Tears welled in Walter’s eyes.
Uh-oh. This was bad. Something painful inside of him rolled over. That dog had been with him longer than Earl.
“What happened?” He walked back to face the boy. “Where is he?”
Walter stared at the sidewalk and shrugged.
“Just tell me.”
Walter darted his face back up, as if he’d been slapped.
Totally, entirely, absolutely the wrong thing to say. Hitch had almost forgot the kid couldn’t—_wouldn’t_—talk. He exhaled hard.
Walter opened his mouth, shut it, then opened it again. His lower lip trembled. “Zlo—took Taos.”
“What?” The word burst out before he really had time to think about it.
That snake Zlo had his dog.
And Walter had just said something.
Why was this happening now, with Hitch? This should be happening with Nan and Byron. They were the ones who had waited forever for Walter to start talking again. They’d know what to say, pat him on the back, make a big deal out of him.
Hitch’s head pounded pain all the way down his spine. “What happened?”
Walter sucked in a shaky breath. He wasn’t crying, but he was mighty close to it. “I—” His voice was tinny, unused.
Hitch was no good with kids, especially crying kids. “Come on now. Don’t cry. Just tell me what happened. Where’d you see Zlo?”
“Out—by—the—Bluff.” Every word was a gasp. “With his ship. It’s broken.”
Electricity zinged across Hitch’s skin. “The ship’s out by the Bluff?” He looked instinctively across town, even though the buildings blocked the view from here. He seized Walter’s shoulder. “You’re sure?”
“But they… saw me.”
A deep growl welled in Hitch’s throat. This was a lead, a solid lead. The first in days. If he could get out there in time, he could finish what he’d started the other day: bring the ship down and get his people and himself out of here before Campbell could rain down any more threats. And then he could put this whole big mess behind him. Coming home had been a mistake. He wouldn’t make it again.
But only if he could get out to the Bluff in time.
He released Walter. “I got to go.”
Shoulders slumped, the boy looked up at Hitch. His tears finally slid free. “I’m sorry about Taos.” Then he turned and ran.
Hitch barely held back a groan as he watched him go.
He’d been too rough on the kid. He’d spoken too harshly, been too impatient. After all, Walter had come to fess up. And Zlo’s taking Taos probably hadn’t been Walter’s fault to begin with.
He should go after him and tell him it was all right.
It wasn’t all right. But what else were you supposed to tell a kid who was breaking his heart over a dog?
Except he couldn’t, not right now. Schturming came first.
Thirty-Six
THE JENNY TORE between the low clouds. Hitch guided her wide around the backside of the Bluff and over the top once more. If luck could hold on a little bit longer, and Schturming was still near where Walter had spotted it, that might give him enough time to keep Zlo from kicking those honkin’ engines of his into high gear. That was the first thing that had to go right if this new plan had any chance of succeeding.
Below, two dozen motorcars roared up the mud-puddled road. Campbell and Griff drove two of them. Livingstone with his legs in casts, and Earl with his slung-up arm, had somehow gotten themselves crammed together in one of the backseats, even though they were so much deadweight on this mission.
In the Jenny’s rear cockpit, Hitch perched on the edge of his seat and danced on the rudder pedals to keep the plane straight. She kept trying to yaw left under the weight of the rope ladder hooked over her landing gear. Every second the ladder somehow stayed put was a second that made it a smidge easier to believe there might be enough miracles left in the world to make this actually work.
Because if it didn’t, they were going to be out of options for stopping Zlo. And even if, by some miracle, everyone managed to pull together long enough for this to work out—Campbell still got the air machine at the end of it.
Not exactly a win-win situation, but getting Schturming on the ground was better than nothing. If they could make that happen, at least Hitch could leave home knowing it wasn’t too much worse off than before he had come back on this misbegotten trip.
For whatever it was worth, at least there was a plan this time—thanks to Walter’s discovery.
A stab of regret punched up through the adrenaline. Little Walter with his wide, trusting eyes and his fearless smile. The only wrong thing that kid had done was to pick Hitch as his hero.
The Jenny tried to drop her wing again. In the front cockpit, Jael twisted around and shot Hitch a questioning look through her goggles. She hung onto the huge piles of rope coiled in her lap.
She’d insisted her bum joints wouldn’t keep her from doing what needed to be done here today. Plus, she “must be finding yakor.” At any rate, she was the only semi-whole person left who wasn’t mad at him and didn’t have it out for him.
He yanked his focus back where it belonged, steadied the plane, and gave Jael a terse nod.
They bounced in the turbulence over the jagged peak of the Bluff. The bare limestone at the top melted down into patches of faded grass and scrubby cedars. A few hundred more yards—a few more seconds—and they’d be over to the other side. Then the luck of this plan would either pan out or it wouldn’t.
“Be there.” He gritted his teeth against the rain-flecked wind. “Just be there.”
The Jenny swooped over the last ledge. The ground fell away and the wide-open sea of air rushed up to float the plane once more. Jael leaned over one side; Hitch leaned over the other.
He blinked hard, straining to see through his water-spotted goggles.
Rock, tree, rock, weeds, more weeds. Nothing that looked like a very large, very obvious dirigible.
And then—there.
Nestled in the corner of the Bluff, the vast, off-white envelope exploded into view.
His heart about exploded along with it.
Jael darted a look back and jerked her head toward it.
He spared a nod, and then dragged in all the air his lungs could hold.
Here went nothing. If this didn’t work the first time, it probably never would. He eased the Jenny’s nose down and dove, straight for _Schturming_’s propellers.
No time to go over the plan in his head. No time to make sure the cavalcade of motorcars were swinging around the end of the Bluff and bumping over the field into position. Hardly even time to think about what he was doing. They had to get in there and get in there fast. As soon as Zlo heard them coming, he’d rev those big propellers and the jig would be over.
Below, _Schturming_’s stern surged up fast. Jammed against the Bluff like it was, there was zero space to maneuver. Hitch slowed the Jenny as much as he dared, but the wingtip still reached the propellers a darn sight too soon.
One of Schturming_’s prop fins was busted clean in half. _That explained why Zlo hadn’t beat it out of here before now. Looked like that cannon misfire yesterday had done some good after all. The dirigible would probably still be able to move, but not nearly as fast.
In another minute, with any luck, it wouldn’t move at all.
As best he could, he angled toward the dirigible’s props with the ladder on the landing gear.