Chapter 1: Pumpkin Hour CHAPTER 1 PUMPKIN HOUR Now We're losing light!" Ben yells over the whir of the blades. "We need to go!" I turn to look out over the field to the tree line, taking in the scene of the crime. The dark green conifers, with their exposed lower limbs. The trampled grass. A wrapper from a protein bar tumbling over and over like a gymnast. A dark patch in the dirt that looks like it's tinged by rust. I can't hear anything but the helicopter's whine, but the screams are still caught in my thoughts--sharp, terrified, then cut out, cut off. "Cassie!" Ben yells next to me. "Move it!" The fear in his voice unsticks my feet. I turn away, following Ben to the Huey. He goes up first, and I put my foot on the landing gear, careful to keep my head bent as I was taught, conscious of the blade spinning above me. Ben crouches in the opening and reaches out his rough hand. I grab it and let him haul me into the helo's belly. I stumble, then right myself, still bent over. "You got this?" I nod and he lets me go. I shuffle to one side and sit in an empty seat, facing Ben and Gareth. As I strap myself in, I try not to think of the body that rests on the floor between us, zipped into a thin black bag by Ben and Gareth after they found me. But the space is so tight that I can't put my feet on the floor without resting them on it. That possibility brings bile to my throat, so I raise my legs in front of me. They protest; I won't be able to keep this position for long. The pilot checks us over his shoulder. He, like Ben and Gareth, is wearing a dark helmet, a microphone by his mouth. The pilot points to a helmet hanging on a hook next to my head. I grab it and put it on, adjusting the volume with a wheel on the side. It's tight and uncomfortable, edging into the headache that's been building since yesterday. The pilot's voice is tinny and distant. "We have ten minutes till pumpkin hour." Ben gives him a thumbs-up, and I feel a moment of confusion until the meaning of the term thunks into place. The helicopter can't fly safely after dark in this mountainous terrain. They call it pumpkin hour, and there won't be a fairy-tale ending if we flirt too hard with that deadline. I know this, I knew this, but the shock of everything that's happened has affected more than my motor skills--I can feel it eroding my memory, like a thick fog descending that I must find my way out of before it's too late. "Everyone strapped in?" the pilot asks as he does his final checks. "Ready!" Ben says, giving a thumbs-up again. Gareth does the same, and then it's my turn. I pop my thumb up in a gesture that feels more positive than possible. But I do have some things to be grateful for. That they found me before it was too late. That I'm alive. That there's only one body in a bag at my feet. The pilot turns away, and then the engine changes gear. The blades above us spin harder, faster, louder as we lift slowly from the ground. It's deep twilight now, the world fading like a watercolor left in the sun, and I cling to the straps holding me in place, petrified of the open door, and that I'll never be able to erase what I saw. What I did. The Huey banks, heading back to the Heli Base at Crane Flat, circling over the small field we just left. I don't want to look down, but I can't help but throw a last glance at the scene below. And maybe it's a trick of the fading light, but I swear I can see the faint outline of someone waiting at the edge of the tree line, watching to make sure we fly away. Excerpted from Have You Seen Her: A Novel by Catherine McKenzie All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.