The Hounds and the Fury
Page 25
The otters, peeking out from under the big roots in the bank, listened as the hounds chimed in after Dasher.
They watched the whole pack go down their slide and hit the water, swimming across the frothy creek in one body.
"Bet they've made the slide bigger and slicker. " Bruce couldn't wait to return to his game.
Darby, at the rear of the pack, heard Bruce's voice and turned to see the otters looking at him. "You’re funny-looking, "the young hound blurted out.
"Not as funny as you are, "Lisa smartly replied as Shaker on Gunpowder jumped off the bank six feet away from the slide, where the grade was better for a horse.
The pack in full cry flew through the flatland on the other side of the creek and climbed up the gentle rise to higher ground to run southwards, wind at their rear, scent blowing away from them.
Earl knew enough to use the wind, but scent was strong and hounds were closing.
He kept on straight through the woods, but the pine needles, under snow, couldn't help dissipate his scent. Hounds moved faster than he thought they could.
Nothing looked promising, so he picked up the pace, his brush now carried straight out. A rotted log ahead provided a break in his scent. He ran inside, straight through to the other end. He kept going.
A pocket meadow needed to be crossed quickly before he could escape into denser woods on the far side. He knew a few dens in there that could be used. If someone was in them, too bad. They'd be crowded for a time.
Snow lay eight inches in parts on the pocket meadow. He didn't relish going across. At the last minute Earl skirted back into the woods, heading northeast, at a right angle to his former line of scent.
Old deer bones protruded from the snow. He ran into the middle of them, men sped away, turning again toward the meadow.
Hounds checked briefly at the bones.
Sister picked her spot and her moment.
"Jason, come up here beside me for a minute."
He rode next to her, then stopped. "This corpse helped our fox, the reverse of Iffy's corpse, which points her finger at you."
Jason shrugged, laughing. "Sister, you have a good imagination."
Hounds sped away. Sister followed. Jason fell in behind. Had she gotten it wrong?
This time Earl did go into the meadow, and it was his bad luck to founder in a deep spot that lay deceptively flat on the meadow. Struggling to extricate himself, he heard hounds draw closer, much too close. He could see them bursting into the meadow, clouds of snow churning up in front of their forelegs.
He finally clawed out of the hole, but the going was deep.
Athena and Bitsy flew over him now.
Athena saw the boar, all four hundred and forty pounds of him, yellow tusks long and sharp, arrive in the little meadow at a trot in the opposite direction.
"Go right!" Athena called down.
Earl, running for his life, pounded through the snow as the huge boar trotted straight at him.
"Duck around him. He'll swing his head in that direction. Make a wide circle, then run like hell, Earl!" Athena commanded.
Shaker, up behind his hounds, saw the danger and blew three long notes to call hounds back, but not before half the pack was face-to-face with one ugly brute.
The boar lowered his head. He stopped. He paid no attention to Earl, who circled him, reaching the woods and freedom.
"Go back!" Ardent boomed, barely managing to pull back the pack.
Shaker, blowing his hounds to him, galloped away from the boar, pulling hounds back into the woods from whence they had come but far to the right of the field, who did not know what lay ahead. The field did, however, pull up at woods' edge.
Jason rode up to Sister, already in the meadow, before she could turn to follow Shaker. He wedged his knee under hers, throwing her over the saddle. Aztec trembled in front of the boar, then turned, racing back through the field. He was only six, but even a seasoned horse would be scared once it got a whiff. Horses were blowing up behind Aztec.
Jason then bellowed, "Reverse."
The field, not able to see over the meadow's rise, obediently turned in the woods.
The only person who had a clear view of what had happened was Betty, on the right at the edge of the woods.
Aztec stopped at the rear of first flight. Walter reached over and grabbed his reins.
Tedi and Edward turned, but Edward stopped turning back.
"Jason passed us—but where's Sister?"
They waited a moment, their horses becoming more restive.
Betty bolted out of the woods toward Sister.
Luckily, Sister had fallen on her right side. Her .38 rested in a holster on her left side under her jacket.
Slipping in the snow, she tore open her coat, black horn buttons popping off, to reach for the gun as the boar charged. No time.
"Roll, then run!" Athena directed, hoping the human might understand.
Betty, hurtling toward the boar, said to Magellan, "We might get hurt, but we have to do this."
"I will, " the thoroughbred replied, all heart.
The boar turned his big head for a moment upon hearing Magellan.
Sister had rolled. Then she ran as fast as she could. The snow slowed her.
She turned while Betty occupied the brute by circling him. Betty'd drawn her gun. Sister at last drew hers.
Betty, cool, didn't fire. "Get to the woods, Janie. I'll pick you up there," she hollered.
"No. What if you fall?"
