A few of the other bandits guffawed, although quietly. “What’re you doing staking a claim when there’ll be plenty to go around?” one asked.
“That’s what I’m calling dibs for. I want my pick of the best one.”
“No way. We might want to keep some of these around for a while, unlike that last group, and you’re always the worst about breaking your toys. You can have the old biddy next to her.” That caused another outburst of harsh laughter from the bandits.
Shaking slightly with rage he was having trouble controlling at these awful words and the casualness with which they were being spoken, Trev glanced up the slope at where Lewis crouched behind a stump. His cousin was using it for the bipod of his rifle and sighting down his scope at the bandit ambush below. When Lewis noticed Trev looking his way his cousin gave him a doubtful look, still worried about the numbers, but Trev motioned firmly to go ahead.
Then, galvanized by what he’d just heard, Trev raised his own rifle and pointed the crosshairs of the scope dead center on the back of the bandit who’d called dibs. Only taking a moment to calm his shaking hands and steady his aim, he held his breath and squeezed the trigger.
His gun bucked in his hands and the bandit lurched forward. There was no sign of a wound, but somewhere among the folds of his heavy winter coat a small but deadly hole had punched through, possibly into a larger and messier hole on the other side.
Tactically speaking he probably should’ve shot the bandit with the scoped rifle first, but after listening to that exchange he wanted to make sure this guy didn’t walk away. He reset his aim and fired again at the same bandit’s back as he slumped down, then swapped targets to the bandit with the scoped rifle who was just now whirling onto his back behind the log they’d been using as cover. The unkempt man searched desperately for where the shots had come from, but before he could solve the mystery Trev shot him somewhere in the torso, and with no other options he pulled himself over the log to hide behind it.
Up the hill he heard Lewis’s heavier .308 barking as his cousin took his own shots, and down below the bandit with a shotgun went down gurgling and clutching his throat. Either a lucky shot or the scope was aiming high.
That was a good start, but unfortunately from there things went south. The remaining bandits also managed to get behind the cover of the log, one grabbing the shotgun from his fallen partner in crime as he fled. Two of the bandits, the ones without guns, apparently lost stomach for a fight against armed enemies hidden in the trees above. They unexpectedly broke free of the log, leaving their packs and weapons behind as they dashed wildly down the slope southwards to take them away from the fighting and the refugees both.
That left three more, maybe only two if the bandit with the scoped rifle had survived his shot, but although Trev could hear them shouting he didn’t see any targets as he whipped his scope back and forth. Then he heard some shots that weren’t coming from his rifle or his cousin’s, and to his horror he heard a high pitched whine and saw a white streak appear on the uprooted log directly in front of his face where a bullet had grazed it.
He ducked behind cover, heart thumping. He’d only been looking at the top of the log, but maybe there was a hollow below it and the bandit with the scoped rifle was shooting at them from there? Or maybe he hadn’t been looking far enough to either side and someone had shot at him from one of the ends.
Either way he couldn’t just sit here hoping for Lewis to bail him out or they were both dead. They’d taken out two bandits, maybe three.
Trev took a deep breath, then burst from cover and sprinted back the way he’d come, staying behind some of the largest trees as cover. He heard more gunshots and flinched with every sharp crack, but he didn’t get hit or see any sign of bullets coming near him, let alone hitting him. Did that mean they were going for Lewis?
He ducked back behind the nearest tree and leaned out enough to check with his scope. From this position he was a bit higher up and had a better angle on the log, although he was also farther away. Just as he’d guessed he saw legs and the lower part of a torso sticking out from beneath the log, as if someone was beneath it shooting through a hole. He could see a bloody stain on his lower back and guessed this was the bandit with the scoped rifle.
He aimed as high up the torso as he could, putting his crosshair’s on the man’s spine, and taking as much time as he dared he worked to line up the shot perfectly and remain motionless as he squeezed the trigger.
A high-pitched scream tore the air and the man rolled out of cover, rifle tumbling from his hands as he writhed and tried to clutch at his back. He was kicking his legs so Trev must have missed the spine, but it still looked like a serious wound. He took aim and put another bullet in the man’s upper torso, and as the man went still he had to content himself that three wounds were enough to take him out of the fight.
As he was searching for another target he heard the differently pitched crack of the shotgun, and in the nightmarish seconds that followed he heard Lewis yell in pain.
The sound was almost enough to make him freeze, but Trev grit his teeth in determination and kept searching, finding another bandit just in time for the man to point the rifle without a scope, some sort of bolt action, his way. Trev ducked behind the tree as the shot rang out. Then, praying that the man was slow with the bolt, he leaned back out and took aim. He saw that the man had dropped the rifle and was lifting that big .44, but he could only hope that at this distance through so many trees a pistol shot would take longer to line up than his scope.
He took aim for the man’s torso, watching the revolver’s barrel shift over to point what seemed directly at him, and had to force himself not to yank the trigger and instead squeeze it calmly.
His shot connected and the man dropped, thrashing in a way that suggested he wasn’t going to get back up again as his revolver flew from his hand. Trev still lined up another shot just to be safe, after which the man went still. Then he ducked back behind cover, even though he didn’t hear any more gunshots, and went so far as to bolt to another source of cover and lean out from it to check the log.
There was no sign of the shotgun and Trev had no idea who’d been shooting it, but with some searching he was able to find five men down. Combined with the two who had fled that accounted for everyone. Trev took a moment to make sure they were all motionless, and as he did he worked to slow his frantic breathing and settle his nerves.
The last few minutes had felt like a nightmare, half of it he barely remembered and half of it stuck in his mind with merciless clarity. He wasn’t quite sure how he’d gotten from behind the uprooted tree to the second tree he’d taken cover behind, but he could still see the way that last rifleman had writhed on the ground after he’d shot him.
Even after satisfying himself that none of the bandits were moving he still did his best to stay out of sight as he bolted for the stump Lewis had taken cover behind. As he went he called softly, ignoring the danger of giving enemies a way to find his location, and to his vast relief he heard his cousin call back equally softly.
He rounded the stump, already dropping to his knees beside where Lewis slumped. But as he landed next to his cousin he froze, horrified by the sight of blood-smeared snow as Lewis clutched his upper left leg with both hands and blood oozed around his fingers.
“Did you get them?” Lewis demanded, somehow focused on the important thing in spite of his condition. “Are they all down?”
Trev shook his head. “Two bolted like rabbits. Neither one of them was carrying a weapon, though, so they shouldn’t be a threat. The others I checked after the shooting stopped and none of them were moving.”