The snow ran deep between the shrubs, almost knee high. We hit a natural laneway between the foliage, about two yards wide. There were animal tracks in the snow, roughly the size of a dog’s paw prints. Drinkwater’s bootprints were not as deeply impressed here: for a few steps they were barely visible at all before re-establishing themselves on the far side of the laneway. I stepped forward and—
“Stop!”
Duncan’s hand was hooked in my collar.
“It’s a fox run,” he said. “Silver foxes, probably.”
“So?”
“Don’t move.”
He dug in the satchel for the battery and lobbed it at the faintest of Drinkwater’s bootprints. The trap sprang out of the snow, teeth colliding with a metallic schnik.
Duncan pointed at a ring of dull yellow spray-painted around the trunk of a poplar tree. “A trapper’s marker. Drinkwater must have seen that, found the baited trap, sprung it, reset it, covered it with snow. Then he stepped past the fox run, walked back down his own bootprints—he probably walked backwards, looking over his shoulder to make sure his boots came down exactly where they’d been—then took off one of his boots and made a print in the snow right over the trap.”
I could picture it perfectly: Drinkwater balanced on one leg with his socked foot outstretched.
Duncan said, “Christ, he’s crafty.”
“It didn’t work, you prick!” My voice rose into the icy altar of sky, going out and out. The sound settled into silence—at which point another voice may have come back, a soft, wavering note.
It will — ill — ill — ill …
It was that point in winter where afternoons were non-existent. First there was morning, sun twinkling off the snow. Next came a terminal grey interregnum, after which twilight swiftly fell.
The sun began to set, very red and cold. The twilight was growing teeth by the time we came upon a steep ridge. Our shadows stretched across the snow, outlines liquefying into the dusk. Wind scrawled the ridge’s whitened edge, helixes of snow spiralling. Darkness locked the cold into our bones; the Mylar-wrapped coals in our pockets were long dead. Drinkwater’s footprints picked a cautious path down the ridge. At a depth of twenty yards they, too, softened into the encroaching dusk.
Duncan’s breaths were ragged and phlegmy; he’d been stopping often to hack up blood. Twice in the last hour he’d collapsed, coughing helplessly. Not one familiar signpost had carved itself out of the terrain. I found it remarkable that two men could live nearly their whole lives in one place and still be completely disoriented by the wilderness that surrounded it. A band of fear tightened round my heart.
Clouds scudded the horizon. A snowflake touched the nape of my neck. We didn’t want to be stuck atop this bluff when night came down.
“Lower ground’s better, Dunk. Even if we manage to make a fire up here, it could blow out.”
“Long way down,” Duncan said, his body angled against the wind as it howled up the ridge.
“Not from where I’m looking.”
The decline was clad in shadows, the basin nothing but a grey gulf—it wasn’t a long way down so much as an indeterminate way down. Our heels dug into the ridge. In the summer it’d be treacherous, but now, the rocks encased in ice, it was deadly. Saplings clung to the snow-clad shale. I grabbed one and stumbled back as it tore out of the ground, its roots as flimsy as threads.
Snow fell with sudden aggression, filling in the prints we were desperately following. A rough path presented itself: a series of rocky shelves switchbacking down and down. One misstep would send us tumbling over the edge. We inched down with hesitant stutter-steps. Sheaves of snow threw crystalline lancets at my eyes. I squeezed my eyelids shut and opened them as another gust raced away with my breath. Blood beat hotly at my temples yet I was colder than I could ever recall. It was no surprise to discover frost crystallizing on my face.
Drinkwater’s tracks became two solid rails in the snow. The cold had locked itself so deeply around my brain that it took a while to realize what Drinkwater must’ve done.
“He started crawling, Dunk.”
We got down on all fours, too. Rocks dug into my kneecaps and the butt of the shotgun banged my tailbone. The sky was only slightly lighter than the rocky scrim. Halfway down yet? No, but still far enough to seal the decision. Here and there shrubs protruded from the snow, their branches clad with frozen berries as pretty as Christmas tree ornaments.
