Gasping for breath, Katy O'Neill ran through the Appalachian
woods. Branches slapped her in the face, and roots threatened to
trip her up in this treacherous environment. The sixteen-year-old
held her backpack of her meager ownings clutched in her arms so that nothing
could snag on it and hold her up.
"I think she went this way," she heard a cry from behind.
Her pursuers were entirely too close! Fighting back panic, Katy
jumped from rock to rock across a stream, and ducked behind a huge oak.
The sounds of pounding feet and snapping twigs came closer,
and the runaway held her breath. She couldn't let them catch her!
The last foster home she'd been in had been the last in a long chain.
Everyone called her too free, too undisciplined. Families would take
her in, then send her back, and it would be another several months in an
overcrowded orphanage before someone else thought maybe they could tame
her.
In the last home, the father had tried to beat some sense into
her. Katy shivered, rubbing the scar on the back of her shoulder.
It was hidden underneath her shirt, but she knew it was there. It
didn't hurt anymore. But it had.
Her pursuers, people from the Tennessee welfare service joined
with the state police, had paused just on the other side of the stream,
and were holding a meeting. "Look, she can't have gone far," she
heard the voice of the man in charge of the search say. "She's never
been in the woods before; she knows no skills to escape us."
Katy's heart pounded. They were only too right.
"Maybe she went down the stream, so as not to leave tracks," another
man suggested. "Hmm. She could have, if she got the idea from a book.
I don't see any other signs of her. You three go upstream... we'll
head down. We'll meet where we parked the cars in an hour."
"I sure hope we find the poor kid," another unfamiliar voice
sighed. "Before she gets hurt."
Agreeing voices moved off, and Katy sagged against the tree.
She hoped she didn't get hurt, too. But she couldn't let them find
her. Slowly, she peeked out from her hiding place. The others
were out of sight. She glanced around, caught sight of an
opening in the bushes straight ahead, away from the stream, and sprinted
for it. Ducking behind the cover the bushes provided, she kept jogging
on, on a slight incline now. After about ten minutes more, the slight incline
turned into a steep hill. The girl sat down to rest on a log, and
thought over her situation. Looking either direction, she finally
decided that up and over would be the best route. It wasn't the easiest,
but hopefully those after her would think she wouldn't try it.
She wasn't sure what she would do when she got to the other side.
She wasn't sure what she would do when, if, she actually
pulled this escape off. She'd been caught the other two times
she'd tried to run away. But this time, she hadn't tried to hide
anywhere near her area. She'd hidden in the back of the first
delivery van that had come along, and ridden all the way out here
before the driver had stopped to check something and caught her, throwing
her out and later calling the police. Who had let the welfare people
know that she was out here somewhere, almost on the Georgian border.
Though she was still in her home state of Tennessee. At least she
thought so. What would she do on her own? Get a job? Where?
Doing what? She'd never done anything for money besides a lemonade
and cookies stand when she was eight. She had no skills to speak
of besides causing trouble. The reality of her situation sunk into
her, and she swallowed, no longer quite as jubilant. She was alone.
Completely on her own. No one to look out for her. Now what?
Katy pushed the dark thoughts away and stood, hefting her pack
onto her back so that she could use her arms. First of all, she had
to get away, or all her running had been for nothing. It wouldn't
take her pursuers too long to figure out that she'd
crossed the stream, and come after her. She had to get over that
hill. It was her only chance.
As she started the ascent, she couldn't help singing softly, "Climb
every mountain, ford every stream, follow every rainbow,till you find your
dream." That was a favorite song of hers, from a movie she'd once seen.
She only hoped that her dreams really could be found on the other side.
It was a tough climb over treacherous footing, and several times she almost
fell, and had to stop for a rest.
Then she came to an open area at the top, and swallowed hard. She'd
have to be out in the open for at least thirty seconds, with no tree cover,
before she made it over the other side. Panting for breath, she retied
her strawberry-blonde hair back, and tensed, ready for a sprint.
"Okay, girl," she told herself out loud. "If you make this, you're
probably home free.
