“I’ll split it with you,” the albino replied, carrying it to where the poor fire coughed and spluttered fitfully. It was the only light they had, apart from the pallid moon that sailed above them in a sky speckled by the remains of the chem-storm.
“What is it?” Finnegan asked.
It was a wad of paper. A couple of hundred small sheets, around five inches by three, with the rotted remains of an elastic band around them. Jak took them out, riffling them through his fingers. Dust flew off their edges, and they made a dry, flaking sound. Ryan suddenly guessed what it was. “Open them up,” he said.
“Pictures,” Lori said. “Pictures and numbers. I can do numbers. There’s a ten and that’s a hundred and a twenty and another ten.”
“It’s old jack,” the boy said disgustedly. “Seen lots around West Lowellton. Left around. In wallets and pockets and bags. Dollars. Isn’t that right?”
“Sure is, son,” Doc Tanner said. “Must be a tidy nest egg there. Close on five thousand dollars. Cheating the tax department, I guess.”
“Not worth shit now,” Finnegan said.
“Wrong, Fats,” Jak said, grinning. “Watch this.” He took the handful of dry paper to the dying fire and poked it on, putting some of the broken wood of the old counter on top of it and adding a few of the smaller green branches. He was right. The pile of money burned wonderfully well.
Chapter Eight
RYAN WOKE DURING THE NIGHT and saw that the fire was dying. He rolled out from under his coat, tossed a couple more branches on the glowing ashes and watched as the dry wood began to burn. From out in the clutching darkness beyond the frail walls of the gas station came the keening wail of a hunting animal. Probably some sort of mountain lion was Ryan’s guess. As he was sliding back to sleep, he heard a snuffling sound near the door, as if some large creature was moving there, having caught the scent of humans. Finnegan, who was on sentry watch, came in from the office area and saw that Ryan was awake. Moving to kneel beside him, he whispered, “Biggest fucking bear I ever seen out there. Must stand close to six feet at the shoulder. Only got to lean on us and this place’s fold like a fucking pack of cards.”
“Want me to get up, Finn?”
“No. I’ll chill it if’n it starts to get too curious ’bout us.” He stood up again. “Know what you call a three-thousand-pound mutie grizzly?”
“No?”
“Sir,” he said, laughing quietly as he went back on watch.
THEY WERE UP AT FIRST LIGHT, bundling themselves into their furs and huddling against the bitter cold that frosted the ground outside. Thick slate-gray ice covered the puddles of water lying in the rutted mud. There was a fresh dusting of snow on the upper slopes of the mountains around them.
“Which way?” Doc Tanner asked, cupping his hands and blowing on them to try to get some warmth into his aged bones.
“North. Where that radio message came from. You never know what it could lead to,” Ryan said.
The blacktop was cracked and showed signs of some major earth movements many years ago. Weeds peeked through the cracks and gaps, and the shoulders crumbled away into the earth around them. Every now and again they found places where mountain streams came rushing over sections of the two-lane highway, washing them out, and carrying debris toward the river at the bottom of the valley.
The road twisted and turned, gradually descending and revealing more and more of the long, wide lake to the right. They passed a sign, leaning drunkenly, pointing back the way they’d come. Klamath Falls 17, it read.
“Nice to know where we’ve been, lover,” Krysty said to Ryan. “All we need to know now is where we’re going.”
Lori was leading them, striding at a moderate pace, her silver spurs tinkling brightly in the cool morning air. The chem-storms of the previous evening had disappeared, and the sky was again the unusual blue that Ryan remembered from the pictures in old magazines. At a hairpin curve to the left, Lori paused and stared intently into the valley.