"Is it important to disguise our ident.i.ty?"
"I don't think so. But it does make you feel more bada.s.s. Like when guys rob a bank and they're all wearing scary clown masks? I have a huge girl b.o.n.e.r for scary clown masks."
"Unless you have Mary Poppins, I think I'll go as I am. But thank you for asking."
Allie led her through the looming pagan rocks of Monument Park, to a stone altar that would've been the perfect place to sacrifice Aslan. Father Storey stood behind it, with the Fireman on his right, and Michael and Ben on his left-an image that Harper thought oddly recalled The Last Supper. Michael even had Judas's stringy red beard, if none of his malice or fear.
"Allie?" Father Storey raised one hand, palm out, as if in benediction. "I promised your aunt you'd have no part in this. Head down to the bus-you're watching the gate tonight."
"I swapped with Mindy Skilling," Allie said. "Mindy didn't mind."
"And I'm sure she won't mind if you swap back."
Allie shot a questioning, hostile look at the Fireman. "I always go. Since when do I not get to go? Mike is going. He's only a year older than me. I started the Lookouts, not him. I was the first."
"The last time you went running around with John, your aunt Carol sat staring out the window, clutching one of your sweaters and praying," said Father Storey. "She wasn't praying to G.o.d, Allie. She was praying to your mother to keep you safe. Don't put her through another night like that. Have mercy on her. And have mercy on me."
Allie went on staring at the Fireman. "You going along with this bulls.h.i.t?"
"You heard him," the Fireman said. "Run along, Allie, and don't give me one of your sixteen-year-old death stares. If you want to have a row with me, it'll have to be later."
She glared at him for a moment longer-eyeing him as if trying to decide how best to get even. Then she looked at Michael, opened her mouth as if to plead with him. Mike half turned away, though, scratching his back with his rosewood nightstick, and pretended not to see her staring.
"f.u.c.k you," Allie said, her voice shaking with anger. "f.u.c.k all of you."
In the next instant she bolted into the trees. Harper had been able to move like that once; she remembered being sixteen quite vividly.
Father Storey smiled in a way that looked awfully like a wince. "In her own soft-spoken, gentle fashion, she does manage to get her point across, doesn't she? I would add that compared to her mother, Allie Storey is the very model of restraint."
"Shoot," Ben Patchett said. "I forgot to grab a flashlight."
"No worries, Ben," the Fireman said, stripping off his left glove. "I brought a light."
His hand ignited in a gout of blue flame, with a soft whoosh, illuminating a circle ten feet in diameter. The boulders threw monstrous shadows halfway down the hill.
Ben Patchett swallowed heavily as Harper fell in beside him.
"I'll never get used to that," he said.
7.
They followed the Fireman away from the church and in under the pines, where there were no boards to walk on. But the snow was brittle here, frozen and gla.s.sy on the surface, and for the most part they could make their way downhill without leaving any tracks.
Downhill? They seemed to be heading toward the water. Harper was surprised, had expected them to pile into a car.
Harper's foot went through the polished surface of the snow and she lurched into Ben's side. He steadied her, then looped his arm through hers.
"Let me help you," he said. He cast a hooded look at the Fireman's back and muttered, "Crazy bringing you along."
A weight and ill-shaped ma.s.s in his pocket pressed against her arm and she frowned. She pushed her fingers into his coat pocket and found a revolver: hatched walnut grip, cold steel hammer.
She slipped her arm free.
He glanced at her, half smiling. "You're supposed to ask if that's a gun in my pocket or if I'm just happy to see you."
"Why do you need that?"
"You have to ask?"
"Sorry," she said. "I thought we're off to help people, not shoot them."
"You're off to help people. I'm on this trip to make sure my favorite nurse gets back to camp in one piece. We don't know anything about these two men. We don't know what they were locked up for. Maybe John Rookwood is all right risking your life for a couple outlaws, but I'm not." His face flushed and he looked down and away. "You ought to know by now how much I care about you, Harp. If something happened-sheesh."
She put her hand on the back of his arm and squeezed. She hoped he read that squeeze as Thank you for caring and not G.o.d, I'm h.o.r.n.y, we should really screw sometime. In her experience it was very difficult to offer a man affection and kindness without giving him the impression you were also offering a lay.
