Joe deliberately looked down at the top of his boots. Then slowly back up again.
Nate understood. Joe was going down.
Joe saw the look of recognition in Nate’s face and suddenly buckled his knees. As he dived forward, he bent his head down and set his shoulders for the fall.
There were three nearly simultaneous explosions, and Joe hit the ground so hard he was able to use the force of his body weight to wrench his hands apart.
Behind him, Hinkle’s body was thrown into the river from the impact of a .50 caliber round plowing through his chest and out his back. But his last reaction was to fire both pistols. The one aimed at Joe had hit somewhere in the mud. Nate was hit, and it rolled him off Nemecek.
Joe writhed in the grass and dirt. White spangles exploded in front of his eyes from pain. Although he’d been trying to free his right hand, it was his left that had somehow been wrenched through the steel claw of the cuffs from the fall, breaking bones along the way. The pain in his left hand was sharp and awful and made him gasp for air. His injured hand felt like a boiling needle-filled balloon on the end of his arm.
He wasn’t sure if he blacked out for a moment, but when he opened his eyes he could see, at ground level, John Nemecek crawling through the grass, using his left hand and right leg. Nemecek’s face was a mask of anger and pain.
Joe raised his head slightly. Nemecek was going for the semiautomatic rifle dropped by the man in all black before Nate killed him.
Behind Nemecek, Nate lay on his side, his eyes open. He looked conscious.
Joe grunted and rolled to his hands and knees. His left hand was white and strangely elongated. The slightest pressure on it hurt like nothing Joe could recall. He looked around for a weapon. Hinkle had dropped two somewhere.
But when he looked over his shoulder, Nemecek was a few feet away from the rifle.
With his good ear, Joe heard Nemecek say, “Five shots, Romanowski. I counted.”
There was a dull black glint in the grass, and Joe closed his right hand around the grip of one of the Glocks. He rose up on his knees, swung around, and aimed it at Nemecek as he crawled.
Joe was a notoriously bad shot with a handgun. He qualified annually by the grace of God and a forgiving firearms instructor. He wished he had his shotgun, but he didn’t, and he croaked, “Freeze where you are, Nemecek.” His own voice sounded hollow and tinny to him.
Nemecek paused and looked up with contempt. His shoulder and leg were a bloody mess, and his face was pale and white. He was bleeding out and knew it. And Joe apparently didn’t scare him.
Like a wounded animal, Nemecek grimaced and crawled toward the rifle. As he reached for it, Joe started firing. Every third or fourth shot, it seemed, hit home. The impact rolled Nemecek to the side and when he tried to scramble back to his knees, he’d go down again. Joe didn’t stop squeezing the trigger until the slide kicked back and locked. Fourteen rounds. He’d emptied the magazine. Spent shells littered the ground near his knees.
As Joe lowered the Glock, he saw, to his terror and amazement, that Nemecek was crawling again toward the rifle.
Joe heard someone speak but couldn’t make out the words. He looked over to see Nate standing, bracing himself against the trailer. He was shaky. His empty revolver hung down along his thigh. Joe could see blood on the side of Nate’s coat.
“I said, He’s wearing a vest.”
In response, Joe held up his empty handgun.
The two exchanged looks for a second. Neither, it seemed, was capable of stopping Nemecek before he grasped the rifle.
Then Joe remembered. He tossed the Glock aside and reached down into the front pocket of his Wranglers with his good hand. His fingers closed around the heavy .500 round Nate had left in his mailbox.
“Nate,” Joe said, and tossed the cartridge through the air. Nate reached up and speared it.
Nemecek had made it to the rifle now, and was pulling it toward him with his left hand. He gripped it and swung the muzzle up.
Joe watched as Nate ejected a spent cartridge, fed the fresh one into the wheel, and slammed the cylinder home.
With a single movement and a sweep of Alisha’s black hair, Nate swung the weapon up.
Although the concussion was probably loud, Joe only heard a muffled pop.
Nemecek’s head snapped back, and the rifle fell away.
37
The snow came unexpectedly, as it did in the mountains, but the pale blue behind the storm clouds indicated it wouldn’t sock in, wouldn’t last all day. Large, soft flakes filtered down through the sky, clumping like cotton in the high grass. The snow muted the chirping of the squirrels and threw a hush over the river valley and Camp Five, but Joe didn’t know it. He could barely hear anything.
They sat near the cold fire pit. Nate had carried Haley’s body over to be with them, as if to separate her from the other bodies that littered the campsite. Her head was on his lap, eyes closed, and Nate stroked her hair.
Joe held his left hand by the wrist with his right as if it were a foreign object. It was swelling and looked like he was wearing a heavy glove. He’d drifted in and out of shock and consciousness for the hour since it had ended.
Finally, Nate said, “You should have flown away.”
Joe shrugged. He could not yet wrap his mind around what had happened in the camp. Every time he glanced over at one of the bodies — Hinkle, the two operatives, or Nemecek — he half expected them to come back from the dead and attack. Snow fell on Nemecek’s face and turned pink beneath his head in the pool of black blood.
Nate stroked Haley’s hair and said, “Everybody. Everybody.”
Joe didn’t ask him to explain.
Nate looked up. “Except you.”
“Dumb luck,” Joe said.
“Why didn’t you just kill him outright?” Joe asked after a few minutes. “It would have saved us a lot of trouble.”
Nate continued to run his fingers through Haley’s hair. He quit and gently touched her cheek with the back of his hand.
“I wanted some answers,” Nate said. “Why he did what he did. I wanted to know if he was operating alone or for somebody else. I wanted to know if he felt any guilt, like I have.”
“Did you expect him to confess?”
“I don’t know what I expected. But now I’ll never know. He’ll be a complete enigma to me forever, just like he’s always been.”
Joe didn’t hear the sound of a motor but noted that Nate had. He looked at Nate expectantly.
“They’re coming,” Nate said.
“Helicopter or convoy?”
“Chopper,” Nate said.
The snow had stopped, and the storm clouds had moved to the west. The sky was clear and blue, and the sun lit up the remaining snow that had gathered in the pine branches.
Joe said, “You’re staying around for them?”
“Are you going to stop me if I go?”
Joe thought about it and shook his head.
Nate rubbed his eyes. He said, “I’m tired, Joe. And I’m hit. I can’t just walk away into the mountains.”
“You could take one of those vehicles,” Joe said, nodding toward Nemecek’s crossover and the two white SUVs. “I can’t drive you out of here in my pickup because it’s stuck on top of the mountain.”
Nate smiled at that.
“So what are you going to do?” Joe asked.
Nate took a long intake of breath and expelled it with his eyes closed.
“You’re in a lot of pain,” Joe said, thinking of the shoulder wound in addition to the gunshot.