TWENTY

Bree curled up on the sofa and sipped her tea. Warm and content, she almost didn’t answer the door when the bell rang. Samson padded to the door and waited expectantly. The bell rang again. She tossed the fleece throw off her legs and reluctantly went to the entry.

Hilary stood on the porch, huddled in a sheepskin coat. “It’s freezing out here.” She brushed past Bree and came inside, stomping the snow from her boots. “Mason is working late tonight, and I was bored. Want to order a pizza?”

“I just warmed up some leftover chicken enchilada casserole Martha sent over. There’s plenty left. You want some?” Bree took Hilary’s coat and hung it in the closet under the stairs. She ordered Samson into the living room. No sense in riling Hilary with his presence.

“Sounds good. I wouldn’t turn down a cup of hot coffee either.” Hilary followed her into the kitchen.

As Bree heated Hilary’s meal, she wondered how she could bring up Hilary’s outburst at the party. Her suspicions would nag her until she laid them to rest.

Hilary sat at the small dinette in the corner. “Mother wants to know if you’ll bring some of your cranberry salad and the sweet potato casserole to Thanksgiving this year.”

“I think I’ve still got the recipes here someplace,” Bree said. Had Hilary really come by because she was bored? Under normal circumstances, Hilary would have just called to ask about Thanksgiving arrangements. Bree set the casserole in front of her sister-in-law along with a cup of coffee then sat across the table from her.

“Smells good.” Hilary chased several forkfuls of food around the plate before she set her fork aside. “Mother told me you’re giving up the search,” she said.

Ah, the real reason for the visit. Bree steeled herself for Hilary’s cajoling. “I’ll search until the first of the year, then I’m going to get busy with a training school. I’ve found a couple of possible sites.” Hilary was blinking rapidly, and Bree looked away. Tears might make her lose her resolve.

“I just came by to tell you I agree with your decision,” Hilary said.

Bree wasn’t sure she’d heard correctly. Wide-eyed, she stared at Hilary. “You . . . you agree?”

“Mother told me I was being selfish, and I guess I was. I’ve been pretty hard on you this past year. I know we’ve had our differences, but you’ll always be my little sister.”

This was a softer, more vulnerable Hilary than Bree had ever seen. “I’ve only ever wanted your approval,” Bree said in a low voice.

“You’ve driven yourself to find Rob’s plane, and I haven’t been very appreciative. I’m sorry.” Hilary smiled ruefully. “I’m not easy to live with; just ask Mason. I blow my top and say things I don’t mean when I should keep my mouth shut.”

The perfect opening. “Don’t we all. Just like what you said about Fay the night of the party. I knew you didn’t mean it.”

Hilary frowned. “What did I say about Fay?”

“That you hated her, and her baby should have been yours.”

Hilary waved a hand. “I was just upset about the doctor’s news. You never really forget your first love, but Steve and I would have been divorced before a year was out. I need someone stable and patient like Mason. I wouldn’t trade him for a dozen Steves.” Her eyes darkened with pain and she looked at her casserole. “We’re doing what we can to get Mason’s sperm count up. We haven’t given up hope yet. For a while I’d forgotten God is in control.”

Bree wanted to know this Hilary better. She thought of Psalm 112. There was something in there about a righteous man being steadfast and trusting in the Lord. Hilary hadn’t killed Fay. Relief washed over Bree until she felt almost giddy.

By the time Hilary left, Bree sensed a new friendship building between her and her sister-in-law, a new understanding. This family would survive the tragedy and go on. It was time to put the past away.

Davy was gone. The first step to accepting that fact would be hard. She looked toward the stairway. There was no time like the present. Leaning forward, she caressed Samson’s ears. “I think maybe it’s time, boy. You want to help me?”

The dog whined and got up. Stretching, he nosed her hand.

“Let’s do it,” she told him. Together they walked up the steps. Bree stopped at the closet at the top of the stairs and took out the empty boxes stacked inside. Her heart began to slam against her ribs. It had to be done, she told herself.

Tears pooled in her eyes, and through a blur she walked to Davy’s room and pushed open the door. She would start with the toys. Kneeling beside the toy box, she packed the blocks first. Davy had loved his blocks. Together they would build towers, then he would chortle with glee and knock the blocks in all directions. She had bought him a box of Lincoln Logs for his third birthday, and he was fascinated with the various ways he could make them fit together.

