“Are you really? That’s nice, dear. So I don’t suppose that I’d find this call came from a New Hampshire area code if I star-sixty-nined it?”
“Of course you would,” Abra said. “I’m using my cell. You need to get with the twenty-first century, bitch.”
“What do you want?” The voice on the other end was now curt.
“To make sure you know the rules,” Abra said. “I’ll be there at five tomorrow. I’ll be in an old red truck.”
“Driven by whom?”
“My uncle Billy,” Abra said.
“Was he one of the ones from the ambush?”
“He’s the one who was with me and the Crow. Stop asking questions. Just shut up and listen.”
“So rude,” Rose said sadly.
“He’ll park way at the end of the lot, by the sign that says KIDS EAT FREE WHEN COLORADO PRO TEAMS WIN.”
“I see you’ve been on our website. That’s sweet. Or was it your uncle, perhaps? He’s very brave to act as your chauffeur. Is he your father’s brother or your mother’s? Rube families are a hobby of mine. I make family trees.”
She’ll try to snoop, Dan had told her, and how right he was.
“What part of ‘shut up and listen’ don’t you understand? Do you want this to happen or not?”
No reply, just waiting silence. Creepy waiting silence.
“From the parking lot, we’ll be able to see everything: the campground, the Lodge, and Roof O’ the World on top of the hill. My uncle and me better see you up there, and we better not see the people from your True Knot anywhere. They’re going to stay in that meeting-hall thingy while we do our business. In the big room, got it? Uncle Billy won’t know if they’re not where they’re supposed to be, but I will. If I pick up a single one somewhere else, we’ll be gone.”
“Your uncle will stay in his truck?”
“No. I’ll stay in the truck, until we’re sure. Then he’ll get back in and I’ll come to you. I don’t want him anywhere near you.”
“All right, dear. It will be as you say.”
No, it won’t. You’re lying.
But so was Abra, which kind of made them even.
“I have one really important question, dear,” Rose said pleasantly.
Abra almost asked what it was, then remembered her uncle’s advice. Her real uncle. One question, right. Which would lead to another . . . and another . . . and another.
“Choke on it,” she said, and hung up. Her hands began to tremble. Then her legs and arms and shoulders.
“Abra?” Mom. Calling from the foot of the stairs. She feels it. Just a little, but she does feel it. Is that a mom thing or a shining thing? “Honey, are you okay?”
“Fine, Mom! Getting ready for bed!”
“Ten minutes, then we’re coming up for kisses. Be in your PJs.”
“I will.”
If they knew who I was just talking to, Abra thought. But they didn’t. They only thought they knew what was going on. She was here in her bedroom, every door and window in the house was locked, and they believed that made her safe. Even her father, who had seen the True Knot in action.
But Dan knew. She closed her eyes and reached out to him.
9
Dan and Billy were under another motel canopy. And still nothing from Abra. That was bad.
“Come on, chief,” Billy said. “Let’s get you inside and—”
Then she was there. Thank God.
“Hush a minute,” Dan said, and listened. Two minutes later he turned to Billy, who thought the smile on his face finally made him look like Dan Torrance again.
“Was it her?”
“Yes.”
“How’d it go?”
“Abra says it went fine. We’re in business.”
“No questions about me?”
“Just which side of the family you were on. Listen, Billy, the uncle thing was a bit of a mistake. You’re way too old to be Lucy’s or David’s brother. When we stop tomorrow to do our errand, you need to buy sunglasses. Big ones. And keep that ball cap of yours jammed down all the way to your ears, so your hair doesn’t show.”
“Maybe I should get some Just For Men, while I’m at it.”
“Don’t sass me, you old fart.”
That made Billy grin. “Let’s get registered and get some food. You look better. Like you could actually eat.”
“Soup,” Dan said. “No sense pressing my luck.”
“Soup. Right.”
He ate it all. Slowly. And—reminding himself that this would be over one way or the other in less than twenty-four hours—he managed to keep it down. They dined in Billy’s room and