Stewart Gordon said. âI thought about pushing it, but I didnât see the point. Thereâs one thing all those girls are good at, and Arrow in particular, and thatâs turning mulish and shutting up. It made more sense to come out and see. Here we are. Weâre not going to be able to get to the door on the passengerâs side. The trade is almost rolled over onto it and itâs jammed against even more rocks. This place is unbelievable with rocks. Itâs worse than the shingle at Brighton.â
âWeâll have to climb up to the driverâs door,â Annabeth said.
âIâll do it. Later on, Iâm going to put a shot of Scotch into your tea and tell you why Arrow Normand is the inevitable product of late-stage corporate capitalism. That was a goodbook, the one about Abigail Adams, but your understanding of economics is up your ass.â
âRight,â Annabeth said.
Stewart Gordon had been pulling himself up to the truckâs driverâs-side door all the time heâd been lecturing her about Arrow, rocks, and capitalism. The windshield was frosted over, but they could see well enough through it to see that there was a man in there, and blood. Annabeth thought about the blood in Arrow Normandâs hair, and then she thought of something else.
âYou know,â she said. âThis truck is practically on its side.â
âI can see that.â
âI know you can. Itâs justâshe must have climbed out. Arrow Normand, I mean. She canât have been thrown from the truck, which is what I thought she said. She must have climbed out. Except, I donât know. That doesnât make any sense.â
âHuh,â Stewart Gordon said. âStand back a little. If the door is frozen shut, itâs going to take a good yank to get it free.â
Annabeth stood back. Stewart Gordon yanked. He yanked again. Annabeth came forward a little and touched his arm.
âLook,â she said. âThe little post thingee, the thing that locks the door. Itâs down.â
Stewart Gordon stopped and looked.
âThat doesnât make sense either, does it?â Annabeth asked him. âI mean, she couldnât have been thrown from the truck if the door was locked, and the door wouldnât lock itself. And I canât imagine that she thought to lock it while she was climbing out.â
âJust a minute,â Stewart Gordon said. He leaned over and went at the windshield with the side of his arm, brushing off the thin layer of frost in great leaping arcs. The wind was getting worse. Annabeth thought that it was coming straight through her coat and going out the other side.
Stewart Gordon grunted, and stepped back again, staying on top of the truck so that he looked like some kind of fearsomestatue in honor of somethingâAnnabeth was very aware that she was making no sense. Stewart Gordon had his hands in his pockets and was looking straight down. Annabeth moved slowly and got herself onto the truck, scared to death that she would slide off into the snow and then need rescuing herself. She got up next to him without his making any sign that he was aware she was coming. She looked down and saw the streaks of red and something else everywhere.
âHe hit his head,â she said. âBut that doesnât mean anything, does it? Head wounds give a lot of blood, even minor ones. He could still be alive.â
âHeâs not alive,â Stewart Gordon said.
âHow do you know? We ought to at least check.â
âWeâre not going to check anything. Weâre not going to touch anything. Weâre going to go get the police no matter how busy they are in the storm. Weâre going to get them now.â
âWe should get an ambulance, just in case,â Annabeth insistedâand yet, even as she insisted, she knew that he was right and she was wrong. Here it was, she thought, here it was, those ignorant