We found a rock carved into a recessed pocket with an overhang to keep out the snow. We stopped and huddled inside, bodies pressed tight, legs drawn into our stomachs. Duncan heaved like a sheepdog with a busted septum and we both shivered uncontrollably: the cold had sunk so deep into our chests that we couldn’t stop our teeth from rattling.
My fingers were waxy looking, the swollen skin stretched tight. Cold ulcers. Next came frostbite. The sunny Swede … what had he said happened when a body froze? On TV or in the movies, a body found in a meat locker was usually pasty-white, little icicles dangling from its chin. But in real life the skin would be black, wouldn’t it? Frostbite bursts the surface blood vessels. Your blood freezes black.
“Are you g-good to g-go?” I asked.
Duncan wiped the blood off his lips and nodded.
We set off at a tormented crawl. Full darkness had fallen, which was a relief in its way: as we could no longer see the basin, we weren’t dispirited by how far away it remained. A blade-edged wind tore down the rock face; I curled my hands into fists, plodding like a mule. My equilibrium was shot; half the time it felt like I must be climbing uphill. I stared skywards at a freak meteor shower: thousands of streaks through the air. I blinked. The meteors vanished.
The next time I put a hand down, the earth wasn’t there. The path had hit an unseen edge. I lurched forward with a squawk, outflung arms grabbing for something, anything, closing around a sapling growing at the lip; the sapling stripped through my hand like burning rope, flaying skin. Something clutched at my hips—Duncan’s hand clawing for my belt—but his fingers tore free and I was falling, too startled to scream, shocked that it could happen like this, no chance to say goodbye.
I came to in a deep drift, snow swirling above me like lunar moths in a dark vault. I patted my body down to check if anything was obviously broken or leaking. My fingers were so numb it was hard to tell what, if anything, was wrong. Running my hands over my own body felt no different than running them over the hood of a car.
Duncan elbowed through straggly pines, his face plastered with blood.
“Stay st-still,” he said. “Can you f-feel your feet? W-wiggle your t-toes.”
I almost laughed. For all I knew my feet had snapped off at the heels. Duncan offered his hand. The fact I could stand stunned me. Something may have been ruptured inside but the cold acted as a natural novocaine.
The snow blew nearly sideways, pinging off my skin as if off glass. The eyelashes of Duncan’s left eye were frozen. He wet his fingers with the blood pooling in his mouth and massaged his lashes until they unstuck. Then he pulled the final flare from the satchel, popped it alight.
Had anything been watching from a godlike vantage, hovering miles above, it would’ve seen a wavering ball of red light moving with agonizing slowness through the night. That ball was surely the only light to be seen for many miles.
Trees filled in around us; soon we were sidestepping them, stumbling over buried sticks and branches: should we collect them, build a fire and hunker down? The very idea of shelter was silly—what would we build, an igloo? You couldn’t hide from this cold.
My worldview winnowed to a pinprick of intent: keep … moving … forward. My breath came in shallow gulps but miraculously I’d stopped shivering; a calm had settled into my bones. I felt like sitting down. A cheery, sensibly gruff voice in my head told me to do whatever I felt like.
Take a load off, son. … sit your ragged ass down.
We struck it in unison: a ringing metallic wall. Duncan tripped back as the hollow reve
rberation trailed into silence, and squinted at the boxy obstacle in our path. Was this it—had we reached the edge of the universe?
My mind was so numb that I couldn’t puzzle out how to get around it, whatever it was. Maybe we would have kept bashing into it like flies into a window had Dunk not given it a half-hearted kick. A sheet of snow dislodged from the underlying metal.
A van. A very old van.
A very old brown van.
Bruiser Mahoney’s old brown van.
We burned the seats first.
The upholstery had been picked at by animals, the stuffing stolen by birds. We tore out what was left in spongy handfuls, hacked the leatherette upholstery with hands now trembling not from the cold but in anticipation. We piled it outside the van’s rear doors, doused it in gasoline and lit it with the flare.
It ignited with a hugely satisfying whoomph. Duncan’s hands were nearly in the fire: neither of us could properly feel the heat. I wanted to cup the fire like water, splash it on my face and up my arms.
By the time my fingertips were prickling with sensation the flames had burned dangerously low. It took the greatest effort to haul ourselves away and scavenge in the van for anything else that would burn.
