Pulling back, Anna says. “You've heard Poke. You know what she went through.”
“I do. And if she did it, it doesn't matter what she went through. If that note is true, I can't have her in the house.”
Anna rocks back as though ducking the words. Her face is rigid with control. “We need to talk about this.”
“I don't think so.”
“She needs
help
,” Anna says.
“From doctors,” Arthit says.
Anna says, “I'm not going to let youâI mean, I'm not going to let
her
â” and breaks off as Boo comes into the room towing a small dark girl with a bumpy face. The girl slides her palm under a runny nose and stares up at them, ready to deny everything.
“This is Apple,” Boo says. He puts a hand on the child's shoulder and brings her forward a couple of reluctant steps. “Apple saw them leave.”
After a moment of silence and a light double tap on her shoulder, Apple says, “Two of them.” She wipes her nose again and studies her grimy palm. “The half-half and that skinny boy.”
“What about the other girl?” Rafferty says. “Chalee?”
“Didn't see her,” Apple says. Boo taps her again. “I
didn't
.”
Anna says to Boo, “Are you sure Chalee went with them?”
Apple says, “You talk funny.”
“You saw the three of them together earlier, didn't you?” Boo says.
“Talking,” Apple says. She looks at all the faces in the room, trying to pick one, and then says to them all, “I'm hungry.”
Arthit says, “I'll send someone to get you whatever you want. What would you like?”
“Tom yum koong,” Apple says, very fast. “Som tam. Ice cream.”
She opens her mouth to add something, but Arthit says, “Fine. Be right back.” He leaves the room, presumably to go to the front steps, where his off-duty cop is waiting.
“What were they talking about?” Rafferty says.
“Running away, I think.” Apple puts one foot in front of her, points her toe, ballet style, and lifts her heel so she can swivel it side to side. She watches the movement with interest. When no one replies, she glances up and finds them all looking down at her. “And about some man that the half-half, the one with the curly hair, was afraid of.”
Arthit comes in and says to Apple, “Fifteen minutes. My man knows somewhere close by.”
“And some people she didn't want to stay with,” Apple says.
“Sorry?” Arthit goes and stands next to Anna. “I missed something.”
“There were people the half-half didn't want to stay with,” Apple says. “She could have gone back to their house, but she didn't want to. I told her she was crazy. She would have had her own bed. The other girl had stayed with them, too, but they didn't want her, they only wanted the fifty-fifty.”
Anna blinks slowly and lowers her head. She says, “I never should haveâ”
“You were trying to help,” Arthit says, putting an arm around her, but Anna shrugs it off.
“I don't need to be comforted,” she says. “I need a
plan
.” Then she asks Apple, “Why didn't she want to go back?”
Apple has been scratching the bites on her neck. “She was afraid of the man. She said he smelled like leather.”
Arthit looks at Anna for a moment and then closes his eyes.
“This shouldn't surprise anybody,” Rafferty says. “She's terrified at the thought of having another father.”
Anna says, “And she's terrified of that man, whatever his name is, who's out there somewhere.” She's looking at Poke but obviously speaking to Arthit. “You can't
begin
to understand how much pressure the girl is under. Even if she blew up that house, it was her
past
she was destroying. Damaged children wake up frightened, they go to sleep frightened. They don't believe there's anyone who will help them, anywhere in the world. And still they try to love their parents. When they finally realize that their parents aren't
worth
their love, the hate can be stronger than anything you or I have ever felt.”
Apple volunteers, “I hate
my
father.”
Arthit says, “But would you kill him?”
“No,” Apple says.
Arthit glances at Anna and says, “Why not?”
Apple scratches her neck and says, “I'm not big enough.”
Dok has tucked
the automatic into his pants to free his hands for the broom, which is once again propped against his shoulder. He has to keep tugging on his waistband to keep his pants up.
After an agonizing forty-five minutes or so, watching Sriyat cough and try to move, the three of them finally worked up the nerve to jump over the man's body. His wheezingâa wet, irregular soundâfrightened Chalee, although Treasure didn't even seem to hear it. Occasionally he made a surprising effort to get up. Not once had anyone spoken between the time Sriyat went down for good and the moment Dok said, “We have to jump over him.”
Once they're outside, panting in the drizzle, Dok and Chalee pick up the door and lean it back in place, securing it the best they can with a twist of wire although they both know that, with its hinges gone, it will eventually sag to one side. It's obvious that Sriyat will be found soon.
Chalee leads them back up the hill. In a block or so, they'll be at the mouth of the passage. They're strung out in single file, farther apart than they had been on the way down, as though what's happened has physically come between them: Chalee, then Treasure, then Dok. Both Dok and Chalee look like they're studying the pavement, deep in thought. Treasure's eyes are everywhere. She seems to be rebalancing herself with every step, as though she needs to be ready to run in any direction. Watching her from behind, Dok sighs.
Chalee stops at the cross street and waits for them to catch up. Treasure gets there first, standing far enough from Chalee that the two of them could just barely graze each other's fingertips with their arms fully extended. They wait in silence, not looking at each other, for Dok to trudge up to them.
“Do you want to give me the broom, Dok?” Chalee asks. “I'll go first.”
“No.” Dok turns it upside down and looks at the bristles. “It's silly.”
“It worked last time,” Chalee says.
“If there even
were
any rats.” Dok runs the flat of his hand over the tips of the bristles. “Useless,” he says.