Sobs spilled from her throat as the memories washed over her. She hugged a teddy bear to her chest and rocked back and forth. She couldn’t do this. Maybe she should ask Naomi to do it for her. The bear still smelled faintly of baby powder and bubble-gum toothpaste.

She slowly pulled the stuffed animal away from her chest and placed it to one side. Davy’s favorite stuffed animal, a koala bear he’d called Pooky, had gone down with him in the plane. She would keep this one instead. She drew in a deep breath, then another. The rest of Davy’s stuffed animals went into the box. She forced herself to move forward.

Step by step, she could get this done. She opened the closet and began to pack Davy’s clothing. The little suit he’d worn to Hilary’s first campaign party, the sweats that matched his daddy’s, the bib overalls he’d worn when they’d made mud pies.

She allowed herself to dwell on each memory. The process would be a cauterization of sorts. If she could get through this, she could get through the rest of her life.

The dresser was next. His small underclothes, socks, and T-shirts went into the box. She pulled out his Barney swim trunks and remembered the way he turned as brown as a squirrel over the course of the summer. Shouting with laughter, he would scream, “Watch me, Mommy,” then plunge into the icy waves that splashed Superior’s shoreline.

The cold water never seemed to bother him. Even when his lips would turn blue, he would beg to stay in the lake. Rob had called him their baby salmon, all slippery and glistening from the water. Shaking, she sat in the rocker until she could go on. The memories crashed over her with the force of a Lake Superior nor’easter. For a few moments she thought she might sink beneath those crushing waves just as the Edmund Fitzgerald had done.

She left the chair and went to the bed. Davy’s Superman bedspread, sheets, and curtains were as he had left them. Four quick flips and the bedspread was folded and in the box. Then she stripped the sheets and tossed them into the box as well. She dragged the toy chest under the window and closed the lid. Standing on top of it, she could just reach the curtain rods. The hooks didn’t want to let go any more than she did, but she finally managed to release them, and the curtains dropped to the floor.

Four boxes. Davy’s young life had been reduced to four boxes. Bree stood and looked around the stripped room. Her heart felt equally stripped, and raw as well. She would ask Kade to help her move the bed to the attic. Maybe she could find a queen-size bed at the secondhand furniture shop. The room was large enough for one, and then her cousin and his wife could have a decent night’s sleep when they came to visit, though that wouldn’t be for some time. They were working in Saudi Arabia for the next two years.

Somehow, taking the boxes of Davy’s things to the attic seemed wrong. One by one, she carried them downstairs to the kitchen. She wished she’d thought of it sooner, but she knew what to do now. She would just have to work harder to accomplish it. Her Carhartt overalls hung on a peg by the back door. She started to put them on then realized it was too dark to pick the right spot. Tomorrow she would dress warmly and dig a hole under the apple tree that held Davy’s tree house. There she would bury Davy’s things.

She would finally have a grave site of sorts where she could place flowers and remember her son—something better than an empty grave at the cemetery. The search was over. She would let it go now. Life wouldn’t be the same without her boy, but she couldn’t live in the past anymore. The future beckoned, and she was ready to face it. She would help Steve find who killed Fay. If that led to the woman in the cabin, fine. But if it didn’t, she was okay with that too.

The snow slowed her progress. Rachel plodded through the drifts with the sun shining weakly through the trees. Sam would be so glad to see her, and even more glad when he heard the news. No more cold cabins for them. By this time next week, they’d be far away from here, somewhere no one could trace them. Somewhere no one could separate them.

She stopped to catch her breath and checked her watch. Nearly two o’clock. Her inner compulsion to see Sam, to make sure he was all right, drove her on. He was such a little boy, and she knew she should not have left him home alone for two days. It had turned colder than she’d expected while she was gone. Ten inches of snow covered the ground, and she wished she had her snowshoes.

Frank would declare her predicament more evidence of her poor judgment, but then he had never given her credit for anything. Necessity was a hard taskmaster. He had just intended to let Paulie go to prison. Even when she’d provided the way out, Frank still hadn’t intervened for Paulie. Her nephew deserved better from his own father. Maybe when Paulie got out of prison, he would come to visit her. Surely he knew what she’d done for him.

She would even let him stay with her, once she and Sam got their own place. Or maybe they’d get a place big enough for the whole family. Smiling, she started off toward the cabin again. She made it the rest of the way in just over fifteen minutes, and the sight of the cabin warmed her. A light shone through the window, and she frowned. Sam shouldn’t be wasting the kerosene that way. But maybe the lad was frightened.

