Authors: Leigh Talbert Moore
Tags: #love, #romantic, #action, #adventure, #small town, #paranormal, #female protagonist, #suspense, #survival
My breath hitched at the idea.
Of course!
Where else were they keeping the rest of Dabb Creek’s residents?
The lunch tone sounded the end of our workday, and I had to keep myself from skipping across the yard to the dining hall. I couldn’t wait to tell Cleve what I’d realized. Joining forces with another camp changed everything.
As we filtered in, I looked out across the field, another camp would be close enough to share food and supplies, and if I got out and went there, maybe I could blend in with those prisoners and find Jackson. Then the two of us could escape together and come back for our friends.
Cleve wasn’t with Team Two, but I saw D’Lo at the end of the line. I tried to catch his eye, but he turned away as if he didn’t know me—or he didn’t want to. An ice-cold chill shivered down my back. Something had happened. Why hadn’t Cleve reappeared?
I walked slower as the other prisoners shuffled past until I was standing behind Dee. We’d be sitting together for the meal now. It was more steak, but this time our cuts had grill-marks on them. We also had a few wedges of cheese, and assorted fruit slices. I kept my head down as he started to eat.
Neither of us spoke, and he acted like he hadn’t even seen me pull back to be beside him or sit right next to him. I watched his hand slide forward and take his glass. I followed with my eyes as he drank it, but he wouldn’t look at anything or make eye contact with anybody. Something different was happening with Team Two when they were away, and it was something bad.
A tremor moved through my stomach. “Dee?” I whispered, looking at my plate.
No response.
I took my hand and moved it under the table to his huge, rock-hard thigh. I couldn’t make a dent in that muscle, but I gave it a squeeze anyway. He slowly turned his head my way and widened his eyes like I should leave him alone.
“What happened?” I insisted.
“Miss?” A genderless voice came from behind me, and I snatched my hand back.
“Y-yes?”
“You haven’t touched your meal. Was it not prepared to your liking?”
I stared at my plate. “I... I ate a big breakfast,” I said, as if they didn’t know.
“At least three bites of everything,” the voice said.
I resisted saying I hadn’t had a mamma since I was nine. I wasn’t that brave. Instead I nodded and picked up my fork. I shifted the fruit around and bit the end off a slice of apple.
“Don’t forget your protein,” the guard said. “You worked very hard today. We don’t want anyone becoming ill.”
I dutifully stabbed a piece of the beef I’d cut but not eaten. As I put the bite in my mouth, I glanced up to the next table. Flora was facing me, and her eyes had dark purple marks under them. Her face was pale, and she seemed to be staring straight through the floor between us. She was getting worse. Something had to happen soon.
If Dee was too scared to help, Cleve and I would do it alone. I had to get out of here if only to get help for my friend.
The third tone sounded. Lunch was over.
* * *
O
ut in the yard, D’Lo took his usual spot in the shade. I watched him sit down and rest his chin on his chest. The straw hat they’d assigned each of us was pulled down over his face.
Cleve still hadn’t come back, and I glanced at our guards. As usual they didn’t seem too worried about us. Keeping my sensors up for any change in their behavior, I casually went to my large friend and sat next to him.
“What’s going on?” I whispered. “Why won’t you talk to me?”
His gaze roamed the perimeter then returned to his lap. Without a word, he shook his head and put his chin on his chest again. I wasn’t having any of it. I grabbed the sleeve of his coveralls and jerked the fabric hard. “Tell me what happened!”
His head wagged back and forth then quietly, through motionless lips he answered. “Not safe. Don’t know what they can hear.” The whites showed around his pitch-black irises as he pointed to the sky. “They’re not from here.”
I shook my head firmly. “NO! You cannot fall for that. They’re screwing with our heads, Dee.”
His eyes held mine, and I could tell he believed the hoax. I stubbornly stared back and pressed my lips tight together. I was
not
accepting their lies, but it was clear he was. He’d fallen for it hook, line, and sinker just like in that old movie where they brainwashed the guy into assassinating the President.
Stress twisted a sharp pain between my shoulder blades. The pressure was becoming too much as I pushed myself off the ground. It was all I could do not to take off running and screaming, kicking and yelling for this to end, for them to let me go. I’d show them what I thought of their psychological warfare.
