On her own, it would take her a little over two hours. With Kit in his present state, it could be more like four or five. But they had to make the effort. At least he didn’t seem significantly concussed, which would have put the whole idea out of the question.
She got him to explain the route to her, then went over it again for her own benefit. For the largest part of the trek, they would be more or less level, staying on the contour line above the forestry plantations. According to Kit, there was a rough path little more than a sheep track most of the way.
“OK, let’s do it,” Fiona said, stripping off the wax jacket and helping Kit into it. It would help conserve his body heat, and she suspected she’d soon have no need of the extra warmth. She tucked herself under Kit’s right shoulder and heaved him to his feet. With the stick in his left hand, he slowly started to drag himself along the track. Fiona walked on the heather by the side of the narrow path, her eyes on her feet to avoid loose rocks and treacherous roots. At least the weather was on their side, she thought. In Kit’s condition, a cold wind and even a shower of rain could be fatal. But the sky was more or less clear, the sun shining still, and hardly a breath of wind disturbed the cool air.
The rasp of Kit’s laboured breathing was all she could hear, the weight of his body against her all she could feel, and the low thrum of his anxious fear all she could sense. They wasted no energy on speech, concentrating simply on putting one foot in front of the other.
After half an hour, she called a halt at the first suitable point, a long low escarpment of striated schist a dozen shades of grey against the heather’s brown. She lowered Kit into a sitting position, then sat down beside him. “Five minutes,” she said. “There’s some high-energy bars in your jacket. Can you manage to eat one?”
Kit nodded, too tired for speech. He fumbled a bar out of his pocket, but his numbed fingers still couldn’t manage the unwrapping, so Fiona took it from him and opened it. “You’ll be OK,” she reassured him. “It’s just that nothing’s working properly yet. It’s the shock to the system.”
He ate slowly, munching every mouthful carefully before he swallowed. He offered the bar to Fiona but she shook her head. When he’d finished, she got to her feet. Time to make a move. By her reckoning, they’d covered about a mile, and it wasn’t enough.
Again they plodded on, Fiona taking as much of his weight as she could bear. The ability of the human body to respond to crisis was amazing, she reminded herself. What a fabulous drug adrenaline was. She knew she’d crash and burn when all of this was over, but she also knew that until then, her capacity for endurance would be more than she could have imagined possible.
Another half-hour, another break. She could see he was tiring fast, and knew that there was no way he could manage another four miles of such rough going. If she could get him another mile or so along the way, Fiona decided she would seek out a hiding place where she could leave him. Under her own steam, she could cover the remaining three miles in half an hour to forty minutes if she pushed herself. Help couldn’t be far away then, so near to Lairg. With luck, Caroline would have persuaded Sandy Galloway to mobilize some sort of local response. They could do the rest for her.
She got Kit to his feet and urged him on. The landscape was changing now, the heather hillside giving way to rock. The path had more or less disappeared and they had to pick their way more carefully. The route was still clear, but it was rougher going, with patches of loose scree that threatened to send them flying. After about twenty minutes, Kit said, “I need to stop. I just can’t…”
“No problem.” Fiona looked around for a suitable perch. A few yards ahead there was a pair of flat boulders that would do for a seat. She steered Kit towards them and helped him to settle. His breath was coming fast and shallow and a sheen of sweat glistened on his face. It wasn’t looking good. Fiona took deep breaths and tried to stay calm. They must be close to the halfway point, she thought. Time to start thinking about finding Kit a bolt hole She leaned back against the rock and stared at the hillside ahead of them.
Suddenly, something caught her eye. About half a mile away, maybe seventy feet above them on the hill, what looked like a pipe kept bobbing into sight above the ma chair It dawned on her with appalling clarity that it was the barrel of a gun. Blake was no countryman; he clearly didn’t realize that although he was keeping low, the gun barrel was as obvious as a mastiff in a crowd of dachshunds. “Kit,” she said. “I don’t want to worry you. But I think there’s somebody up there ahead of us. On the hill. Is it likely to be somebody local? Or a hill walker…”
“Where?” he said lethargically.
“I don’t want to point in case it’s Blake. But it’s round about where a reasonably fit man would be if he’d driven back to the main road and started hiking in from this end. Over to the left, maybe seventy feet above us. There’s a shoulder of the ridge behind him. He’s maybe forty or fifty yards to the right of it.”
“I can’t see anything,” he said. His voice was slurring again, Fiona noticed with anxiety.
“I saw what looked like a gun barrel bobbing up and down. Could it be a local?”
“I don’t think so. There’s no reason for them to be up here. There’s nothing to shoot.”
“Fuck,” Fiona breathed, getting a better view. “He’s coming after us. Let’s move on a bit and see what he does.”
Wearily, they dragged themselves to their feet and laboured on to the next place where it was possible to sit down, a stagger of about five minutes.
“Has he moved?” Kit asked.
Fiona angled her head so it looked as if she was staring straight up the mountain. But out of the corner of her eye, she was scanning the area where she had seen the barrel. “I’ve got him,” she breathed. “I can actually see the blur of his face. I don’t think he’s moved.”
“Good,” Kit said. “About five minutes ahead, there’s a sort of crevasse. It’s about four feet wide, but from up there, it just looks like a dark line in the rock. It’s about half a mile before it opens out again. He won’t be able to see us in there. Leave me and go on, you’ll have a head start. It’s not that far to the road, you can get away.”
“And what about you?”
Kit sighed. “There’s no way I’m going to make it out of here. I’m practically on my knees now. I can’t go much further. He doesn’t have to get both of us. Please, Fiona. Leave me.”
She shook her head. “I’m not leaving you, Kit. I can’t. Not after Lesley. Dying would be easier, believe me. But I don’t have any plans to die either. Give me the map.”
Kit pulled the map out of his pocket and she spread it across her knees. “Right. We must be about here?” She pointed.
“No, not quite that far along.” He corrected her, jabbing the map clumsily with his finger.
“There’s a stream runs down across this track,” she said. “How far is that from the end of the defile?”
“A few yards. Maybe a dozen?”
“How deep are the banks?”
“I suppose a couple of feet deep…” His voice began to trail away as his energy ebbed.
Fiona nodded. “So if I can get up the stream bed without him seeing me, I should be able to come up above and behind him. I can jump him. Hit him with a rock or something. Deal with him, anyway.”
“You can’t do that. He’s a big strong bloke,” Kit protested. “And he’s got a gun.”
“Yeah. But I’d put money on my will to live being a damn sight stronger than his. And that, my love, is a professional opinion.”
“You’re crazy. He’ll kill you.”
Fiona put her hand in the pocket of her fleece and took out the craft knife. “I’m not exactly unarmed. And I’m willing to use it. It’s our only chance, Kit. I’m not going to sit here and wait to be killed.”
Kit put his hand over hers. “Be careful.” He frowned at the inadequacy of his words. “I love you, Fiona.”
She leaned into him and kissed his cheek. The cold clamminess of his skin reminded her there wasn’t time to delay. She checked that Blake was still in position. Then she stood up. “Let’s do it.”