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Hunter threw the satchel as he exploded from the tunnel and violently grabbed Bobbi Jo around the waist.

"Everybody gel clear!" he screamed.

Holding her tight in his arms, Hunter leaped far to the side, carrying her. She screamed as they landed on a downward slope, and he kept them rolling, gaining distance.

The rest had moved as one; no questions.

An eruption of flame like a dragon's wrath thundered from the entrance. The blast flattened them to the ground grinding and rumbling, punishing.

Smoke, trembling… echoes.

The light was gone — the spectacular red-orange and crimson that Hunter had seen through closed eyes — to gray silence, a ringing stillness in deafened, superheated air. Clouds of black rolled from the tunnel.

Bobbi Jo, still holding her sniper rifle, didn't move. Suddenly concerned, Hunter bent over her, gently removing a lock of hair from her face. His voice was soft. "Hey…"

Her lips trembled. "Jesus," she whispered. "Jesus…"

Hunter smiled slowly, hand on her shoulder, before he looked over the slope of the bank, squinting into the burning smoke. The professor was far to the side, safe, and Takakura was lying atop him, covering the old man's body with his own. Wilkenson was on his back, clearly stunned, not recovering.

But Taylor was already on his feet, peering cautiously into the crevice, shotgun ready. Then he saw Hunter's concentrated frown and shook his head: nothing there.

Nodding, Hunter lifted Bobbi Jo to her knees and she raised a hand, slowly rubbing her eyes. "Oh…man," she whispered, shaking her head. "That was… way intense. I should have been a plumber… or something."

Hunter laughed lightly. "Yeah. Or something."

Looking at the roiling blue-black cleft in the cliff, she added, "Did we get it?"

Hunter's smiled faded slowly. "I don't know. Would have been hard to survive. Maybe."

"Yeah?" She struggled to her feet and walked to the top of the slope, letting the Barrett hang on the sling. She stared into the passage a moment. "How could it have survived that?"

"I don't know," Hunter answered dully, glancing at Takakura, who now knelt like a boxer waiting out a count. The Japanese shook his head angrily.

Hunter continued, "It couldn't have escaped the explosion. It was too close. Almost on top of it. But it might heal up faster than we expect. It's already healed up from what we did to it last night. I could tell that much when I saw it."

"How close did you get to it?" Taylor asked.

"Too close." Hunter picked up his Bowie from where it had fallen, wiped the blade on his grime-smeared pants. He knew they needed to move soon. For the moment, he didn't feel his wounds much — a gift of the high levels of adrenaline coursing through him. Hunter knew this pain block was part of an involuntary survival mechanism and he couldn't consciously turn it on any more than he could shut it down. He also knew it wouldn't last more than an hour or two before he would be hobbling in agony. They had to get to the Blackhawk, and quickly.

"Can the professor be moved?" he asked Takakura.

"Hai."

The stoic Japanese had gained his feet, sword held hard in his strong right hand. Then, casting a single glance at the cleft, he sheathed the awesome weapon without looking. "We have no choice. He will die if he does not receive medical attention."

Time to move.

Hunter lifted one end of the stretcher and Takakura the other, and with Taylor at point, they began moving forward. Bobbi Jo and Wilkenson were rear guard as they began their last walk through soundless black hills inhabited by the most terrible of all nightmares and fears.

He crawled, twisting and writhing on rotten leaves, coughing, gasping, dazed and breathless. He rolled down a short slope, found himself up against rock and water, his mind alive with fire and pain.

He remembered crawling on cold dirt, rising, falling, unable to cease moving because of the pain. He was blinded and he stumbled, roaring and striking in rage until he fell again, not to rise.

Now he lay in shadow, staring up without seeing until he remembered his strength. And with memory his hands closed, pain lancing his body as the claws touched boiled flesh. He screamed, and screamed again, twisting his head in rage and frustration before rolling to a knee and stumbling on, unable to remember…what?

As the hours passed he sensed a lessening of the pain, as he had vaguely expected, and as he felt the lessening he remembered more and more, but his strength was insufficient. He stumbled over a root and rolled down the hill where he now lay, breathing heavily.

His deep-born animal mind told him to rest, to drink, to wait, and, with dark, to kill and eat and heal. So he lay silent, letting his body do what it was so magnificently designed to do. And within hours, he knew, he could rise to feast again, restoring his strength.

Then he would go back, and he would kill them.

He would kill them all.

* * *

It was ridiculously easy to enter the professor's town house. Chaney walked through it, impressed by the rich mahogany desk and bookshelves in the den, the living room's light-brown leather couches.

The kitchen and dining room were full of black-lacquered hardwood and stainless steel. Chaney thought that the professor may have spent too much time in the lab.

He found an extensive amount of health food, herbs, vitamins and a full array of prescription medicines on the kitchen shelves and in the refrigerator. He moved to the bedroom.

It was even more impressive than the den, with a huge oak four-poster bed covered with a dark blue spread. He walked over to the bed, opened a drawer in the nightstand. He found a book on nutrition, a flashlight and a gun.

Brow rising slightly, he picked it up; a Smith and Wesson .38-caliber revolver with a four-inch barrel. With his gloved hands Chaney opened the cylinder, found six hollow-point rounds. He put the gun back and looked around again. Then he searched the closet, found a number of dark suits, blue, black or gray. All expensively tailored.

In a corner of the closet he found some mountaineering gear. Well-used crampons, an ice ax, expensive Gore-Tex jackets, masks, a helmet, gloves, pants, boots — enough gear for a serious expedition in the Arctic.

Moving into the den again, he examined the bookshelves. He searched by sections: philosophy, classical literature, modern literature, history separated by epoch, anthropology, archaeology, a large selection of medical journals, catalogued indexes of medical periodicals, a smaller section comprising medical and foreign language dictionaries, and finally reference manuals and biographies.

Chaney perused the wall and occasionally opened a book to glance through it, but despite the range of interest apparent here, he found nothing on biological warfare, military research or its history. He was about to walk away when something caught his eye.

He saw the slightest sliver of yellow protruding from a magazine in a binder. He removed it from the shelf: North American Anthropology, June 1975.

Chaney opened it to the yellow bookmark and studied the pictures first. They revealed a creature classified as Homotherium.

The illustration featured a skeleton of this ferocious-looking beast that looked to be equal parts man and saber-toothed tiger. It was standing on hind legs, forelegs reaching down to its knees. Its fangs, incredibly long and deep-set in the skull, were viciously distended. Alongside the skeleton was a fleshed-out and rather spectacular portrait of what it might have looked like. It seemed exquisitely designed for fighting, for predation.

Chaney was impressed.

That's what guns are for, he mused.

He read the article slowly, wondering if it related to the case. He read the caption beneath the skeletal display: "This body of a Homotherium, one of the rarest of all prehistoric predators, was discovered on Alaska's North Slope in 1974 by an Idaho archaeological team. Remarkably preserved, it was discovered beneath the body of an early relative of Homo sapiens that scientists have so far failed to classify. Experts believe the second set of bones belongs to a distant cousin of Neanderthalis sapiens, which possibly migrated from Siberia to Alaska in 12,000 B.C. across islands in the Bering Strait."