For the first few minutes the next morning, I felt a hundred pounds lighter than the day before, as if I’d shucked off my whole worrisome self. I woke to the sound of Dad showering, the water rushing powerfully through the pipes, and stretched happily.
And then I remembered: the bullets, but no gun. Daniel’s ashes, which should have been waiting on our mantel in Sacramento, along on this crazy road trip with us. Not to mention Dad’s portable memorial to Daniel, the dead son he never mentioned.
I tiptoed to the bathroom door and tried the knob, which was locked. Did Dad always lock the door when he showered? The four of us had shared a single bathroom in Sacramento, and occasionally Mom and Dad had popped in on each other, or Dad and Daniel, or Mom and me, but the opposite-gender parent-child privacy had been fully respected. For all I knew, Dad had always locked the bathroom door ever since it was just the two of us. But maybe the door was locked now for a different reason.
Acting quickly, I repeated the search Sam and I had conducted yesterday: in Dad’s suitcase, under the mattress, making sure everything was undisturbed by the time I heard the water stop.
“Liv? Are you up?” Dad called through the door.
“Yeah.”
“Feeling better this morning?”
“Fine,” I said, and sat on the bed to think.
If Dad had a gun, it was in the bathroom with him now, and he would be carrying it underneath his clothes when he came out. If Dad didn’t have a gun, I was an idiot. It wasn’t hard to believe in my own stupidity, and I wanted to, more than anything, but somehow, our conversation yesterday hadn’t completely reassured me. Dad had done it again—looked straight at me without seeing me at all; said one thing while his mind seemed to be moving in a completely different direction.
Since Sam had held out his hand yesterday afternoon and I’d seen the bullet, my mind had been whirling. I wasn’t any kind of mental health expert, and a few sessions with a family therapist didn’t qualify me to be a crisis counselor, either. After our search of the motel room, Sam suggested I come right out and ask Dad about the bullets. I’d turned the question over in my mind that afternoon as Dad and I watched TV, but couldn’t bring myself to ask. I was fairly sure he would lie, feigning surprise, becoming defensive. And where would that get me? On the other hand, I wasn’t sure I could face the truth.
But I knew what I had to do, had known it since the second I rounded the corner of the administration wing at Rio and saw my father on the cafeteria roof. I had to come clean to Mom. I had to tell her the whole sorry mess. I should have told her on the phone, when I’d announced we were coming to see her in Omaha, or during any of our quick conversations since, when I’d done nothing more than update her about the weather and mileage and things I’d seen along the road, like circling vultures and shredded remains of tires from eighteen-wheelers. It had seemed unfair, an awful thing to dump Dad’s craziness on her when she was too far away to do anything about it. One more day, I promised myself. I would spill it all to her the second we pulled into her driveway in Omaha.
Just then, Dad emerged from the bathroom, looking fully rested and relentlessly chipper. “Let’s get this show on the road,” he said, slapping his hands together. The sound felt too loud for our little motel room, as if he’d miscalculated the volume. I noticed that he was wearing the same hooded sweatshirt as yesterday, its hem hanging low over his pants.
At breakfast, Betha Caldwell pressed her palm against my forehead, checking for fever, and I missed my own mother all over again with an intense, almost physical ache. Soon.
Because Dad was hoping to get on the road as soon as possible, Betha gave us a ride to J & E Automotive, and by nine-thirty, our suitcases and backpacks and extra shoes and books were heaped haphazardly on the sidewalk in front of the shop, waiting to be stowed in the Explorer. While Dad went inside to check on the progress, I plopped myself down on the cement next to our belongings, aware that to any passerby our junk probably looked like a homeless camp, missing only the shelter of a giant cardboard box.
Surprisingly, Sam wasn’t sitting outside the store, and his roadside stand wasn’t there, either. The folding tables were leaning upright against a fence on the side of the J & E Automotive property, and the chairs were there, too—but there was no sign of his snow globes depicting their miniaturized scenes of horror. Had he come back here yesterday afternoon, after our failed search of the motel room, and packed up for good? Or was he waiting until I was on the road again, out of his sight and mind, before he resumed business as usual?
