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The Institute

I
know that. 
You
know that. Would a kid know that?”
“If he’s any good in school, he’d know Richmond is a fuck of a long way from Los Angeles.”
“Yeah, but it’s also a junction point. The guy said he might be on this train, then get off and
try to hop one going west.”
“Well, I didn’t see any kid.”
“The guy said his brother-in-law would pay a reward.”
“It could be a million dollars, Billy, and I still couldn’t see any kid unless a kid was there to
see.”
If my belly rumbles again, I’m finished, Luke thought. Deep-fried. Nuked.
From outside, someone shouted: “Billy! Duane! Twenty minutes, boys, finish up!”
Billy and Duane loaded a few more Kohler crates into the boxcar, then rolled their ramp
back into the truck and drove away. Luke had time to catch a glimpse of a city skyline—what


city he didn’t know—and then a man in overalls and a railroad cap came along and ran the
Southway door shut . . . but this time not all the way. Luke guessed there was a sticky place in
the track. Another five minutes passed before the train jerked into motion again, slowly at first,
clicking over points and crossings, then picking up speed.
Some guy calling himself some other guy’s brother-in-law.
Said he was always talking about hopping a freight.
They knew he was gone, and even if they found the 
Pokey
downstream from Dennison
River Bend, they hadn’t been fooled. They must have made Maureen talk. Or Avery. The
thought of them torturing the information out of the Avester was too horrible to contemplate,
and Luke pushed it away. If they had people watching for him to get off here, they’d have
people waiting at the next stop, too, and by then it might be daylight. They might not want to
cause trouble, might just observe and report, but it was possible they’d try to take him prisoner.
Depending on how many people were around, of course. And how desperate they were. That,
too.
I might have outsmarted myself by taking the train, Luke thought, but what else could I do?
They weren’t supposed to find out so 
fast.
In the meantime, there was one discomfort of which he could rid himself. Holding to the
seat of a riding lawnmower to keep his balance, he unscrewed the fuel cap of a John Deere
rototiller, opened his fly, and pissed what felt like two gallons into the empty gas tank. Not a
nice thing to do, an extremely mean trick on whoever ended up with the rototiller, but these
were extraordinary circumstances. He put the gas cap back on and screwed it tight. Then he sat
down on the seat of the riding lawnmower, put his hands over his empty belly, and closed his
eyes.
Think about your ear, he told himself. Think about the scratches on your back, too. Think
about how bad those things hurt and you’ll forget all about being hungry and thirsty.
It worked until it didn’t. What crept in were images of kids leaving their rooms and going
down to the caff for breakfast a few hours from now. Luke was helpless to dispel images of
pitchers filled with orange juice, and the bubbler filled with red Hawaiian Punch. He wished he
was there right now. He’d drink a glass of each, then load up his plate with scrambled eggs and
bacon from the steam table.
You don’t wish you were there. Wishing that would be crazy.
Nevertheless, part of him did.
He opened his eyes to get rid of the images. The one of the orange juice pitchers was
stubborn, it didn’t want to go . . . and then he saw something in the empty space between the
new crates and the small engine gizmos. At first he thought it was a trick of the moonlight


coming through the partly opened boxcar door, or an outright hallucination, but when he
blinked his eyes twice and it was still there, he got off the seat of the mower and crawled to it.
To his right, moon-washed fields flashed past the boxcar door. Leaving Dennison River Bend,
Luke had drunk in all that he saw with wonder and fascination, but he had no eyes for the
outside world now. He could only look at what was on the floor of the boxcar: doughnut
crumbs.
And one piece that was bigger than a crumb.
He picked that one up first. To get the smaller ones, he wet a thumb and picked them up
that way. Afraid of losing the smallest into the cracks in the boxcar floor, he bent over, stuck
out his tongue, and licked them up.


