“How’s my Emily Lou this morning?” he heard a female voice say. “Is she ready to feed the family?”
Matt slowly crawled to the edge of the loft and placed a foot on the ladder, turning his back to the young lady who had placed her bucket under a cow and was now working her practiced hands across the udder. Sharp sprays of milk resonating in the bucket masked the sound of his feet lightly descending the wooden ladder from the loft. At the bottom, he moved quietly toward her.
He registered that the sound of the spraying milk had stopped a few seconds earlier as the woman spun off her stool and lifted a .22-caliber Derringer toward him.
“Stop right there!” she barked.
Matt stopped and lifted his hands into the air.
“We slept in your barn last night.” Matt took a step back, holding up his hands.
“Don’t move,” she ordered, pulling a cell phone from her coat pocket. She punched a button and got a walkie-talkie beep. “Dad, we’ve got trouble in the barn. Bring the boys and the guns.”
Matt stood still, arms raised, eyes locked onto hers. She was pretty, he thought, in a fresh, farmgirl sort of way. She had clean skin, a wide mouth, and dark hair pulled back into a ponytail. Her eyes were a deep brown that locked onto him like radar.
“I can explain. My partner and I, she’s still up there,” he said, pointing. Peyton was actually awake now, looking over the rail of the loft. The woman shifted her pistol up toward Peyton and then back over to Matt.
“While this may not be the smartest thing to say in Vermont, we’re with the government,” Matt said. “The federal government.”
“Right about that. Not too smart,” a male voice said over the woman’s shoulder. This was a big man, Matt noticed. He was a good foot taller than the woman. His daughter, Matt presumed. A barrel-chested man, the father had an untrimmed beard, wore overalls, and leveled a 12-gauge shotgun at Matt. Looked to Matt like an old Remington 870. Made sense. Good sturdy weapon and Remington had made over 5 million of them, still counting.
“We have no weapons, no wallets, no nothing,” Matt said. “All we need to do is make one phone call, and we’ll be on our way. When we get our car back, I’ll even repay you for the overnight stay.”
The father actually seemed to mull this over and then said, “Nope, sounds like bullshit. I’m calling the cops. They’ll let you make a phone call.”
Matt sensed the man was bluffing. If the farmer was going to call the cops, he would have already done so. He also knew that Vermont residents were infamous for their independent streak and their lack of confidence in government.
“Come on, look at us.” Matt motioned with his hand. By now, Peyton had climbed down the ladder and was standing next to him. “We’ve been on the run all night long, being chased by some really bad people. We found your barn, thought we might be able to get some rest and slip out without being noticed. We should have asked, but we got here about five this morning. We were wiped out. These people have stolen everything we had on us.”
“What, you two running drugs?” the farmer asked.
“No, nothing like that,” Matt said. “You can check us out. We’re good people. All we want is one phone call, and then we’ll leave. You can keep all your weapons aimed at us while I make the call and until we are off your property. I know we trespassed, and I know we endangered you by hiding here.”
“No danger as long as we’ve got these,” the farmer said, holding up his weapon. “None of these rag heads going to get us.”
Matt wasn’t sure what the farmer was referring to, but it occurred to him that something terrible had probably happened. The melodic terrorist voice from the prison cell hung in his mind. The events of the last twenty-four hours.
“One phone call. Please?” Matt asked.
The man looked at Peyton, then back at him. “You guys look pretty roughed up. Scared my girl here, though. Don’t appreciate that.”
“I apologize, deeply, sir,” Matt said.
“Stephanie, let the man use your cell phone. Toss it over to him. When we get the bill, we’ll charge him.”
“Thank you,” Matt said, catching the phone Stephanie launched at him.
Matt punched in the only number he could remember that might help. He listened as the phone rang and felt awkward as the father-daughter combo stared at him. Out of the corner of his eye, he thought he noticed some movement and then heard a squeak in the rafters. The sound was probably the boards expanding under the heat of the morning sun, Matt figured.
“Hello,” said the woman’s voice on the other end.
“Meredith, this is Matt.”
After a slight pause, she said, “You’re alive! Thank God.”
Meredith had practically shouted the words, and everyone could hear. The daughter and father looked at one another, keeping their weapons trained on Matt and Peyton.
“Listen—”
“Are the others okay? Peyton, the crew?”
“Peyton’s with me, Meredith. The others are not. Listen, I’m on someone else’s cell phone right now, and it’s not a great situation, so I need you to get us some transport back to your location as quickly as possible.”
“Okay, okay,” she said. “Where are you? Why is it not a good situation?”
“We’re in Sheldon Springs, Vermont…”
“I knew it. They were taking you north.”
“Right.”
“Hang on. I’m bringing up my computer. Is there someone there with you that you can ask if they know where the nearest airport or airfield is?”
Matt moved the phone away from his mouth.
“Is there an airfield near here?”
“Yea, about fifteen miles up the road to the northwest,” the father responded. “Route 7 or 89 will get you there.”
“Thanks.” Then to Meredith, “We’re twenty miles. Take us about two or three hours to walk it, probably. Less if we can get a ride.”
“I’ve got it. It’s a small airfield to the northeast of Swanton, Vermont.”
“Swanton?” He looked at the farmer.
“That’s right.” The farmer nodded.
“Go there now, and I’ll have some of your very good friends pick you up,” Meredith said.
“Thanks. I really appreciate this.”
“It just occurred to me, have you heard about the attacks?” Meredith asked.
“What attacks?”
“Matt, they’ve struck again. The Charlotte Coliseum, Mall of America, and the Amtrak from D.C. to New York were all destroyed,” Meredith said.
Matt was speechless. Peyton watched him and asked, “What?”
He looked at the farmer and his daughter, immediately understanding their reaction to his and Peyton’s unannounced presence in their barn.
“More attacks,” Matt whispered to Peyton.
“Matt, just stay safe. I thought… well, we all thought we’d lost you,” Meredith said.
A thought raced through his mind that Meredith had lost him several months ago when she returned the engagement ring, but the heavy reality of more terrorist attacks crushed such insignificant thoughts.
“Thanks. We’ll be safe.”
He pressed the off button and held the cell phone out to Stephanie, who stepped forward and took it from him.
“Three terrorist attacks—”
Matt heard another noise, a footfall, in the loft and figured it was another family member.
“You got anybody else with you?” the father asked.
“No, but we were being chased,” Matt said, quickly.
“Anything to do with all this news about terrorists?” the father asked.
“Maybe. We think so,” Matt said, his mind reeling.
“What happened?” Peyton demanded.
The first bullet whipped past Matt’s ear and caught the father in the right shoulder, spinning him around, causing the shotgun to bounce on the cement floor like one of those Marine ceremony tricks. It flipped directly into Matt’s hands as he dove toward Stephanie, instinctively trying to protect her. Stephanie fired a shot at Matt, missing him with her unsteady hand.