was now.
She remembered the terrible sight at the hunter’s blind—deputy Ed Schaeffer lying unconscious on the ground, arms and face swollen grotesquely from the wasp stings. Garrett had muttered, “He shouldn’t’ve hurt ’em. Yellow jackets only attack when their nest’s in danger. It was his fault.” He’d walked inside slowly, the insects ignoring him, to collect some things. He’d taped her hands in front of her and then led her into the woods through which they’d been traveling now for several miles.
The boy moved in an awkward way, jerking her in one direction, then another. He talked to himself. He scratched at the red blotches on his face. Once, he stopped at a pool of water and stared at it. He waited until some bug or spider danced away over the surface then pressed his face into the water, soaking the troubled skin. He looked down at his feet then took off his remaining shoe and flung it away. They pushed on through the hot morning.
She glanced at the map sticking out of his pocket. “Where’re we going?” she asked.
“Shut up. Okay?”
Ten minutes later he made her take her shoes off and they forded a shallow, polluted stream. When they’d crossed he eased her into a sitting position. Garrett sat in front of her and, as he watched her legs and cleavage, he slowly dried her feet with a wad of Kleenex he had pulled from his pocket. She felt the same repulsion at his touch that had flooded through her the first time she had to take a tissue sample from a corpse in the morgue at the hospital. He put her white shoes back on, laced them tight, holding her calf for longer than he needed to. Then he consulted the map and led her back into the woods.
Clicking his nails, scratching his cheek . . .
Little by little the marshes grew more tangled and the water darker and deeper. She supposed they were headed toward the Great Dismal Swamp though she couldn’t imagine why. Just when it seemed they could go no farther because of the choked bogs, Garrett steered them into a large pine forest, which, to Lydia’s relief, was far cooler than the exposed swampland.
He found another path. He led her along it until they came to a steep hill. A series of rocks led to the top.
“I can’t climb that,” she said, struggling to sound defiant. “Not with my hands taped. I’ll slip.”
“Bullshit,” he muttered angrily, as if she were an idiot. “You got those nurse shoes on. They’ll hold you fine. Look at me. I’m, like, barefoot and I can climb it. Lookit my feet, look!” He held up the bottoms. They were callused and yellow. “Now get your ass up there. Only, when you get to the top don’t go any farther. You hear me? Hey, you listening?” Another hiss; a fleck of spittle touched her cheek and seemed to burn her skin like battery acid.
God, I hate you, she thought.
Lydia started to climb. She paused halfway, lookedback. Garrett was watching her closely, snapping his fingernails. Staring at her legs, encased in white stockings, his tongue teasing his front teeth. Then looking up higher, under her skirt.
Lydia continued to climb. Heard his hissing breath as he started up behind her.
At the top of the hill was a clearing and from it a single path led into a thick grove of pine trees. She started along the path, into the shade.
“Hey!” Garrett shouted. “Didn’t you hear me? I told you not to move!”
“I’m not trying to get away!” she cried. “It’s hot. I’m trying to get out of the sun.”
He pointed to the ground, twenty feet away. There was a thick blanket of pine boughs in the middle of the path. “You could’ve fallen in,” his voice rasped. “You could’ve ruined it.”
Lydia looked closely. The pine needles covered a wide pit.
“What’s under there?”
“It’s a deadfall trap.”
“What’s inside?”
“You know—a surprise for anybody coming after us.” He said this proudly, smirking, as if he’d been very clever to think of it.
“But anybody