"Dammit!" Betty rode in the opposite direction of Sister, the boar charging after her. Then she wheeled and spurred Magellan. The horse flew past the beast, who though large had quick reflexes. Betty reached Sister, who stuck her gun back in the holster.
Slowing Magellan, Betty leaned down, her left arm straight.
Sister grabbed Betty's arm, ran alongside Magellan for two steps, gained speed, and swung up.
Thank God, Betty was strong. She held Sister's weight as the older woman flung her right leg over Magellan's hindquarters. Mounted, the two galloped into the woods. Tedi and Edward followed on seeing them.
Walter was moving forward with Aztec. He had no idea what was up ahead, since Jason hadn't told anyone. Most had turned to follow Jason, thinking he was temporary field master.
The boar had no desire to chase the horse or the people. His mission was to find the female whose perfume had reached him a half hour ago.
Sister, not dismounting, slid from Magellan to Aztec, who had calmed down next to Clemson, Walter's bombproof older hunter.
"Where's the field?"
"I don't know," Walter said.
'Jesus!" Sister's face reddened. "Listen!"
Hearing Shaker's horn, Sister said, "Tedi, kick on. Edward, too. Take the field. Don't listen to Jason."
Walter turned to the horn, but he waited a moment for Sister and Betty.
Sister reached over to Betty. "It's not over."
"I know."
With that, both women left Walter in the lurch. Angry, he squeezed Clemson to catch up, but their horses were younger and faster, so he followed Tedi and Edward, also moving fast.
Sister reached the hilltoppers first as Betty pulled away to go to Shaker, who didn't know anything had happened.
"Ben, he got away," Sister said, voice low.
Ben reached into his pocket and plucked out his cell phone to call the deputies on the road.
"Bobby, you have one hell of a wife." Sister then blew by the rest of them, calling out, "Tedi and Edward will lead you. They're coming up behind. Wait for them."
She rode up to Shaker and filled him in. Betty had not done so, feeling it was more important to take her position at ten o'clock from the hounds. She was right in this, as there was nothing any of them could do about Jason at the moment.
"Let's pick them up. He'll kill anyone or anything in his way, and we don't know where he is." Sister told her huntsman, "Hold hounds for a moment."
Trudy sat on her haunches. "What was that ugly t
hing?"
"Big old fat wild pig, that's what, "Asa informed her. "He would have cut us up like flank steak. "
"Quicker than you think, those pigs, "Cora commented.
"How come we haven't smelled them before now?" Diddy asked a good question.
"They keep to themselves except during breeding season. "Ardent hated boar.
"And they 're in the mountains. Paradise runs into all that billy-goat land we hunted last week. You won't find them at Tattenhall Station or Tedi or Edward's." Diana studied game just as Sister and Shaker did.
"Well, they'll come down if food is scarce. They'll trot fifty miles and not think a thing of it. "Ardent thought it odd that a wild pig will hurry along to a foraging spot, then, when close, slow way down.
"Hope I don't see another one. " Trinity had been scared out of her wits.
"Gather round." Sister waited as the field made a semicircle around her. "Ben, do I have permission to announce our suspicions, which I believe are now confirmed? Everyone's safety is at stake."
'Yes."
The sheriffs one-word answer riveted everyone's attention.
"We believe that Dr. Jason Woods killed Iphigenia Demetrios." She waited while that sunk in. "He is armed, extremely dangerous, and highly intelligent. I want everyone to stick together on the ride back. In those places where it's tight and you go single file, look to the person in front, then back. If anyone falls out of your sight line, holler. Loud."
"Why won't he just ride back to his trailer and take off?" Henry Xavier asked.
"Since he now knows that we know, he'll assume I have officers at the trailers and on the crossroads in every direction. He's going to keep clear," Ben replied. "I will ride tail for the hill-toppers. I'll be the last person in the line. I think we'd better move along."
"Shaker ..." Sister meant to tell him to move on. Then she suddenly exclaimed, "Where's Sybil?"
"Still on the left, I hope," Shaker, worried, replied.
"Did you blow her in?" Sister asked crossly.
"Of course I did."
"I'm sorry, Shaker. I know better. I'm on edge."
"If I'd nearly been gored by a boar, I'd be on edge, too, and we don't know where that bastard is—the human, I mean." Shaker removed his cap to wipe his brow, the cold air sharp on his sweating head.
"Blow again."
Shaker put the brass horn to his lips and blew the notes that sounded like "Whipper-in," two medium notes followed by one shorter one.
Nothing.
"We need to move on, Sister," Ben firmly told her.
"I can't leave her there, Ben." Sister's voice was low, soft.
Shaker spoke up. "I'm going with you."
Tedi and Edward came to them, realizing their daughter had not come back to the horn. Walter also rode up.
