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"Did you get it?" he asked.
"I think so!" I set Jewels down on the workbench and opened the case. Under the piece of silk I always kept to wrap her in were four sheets of paper that Spill had slipped inside during our tug-of-war.
"And do you think Randall fell for the fight?" Grandpa asked.
"Hook, line, and sinker," I said, grinning.
32.
September 30th-I am not an adventurer by choice but by fate.
-Vincent van Gogh
BY THE TIME BREAKFAST WAS READY, GRANDPA WAS already huddled over his workbench. I had to force him to come out for lunch so Randall wouldn't get suspicious, but he refused to stop for dinner.
"If we're going to be ready by tomorrow night, I need to keep working," he told me.
I'd made a huge pot of potato and leek soup, one that would last us a week, just to throw Randall off a little. I didn't know if he'd noticed or not, but the soup smelled delicious, and in the end, I talked him into having some, which was also part of the plan. I needed to make sure he trusted me not to poison his food. Which, of course, I hadn't. And I didn't even plan to, either. But I did need his trust.
Brandy had shown a stubborn streak I hadn't antic.i.p.ated by not talking to either me or Grandpa for almost two full days, but on the third morning, she woke up cheerful and herself, which was a big relief to all of us as we needed her happiness to buoy our spirits.
The house was really getting cold at night. I'd gone upstairs to get my blankets because Brandy and Michael had begged me to sleep with them on the foldout couch in my grandparents' bedroom and I'd finally agreed. I'd shared a bed with my sister ever since I was three, and I kind of missed having someone to cuddle with on cold nights.
My grandparents were getting ready to turn in, and I'd left the kids in the living room to choose a story from a pile of really old picture books Grandma had given them. I'd just come out onto the landing when I heard Doug's voice downstairs. I hurried over to the balcony that looked down onto them below.
"But you want to live with Molly, don't you, Brandy?" he asked.
"I guess. But I miss you."
"I miss you too, but it's better this way."
So Doug had come back and it looked like he planned to hand the kids over to me permanently.
"Molly said you were gone," Michael piped up.
"I wouldn't leave without saying good-bye," he told them. "I want to hug you both, but you have to be careful. I'm still sore from my fall."
When the Organization had given Doug the first warning, he'd told the kids he'd cracked a rib falling off a horse, and of course, they'd believed him. Doug tried to squat down, but his face went ashen and he visibly clenched his jaw, a little moan escaping.
"Maybe you'll just have to hug my legs," he said, straightening up. "It's kind of hard to bend over."
The kids flung themselves at him, practically knocking him over, and wrapped their skinny little arms around his thighs. He blanched in pain, and for a second I thought he might pa.s.s out.
"Easy now," he said. "Not too tight."
"We're only hugging your legs, silly," Brandy said, giggling.
"I know, sweet pea, but I'm sore all over." He ruffled their hair with his big hands, and laughter floated up to me as I watched.
"Okay," he said after a while. "I gotta go. You two be good for Molly, and do what she says, all right?"
"We will," they said together.
He motioned to a large envelope on the end table. "And don't forget to give her the papers I left."
"We won't," they said.
His voice got so soft I almost couldn't hear him. "Tell her I'm sorry too," he added.
"Okay."
"Hey, Doug?" I called over the balcony. "Where are you going?"
He looked up at me, and flinched from the sudden movement.
"Mexico," he said.
"You're leaving Brandy and Michael with me for good?" I asked.
"Is that okay?"
I couldn't believe he was asking me that now when he'd obviously planned to just sneak away without them.
"The Organization's keeping me here now," I said. "But if they ever let me go, I'll have to take them back to Canada with me." I wanted to make sure he understood he'd probably never see them again.
"Yeah." He nodded. "I know."
I did not want to be nice to him, but he looked so pathetic standing there. He'd chopped off all his long hair, probably so people would stop grabbing it in fights, and he was obviously in a lot of pain. "Do you need some money?" I asked.
"Nah, I'm good."
"Well . . . be careful."
"You too, Molly," he said. "Their birth certificates and stuff are in the envelope."
"Okay."
He rubbed the tops of their heads. "Take care of my kids."
"I will."
"I know." He waved and was gone.
If he was going to Mexico, he wouldn't be back, so it didn't really matter if we took them away from here or not. He'd entrusted them to me, and they belonged on our island farm now. a.s.suming we could ever get back.
Brandy was curled up against me in the foldout bed and Michael had one leg over mine. I s.h.i.+fted trying to get more comfortable, but someone was standing over me with a candle, shaking my shoulder. "Wake up, Molly," Grandpa said.
"What?"
"I did it!"
"What's going on?" Brandy mumbled.
"Jack?" I heard Grandma's voice say from across the dark room where she was tucked into her own bed.
"It's okay," he told her. "I just wanted to tell Molly that I did it. The module works!"
I disentangled myself from the kids and hunted for my jeans. "I want to see it," I said.
"There's not much to it," Grandpa said.
"Can I come?" Michael asked. Brandy had already fallen back asleep.