One, two... three!" With the last number, she sprang out,
running up and across the open rock.
Time seemed to slow down as she ran. Every moment, she
expected a shout, an outcry when someone noticed her. Suddenly, she
had topped the ridge and was going down the other side. She almost
hit a tree in her surprise, and skidded to a halt barely in time.
She'd made it! She made it!!
Katy bit back an excited scream. The sound would carry. She looked
back the way she'd come, then caught something out of
the corner of her eye, a flash of colors.She turned slowly, and breathed
in sharply. A rainbow arched out of the clouds covering a large valley,
coming down around a bend in the mountains where she couldn't quite see.
The valley floor was pretty much flat, though a ridge rose up in the middle
a few miles away. Like the other side of the mountain, pine, oak,
and slender trees like birch and aspen were intermixed, though things were
slightly greener on this side. *This valley must catch clouds,* she thought.
In the distance, she could see regular patches of different shades
of color, fields, it looked like. So, there were farms out here.
In the middle of nowhere. There was not a town for over a hundred
miles from her position, according to her hastily-consulted map.So, what
were a bunch of farms doing out here in the middle of unmapped Appalachians?
It didn't make sense.
Sighing, Katy leaned back against a tree. Then she blinked, and
peered down the hill. There seemed to be some sort of... barrier,
between her and the valley below. The dark green line went all the
way along the hillside, fading out of sight.
Curious, she straightened, and, looking around once more, started down
the slope. When she hit a wall of bushes and trees, she knew she'd found
what she'd been looking at. Carefully, she pushed forward, through
the growth, until she came to a wooden fence. It was about eight
feet tall and made out of ordinary dark-stained boards. The stain
looked like a form of weatherproofing. She rapped on one. Solid.
Not about to give way to anything.
Her curious streak was now screaming at her. She turned and looked
around for something to climb up. Her eyes lit up when
she saw a tall pine, and she trotted over to it. It was climbable.
It wouldn't be easy, but a practiced escapee could do it. Cracking
her knuckles, Katy leaped high for the lowest branch and pulled herself
up, her arm muscles complaining at the strain. Finally, she made
it up, and, grabbing another branch, kept going up. It was much easier
up here; the branches were close together.
When she came to a branch that leaned out over the barrier, she
crawled along it, balancing herself, until she was in a postion to drop
down inside. But it was too far down. She looked around again,
then stepped carefully over to another tree very close by, an oak growing
up inside the fence. From there the runaway easily climbed to the
ground, jumping the last six feet. The moment her feet touched the carpet
of autumn leaves and sunk in, she felt like she'd just set foot on another
world.
Breathing in, she looked around. Things looked the same as they
had outside the fence. Why should they feel different?
Pulling herself out of her reverie, Katy shook her head at herself
and started the trek downhill. The welfare people probably couldn't
follow her over that fence even if they made it to it, and they probably
wouldn't think she had gone over either. If they even found it to begin
with. So she was very probably safe. She felt like yelling
in excitement, but kept quiet. Her pursuers, if they were out there,
would hear. So she just continued traveling. The farther she
got from the fence, the safer she felt.
She'd lost track of time, just looking at everything and enjoying the
peace of the woods and knowing she was finally free, and so was surprised
when the ground leveled out and she stepped onto a one-lane dirt road.
She paused and looked down the road in either direction. To her right,
south according to her compass, it turned toward the southeast and cut
across the open
valley. To her left, in the direction of the farmland she'd seen
earlier, it followed the line of trees, running just inside so that colorful
branches arched over it in a form of tunnel that sunlight filtered through
in visible beams.
The picture was so beautiful that it deserved to be in a painting.
Katy chose that route, and struck off down the road. Even after all the
walking she'd done, she wasn't all *that* tired. And this was mostly
flat, easy going.
The road followed the curve of the mountain, and eventually came out
of the trees to go over a wooden bridge into open country. A free-running
herd of horses raised heads to look at her as she came into sight.
The chestnut stallion snorted, dancing sideways, then lowered his muzzle
to the grass again. Katy grinned at the sight. She loved horses,
and seeing them unfenced like this sent a thrill through her.
