The Naked Edge

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The Naked Edge Page 5

by David Morrell


  “Somebody'll hear and call the police,” William said.

  “The nearest neighbors are a couple of miles away. They hear us shooting all the time.” Cavanaugh pressed the accelerator, throwing up dust. “It's a private canyon. The ridges muffle the shots. Nobody pays attention.”

  “But they'll see the smoke and call the authorities,” William said.

  “It'll take time before the smoke rises above the canyon. Then it'll take more time before emergency crews arrive.”

  “Couldn't you lie to me just once?”

  The horses reached the trees to the left and veered in panic.

  Don't you dare hurt them, Cavanaugh silently warned the gunmen in the trees.

  Out of control, the horses galloped toward the Taurus now. More bullets starring the windshield, Cavanaugh aimed toward a gap in the trees: the lane that would take him to the road. The horses threatened to cut in front of him, making him afraid he'd hit them.

  Blood spraying, a horse flipped, its momentum twisting it over and over.

  In a fury, Cavanaugh veered around it, then urged the Taurus into the gap between the trees. Now the gunmen at the eastern and western sides of the canyon couldn't see the car. Only the shooters in the woods to the south could be a threat. The left front tire felt mushy, the same as the one on the right, but the lane was only a quarter mile long.

  We'll soon reach the road, Cavanaugh hoped. Rounding a thickly treed curve, he pressed the button that would open the gate, only to realize that the button was useless—the electricity wires had been cut.

  His thoughts were shattered by the sight of a van parked sideways, blocking the lane. The trees were dense on each side, giving him no room to veer around it. He'd be forced to ram it, striking the van where it had the least weight—at the fender behind the rear axle. The mass of the Taurus's armor would give it enough force to shift the van and allow the Taurus to squeeze past. But the moment Cavanaugh flicked a switch to deactivate the Taurus's air bags, he noticed how low the van was. Something in it was enormously heavy.

  I'll never be able to force it aside.

  As a man stepped from behind the van and fired toward the Taurus's windshield, beads of glass flew inside the car. Cavanaugh stomped the brake pedal and skidded to a stop, his passengers jerking forward despite their seat belts. He yanked the gearshift into reverse and sped swiftly backward along the lane.

  A bullet whacked through the front windshield.

  “Everybody down!”

  Cavanaugh sped backward around the curve. He reached an area where the lane widened, took his foot off the accelerator, and simultaneously twisted the steering wheel a quarter turn. The Taurus spun a hundred and eighty degrees, grazed a tree trunk, and now faced ahead. Immediately, Cavanaugh shoved the gearshift into forward and pressed the accelerator. The rear wheels threw dirt toward the pursuing gunman, who fired at the Taurus's rear tires, the dust ruining his aim.

  But Cavanaugh knew that it wouldn't be long before the rear tires had bullet punctures, also. Already, the deflating front tires made his steering hard to control. The stress from the 180-degree turn had worsened their damage. As he sped from the trees and into the meadow, he felt the front wheels settle onto the plastic ring that he'd attached to the center of each rim, a tire within a tire. Without the cushion of the normal front tires, the Taurus jounced and slammed over holes in the lane.

  “We're all going to die!” William exclaimed.

  “Wrong!” Cavanaugh stared ahead through the shattered windshield and saw that the entire lodge was aflame. The dense smoke didn't rise. Instead, a breeze kept it low, carrying it in Cavanaugh's direction, and as he approached it, he shouted to William, “Hand me the rifle I gave you!”

  Reaching back, taking it, he told Jamie, “Switch places with Mrs. Patterson! Get ready to drive!”

  He steered to the left of the burning lodge and sped into the smoke, which was so thick that he couldn't see ahead of him.

  Jamie crawled over Mrs. Patterson, squeezing next to him.

  “Angelo, check your watch!” Cavanaugh yelled. “Tell Jamie when it's ninety seconds from now!”

  “What do you want me to do?” Jamie asked.

  “Drive forward until Angelo tells you it's time. Then drive back this way until you reach the smoke.”