He smiled. "Besides. Departmental regulations require any officer transporting a prisoner to carry his firearm at all times. You can give up the badge, but it's hard to give up the mind-set. Not that I ever really gave up the badge."
"You still have it?"
"I keep it with my secret decoder ring and the fake mustache I used for undercover work." He b.u.mped her affectionately with his shoulder.
The snow was the color of blue steel, of gunmetal, in the moonlight.
He mused, "Sometimes I think I ought to put it back on."
"The fake mustache?" She peered into his features. "I guess you could pull one off without looking too sleazy. You have a good face for a mustache."
"No. My badge. Sometimes I think this community could use some law. Or at least some justice. Think about this gal who's running around, helping herself to grub and jewelry. If she comes forward and admits what she did-or if we find her out-is that really going to be the end of it? We're all just going to hug it out on Father Storey's say-so?"
"Maybe she could peel potatoes for a week or something."
"Or we could lock her up for three months, teach her a lesson. I even know where I'd do it. There's a meat locker below the cafeteria, just about the size of a cell at the county jail. Bring in a cot and-"
"Ben!" she cried.
"What? She wouldn't freeze. It's probably warmer in there than in the bas.e.m.e.nt of the church. There hasn't been any electric for months."
"That's disgusting. Solitary confinement in a room that smells like rotten meat. Over a couple cans of milk?"
"And the Portable Mother."
"f.u.c.k the Portable Mother."
He flinched.
Father Storey and Michael Lindqvist ambled along ahead of them, Father Storey saying something, a hand on Mike's back. Mike walked with his nightstick stuck out to one side, rapping it against the occasional tree trunk, like a boy running a stick over the boards of a fence. Ben watched them for a bit, then shook his head and snorted.
"If I was Mike, I'd be relieved to get out of camp and I don't know if I'd hurry back. He might be in more danger here."
"From who?" Harper asked.
"From Allie. That girl has a temper. I wouldn't want to cross her."
"You think she's mad Michael didn't come to her defense?"
"Especially after what they were up to before chapel. I saw the two of them ducked behind a pine at the edge of the woods, making out like they were never going to see each other again. If I was her father, I would've-but I'm not, and I guess neither of them are exactly kids anymore."
"I didn't know they were a going thing."
Ben waggled his hand. "On again, off again. Apparently on again." He smiled at this. When he spoke once more, his voice was pitched low and soft. "Putting the thief in the meat locker might be a kindness. You don't see that, because you think everyone is as warmhearted as you. Father Storey doesn't see it either. You and he are two sides of the same coin in that way."
"How is it a kindness?"
"It would keep her from getting killed. It's less a punishment, more like protective custody."
Harper opened her mouth to disagree, then recalled Allie's talk of finding the thief and yanking out her tongue. She closed her mouth and said nothing.
Three canoes were tied alongside the dock, bobbing in the sea. The Fireman lowered his burning left hand, put it under one flap of his turnout jacket, and smothered the flame.
"It'll be safer and faster to go the rest of the way by water." He settled into the canoe at the far end of the dock, slid his halligan into the bottom.
Ben frowned. "Um-John? Am I counting wrong, or are we at least a boat short? We're rescuing two men, aren't we? So . . . where are we going to put them?"
"You'll have room for them. I'm not coming back by boat. I've arranged for other transportation." The Fireman undid a rope and pushed the canoe into the Atlantic. It rode low in the water and Harper wondered how heavy a halligan bar really was.
Ben gestured at one of the other canoes. "Harper, I don't know much about boats. Do you want to steer and I'll-"
"Actually," Father Storey said, "I have a private medical matter to discuss with Nurse Willowes. Do you mind?"
Ben did mind-for a moment the disappointment on his face was so bald it was almost funny. But he nodded, and climbed down into one of the other canoes. "We'll see you when we get where we're going, then. Watch out for icebergs."
Harper untied them while Father Storey carefully climbed into the front of their canoe. As they pushed out into the water, Harper shut her eyes and inhaled deeply. The air was so clean and smelled so richly of the sea, it made her briefly dizzy.