They hear a shoe scuff and see Treasure stepping off the curb and into the street. Her clothes are brown and stiff with Sriyat's blood, her hands so saturated that it looks like she's wearing gloves. The two of them trail behind until she comes to the passageway, and then she turns without a pause and goes in. The other two hurry to catch up.
For a moment they think they see a small silhouette at the far end of the passageway. Dok stops, but when he's blinked, the figureâif there had been a figureâis gone.
A boy runs into the office, his face electric with news: “They're coming.”
Rafferty, who had crammed himself onto one of the folding chairs, is up instantly. Boo goes straight to Apple and picks up the tray of food that she's been eating as fast as she can, and says, “Upstairs.” Still chewing, she trails him out of the room, and by the time Rafferty reaches the door, Boo and Apple are five or six steps up. Rafferty pushes open the outer door, watched by a roomful of wide-awake boys, and jogs to the end of the building, where he slows, takes a very deep breath, and steps into the mouth of the passageway.
He hears the door to the shelter open behind him, but his attention is on the slight black figure, just a silhouette, coming toward him. He knows it's Treasure by the mop of hair, once again in rebellion against the brush. Behind her is another figure that, as it moves, resolves itself into two.
Treasure stops for a moment, probably surprised by the sight of someone standing there. He thinks she might turn and run, but the other two figures keep coming, and after they've taken a couple of steps, she seems to remember that they're back there and she continues toward him. Rafferty hears a
skritch-skritch
sound like that of someone using a stiff brush to clean a pair of shoes. He backs away from the alley to make himself look less threatening. There's a whispered argument going on behind him, Anna's voice overriding Arthit's and then rolling on, a stream of words. Rafferty tunes it out and watches the black figure advance, the two who are farther away leaning left and right to look over her shoulders and each other's. The brushing sound gets louder.
And Treasure steps from the mouth of the passageway. Her gaze slowly sweeps the area, pauses at his face and then continues its survey. He sees her register the people on the steps to the shelter, and then she looks back at him or, he thinks, through him. She's shaking. She hasn't taken another step since she emerged from the passageway, and the two children behind her have stopped, too, still in the narrow alley, just a few steps from the end.
She's covered in blood, her hands so thickly coated she could have been finger painting with it. Blood has saturated her clothes, dried in flakes on her face and arms, and clotted in her hair. He can smell it, the odor flowing off her like wet heat. He looks into her eyes and sees the emptiness of someone who may have just taken her final blow and doesn't know whether she can get up again or why she should bother, and all the revulsion he feels disappears. He opens his arms and kneels down, and, to his amazement, she comes.
She's burning hot. The moment his arms go around her, she begins to shiver violently, and then her breath starts to come in gasps and she seems to be trying to say something, but she can get no further than “I
 . . .
I
 . . .
I,” and even that's all air, and as he tries to think of some way to comfort her, her legs buckle and collapse, and she turns to deadweight in his arms. It catches him completely unprepared and off balance. He's leaning forward, toward her, and her arms around his neck drag him down. The next thing he knows, they're both flat on the wet pavement with Arthit and Anna leaning down, Anna trying to help. Treasure's eyes are closed, and she's emitting a series of tiny wordless sounds, part sob, part yelp, like an injured animal.
Boo comes at a run, looks down at her, and says, “My office. I'll get the doctor.”
Dok, who has emerged from the passageway with a broom in his hand, says, “It's not her blood.” Behind him, Chalee's clothes are also smeared a dark reddish brown, and there are streaks of it on her forearms and forehead. She seems to have wiped her hands on the front of her T-shirt.
“Are you both all right?” Boo says.
Chalee says, “Yes. I don't know about her.”
Arthit helps Poke up while Anna kneels beside Treasure. The child's eyes are still closed, and she's still making that whimpering sound. Anna says, “We have to get her inside, and she needs a sedative.” To Arthit she says, “Go away,” and Arthit backs up a few steps.
“I'll send someone to the compound to call the doctor,” Boo says over his shoulder. He's already on his way back to the building, pulling his phone from his pocket as he runs. “And somebody will get the hospital bed ready.”
Rafferty calls out, “I don't think she's been cut.
Please
, nobody except us, until we know what's happened.” He kneels beside Treasure and slowly lifts her to a sitting position. Her head flops forward onto her chest. Waving Anna down on Treasure's other side, he takes the girl's near arm and wraps it over his shoulders, grasping her wrist with his other hand. He raises his eyebrows in Anna's direction, and she nods and gets Treasure's other arm around her neck. Rafferty says, “Up on three,” and begins to count, the words separated by Treasure's yelping sounds. He ducks his head on three as an additional signal, since he's not certain that Anna has followed his lips, and the two of them stand, bringing the girl up with them. Treasure begins to scream, the same high, unwavering sound he'd heard the night she saw her father emerge, still alive, from the big burning house.
Rafferty says, “It's all right, it's all right, you're safe, it's all right,” and the scream thins and drifts and breaks into the same spasmodic whimpering. With Treasure dangling between them, he and Anna get her up the steps and into the shelter, curious boys staring wide-eyed from their cots. One of them is Tip, the boy she'd scratched, who had developed a crush on her. When the boy next to him says something that makes a few other boys laugh, Tip punches the boy in the face. Instantly there's a knot of fighting boys, cots going over sideways, the smack of flesh on flesh, muffled grunts, and the occasional cry of pain.
Boo barrels past them, running into the room with the boys in it, and as Rafferty and Anna angle themselves and Treasure through the narrow entrance, Rafferty hears Boo bellowing and then the sound of a couple of slaps and something heavyâa cot, perhapsâhitting the wall. The room falls silent behind them.