Still watching the horses, she started over the bridge. Then, suddenly,
the stallion's head shot up again, just as a roar could be heard.
Katy spun to glance down the road, hearing pounding hooves as the herd
galloped away, and froze herself.
A dark green racer, quite old, probably from the late '70's, was skidding
around the bend behind her. She flinched at the car's speed toward
her, hair flying as she looked for a place to run. But there was
nowhere; she was stuck on the bridge. She
readied herself to leap into the stream, but the driver put on the
brakes just in time, and the power car nosed down hard to a
stop right beside her.
A young man with brown hair and laughing brown eyes climbed out to
sit on the top of his car door, and looked across the roof at her.
She was a bit surprised; the people she'd known would yell at her if she
ever tried such a stunt. But he didn't seem
to worry about his weight damaging anything. She'd heard that
older cars were built stronger, well, maybe it was true. "Hi there!"
he greeted.
"Hi," she responded nervously, heart still pounding from her fright.
He cocked his head at her. "I don't think I know you..?"
"Katy," she responded. She still didn't want to give out her
last name. Wherever she was, the people still might send her back
to the welfare service if they knew her name from lost posters.
But this person's grin was kind, though a bit mischievous, and
he didn't ask about her failure to give a last name. He simply responded.
"Well, welcome, Katy! I'm Dave." He held out his hand over
the wide roof, and she reached out slowly, then
forced herself to relax and accept the friendly handshake. He
went on as though she'd never hesitated. "I assume you're from
outside from your accent."
*Accent?* she wondered. He was the one with the accent, a strange,
soft-drawled mix of deep South and something else, something indefinable
and unique.
"Outside?" She frowned a little. "Well... I did climb over
a fence to get here. Up there," she pointed back the way she'd come
and up the mountain. "Is that what you mean?"
"Yeah. You're from Outside." Katy blinked slightly.
This time she had heard the slight stress, the emphasis on the word that
meant it was capitalized. A name.
"Would you like a ride into town?" he asked.
Katy thought about it, then nodded. "Yeah. Thanks."
"Then get in." He slid back into his car and put both hands
on the wheel, waiting and glancing over at her.
Shrugging mentally, she pulled off her backpack and tugged on
the door handle, then stared at it when it stuck.
"Just get in the window," Dave chuckled. "It's a racing car."
She hesitated again, then shrugged and obeyed. Holding her pack
in her lap, she settled herself, glancing around for a seatbelt.
There was none. Oh well.
"Okay, here we go." The car pulled off the bridge, kicking up
a cloud of dust behind it as it hit the dirt on the other side. Katy
tensed, then made herself calm down, again. If he raced, he was a
good driver. They wouldn't crash.
She started to watch the scenery go by. It was really quite
nice here, though they were now out in the more open area, with a
lot fewer trees and only shallow hills. Dave seemed friendly
enough, so she decided to ask a few questions. She started with his
name. "Dave?"
He glanced over. "Yeah? What?"
"What's that fence there for? Does it really go around the whole
mountainside? It looked like it from up there."
"Sort of. It goes around a lot of land, mountain and valley.
About a hundred miles on each side of a semi-square."
She gasped involuntarily. "A hundred..! What in the world
for?!"
"It's our world. Separate from Outside. We have our own
county government and everything."
He didn't seem to be willing to give much more information than she
asked for, so she just kept asking. "Who owns all this?"
He didn't look at her, a bit hesitant. "Well... I can't
really tell you. We're not supposed to tell Outsiders much about
our world."
"Oh." Katy reached out the window to snatch at a low branch as
they drove underneath, and turned the leaf she gleaned over in her hands.
"That's okay. I don't want you to get in trouble." She paused.
"Do you meet... Outsiders, much?"
"Not that much. Sometimes. Usually by us going out, not
them coming in."
"Oh." She decided to stop asking questions about apparently touchy
subjects. She really didn't want to get him in trouble.
And she'd found out enough anyway. She was in an area that had
somehow drawn themselves apart from the rest of the state, and maybe even
nation. Meaning that she would likely be safe here.