We hacked ragged Xs into the passenger seat and harvested every scrap of foam. We tossed water-fattened bodybuilding magazines on the guttering fire, laughing like children as the flames devoured the veiny beefcakes.
Duncan tore hunks of radial tire off rusted rims: they peeled in long curls like monstrous black fingernails. They hit the flames and smouldered, sending up a noxious stink. I found the emergency spare under the bench seat and heaved that on, too.
The temperature inched upwards. Our faces were swollen and windburnt. Cold blisters burst on my fingers and oozed down my palms. My mind started to tick again, but the flames were already dipping. I crawled to the front of the van and tore the stuffing out of the driver’s seat. A small wooden box hidden within the seat coils fell to the floor. Curious, I dumped the box’s contents—ancient vials filled with piss-yellow liquid and a reusable syringe—then returned to the fire. The box was made of cheap presswood; the flames devoured it greedily.
I crawled under the van and found a log big enough to burn through the night. Once its icy encasement melted, the fire crept along the wood with grasping orange fingers.
Duncan lay with his legs dangling over the bumper. His hitching, shallow breaths sounded a lot like hiccups. He looked helpless, a fish asphyxiating to death on the beach.
“It’s your lungs,” I said. “Blood in them. Can I take a look?”
Dunk gave a vague shrug. I unzipped his parka, rucked his sweater up. His chest was nearly black from nipple to nipple, the skin tight-swollen. There was a horrible dent on the heart side of his chest near his abdominals.
“Broken rib … punched into your lung? Jesus, Dunk. How did you make it this far?”
Duncan closed his eyes. Blood dripped out the side of his mouth. If we couldn’t get the blood out of his lungs, he’d choke to death on it.
I crawled to the front of the van, searching for the contents of that wooden box. I found the vials first. Their labels were faded, but one I could make out: Testosterone ethanate. The other read: Equipoise. Bruiser’s travelling ’roids case? I rooted under the seat until my hand closed on the syringe. Old, Victorian-looking; I envisioned genteel addicts in deerstalker hats funnelling opium into their veins with the thing.
It could be done: slide a needle into Dunk’s lungs, drain the blood. The needle looked up to the task: long, with a wide gauge. A hog-sticker. The tip didn’t look especially sharp. Would it pierce the chest plate? Was there an actual plate of bone behind the rib cage, or just durable cartilage? The needle could pierce cartilage, surely. But I’d have to drive it hard into Duncan’s chest.
A foolproof plan? Hardly. The needle could break. There was that. Or not quite reach his lungs. Or Dunk’s blood might be too coagulated to flow, and it would be like sucking wet sand through a cocktail straw. Those problems didn’t seem important when I considered that Dunk would surely die if I did nothing at all.
“I could try to drain the blood.”
Duncan cracked one eye and saw the needle. “With that?”
I nodded. “I’ve seen it done.”
“Where?”
“Can I be straight with you? I saw it in a movie.”
Duncan smiled. Blood shone on his teeth. “Which one?”
“Don’t remember. It had Mark Wahlberg in it.”
“Marky Mark?”
“I don’t even know if it’ll work, Dunk. Plus I guess it could snap. Infection’s a possibility—who knows what Mahoney used this thing for. Worst-case scenario is, you end up with a needle sticking out of your chest.”
Duncan shook his head. “W-worst-case scenario is …”
“We know the worst-case scenario, don’t we?”
Dunk let his eye slip closed. “So try.”
I dipped the needle in gasoline, shook off the excess and held it to the flames. A tongue of fire lapped the metal. I held it until the heat blistered my fingertips, then doused it in the snow.
I screwed the needle back onto the hull, debating. Ultimately I elected to straddle Duncan’s hips so I could bear down with my full weight. Running my fingers across his chest, I hunted for the separation between his ribs. The skin was too swollen to make it a certainty. I found the spot where Duncan’s heartbeat was strongest; I guess I’d aim someplace to the right of that? Couldn’t push too hard—if the needle hit bone and snapped, there went our chance. I’d have to slide it in real nice and slow.
“Ready?”
“Go.”
