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“It’s okay,” Chris said, as if soothing a little kid who’d scraped a knee. “Shh, it’s fine. You did the best you could. You can’t give up.”


“But what I’ve done.” Peter covered his face with his hands. God, you’ll never forgive me.


“You have to forgive yourself first,” Chris said, and hallucination or not, this is what Peter needed to hear. Much later, in fact, Peter wondered just who had answered.


“Help me,” Peter whispered.


“Help yourself.” It was Chris’s voice, and it wasn’t. It was a little of Simon, and it was not. It was small, the calm at the center of the storm, the eye of a hurricane where the air is still as glass, a bubble out of time. “Control yourself. Find a space to hide.”


“Space to hide?”


“Yes, a special place only you know about. Put Peter there and I’ll find you again. Wait for the right moment.” A pause. “Now, eat, Peter. Forgive yourself, and live.”


“Okay.” The word was salty and his voice faraway. Knuckling away tears, he shuffled on hands and knees over dried urine and desiccated feces to the foot, which lay on its side like a forgotten shoe.


“Go on,” the small voice said. “Do what you have to.”


“Okay,” Peter said again. The stump above the ankle was edged with clot, scanty shreds of raw muscle, and ratty gray tendon. Clamping his front teeth on a flap of loose skin, Peter gave a careful, experimental tug. There were an initial, slight resistance. He used his hands to help, stripping foot meat like barbecue from a rib. The skin gave with a soft riiippp, a sound that reminded him of his mother tearing his old cotton underpants into dust rags—and then Peter began to chew.


The taste was indescribably vile, like rotting liver left to turn green. That taste was his life.


“Now that,” said Jug Ears, “is so fucking gross, I cannot tell you.”


21


“I have something to tell you, honey. About that phone call?” Her dad slowly retracts his line, the reel going click-click-click as he jerks the rod up and down, up and down. Crappies love a jumping jig. “The one last night?”


“Uh-huh?” Ellie’s not really listening. A light breeze, still chilly in early June, whispers through the down on her arms. The water’s so glassy there’s a whole other sky trapped underwater. She should be focused on her float, but her attention is on a male loon drifting along the far shore. When it tilts its head, she can see the red flash of its eyes. Lifting its neck, the loon wails, a spooky call—the sound of Minnesota’s Boundary Waters and fishing with her dad—that always sends fingers creeping down Ellie’s spine.


“Cold?” Her dad slips an arm around her shoulders. “Want my sweatshirt?”


“No.” She snuggles. He smells of Dove soap and scorched sand, because Iraq never washes off. After his first deployment, he climbed into Grandpa Jack’s shower with all his clothes and gear on as she perched on the tub and Grandpa leaned, unsmiling, against the jamb. I washed everything before I left, her dad said, cranking the shower full blast. But watch this. The water gushed out clear and drained out muddy gray, which surprised her because Grandpa Jack did a newspaper story on the troops and her dad sent video of a sandstorm. The color of Iraq then was this really funky neon orange, not dead ash-gray. Two minutes after you take a shower, you’re dirty again, her daddy said, through spray. Stuff never comes out. (Grandpa Jack was pissed for days after, though: All that damn sand clogging my drains. But she caught him carefully scraping crusts of leftover sand into a small jar, like a souvenir.)


“Just watching the loons,” she adds. She wishes her dad wouldn’t talk. This is the time she likes best: before a fish strikes. Once the bait’s taken, it’s as if something breaks, because what happens next is a matter of life and death. That fish’s life is over, just like that, and all because Ellie danced a jumping jig with a juicy waxworm on that particular morning when a crappie swam by and decided, Saaay, that looks pretty interesting.


“Oh.” Her dad pauses. “Anyway, that phone call.”


“Yeah?” From the brush on shore, the mom loon suddenly emerges, with two brown-black fluff balls. Ellie feels a jolt of excitement. The morning’s so still, the wind’s sigh so light, she can hear the chicks’ peeps and the mom’s soft hoots. “Look,” she whispers. “Babies!”


“Uh-huh.” He squeezes her arm. “Honey, I need to tell you something important.”


“Sure.” Her eyes are glued to the peeping chicks. The dad glides over as the mother slips into the water and the babies follow: plopplop! “What?”


“I have to leave again,” he says.


For a second, the words just don’t sink in. Across the lake, the loon family is dodging around lily pads. Somewhere close she hears the plunk of a fish shattering the surface to snatch a bug. But inside everything has gone as dead and ashy as Iraqi sand.


