A string of curses split the air under a bright blue September sky stretching over the Ozark hills. The unintelligible shout briefly muted the banjo picking that blared through the speakers of a battered black pickup truck.
A stone’s throw from the truck, Chuck Harris huddled inside a blue nylon tent beside his girlfriend, Lisa Peters. She reached out and tapped him on the knee.
“Did you hear that?” she asked.
He pulled an earphone from one ear. “What? Say what?”
“Did you hear? They’re screaming again. And it sounds like someone else is pulling out.”
With a groan, Chuck rolled into a crouch and peeked out the mesh window. “They’re leaving. The last sane campers.”
“Are you sure?”
“I can see the taillights. And their gear is gone. It’s just us and the psychos.”
Lisa put her hands over her ears. “How many times can they play ‘Folsom Prison Blues’?”
“And ‘Dueling Banjos.’ Gives me the chills.”
“Huh?”
“Dueling Banjos. You know that old movie? Deliverance? With the murdering hillbilly retards. I think they’re making the sequel right now.”
“Don’t say ‘retard,’ ” she said under her breath; but he’d replaced his earphone.
They had arrived the day before, on a hot Friday evening, to spend Labor Day weekend at the scenic campground in Mark Twain National Forest, an unspoiled haven in the Ozark hill country. They had erected their tent under lush leaves, but their peaceful retreat was interrupted before nightfall by the arrival of a rusty pickup spewing noxious exhaust.
“It’s just us and them now.” Lisa unzipped the fabric door partway and stuck her head through the opening.
Chuck asked, “Are they still drinking?”
Dozens of beer cans littered the neighboring campsite, blinking silver in the late afternoon sunlight. Two men sat at a dying fire, passing a pipe.
“Smoking.”
“God damn,” Chuck said. “I’m a prosecutor, a county official in McCown County. I’m a prisoner in this blue nylon womb. I can’t go outside.”
“This isn’t McCown County.”
“Okay, but still. I’m technically law enforcement. What am I supposed to do, if I’m confronted with their criminal antics? Run up and say ‘citizen’s arrest’?”
Lisa reached into a duffel bag and pulled out a bottle of Fireball Whisky. Taking a quick chug from the neck of the bottle, she said, “I didn’t see the little girl out there. Or the woman.”
“So they went home. Good for them.”
“Chuck, they all drove here together in that piece of shit truck. How could a pregnant woman and a little kid get home from the middle of the woods?”
“Well, maybe they’re on a nature hike.” He slumped back on his sleeping bag. “This is not what I envisioned when you proposed this camping getaway.”
Angry voices drowned out the banjo music once again. Lisa crawled back to the mesh window.
The two men, one tall, lank, and bearded, the other stocky, with a tangled ponytail, remained at the fireside. But a woman had joined the circle. She was young, in her midtwenties, with long hair tinted a deep henna hue, bordering on purple. A gray sweatshirt strained over her abdomen. The bearded man was shouting at her; he jumped to his feet and advanced on her, his fists cocked.
“She’s got to be about nine months pregnant,” Lisa said. “She could drop that baby right now.”
As Lisa watched, the bearded man shoved the pregnant woman, barking an insult. The woman stumbled, knocking over the cooler that sat beside the campfire, spilling ice and beer cans into the dirt. Her companions roared. She lumbered to an upright position and struggled to right the cooler, scrambling to pick up cans and toss them back inside. She bent to stop the movement of a can rolling away from the others. The tall man grabbed a handful of her magenta hair, jerked her up and backhanded her, sending her onto the smoking campfire.
When the woman fell onto the fire, Lisa screamed. She jerked at the zippered door of the tent, fighting to open it. Chuck snatched her by the arm.
“What the hell are you doing?”
She turned on him, her eyes blazing. “That fucker. Beating up a pregnant girl. He threw her on the fire.” She returned to the zipper, but it snagged in her shaking hands. “We’ve got to stop him.”
Chuck grasped her around the waist and pulled her away from the nylon door. “Are you trying to get us killed?”
Lisa fought him, panting. “Do you think I’ll stand by and watch that go down?”
He pinned her on the Coleman sleeping bag. “Jesus, Lisa, what do you think you’re dealing with? Those crackers are crazy. They’re criminals. A guy who’d beat up a pregnant woman—what do you think he’d do to you or me?”
They lay together in the tent for protracted, tortured moments as the screams rent the air outside.
“We have to call 911,” Lisa said in a whisper.
“We can’t get a signal out here. No access. We’re in the middle of fucking nowhere.”
They heard the man’s voice again.
“I’m going to fuck you up, you fat whore.”
Lisa moaned. “Oh Lord, Lord, Lord.”
Chuck grabbed his backpack. “We’ll make a run for the car. We can drive to Sparta, I think that’s the nearest town, and contact the police there.”
Chuck peeked through the mesh, then they scuttled out of the tent. As they ran for the car, Chuck tripped over the lawn chairs they’d set by their own campfire and fell on the hard-packed patch of dirt.
Lisa stood by the passenger door as he crawled to the car, saying in a hoarse whisper, “Hurry, for God’s sake. Hurry.”
Once inside the vehicle, the ignition roared, and Chuck hit the accelerator. The car swung by the neighboring campsite, where the tall man had the pregnant girl in a headlock, just outside the circle of the campfire. Her gray sweatshirt was smoking. The man with a ponytail sat in a chair, watching, and lit his pipe.
As Chuck and Lisa pulled away from the campsite and into the woods, they saw the child, a little girl, standing by the side of the road. She was a skinny waif with scruffy blond hair, regarding them with an unblinking stare behind broken eyeglasses.