Now it was his turn. "Why're you here? I mean, what were
you up on the mountain for anyway?"
His continued friendliness made her relax a little. She felt
she could trust this fast-driving teenager. "I was running away."
He glanced at her again, a little startled. "Running away?"
"Uh-huh."
"From who?"
She sighed. "From the Welfare people. Don't send me back,
please!"
Dave was silent for a few seconds, then shrugged. "Okay.
I don't think we would anyway." He grinned reassuringly at her.
"Could I ask just one more question?"
"Shoot."
"What's this place called? Inside?"
He laughed. "Aw, no! This is Hazzard County!"
Katy froze, then turned to stare at him. His return glance was
candid and honest. "Haz... Hazzard? But... there's no such
place! And even in the TV show, it wasn't that big! This place
is huge!"
Dave sighed. "I grew up here, and I don't know much about Outside
stuff like the TV series we supposedly patternedourselves after.
And yeah, it's a lot of land, but there are three towns in the county,
and a lot of open farmland and deep woods." He paused, looking a
bit guilty. "I can't tell you any more. We're not supposed
to tell *that* much to Outsiders."
"I'm sorry. I was just curious."
He looked at her again. "You gonna stay?"
Katy leaned back in her seat and looked around at the land speeding
past, and smiled. She suddenly knew the answer, and felt freer than
she ever had before. "Yes," she whispered. "I'm going to stay."
Dave relaxed, and grinned. "Great! Nobody'll ever find
you here, I swear. I guess I should take you to someone who can tell
you all the history, then. Like how we started, about twenty
years ago-"
"Actually, I think I'll have plenty of time to find that out," Katy
interrupted. "Truth is, I'm hungry. Do you know of
anywhere that has good food?"
Dave frowned. "Hmm. Well, there's the Busy Bee in Hazzard,
and Ellie's Cafe in Keller's Corners, and of course the Boar's Nest has
hamburgers."
She shrugged helplessly. "You forget that I don't know what's
where! Wherever's closest."
He shrugged back. "Okay. We're closest to the Nest, so
I'll take you there, and then into Hazzard to the hotel. You can
get a room there, free until you get a job. That's allowed here,
as long as you don't just try to live on charity."
"Thanks. I don't plan on it." She smiled. "You guys're
really friendly to strangers, you know that?"
He grinned back. "Well, a stranger's just a friend we've never
met." The way he said it sounded like a quote from someone
else. "And a new citizen," he added with a twinkle in his eyes.
"That's even more special."
They pulled into a vaguely familiar dirt parking lot twenty minutes
later. Katy had seen the "Dukes of Hazzard" TV show only
a couple of times, but she still recognized the Boar's Nest.
Dave turned off the engine and slid easily out of the car. Katy
left her pack in the back seat and followed.
Inside, Dave snatched a table near the front just before someone else
did, and grinned at the couple he'd beat there.
"C'mon, Katy," he waved a hand toward another chair. "Hey Kit!"
A small blonde girl turned from where she'd been talking to a
brunette across the bar, and waved. "Hi Dave," she called back
over the country music coming out of the jukebox. "Want something?"
"Yeah. Two hamburgers with everything on 'em..." He glanced
at Katy. "What'd you like to drink?"
"Oh, I don't know. Have any root beer?"
"Sure." He called back, "And two root beers."
"Gotcha." The girl named Kit vaulted the bar in a smooth, unladylike
move and grabbed two glasses, filling them with dark liquid from a dispenser.
Her friend pulled a tray out from underneath the counter and took two paper-wrapped
hamburgers from a heated pan to put on it with the root beer. Kit
brought the tray over, smiling. "Hi," she greeted Katy. "New
in town?"
"Actually," Katy admitted with a glance at Dave, "yes.
I'm from... Outside."
The blonde girl's startling bright green eyes widened. "Really?
I... I've never met anyone from Outside! Well, not since I came here
myself when I was two, but I don't really remember back that far."
"You came from Outside?" Katy was curious now.