I positioned the needle on the perimeter of blackened skin. Shoulders hunched, I bore down with even pressure. Duncan’s skin dimpled slightly before the tip pierced; he grunted as the needle slid through layers of tissue into pectoral muscle. It hit an unflexing hardness. Bone? I let go of the needle, left it jutting from Duncan’s chest. I felt my own chest. My ribs were closer to the surface, I was sure of it—I must’ve hit Duncan’s chest plate.
I gripped the hull again and pushed. The cartilage buckled like a sheet of plastic. A burbling noise came out of Duncan like a sewer backing up. A bubble of blood formed between his lips, bursting wetly. My arms flexed. My elbow wound tore open, and blood streamed down my forearm.
The noise the needle made punching through Dunk’s chest plate would have been familiar to any schoolchild: a three-hole punch crunching through a sheaf of construction paper. The shaft sank into the softness of Duncan’s lungs. Blood geysered out.
Dunk inhaled a huge lungful, then his breathing rapidly settled into a normal rhythm. After the initial eruption the blood settled to a steady trickle that ran down and around his hip bones. We lay together listening to his lungs drain.
“Turn on your side,” I said. “That could help.”
In time he sat up. Blood lay dark on his chest. It had soaked into his jeans, and it dribbled out of the syringe like a drippy faucet. He unscrewed the glass hull so just the needle protruded from his chest.
We sat with our legs dangling off the bumper, feet kicking as if we were kids perched on a railing. The wind had tailed off now, and the snow fell in big soft flakes.
A wolf sat beyond the firelight, nearly invisible in the snow. In the night stillness I heard it breathing, smelled the gamy oil of its coat.
“Go on,” I said. “Scat. Skedaddle.”
The wolf stayed, but I didn’t mind. It wasn’t aggressive—just curiously opportunistic, like any wild animal.
“Tell me a story,” Dunk said.
“What?”
“The last time we were out here—remember? The … the dogs living on that giant meatball. Or the one about the man who lives behind the Falls.”
I could barely remember telling those tales. “I haven’t told a story in years.”
I found two Coke cans, cut the tops off, packed them with snow and set them near the embers.
Once the snow had melted I handed one to Duncan. The water was icy-cold, clean and sweet. We drank, burped, repacked the cans.
Duncan said, “I have a story.”
“Yeah?”
“Well, not so much a story as this dream I’d have in prison. It always started at the end. Ed would be standing there and I’d be going away from her … being pulled, more like. And I’d say, ‘I’m coming back. To you, to everyone—Mom, Dad, Owe, everyone. I’m not gone long. This is just the wandering time.’” His expression was perplexed. “The wandering time? And Ed, she’s not upset or angry. All she says is, ‘I won’t be here when you get back.’ Which crushes the hell out of me, y’know? And what I say is: ‘I’ll find you.’ After that it’s nothing … it’s whiteness. Ongoing white, like out there.” He pointed into the snow. “And I’m gone in it, right? For how long I really can’t say. I wake up staring through white, like someone has poured milk on my eyes. But I always think I’m almost back where I belong. Just before I wake, I believe I’m almost out of the white.”
The first edge of dawn broke along the bottom of the eastern sky and the wind picked up out of the trees.
We’d dozed fitfully. In the witching hour something settled softly upon the roof. It bore a musty smell, like hay in a barn. I stared up at it through the heavy grey. A metallic scriiiitch. A trio of dark sickles—talons, I realized, likely belonging to an owl—hooked through rust holes in the roof. Perhaps this was something this particular owl did often—a nightly observance? It took flight again, its heavy wing-beat carrying over the night’s tranquility.
There is a silence particular to the wilderness at dawn: every creature still sleeping, the earth resting, too. The rising sun reflected off the fresh-fallen snow, postcard-pretty. I sat on the bumper, staring bleary-eyed across the grey light of the clearing. The wolves were gone. My feet were swollen inside my brogans.
I pulled the shoes off, wincing. My socks were tacky and crusted—they appeared to be fused to my feet. I rolled the left one down to my ankle, noting how the skin beneath was fish-belly pale. Then I gritted my teeth and peeled it all the way off.
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