She sometimes forgot just how young Sam was. He often seemed so much older than four. Those eyes of his had seen horrors no child should witness. He never spoke of his dead father, but she saw his memory in the boy’s eyes. As she pushed the lever to raise the inside latch, the scent of smoke, strong and acrid, burned her nose, and her heart raced.

“Sam?” Alarm made her speak louder than she’d intended. A charred blanket lay by the wood stove. The stove door stood open and wind whistled through the cabin like through a wind tunnel.

Frantic now, she rushed forward. She heard a groan. “Sam?”

“It hurts.” Sam raised his head from where he lay on the floor near the back door.

Soot covered his face and hands, and his pajamas were black with it. One sleeve had been burned, and even from here, she could see the blisters on his arm.

She rushed to kneel at his side. “Sam, what happened?” His body was chilled. She examined his arm. Second-degree burns, nothing worse. And only in one small area. There seemed to be no other damage.

She scooped him into her arms, carried him to the bed and bundled him beneath the covers, then rushed to build a fire. The kindling box was empty. Confusion churned her mind. This was the second time he’d disobeyed her in the past few days. What had happened to her sweet, obedient son? His disobedience had hurt him. She pushed away the guilt she felt for leaving him alone. He would have been fine if only he’d obeyed her. Necessity was a hard taskmaster.

She grabbed the ax by the door and quickly shaved some kindling from a split log. Within minutes she had a fire blazing, and its pleasant warmth began to creep into the room. Ignoring his pain-filled eyes on her, she washed his burns and applied a salve.

“This is what happens when you don’t mind your mother,” she told him.

“I tried to do it like you showed me,” he murmured.

“Don’t try to blame me for your misbehavior,” she said. “I told you to leave the fire alone.”

“I was so cold.”

Rachel bristled. He didn’t know what cold was. She was the one who had traipsed through the cold Chicago wind all night, and for what? To give a nice home to an ungrateful child. She trembled with the urge to punish him then reminded herself he’d already reaped the consequence of his disobedience.

“The fire jumped on me. Mommy always said to ‘drop and roll,’ so that’s what I did.”

His mommy. He hadn’t mentioned her in months. “I’m your mother now,” Rachel said sharply. She tossed the water out the back door then busied herself with cleaning up the mess. She could not pack with the cabin in this mess. They would be on the bus for Chicago in two days. Frank had promised to pick them up at the station.

She would give him a stern lecture about obedience tomorrow. Frank would toss them out if she couldn’t keep the boy under control. If Sam didn’t do what he was told, she didn’t know what she would do. He had severely disappointed her. She would have to make him understand that.

When Rachel finished cleaning, she pulled on a flannel nightgown and crawled beneath the covers next to her sleeping son. There was so much to do over the next couple of days. But she would breathe easier once they were gone from this place. No one would ever find her and Sam once they reached Chicago.

A distant hum woke her. From the brilliance of the morning light, she knew it had snowed overnight. She ran to the window and surveyed the blinding landscape. There was at least eighteen inches of snow on the ground. The racket increased, and she caught a glimpse of a snowmobile moving fast through the trees. The rider must be an idiot to travel so fast over this terrain, especially under such conditions.

The sound trailed away in the direction of the old copper mine. Rachel frowned. Could that have been the man she’d seen carrying the woman’s body? What was he doing snooping around here? Sam was still in a deep sleep. She quietly pulled on her clothes then let herself out of the cabin.

Her snowshoes hung on a nail outside the door, along with her binoculars. She slipped the binoculars over her head then put on her snowshoes and started toward the mine. She loved the woods after a deep snow. The peace and serenity soothed her. All she could hear was the sound of her own breath whistling through her teeth as she tramped through the winter wonderland.

The sound of the snowmobile died suddenly, and she guessed from the sound that it had stopped at the mine. Hurrying as fast as she dared, she struggled through the snow until she came to the edge of a clearing. The old Copper Queen, its wooden shaft and outbuildings weathered and dilapidated, sat at the far end of the clearing. The snow had stopped falling, except for the occasional flake, and she had a good view from where she crouched.

