We left Mist in the woods with No-Face, a nervous, paranoid woman who warns Mist that if she stays, she could end up dead.
"Get
out of here," No-Face whispered, "The sooner the
better."
"What?
What are you talking about.
You're just saying that because of Docker. You want him for yourself. That's why you want me to leave. I've seen you with him."
"No. I
mean, yes. I told him you don't belong
here. You're not, well, like us. He said I should mind my own business if I
wanted to see tomorrow. Listen, you
better mind yours about what happened today, too." She looked around, then spoke rapidly,
"I'm taking a chance talking to you.
If you stay, they'll, they'll kill you.
No one will ever find out. You
don't know what goes on. They think I
don't know. They offed his brother
Waverly because he wanted out. He got
sick of what these people do. Docker,
he-" I touched her arm; she was
trembling. In the early moonlight, tears
glistened on her face.
"What
on earth are you saying? He what? What?
What do you mean they'll kill me?
Like Darlene?" She put her
fist to her mouth. Her eyes were
terrible. She shook her head and cupped
her palms to her face, stifling her cries.
"I can't --This is no place for
you," she said, her voice muffled by her hands, "You don't know what
they do. Those kids . . ."
"You're scaring me. Who killed Waverly? Tell me about Docker? Does it have anything to do with what that
guy said when he tried to whip Billy-Bob?"
I grabbed her shoulders.
"What about the kids?
Docker's boys? Tell
me." She wept quietly. "What's wrong with you? This is too much." My patience was running out. I turned away for a second and came back. "Why should I believe you? What about you?" I pulled her close, shocked by her thinness,
and stroked her hair, trying to calm her.
A night-bird trilled; an owl hooted from its low perch. My heart pounded.
"It's too late.
Get help for the boys," she whispered, emphasizing her words by
pushing her head into my chest, "Please, please, get away and save
yourself. The briefcase."
"What about it?
Why is it too late? You're not
making any sense." She didn't
answer. I took her hand; it was dry and
icy-cold. She was shaking so hard I
didn't want to push her anymore, afraid she'd crack. At the sound of movement nearby, she started
and pulled her hand from mine. Through
the shrubs, I could see the kids shifting around, waiting.
"Sally, what're you doing?" Billy-Bob's voice filtered through the
leaves. He pushed aside branches and
stepped through. .
"It's just Billy-Bob and the other two,
No-Face," I said. I didn't want the
kids to hear what she was saying.
"Look, it's getting really cold.
I've got to get them back to the cabin." I hugged her, wondering if she'd done so much
speed it made her squirrelly.
"Please, please, please
--"
"I have to go. I'll be back in a few minutes. Wait for me." She collapsed to the earth, shuddering. At a loss, I stood over her for a moment.
I sneaked the kids to the cabin,
gave them over to Mormo, then rushed back.
She was gone. On the ground, a
glittering object caught my eye. I
stooped down and picked up a small, silver-framed mirror. Brushing off loose soil, I turned it over in
my hands, gazed into it, then shoved it into my jeans pocket.
![]() |
| A cabin like Docker's built into mountain foothills |
I pulled a joint from the stash bag
on the floor. Docker woke up. I told him what the men did to the boys, that
someone hit me with a bottle. "Oh, hon, I'm sorry," he crooned,
sleepily, "Leave it to me, I'll take care of the bitches. But those jerks were just fooling around,
they can't hurt the runts." We lay
there smoking, then made love. He was so
tender, so loving and gentle. And even
in the dark I could look into his eyes -- devoted, soft, like a nursing babe's
I'd seen once on a bus nuzzling up to its mom..
Docker whispered how he would love me and be with me always and never
let anything happen to me. He'd protect
me. "'Cause I love you so much,
baby, I don't know what I'd do without you." I wanted to believe him. In his arms, I forgot everything; forgot
about seeing him with No-Face, forgot what she'd said about Waverly. Docker never talked about him. I pushed what that bartender had told me eons
ago out of my mind. No-Face is paranoid
and jealous, really jealous -- trying to turn me against Docker; and the men,
stone spooked, drugged out of their skulls.
And lots of kids are scared of their dads.
A
deafening sound, like furniture thrown.
Docker jumped up, pulled on his pants and slid down the ladder. On the other side of the loft, Linda
sighed. Pal groaned, "What the holy
hell is fuckin' going fuckin' on?"
He dressed hurriedly and swung down, joining Docker below. The boys were dead to the world. I drew on my shirt and jeans and leaned over
the platform. On the bar, the battery
lamp shed its bluish light on the scene, casting Docker's looming shadow
against the wall, like an enormous undersea creature, exaggerating the peaks of
flesh on his bare shoulders. The overturned
table and chairs lay helter-skelter; a couple of men paced in front of the
door. I glanced at Linda on her mat,
forearm across her eyes; stiff, dark blonde hair spread out around her head.
