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The Witch of Gideon (Nowhere, USA Book 5) Page 12


  He had to know.

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  The world had taken on a kind of surreal glow by the time Sam and Charlie got back to the veterinary clinic from Persimmon Ridge, where Sam had told the Normans their only child was dead.

  It seemed to take forever to get to the Middle of Nowhere, like the drive was thirty miles instead of six.

  Thelma Jackson was gone. Though Sam still had questions for her, she was glad she didn’t have to ask them right now because her mind felt like it was wrapped in cotton. Charlie took Merrie back to Sam’s to get a quick lunch and a “mini-nap” before her shift with E.J. Sam just … went on autopilot. She went into the building, donned her white yep-I’m-a-doctor-alright lab coat, checked on E.J., under the watchful eye of Doreen Jaggers, and surveyed the empty waiting room, profoundly grateful there were no patients waiting.

  When she went into the breakroom, she was surprised to find Malachi, sipping a cup of road tar. She was sure he’d ask how it had gone with the Normans, which she didn’t want to talk about, and then he’d want to discuss what Thelma’d told them. And she didn’t want to talk about that either.

  She sat down but was spared both discussions.

  Pete Rutherford didn’t knock on the door, he just burst into the room.

  “Sam, you got to come quick. It’s bad.”

  An incoming, of course. Someone had either accidentally or purposefully challenged the Jabberwock and was now out there in the parking lot paying the price for that mistake. And they all were bad.

  Pete hung there for another beat. There was more.

  “It’s two kids. And one of ‘em’s Rusty.”

  That was absurd, of course. Pete was mistaken.

  Sam thought that thought and fifty more of them in the second it took her to rise out of her seat.

  It couldn’t be Rusty. Rusty was on the other side of Twig, spending the afternoon with his friend Douglas Taylor.

  And Rusty wouldn’t run afoul of the Jabberwock. Sam had made sure he wouldn’t. She knew enough about kids in general and her son in particular to know that once news about the Jabberwock got out, he would be filled to bursting with curiosity about the it. Duh. Of course he would. He was resourceful enough to find some way to satisfy his curiosity. Better that she be there when he did. Because twelve-year-old boys were invincible, they were bulletproof, they were going to live a thousand years. Danger? Pfffffft. Never gave it a thought, or if they did, they certainly didn’t let on that they did.

  So she took Rusty out to the other side of the North Fork River on Wiley Road to the county line and showed him the Jabberwock, told him about her ride on the beast, from the Danville Pike county border with Beaufort County to the Middle of Nowhere. And, gross as it was, she had taken him with her to the Middle of Nowhere and let him see for himself what happened to the people who tangled with the beast. Sam also told Rusty in brutal detail what had happened to Abby Clayton.

  No way would that kid have gone through the Jabberwock. No way.

  She kept telling herself that as she ran out the door and across the parking lot to the bus shelter. That’s where she stopped telling herself, when she saw the unmistakable reddish-brown hair on the young boy who was vomiting so violently he was spraying blood out his nose.

  But it was the boy beside him that stopped Sam in her tracks. Printed on his forehead were the words: rattlesnake bite. Not that she’d needed an explanation.

  Rusty saw her then, or at least became aware of her presence and managed to force words through and around the heaving.

  “Big one. Timber rattler.”

  The boy was Douglas Taylor and he was, indeed, in bad shape. His whole left arm was swollen to twice its size, all the way to the shoulder. His hand had turned an angry purple color, with two oozing indentions on the back of it. And he was bleeding. His nose was an open spigot of blood that would have drowned him if Pete hadn’t had the presence of mind to roll him onto his side. The nosebleed was courtesy of the Jabberwock. Everything else was courtesy of a timber rattlesnake.

  She knelt and took hold of the wrist on his right hand. His pulse was rapid and thready, his face as white as a sack of flour, he was sweating and gasping for breath.

  She looked up at Pete, who had come back out behind her. He knelt on the ground on the other side of Douglas, while she heard Rusty heaving and heaving behind her. She looked into Pete’s eyes.

