Brothersong (Green Creek 4) - Page 61

I went to a window and looked outside.

There was a thin layer of snow on the ground. Icicles hung from the trees. The glass was cold against my fingers. I couldn’t see a road, only thick forest. I didn’t know where we were in relation to the house. To my truck. I could probably find it if needed.

But if he thought I was just going to leave after all this time, he was in for a rude awakening.

I went back to my bag and opened it up. There, sitting on the top, was my phone.

It was smashed, the screen cracked.

I stared down at it.

It’d been in my truck. I hadn’t taken it out into the house.

Which meant the hunters hadn’t touched it.

It’d been broken after.

“Asshole.” I took it out of the bag and tried to power it on. Nothing happened.

I tossed it to the side, looking back to my bag. What few possessions I’d brought with me were still there, minus the shorts. I found the item I was looking for at the bottom.

It was soft and warm. I glanced toward the door. I didn’t hear Gavin. I pulled the hoodie out and raised it to my face, inhaling deeply. The scent had faded after so long, but I chased after it greedily. Just when I was about to give up, I smelled it.

Home.

Kelly.

“What the hell do I do now?” I asked him. A year. I’d had a year to get to this point. A year to plan for what would happen if and when I found him. And now that I had, I was at a loss. I didn’t know why I’d thought he’d make it easy. He was a Livingstone. I was a Bennett. We never made things easy.

Kelly didn’t answer.

I put the hoodie on. It was tight in the shoulders and the sleeves were too short, but it made me feel better.

I pulled on the only other pair of jeans I’d brought. My leg groaned, but it already hurt less. I popped my back and neck. I was thirsty, and I had to piss.

There was no bathroom.

Because of course there wasn’t.

I slipped on my boots without socks. There were splashes of my blood across the back of one of them. I wondered what had become of the hunters. If they lay in front of the cabin, blood frozen, eyes wide, snow in their open mouths.

“Or maybe Livingstone ate them,” I said to no one.

The thought felt like a lance of ice.

I went to the door.

Took a deep breath.

And opened it.

The air was still. A clump of snow fell from one of the trees. My breath poured from my mouth in a fog. I inhaled deeply, and it was crisp and bright.

There was something running just underneath it all, like a dark current. It felt like a shadow, tendrils reaching out and infecting the ground beneath my feet.

I knew what it was.

Who it was.

Tags: T.J. Klune Green Creek Fantasy
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