“What's up?” That was from Robyn, legitimately confused. “Jesus God, Calvin, who's
that
?”
“His name's Don. He'sâ¦had some real bad news tonight, and may still be in trouble. Iâ”
Robyn raised an eyebrow, instantly suspicious. “What
kinda
trouble?”
Calvin squatted beside her and dragged Don down with him. “I'll tell you what I can,” he began, “but that won't be much, so you've gotta trust me. We've all got secrets here, and there may be more before the night's overâor everybody may know everything. The point is, right now I've got something I need to do somewhere else and fastâand I need somebody to take care of Don. He's just seen one of his friendsâ¦die, and it's kinda freaked him out, so I thoughtâ”
“Oh Christ,” Robyn moaned. “Why didn't he just go to the cops?”
“I
can
talk,” Don grumbled indignantly.
“I know you can,” Calvin told him. “But you're gonna have to be real careful about what you say for a while, okay? At least until you get your head on a little straighter. Just remember what you told me and what I told you, and then think how that'd sound to somebody who wasn't there.”
Don nodded meekly. “Yeah, sure.”
“Besides,” Calvin told the runaways, “do you really
want
him talkin' to the cops just now? As wired as he is, it'd be
real
easy for him to let something slip about you guys.”
Brock was staring suspiciously at both of them. “Something really weird's goin' on, ain't it?”
Calvin puffed his lips in exasperation, wishing the boy was not so observant. “You could say that.”
“
How
weird?” Robyn asked pointedly.
“Weird enough.”
“And you're involved in it?”
“Yeah.”
“And you won't tell us what it is?”
“It'd take more believin' than you've got in you,” Calvin sighed, “and more time to convince you than I can spare. For now, I just need you guys to keep an eye on Don here until I get back. Feed him if you can find something; help him clean up a little. He may start goin' into shock, and if he does, just keep him warm, andâ”
“I've
had
first aid,” Robyn noted with a touch of sarcasm.
“Good. Let's hope you don't have to use it. But as I was sayin': there's something goin' on thatâ” He paused, then: “Oh hell, I wish I could just lay it all out straight, but I can't. Suffice to say that Don's sister's
also
been killed, and under peculiar circumstances, and that I found the body, but that somebody else found it before I could report it, so that the cops think I may have done it.”
“You mean like they think you killed your dad?”
“Uhâ¦yeah, actually.”
Brock's comment elicited a startled scowl from Don, and Calvin wished he had leveled with him about that earlier. Last thing he needed was to destroy Don's shaky confidence now.
“Shit!” Brock exclaimed, before Robyn cuffed him.
“The point I was tryin' to make,” Calvin went on, “is that there're cops in the woods less than a mile northwest of here: sheriff's men, mostly, and they don't much like me. They're pretty much staying' put, though, and they've gotta get a body back to town, but they may be snoopin' around some too, so you'd be smartest to just lie low. I'veâ¦I've done something to make this place harder to find, but it may not work. So just be as quiet as you can, and remember: no lights, no fire, and no more talkin' than you can help.”
“Right,” Brock agreed.
“Robyn? I need a promise. I'm sorry, but I really do.”
“I don't promise what I don't know.”
“You'll have to this time. Tell you what, I swear I'll tell you everything as soon as it's over.”
“What if it's
never
over?”
“Then we're all in deep shit. Now, promise. And let's see those hands. I don't want any crossed fingers.”
Robyn sighed sourly, but displayed both palms. “I swear.”
Calvin put an arm around Don's shoulders and gave him a quick, reassuring squeeze. “You gonna be okay, kid?”
“Yeah, sure.”
“Positive? If there's somewhere else you wanta go, I'll take you there as soon as I can, but like I told you, time's real critical right now.”
“Sure,” Don sniffed miserably. “But it's gonna be real hard waitin'.”
`I know,” Calvin told him, squeezing him again. “But twelve hours from now the whole thing may be over.”
“No,” Don shot back bitterly. “Mike'll still be dead. So will my sister.”
Calvin could find nothing to say to that.
“Need some help?” Brock asked suddenly.
“Yeah,” Calvin replied. “But I think this is kinda over your head. Iâ¦I
know
I ought to level with you guys,” he added to the group as a whole. “But I really don't want to say any more now, 'cause I simply don't have time to explain. Exceptâ¦well, there's more to me than meets the eyeâ¦I guess. A little.”
“Figured as much.” Robyn nodded. “I sure can pick 'em.”
“
I
picked 'im,” Brock pointed out.
Already nearly at the edge of the sinkhole, Calvin turned, and stared at Robyn. “'Fore I go I need a favor.”
Robyn raised an eyebrow. “Yeah?”
“I really could use some lipstickâif you've got any.” The eyebrow went higher, but she was already reaching for her purse. “What color?”
“Many as you've got, and the wilder the better.” Robyn thrust a handful of plastic and metal tubes in his direction. “I'm not even gonna ask.”
“Just as well.” Calving grinned as he accepted them and stuffed them in his pack. “Thanks a bunchâ¦see you when I can.”
*
A short while later, Calvin returned to his own camp for the first time in what seemed like days, but was in fact slightly less than half of one. Everything was still where he'd left it: the backpack with its meager store of clothing and supplies, the ruins of the asiâand most importantly now, Dave's Galunlati-made bow. He slipped his hand up into the hollow tree truck where he had left it, felt the reassuring smoothness as he drew it out and examined it in the moonlight. Even in the dimness, it was still a thing of beauty, and he could still make out the many kinds of wood that composed it. Funny, though, how rarely he'd actually used either it or the near twin that had been lost in Faerie, that actually belonged to him. Still, he could think of no better use for it than defeating Spearfinger, though he doubted even Uki had foreseen that when the shaman had bestowed it upon Dave in reward for helping slay the uktena.
