be fired without a trace. The powder was solid and affixed to the bullet. Next he found the bolt release and the safety. Without a sound, he continued his crawl along the tree line.
'Bulldog-silver. Boxer-gold.' The unconscious man's radio crackled. 'Pitbull-iron. Poodle-quartz. Shepherd- copper. Basset-' Silence. 'Basset-' Kier said nothing. 'Basset, say the code.'
The burning roof now created a brighter light, and the snow did not fall as thickly. Kier moved into the forest, continuing in a circle around the cabin, which was rapidly becoming a pile of his smoldering treasures.
In case Jessie tried to emerge as the fire began dying, Kier had to get these men away from the cabin or disable them all quickly. Knowing every square inch of the terrain was about the only thing in his favor. It wasn't enough. The others would be much more cautious now, nervous that he was hunting them. They would not stand in the open, nor would they hide in obvious spots like the tree line. He needed a radically different strategy.
He had an idea.
'I want to live my last few days in peace,' Kier spoke into the radio. 'Since the 'chemical,' as you call it, will kill me anyway, why worry about it?'
He began to run even as he spoke, hoping they couldn't immediately locate him from the transmission. It was a risk.
'Stay here and you'll die one by one. Unlike you, I have nothing to lose. I'm dead any way you slice it. I know the ground. You don't.'
'You'll be a sorry son of a bitch if you don't give up. You'll die slow,' an angry voice replied.
'Stay with procedure.' It was Tillman's calm, authoritative voice.
'Some of your men aren't taking to these mountains.' Kier ran through the trees toward the cabin's front. 'Tillman, can you hear it in his voice? Your man's moving off-center. Maybe we should all start lobbing grenades around in the dark.' Kier chuckled into the radio.
'Whatever you might have we can fix.' Tillman again. 'If we agree to pull back, we want your promise that you'll stay and negotiate.'
'I'm a doctor. I'm not going to leave and risk spreading something around.'
'Make sure you don't then. We're withdrawing. We'll hold our fire. After we pull out, I'll call you. We'll meet.'
It was what Kier had hoped for-a misguided attempt to trap him on his own turf. If he were lucky, at least some would make a show of leaving. Nearing the road, where he expected to find the snowmobiles, he moved slowly in a crouch, alert to every shadow, every vertical line or hump that might be a man. Then he stopped.
There would be someone with the snowmobiles, at least one guard. He crawled in a serpentine pattern, first approaching the driveway, then moving away. Time and cold were working against him, but he knew his edge lay in patience. Animals stayed hidden because they spent minutes and hours without moving, oblivious to the disquiet that the passage of time created in humans. Pausing frequently to put his head above the snow, squinting against the tiny wind-driven flakes, Kier found no one. Surprised, almost bewildered, he drew to within fifty feet of the road. Still he remained alone.
Something-he didn't know what-told him to backtrack. It made sense since he was leaving prints in the snow, but mentally, turning around was tough. After only a few feet, he saw two shadows and a small light. They were following his trail. He vigorously shook a tree, and night tracers lit the air over his head, the bullets chopping the tree in half. Some trace. In a blink, he touched off a dozen rounds of his own. The two men disappeared like chaff in the wind. He had aimed high, over their heads, but it would keep them down for the seconds he needed.
Now the race was on in earnest. Most of the men would be nearby, coming down the driveway to the waiting snowmobiles. They would be right where he wanted them. Turning, he ran carelessly, knowing there was no way to make it safe. His legs churned through the snow, and in seconds he could feel the stress. His muscles burned, and the air frosted his throat.
He made an angle for the road. By coming back from the north instead of east from the cabin, he hoped to have a split-second edge on the guard. The man would be watching in the direction of the cabin.
Kier hit the public road at a dead run. He didn't see the parked two-man vehicles until he was almost on them, didn't see the guard until the man turned to fire. Kier dived, bullets tearing past him. The muzzle blast flashing in the night made an easy target. Kier rolled and killed him.
