The problem is that we don’t stay in town. We come out to hunt, to fish, to gather berries, to chop trees, and just to get out and move around. When you’re in a region with so few people, a passing stranger is going to get your attention.
So how big a secret is Rockton? If you live in the immediate area, you know there’s a settlement. You just don’t know what kind of settlement it is. If you ask Jacob or Brent, they’ll pretend it’s a commune or wilderness retreat, but the Yukon isn’t the kind of place where people like answering questions, so most don’t ask. Their own wild imaginings are far more entertaining. Even Brent has a list of conspiracy theory explanations for Rockton, and no real interest in learning the truth.
What about those from Rockton? Men like Tyrone Cypher. Cypher hadn’t run away. He’d just said “fuck this” and walked out. His “fuck this” had been directed mostly at the new sheriff—Gene Dalton. Like Dalton, Cypher hadn’t been above throwing his weight around. Unlike Dalton, he didn’t need an actual excuse to do it. Also, as Jacob said, he was crazy. So the council demoted him to deputy and Gene to sheriff. After a few years, Cypher stormed off, declaring he’d rather live among “savages” than the so-called civilized folk of Rockton.
Did he talk about Rockton after he left? Maybe. But Dalton figured anyone who spent five minutes with the guy wouldn’t have believed a word that left his mouth. Whatever Cypher has said, it’s never come back on Rockton. The Yukon wilderness is a nest of interlocking secrets, and if you go after someone else’s, they might retaliate by digging up yours.
As we walk, Dalton follows Jacob’s landmarks and points them out to me, part of my ongoing survival education.
See that ridge? If you can count two points, you’re heading northeast. Three, you’re heading east. One? Due north. You want to head back to Rockton? Over your shoulder, you’ll see the ridge as two peaks, the smaller one to the left.
There’s a lightning-struck tree right up here. Take a good look at it. It’s a white spruce, like the lightning-struck spruce over by the lake, but see how this one’s split? Right down to the base. That’s how you tell the two apart.
This is the language I’m learning. The little things that are, to him, as natural as saying, Head up to the Tim Hortons, then swing a left at the light and keep going until you hit a one-way street.
I’m in the lead and have been for a while, my instructor letting me take the wheel. Keep an eye out for crisscrossed felled pines and then make a left, forty-five degrees.
When I don’t quite get it right, he prods my shoulder blade, steering me. This time, though, his hand falls and grips, and that’s my brake.
“We’re getting close,” he says. “There’s a clearing to the right, and I’m going to guess that’s where Cox built his shelter. Which means we need to watch for traps.”
“Booby traps?”
“That’s common for those who hunker down someplace alone and exposed. We had them when Jacob and I were growing up.”
That’s how Dalton words his past life—“when Jacob and I were growing up” or “when I lived out here.” Never “when I lived with my parents.” Maybe that’s too confusing when he has two sets. But I think it’s more that the two sets are confusing to him.
After the Daltons brought him into Rockton, he waited for his parents to rescue him. When they didn’t, the only way he could deal with that was to reject them and accept what everyone told him—how lucky he was to have been “rescued.”
Then he grew up and realized he’d actually been kidnapped. And he still has no idea why his birth parents didn’t come for him. If he’s ever asked Jacob, his brother didn’t have an answer.
I want to help him reconcile this. At least, I want to help him confront his confusion and anger and the scars left behind. But I don’t know where to begin. I get chances like this, when he mentions that life, but when I’ve tried prodding further, he slams that door and moves on.
So I only say, “What kind of traps?” and he resumes walking, up beside me now. “Could be bear, but that’s rare. More likely … Well, let’s see.”
We reach the edge of a semicleared area. The ground shows evidence of old fire damage, where sporadic shrubs have managed to take root and a few trees have established a fresh foothold. Almost dead center I see a log cabin, small but decently constructed. Dalton stops me on that clearing edge and eyes the shelter. Then his gaze sweeps the clearing. He motions to a section where the snow dips, no tall vegetation poking through.
“Pit trap,” he says. “It’ll be covered in brush, but that hollow is a giveaway. There’s another one. Can you see it?”
I take a moment. Then I point and say, “About five meters left of that black spruce.”
“Good.”
“There’s another low spot over there, closer to the cabin, but it looks completely cleared from this angle.”
“Yeah, that’d be a work area, maybe fire pit. Gotta be careful of the hollows and the dense undergrowth, which could be hiding a snare. Snares are particularly hard to see. I say don’t even try—just lift your feet when you walk, so you don’t drag through one. Even if you do, it’s easy enough to get out of. Most of these just are to warn Cox of trespassers.”
“But aren’t snares more likely to be set off by animals?”