And whoever had put the trailer there had had eight years to move it. What it sounded like they’d never had, though, was a reason.
I had the map, and a bundle of sticks across my back, and like any hunter I had a shotgun — not my granddad’s, since that one had yet to turn up, and it’s just as well I went for the one in my trunk, carried out of habit for the job — but sometimes hunters come home empty-handed.
At least I came back with a good idea of what else I needed before going out to try again.
“Remember what Grandma used to call her?” Gina asked. I was ashamed to admit I didn’t. “‘Our little wood-elf,’” she said, then, maybe to make me feel better, “That’s not something a boy would’ve remembered. That’s one for the girls.”
“Maybe so,” I said, and peeled the blanket open one more time to check my sister’s face. I’d spent the last hours terrified that there had been some magic about our grandmother’s attic, and that once she was carried back to the outside world again, the eight years of decay Shae had eluded would find her at last.
One more time, I wouldn’t have known she wasn’t just dreaming.
Instead, the magic had come with her. Or maybe the Woodwalker, spying us with the burden we’d shared through miles of woodland, knew our hearts now, too, and opened the veil for our eyes to see. Either way, I’d again followed where the old map led, and this time Shae had proven to be the key.
“Do you think it goes the other way?” Gina asked.
“What do you mean?”
“If we stood up and whoever’s in there looked out, would they see us now? Or would they look straight at us and just see more trees?”
“I really don’t want to put that to the test.”
The trailer was small enough to hitch behind a truck, large enough for two or three people to spend a day inside without tripping over each other too badly. It sat nestled into the scooped-out hollow of a rise, painted with a fading camouflage pattern of green and brown. At one time its keepers had strung nets of nylon mesh over and around it, to weave with branches and vines, but it looked like it had been a long time since they’d bothered, and they were sagging here, collapsed there. It had a generator for electricity, propane for gas. From the trailer’s roof jutted a couple of pipes that had, ever since we’d come upon it, been venting steam that had long since discouraged anything from growing too close to it.
Eventually the steam stopped, and a few minutes later came the sound of locks from the other side of the trailer door. It swung open and out stepped two men. They took a few steps away before they stripped off the gas masks they’d been wearing and let them dangle as they seemed glad to breathe the cool autumn air.
I whispered for Gina to stay put, stay low, then stepped out from our hiding place and went striding toward the clearing in-between, and maybe it did take the pair of them longer to notice than it should’ve. They each wore a pistol at the hip but seemed to lack the instinct to go for them.
And the trees shuddered high overhead, even though I couldn’t feel or hear a breeze.
“Hi, Ray,” I called, leveling the shotgun at them from the waist.
“Dylan,” he said, with a tone of weary disgust. “And here I believed you when you said you weren’t no narc.”