“Says he runs the dead and alive. Those got the death without ending, she says. Baron got a fortress not far off. Runs the ville’s all around. She says he’s ten foot tall with a” He laughed. “With a prick so long he ties it to his knee.”
“What sort of power’s he got? Sec men?”
Finnegan muttered the question. “Says he don’t need that. Got the power. Makes it sound like some kind of wizardry, Ryan. Says he’s the walking death himself. Says he can’t be killed.”
J.B. caught that, bringing up the rear of their small column, and he snorted. “Put him in front of my Steyr blaster and see if he’s still walking and talking after six rounds go into him.”
The towering woman heard him and giggled. It was a strange, thin, feeble sound, like that made by an ailing child, amazingly out of proportion to her build. Finnegan said something, and she leaned down to listen, one hand resting lightly on his arm. The other hand, Ryan noticed, stayed under the blanket.
“She says the baron would eat a little man like him,” Finnegan said, gesturing toward J.B. “And shit him out for the I think she means the gators.” Ryan found it all like a bewildering puzzle. Gradually they were putting together some of the pieces. The whole region looked as though it had been nuked with neutron missiles that devastated people and left buildings intact. There was this mysterious Baron Tourment, who seemed to be a very big fish in a medium-size pond. Maybe used voodoo to keep his people in line. And there was this equally odd resistance group somewhere around West Lowellton, where they were heading. Led by a white wolf.
“A white wolf?” he muttered to himself.
Chapter Eleven
RYAN HAD TRULY INTENDED to let the hulking Cajun woman go free.
If he’d felt that she’d been any threat to them, then he’d have given Finn the nod to put a bullet through the base of her skull. He’d have given the word and not had a moment’s unease about it. That was the way it was in the Deathlands.
But she wasn’t a threat. She’d brought them through the swamps, into the pale glow of dawn, right to the edge of what had to be the suburb of West Lowellton. It didn’t matter to them that she would tell Ti Jean and the other Cajuns. It was obvious that they preferred the dark, mazy wilderness to the open spaces of the town. Ryan didn’t figure there was any real danger of their being pursued.
So why not let her go?
Finnegan looked at him, beneath the grove of stunted elms dripping with the leprous moss, where they waited. The woman’s left hand was scratching where an early rising mosquito had raised a weal above her swollen, freckled breast. Her right hand was still beneath the torn blanket, where it had been every single time that Ryan had looked at her. That bothered him a little. Even when she’d stumbled on a couple of occasions, she’d used only her left hand to steady herself.
“How ’bout?” asked Finn, gesturing to the Cajun. His dark blue sweater and pants were splattered with mud, some patches drying, some still dark and wet. The steel toe caps of his combat boots were slick with the gray-brown slime.
“Let her go,” said Ryan. “She’s told us ’bout all there is. We best watch out for this Baron Tourment and the snow wolf. Tell her she can go free.”
Standing beside her, virtually in her shadow, Finnegan beckoned to her. Doc grinned at the sight of the tubby little man and the looming woman.
“She stands like a sow that hath o’erwhelmed all her litter but one,'” he said. ” Henry Four .” Cackled with laughter at the looks of total bewilderment on the faces of all his colleagues. “But let it pass, my brothers. Oh, let it pass.”
“Hurry it up, Finn,” called Ryan, staring at the oddly matched couple.
“Fucking all right,” snapped Finnegan, looking away from the Cajun for a moment.
Ryan’s good eye opened wide.
Just as Finnegan half turned away from the woman, gesturing with his arm toward the dark desolation of the swamp behind them, she finally began to take her right hand from under the blanket.