  “Why? What are you going to—”

  “When you come back, stop just before you get to the smoke. I'll step out of it on your side. Be careful you don't shoot me.”

  Cavanaugh floored the brakes, the solid inner tires digging violently into the ground as the car stopped. He took a deep breath, shoved the door open, and lunged out into the smoke.

  Hearing the door bang shut behind him and the car speed forward, he ran to the left in the direction that the breeze took the smoke. Despite holding his breath, he had a desperate urge to cough, the smoke stinging his eyes. His nostrils and throat felt irritated.

  The air lightened, the smoke getting thinner. He saw an opening. Sunlight revealed the stream where it wound through the canyon. He rolled down its bank, feeling the impact of his armored vest against his ribs. At the smoke-free bottom of the streambed, he took a deep breath, feeling cool sweet air fill his lungs.

  Rising to a crouch, he hurried along the stream until the smoke was behind him. Then he crept up to the rim. Peering carefully across the meadow, he scanned the pines and aspens. The smoke behind him prevented the silhouette of his head from showing as he aimed toward the trees.

  He remembered the Condition Yellow operators he'd seen at the gas station where he'd stopped on the way home.

  Why? I'm not in the game any longer. Why am I suddenly a target?

  This much, he did know. If this was the same group, there were ten of them. He'd taken a count while he stood at the pump. Plus, there was the sniper on the eastern ridge. And no doubt a spotter for the sniper. Twelve.

  Behind him, the burning lodge roared and crackled. Inside it, something heavy collapsed, rumbling like an explosion.

  Twelve, he repeated to himself.

  Well, let's see if we can lower the odds.

  Hearing the Taurus speed toward the northern part of the canyon, Cavanaugh estimated that the car would have emerged from the smoke by now. The men in the woods on this side of the valley would chase it.

  With the Taurus gaining distance from them, they'll choose the easy route and run through the grass next to the trees.

  And here they come, he thought as he squinted to the south, toward the gunman who'd been in the lane. The man raced into view, sprinting next to the trees, pursuing the Taurus.

  Cavanaugh sighted along the AR-15, squeezed the trigger, and blew a hole in the man's throat. The man fell as if someone had yanked a rope attached to his ankles.

  Switching aim, Cavanaugh scanned the trees, saw a gunman racing along it, and blew part of his head off. A third gunman, racing farther along, sensed that something wasn't right and paused to look back. Even at a distance, the fear on the man's face was evident as he saw his downed teammates and charged for the cover of the trees. But not in time. Cavanaugh's bullet shattered the back of his head. The man became a rag doll whose lifeless legs folded, his momentum pitching him forward.

  Farther along, a fourth man definitely realized something was wrong. As Cavanaugh switched aim, the man darted into the trees. Cavanaugh fired toward his retreating figure, seeing him lurch into a pine bough, blood spraying the green needles, the man's arms flying up as if in surrender, his hair seeming to part as a second shot caused more blood to spray, and suddenly he was falling.

  Cavanaugh switched his aim yet again, but no targets presented themselves.

  They realize what's happening, he thought. They've taken cover. Now they'll . . .

  He rolled to the bottom of the stream a moment before bullets tore up dirt above him. Four. I got four of them. Out of twelve.

  He heard the sound of the Taurus's engine change as Jamie turned the car and started back. Retreating farther along the stream,
he took a deep breath before he reached the smoke. Then he climbed up, letting the smoke envelope him.

  Keeping his eyes closed, he approached the sound of the returning Taurus. His nostrils and throat felt burned.

  The drone of the Taurus became louder.

  He stumbled faster. Come on, Jamie!

  Then he heard the car stop ahead of him. Opening his eyes, which immediately began to weep, he stooped and emerged from the smoke. Coughing, he saw the car. Only partially visible through the bullet-starred side window, Jamie's strained face reacted with relief when he opened the rear door and climbed in, only to realize that the window across from him had a hole in it. The smell of blood permeated the car's interior. Angelo was slumped forward, unmoving.

  William was covered with gore. He stared straight ahead, catatonic.

  “Two windows are shattered!” Jamie said, pressed low in the front seat. “The others can't take much more!”