It had only been two days, but I was already taking Sam’s presence for granted. This was where he always was, and this was what he always did. At any minute, Sam’s stepdad was going to announce that the Explorer was good to go, and that would be the end of Sam Ellis and me, if there had been a Sam Ellis and me to begin with.
I hadn’t even thanked him, I realized—not for taking me out to see the stars or exchanging stories of our worst things. I hadn’t thanked him for standing on top of my bed in his socks, unscrewing the overhead vent with a handy little tool on his Swiss army knife. I’d protested that my father really wasn’t that savvy—I was pretty sure he didn’t have his own multi-tool, anyway—but I’d felt relieved when Sam’s searching had produced nothing except a small shower of dust bunnies. I hadn’t even said a decent goodbye after Dad had barged wild-eyed into the motel room, looking as if he might strangle Sam, and me, too. At least Sam’s shoes had been back on his feet by then, so Dad hadn’t been able to collect evidence to support his wrong conclusion.
The office door swung open, and Dad came out.
I tried not to sound as if our car being fixed would be the end of the world. “The Explorer’s ready?”
“Not yet. Within the hour, they said. I’m going to grab some coffee. You in?”
I shook my head. If Sam Ellis came by, I wanted him to see me here, waiting for him. “I’m saving room for forty-four ounces of sugar and cancer-causing additives once we’re on the road.”
Dad patted the top of my hoodie affectionately as if I were a small dog and crossed the street. I was leaning back against my suitcase, staring after him when Sam said softly, “Hey.”
I whirled around to find him a foot from me. “Sneak up on me, why don’t you?”
Instead of saying anything, Sam crouched down beside me and grabbed my hands. Actually, he grabbed at the outline of my hands, which were tucked up into my sleeves. Even though our actual skin was separated by a thick layer of fabric, I swear I could still feel the warmth of him coming through.
“Where did you come from?” I demanded.
He jerked his head in the direction of the shop. “Inside. I’ve been helping out with your car.”
“I tried to ask him, but I couldn’t,” I whispered. “What am I going to do?”
He smiled shyly, as if we’d just met. Except when we’d met, he hadn’t actually been shy at all. “I figured you weren’t going to say anything, so this morning I took care of it for you.”
“What do you mean? You took care of what?”
He sank down next to me, reached into the pocket of his jeans, and held out five bullets in his cupped palm.
I leaned away from him, feeling sick at the sight. “You just took them out?”
“Yep. All of them.”
Panic was rising in me again, like water in a backed-up sink. “But what if he notices? What if we get on the road and he feels around under his seat and they aren’t there? What am I supposed to say then?”
Sam smiled his smile that wasn’t all the way even, but a little crooked, so that his lips met in two not exactly parallel lines. “Well, I replaced them with something else. So if he just feels around down there...”
“He’ll think the bullets are still there.”
“Right.”
“What did you replace them with?”
“Some AAA batteries.”
I let out a snort of laughter. “Oh, wow. That shouldn’t be funny. But it is.”
“They’re about the same size, and it might work.”
“Yeah.” Relief had flooded through me, and something else—gratitude. A warm, happy flush snuck up my face. “It might.”
“But you’re going to tell your mom everything, right?”
“Tomorrow.”
“And you’re sure you’re going to be okay until then, between here and Omaha?”
I slid my hands out of my sleeves and locked fingers with Sam. His hands reminded me a bit of my mom’s, gently calloused, hands that knew how to make intricate pieces of art, or take the cover off a heating vent, or help with an oil change. “My dad isn’t going to hurt me. He wouldn’t ever.”
He gave me that crooked smile again, and I leaned close to him, so close that I was pretty sure the heart I heard beating wasn’t my own. “Sam Ellis. Do you know what I’m going to do right now?”
“You’re going to kiss me,” he said.
And he was right.