  “Do you have any—?” he asked.

  “Antivenom? No.”

  The survival rate for rattlesnake bites was higher than ninety percent — if the victim received antivenin within two hours after the bite. Sam didn’t know how much time had elapsed since Douglas had been bitten, but it hardly mattered. Without the antivenin, there was really nothing she could do.

  “How did he end up in the Jabberwock?” Pete asked and Sam instantly understood. She turned toward Rusty and froze in place like a statue. Malachi had come out of the building behind her and Pete. He had apparently lifted/helped Rusty up onto the bus shelter bench and was sitting beside the boy, holding his head as he heaved.

  Malachi saw her staring, misread the stunned look on her face.

  “He’s fine,” he said, then nodded toward Douglas. “Wrote rattlesnake bite on his forehead because he knew somebody on the other end would need to know that. He did it on purpose, rode the Jabberwock to get his friend help.”

  Malachi was right of, course. Rusty had gone through all that … and it didn’t matter. If Sam had been standing beside Douglas when he got bit she could have done no more for him than she could right now.

  Without antivenom … there wasn’t a thing she could do to save the boy’s life. And from the look of him, it wasn’t likely to last much longer.

  “Call his mother,” Sam instructed Raylynn, who stood beside where Pete knelt. “Her name’s Claire … not Taylor … McFarland. If you can’t find that number, call Little Elmer Jones. He lives down the road, so do the Callaways. She needs to get here as fast as she can.

  What she didn’t say was, “so she can say goodbye to her son.”

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Duncan Norman had never been in more of a hurry in his life, never been driven by such a need in his life, but when he arrived in Mamie Butterfield’s car at the parking lot of the Dollar General Store in the Middle of Nowhere, the pandemonium he found there stopped him in his tracks.

  Standing on the outside of the crowd gathered there, he grasped quickly that somebody had ridden the Jabberwock, as the kids called it, to the parking lot and that the crowd had gathered to care for them. But it was much bigger than that, as he found out when a second car careened into the parking lot minutes after his did and a woman leapt out of the passenger side door and raced to the spot where the caregivers were crowded around a body on the asphalt.

  It was Claire Taylor. But that wasn’t her name now, he didn’t think. She and her little boy, Douglas, had come to Duncan’s church a time or two before she had married the last of … he didn’t know how many husbands. This one, whose last name was McArthur or McFarland, something like that, didn’t have any use for “religion.”

  The hysterical scene that played out then as Duncan watched should have broken his heart. It didn’t. His pastor’s heart should have ached with compassion for the poor woman whose son had been bitten by a rattlesnake. He should have cared. But he discovered to his dismay that he had no caring left inside. He was a hollow man, his chest as empty as the Tin Man in The Wizard of Oz. Every feeling, every emotion he possessed, had died with his little girl.

  He’d heard the grieving say things like that, but he had never before understood what they meant. Now, he knew that everything a parent was, all the emotional investment, the care, the love, the faith and hope they had invested in their child, vanished when the child died. And that left the parents with only a vacuum in their chests. Hollow and unable to give anything to anybody because they had not even sufficient emotional resources for themselves.

  For
the first time in … since he had entered the ministry, Duncan Norman was a spectator to human tragedy, an onlooker. Not a participant, not engaged in an effort to heal the grief. Just there, watching. And in truth, he just wanted the whole thing to be over, for Claire to summon sufficient emotional control — not likely — or for somebody else to take charge of her. He needed for her drama to be over. He needed desperately to talk to Sam Sheridan.

  Sam would have sworn that it was impossible to feel any more helpless than she had felt when Judd Perkins hauled E.J.’s body into the clinic, his leg a gory mess. He’d been in agony and Sam couldn’t even ease his pain! Until she could. Malachi had provided a bottle of oxycontin. Sam didn’t even know how many pills were in the bottle but it didn’t matter because Malachi had a limitless supply.

  But Malachi had no magic pills to relieve the suffering of the little boy who lay before her now. There was at least hope for E.J. Maybe they would be able to do something before it was too late. And they had time to try. At least try.