  Desperate, Cavanaugh strained to decide what to do. To the south, the lane through the trees was blocked. To the west, most of the shooters were dead. But that still left shooters to the east and north, plus the sniper on the eastern ridge.

  “Back up. Get a little farther from the smoke,” he told Jamie.

  Immediately, the car was in motion.

  Cavanaugh pulled William down as bullets hit the no-longer protective window, chunks of glass flying.

  With a clear view of the burning lodge, Cavanaugh told Jamie, “Stop.”

  She did.

  “We're getting out.”

  She didn't hesitate.

  Cavanaugh dragged William from the back seat. Jamie and Mrs. Patterson joined him, scurrying down into the streambed.

  “I shot four of them on this side,” Cavanaugh told Jamie, pointing to the west. “I think there's only one more shooter over there. If we can get into the woods, we can take him. Then we're home free.”

  The expression “home” struck him with bitter force as he thought about the burning lodge.

  “But we'll be shot if we show ourselves and try to run to the woods,” Jamie said.

  “Unless we have a distraction.”

  Behind him, another car window burst apart, glass flying, too many bullets having struck it.

  “What kind of distraction?”

  “Give me a gun,” William said, his catatonia broken.

  “What?”

  “Give me a gun. Bastards. Sons of bitches. Give me a gun. I'll shoot them until their whore mothers won't recognize them.”

  “Hold that thought, William. Glad to have you back with us.”

  Cavanaugh squirmed to the top of the bank and risked showing himself to what he assumed was now only one gunman on the western side of the canyon. But he didn't face the west. Instead, he peered toward the burning lodge. He studied a shed behind the building. A large white propane tank was next to it. But a non-incendiary bullet wouldn't detonate it.

  “Jamie.”

  “What?”

  “Cover your ears. Make sure William and Mrs. Patterson cover theirs.”

  He sighted his rifle toward the burning lodge, toward the fiery back porch, toward a barbecue grill on the porch. The grill had a small white propane tank. When he shot a hole in it, the flames caused the gas in the tank to explode, the porch heaving, its roof flying. Burning chunks arced toward the shed.

  Immediately, Cavanaugh swung his aim toward the huge white tank behind the lodge, shot a hole into it, and tumbled down the slope, pressing his hands to his ears.

  But nothing happened.

  I didn't time it right. All I did was blow a hole in the tank. Now the gas is escaping, but if the fire doesn't reach it—

  The ground shook. Even with his hands over his ears, the roar of the explosion stunned him. A shockwave jolted him, knocking him even closer to the ground. As the canyon walls captured the roar and thrust it back in a massive echo, Cavanaugh yelled, “Now! Run to the trees!”

  He grabbed William, and thrust him up the side of the streambed. Jamie and Mrs. Patterson ran next to him, chunks of smoking metal and burning wood thudding around them.

  “Faster!” Cavanaugh yelled, ignoring something hot that fell on his left arm.

  Any moment, he expected a bullet to knock him flat. But more chunks of metal and burning wood kept falling, and he kept charging, and at once, yet another explosion shook the canyon, its shockwave so powerful that it threw Cavanaugh and William onto their chests.

  “Jamie?” Cavanaugh's ears rang. “Mrs. Patterson?”

  “We're okay! What was that?”

  “I think it was the helicopter!”

  Cavanaugh tugged William to his feet and pushed him, urging him to run. Cavanaugh's body armor made him feel suffocated. Another hot object struck him, this time on his neck, but all he cared about was the forest looming before him as he and William burst through undergrowth into the trees. He yanked William down with him and waited tensely for Jamie and Mrs. Patterson to crash through bushes and dive behind trees, landing next to him.

  Only then did bullets from the opposite side of the canyon wallop into the woods. Too late, Cavanaugh thought in triumph.

  The shots faltered, ending.

  “They know the explosions can probably be heard all the way to Jackson,” Cavanaugh said. “The smoke's above the canyon now. Police and emergency crews will be coming. The shooters need to get out of here.”