I walked as far as the chicken-wire fence and stopped. I took a deep breath and let my shoulders drop. Staring into the dense forest, I tried my own brand of mental messaging, begging for Jackson to feel my presence or to hear me calling him through the sheer force of my will.
The woods grew even darker as the trees got closer together. Green leaves mixed with black shadows, dark-brown sticks with mud. I stared until my eyes hurt. Then I took another deep breath and headed up the hill to try and find Cleve.
I’d just reached the grove in the center, when Cato burst from her cabin at the bottom of the hill. I jumped, then froze in place and watched as she walked quickly, almost running toward the dining hall.
Her movements were a mix of excitement and desperation. She didn’t see me, but by the look on her face, I doubted she would’ve have seen anyone.
A shuffling noise to my right caught my attention, and a guy who appeared about my age stepped from around the corner, just beyond the hall. He was tall and wore a drab tee that revealed muscular arms. Khaki cargos hung low on his slim hips, and dark bangs were swept long over his left eye and cheek. His lips were tight, and he seemed angry.
It didn’t matter. The general-woman let out a laugh-cry and broke into a real run when she saw him. She grabbed him first by the shoulders and then pulled him into a hug. She let go and held him at arm’s length, and I watched her scrub her fingers back and forth through the front of his hair. It was the color of coffee, and he seemed embarrassed by her show of affection. I bit my lip, frowning as I watched them.
“Gallatin. Oh, at last.” Her voice was still that same calm sound, but it trembled a bit as she spoke. Then she laughed again. “Are you well? Did you encounter any difficulties on your journey?”
I studied him, wondering who this guy was. I didn’t have to wait long for my answer.
“I am well, sister.” His voice matched hers in its calm, formal speech. “The trip was quiet.”
She turned, putting her arm across his shoulders and leading him away, toward the single cabins. “I’ve prepared a place for you to sleep. You’ll have your own room... But I’m afraid you
must
help with the animals. I’m at a complete loss.”
“I’d rather work than sit here doing nothing. Now that you’ve brought me here.”
He was her same height, but his coloring was completely different. Whereas Cato was extremely fair with pale blue eyes, he was all one color—tan, or perhaps it was more olive—and his straight-smooth hair was only a touch darker than his burnished skin.
As they walked, his eyes flickered around the yard, landing briefly on mine. My heart stopped, and I looked away. I’d never seen eyes that color before on a person—golden-brown, almost yellow. Of course, I’d never been outside south Mississippi, and this guy was clearly foreign.
Still, something wasn’t right about them. Like brass, their golden-amber seemed to shine, deep-set in his face. It was unsettling. Even more unsettling was an ugly, brownish-pink scar that cut down his left cheek, just outside his eye and down his temple. From the way it looked, it could only have followed a near-fatal injury.
He took no notice of me, and when I glanced up again, his attention was back on his sister. I watched him readjust his long bangs back over the scar, and when he did, I saw another one, a matching brownish-orange mark across the back of his hand.
Cato smiled and hugged him to her, and I was even more convinced the alien story was a total hoax. What I’d just witnessed, this reunion, her behavior toward him and his response, was as human as two people could get, and while this guy might look strange, nothing about his actions suggested he was from anywhere other than this planet. The only question was
where
on this planet.
––––––––
J
ackson took to football like a duck to water, and Coach made him starting quarterback.
The girls were even pretty nice about letting me join the cheer squad—all except Star McLain. As cheer captain, Star acted like being on the varsity team was a privilege earned only through years of climbing the pepster ladder.
She’d also been after Jackson since he’d shown up in a jersey, so I figured she’d be happy if I were out of the way. I tried to ignore her. I didn’t want to give her the satisfaction of thinking she made me mad, but this entire turn of events had me on edge.
Slowly, as senior year progressed, everything started to change. I was becoming less and less confident about our dream and Jackson’s commitment to it. Regardless of my inner turmoil, D’Lo never missed an opportunity to hassle me after practice.
“How’d a little tomboy white girl like you get tagged with a prissy name like
Prentiss
?” Dee squinted at the sun reflecting off the silver bleachers. Sweat made my ponytail stick to my neck, and I’d have left already if Jackson weren’t still on the field.