"Uh-huh. Me and my twin brother were abandoned, and our dad...
well, I guess he's not really our dad, but... well, he found us and took
us in." Kit perched on the edge of the table.
Katy judged her to be about five foot three, or maybe five-four. About
her own height.
"I'm Christina, but just call me Kit. What's your name?"
"Katy. I was running away from the welfare people up on a mountain
and went over a fence in order to hide."
"I found her up by Deerpoint Pass," Dave interjected.
The other girl grinned, cocking her head to the side. "Really?
So we've got an Outside history in common. How'd you get over the
fence?"
"I climbed a tree and jumped to another tree inside."
Slender eyebrows raised. "Inventive."
"Almost worthy of a Duke, huh?" Dave said teasingly.
Kit aimed a playful jab at his jaw. "Don't let Daisy hear you."
Katy gave the other girl a second look. "There's really Dukes
here?"
"Yep. My best friend's Daisy Duke, over there." She pointed
back over her shoulder to her brunette friend.
"Oh..."
"Actually," Kit went on, "you're looking for a place to stay, right?
Why don't you spend the night out at their farm? It'd be
more comfortable than the hotel, and with better food too."
Katy blinked. "Um... You sure they'd let me?"
"Sure. They often put folks up." She turned and called,
"Hey, Daisy!"
The other girl left her post and trotted over. "What, Kit?"
Then she gave a brief "Hi!" to Katy.
"Hi," the newcomer replied, a little shyly.
"Katy here's new from Outside, a runaway," Kit proceeded to tell
the whole story in one sentence. "She needs somewhere to
stay besides the hotel. Do you think you guys could put her up
for a bit?"
"Sure." The brunette, Daisy, turned friendly hazel eyes on
Katy, and reached out to put a hand on her arm. "You ran
away? Why?"
"I was tired of bouncing from one foster home to another,"
Katy replied curtly. It was a sore subject with her.
"Oh. Gosh, I would be too." Daisy smiled at her, annoyed
understanding in her eyes. "So, you're coming. That's final."
Katy was a little nervous about meeting people that were only supposed
to exist on TV. But then again, they probably weren't the same people,
just the same last name. After all, this was the real world, just
a strange little corner of it.
"Okay. Thanks, Kit, Daisy. I really appreciate this."
"You're welcome." Kit flashed her a sunny smile and stood
up, heading back for the bar.
Daisy stayed for a moment, though. "My shift's up in twenty minutes,
stick around and I'll drive you home. Want some fries or something
with that burger? It's on me."
Katy nodded her thanks, and waited until the other girl brought her
a small bag of normal, everyday french fries before unwrapping her food
and digging in like Dave already had. It was a good hamburger, juicy
and full of flavor, and for the next
several minutes, neither one of them said anything besides a mumbled,
"Hand me the ketchup?"
Dave finally left, saying he had some work to go do, then running back
in with her backpack and waving goodbye again. Katy
smiled amusedly as her new friend took off out the door again, hen
turned to watch the local color of this place.
People came and went, laughing and joking with each other, buying
food, ordering drinks. They put coins in the jukebox and
played different songs. They came in groups and left separately,
or came alone and left with a friend or several. Kit and Daisy
went back and forth between the bar/counter and tables, smiling
at friends and giving those who tried to get too friendly dangerous scowls.
And they could back up the threat, too -- Katy watched as one slightly
inebriated young man made a snatch at Kit and she kicked him in the stomach.
It was a very colorful place to meet the local people. A little
wild, but interesting. Daisy kept coming back and refilling her glass
of soda with a "don't tell anyone" wink, and finally came without anything,
leaning on the table edge. "Hi, yet again," she laughed. "Um,
I'm done, so give me a sec and I'll be right with ya, okay?"
Before Katy could reply, she was gone again, trotting through a door.
In a couple of minutes, Daisy was back, dressed in black jeans and a green
sleeveless shirt now, rather than the matching white shorts and top she
and Kit had been wearing earlier, the apparent uniform of the waitresses
here.
"C'mon, Katy, let's go."
