
“I finished it while you was sleeping,” he said. “I like trains. I rode one once. When I was little. From St. Louis, after Mamaw died. Joey rode up by hisself on the train and got me. We rode back together. I got to sit in front with the rich people. We wasn’t supposed to, but Joey figured a way. Joey’s smart. He said it was only fair. He says I’m good as anybody. Ain’t nobody no better than nobody else. That’s a good thing to remember.”
Peter stared at the little locomotive. There was even a tiny engineer inside.
“Whittlin’s a good thing, too,” Huey went on. “Keeps me from being nervous.”
Peter closed his eyes. “Where’s my mom?”
“I liked talking to you. Before you ran, anyway. I thought you was my friend.”
Peter covered his face with his hands, but he kept an eye on Huey through a crack between his left cheek and palm. Now that he knew where he was, he thought about jumping out. But Huey was faster than he looked.
Huey dug into his coveralls again and brought out his pocketknife. When he opened the big blade, Peter pressed himself into the passenger door.
“What are you doing?”
Huey grabbed Peter ’s bound wrists and jerked them away from his body. With a quick jab he thrust the knife between Peter ’s forearms and sawed through the duct tape. Then he reached over and unlocked the passenger door of the truck.
“Your mama’s waiting for you. In the playground. At the McDonald’s.”
Peter looked up at the giant’s face, afraid to believe.
“Go see her, boy.”
Peter pushed open the truck’s door, jumped to the pavement, and started running toward the McDonald’s.
Joe reached across Margaret McDill’s lap and opened the passenger door of the BMW. His smoky black hair brushed against her neck as he did, and she shuddered. She had seen his gray roots during the night.
“Your kid’s waiting in the McDonald’s Playland,” he said.
