“Do you feel better now, Davy?” she’d say afterward, as if talking to a child.
He wanted to shoot the smug look off her face, that self-satisfied grin. As if she knew something he didn’t. She’d stolen even this from him, his women. When she watched, she claimed part of them, as if she were the director and he were a mere puppet.
Well, he intended to cut the strings of the puppeteer. He had finally agreed to meet her in Missoula tonight, and they’d drive from there to wherever. He’d had to agree. If he’d told her what he was going to do, she wouldn’t have left him.
No, tonight was the hunt. Tonight he would be free. He would take his prize and then just keep going. He could live for months off the land this summer. He’d walk all the way to California if he had to.
She would never find him. He would be free at last.
And his hunts, his women, would finally be his own.
He left the house quietly and went the long way to the meadow. He had another path to get down to his girl.
First things first. Follow Miranda Moore. He would take great pleasure in slitting her throat. He had wanted to kill her when she had first escaped, but The Bitch said no. Like she was pleased one got away. She had laughed at him, taunted him, and he longed to take her neck into his hands and break it, like the neck of a chicken. Crack. Toss her by the side of the road and let the cougars chomp on her, the bugs crawl in and out of her mouth. It would serve her right.
But of course he didn’t. Not then. He’d always believed that without her, he would be nothing. Without her, he would have perished years ago. She’d saved him more times than he could count. He’d been grateful. He’d loved her.
He hated her now. And this hate trampled all over any love he’d ever had for her.
He started down the slope toward the gulch below, planning his kills. First, Miranda Moore and the cops. Then, his girl.
And then, his fucking sister.
Two gunshots echoed from the canyon below. His girl. They were stealing his girl.
The bitch would pay!
He trekked faster down the mountain. The hunt was on.
“We can’t wait for Quinn,” Miranda told Booker.
They’d gone directly to the south meadow in her Jeep. When she didn’t see Quinn, they drove up to the house.
No one answered.
She tried Quinn again, got voice mail again. Damn him, didn’t he have call waiting?
Miranda took a deep breath. The mountains wreaked havoc with cell phones. She had call waiting and half the time calls went directly to voice mail because the towers got mixed signals. It didn’t help that the weather was turning; the bright, sunny morning had disappeared, leaving a gray pallor over the entire mountain. The serious storm was supposed to hold out for late tonight. She hoped it would.
Quinn would be here soon. She knew he would. But could she wait? Between the weather and their not knowing the whereabouts of David Larsen, Ashley’s fate was in question.
Miranda sensed she was close. She had to try. If Ashley died today down in the canyon locals called Boulder Gulch, and Miranda had waited to search, she’d never forgive herself.
Besides, Lance Booker was with her. He was a good cop, strong too. It was two against one. And Larsen didn’t know the police were on to him. The element of surprise would be an added benefit.
“Ashley’s down there. I know it,” she told him. “If he feels the pressure of the police on him, he could kill her and disappear. Right now. We have to get to her first. We can’t wait for Quinn or my team.” She’d called everyone off their searches and told them to meet at this location and proceed with caution.
“You’re right,” Booker relented.
She slowly let out her breath. She wasn’t sure what she would have done if Booker hadn’t agreed to go down to Boulder Gulch with her. But if they were going to track Larsen’s steps, they needed to do it while it was still light.
She pulled out her topo map and folded it so she had Boulder Gulch and the surrounding area clearly visible. She pocketed it, looked along the ridge of the slope. She saw the disturbance in the leaves and dirt from where Larsen had come up the slope and greeted Ryan.
“Here.” She motioned for Booker, her heart pounding so loud she worried the deputy would hear her fear.
Could she do this? Knowing she might come face-to-face with her attacker?
How could she not? If she waited even ten more minutes, Larsen might get to Ashley first and kill her.
What if Ashley was already dead? But Miranda felt she was still alive. It was too soon to hunt her. Larsen was cocky. He liked to keep them long enough to break them. To weaken them, so they didn’t have a chance to survive his hunt.
He hadn’t broken Miranda. He hadn’t killed her. She’d gotten away, and now she would take away his prize. Ashley.
She called her team leader, Charlie. “Booker and I are going after Ashley.”
She followed Larsen’s path. He’d zigzagged his way up the slope to keep from falling. Some places were dangerous: if she started to slide down, she wouldn’t be able to stop until she hit a tree.
Boulder Gulch was a narrow, two-thousand-acre canyon that cut through the mountain with a seasonal creek. It had incredible rock formations. She’d come here with Professor Austin’s geology class. The trip had been treacherous, even though they had followed an easier path, on the canyon’s far eastern slope. But now they’d have had to drive nearly an hour around the mountain to get to it.
Coming down this side was the fastest way to the bottom.
They’d been virtually scaling down the mountain without ropes for fifteen minutes. Booker and she didn’t talk because they couldn’t. In the back of her mind, Miranda knew Ashley would be in no condition to come back up this way. They’d have to go the long way out of the gulch. That meant miles of relatively flat river rock, hours of walking.
Or running.
She could see the bottom of the gulch. “Booker.” She gestured down the slope. “We need to find another way down.”
“This is how he came up,” Booker said.
“But he was coming uphill. He could use his momentum to pull himself up, grabbing trees for support. It’s nearly three hundred feet down. And the last fifty feet are boulders. It’s too dangerous.” She’d had too many of her team members injured over the years trying to get up and down the sometimes sheer face of the mountainside.
Booker didn’t look happy. “We could be far away before we find a better place.”
“It looks a little better over there. Then we’ll backtrack when we get to the bottom. But we need to hurry. We don’t know when he’ll be back.”
She turned, walking parallel to the canyon bottom. The wet dirt beneath the thick layer of pine needles made the stretch difficult. The air was cooler down here, and it didn’t help that the day had become overcast. Almost on cue, a fat raindrop hit her face.
“Watch out. The moisture is going to make the needles slippery,” she told Booker.
“Miranda, I’ve lived here my entire life. I know the mountains.”
“Sorry,” she mumbled.
He flashed her a smile. “Let’s go down here.” He pointed to a slope that didn’t look much safer than the area they’d passed up. Lots of pine needles, a few fallen trees, the occasional protruding boulder. And a sharp angle downward.
“You sure?” She looked in the direction they were walking. There didn’t seem a better place within sight.
“Absolutely. See how it slopes at the bottom? It’s just the next fifty feet that’ll be difficult.”
“All right.” She wasn’t as confident, but another drop of water hit her face. She feared time was running out.
Booker started down first. She followed in his footholds, keeping her body nearly flush with the mountainside to maintain her balance.