She stood up, draining her glass, and followed her new friend
out the front door to a dark-red Mustang with white racing
stripes on its sides. Then she blinked, a little surprised. This
wasn't quite the kind of car she'd imagined Daisy to have. She wasn't sure
what she *had* expected, but not this. "This your car?"
"No, a loaner from a friend. Just climb in." The brunette
tossed her small purse in and scrambled practicedly through the
window and into the driver's seat. Katy, shrugging, climbed into
the passenger side.
"What's with all the welded doors?" she joked. "Don't any of
them open in Hazzard County?"
"Sure they do," Daisy answered, pulling out of the parking lot and
down the dirt road in the direction Katy and Dave had come from.
"But not on racers."
"A lot of kids race cars around here, huh?" Katy asked.
Daisy shrugged, then nodded. "Yeah. My own car's
a jeep, but Dixie's in the shop."
"Your car has a name?"
"Yep!" she answered, laughing. "My cousins' General Lee does
too."
Katy frowned a little. "General Lee?"
"He's an orange Charger, with a confederate flag painted on top of
his roof. He's the fastest thing around. We're all pretty proud
of him."
"Oh... I think I remember that, hazily."
Her new friend shrugged. "I wouldn't know. We don't
watch TV anyway, and sure not about ourselves! I prefer to just
pretend Hazzard never came out of a story in the first place."
Katy could sure understand that. "General Lee sounds like a memorable
machine."
Daisy smiled. "Yeah, that he is."
She was curious about something else. "Who are your cousins?
Two boys, and they live with you, if I remember right and if that's the
same as that show Outside."
"Yeah, you've got all the major facts right. But we aren't all
really cousins. Me and Luke are really brother and sister.
Our parents never came back from a vacation Outside, though they intended
to, since we'd been left here with friends. And Bo came from Outside
almost as a baby. You see, people in Hazzard tend to adopt kids who're
orphaned or abandoned whenever they can. Our Uncle Jesse took in the three
of us." Daisy's whole demeanor softened unconsciously. "He
loves us, and we really love him too."
"Oh. But you're still family."
The brunette nodded vehemently, her eyes briefly meeting Katy's.
"In all the ways that are important. We grew up together, we live
together, we've got the same last name. We love each other.
And that's all that matters, not whether or not we're blood kin.
We're cousins. We're a family."
The first family member that Katy met was Daisy's 'uncle'. Jesse Duke.
Who totally tore apart her theory that the people were not the same as
in that television series. White-haired, bearded, and weatherworn,
he greeted her with a friendly smile.
"Well, hello! Welcome to Hazzard. Come on in, dinner's
in about an hour." He turned toward the barn, and cupping hands
around his mouth, hollered, "Boys! We've got company!"
Almost instantly, a head poked out from the hayloft in the barn, then
disappeared with a shout. Only a couple seconds later, two boys jogged
out of the barn, the blond still pulling on his blue western shirt.
The pair came up to her and studied her, then the obvious leader, a
muscular, somewhat short dark-haired young man in a light green shirt and
blue jeans slightly darker than the other's, smiled at her and stuck out
a hand. "Hi. So you're Daisy's new friend."
"Yeah. I'm Katy," she answered, accepting the handshake.
"What's your names?" She suspected she knew who was who already,
as this one had almost the same color hair as Daisy and was likely her
brother, but she wanted to be sure before she made a fool out of herself.
The dark-haired boy pointed to his blond cousin. "I'm Luke, he's
Bo. Let me carry that." He took her pack, then led the parade
into the farmhouse.
Bo and Daisy found places to relax in the living room, and Katy
joined them while Jesse headed for the kitchen and Luke
disappeared up a set of stairs. Katy looked around. Simple
but nice, the entire house seemed to radiate warmth. It was
a
friendly place, and she smiled despite herself. She knew this
was crazy, being here with these people, and impossible. But yet
she was here, and she wanted to stay. Forever.
"So, what brings you here?" Bo spoke up from his curled position on
the couch. His dark blue eyes were candidly open and friendly, and
curious too.
Katy sighed deeply. The third time she'd have to explain this.
