was heavy, but he managed to pull it onto his back. He staggered over to the wall and, as quietly as he could, laid the drawer down, toeing it against the damp wall. He stacked another drawer on top of that first one, then another, carefully, one upside down on top of another.
He had to lift the sixth drawer really high to fit it on top of the others. He knew he had to do it and so he did.
Hurry, Sam, hurry.
He was hurrying. He didnât want to die even though he knew heâd probably be able to speak to his mama again all the time. No, she didnât want him to die, she didnât want him to leave his father.
When he got the last drawer balanced on the very top, he stood back, and saw that he had done a good job putting them on top of each other. Now he just had to climb up on top and reach the window.
He eyed the drawers, and shoved the third one over just a bit to create a toehold. He did the same with the fourth.
He knew if he fell it would be all over. He couldnât fall. He heard Fatso scream, âNo matter what you say, we canât stay here, Beau. Itâs going to start raining any minute now.You saw that creek out back. A thunderstormâll make it rise fast as bat shit in a witchâs brew!â
Drown? The thunderstorms heâd heard on the Weather Channel, that must be what Fatso was yelling about. He didnât want to drown either.
Sam was finally on the top. He pulled himself upright very slowly, feeling the drawer wobbling and unable to do anything about it. He froze, his hands flat against the damp wall, then his fingers crept up and he touched the bottom of the windowsill.
Things were unsteady beneath his feet, but that was okay. It felt just like the bridge in the park when he walked across it, just like that. He could work with a swing, even a wobble, he just couldnât fall.
He pushed at the window but it didnât budge. Then he saw the latch, so covered with dirt that it was hard to make out. He grabbed it and pulled upward.
He heard Fatso yell, âBeau, listen to me, we gotta take the kid somewhere else. That rainâs going to start any minute.â
So that was his name, Beau. Beau said something back, but Sam couldnât make out what it was. He wasnât a screamer like Fatso.
Sam had the latch pushed up as far as it would go. Slowly, so slowly he nearly stopped breathing, he pushed at the window.
It creaked, loud.
Sam jerked around and the drawers teetered, swaying more than ever. He knew he was going to fall. The drawers were sliding apart like earth plates before an earthquake. He remembered Mrs. Mildrake crunching together real dinner plates to show the class how earthquakes happened.
He shoved on the window as hard as he could and it creaked all the way out.
The drawers shuddered and moved and Sam, almostcrying he was so afraid, grabbed the windowsill. With all the strength he had, he pulled himself headfirst through that skinny window. He got stuck, wiggled free, and then fell outside.
He landed on the ground, nearly headfirst.
He lay there, breathing, wanting to move, but afraid that his head was split open and his brains might start spilling out. He lay listening to the wind pick up, whipping through the trees. There were a lot of trees around him, and the sky was almost dark. Was it nighttime?
No, it was just the storm coming closer, the thunderstorm the Weather Channel had talked about for eastern Tennessee. How could he be in Tennessee?
He had to get up. Fatso and Beau could come out at any moment. The drawers had fallen over, no doubt about that, and the loud noise would bring them into the bedroom fast. Theyâd see he was gone and theyâd be out here with guns and poison and more rope and get him again.
Sam came up on his knees. He felt something sticky on his face and touched it. Heâd cut himself with the fall. He turned to look up at the window. It was way far off the ground.
Sam managed to stand up, weaved a