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Jamie crawled over Mrs. Patterson, squeezing next to him.
"Angelo, check your watch!" Cavanaugh yelled. "Tell Jamie when it's ninety seconds from now!"
"What do you want me to do?" Jamie asked.
"Drive forward until Angelo tells you it's time. Then drive back this way until you reach the smoke."
"Why? What are you going to--"
"When you come back, stop just before you get to the smoke. I'll step out of it on your side. Be careful you don't shoot me."
Cavanaugh floored the brakes, the solid i
Hearing the door bang shut behind him and the car speed forward, he ran to the left in the direction that the breeze took the smoke. Despite holding his breath, he had a desperate urge to cough, the smoke stinging his eyes. His nostrils and throat felt irritated.
The air lightened, the smoke getting thi
Rising to a crouch, he hurried along the stream until the smoke was behind him. Then he crept up to the rim. Peering carefully across the meadow, he sca
He remembered the Condition Yellow operators he'd seen at the gas station where he'd stopped on the way home.
Why? I'm not in the game any longer. Why am I suddenly a target?
This much, he did know. If this was the same group, there were ten of them. He'd taken a count while he stood at the pump. Plus, there was the sniper on the eastern ridge. And no doubt a spotter for the sniper. Twelve.
Behind him, the burning lodge roared and crackled. Inside it, something heavy collapsed, rumbling like an explosion.
Twelve, he repeated to himself.
Well, let's see if we can lower the odds.
Hearing the Taurus speed toward the northern part of the canyon, Cavanaugh estimated that the car would have emerged from the smoke by now. The men in the woods on this side of the valley would chase it.
With the Taurus gaining distance from them, they'll choose the easy route and run through the grass next to the trees.
And here they come, he thought as he squinted to the south, toward the gunman who'd been in the lane. The man raced into view, sprinting next to the trees, pursuing the Taurus.
Cavanaugh sighted along the AR-15, squeezed the trigger, and blew a hole in the man's throat. The man fell as if someone had yanked a rope attached to his ankles.
Switching aim, Cavanaugh sca
Farther along, a fourth man definitely realized something was wrong. As Cavanaugh switched aim, the man darted into the trees. Cavanaugh fired toward his retreating figure, seeing him lurch into a pine bough, blood spraying the green needles, the man's arms flying up as if in surrender, his hair seeming to part as a second shot caused more blood to spray, and suddenly he was falling.
Cavanaugh switched his aim yet again, but no targets presented themselves.
They realize what's happening, he thought. They've taken cover. Now they'll . . .
He rolled to the bottom of the stream a moment before bullets tore up dirt above him. Four. I got four of them. Out of twelve.
He heard the sound of the Taurus's engine change as Jamie turned the car and started back. Retreating farther along the stream, he took a deep breath before he reached the smoke. Then he climbed up, letting the smoke envelope him.
Keeping his eyes closed, he approached the sound of the returning Taurus. His nostrils and throat felt burned.
The drone of the Taurus became louder.
He stumbled faster. Come on, Jamie!
Then he heard the car stop ahead of him. Opening his eyes, which immediately began to weep, he stooped and emerged from the smoke. Coughing, he saw the car. Only partially visible through the bullet-starred side window, Jamie's strained face reacted with relief when he opened the rear door and climbed in, only to realize that the window across from him had a hole in it. The smell of blood permeated the car's interior. Angelo was slumped forward, unmoving.
William was covered with gore. He stared straight ahead, catatonic.
"Two windows are shattered!" Jamie said, pressed low in the front seat. "The others can't take much more!"
Desperate, Cavanaugh strained to decide what to do. To the south, the lane through the trees was blocked. To the west, most of the shooters were dead. But that still left shooters to the east and north, plus the sniper on the eastern ridge.
"Back up. Get a little farther from the smoke," he told Jamie.
Immediately, the car was in motion.
Cavanaugh pulled William down as bullets hit the no-longer protective window, chunks of glass flying.
With a clear view of the burning lodge, Cavanaugh told Jamie, "Stop."
She did.
"We're getting out."
She didn't hesitate.
Cavanaugh dragged William from the back seat. Jamie and Mrs. Patterson joined him, scurrying down into the streambed.
"I shot four of them on this side," Cavanaugh told Jamie, pointing to the west. "I think there's only one more shooter over there. If we can get into the woods, we can take him. Then we're home free."
The expression "home" struck him with bitter force as he thought about the burning lodge.
"But we'll be shot if we show ourselves and try to run to the woods," Jamie said.
"Unless we have a distraction."
Behind him, another car window burst apart, glass flying, too many bullets having struck it.
"What kind of distraction?"
"Give me a gun," William said, his catatonia broken.
"What?"
"Give me a gun. Bastards. Sons of bitches. Give me a gun. I'll shoot them until their whore mothers won't recognize them."
"Hold that thought, William. Glad to have you back with us."
Cavanaugh squirmed to the top of the bank and risked showing himself to what he assumed was now only one gunman on the western side of the canyon. But he didn't face the west. Instead, he peered toward the burning lodge. He studied a shed behind the building. A large white propane tank was next to it. But a non-incendiary bullet wouldn't detonate it.