"I like it out on the ocean. Always have," Father Storey said, speaking over his shoulder. "You know, the camp has a nearly forty-foot sailboat stashed on John's island. Big enough to-oh, will you look at that!" He pointed across the water with a dripping paddle.
Allie was in the front of the Fireman's canoe with a paddle. She had sat up as soon as they were fifty feet from the dock.
"Do you remember what John said to her, back on sh.o.r.e? 'If you want to have a row with me, it'll have to be later.'" Father Storey did a voice that was a little like Paul McCartney in Yellow Submarine. Not a bad imitation of the Fireman at that. He said it again-"'A row!'"-the British way, so it rhymed with cow, then repeated it once more, but in the American fashion, so it rhymed with low. "Ha! He was telling her we were taking the canoes, so she could run ahead and wait for us. Well. She comes by her go-screw-yourself streak honestly. I could never tell her mother, Sarah, a thing, either."
The sh.o.r.eline, bristling with firs, scrolled by on either side of them as they made their way out of the little harbor.
"What's bothering you, Father? You said you're not feeling well?"
"I believe I said I had a private medical matter. I don't think I said it was anything to do with me. I guess I'm all right. A little sick at heart. You don't treat for that, do you?"
"Sure. Take two chocolates and call me in the morning. I think Norma Heald has a few Hershey's Kisses in the kitchen. Tell her I wrote you a prescription."
He didn't laugh. "I think I'm going to have to send someone away. I've been trying to figure out how to protect someone no one will forgive. It seems to me that sending her away is the only hope for her. If she stays here, I'm afraid of what the camp might do to her." He cast a glance back at Harper and smiled a little. "Every time I see them sing and shine together I always wonder what would happen if they formed a lynch mob. Do you think the Dragonscale would like a lynch mob as well as a chorus? I do."
8.
He knows who the thief is, Harper thought. The idea was a sharp jolt, the mental equivalent of stepping on a tack.
"Why are you telling me this?" Harper asked.
He stared out over the prow of the boat. "The person of whom I speak would never leave willingly. Could you-if you had to-administer something? To pacify a person if she was-hysterical? Dangerous? To herself or . . . or others?"
Whatever Harper had been expecting to talk about, it wasn't this.
"I don't have anything strong enough in my supplies. To be honest, Father-"
"I wish you wouldn't call me that," he said, with a sudden bitterness. "I've never been ordained, not by any church. The only person who ought to call me Father is Carol. I never should've let that get started, but it satisfied my ego. I taught ethics and the history of Christianity at a prep school in Ma.s.sachusetts. I've gone from old-fuddy-duddy-in-the-ivory-tower to high popeDalai Lama of the New Faith in five months. You show me someone who could resist that, I'll show you a real saint."
"Now, Father. If I heard someone sneering at you like that, I'd break something over their head. Don't you know you give all these people hope? You give me hope, and that's as magic as a whole church full of people glowing like Christmas lights. I've started to believe I might live to see my child born, and that's because of you, and the songs, and all these wonderful people who have gathered around you."
"Ah. That's big-hearted of you, Harper. You just remember: I didn't do anything to make all of you wonderful. You were that way when I found you."
They swung out and around a headland into open water. The bank was forty feet away, a steep hill rising through scrawny bare trees and boulders.
"To return to your question, I don't have sedatives of any strength whatsoever. G.o.d help us if I ever have to perform a surgery. The most powerful drug in the camp medicine cabinet is Advil. But even if I did have something stronger, I wouldn't like to sedate someone as a punitive measure. I don't do that. I help sick people."
"This person-she is sick. And before you ask, no, I don't want to say who I have in mind. Not until I've absolutely settled on what steps to take."
"I wasn't going to ask." She had already noticed the way he was trying to avoid naming names.
He paused, considering for a time, then said: "What do you think of Martha Quinn's island?"
"I think I'd feel a lot better about it if I knew someone who has actually heard the broadcast."
Father Storey said, "Harold Cross claimed to have heard it. Once. And he was texting with someone in Lubec, which has been operating as the capital of Maine ever since Augusta burned to the ground."
"Harold was texting with someone who said they were in Lubec," Harper said. "I never knew him, but by the sound of it, Harold was a little too trusting."