21
It was Mrs. Sigsby’s turn to catch some sleep on the couch in the inner room, and Stackhouse
had closed the door so neither phone—the landline or his box phone—would disturb her.
Fellowes called from the computer room at ten to three.
“9956 has left Richmond,” he said. “No sign of the boy.”
Stackhouse sighed and rubbed at his chin, feeling the rasp of stubble there. “Okay.”
“Shame we can’t just have that train pulled over on a siding and searched. Settle the question
of whether or not he’s on there once and for all.”
“It’s a shame everyone in the world isn’t in a big circle, singing ‘Give Peace a Chance.’ What
time does it get to Wilmington?”
“Should be there by six. Earlier, if they make up some time.”
“How many guys have we got there?”
“Two now, another on his way from Goldsboro.”
“They know better than to get intense, right? Intense people rouse suspicions.”
“I think they’ll be fine. It’s a good story. Runaway boy, concerned folks.”
“You better hope they’re fine. Tell me how it goes.”
Dr. Hendricks came into the office without bothering to knock. There were circles under his
eyes, his clothes were wrinkled, and his hair was standing up in a steel-gray ruff. “Any word?”
“Not yet.”
“Where’s Mrs. Sigsby?”
“Getting some badly needed rest.” Stackhouse leaned back in her chair and stretched. “The
Dixon boy hasn’t had the tank, has he?”
“Of course not.” Donkey Kong looked vaguely offended at the very idea. “He’s not a pink.
Farthest thing from one. To risk damaging a BDNF as high as his would be insane. Or to risk
extending his abilities. Which would be unlikely but not impossible. Sigsby would have my
head.”
“She won’t and he goes in it today,” Stackhouse said. “Dunk that little motherfucker until
he thinks he’s dead, then dunk him some more.”


“Are you serious? He’s valuable property! One of the highest TP-positives we’ve had in
years!”
“I don’t care if he can walk on water and shoot electricity out of his asshole when he farts.
He helped Ellis get away. Have the Greek do it as soon as he comes back on duty. He loves
putting them in the tank. Tell Zeke not to kill him, I do understand his value, but I want him to
have an experience he’ll remember for as long as he 
can
remember. Then take him to Back
Half.”
“But Mrs. Sigsby—”
“Mrs. Sigsby agrees completely.”
Both men swung around. She was standing in the door between the office and her private
quarters. Stackhouse’s first thought was that she looked as if she had seen a ghost, but that
wasn’t quite right. She looked as if she 
were
a ghost.
“Do it just the way he told you, Dan. If it damages his BDNF, so be it. He needs to pay.”


22
The train jerked into motion again, and Luke thought of some other song his grandma used to
sing. Was it the one about the Midnight Special? He couldn’t remember. The doughnut
crumbs had done nothing but sharpen his hunger and increase his thirst. His mouth was a
desert, his tongue a sand dune within. He dozed, but couldn’t sleep. Time passed, he had no
idea how much, but eventually pre-dawn light began to filter into the car.
Luke crawled over the swaying floor to the partially open door of the boxcar and peered out.
There were trees, mostly straggly, second-growth pines, small towns, fields, then more trees.
The train charged across a trestle, and he looked down at the river below with longing eyes. This
time it wasn’t a song that came to mind but Coleridge. Water, water everywhere, Luke thought,
the boxcar boards did shrink. Water, water, everywhere and not a drop to drink.
Probably polluted anyway, he told himself, and knew he would drink from it even if it was.
Until his belly was bulging. Puking it up would be a pleasure because then he could drink more.
Just before the sun came up, red and hot, he began to smell salt in the air. Instead of farms,
the buildings sliding past were now mostly warehouses and old brick factories with their
windows boarded up. Cranes reared against the brightening sky. Planes were taking off not far
away. For awhile the train ran beside a four-lane road. Luke saw people in cars with nothing to
worry about but a day’s work. Now he could smell mudflats, dead fish, or both.
I would eat a dead fish if it wasn’t all maggoty, he thought. Maybe even if it was. According
to 

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