"I'm... a runaway. I got tired of getting bounced around from
foster home to foster home, so... I decided to strike out on my own.
I was being chased, and I climbed over a fence in order
to hide. Then I went down the hill, and met a kid named Dave,
and he drove me to the Boar's Nest, and the rest is history."
"So you didn't know where you were?" Luke asked as he came through
the door and sat down near Katy on the stone hearth. He seemed the
most calm and mature of the Duke 'cousins'.
She shook her head, then shrugged. "Nope. But I'm glad
to be here. It might be the first place I've ever been where I'm
safe."
She regretted saying it the same moment it came out of her mouth, but
it was too late. Luke's crystal blue eyes darkened
slightly with a curious worry, and he sat forward. "What do you
mean by that, Katy?"
"N-nothing," she stammered. "Nothing. Just forget
it."
Bo opened his mouth, but Daisy, sitting beside him, elbowed him, and
he shut it again with a glare in her direction.
Luke looked like he wanted to say something too, but after a few seconds
of hesitation, he nodded. "Okay. Almost everybody who comes
here has something to hide. You don't have to tell anybody if you
don't want to."
The four young people lapsed into silence for a bit, then Daisy stood
up, stretching. "Well, Katy, why don't we set you up upstairs?
You can share my room."
Katy followed the other girl's lead and grinned. "Thanks. Where's
my stuff?"
"I put it in Daisy's room already," Luke told her, standing as well.
He gave Bo's shoulder a friendly slap. "C'mon, cuz,
we've got some chores we still have to do."
The younger boy groaned and slid down on the couch, but Luke hauled
him to his feet, and Bo gave in. Giving the girls a look
that plainly said "I'm going to my death; save me", he headed out he
front door with Luke.
Katy giggled. These kids were so much fun... An arm slid
around her shoulders, and she looked up to see excited hazel eyes
sparkling at her.
"Come on, let's go!" Daisy ran up the stairs, and Katy, still
giggling slightly, followed. She was safe here, she was sure now.
After what Luke had said about not having to tell anyone anything...
She'd have to find a job, though, something she was good at doing.
What was she good at doing? She didn't even know what talents she
might have. Oh well. That could wait for later. She had a few
days, at least, to settle in before she started hunting for her own niche
in Hazzard life. And she had doubts as to whether she could be anyplace
better to settle in than right here. She already had one friend.
Maybe four.
"This is it," Daisy announced as she opened a door and swept a hand
into it. "This is my room, and yours for as long as you're here."
She took a few more steps down the hall and gestured to two half-open doors
exactly opposite each other.
"The boys' room, next to mine, and the bathroom. Uncle Jesse's
room is over there," she pointed to the end of the hall. "Got it
all figured out?"
"Well, I don't figure I'll wander into the boys' room trying to find
my own, if that's what you mean," Katy joked.
Daisy laughed. "Yeah. Sometimes I borrow stuff from
them though, so just one word of warning -- open door means come in if
you want to, shut door means stay out on pain on death." She purposefully
overdid the wide-eyed expression of fear, stumbling back against the wall
then half-running back into her own room.
Katy, almost doubled over laughing, followed.
Daisy fell onto her stomach on the bed, still giggling.
Katy copied her actions, then propped herself up on her elbows and
looked around. It was a simple room, with wood-paneled walls, white
curtains, and a soft royal-blue carpet. The bed was a double, just
big enough for two girls to share. She sighed lightly, laying her
head down on her hands and closing her eyes.
This was all too wonderful to be true. In just a couple of
hours, she'd gone from hunted and running scared to safe and warm
here.
"What're you thinking?" Daisy's soft voice broke into her thoughts.
Katy opened her eyes, blinking back sudden tears. "I'm not even
totally sure... I'm just so glad I'm here..."
Her friend put an arm over her back, hugging her gently. "It's okay,
Katy. Something awful happened to you Outside, didn't it?"
She swallowed. She had to tell someone. Not everyone.
But Daisy... she somehow wanted *her* to know. "Yeah... sort of.
Lots of things."
"Like what?" Daisy prodded gently.
