She splashed on her back, and water rushed up her nose. She reached blindly for the surface, and the flashlight swirled away from her, a blob of luminous churning. By instinct alone, she kept hold of the shotgun as the current pushed and spun her. The gun dragged her down. A thick root hit her thigh.
Rolling, she fought her way up the streaming bank and lay panting in the mud. She hunched over, gasping and choking, wiping at her eyes, her body heat bleeding away with the water that poured from her.
She thought about hiding under the bridge until the storm lessened, but the stream swelled and twisted at her feet, growing wilder by the moment. And where was the bridge anyway? Grunting, she staggered up the embankment.
In a burst of brilliance, the road seemed wrong somehow, unfamiliar. Thunder seemed to grow louder, to follow closer on the flash. She couldn’t spot the turnoff or the hanging tree or any other landmark, though she should have by now. A branch struck her shoulder. Forked lightning cracked the sky overhead, revealed a road grown narrower than it should have been.
Behind her, something moved. With a harsh cry catching in her throat, she spun. A solitary tree swayed wildly. Saplings seemed to leap at her with each bright glare, and thunder left her too deafened to listen for dogs.
Dark pillars surrounded her, and she stood absolutely still. The chill she’d been fighting went through her, forcing her teeth together with a sharp click. She blinked at the thing she’d mistaken for the trailer: one wall only, cut through with window holes that opened to nothingness. Lightning slanted behind it.
Thunder staggered her.
Through the pines floated an agonized, choking scream.
There was no way of telling if it came from a man or a woman, but there was no mistaking that it was a cry of terror and pain. And close.
Isolated in the downpour, she listened. There was no way of knowing even from what direction the cry had come. While the gale whipped through the pines, they seemed at last to have merged—this force and this terrain— to have become a single unit, a rippling universal shadow.
And something bulky moved with a heavy sound, crouching through the blurring trees. And a horrible stench sifted up through the rain.
Numb with terror, she backed away. She heard it moving again, could almost see it now, there in the underbrush.
Backing away, backing farther, she felt it, felt it slowly emerge.
Squat and heavy, it hunched on four legs in the flattened brush.
It scrambled toward her.
The gun exploded, rearing upward, striking her shoulder. The shot went high. The muted tearing of the pellets through the trees mingled with the soft battering of raindrops. After the flash, she could see nothing. The storm had become a steady drizzle, and the water pressed down her body like a hand. Wishing she had more than one shell remaining, she took a step backward, aiming at first one dark area, then another.
Flames sprang in the air, heat and a crackling shock that sent her staggering backward, stunned and reeling.
Lightning slithered on the ground, and a lump of ore fused in blinding brilliance.
Rain already beat down the flames that crept across the cloven earth between them.
Now, she ran with no knowledge of how she’d risen. Tripping, she slid on her face, the gun discharging on the ground beneath her. She was slow to get up, sure some part of her had been ripped away. Again, the full force of rainfall hammered from the sky.
Crashing sounds surged toward her.
Doubled over, she hobbled on, shivering and limping.
“Pamela!” She launched herself at the trailer. “Pamela, it’s Athena!” She pounded and yelled, her voice lost in the shriek of wind that buffeted and pulled at her. “Open the door! Let me in! Hurry!” Bubbling up through the downpour, the screams emptied out of her. “I think I hear it coming! God damn you! Open up!”
“Go away!” There came faint, frightened squeals. “I can’t unlock the door. They’re out there. I can’t now!”
“Let me in, Pamela!” Her words swept away before the growing howl and the roaring pound of terror in her ears. “Please, oh God.” The baying of dogs surrounded her.
The door popped open, and Pam collapsed out of it. Falling, she struck Athena, knocked her off the trailer steps. They rolled on top of one another, both struggling in the mud. “The lights went out!” Pam sobbed. “Oh, ’Thena, the lights went out and I didn’t know what to do. I hear it! Oh, what is it? I hear it!”
Athena jerked her head toward the thrashing in the trees, caught a glimpse of rapid motion. She heaved herself up, dragged Pam back inside.
Small lights glinted, and something slipped, smashing under her feet as she latched the door. Thin white candles stuck to the collapsible table, and their box lay open, contents scattered about the floor. Thunder rattled the window. The storm drummed on metal walls.
With a tinny sound, the door moved. Pam pulled Athena closer. The latch clattered.
The whole trailer shuddered. The door leaped. It banged and shook with impact after battering impact. Pamela cowered, sobbing in Athena’s arms.
The pounding stopped abruptly. Something tore at the walls.