Don didn’t have much hope for concealment; he was way too bulky to scrunch down in the front seat. Instead, he swung the assault rifle out of the window. It was an awkward angle, and he had to hold the gun wedged under his opposite armpit. He fired off a short burst, but he had more chance of hitting the moon than he did the Ford.
From the back seat the children’s cries were plaintive and I felt a pang in my heart.
This is not right, I thought, it’s just not right.
Let these bastards come after me and Don, fair enough. I could accept that. But to endanger the children was supremely wrong. It was both cruel and cowardly.
Rage flooded through me like an icy tide.
‘Millie,’ I said. ‘Get the children to cover their ears and close their eyes. Things are about to get scary.’
No sooner had I said it than I slammed on the brakes.
Taken by surprise, the driver of the Ford was slow to react and the car flew past, the woman missing the opportunity to shoot Don. Don twisted the gun, propping it against the door frame and rattled off another short burst. Silver-edged craters appeared in the metal body of the Ford and the car skidded away as the driver took evasive action.
The cabin was now dead in line with the Ford, and I watched as the driver tore at the steering. The Ford clipped the back corner of the cabin, blasting through rotting boards and finishing the job started by the elements. The cabin twisted with the impact and came apart. Wood and dust flew everywhere. The Ford spun out, and it hadn’t survived the impact undamaged. Bits of plastic and metal joined the flying detritus. Steam erupted from the engine and blocked any view of its occupants.
Then we were past the wreck, and I floored the throttle as the other vehicles roared after us.
‘How far is it to the logging camp?’ I called back to Millie.
‘Not far now, take the next road to the left.’ Millie’s voice was as high-pitched as the children’s screams.
Next road? Where? Where?
I saw it a hundred yards ahead: a narrow track that was little more than a beaten path winding up the hillside.
You’ve got to be kidding me, I thought. We’d need a 4?4 to negotiate that trail.
But there was nothing else for it.
Bullets spanged off the minivan.
A black SUV roared up on our right, trying to cut us off, and I saw the face of the tattooed man snarling at us as he raised a shotgun. Don struggled to bring the rifle round on him, but he had it wedged, the carrying strap impeding him.
The shotgun flared, the load holing the front fender.
Thankfully he hadn’t fired at Don, but at the tyre in an attempt at stopping the van.
‘Get back.’ I leaned past the old man, my elbow against Don’s chest. I wasn’t fucking around with trying to disable their vehicle. I aimed the SIG directly at the tattooed man’s face.
Fired.
But already the man was reacting, throwing himself backwards as far as his seat would allow.
My bullet missed him, but it didn’t matter. It hit an even more viable target.
The driver of the SUV couldn’t do his job with most of his forehead missing.
Easing down on the brakes, I watched as the SUV streaked across in front of us at too sharp an angle, and I turned into the trail even as the SUV flipped and rolled in a shower of dirt and mud and shattered metal.
The trail was slick and muddy, but the minivan was sturdier than I’d first assumed. It hauled itself up the hillside, the engine moaning but not ready to give up.
Looking down the hill, I saw the last two pursuing vehicles veer off to check on their fallen comrades. Three men clambered out, rushing to the SUV, dancing around futilely as they searched for their leader among the steaming wreckage.
I’d bought us some breathing space, but they’d be coming again. At least there’d be fewer of them to contend with next time.
Chapter 17
‘Well… we made it.’
‘Just.’ Don added, looking at the ramshackle collection of buildings, ‘But was it worth it?’
My nod was more confident than any of us felt. ‘We’ve a better chance here than we do on the open road.’
‘We didn’t do too badly. We stopped two of them.’
‘We were incredibly lucky, that’s all,’ I said.
‘Is your glass always half-empty?’
‘My glass got shattered a long time ago.’
It was a hell of a climb up the slope but we had made it without bursting the suspension on the people carrier. Once we were off the barren hillside, the forest encroached again, but at least it offered some respite from the driving rain. I had flicked on the headlights to negotiate the gloom, and then put my foot down. The earlier opinion was still strong in my mind: the bad guys would be coming again. We had to find shelter for Millie and the children, then set Don up to cover me while I took the fight to our enemies. We wouldn’t be able to do that while dawdling on the mountain trails. We had found the abandoned logging camp ten minutes later.
Parking the van near to a decrepit cabin, I said, ‘Millie, I want you to go and check inside. See if there’s a telephone or radio. Then come and join us.’
‘Where are you going?’
‘In there.’ My nod indicated a series of huts and industrial sheds beyond a chain-link fence. The fence had drooped in places and was no real security.
‘Why not just check those huts?’ Millie asked.
‘This one is outside the compound. I’m guessing it was once a security checkpoint. If there’s a comms area, that’s the logical place to find it.’
‘I’ll go,’ Don said, shifting to open his door.
‘No.’ I gripped his wrist. ‘I need you to look after the children.’
‘I can look after the children,’ Millie said.
‘Don can handle an assault rifle — can you?’
Millie just stared for a long three seconds. Then she opened the door and slid out. Hunkered against the rain, she headed for the abandoned cabin. I drove away and through the open gate, all the while watching Millie in the mirror.
‘What was that all about?’ Don asked.
‘What do you mean?’
‘It’s pretty obvious that you wanted Millie out of the way. What’s on your mind, Hunter?’
I chewed my bottom lip for the briefest of time. ‘Not in front of the children, Don.’
There were cabins on both sides of the trail, some faring better than others in the fight against the elements. None of them had successfully held back the forest from reclaiming its territory. Undergrowth grew all the way to the walls and sometimes even inside the buildings. Further back were the large sheds, the abandoned homes of saws and winches and all the equipment necessary for a lumber operation. Ignoring the structures, I drove to the furthest corner of the sprawling encampment. There I reversed the van under a lean-to. It was concealed from anyone coming along the trail until they were adjacent with it, and I elected to leave it nose out in case we had to trust to speed and manoeuvrability to get us out of a fix a second time.
‘Grab the gun for me, will you.’ I climbed out the van. ‘And bring the children.’
‘What about Fluffy?’
Beth was cradling the tom in her arms. The tatty old cat returned my stare as though defying me to leave it behind. Maybe if I didn’t give the correct answer to the little girl, it would show me how it had earned its scars. Fluffy? Jesus, if there was ever a misnomer that was it!