“Not far. Stop worrying.”
“You stop worrying,” Caine muttered. Bug was walking invisible through open fields. Nothing but depressions in the dirt where he stepped. Caine was all-too-visible. Broad daylight. Across a dusty, plowed field under a bright, hot sun. Bug said no one was in these fields. Bug said these fields had nothing growing and that none of Sam’s people knew about the farmhouse, which was practically unnoticeable, off a dirt road and looked abandoned.
Caine’s first question had been, “Then how do you know about them?”
“I know lots of stuff,” Bug answered. “Besides, a long time ago you said to keep an eye on Zil.”
“So how does Zil know about this farmhouse?”
The voice above the impressions of invisible feet said, “I think one of Zil’s guys used to know these kids. Back in the day.”
Caine’s next question: “Do they have food there?”
“Yeah. Some. But they also have shotguns. And the girl, the sister Emily? She’s some kind of freak, I think. I don’t know what she does, I ain’t seen her do anything freaky, but her brother is scared of her. So is Zil, kind of, only he doesn’t show it.”
“Great,” Caine muttered. He noted that Zil was a kid who wouldn’t let himself show fear. Maybe useful.
Caine shaded his eyes with his hand and scanned around, looking for telltale dust plumes from a truck or car. Bug said the Perdido Beach people were low on gas, too, but still drove when they needed to.
He was confident that he could take on and defeat any one freak from Sam’s group. With the sole exception of Sam himself. But if it was Brianna and Dekka together? Or even that little preppy nitwit Taylor and a few of Edilio’s soldiers?
But right now the real problem was simply that Caine was weak. Walking this distance—miles—was hard. Very hard when his stomach was stabbing him again, and his navel was scraping his spine. His legs were wobbly. His eyes sometimes became unfocused.
One good meal…well, not really a good meal…was not enough. But it was keeping him alive. Digesting Panda. Panda energy flowing from his stomach through his blood.
The farmhouse was hidden by a stand of trees, but otherwise right out in the open. A long way from the road, yes, but Caine couldn’t believe Sam’s people had never found it and searched it for food.
Very strange.
“No closer,” a young male voice called from the front porch of the house.
Bug and Caine froze.
“Who are you? What do you want?”
Caine couldn’t see anyone through the dirty screen.
Bug answered, “We’re just—”
“Not you,” the voice interrupted. “We know all about you, little invisible boy. We’re talking about him.”
“My name is Caine. I want to meet the kids who hang out here.”
“Oh? You do, huh?” the unseen boy said. “Why should I let you do that?”
“I’m not looking for trouble,” Caine said. “But I guess it’s only fair to tell you that I can knock your little house down in about ten seconds.”
Click click.
Something cold touched the back of Caine’s neck.
“Can you? That must be something to see.” A girl’s voice. Not two steps behind him.
Caine had no doubt that the cold object laid against the nape of his neck was a gun barrel. How had the girl gotten so close? How had she snuck up on them?
“Like I said, I’m not looking for trouble,” Caine said.
“That’s good,” the girl said. “You wouldn’t like the kind of trouble I can bring.”