"No, you stay here."
He started to whimper and so I picked him up and put him into bed with Grandma.
In the garage Grandpa had lit two whole boxes of candles in order to see what he was doing. Gleaming in the middle of the floor was the Studebaker, its hood propped open and a slight hum coming from it.
I leaned in and inspected Grandpa's handiwork. The Super Seven Solar Battery had been replaced by a red metal box with a curved top. The lid was hanging open, and I could see a mess of wires he'd pulled out of the wall, a hose made from one of Spill's spare inner tubes, what looked like two circular saw blades, some string, and duct tape. Obviously whatever was really powering it was hidden from view. Even I knew you couldn't build a power source from duct tape.
"How fast do you think it will go?" I asked.
Grandpa examined the pages that Spill had given us. "It says it will go seventy miles an hour, but I doubt the Studebaker will go more than about twenty because she's made of steel."
"It's amazing that you could build this out of sc.r.a.p pieces."
"But that's the whole point. Anyone who can follow directions can build it."
When Grandma had been in the hospital, Grandpa had found an old Today's Mechanics Today's Mechanics in the waiting room. In it was an article about how to build a self-generating power source that was capable of running any car. He'd wanted to try it on the Studebaker, but later discovered he was missing several pages. That's where Spill had come in. He'd downloaded the rest of it from the internet. in the waiting room. In it was an article about how to build a self-generating power source that was capable of running any car. He'd wanted to try it on the Studebaker, but later discovered he was missing several pages. That's where Spill had come in. He'd downloaded the rest of it from the internet.
"We can't risk taking the car out," Grandpa said, "but I can back her up a little, just so you can see it works."
"Okay."
I climbed in and he backed up about two feet. It was sort of anticlimactic unless you thought about the fact that he'd made it run himself.
"You did it!" I said, and scooted across the bench seat to give him a hug. Unfortunately, because electric cars are almost silent, I hadn't realized that he hadn't turned the module off. His foot slipped on the pedal, sending us backward with a bang right into the garage door. He put it in park, switched it off, and we jumped out. Randall was off duty and our night guard was out in the backyard by the fire, but he would've heard the thump for sure. I started pinching out the candles with my thumb and forefinger.
"Leave them," Grandpa said. "He'll check the bedroom first, and if we're there, hopefully he won't come in here. Let's go!"
I wasn't sure it was a good idea, but I followed Grandpa anyway, racing through the house. I dove into the bed next to Brandy and heard heavy footsteps in the living room. I'd just pulled the covers up over us when someone shone a Crank Light in my face.
"What's going on?" I mumbled, faking grogginess.
The beam danced around the room, settling onto my grandparents' bed.
"Nothing," the guy said. "Just my nightly head count. Sleep tight."
The light preceded him out of the room, and I heard the French doors to the deck click shut behind him. I waited five minutes, climbed out of bed, snuck back to the garage, and put the candles out. The car worked! Now we just had to get away.
33.
October 1st-An apple a day keeps the doctor away.
IT WAS REALLY HARD TO ACT NORMAL THE NEXT DAY, but we tried our best. I spent the morning stripping the garden of anything that was left, which wasn't much. I had no idea if we'd be able to cook along the way, and I wasn't counting on fresh water, so I had Grandma wash and prep everything we had left for the journey with the idea that we'd just eat it raw if we had to.
When Randall came on duty, I went out and sat by the fire with him. I did a double take because over his lip was the very faint start of a thin moustache. With his felt hat and short stocky body, and now this, he was looking more and more like an old-time movie gangster.
"How exactly do I spend a piece of gold?" I asked him.
At first he didn't answer, and I thought he was back to the silent treatment.
"I guess I could change it for you at the market," he finally said. "Why?"
"I want to stock up on food," I said.
He nodded. "You ready?"
"Sure. I want to busk too, though. Let me get my fiddle."
I ran inside and got Jewels and a couple of cloth bags, and then Randall and I walked down to the market one last time. Of course, he he had no idea it was the last time. According to the plans we'd made, today Spill was supposed to send us the go-ahead message hidden inside an apple. My heart was racing, and I was glad for Randall's silence because I wasn't sure I could keep the nervousness out of my voice. had no idea it was the last time. According to the plans we'd made, today Spill was supposed to send us the go-ahead message hidden inside an apple. My heart was racing, and I was glad for Randall's silence because I wasn't sure I could keep the nervousness out of my voice.
He led me into the scary bit of the market, but everyone moved swiftly out of our way and no one looked directly at either of us. He went into a tent to change the gold and I stood outside. After a few minutes, he came out with my money and then he led me around to buy dried goods, bread, and cheese. When I asked a vendor how much something cost, they gave me a price right away. Not one person asked me "how much do you have?" like usual. And, after a glare from Randall, the bread vendor lowered his price considerably.
"You ready to busk now?" Randall asked.
The bags were overflowing, and it was so cold I knew I'd be fumbling around, sounding horrible, but I needed the all-important message from Spill, and I knew busking was how he'd get it to me.