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“Which way? I asked.

“Down. Hill. Don’t know.”

“Okay-where’s that EPIRB?”

But he shook his head. The effort cost him as he winced with pain. “Save it,” he whispered. “You might need it for the kids.”

“I need it right now to get you to the hospital,” I said. “I’ll find Carrie, but first-”

“No,” he said. “I’m wearing a vest. I’m not bad hit. Bruise from hell, bullet tore a crease. Can’t breathe so good, chest hurts like a mother. But it’s not serious. Go find Carrie. Save the EPIRB.”

“Let me check you out,” I said. “You’re bleeding pretty good.”

“Like being hit by a truck,” he said. “They’ve got Carrie, man. Get on it.”

He closed his eyes and concentrated on getting his breath. I noted no blood in or around his mouth, so he was probably right-the round hadn’t penetrated.

“Okay,” I said. “I’m on it.” Then I saw Carrie’s nine in the snow by the side of his tent. I made sure it was chambered and gave it to him. “In case they come back.”

He nodded. I knew he wasn’t afraid of the men coming back. A couple of those big dogs, though… He’d been holding his little boot popgun. I took it with me.

I found him a canteen, pulled his sleeping bag over him, and stood up. The shepherds backed away from the shelter, as if afraid they were going to be blamed for something. I wondered if the shooter had thought he’d bagged me instead of a stranger. A man and a woman had been causing the Creighs all kinds of trouble, and there was a camp up on that hill above the lake with a man and a woman visible. Drop the man, take the woman. Clear mountain logic.

I backed into the trees with the dogs, got out the monocular, and spent the next fifteen minutes surveying the opposite shore of the lake and the big rock formation at the right-hand end of it, all the while absorbing what had happened to Mose. I felt like a complete shit-heel. Mose had done his level best to say no to us, and I’d shamed him into getting involved. Now he was down, probably with a cardiac tamponade at least. And Carrie was gone, too. I took another sweep with the spyglass. Nothing had changed. Pristine wilderness. No smoke from a campfire, no tracks or trails.

Tracks? If they took Carrie, they might have left tracks.

I circled the camp and found a second faint trail of boot tracks pointing diagonally across the slope leading down toward the lakeshore. I went back to our shelter and found Carrie’s light jacket. I pressed the shepherds’ faces into it and then gave them the find-it command. Off they went. I made sure my rifle was ready to work and followed the dogs down the hillside, being careful to jink and jive a little to make a long-range shot more difficult. The muttskis were hot on the trail, noses down, tails up, and doing their own zigzag search pattern in pursuit of lingering molecules of scent in the frozen grass with those amazing noses.

Down by the lakeshore there was a final barrier of scraggly pines, where the shepherds had a harder time of it. They seemed to be generally headed for that impressive rock formation, so I began to pay attention to that as we closed in on its base at the end of the lake. From here at the water’s edge, there was no sign of the fabled glass hole. I stayed in the tree line to avoid making an easy target, and trusted the dogs to alert me to anybody or thing lying in wait. The sky above the trees was a deep blue, and the water reflected that color. It was now early afternoon and the sun was strong at four thousand feet, even through the canopy of pine trees. I could feel the sunburn coming on.

When we got to within a few hundred yards of the ship-shaped rock formation, the shepherds lost the trail. They circled and circled, returned to me several times, and then flopped down on the ground. I found a clump of boulders and sat down among them, still trying to make it hard for any long-range shooters. The rocks were warm in the sunlight, and the snow and sleet of last night seemed like a dream. But Mose was wounded up there on the hillside, and Carrie was once again in the clutches of the goddamned Creighs.

I studied the sheer cliffs for several minutes. It seemed to be a different kind of rock from a lot of what I’d seen in the Smokies. I wondered if it was basalt, the weathered remains of an ancient lava plug, in which case the whole lake was a crater. I kept looking for a cave or any other feature that might admit humans, but all I could see was sheer blackish rock, with a lone hawk soaring several hundred feet above it, on the prowl for prey.

There was a crash in the underbrush and, as I took the monocular away from my eye, I caught just a glimpse of a doe, all pumping, tawny motion with a flashing, oversized white tail, blasting its way up the slope, followed immediately by my two shepherds. I whistled for them, but it was too late-instinct had overcome training, and they disappeared up the slope in hot pursuit. All too aware that my eyes had just deserted me, I unlimbered the rifle and looked around. Something had spooked that deer, and it hadn’t been the dogs. Or at least not my dogs.

A moment later, four of Nathan’s dogs appeared out of the underbrush, noses down, intent on the deer’s trail. They stopped and milled around about a hundred feet in front of me, happily unaware that I had them in my rifle sights, and then set off in the same direction my shepherds had gone. I wasn’t sure that was good news until I heard a voice in the woods in front of me. A scruffy-looking and extremely thin man dressed in black coveralls and a tattered Army jacket appeared out of the woods, holding a single dog on a leash. This dog was following the trail of his buddies, and the man was having a tough time restraining him. The pair stopped in the same place the other dogs had stopped while trying to sort out all the scent. The man encouraged the dog to get on with it, and finally it lurched to the left and followed what had to be by now a virtual parade of scent up the hill. Then a second man appeared, holding a shotgun in one hand and a walking stick in the other.

Unlike the first guy, this one was looking around, so he was quick to spot me sighting down the barrel of my rifle at him. He was almost as tall as Nathan and had an enormous black beard that covered his entire lower face. He pulled up short and called the first man, who turned around and was then nearly yanked off his feet by the big dog, which was still intent on getting that deer. For a moment, we formed a tense tableau, the bearded guy standing in midstride, the dog handler wrestling with his anxious beast, and me ready to perforate the both of them with as many. 308 rounds as I could load before they hit the ground.

“Hey, now,” the dog handler said, finally pulling hard enough on the leash to make the dog behave. It struggled for a few seconds and then caught sight of me. It barked once and started pulling in my direction.

“Where’s the woman?” I asked, aiming my question and the rifle at the dog handler, since he seemed to want to talk. The other guy was leaning on the walking stick and staring at me, but he’d made no move to bring that shotgun up. Yet.

“You lookin’ fer that woman, is that it?” the handler said. The dog was growling now and making it clear that he knew what his new mission was. I thought I saw the bearded man’s hand begin to move, so I swung the rifle over to cover him. He had the shotgun, which made him the far more dangerous adversary here.

“Tell me where you’ve got her, or I’m going to shoot fuzzy-wuzzy and then you, in that order.”

“Well, hey now,” he said again. “Ain’t no need for that. We’ll tell yer, won’t we, Jacky. Take it easy, now, mister, everythin’s gonna be okay.”

The handler looked pointedly over at Jacky, as if for corroboration of what he’d just said, and Jacky, never taking his eyes off me or the rifle, nodded once in slow, deliberate fashion. I almost fell for it. What that nod had really meant was for the handler to turn loose his baby-killer, which he did with a bare twitch of his hand. The dog lunged forward even as Jacky began to swing the scattergun.

I didn’t hesitate. I fired one round at Jacky, which spun him around and sent him rolling down the slope with a howl of pain. I jacked in a reload and shot the dog through-and-through when it was no more than twenty feet away, and then I drew down on the handler, who was still, amazingly, standing there with his mouth wide open and a shocked expression on his face. I worked the bolt and took aim at his face. I was vaguely aware that the bearded one was flopping around down there in the weeds, still yelling, and made a mental note to put eyes on that shotgun. Just in case, I moved to the right, putting a boulder between me and where I’d seen Jacky fall, and then asked the man again where they had put Carrie. The dying dog began to cry miserably.