He went to the first snowmobile, his fingers searching wildly. There was no key. And he knew without looking that the rest would be the same. Only seconds stood between him and several men with automatic weapons. No time to search the body. His last chance to carry out his plan would use up the precious remaining seconds. He would do with his feet what he had intended to do on a machine, and it would be the most important footrace of his life.
He fired a wide volley toward the cabin, hoping to slow his pursuers, and ran. Not with measured strides or with an eye toward pacing himself, but full out.
'Catch me if you can, assholes,' he shouted into the radio.
It was some six hundred yards to where he was going- about three-eighths of a mile-but it was in deep snow and far enough that his pursuers could easily reach sixty miles per hour by snowmobile.
Staying to the edge of the road, sometimes to a trail just off it, made him a harder target. Still, why would a man run down a road? Hopefully, they wouldn't think about it much. He didn't. Instead he focused upon the pain dancing in his mind; fire, burning up and down his legs; lungs that were melting butterfly wings; and a body that couldn't get enough oxygen. He wanted air. He wanted away from the pain. But he could only run.
He had gone almost a quarter mile-he recognized a tall pine-when he saw the first lights behind him. For a moment, he almost slowed at the hopelessness of what he intended. They would catch him in one hundred yards unless he stopped to fight or slunk into the woods.
There were six lights, a pack. It was all or most of them, and they hung relatively close together.
He jumped off the road just before the first bullet came. When he fired back, one man went down. The lights scattered and the firefight began. Events were developing all wrong. And it would have stayed that way except for their one miscalculation.
The enemy was also patrolling the road. Around the corner, from the opposite direction, a snowmobile roared into Kier's sights. The gunrack across the front told him enough. He crouched. At the lights from the pursuing vehicles, the new man slowed, presenting an easy shot. Kier fired right into the man's steel breastplate, literally blowing him off the seat, and ran for the careening machine. He was on it before his startled pursuers fully grasped what had happened. Kier turned off the lights and exulted in the power of the machine. He revved the engine in neutral from behind a tree, sending an unmistakable message.
'Catch me if you can,' he shouted again into the radio before taking off.
He sped away from them at forty miles an hour in low gear, wanting it to sound like sixty. Two bends and he saw the small side road that was critical to his plan. He went straight ahead instead of rounding the third bend, down into an old creek bed and skid trail used to slide logs to the river in the early 1900s.
At night, up was not so easily discerned from down as one might think. At night in a snowstorm, up from down was even harder to perceive. On a steep grade it was even more difficult to determine. Kier knew the chute grew steeper as it went. And it only went down.
He lay flat on the machine, barely able to glimpse the occasional light in the rearview mirror. He dodged and weaved around the curves, jinking up and down the banks of the gully like a luge in a track. He could barely hold his speed to forty in a dead coast. Now he was dropping like a plummeting bird. Wind whipped in his face. He clutched the snowmobile between his legs as if it were part of him. They were gaining on him. He screamed his mirth into the radio.
At the last possible second he rose on his machine, jumping clear to the side and up the bank. He felt like a pebble falling down the mountain. He tried to slide, but bounced terribly. The earth, his mountain, pummeled him. Snow-covered brush whipped him. Frantically, he grabbed and dug in, first with his feet, then with his hands and elbows. He cartwheeled in the blackness, slapped and thrown like a child in the clutches of a monster.
But it slowed him. He stopped on the lip of the chute, out of the slick, as the first machine passed by with its engine dead and the driver screaming at the horror of the abyss. A second man shot by with only the sounds of shifting gears. Kier lost count of the machines that reached the end of the chute and flew the fifty to one hundred feet to the river's bottom. There was a big, deep stretch at the head of a rapids into which the unsuspecting would fall. They might survive, but it would be a struggle to make it through the rapids, and it would be hours before any survivor could make it out of the canyon a couple of miles or more downstream.