“My mamma named me Prentiss.” I glanced up at his giant body hanging on the guardrail.
“You the craziest little white girl I ever seen. I’ll never forget the day you stuck your hand up that cow’s butt.”
“Can you just drop it?” I cut him off, wishing eyes really could throw daggers.
He chuckled and walked around the railing then flopped on the metal bench next to me. It shuddered under his 200-pound frame.
“Don’t know why you’d be ashamed of that,” he continued. “Ain’t a girl out here got the balls to pull off that kind of stunt. Not many guys either.”
“Some people don’t need any ammunition.” I watched Star slide her dark, wavy hair over her shoulder.
She was hanging around the cooler again, smiling with her perfectly glossed lips and blinking as she leaned her body closer to Jackson’s. I watched as Jackson took a drink and smiled back.
D’Lo followed my gaze down to the field. “Shoot, Pren, you worried about that?”
I glanced over at D’Lo and smiled, trying to play it off. “Course not.” My attempted laugh came out as sort-of a weird honk. “Just wish he’d come on. It’s hot.”
I kept watching as Star leaned forward like she lost her balance and giggled, sliding her hand down Jackson’s arm. He grinned and caught her then glanced up to where we sat. My throat was tight, but I smiled as if nothing was wrong.
“Star’s just some tricked out country girl. She’s got nothing on you,” D’Lo said.
“I wouldn’t say that.”
Star was the same height as Jackson, which was on the tall side for girls, and she had nice long legs she’d be happy to wrap around his waist—that much was obvious. As she leaned into his ear, my stomach clenched.
“She’s got something,” I said. “Probably cause she’s always had a mamma. She knows how girls are supposed to act.”
“Your mamma don’t teach you to act like that. It’s the opposite.”
Jackson finally backed away from his sultry pursuer and waved before turning in our direction. I looked down at my hands clasped so tightly my knuckles were white. I released them and tried to relax before he got to us. I glanced at D’Lo looking in my direction. I hadn’t hid my worry from him one bit.
“Just thinking about the game,” I laughed, rubbing my palms together. “It’d be great if we took the championship, don’t you think?”
“Mm-hm.” He was still watching me when Jackson walked up and grabbed my hand, pulling me to him.
“You ready?” He smiled, and I pulled in close to his side. If I was going to be with someone like him, I had to expect a little challenge every once in a while.
“Looked like Star had ants in her pants,” D’Lo called out to him. “Looked like you were thinking about helping her with ’em, Jax.”
“Shut up, Dee.” Jackson looked at me as he answered, evaluating my response to his friend’s comment. I looked away, and he frowned. “You’re not thinking anything wrong are you, Pip?”
“What?” I tried acting innocent, but the problem with being a guy’s girlfriend since seventh grade was he knew when I was lying.
“Come on. You know better than that.”
“I know!” I wanted to mean it, but secretly I wished I could banish Star from our realm of existence.
“You’re my only cheerleader.” He looped his arm around my neck and pulled my head to his lips, pressing them against my temple.
The warmth of his kiss eased the fist in my chest, and I inhaled his smell of cut grass mixed with sweat.
D’Lo shouted after us. “Don’t worry, P. If Jackson loses his mind and lets you go, he knows I’ll be picking that up. Fast.”
Dee’s arm pointed at us as he walked away, and I looked over Jackson’s shoulder, smiling my thanks. He might call me names half the time, but Jackson’s best friend knew how to have my back.
“Tell him not to hold his breath,” Jackson whispered in my ear as we left in the opposite direction.
“Tell him yourself.”
* * *
T
he morning alarm and the noise of the partition opening cut through the sounds of sleep, and I stared frustrated at the tiny metal rods and springs above me. They were a cross-hatch of support for the bunk above, and as I ran my eyes up and down and around the tracks they formed, I wondered why my brain had thrown
that
particular memory at me.
Star McLain was the last person I wanted to think about right now, and if there
was
anyone I hoped had been taken away, it was that wannabe home-wrecker. Maybe that was the reason I dreamed about that day. Dee had always helped me in the past, and now his support seemed to have vanished.