Page 26 of Prey


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She screamed. The sound burst out of her. It was one word, his name. “Dare!” Her voice was nothing more than a croak; she was cold and hoarse and exhausted. But it was loud enough that he reined in the horse, the flashlight beam sweeping around, and she heard his gravelly voice call back.

“Angie? Where the fuck are you?”

Yeah, it was definitely him. If she’d been the crying type, she’d have burst into tears.

He kneed the horse forward, straight toward her. She raised a shaky arm in the air, and almost fell on her face in the mud. Oh my God, she was so happy and relieved to see him she might cry anyway. She couldn’t believe it, couldn’t believe he was actually there, couldn’t believe she was actually happy—no, make that ecstatic—to see Dare Callahan. Wasn’t that a kick in the pants?

His voice called out as he came closer. “Where are you? Talk to me, goddamnit. Say something.”

“Here,” she said, louder than before, trying to grab a tree branch and pull herself up, and failing miserably. She sat on her ass in the mud, instead, with rain running down her cheeks, and tried to smile. “I’m here.”

Chapter Thirteen

Dare’s gut was tight as he swept the flashlight beam back and forth, looking for movement that would pinpoint Angie’s location for him, but visibility was low and the landscape around him was in constant motion anyway, with the wind whipping everything back and forth; one more motion wouldn’t necessarily stand out. Angie’s voice had been weak, so weak he couldn’t locate her by sound alone; the rain almost drowned her out entirely. A roll of thunder said another line of storms was approaching; he needed to find her, and fast, so they could get under some kind of shelter.

He’d been pushing his luck with the lightning from the moment he’d left the camp; only a damn fool went horseback riding during a storm, so he guessed this made him a damn fool. Hell, he knew it did. Anyone with a lick of sense would have taken shelter, but instead he’d pushed on, fighting his horse the whole way. He figured that meant the horse had more sense than he did; instead of getting used to the weather and settling down the young buckskin had gotten more fractious by the minute. Controlling the horse was taking almost all of his attention, which meant he couldn’t concentrate on his search. Once more he swept the flashlight from side to side, trying to blink the stinging rain from his eyes and cursing every drop that fell. Then a pale gleam close to the ground caught his eye, and he snapped the light downward. There was something small and muddy, an animal of some kind—Then he took a closer look, and a kind of furious disbelief roared through him.

No, not an animal: Angie. She was just sitting there sort of hunched over, a strange, twisted expression on her face as if she were trying to smile, for fuck’s sake. Something was seriously wrong, because no way in hell would she ever smile at him under normal circumstances.

He reined in hard, an action the buckskin took exception to, but the damn horse had taken exception to everything else from the moment Dare had ridden him out into the storm, so why stop now? Adrenaline flooded through him, throwing his body into automatic combat mode as he pulled his rifle from the scabbard and swung down from the saddle. The horse was too skittish to take him close to Angie, so Dare looped the reins over a low-hanging tree branch and gave the big animal a quick pat on the neck to reassure him, then reached Angie with four long strides.

“Where are you hurt? What the hell happened?” he snapped at her, going down on one knee beside her. He shone the flashlight over her, starting at her head and working down. He didn’t see any blood, but she was so covered with mud that he wouldn’t be able to spot anything short of arterial spurting. He noted the bulging saddlebags beside her, and she was clutching a rifle so caked with mud it looked more like a club than a firearm. If she’d needed to shoot, she’d have been shit out of luck.

She was shaking from head to foot, unceasing quakes that were hard enough to rattle her bones, but she grabbed the flashlight and switched it off. “We have to move.” Her voice was thin and hoarse, but forceful for all that. “The light … our position.”

That one word, position, was enough to flip a switch in him, because it could only mean trouble. His heart began pumping hard, but his brain was icy cold and clear as he took an immediate three-sixty threat assessment, looking for whatever had Angie Powell crawling through the mud over a mile from her camp.

He didn’t see anything except trees and rocks and mud, lashed by wind and rain, but his senses stayed on high alert. Just because he couldn’t see trouble coming didn’t mean it wasn’t there. His nerves and instincts had been forged in combat; a lifetime away from war wouldn’t be enough to counteract those instincts. Until the day he died, a part of him would always be ready to react to a split second of warning, and that part immediately understood what she was saying. Someone else, possibly the same someone who had fired those shots tonight, was out there hunting her. He hoped like hell Angie was the one who’d done the shooting, but he figured she’d have hit whatever she was aiming at, so it seemed more likely she’d been the target rather than the shooter.

