spine and extended up across his scalp now intensified. His hand was so slick
with sweat that he was afraid the gun would slip out of his grasp.
Fifteen feet.
Travis pointed the .38 in the air and squeezed off a single warning shot. The
blast crashed through the forest and echoed down the long canyon.
The retriever did not even flinch, but the thing in the brush immediately turned
away from them and ran north, upslope, toward the canyon rim. Travis could not
see it, but he could clearly mark its swift progress by the waist-high weeds and
bushes that shook and parted under its assault.
For a second or two, he was relieved because he thought he had frightened it
off. Then he saw it was not actually running away. It was heading
north-northwest on a curve that would bring it to the deer trail above them.
Travis sensed that the creature was trying to cut them off and force them to go
out of the canyon by the lower route, where it would have more and better
opportunities to attack. He did not understand how he knew such a thing, just
that he did know it.
His primordial survival instinct drove him into action without the need to think
about each move he made; he automatically did what was required. He had not felt
that animal surety since he had seen military action almost a decade ago.
Trying to keep his eye on the telltale tremble of the brush to his right,
abandoning his backpack and keeping only the gun, Travis raced up the steep
trail, and the retriever ran behind him. Fast as he was, however, he was not
fast enough to overtake the unknown enemy. When he realized that it was going to
reach the path well above him, he fired another warning shot, which did not
startle or deflect the adversary this time. He fired twice into the brush
itself, toward the indications of movement, not caring if it was a man out
there, and that worked. He did not believe he hit the stalker, but he scared it
at last, and it turned away.
He kept running. He was eager to reach the canyon rim, where the trees were thin
along the ridge top, where the brush was sparse, and where a brighter fall of
sunlight did not permit concealing shadows.
When he arrived at the crest a couple of minutes later, he was badly winded. The
muscles of his calves and thighs were hot with pain. His heart thumped so hard
in his chest that he would not have been surprised to hear the echo of it
bouncing off another ridge and coming back to him across the canyon.
This was where he had paused to eat some Oreos. The rattlesnake, which earlier
had been sunning on a large flat rock, was gone.
The golden retriever had followed Travis. It stood beside him, panting, peering
down the slope they had just ascended.
Slightly dizzy, wanting to sit and rest but aware that he was still in danger of
an unknown variety, Travis looked down the deer trail, too, and scanned what
underbrush he could see. If the stalker remained in pursuit of them, it was
being more circumspect, climbing the slopes without disturbing the weeds and
bushes.
The retriever whined and tugged once at Travis’s pants leg. It scurried across
the top of the narrow ridge to a declivity by which they could make their way
down into the next canyon. Clearly, the dog believed they were not out of danger
and ought to keep moving.
Travis shared that conviction. His atavistic fear—and the reliance on instinct
that it invoked—sent him hurrying after the dog, over the far side of the ridge,
into another tree-filled canyon.
2
Vincent Nasco had been waiting in the dark garage for hours. He did not look as
if he would be good at waiting. He was big—over two hundred pounds, six-three,
muscular—and he always seemed to be so full of energy that he might burst at any
moment. His broad face was placid, usually as expressionless as the face of a
cow. But his green eyes flashed with vitality, with an edgy nervous