He reached out with his cuffed hands and snagged her fingers. “You get me free, and I’ll find a way. I promise you.”
Milton’s footsteps started slogging toward them.
Time to go then.
He kept hold of her hand. “Tonight.”
She nodded. “Tonight.”
Milton reached them. “Sorry, ma’am. But I really do got to take him back now.”
“I understand.” She pulled her hand free. “Goodbye, Hitch.”
“Goodbye, Nan.” He watched her leave. His throat tightened, but for the first time since yesterday afternoon, he was able to draw a full, cold breath into his lungs.
Milton took his elbow and turned him toward the car.
Another batch of planes roared overhead. The sound reverberated in his chest, and the old longing stirred. He could still fly away. Tell Campbell yes, get out, and never come back. Once he was gone, Campbell’d never find him.
On the other hand, if he stayed, and especially if this escape tonight worked, Campbell would prosecute him to the full extent he was capable. Like enough, Hitch would spend the rest of his life in jail.
That’s what logic said.
But when you came right down to it, he’d never lived much of his life by logic.
Forty-Four
THE COMMOTION IN the jailhouse erupted about nine o’clock.
Hitch stopped pacing his cell.
It was hard to hear past the din of the rain pounding on the roof. But that thud had sounded a whole lot like a body hitting the floor.
Something clanged. Another thud.
A whisper shrilled through the empty corridor: “Dagnabbit! Did you have to drop him right on my big toe?”
“Never mind that. Now, son, just you move along. We don’t want no trouble.”
Hitch dodged into the far corner of his cell, where he’d have the best angle of sight down the corridor.
Three men appeared through the far doorway. The two in back, clad in overalls and straw hats, wore red bandannas over their noses and hefted shotguns.
The Berringer brothers. Of course. Who else was Nan going to recruit?
Hitch almost grinned.
They prodded Griff along in front of them.
“Now, git on.” J.W. poked at Griff with his shotgun barrel. It wasn’t cocked. “You think a jailbreak’s supposed to take all night?”
Griff held up both hands. The key ring dangled from one thumb. His teeth were clenched hard, but his expression was more forbearing than upset.
Matthew clamped a hand on Griff’s shoulder and looked back at J.W. “Hush your mouth. You want to wake the whole blamed place?”
“Me wake the whole blamed place? What about you knocking them fellers out and letting them smack into the floor? If you’d given me some warning, I’d’ve caught ’em and nobody would’ve heard a thing.”
“What did you think I was going to do? Stand there and wait until they turned around and recognized us in these silly disguises?”
“These disguises are a common-sense precaution, and you know it.”
“They’re silly. Ain’t going to fool nobody.” Matthew rattled Griff’s shoulder. “Fool you, son?”
Griff cleared his throat. “That… might depend on who’s asking.”
“See?”
J.W. snorted. “What’s silly is this whole idea of a truce between you and me. I’d be in and out and have this job finished all by myself by now.”
“Surely.” Matthew didn’t sound sure. He looked at Griff. “Now where’s your brother?”
Hitch kept his mouth shut. Matthew and J.W. were already making so much noise, it was a miracle nobody had heard what was going on. The Schturming refugees in the other cells just stared slack-jawed and muttered amongst themselves.
Griff led the Berringers to Hitch’s cell and looked Hitch straight in the eye as he stuck the key in the lock.
Hitch gave him a nod. No doubt Griff had his own reasons for letting him out. Whatever they were, the results were a heap better than all the fighting and stonewalling they’d been doing ever since he’d got back.
Hitch looked at Matthew. “Thought you’d never get here.”
J.W. crooked his elbow around his shotgun. “Can’t hardly do a jailbreak in broad daylight.”
“Hush,” Matthew said. “Now, Hitch Hitchcock, you stop your wisecracking and listen to me. This whole thing’s rash, and I hope you know it. But it’s the only chance most of us got—including you. So if you’re brave enough to take that contraption of yours up tonight, God bless you. Your mechanic’s got it fueled and ready for takeoff, right outside of town. He’s been keeping it dry under tarps all this time.”
Griff opened the door.
Hitch grabbed his leather jacket off the bunk and stepped into the corridor. “What about Jael?”
“Hmm.” J.W. scratched his nose above his bandanna. “Where do they keep lady prisoners anyway?”
Griff headed down the corridor without needing even a single prod from Matthew. “This way.”
The cell Griff led them to was empty and dark.
Griff frowned. “She’s supposed to be here.” He unlocked the latch and stepped inside the cell.
“This a trick?” Matthew said.
The words were barely out of his mouth when something streaked down from the corner and hit Griff in the head. He toppled forward onto his knees.
Hitch lunged to catch him. “What—?”
With a grunt, Jael fell out of the ceiling. She landed in a crouch, next to the short log she must have somehow snagged and smuggled in under her skirt when they’d been at the graveyard that afternoon.
Hitch caught her bare arm. “What do you think you’re doing?” He looked from her to the ceiling. “How’d you get up there?”
She scrunched her face in a wince and straightened up. “I climbed.”
“And wedged yourself up there?” The girl was a consarned monkey.
Matthew pushed past Hitch to help a bleary Griff back to his knees. “What’d you hit this poor boy for?”
“Don’t you know a rescue when you see one?” J.W. said.
“This is rescue?” She looked at Hitch, then down at Griff. “Oh.” Then, sympathetically: “Oh.” She knelt and gently patted Griff’s cheeks.
Hitch scrubbed his hand through his hair. “How come I didn’t get all this nursing whenever you hit me?”
“You were not rescuing.”
“Yes, I was… some of the times.”
She slanted him a glance that looked downright reproachful.
“Yeah, well, anyway. I’m about to beat it. Breaking jail’s a crime in itself, so if Campbell catches up to me, it’ll mean about twice as much trouble as before. You can come on out if you want, and the Berringers or somebody will take care of you.” He glanced at Matthew for a nod of confirmation. “But you just might be better off staying here. It’s your choice.”
She stood and faced him. “You are going after Schturming. In this weather?”
“Yes, to find Walter and stop Zlo.”
“I will go with you.”
“_No._” The word came out fast. He took a breath and slowed himself down. “I don’t want you up there tonight. Flying in weather like this is… well, it ain’t recommended. I could crash as easy as not, and that’d be the end of it.”
“You will never be finding Schturming without me. Now that Zlo has changed the dawsedometer to on again, I can feel where it is. You cannot.”
“Jael—” How to say this? And in front of Griff and the Berringers too.