  He let thirty seconds elapse and decided it was safe to peer between trees. What he saw made him inhale sharply. The exploding propane tank had indeed caused the helicopter to explode. The combined force had flattened the lodge. Burning timbers were everywhere, igniting the grass.

  25

  “You prick!” the spotter yelled. “You swore you could do this!”

  “How was I to know the target would—”

  With a look of contempt, the spotter drew a handgun and shot his companion four times in the face. Then he took out his knife and cut off the sniper's fingertips.

  “That's what I know,” he said.

  The act wasn't impulsive. It wasn't motivated by anger. The truth was, he'd been ready to kill the man, whether the attack was successful or not. The sniper had exemplary professional habits before an assignment, first-rate preparation, but afterward, he drank and talked too much. His usefulness had come to an end. In fact, the execution was the only thing about this assignment that felt good.

  “Abort,” he shouted into his walkie-talkie. “Abort. Abort. Abort.”

  PART TWO:

  THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO FAIRBAIRN

  1

  “Those last four shots are too low-pitched to be from a rifle,” Jamie said, puzzled.

  Cavanaugh nodded. “Sounds like they came from the ridge where the sniper was. But we're too far away for anybody to expect to hit us with a pistol from there. It doesn't make sense.”

  Jamie studied their surroundings. “We need better cover.”

  “Right. For all we know, there's still at least one shooter on this side of the canyon. Keep down,” he told William and Mrs. Patterson. “Move back.”

  Deeper into the woods, they found a depression circled by trees and squirmed into it.

  “Mrs. Patterson, face this way,” Jamie said, watching the elderly woman take her small Ladysmith revolver from her apron. “Aim toward the trees.”

  “William, you face this way.” Cavanaugh unholstered his pistol and gave it to the attorney. “Keep it pointed away from us. Don't pull the trigger unless I tell you.”

  Cavanaugh and Jamie sank low, every quadrant occupied.

  “When I get out of this—” Emotion made William's voice thick. “—I'm going to take shooting lessons. Karate lessons. Every damned lesson I can find. I won't feel helpless like this again.”

  “I'll be glad to teach you,” Cavanaugh said, trying to distract William from his fear. “Especially about Fairbairn.”

  “Fairbairn? Who's he?”

  “But here's your first lesson. Stop talking. We need to be q
uiet so we can listen if someone's sneaking up on us.”

  “Oh.” William's face turned red with embarrassment. “Yes.”

  They waited and watched the forest. Cavanaugh's need to protect helped distract him from his rage. He wanted to get his hands on whoever had ordered the attack, to slam that person's head against a rock until bone cracked and—

  No. Fantasies about revenge were a liability. Anger got in the way of clear thinking.

  Concentrate on keeping everybody alive.

  A minute passed. Cavanaugh's ears continued to ring because of the explosions and the shots he'd fired. He worked to filter out that sound, to listen beyond it, trying to detect any noise in the forest.

  Ten minutes. Fifteen.

  Sweat oozed from under his body armor. His back hurt from the force of the bullet that the armor had stopped. As he aimed toward the trees, his heart thumped against the ground.

  There! A branch snapped deep in the trees. Cavanaugh steadied his rifle in that direction. Another branch snapped, and now Cavanaugh's finger slid onto the trigger.

  He relaxed as an elk poked its head from the underbrush, its antlers blending with the dead branches of a tree behind it.

  Maybe this is going to be all right, he thought. The elk wouldn't be wandering in this direction if somebody with a rifle is out there, creeping toward us.

  Then another elk appeared, and Cavanaugh became more hopeful.

  At once, the animals bolted, their hind legs kicking as they crashed through the forest. Somebody is out there. Cavanaugh again touched the trigger. But then he realized what had spooked the elk. Not somebody creeping among the trees.

  A noise. Far away but getting louder. A high-pitched cluster of sirens. The police and the emergency crews were finally coming.

  Cavanaugh studied the forest one more time and murmured to the group, “I think we're going to make it.”

  “Whatever pressure you put on me, I can take,” William said.

  “What?”

  “I went to Harvard law school. Nothing's more brutal than that. I'm holding you to your promise to teach me. And while you're at it, who the hell is Fairbairn?”

 

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