"Shitshitshitfuck. Shit!
God, fuck this, man," she hissed.
"Pal! Let
him loose." I heard Docker
shout. I looked down and saw a guy in a
quilted jacket and blue jeans, his head covered with a dark knit cap, leaning
against the wall, his gear in a pile in front of him. Mormo hulked nearby.
"Morm', how'd they get in?" Docker said.
"Broke lock.
Toss stuff at me when I try to keep them out-"
"Ya gotta let us in," the man interrupted,
whining, "We almost froze our balls off out there last night, man. I'm not asking for just us, y'know, it's for
our kids."
"You
don't give a shit about your kids. It's
your own asses you're worried about. Now
get out. Pick up this shit and get the
fuck outta here! You'll come in when I
fucking say so." Docker pointed to
the door.
"Hey,
man, we got a coalition-"
"A what?" He dropped his arm and stepped toward the
man.
"A coalition. They're outside. How long we gonna be up here, this time? We don't want what went down last-"
"Ah, ha!
Beats all." Docker
laughed. "You're outside a couple
fucking nights, you lousy bunch of sissies, and you got yourselves a
coalition. And fuck last time- This is
Now! We're here for as long as it
fucking takes, asshole. As long as I
fucking want. I don't wanna hear about
fucking last time. You know what happens if you try to split, so don't even
fucking think about it." The men
continued to shout. I saw Pal slam the
guy's shoulders against the wall.
"We
didn't make any fucking promises to nobody, man." Docker spoke quietly now, in even, measured
tones. "All we said was up here
everyone's for his-fuckin'-self.
Everyone gets his share when the deal's done. Dig?
Anyone don't like it, say so now.
I'm not fucking going to repeat myself."
"Hey, Docker, 'scuse me, but you said we could
use the cabin, 'member? After we found
Jody's kids . . ." I couldn't tear
my eyes away. Docker slapped the top of
the bar with the flat of his hand, making a sound like the crack of a gun.
Linda scooted beside me, naked breasts swinging, both
of us smelling of sweat and sex. Her
shoulder brushed mine. I leaned close,
shocked to see for the first time the flesh just below her waist formed an
intricate scalloped chain, attached across her abdomen, from one hip to the
other. I shook off the distraction of
wondering if No-Face and the other women bore the same, and if it interfered .
. . .
"What happened last time?" I insisted. Her eyes registered the struggle of whether
or not to trust me. She opened her
mouth, closed it and turned away, shaking her head. Whispering hypnotically, she addressed the
back wall as though divesting herself of the onus of speaking directly to
me. Below, the men continued to argue.
"I have had it!" she said, "I'm
sick of it. Two kids froze to
death. They had colds. We'd come up right after Labor Day once for only a month or so till things cooled down, so the Members
couldn't trace the goods. There was an early snowstorm. Bad one. Docker wouldn't let anyone in."
She paused. Her face now in profile, she looked at me out of the corner of her eye. I rested my hand
on her shoulder. She jerked away.
"I shouldn't've told
you." She looked me full in the
face, eyes huge . "You're an Outsider.
You'll tell Docker, I know. He'll
kill me. Just like-" She could've touched me with an exposed
wire.
"He killed Darlene? So it's true?
No-Face said-"
"She told you? That bitch!"
"She didn't say-"
"Shut up!" I heard her jaw snap. "That cunt!"
"Tell me. Please.
Did he? If he finds out I know,
it'll be because you told him. I swear I
won't tell him. Please. Trust me." The hair on my arms stood on end. I remembered what Sandman had said. "And what 'goods' are you talking
about?"
"I've got to get out of here,
away from you. They know we're up here
alone together," What little color
showed in her face drained away. Blue
veins pulsed in her temples. She
scuttled backwards on her heels and the palms of her hands like a crab. She pulled on her clothes and boots, dragged
a filthy comb through her hair, grabbed her leather bomber, and descended the
ladder into the melee below. I wanted to
follow her and keep on going straight out the door. I looked down and saw Pal draw a knife across
the coalition spokesman's throat. Blood
spurted in his face, on Mormo, everywhere. I don't remember what happened next.
I awoke to silence in unbearable heat, naked on the mattress, not knowing where I was. Then I remembered and felt like Mormo was sitting on my chest . . . . Was it a dream? Was I really out for two days? To be continued:
Mist discovers more horrors and starts planning her escape.
I awoke to silence in unbearable heat, naked on the mattress, not knowing where I was. Then I remembered and felt like Mormo was sitting on my chest . . . . Was it a dream? Was I really out for two days? To be continued:
Mist discovers more horrors and starts planning her escape.

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