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Prey (Linda Howard) Page 32
Author: Linda Howard, Abby Crayden

Every one of her instincts shrieked at her not to move, not to attract its attention, but she needed that rifle. To get it, she’d have to crawl fifteen feet closer to the bear, and pray it didn’t see her. Slowly, so slowly, she lifted her right hand from the mud and moved it forward. Next was her left knee. Then her left hand, still clutching the flashlight. Right knee. Repeat the process. Slowly, slowly, forcing herself to drag in deep, controlled breaths through her mouth, then silently letting the air ease out of her, not putting any force behind it. If she didn’t make any noise, maybe the bear wouldn’t notice her.

Her hand touched the stock of the rifle. She froze for a moment, making certain the bear was still preoccupied. The almost constant flashes of lightning showed it in a kind of freeze-frame effect as it bit into Davis’s stomach and slung him around with a toss of its powerful head, tearing flesh free and sending his body tumbling. Like a cat with a new toy, the huge bear pounced on the dead man, completely oblivious to the storm crashing around them.

The bear’s back was to her. Now. Angie pulled the rifle toward her. The mud sucked at it, resisted her efforts to lift it. Feverishly, her hands shaking, she tried to wipe the mud away but reality slapped her in the face: She couldn’t fire this rifle until it had been cleaned. The mechanism was too caked with mud.

She almost whimpered, almost collapsed in the mud in despair. Only the thought of the bear doing to her what it was now doing to Davis kept her from dissolving into an unending wail. Silent. She had to be silent.

Just as slowly, deliberately, as she had crawled forward, she now repeated the process in reverse, dragging the rifle with her. She didn’t stop until there were trees between her and the bear, until the blasts of lightning no longer revealed the gruesome scene. Only then did she stand, clinging to a tree trunk and hauling herself up. Her chest heaved with silent sobs, sobs she didn’t dare give voice to.

Think! she commanded herself. She had to think, or she would die. She couldn’t panic. These next few minutes might well determine whether she lived or died, so she’d better make some damn good decisions.

She couldn’t stay here. Even minus the bear, there was Chad. She’d seen him kill a man; he’d already tried to kill her. The bear might continue on its way, but Chad would come back. He’d have to.

That meant she had to leave. She had to walk off this mountain, in the night, in one of the worst storms she’d ever seen. She might get struck by lightning, but she’d rather that happen than let the bear get her. And that lily-livered little bastard Chad had taken all the horses, probably hoping the bear would save him the trouble of taking care of her. By the time the bear got through with Davis, would it be possible to tell he’d died from a gunshot wound, rather than being eaten? Would there even be an investigation, or would the situation be so self-evident that it would be written off as a bear attack, a second one at that. And if she were the third victim … the rogue bear would be shot, and a murderer would walk free.

She was damned if she’d let that happen.

She needed things from her tent. Her instinct said to run, and run like hell. Her brain said she needed food and water, she needed a way to keep warm, she needed a weapon that actually worked. All of those things were in her tent.

Staying in the trees as much as possible, feeling her way between flashes of lightning and trying to stand motionless whenever the sky lit up, she made her way to the tent. She was completely drenched, her sweatpants soaking up water like a sponge and hanging heavy on her, threatening to slide down her hips. Her hair was plastered against her head, and she could almost feel her body heat leaching away. By the time she ducked into the tent, she was shaking so hard there was no way she could have stood motionless, so it was a damn good thing bears didn’t have great eyesight.

Okay, what did she need? Her saddle bag. She’d have to have dry clothes, and the saddlebag would keep them dry. Her slicker. Her clothes couldn’t get any wetter, but the slicker would help keep her body heat in, and if she found a place to shelter it would keep the rain off her. The pistol. It might not stop a bear, but it would damn sure stop Chad Krugman, and it would make the bear take notice.

What next? Food. She grabbed some protein bars, shoved them into the saddlebag. Ditto a bottle of water. One bottle wasn’t much, but water was heavy, and she didn’t want to weigh herself down. The flashlight.

She thought of quickly stripping off her soaked sweatpants and replacing them with jeans, but soaked jeans wouldn’t be any better. She hurriedly put some clothes into the saddlebags, added some extra boxes of ammo because regardless of weight extra ammo was always a good thing, then buckled the straps. She pulled her slicker on over her wet coat, slid her muddy rifle into the scabbard and slung it over her shoulder.

Then she opened the tent flap, and eased into the night.

She still didn’t run. She had to put distance between herself and the bear, between herself and Chad, and the best way to do that was carefully. She couldn’t turn on the flashlight, so she placed each step with care.

She couldn’t even stop to think. Both of the killers she fled fell into the “what the hell?” category, but she didn’t have the luxury of analyzing why things had happened, she simply had to get the hell away from there. She had to focus on keeping her footing, on staying downwind of the bear, on not getting hit on the head by a falling tree limb or struck by lightning. She had enough to think about. She’d worry about “why” later.

Lattimore’s place was a long way away, and once Chad discovered she wasn’t here in the camp, he’d have to know exactly where she was heading. All she could do was keep moving, away from the carnage, away from what she’d seen. Caution was more important than speed … but, damn, she could use some more speed. The urge to run beckoned her, and still she resisted. She couldn’t run for hours, and she sure as hell didn’t need to try running in the dark, on slippery mud.

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