Untraceable (21 page)

Read Untraceable Online

Authors: S. R. Johannes

Tags: #YA

I’m engulfed by the scent of his musky cologne, making him smell like some kind of businessman. Maybe I should just let him help me. “Wyn, I think this is all related. That guy in the store did this. I’m sure of it.”

He holds me at arm’s length so he can see my face. “Did they … you know …
touch
you in any way?”

“It’s not what you think, but they did threaten me.” I stare up at him, our faces only inches apart. “Will you help me? I can’t do this without you.”

He pulls my hair back in a ponytail at the base of my neck. “Man, those big green eyes of yours should be classified as deadly weapons.” He pulls me back into him.

Even though he’s erased the space between us, I try to keep a thin invisible wall between us. I don’t want to lead Wyn on. Now when I’m still confused myself, it might lead him on and that wouldn’t be fair.

He rests his chin on my head. “Tell me the truth. Have you told me
everything
?”

My confession about Mo rises to the surface, threatening to come out. Instead, I pinch my lips together and hold back. This is not the time to upset Wyn. I force out my answer. “Yes.”

He cups my chin with his hand. “Then I’ll help you.” A long sighs fills the only space left between us. He rubs his thumb along my jawbone as he stares at me. His breath is warm and his touch, soothing. He breaks our gaze and looks off to the right. “So then, let’s go.”

I look around for a second. “Did I miss something? Go where?”

He points to the mountain rimmed in a halo of fog. “Station 19. Show me what’s going on up there. We still have enough time before it gets dark.”

My laugh comes out as a cough. “You? Hiking? It’s almost five miles. You don’t even walk that in a month. Come on, be serious.”

He presses the heel of his palm against my forehead. “Excuse me, but I was the Rooster Run champion two years in a row.”

This time, I laugh in his face. “Hello! That was in second grade!”

“Hey, it’s more than you can say. You didn’t even place.”

“’Cause it was for
boys
.”

He scoffs. “Since when does that stop you?”

I pinch back a smile. “True.”

Wyn lightly touches the dimple in my chin then the tip of my nose. “Seriously, I’ll go up there with you. I don’t want to lose any evidence if it’s all we got. Beside, you and I both know you’re not gonna wait until morning anyway, and I don’t want you to go alone. You need protection.”

“From who?”

“Yourself mostly. So let’s get a move on then. We’ll hike up together and take some pictures for Carl. Maybe it’ll light a fire under him and Les.”

I chew on my cuticle, feeling guilty for not coming clean about Mo. “You’d do that for me?”

He smiles and ruffles my hair. “That’s the kind of great guy I am.”

“But you hate to hike. You hate the woods.”

Wyn shrugs. “Whatever, I
own
these woods. Besides, how can I refuse to hike when I live in the mountains?”

“My point exactly.”

“Unless you can think of something better for us to do.” He plasters on a silly sexy face, resembling a soap opera star with one eyebrow arched and lips puckered.

Rolling my eyes, I cover his mouth so he doesn’t speak. “Not now, please.” I laugh and scoot forward on the seat. “Hop on,
sucker
.”

He straddles the space behind me and grabs hold of my waist. “You know if I wasn’t a total
gentleman
, I’d take advantage of this position.”

“If you weren’t such a
sissy
, I’d let you drive.”

He laughs as we take off down the road. His warm breath strokes my ear. Heading up into the mountain, I’m very aware of Wyn’s arms cradling me. How at every turn, they tighten a little. How he leans against me. How his legs rub against the back of mine. Only a thin layer of cotton clothing is preventing us from touching skin, yet a little heat still manages to simmer between us.
 

 

 

Survival Skill #23
 

 

Signs of passage include signature footprints, broken limbs, or flattened vegetation.
 

 

“Are we there yet?” Wyn calls out from a few yards back as he crashes through the leaves.

I continue sliding through the underbrush without any issue. Daylight is fighting for extra time as darkness invades. The sky has blackened and the rain has already started. Every fifteen feet or so, I stop and wait for Wyn to catch up. “You hike like a girl.”

“How would
you
know?” Wyn’s breath comes out in spurts. I’m pretty sure he hasn’t had this much exercise since we were five.

I can’t help but stifle a snicker when he gets tangled in a web of branches and begins battling against the menacing vines. My little woodland warrior. “You sure you’re okay?”

He pushes a branch that slaps him back in the face. “No.” A few steps later, he breaks free and trots to catch up. “At the risk of sounding like a total sissy, I should have changed my shoes. These Converses are toast.” He lifts up khaki-colored shoes soaked in mud. How Wyn ended up so neat while living in a small mountain town is one of North Carolina’s greatest mysteries.

“I’m not even going to respond to that.” I break off a crooked stick and hand it to him. “This might help.”

Wyn grabs the thick branch and chuckles. “Three legs are better than one.”

I flick his ear. “Do you kiss your mother with that mouth?”

His face scrunches up as if he’s sucked on a lemon. “If I
kissed
my mother, you’d have more to worry about than my
sick
sense of humor and sexual innuendos.”

“Hm. Good point.”

Wyn and I walk for a few more miles, chatting about nothing, ribbing each other, and getting digs in whenever we can. When we reach the top of the trail, it splits into two. We veer right and head up. The deeper we travel into the woods, the darker it gets.

As soon as we reach another mile marker, I check my GPS. “We’re almost there.”

He rests on a boulder and wipes his forehead with his sleeve. “Why does it have to be so hot?”

I take a swig of water and hand him my canteen. “Don’t get too tired, we still gotta hike back.”

