivia.
“What are you doing?” Olivia asked.
“I’m going to climb this tree as high as I can and I’m going to try really hard this time to get help on the radio.”
“This tree?” Owen asked.
“Yeah.”
“I’m not sure that’s how radios work. I just covered that in my science homework. You don’t need to climb a tree. I think radio signals bounce off the atmosphere,” Owen said. “Did you do physics, Heather?”
On Goose Island, Heather had done physics with her mom for a few days in the trailer-park classroom whose big windows looked across Puget Sound to the snowcapped mountains of Olympic National Park. She’d taken in nothing. Her mind had been over there walking through the snow, through the rain, learning the tracks of cougar, black bear, elk, and black-tailed deer.