“What?” she says, sitting up fast, as if she’s the waxworm on the jig now. The adult loons jerk their heads, too, as if they’re just as startled by the news. “You just got back!”


“Six months ago,” he says, his eyes on the water, jumping that jig as if his life depends on it. Her dad keeps his hair military-short, and a red flush creeps into the fish-belly skin behind his ears and at the base of his neck. “It was supposed to be a year, but they need me. One of the other handlers and his dog were . . . they’re out of commission.” The way he says it, she knows it means dead, but that’s a taboo subject, what her daddy calls bad juju. KIA is a jinx; say dead, it’s like stepping on a crack. Men and dogs don’t die; they’re out of commission. “Mina’s with another handler, but he’s rotating out, and I know her, so . . .”


It’s not a she. I’m a she. That’s what Ellie wants to say. It’s a dumb dog. It is as if her dad and Grandpa Jack have decided she’s like this Mina: must be time to rotate Ellie to another handler.


“When?” That’s not what she wants to say either, but fighting won’t help. She bounces her gaze from him to his water-twin. “Never mind. Doesn’t matter.”


“Two weeks.” In the water, the twin dad turns her a look. “Got to square some things away, but we can . . .” His voice trails off. She can’t even imagine what he thought he could say to make things better.


She doesn’t say okay. Or I hate you. Or every time you go, it’s like you die and I’m so scared I die, too. Besides, one is a fib. She has no interest in the loons now. Instead, she stares down at the little water-girl, trapped next to her water-dad, who says—


“. . . much longer?”


“Huh?” Ellie blinked away from the memory of that June morn


ing and into the here and now of March. Stuffed with high clouds,


the afternoon sky was the color of boiled egg white. As she looked


up from the blue-black eye of her ice-fishing hole, she had to raise a


hand against the glare. “What did you say?”


“I said, how much longer?” Eli’s long eyelashes were feathered


with frost. Flecks of ice clung to his scarf and dangled from a fraying


watch cap, like Christmas ornaments. His cheeks were cranberry red. Cradling his rifle, he stamped his feet with an exaggerated shudder. “I’m freezing. How can you do that?” He chinned the rod in her naked


right hand. “My fingers would fall off.”


“That’s because you’re not moving around,” she said, returning


her attention to the rod and gently playing it, up and down, up and


down, jumping that jig. To be honest, her hand was turning icy, the


nails bluing with cold. The few times she and Grandpa Jack ice-fished,


he’d always started a fire on shore so she could warm up with hot


cocoa and charred brats and blackened hot dogs. Her mouth watered


at the memory. She would kill for a hot dog. With mustard and relish.


Grilled onions.


“You okay?” Eli’s eyebrows, honey-colored and delicate, pinched


together.


“Yeah.” She worked to stopper the sigh. Something her grandpa


said drifted through: If wishes were fishes. . . . No good wishing for


anything these days. You just ended up depressed or in tears, or both,


and she’d be darned if she bawled in front of Eli. He was cute, and


despite the fact that he was twelve, they hung together. ( Jayden called


them the Killer Es, which Ellie just didn’t get.) But Eli could also be


kind of a goof. Like, sometimes she thought she ought to be guarding him. She tilted her head at two nearby holes where she’d lowered


stringers. “Could you take those back? I have to break down the tipups, and since I’ve got, like, fifteen of those . . .”


“Me?” Eli wasn’t fond of fish slime, and Ellie had had a very


good afternoon: fourteen black crappies, all ten-inchers. “Well,” Eli


said, twisting to look toward shore and their patient horses waiting


beneath drooping boughs of tall hemlock. Nearby, a clutch of crows


hopped over the snow, probably hoping for a nice steaming mound of


fish guts, while a stern-looking, solitary gull perched on a thumb of


icy rock. “I guess I can wait. You’ll need help with the auger.” Right, so then I carry all the fish and the tackle. On the other hand,


she knew what Eli really wanted to avoid was storing the tackle. Well, avoiding the place that was near where they stored tackle. Even the horses hated that part of the woods. She wasn’t wild about it either,


but at least she wasn’t such a girl.


“Well,” she said, withdrawing her rod and reaching, with studied


casualness, to an inside parka pocket. Pulling out a plastic container,


she popped the lid. In a bed of sawdust, warmed by her body heat, were


thick white maggots, each about as long as the tip of her pinky. She