Over the past fifty years, the forest had reclaimed much of the area, but the Copper Queen still stood tall and proud. Last summer Rachel had come here and poked around, hoping to find some relic of the grand old lady’s heyday. But all she had ever picked up were old bottles and a few quartz rocks.

The rider had parked the snowmobile near the entrance of the main offices. She didn’t dare leave the cover of the trees. He had to come out sooner or later. She scanned the surrounding area and detected nothing that concerned her.

Crouching on her haunches, she settled back to wait, though she knew she would have to head back if he didn’t come out soon. Her stomach growled with hunger, and Sam would want breakfast when he awakened.

Rachel took a deep breath. She loved the air’s sharp, cold freshness. She would miss this in Chicago. But the cabin would always be here. Maybe she and Sam could come up for an occasional visit. No, that wouldn’t be a good idea. Once they were gone from here, they needed to stay gone. She and Sam would have to disappear—without a trace.

A movement caught her eye. She tried to bring the binoculars to her eyes, but the brim of her leather fedora blocked her view. She took it off and laid it beside her then focused the binoculars. A man carrying a duffle bag came out of the building. His face was turned away, and Rachel cursed.

“Turn this way,” she whispered.

As if he heard her soft words, the man turned fully toward her. Through the binoculars, Rachel saw his face clearly. It was the same man, just as she had suspected. His cheeks were red with cold, and the concentration lining his face told her that whatever he carried was important. He secured the bag onto the back of the snowmobile and hopped onto the seat. The roar of the engine cut through the cold air. Then he pointed the snowmobile directly at Rachel.

Panicked, Rachel scuttled back farther into the brush. She didn’t come out until the sound of the engine faded, then she scrambled to her feet and rushed toward home. She’d had no business even coming out here other than to satisfy her curiosity. It was stupid to put herself in danger like that. If he’d seen her, he might have killed her just like he killed that woman.

Hurrying into the cabin, she latched the door behind her with a relieved sigh. The sooner they were gone from here the better.

“I’m hungry.” Sam’s plaintive voice broke into her thoughts. “It’s cold in here.”

He was right. The fire had gone out while she was gone, and the chilly wind had quickly stolen the remaining warmth.

“I’ll have it going again in a jiffy,” she said cheerfully.

“Are you still mad at me?” Sam’s woebegone face peeked over the edge of the covers.

“I’m not angry, but I’m very disappointed in you, Sam.” When his face crumpled in tears, she softened her tone. “You must learn to always obey me, son. Always. I only want what’s best for you.”

He began to sob, and Rachel went to take him in her arms. “There, there,” she soothed. “We’re going to leave here in a few days, Sammy. You’ll have other children to play with, and a nice house with heat that comes out of registers instead of a stove. You won’t ever again have to worry about being cold.”

“Never?” He hiccuped and rubbed his nose on the back of his pajama sleeve.

“Never. I promise. Won’t that be fun? We’ll be in a big city with lots of other people.”

“What about my squirrel?”

“Well, we’ll have to leave Marcus here. He wouldn’t like it in the city. He wouldn’t have as many trees to play in, and it would be hard for him to find nuts.”

Sam screwed up his face as he thought about it, then he nodded. “Can I come back to see him sometimes?”

“We’ll see if we can find you a new squirrel in Chicago. And we can walk along the lakeshore and feed the ducks. That will be fun.” She kissed him on the forehead. “Now let’s take a look at your burns this morning. How are you feeling?”

“My arm stings. Can I have Captain Crunch?”

“We’re all out of Captain Crunch, but I have Cheerios.” She ran her finger over Sam’s burns, and he flinched. Pressing her lips together, she went to fix his breakfast.

After breakfast she tackled the laundry. She heated water on the stove and dumped it in the washtub. She propped up the washboard in the tub and rubbed the clothes against it vigorously. As she worked, Rachel imagined the life they would have in Chicago. Never again would she be alone; she would always have Sam, and he would always love her. No one had ever really loved her, not even Frank. But someday Sam would thank her for saving his life, for putting him through school. He would show his gratitude by taking care of her when she got too old to take care of herself.

School. She would have to get a forged birth certificate and immunization records. Then she could get Sam to a doctor for the shots he needed to go to kindergarten. It would all work out.

Draping the wet clothes on a retractable line across the cabin, she finished the laundry as quickly as possible. They needed more wood. She went to the door and took down her coat. Where was her hat? Her heart dipped. She’d lost it, probably at the mine. She had to have her hat.

