Dismember

Dismember by Daniel Pyle

Book: Dismember by Daniel Pyle Read Free Book Online
Authors: Daniel Pyle
Tags: Suspense
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something he might use as a weapon or a hidey-hole into which he could crawl. Maybe a forest ranger would suddenly appear and whisk him off to safety, or maybe a pack of wolves would leap onto this Davy guy from out of nowhere and rip out his throat.
    Yeah, right.
    Zach saw the game trail before he actually stepped foot on it, but not by much. For just a moment, he thought they must have driven in a big loop and come back to where they’d started, but then the illusion ended and he realized these woods were not only much hillier than those around his house, but also rockier and less dense. Not to mention they were now moving toward the sun, and not away from it, which would have been the case on the trail back home. 
    Just how many secret paths did this guy know? 
    The hem of Zach’s shirt caught on a thorny branch and ripped. Zach pulled away from the snag and moved closer to the center of the trail.
    “Your brother’s been missing you, you know,” Davy said, not turning around.
    As with most of this lunatic’s statements, Zach didn’t understand. He had no brothers. Or sisters, for that matter. His mom and dad hadn’t thought they could have kids until Zach came along. Then Dad had died and…well, that was that.
    “Been missing both of us. He’s waited a long time for today.” He pushed aside a tuft of tall weeds and continued to follow the trail. “A long time.”
    Zach followed, his clapping shoe almost more annoying than the truck’s hissing radio had been, wondering if he should respond or if Crazy Dave was talking mostly to himself.
    They topped a small rise and wiggled between two closely growing trees. Davy led him off the trail at that point, onto a narrower path that seemed exactly the width of the man’s hips. They pushed through one last pair of overlapping bushes, and then they were there.
    Zach let out a breath he felt he’d been holding in since getting out of the truck.
    Not an unmarked grave, not a pile of corpses awaiting the addition of one scared boy. Just a house.
    They’d come upon it from behind. Although the trees didn’t end at any sort of a yard, but continued right up to the edge of the structure so that many of their limbs actually overhung its roof, the property was clearly distinguishable from the surrounding woodlands by its lack of undergrowth and carefully trimmed tree limbs. A tire swing hung from a high, thick branch to the left and lolled in the late afternoon breeze, and Zach knew at once that this was not the kidnapper’s house. This was a real home, a place where normal people lived.
    Davy waited at the edge of the property, watching the house, head moving slowly back and forth. Zach guessed he was looking to see if anyone was home, though he couldn’t see the man’s eyes and didn’t dare try to get into his head. Davy held out his arm to keep Zach from rushing on ahead, though Zach had made no movement to pass him. They stood that way for a long time, the man cocking his head sometimes, maybe listening to some distant sound.
    It gave Zach a chance to check his phone. He couldn’t use it, of course, not until he got alone somewhere, but he could at least check to see if he had any reception and set the thing to silent if it wasn’t already. Staring at Davy, who was so close Zach could have kicked him in the butt, Zach snuck his hand into his pocket and eased out the cell. Still watching Davy’s back like his life depended on it (which it probably did), Zach tilted the phone’s screen toward him and searched it for a reception bar or two.
    There were none. The word Searching… flashed across the screen, and Zach tried extending the antenna, but it was no good. Rather than set the phone to silent, Zach held down the power button until it shut itself off, unable to remember if it made any sounds when shutting off but plastering his palm against the small speaker just in case. If he didn’t get service up here on the high ground, he probably wouldn’t get it

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