He groans as he guzzles my water.

A scratching noise catches my attention. I press my finger against my lips as my heart flips around in my chest like a fish on land. “Did you hear that?” Wyn stops in mid-gulp and shakes his head. Then I hear a noise, like a door is being slammed. Without explaining, I dash off toward the station. Wyn crashes after me. Once I reach the site, I hide in a bush at the edge of the clearing. Watching.

Panting, Wyn squats next to me and hits my arm. “Thanks for the warning.”

With one finger to my lips, I poke him. “Sshhh. I heard someone.”

“Well, it can’t be those guys you were talking about. They’re still locked up.”

We both peer over the bushes at the crooked station. Something’s different, but I can’t tell what. I signal Wyn to follow, but he shakes his head in disagreement. He points to the space next to him, telling me to stay put.

Ignoring his protest, I emerge from the bushes and slowly approach the building. Scanning the dusty earth, my eyes hone in on some faint parallel lines, resembling rake marks. I point them out to Wyn, but he only shrugs. Clueless.

Something draws my attention to the fire pit. It’s empty. No old ashes. No charred sticks. Nothing but a circle of small boulders. I motion to Wyn again, trying to hint that something is wrong. Again, he appears clueless. Continuing up the steps, I stop in front of the rickety door.

Wyn bumps into me from behind.

I glare at him and point to a window without saying anything.

He peeks in and blurts out. “There’s no one in there.”

Hissing, I struggle to keep my own voice low. “Sshhhhh! You’d be an awful Indian. Tommy would be very disappointed.”

He waves me off. “Whatever. Why are we sneaking around acting as if we’re behind enemy lines? We’re alone.”

“You can never be too safe. Wait until you see how messed up this place is.” I push open the door with both hands and step inside. Particles of dust bounce around in the streams of sunlight. My breath catches in my throat. The inside is perfectly clean, untouched.

The same parallel lines from outside mark the floors.

No mess. No cans. Nothing. The place is spotless.

Wyn stretches his lower back. “Boy, if this is a mess, what do you call your room? A disaster area?”

I ignore him. “I can’t believe it. Everything’s clean.”

He strolls around the inside, inspecting drawers and cupboards. “Maybe Les did it.”

Shaking my head, I inspect the room for tracks. For a sign telling me who was here. “No. Les told me he hasn’t been up here. Besides, how would he get out here before us? And why would he clean up? His office is a pig sty.” Then Simon pops into my mind. “Oh no!”

Before Wyn can stop me, I bolt out of the station and run in the direction of the dead carcass. Searching the weeds. Please let him be there. It’s the only evidence I have against these guys.

Wyn thunders after me, pounding down the steps like an elephant. “G! Wait!”

Hopefully, whoever was here is long gone because Wyn’s lack of silence is astounding. If we were in a war, he’d have to be sacrificed first or we’d both be dead. I approach the area where I first found Simon. I stomp my foot and yell at the world. “Damn it!” There’s no carcass. Only a slightly mashed area of grass. I hunt around for tufts of hair, blood anything, but the brief rain shower from earlier must have erased anything left behind.

Wyn huffs up next to me and bends over with his hands on his knees, out of breath. “What’s wrong?”

All my stealthness goes out the window. I speak loudly so anyone hiding around me can hear. “Everything that might have gotten Carl to take me seriously is gone.” I sweep the area looking for any signs of heel digs or that something was dragged out of here.

He glances around. “You’re sure it was here?”

I shove him away with both hands. “Do you think I’m mental?”

He pushes my shoulder with one arm. “First of all, I
know
you’re mental. Second of all, chill out, ya woodland freak. I only meant, are you sure this is the
area
? What’s gotten into you lately?”

My hands automatically wipe across my cheeks as if erasing any tears before they even fall. I want to scream, wishing I could curl up in the weeds and let them grow over me. “I can’t seem to catch a break, and time is ticking by. Now we don’t have any evidence so Carl’s going to let those guys out.”

He cups my neck and lifts my chin with both of his thumbs. “I don’t know what to say, G. There’s nothing here.”

“You don’t believe me.”

Studying his eyes, it dawns on me how much they resemble stormy skies with a high chance of rain. “I believe you saw something horrible and I’ll try to help you figure this out. No matter what it is. I promise.”

I nod as helplessness fills my body. I can tell Wyn is losing faith in me. I see it in his face. Hear it in his voice. He strokes my face and stares at my lips. For a brief second, I want him to kiss me. To replace the pain in my gut with something sweet and nice. Tell me everything’s going to be all right. That Dad’s going to be okay. That I can go back to being the carefree girl I was before this mess happened.

But the fleeting moment—whatever it was—drifts away. I collapse into Wyn and hide my face in his neck, now sweaty and dirty.

He pecks the top of my head. “It’s getting dark. We need to head back. There’s a long hike ahead of us. One I’m not too thrilled about.”

“Okay.” I hand him my flashlight and trail several steps behind him. A rising half moon provides little light. Without uttering a word, we hike back through the columns of spruce, fir, and beech trees.

There’s nothing to say.

After all the extensive hiking I’ve done today, my feet and legs grow angrier with every step. My exhausted body’s heavy, making it feel as if I’m sleep walking. With each step, I feel heavier and heavier, anchored to the earth by fatique, sadness, and confusion. I think about the ransacked station.
Am I really making something out of nothing? Am I just seeing what I want to see?

Other books

Calico by Callie Hart
Absolute Risk by Gore, Steven
Porcelain Princess by Jon Jacks
Countdown by Natalie Standiford
Kidnap by Tommy Donbavand