She got Sam dressed. “How would you like to play a game, Sammy?”

His head bobbed up and down. “What kind of game?”

“A spy game.”

“What’s a spy?” His tongue poked out as he worked at tying his shoes.

“Someone who watches what is going on and reports back to headquarters. You be the spy, and you can report to me.”

“That sounds fun!” He jumped to his feet.

“Get your snowshoes on,” she told him.

He stopped at the door. “I don’t like the snowshoes. I want to play in the snow without them.”

More disobedience? This was getting to be a habit, and one she intended to break. “Don’t argue with me. Get your snowshoes on.”

Sam’s lower lip thrust out, and he shook his head. “I don’t want to.”

Rage boiled over, and Rachel grabbed him roughly by the arm. Too late she realized it was his injured arm, and he cried out. “It’s your own fault,” she said. “Now get outside and get your snowshoes on like I told you.”

Sobbing and holding his arm, Sam did as she said. She didn’t know what had gotten into him. If he kept causing her this much trouble, what would she do? This must be what all the magazines meant when they talked about children becoming rebellious. What would it take to break Sam of that streak?

Sam slowly strapped on his snowshoes then stood and waited while she put hers on.

“Let’s go,” she said curtly.

It was slow going with Sam. Rachel was beginning to wish she’d left him home, but she needed him to keep watch for her. They finally reached the mine. She paused and listened but heard nothing.

“Follow me,” she told Sam. She led the way across the clearing to the building where she’d seen the man. “I want you to stand guard here. Your job as a spy is to listen for any people or snowmobiles,” she said. “If you hear anything, just yell for me, okay?”

He nodded. “Okay. But hurry. I’m scared.”

He was always scared. When she got him to Chicago, she’d have a doctor look at him. She patted him on the head, turned on her flashlight, and went down into the shaft building. An hour later she was dirty and tired but no wiser. It was going to take someone smarter than she was to figure out what that man had been doing there.

When she exited the mine, she saw a man standing with Sam. The boy was crying and trying to get away from him. Did Sam know him? There seemed to be a frightened recognition on his face. She looked around for a weapon and grabbed a chair leg from a pile of rubble. Creeping forward, the snow crunched beneath Rachel’s boots and the man turned to face her. The breath left her lungs when she saw the gun in his hand.

“I’d put that down if I were you,” he said casually. A sock hat covered his hair, and the rest of his form was buried in a thick coat. He held up her fedora. “You were here before, weren’t you? What did you see?”

She let the chair leg drop from her fingers. “Nothing. You with a duffel bag, that’s all. Let go of my boy.” She hadn’t heard his snowmobile.

“I want you to keep your mouth shut about what you saw.”

“I don’t know who you are anyway.”

“You could point me out. But now that I’ve seen the boy, I know you don’t want to draw attention to yourself.”

“What do you mean? Please, let go of my son,” she whispered.

The man grinned and released Sam. “Go to your mother, boy. ”

He knew she wasn’t Sam’s mother. Her fear ratcheted up a notch. Sam limped toward her, and she grabbed his good arm and dragged him close to her side. “I’m not saying anything.” Sam clung to her tightly.

“Good. Because I know someone who would be very interested in finding the boy. Someone who has been looking for him. You obviously know where the plane is. You’re going to take me there. Let’s get going.”

She balked. She had to come up with a plan. “It’s too far in the snow.”

“My snowmobile is over there.” He motioned to a dip in the terrain in a stand of aspen. “Move.”

“The boy is tired,” she protested. “Come tomorrow, and we can go while he’s having his nap.”

“I’ve been looking for it for a year. I don’t intend to wait.”

She had no choice but to follow him across the snowy ground. He got on the snowmobile and motioned for her and Sam to get on behind him. There would be room for the three of them; the man was slim and Sam was small. Sam began to whimper.

“Hush,” Rachel said sternly. She had to think.

The man turned the key to start the snowmobile, but all it did was click. He muttered an oath under his breath and tried again, but the engine still refused to start.

“Get off,” he growled. “I’ll have to walk back. I’ll be over to see you tomorrow. You’d better be there, or you’ll be sorry.”

Her tongue wanted to form words of defiance, but all Rachel managed to do was nod. She wished she had his gun. She wouldn’t hesitate to use it. No one was going to take her boy. It was only after she was home again that she realized her fedora was still at the mine.

This time it could stay there.