"Well..." She sniffed back more tears. "I just...
I never had a real home. Nobody wanted me, so I was moved every few
months. Some places were okay, but the last few..." She shivered
uncontrollably, and her friend tightened the sideways hug. "I tried
to run away twice before, but I got caught both times. This time,
I headed straight for the deep woods, hoping to lose them."
"You did, I swear," Daisy said strongly, though quietly.
"Few people have ever found Hazzard, and they won't have the agility
to climb over the fence like you did even if they do find
the barrier."
"Uh... uh-huh." Katy was feeling a bit stupid, but she couldn't
stop shaking as all the pent-up fear of the past year came back to her
all at once, and tears flowed freely. "I don't ever want them to
find me..."
"They won't," Daisy said again. "Katy, what happened to you that
you had to run away like that? You sound like you're pretty desperate."
Katy turned her head to meet the other girl's eyes. "They... they were
pretty mean. The last home... I was the bottom of the barrel,
and so were they. I was sent there without much investigation.
They just wanted someone to work, like
Cinderella, I guess. The man... he beat me when I broke a vase
one day."
Daisy tensed, drawing back a bit, and her soft hiss of
breath drawn in through clenched teeth was one of sheer fury.
"He what?!" She was whispering now, her eyes flashing hotly.
Katy nodded. "I... I've still got the mark."
"Where? Does it hurt?"
"Not anymore. It was a couple months ago. I've been in
an orphanage ever since." She sat up and rubbed the spot where the
scar was gingerly, almost expecting it to hurt again. "Here."
"Can I have a look?"
Katy nodded again, and felt her friend slowly lift up the back of her
shirt. "You see it?"
Daisy muttered something quick and sharp under her breath, and Katy
suspected it was a word that she might get in trouble over if her uncle
heard. "He did that?"
"Yeah. It doesn't hurt anymore."
She felt her friend touch the spot lightly, then flatten her palm against
the scar. Katy relaxed a little despite herself.
Daisy's hand was strong but soft, gentle like a mother's touch might
be, though this girl was probably only a couple of years older than she.
"What did he do that with?"
"His belt."
"Had to have been the metal buckle to leave that."
"Yeah."
Daisy pulled her hand away, letting the shirt straighten itself out,
then wrapped both arms around the younger girl in a fierce hug from behind.
"They'll never do anything like that again, Katy, I promise. You're
safe in Hazzard, with us."
Katy blinked back more tears. "I almost wish I could just stay
here, with you." She twisted around, meeting the other girl's eyes
again. Silent words and emotions passed, and Daisy nodded.
"You can stay for a while. I have a feeling you'll need more
than a few days to get life back to normal, huh?"
"What's normal?" she laughed bitterly.
"You'll find out. Here. You belong in Hazzard. And
you can stay. All you have to do is choose to."
"Thank you," Katy whispered fervently, eyes still locked with
Daisy's. "Thank you all."
The other girl smiled. "What're friends for?"
Slowly, she returned the smile, wiping her eyes. "...Yeah.
That's what friends are for."
"You got it." Daisy jumped to her feet. "C'mon, forget
the past. It doesn't matter anymore. I smell dinner cooking,
let's go help set the table."
Katy followed her out the door. "I ate at the Boar's Nest."
"Yeah, but I didn't. Besides, believe me, Uncle Jesse's cooking
is worth a second dinner."
Laughing a little, the two girls bounded downstairs, Katy's heart feeling
strangely light. This was strange in a way, the very thought of being
here, in a place that shouldn't exist, with people that were supposed to
be only fictional, yet were all so very, very real. Strange, but
wonderful. Katy felt safe here, and curious, as though there was
suddenly more to the world, and now she had the freedom to explore it like
she never had had the chance to before. And it had all happened,
the entire changing
of her life, in one day. She remembered the words of that song
she had thought about earlier. "Climb every mountain, ford every
stream, follow every rainbow, till you find your dream." The mountains
and a rainbow had led her here. And maybe, just maybe, she could
find her dreams in this secret world.
Katy believed that she could.