"Tedi, you stay with the field. I'll go," Edward gently ordered his wife.
"No. This is my fault. He was quicker and more ruthless than I thought. I should have known better."
"He was lucky," Shaker said.
"Yes, but smart. He used the boar." Sister respected her foe.
She had underestimated him and desperately prayed that Sybil wouldn't pay for it.
"I'm going. I'm a doctor." Walter spoke firmly. "Edward, please help with the field in case someone makes a mistake."
"What if he comes back to snag a hostage?" Betty had ridden in, since hounds rested.
"Ben's with them." Edward wanted to go.
"We'll have too many people. We can't risk him shooting all of you. You, too, Shaker."
"I'm not letting you go!" Shaker noticed Gray riding toward them.
"We can't risk the pack because I was stupid. He'll shoot my hounds. No. You, Betty, go back. Edward, get Gray, and get him turned around before he knows what's happening. Go back. I can outfox this son-of-a-bitch."
"I'm going with you." Walter, accustomed to command when necessary, faced her.
"I'm an old woman. If I die, so what? Walter, you're young. Go back with the others."
As the others turned, Shaker called the pack, and Betty floated out to the side.
Walter said, "I'm going."
"I'll see you back at the trailer, Betty. I owe you." Sister realized that Walter would not be dissuaded.
Betty, deeply distressed, fought back the tears and nodded.
"Walter, unbutton your coat. You're wearing a shoulder harness. Make sure you can get to your gun fast."
He did as he was told. They cantered to where the riders were pulled up and circled until they found Jason's tracks.
"I'm worried sick," Walter confessed as they followed the tracks.
Sister replied, "With good reason. This is my fault."
Before he could protest that it could have happened to anyone, she picked up the pace.
The deer paths were wide. She slowed at one point where fox dens were near a thread of a creek.
She noticed a glob of frozen blood, footprints.
She pushed Aztec from a canter into a gallop, pointing at the blood with her crop.
Walter looked down as he passed. A grim determination filled him. Sister had been caught off guard. He'd been duped by a colleague. He wanted to strangle Jason for that as well as for the harm the other doctor had done.
Jason, moving south toward Chapel Cross, slowed after a half-mile gallop. A sense of direction wasn't his strong point, so he carried a small global positioning device, which he checked from time to time.
He knew the closer he got to Chapel Cross the more wary he needed to be. There'd be cops everywhere, but he thought he could elude them by dismounting and smacking Kilowatt on his hindquarters. That might divert them long enough for him to cross the road. Once on the other side of Chapel Cross he knew he could steal a car or truck from a farm as the county became more populated.
He'd change cars along the way. Arrogant, he felt he was smarter than everyone. He believed he could lay low, angling toward the Canadian border. He had his passport with him, a habit he'd learned when overseas. He also had a forged Belgian passport. He thought ahead. In time he figured he'd fly out of Canada. The money was safe in a bank in Zurich.
Jason hadn't thought it would reach this point, but he always had backup plans. Iffy had screwed up the original plan by panicking and, worse, insisting they run away together. She'd paid for it.
He walked along, not realizing that Sybil shadowed him a quarter mile behind. She could have shot his horse when he galloped past her as she sat on a ridge.
She couldn't do it. She couldn't kill a beautiful animal who happened to have a criminal on his back. She knew she was wrong in terms of human justice, but she felt in her heart that she was right.
She knew Jason wasn't a country boy, smart though he was. Tracking him would be easy enough. If she had a chance for a clear shot at him, she'd move up and fire. Her advantage lay in surprise.
The thick undergrowth forced them both to stick to deer trails. She stopped abruptly as Bombardier snorted when a deer approached downwind, their usual approach when their curiosity was aroused.
The doe stopped, looked at the horse, then bolted into the brush.
She had heard Shaker blowing for her. She wondered how Jason had gotten away. She told herself that one great thing about being a whipper-in was you became resourceful.
A soft flutter of wings startled her. She looked up to see, right over her head, Athena, low, followed by Bitsy, flying silently as only owls can do. Bombardier didn't flick an ear. The owls were so close that the variations in feather colors showed clearly.
Jason, senses straining, also did not hear the owls, who gained altitude while staying behind him. The thick forest gave way to a rolling hay field. The only route to Chapel Cross was over that field. Fortunately, it was far off a state road—but still, how long before the helicopters would be looking?
Jason figured Ben had called in all the resources he had, but it would take the helicopter team at least forty-five minutes to reach him because the small airp
ort was thirty-five miles away, and the team would need to suit up, mount up, then fly to Paradise.
He had a comfortable window of time to reach Chapel Cross. Even in his black frock coat he'd stand out crossing the white hay field, but if he skirted the edges he'd tack another fifteen minutes onto the ride.
He pushed his horse into a trot and risked it.