  This little boy had no hope. It was already too late. A small boy and a big snake — she could tell it was huge by the size of the puncture wounds and the distance they were apart. Given the speed and amount of the swelling, the snake had injected a full load of venom into the bite. It would have been touch-and-go even if Sam’d been right there with a syringe full of antivenin and a cotton ball already dabbed in alcohol.

  This little boy was going to die. Rusty’s friend. A friend her son had been willing to challenge the horror of the Jabberwock to save. She was so proud of Rusty.

  It seemed to Sam that time turned into molasses — on a cold winter morning. It oozed by thick and slow. Every second took an hour to pass and during that hour Douglas’s symptoms worsened.

  The boy would not last long in his condition. His breathing was labored and ragged, his heartbeat the flutter of a hummingbird’s wings. The exact nature of how he would die wasn’t yet apparent. He was in shock and severe shock could shut down the heart or lead to a catastrophic stroke. But if Sam had to guess, she thought it would be a sudden cascading of organ failures, one leading to another until his heart … just stopped.

  Where was—?

  A car careened into the parking lot of the Dollar General Store, and before it came to a complete stop, out leapt a woman with flaming red hair — a Sears color. She looked around frantically, spotted the clot of people clustered around the bus shelter and raced toward them, likely unaware that she had lost a shoe somewhere, and was proceeding aboard a lone flip-flop that came off before she reached them.

  She saw the boy lying on the asphalt and screamed.

  It was a horrifying sound, a primal, almost feral sound that made the small hairs on the back of Sam’s neck stand on end.

  Dropping to her knees beside Douglas, she looked pleadingly at Sam.

  Her words came out in a single hysterical babble, with pauses only when she ran out of breath.

  “Is he alright, tell me he’s alright, that he’s going to be alright, dear sweet Jesus God look at his arm. You have to do something, give him something, fix that poor swollen arm. Dougie, Mommy’s here. Can you hear me? Open your eyes, sweet baby, and talk to me, tell me you’re going to be okay. Don’t just lay there like that, talk to me. Dougie, you’re scaring Mommy. Talk to me.”

  When she paused for a breath, Sam put in as kindly as she could.

  “He can’t speak right now, Mrs. McFarland. He’s unconscious. But he can hear. Talk to him. He can hear you.”

  Mrs. McFarland leaned over her son and began to shout. Sam hadn’t said that it was hard for Douglas to hear but his mother must have taken it that way because she spoke to him like he was behind a closed door.

  “Dougie! Dougie, I’m here, Mommy’s here. You’re going to be fine, just fine. You got bit by a rattlesnake but it was a little bitty one, not big around as a pencil. Didn’t have hardly no venom at all. Dougie, can you hear me?”

  She took his hand in hers, the hand not swollen to roughly the size of a catcher’s mit.

  “Squeeze my hand if you can hear me, okay? Come on, squeeze my hand.”

  Apparently, she felt nothing because she then instructed him to blink his eyes if he could hear her, but there was no response.

  Finally, Claire recovered enough of her reason to want to know what her Dougie was doing out here in the parking lot, why whoever brought him here had left him outside instead of taking him into the veterinary clinic for treatment.

  “Nobody brought him,” Sam said. “He rode the Jabberwock.”

  For some reason those words hit Claire McFarland like a drop of water in hot grease.

  “Oh, no he didn’t! He couldn’t have. Why, the county line is more than two miles from our house and he wasn’t even in that part of the woods.” She looked at him, her eyes caressing his face. “And he wouldn’t have. I have told him about it. He knows to stay away. He couldn’t have.”

  “Rusty used the Jabberwock to bring Douglas here after he was bitten,” Sam said, and the woman’s eyes snapped to her so fast there was almost an audible clacking in the sockets.

  “Rusty took my Douglas into the Jabberwock?” She screamed the words.

  “To get help for him. They were out in the woods and he—”

  “If Douglas got bit by a snake, Rusty should have come and gotten me. They were only a little way from the house.”

