quiet and dirt-under-the-fingernails and waking-up-all-alone-every-day.
Finch seemed older suddenly, all cleaned up. I thought he might be seventeen, not the fifteen Iâd first thought. Iâd have to ask him, once I knew him better.
We moved out onto the wooden platform, and then, in a blink, the black train was pulling up and good-byes, good-byes.
âLast chance, Violet,â Luke said. He stood on the bottom step of the train and looked down at me. Sunshine was already inside, having walked right by without a word.
I shook my head.
Luke sighed. âBe careful, sister.â And his face told me how much he meant it. âI was . . . a coward, back at Innâs End. Iâm not proud of it, Vi. But youâre making the wrong choice. You are. If a person goes looking for trouble, theyâll find it.â The train began to howl. âWhat if the barn boy is River?â he shouted over the noise. âWhat if itâs Brodie? What will we do then?â
I didnât answer.
What would any of us do with either Redding boy if we found him? I hadnât figured that out yet. Sometimes it just wasnât worth thinking ahead. Because then youâd freeze and never end up doing anything, anything at all.
Luke stared at me, and I stared at him, and I could see he was pissed, and sad, and a little scared still. But mainly, mainly he just seemed kind of . . . lost, all of sudden.
âWeâve never been apart, you know,â I said, because we hadnât. But Luke didnât hear me over the howling. He turned and went up the steps.
The train left, and he was gone.
Thatâs when the bad feeling started. Deep in the pit of my belly. Thick and bitter and sweaty.
Luke was right. Iâd made the wrong choice.
And I supposed I should have wondered right then if I would ever even see my brother again. But that seemed too dark a thought, even for me.
âââ
We left the college town behind a half hour later, though I didnât want to. The way Innâs End had played out didnât make me all that eager to follow another one of Wide-Eyed Theoâs stories down the rabbit hole.
No, that wasnât true. I wanted to go to North Carolina. I did. . . . I just needed one more cup of coffee first.
Finch was quiet as we wandered back through the campus. He didnât seem to understand money very well, let alone have any of his own, so I paid for his coffee and he didnât mind a bit. He winced each time a car went by, and I watched him stand by an overflowing garbage can for a full minute, a melancholy look on his face.
But he watched other people closely and learned fast. The day before, heâd been a cabin-dwelling mountain boy. By the time heâd finished his whole-milk latte, he was leading the way back to the car, cutting through alleys and jaywalking across busy intersections like some true-blue city kid.
âFinch, have you ever been to this town before?â I asked, looking at him out of the corner of my eyes. âHave you ever been anywhere?â
âNo.â He paused, and glanced around, serious and big-eyed like a deer that had taken a wrong turn and ended up in the middle of town. âThe world is a lot bigger than I thought.â A truck rambled down the road in front of us. âAnd a lot louder.â
âA lot bigger?â Neely repeated, and laughed. Though not in an unfriendly way. âWe havenât even left the state yet. You wait.â
And Finch nodded, though I detected a bit of doubt in his eyes, like he wanted to believe Neely about the world being bigger but couldnât yet, not quite.
We got in the car and drove away.
The truth was, Iâd been back in civilization and I liked it. The grand university had sucked the Devil-hunting itch right out of me.
I thought about me going east and Luke going north and I felt a tug. Something was going taut between us, some connection,
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