A glance at the sky showed the night moving well toward morning, which meant he didn't dare waste much more time before setting out toward Don's house.
But before he could do that, there were still a couple of things Calvin had to accomplish.
Chapter XV: Plotting
(shortly after 2 A.M.)
Robyn was more than a little pissed at Calvin when she saw him scramble up the low embankment that ringed the camp and disappear among the palmettos at the top.
What did he
mean
sneaking off in the middle of the night like that? Going Christ-knew-where, and then coming back with thisâ¦
stranger
in
tow like he had some God-given right to tell the whole world where she and Brock were and what they were doing? And then cutting out mysteriously all over again? He'd seemed like such a nice guy, too; though she had to admit that she'd been dubious when Brock had first dragged him into camp. She was
still
dubious about a lot, most of it having to do with the fact that she knewâand Calvin had admittedâthat he had a lot of secrets. Trouble was, secrets were that for a reason, and often enough that reason was dangerous.
That was the last thing she needed now, when she and Brock were only a few days from making the final break. No, she amended, the
last
thing she needed was someone to take care of in the middle of the night.
Why, then, did it bother her to be pissed at Calvin? Why did he have to
be
such a nice guy: so friendly, so relaxed, so openâas far as that went. Nice looking, too; and she loved the way he wore his body so unselfconsciously, how he moved soft and quick and sure, almost like Malcolm McDowell had done in
Cat People,
only it worked even better on Calvin because he did it completely unaware. He also liked Brock, and Brock liked him, and that was good. She'd even toyed with the idea of asking him to accompany them on their run to England; had, in fact, almost worked up nerve enough to spring the question when he'd innocently let drop that he had a girlfriend.
That
was just her luck too: the good ones were always taken; and Calvin was too tied up in his own ethics to allow her even a nibble when no one was looking. There was only one thing that troubled herâ¦
“What'cha starin' at, sis?” Brock's voice broke in on her reverie, and Robyn realized she'd been gazing at the gap in the shrubbery Calvin had departed through for a good minute after the bushes had closed behind him. She could feel herself blushing (which she hated, but at least it wouldn't show in the half-light) and let her eyes drift first to the moon, which was still visible through the leaves above them, and then down toward their latest visitor, who was squatting on the ground staring at the topsoil.
“Nothin',” Robyn informed her brother, with more irritation than was deserved. “How's
he
doin?”
“You tell
me
,”
Brock shot back, then scooted around so that Robyn could take a look at their charge. “You're sweet on ole Calvin, ain't you?” he added, as she rearranged herself so that a maximum amount of light fell on Don.
“He's a nice guy and nice lookin',” Robyn replied tersely, then laid a hand against Don's forehead. “You don't have a fever or anything,” she observed. “How do you feel?”
“Like I been shot at and missed and shit at and hit,” Don told her. She chuckled in spite of the tired old line. Apparently the kid was trying to make the best of a bad situation with humor. Or maybe not, for right after that, he seemed to withdraw into himself again, as he'd been doing off and on ever since he'd first arrived. That was bad. She considered chasing down the flashlight to better check him out, but decided it'd do as much harm as good, as well as possibly attracting undesired attention.
“Of
course
he don't have a fever,” Brock drawled sarcastically from where he was rummaging in Robyn's back-packâCalvin having gone off with his. “He's had the crap scared out of him, not been bit by germs! 'Sides,” he continued, “shock makes you cold, not hot, and that's what Cal told us to look out for.”
“Do you mind?”
Robyn snapped at him. “If you wanta do some good, how 'bout handin' me what you've got in your hand?”
Brock bared his teeth, but passed his sister the Hershey bar he'd excavated. “I was gonna give it to 'im anyway.”
Robyn snatched the chocolate and delivered it to Don, who slowly began to unwrap it. “Mind tellin' us what's goin' on?” she asked, scooting around behind him and starting to work the worst of the detritus out of his hair. Don did not resist.
“Yeah, spill it,” Brock urged. “Where'd you run into Calvin, anyway?”
“He told me not to tell.”
“He
would
have,” Robyn snorted. “I wish to God he didn't have so goddamned many secrets.”
“I know one,” Brock volunteered smugly.
“What?” Don asked without much interest.
“He's a
were-deer
!”
“A
what
?”
Robyn could not help herself.
“No shit?” Don echoed.
Robyn wondered if that was incredulity in his voice (which it certainly should have been), or acknowledgment of pre-existent information. “Come
on,
Brock, get real,” she finally managed.
“No, it's true,” Brock insisted. “I ain't had a chance to tell you, since he's been around all the time, and I didn't wanna talk about it while he was here, and
then
we was all asleepâbut there was something kinda weird about the way I found him.” And with that he recounted the tale of the hurt deer he'd happened on. Mostly this was for Don's benefit, since Robyn had been there when he'd come running in all perplexed and excited, first about the clothes he'd found abandoned while on a supply run, then about the wounded stag he was going to bandage. Eventually he got to the part where he'd gone back and found a stark-naked Calvin instead, and how Calvin kept evading Brock's questions about the deer and why he was minus his duds.