CHAPTER 12
y over.
quot;Speck, ;
S.
quot;e o go. Dont you feel t to begin.quot;
quot;Come back to sleep.quot;
I gatoget;e be able to leave unless we go rig;
Sed ;e can stay. Its Sunday and tay all day and read. Nobody ;
For a fleeting second, I considered t of staying in toerror.
quot;Its too risky,quot; I w;Suppose someone c;
So t. quot;trust me.quot;
quot;Are you coming?quot; I asked at the door.
quot;Go. Sometimes you are suc;
Squeezing t, I ake. I did not like arguing s many days on s bounced back and fortion, for I found myself quite lost soon after abandoning urn brougreets and strange e to escape, I became more ed. At an edge of torees invited me into its rail from tions, follos ts and turns. In , I sayed put until t it could serve as compass, but at time, my ts ions. o grouck eternally in the waning sliver moon dipped and disappeared.
A small creek, not more trickle, bisected to folloer. tracing a creek at daen in my dreams as to be as familiar to me as my oself ran beneatony road, and to a solitary farm, I sao t sunrays bathe porch in gold.
Some trick of lig in a dream beto come t broug into focus, took on a more s are, its door less and less like a epped out of t and onto t grass. trifying me on t. A man came doairs, pausing on t-to-bottom step to ligte. rapped in a blue robe, took one step fored , startled by ture. ly.
ter still did not notice me, t t t. I ed to turn