His spidey sense didn’t pick up that crawly sensation of being watched, though, and his memory of the land told him that they were in s

uch rugged folds of the mountains that, combined with the low visibility, someone would have to be close by to have any chance of seeing the light. Tracking someone in this weather would be impossible and she wasn’t on the trail anyway, which wasn’t even a real trail, just the path of least resistance. In the deluge of rain he’d gone off it himself, which was why he’d doubled back. Thank God he had.

But first things first, and he didn’t like that she hadn’t answered him right away when he asked the first time. He also didn’t like the way she was listing to the side, as if she was about to fall over. He clamped one arm around her, propped her against his raised knee. “Were you hit?”

She was dragging in deep, ragged breaths, the way people breathed when they’d pushed themselves to the limit. Her head wagged to one side. “No. My right ankle.”

“Break or sprain?”

Another shuddering breath. “I don’t know. Sprain, I hope.”

Either way, she obviously couldn’t walk, and he couldn’t do anything for her until he got her back to the camp. He rapidly assessed the situation. There were several things that he needed to do, and they all needed to be done more or less simultaneously, but the obvious number one priority was getting her on the horse. He could find out what happened, tend to her ankle, and use the sat phone to call for help once he had her safe. The sat phone was virtually useless right now, anyway, because of the fucking weather.

“Okay, let’s get you on the horse,” he said gently, hooking the rifle’s strap over his shoulder to free both his hands. He slid his left arm under her knees, his right arm around her back, centered his own balance, and pushed himself up with her cradled in his arms. He’d barely reached an upright stance when he abruptly felt tingles race over his scalp and skin, like hundreds of spiders, making every hair on his body stand up. “Shit!” he said, and even as the word was coming out of his mouth he threw himself down, spread-eagled on the soggy ground with Angie under him, as if he could somehow shield her from a lightning bolt.

The blast of light was deafening. Light should be just light, but this was sound, too, an explosion of sheer energy that was almost like being body-slammed. There was no space between light and noise, it came all at once as if a giant had stomped the earth. The ground shuddered beneath them, something he found vaguely comforting, because if he could feel that then they hadn’t just been fried. His ears rang, his nose burned from the chlorine stench of ozone, and beyond all of that he could hear the horse screaming in panic.

“Shit! Fuck!” He launched himself off Angie, forcing his body to respond even though his head was still reverberating from the force of the nearby strike. The buckskin was rearing, its eyes rolling white in terror, fighting for all it was worth to jerk free. Dare scrabbled on feet and hands for the first couple of feet before he could catch his balance, and in those crucial two seconds the delay cost him, disaster struck, in the form of a tree branch. It wasn’t even that large of a branch, but the whipping wind broke it free and it came sailing out of the night like a rock from a slingshot, and slapped across the animal’s chest and neck.

The buckskin went wild. Before Dare could throw himself at its head and catch the bridle to pull it down, with a powerful wrench of its neck it pulled the reins free and ran. It didn’t just run a few yards and stop, the way horses usually did; it bolted, terrified out of its wits, and in a few seconds was completely lost in the night.

“Goddamnit!” Dare bellowed. “You stupid fuck!” He didn’t know if he meant himself or the horse, but fuck, now they were stuck on foot and the damn sat phone was in the saddlebag, so he couldn’t even call for help when the weather cleared. The horse might stop a hundred yards away, but with the darkness and the weather he’d never be able to see it. He didn’t think so, though; that horse was so scared it might not stop running until it couldn’t run any farther. He hoped it didn’t stumble and break its fool neck.

He stood there, breathing hard and fuming with frustration, so angry at himself for not tying the reins more securely that if he hadn’t needed his hat he’d have thrown it on the ground and stomped on it. This was his fault. He’d known how nervous the buckskin was, and instead of just looping the reins around the tree branch he should have actually tied them. He’d been in such a damn hurry to get to Angie that he’d let himself get careless, and now they were in a fine mess, with her hurt and—

She hadn’t made a sound.

A chill ran through him, a chill that had nothing to do with the cold rain or the storm or even the serious situation. Surely to God the lightning current couldn’t have gone through the ground and hit her, without also hitting him. But he’d all but slammed her to the ground; there might have been a rock, she might have hit her head … Slowly, almost sick with dread at what he might see, he turned his head to look at her.

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