before I call this in. You saw the truck?'

'I did.'

'Good. In the meantime, call whoever's in charge of this little show-Colonel, you said?'

'That's affirmative.'

'Well, call him on up here so I can get some kind of confirmation.'

The soldier stared at him for a moment. He was young, Lee noticed, and he looked scared to death. Probably some accountant from Wausau who never in a million years had actually expected to get shot at. 'We appreciate that, sir.'

Lee turned his back and reached through the open window of the car to turn off the ignition. When he tipped his head inside the car, he swore he could smell the stick of peppermint gum in the glove box and the oil on the muzzle of the shotgun on the rack above the cage. He heard the irregular breathing of the young soldier behind him. . ..

Just as his fingers brushed the key, he saw . . , something. A reflection in the closed passenger window, moving too slowly, too purposefully, and suddenly he remembered things that had seemed silly at the time. Academy runs, slinking through the darkened training house where cardboard gunmen popped out of every doorway or dropped from the ceiling and your heart beat so hard that your chest wall ached for days afterward. . . .

His head and his hand remembered those days like they were five minutes ago, which surprised him a little. He spun sideways, flinging his back against the door frame just as the report of the M16 exploded in his ears. His nine-millimeter was in his hand long before his brain would have thought to initiate the gesture, and then he had a split-second image of the young soldier standing there with the muzzle of the rifle leveled at Lee's head, and then there was another gunshot, so close on the heels of the first that they blurred together.

For a moment that seemed to stretch into eternity, Deputy Lee and the young soldier stared at each other in disbelief. Then Lee gaped down in horror as the soldier sank slowly to the pavement, a black-red circle spreading on his chest. The M16 clattered uselessly to the asphalt.

'Jesus,' Lee muttered stupidly, unable to tear his eyes away. 'Jesus.' The muzzle of his nine dropped toward the ground.

'Becker!'

The hiss came from the trees on the left side of the road, and as instinctively as Lee had spun and drawn his weapon and fired his first shot into the young soldier's chest, he sprinted around to the other side of the car. A bullet kicked up stones from the road just behind him, then another zinged by his left ear with a whining whistle. He ducked down next to the car and reached for the door handle as a volley of shots hit the pavement just behind him. Lee didn't believe for one minute that they were blanks.

He dashed down the berm into the forest, blood streaming from where the young soldier's first shot had grazed the side of his head.

BONAR WALKED into the Hunter's Inn, spied Halloran hunched over in a back booth, and made a beeline for him, he slid into the cracked vinyl seat with a heavy sigh. He looked every minute of the long day they'd put in so far. 'Okay. I sent the prints for our bodies off to that Roadrunner character and moved all the stuff you wanted into my ride, but why you want to drive all over the north woods in a 'sixty-nine Camaro is beyond me.'

Halloran tapped the eraser of a stubby pencil on the map he'd been studying. 'We're going to meet up with Magozzi and the rest of them at Hamilton, right?'

'Right. I figured we'd pop down to the state highway and make some good time, but you know darn well the Camaro's Smokey bait. They wouldn't stop us in the county SUV. If we kept the lights going, we'd have clear sailing.'

Halloran leaned back and rubbed at his eyes. 'We've got about a half an hour on Magozzi's crew. Thought we'd take the northern route.'

Bonar worked his thick eyebrows halfway up his forehead. 'Through Missaqua County?'

'Might as well take a look-see on our way. If the Feds are hot enough to pull Ed Pitala's patrols off the road, I'm guessing they'll have some blocks set up to stop any other cops that might wander in. Civilian traffic is another thing. No way they can stop that. And a 'sixty-nine Camaro's about as civilian as you can get.'

Bonar puffed his cheeks in a miserable exhale and signaled to Joe over at the bar. 'If we get stopped at the Missaqua border by a few hundred gentlemen in really nice suits, I think the uniforms might give us away anyhow. Unless, of course, you're planning on just mowing them down with the shotgun and riot gun you had me stash in the backseat.'

Halloran slurped a sip of the best coffee in Kingsford County. 'After the way they've jerked us around today, I'm beginning to think that might be a pleasant way to spend a Saturday night.'

Bonar rolled troubled eyes up to the stuffed jackalope mounted to the wall over the booth and grimaced. 'Man, what're we doing here? You know I hate this place.'

'Best food around, and you wanted to eat before we took off. The diner's closed, and there's nothing on the road where we're headed. Cheeseburger rare, heavy on the onions, and every side old Joe's got back there on the grill.'

Bonar smiled a little. 'You got me onions when we're riding together?'

'I figured you'd be real polite and hold your breath the whole way.'

'At least you didn't pick the booth with the stuffed cat.'

'Even I can't stand that one. Used to pat that cat every time I came in here.'

Bonar took a quick look around the dark interior, then wrinkled his nose and pretended he hadn't seen a thing. The place was made from hand-hewn pine logs pulled down by Joe's grandfather a hundred years ago, and every few feet, the glass eyes of some dead animal or other stared down at you. It gave Bonar the creeps.

There was the two-headed calf one of Barkley Widen's prize Guernseys had dropped back in the 70s, a loose- lipped moose with a giant, moldy rack, and every other woodland animal you could think of, including a family of chipmunks fastened to a wall plaque with fake moss falling off. To the best of Bonar's knowledge, Joe hadn't killed a single one. The man couldn't bear the thought of taking the life of any creature, but the animals had been hanging since his grandfather's day and, as he put it, taking them down would be a pure waste of good taxidermy.

And then there was the cat-the one and only dead thing Joe himself had contributed to the grisly decor. Lord, how he had loved that cat, every one of the twenty-three years the tabby stray had prowled around the bar, taking the occasional swipe at a paying customer with his long, untrimmed claws, relenting only when he licked enough suds from where the beer tap dripped to put him to sleep. Seemed a strange way to honor the memory of a companion, Bonar thought- stuffing it and having it mounted on a wall.

'I don't think I can eat here,' he said unhappily.

Halloran gave him a tired grin. 'You'll eat in your coffin.'

'This is like eating in someone else's coffin.'

His discomfort slowed him down, and it took him a full ten minutes to put away the cheeseburger, and another five to polish off the french fries, onion rings, and coleslaw.

Halloran watched him eat, sipping a fresh cup of coffee to keep him awake on the road. When Bonar pushed his plate away, he threw down a handful of bills and slid out of the booth. 'We need to go.'

Bonar nodded, reluctant to move. 'Man, I'm tired. You want to check with Green Bay again before we take off?'

'Called them before you got here. Sharon and the others still haven't shown up. The detective I talked to earlier went home an hour ago, but the patrols up there are running a watch-and-stop on the Rover.'

Bonar held his gun tightly in the holster as he got up. 'Not so long ago, I was thinking we were like a couple of old ladies, worrying about a woman who won't even give you the time of day just because she's a few hours late. But I started counting those hours while I was loading the car, and there's just too many of them.'

Halloran gave him a steady look and nodded.

'Damn, Mike, this is scaring me to death.'

THE GOOD THING about Bonar's Camaro-aside from the 427 big-block Chevy-was that he'd put in one of the county's new radio units just last year.

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