  She actually turned to Rusty then, who was totally unaware of her presence and didn’t respond, probably didn’t hear what she said to him.

  “Rusty Sheridan, why didn’t you come get me?”

  “If they was close enough to the county line to cross it, they couldn’t a’been playing in the woods next to your house,” Pete said kindly, trying to reason with the woman.

  “You don’t know that. You don’t know anything. Dougie is an obedient boy and I told him he couldn’t go anywhere beyond sight of the house. He would never have disobeyed me. Never!”

  She was still yelling now, probably didn’t know it or what she was saying but her voice stopped in mid-cry when Douglas made an odd sound.

  A rattling, choking sound replaced his labored breaths. His body lurched upward as if he were having a seizure, and maybe he was, and then he collapsed to the asphalt and lay still.

  “Dougie …?”

  His mother had a look of such shocked denial on her face, Sam suspected she genuinely didn’t know that her little boy had just died. But Sam was wrong.

  “Dougie!” she shrieked, wailed. She leaned over and pulled the child’s body up into her arms as she shrieked, made sounds a human voice couldn’t make as she held the boy and rocked his limp body back and forth.

  “Nooooo!” She looked at Sam, pleading.

  Someone knelt beside her, a man who must be her current husband. Sam had never met him.

  He put his arm around her shoulders and said in a calm, quiet voice, “You got to lay him back now, Claire, let them folks see to him and tend to that bite. Put him down.”

  She bought instantly into the fantasy.

  “You’ll fix it, won’t you, Sam? You’ll make my Dougie better.” She looked into her husband’s eyes without seeing him. “He’ll be fine. Just needs to rest, that’s all. That bite is going to sting, though, when he wakes up. We need to stop by and make sure we got baby aspirin ‘cause I bet I’m going to be up all night, rocking him.”

  Sam looked over Claire’s head and made eye contact with her husband. “Why don’t you take Claire inside, into the waiting room, while I … take care of Douglas.” The man nodded.

  Sam looked up at Malachi, who was no longer holding Rusty’s head because the boy had finally stopped heaving, just sat with his head in his hands as if it felt fragile. Reaching into the pocket of her smock, she pulled out the bottle of oxycontin. It was neither a sedative nor a tranquilizer. Sam had none of either. Oxycontin was not designed to … but it would relax Claire, wrap her mind in a narcotic haze. It was all Sam had.

  She opened the bot
tle, poured out a small handful of pills and gave them to the man kneeled beside Claire. “These will … help. No more than two every four hours. Let’s get her inside, get her some water for the pills.”

  Claire allowed herself to be helped to her feet, turned and walked slowly between her husband and Malachi toward the animal hospital doorway.

  Sam looked at Pete Rutherford, who seemed about to cry. She was glad Charlie wasn’t here. Charlie knew what it felt like to lose a child.

  At that moment, the fragile pink bubble of unreality that incased Claire McFarland burst. She stopped in her tracks, whirled around and raced back across the parking lot.

  Not to the spot where Douglas lay dead on the asphalt. She ran to Rusty.

  “What did you do?” she screamed at the boy. Rusty lifted his head when she spoke, with the pinched look on his face that told Sam he had a needle in his brain like Liam Montgomery’d had when he showed up in the Middle of Nowhere.

  Rusty didn’t try to answer, probably couldn’t talk and certainly didn’t know what to say if he could.

  “Why did you drag my baby off to play in the woods where he didn’t want to go?”

  She didn’t give him a chance to reply, even if he’d been able.

  “Why didn’t you help him? Why didn’t you come get me? Why didn’t you carry him home to his mommy?”

  “We were so far—” The words were a ragged whisper.

  “So far? Far? My Dougie wouldn’t have gone so far if you hadn’t made him. He trusted you, looked up to you. He would have done anything you told him.”

  Sam didn’t know when she had crossed the space between them, only knew that she had shoved her way in front of Rusty.

  “Rusty did the best he could.” Sam’s husky voice was an octave lower, in a tone that would brook no argument. “Douglas is too big to carry—”