matter of time.
On the floor are two bedrolls, Martinâs knapsack, and Jeffersonâs saddlebag. Beside the saddlebag is a small wooden box Iâve never seen before. A flowery design is burn-etched into the top, the latch closed with a metal clasp. I know Ishouldnât pry, that I donât have time, but itâs so odd that we spent months together on the trail and I never saw this box. I flick the clasp open and peer inside.
There are only a few tiny items: a small leather pouch filled with something soft, a long feather, a letter thatâs been unfolded and read so often that the pages are frayed and the writing is blurred, and a single gold nugget the size of my thumbnail.
I stare at the nugget. My memory is vague with the distance of both miles and months, but Iâm sure of it. This is the nugget I gave him, back in Georgia, the day my uncle killed my parents. I found it on his land, so it belonged to him fair and square. He should have used it to buy supplies for the journey west, but he saved it. For some reason, even though he needed money worse than anything, he saved it.
The baby starts screaming again. I slam the box closed and dash outside. I gather all of Jeffersonâs and Martinâs belongings into a pile where I hope theyâll be safe from stray embers; then I bend to retrieve the Joyner baby.
We head toward the cabin, which is now a pillar of fire, so hot and angry I feel like the very hair on my head is in flames. I pat my scalp to make sure it isnât, even as I glance about, hoping with sick desperation that Becky made it out of the cabin. Then I see her, running toward the creek with a bucket, and I nearly fall to my knees with relief.
Olive and Andy are still stomping out embers. âOlive!â I call, and she comes running. âHold your sister.â The girl takes the baby with well-practiced hands. âYou and Andy take thebaby. Head down to the pond where itâs safe and stay there, understand?â
âI want to help!â she protests.
I almost give in; I wouldnât want to stand by, neither. âJasper will want your help later with some doctoring, so I need you safe.â
âOkay, Lee.â
She rounds up her brother and herds him toward the pond. Once the three Joyner children are safely away, I grab the Majorâs shovel and start heaping dirt onto the cabin fire. Jefferson yells something at me, but I canât understand because the fire is roaring, drowning out everything else.
We all work hard and fast, harder and faster than weâve ever worked in our lives, but I can already tell itâll hardly matter. Weâre going to lose the cabin for sure, and a lot more besides. Iâm grateful for the rain weâve been having; otherwise all our claim land would be up in smoke by now. As it is, we have a slight chance of keeping the fire from spreading to the surrounding woods and autumn-dry meadows. Becky and the college men pour water on the edges of the fire, while the Major and Jefferson bat it down with canvas.
Sweat trickles between my shoulder blades as I shovel and shovel, until Iâve dug a decent trench between the cabin and the trees. The skin of my face is tight and hot as if itâs been sunburned, and my hands, my clothes, everything is covered in fine gray-black dust. Every single breath is a wheeze of dry, sharp pain.
Thereâs still no sign of Martin.
One of the nearest pine trees starts to flicker and pop. Within seconds, itâs a giant torch, lighting the whole sky.
Light flares on the hill above us. A split second later the ground rumbles as a sound like a thousand trees splintering to dust pierces my head. Itâs our ammo exploding, in the cache Jefferson and Martin dug.
We all pause in our work, faces falling. The shovel drops from my blistered hands. I donât know what else to do.
Suddenly, figures enter the wide circle of firelight. Ten of them. No, more. At least thirty.
James Patterson
P. S. Broaddus
Magdalen Nabb
Thomas Brennan
Edith Pargeter
Victor Appleton II
Logan Byrne
David Klass
Lisa Williams Kline
Shelby Smoak