Chapter Nine - Terry Sneaks Away
Common sense kicked into gear in Terry’s brain and he remained under the canvas awning. He should call his parents first. They could either pick him up here, or he could meet them in that village where they’d lunched on their way in. Or his dad could book a hotel room for him until he caught the next flight from out west. And a way to get to the airport. From his vantage point behind the courthouse on Main Street, Terry studied the road in each direction. To his left lay a populated strip of Inns, pubs and General Stores, where he could slip among the dozens of families milling about. Cellular phones and other modern gadgets were prohibited here, but once upon a time people had relied on coin phones in public places. He didn’t see any booths, but one of the inns must might have one. He cursed himself for not paying more attention during fifth-grade history. What if telephones didn’t exist in the Pioneer era.
There was only one way to find out. He headed up the street towards a log cabin halfway up the next block. A Perkins Tavern sign hung from the front, swaying gently in the breeze. At the sight of a flash of red, he froze. The robe of an Adept. He turned around and walked quickly in the opposite direction. Beyond a cluster of houses at the edge of town, the road cut through a field and into the woods. He should be able to find another village or town and call his parents from there.
After taking one last glance around, Terry hied it through knee-high grass into the safety of the forest. He walked along the grassy ridge between the two deep ruts of the lane, taking in the sweet forest smells. He was free, but now what? Already that giddy thrill of escape was fading. Reality was kicking in. He should have planned better, at least grabbed a flask of water or a link of sausages before fleeing. If he had any sense he’d head back now and just say he got lost. Unfortunately a week of drudgery and exhaustion had depleted the rational part of his brain. He continued.
Birds tweeted and crickets wheezed as the trail wound between giant evergreens. Sunlight blazed down in shafts creating a mottled landscape that made it hard for him to orient himself. The terrain grew hillier. Terry clambered up, breathless, wishing the lane had switchbacks instead of going straight up. Had they come down this same lane on the cart? He regretted dozing on their way in. Stupid, stupid, stupid. The path levelled off again. Terry spotted a clearing ahead, the sun radiating down onto golden yellow grass.
A breeze carried sounds of tinkling on metal and whickering horses. He was already coming to another village. He emerged from the forest into a field and beyond a cluster of low wood houses. He shielded his eyes from the blinding overhead sun and stumbled towards the cluster of brick and limestone buildings in the distance.
A sense of déjà vu flooded into him at the sight of the wide dirt road flanked by rickety wooden houses. Everything looked overly familiar, including the horse-drawn carriages shuttling people around and the neatly hand-painted signs. He’d seen similar log cabins and colonial style stone houses this morning on his way in. He tried to relax. He was being paranoid. These old-timey villages were bound to look the same. His parents had taken him through multiple state capitals and all of them had nearly-identical domed white buildings with Roman columns and wide marble staircases.
He wandered along the main road, his eyes landing on a sign swaying gently in the breeze. “Perkins Tavern,” he mouthed. In spite of the hot afternoon sun, his blood ran cold. He forced himself to calm down. Like Disney World in Florida, Disneyland near his own hometown in Anaheim, and the one in Europe, these towns must be copies of each other right down to the pub names. Three or so blocks farther along, he spotted a limestone courthouse and behind it a market with the same wooden stalls sheltered by cloth canopies …
… and Katya sitting bored on the stool behind half-empty bushel baskets of potatoes and zucchini.
“WHERE ARE YOU GOING!”
A shadow loomed over Terry. A fearsomely strong hand grabbed the scruff of his tunic, lifted him up off his feet, shook him like a dog worrying a bone, and dropped him back down. Terry stumbled forward onto his hands and knees. Gravel dug into his palms. Out of the corner of his eye he spotted the familiar poppy-red satin edged with gold, which filled him with a dread similar to looking down a loaded gun from the wrong end. Only when he looked straight at the adept did he see the plain brown robe.
“I—I needed to take a leak,” Terry stammered. “And c-couldn’t find where to—”
A foot to his backside kicked him forward and he sprawled onto the grassy verge. A pair of arms lifted him back onto his feet. He turned and, to his shock, Ms. Huston was dusting off her robe. Her small grey eyes narrowed almost to slits as she pointed to a whitewashed building across the road from the courthouse. “In there,” she said in a quieter, more feminine voice. “Is the sign marked ‘privy’. Did you not listen to a thing on the way here?”
“Sorry,” Terry said, not wanting to get into even more trouble by adding miss or ma’am in case he chose the wrong one. “I was looking for something spelled with two v’s, not one.”
Ms. Huston let out a cackle that reminded him of the evil green witch in the Wizard of Oz. “You are a stupid one! It’s not my imagination, the neophytes really do get worse each and every year!”
“May I go?” Terry asked, hoping his desperation to get out of her sight came across to her as his being in dire need of heeding nature’s call.
She folded her arms across her chest. A sly, cruel smile spread on her thin lips. She cocked her head. “You may. Go.”
“Thank-you-miss!” he yelled, running straight for the building she’d pointed out as if his life depended on it. It didn’t bother him that she’d called him stupid. The more Adepts thought of him as just another dumb kid, the less vigilant they’d be when he was in their sights. So far, Ms. Huston was the only one he’d interacted with. If he were smart, he’d figure out which Adepts he really needed to impress, and try to get on their radar with some impressive feet. If he were smart. Terry feared that was a mighty big if. If he were really smart he’d stay under their radar for the rest of the summer.
















