“This is it.”
“You’re absolutely sure?”
“I’m looking at it from a different angle, but yes, where those two little creeks come together. That’s where we camped.”
McLanahan nodded, satisfied.
Farkus sighed and sat back. His right shoulder throbbed from the fall he’d taken. Being outside in the mountains always made him hungry, though. He thought he could use a big glass of bourbon and a steak. Some fries.
He relaxed and closed his eyes in time to hear Sollis say, “He’s back.”
Farkus contented himself with not watching, but he listened as Sollis and McLanahan exchanged comments. They sounded more like they were hunting elk than a man named Butch.
“Eighteen hundred yards is a hell of a long shot,” Sollis said. “I’ve made it in perfect conditions, but I’ve missed it, too.”
“How far are we from perfect conditions?” McLanahan said, taking the glasses away from his eyes long enough to look around at their position.
“In perfect conditions, I’ve got a spotter and I can take a practice shot or two. That way, the spotter can tell me to adjust my aim a mil or two to get dead-on.”
“No practice shots,” McLanahan said, annoyed.
“I know. The first one has to be the one. Luckily, we don’t have any wind, so I don’t have to adjust much. But it gets dicey figuring the drop on the bullet when we’re shooting at a downward angle. But the windage is good right now. I’m glad I brought my hot loads.”
Farkus had absolutely no idea what he was talking about, and didn’t care enough to ask.
McLanahan said, “We might be able to get closer if we work our way south along the ridge. My fear is he might see us moving, or we might not find such an ideal location to set up.”
“I agree.”
“What’s he doing now?”
“He’s bent over. I think he might be building a fire.”
“Could you hit him?”
“I wouldn’t want to try. When he’s bent over like that, he’s a small target. I wouldn’t even dream of touching one off unless he was standing up, offering a full profile. Even then. .”
“Shit,” McLanahan said, shifting his weight against the rock so he could brace his binoculars against the wall. “I lost him while we were talking.”
“He’s still there,” Sollis said calmly. “He’s just hard to see because he’s wearing camo and bent over in the grass. I think he’s blowing into the fire, trying to get it started. Yes-I can see a little bit of smoke now.”
“Camo,” McLanahan said. “That’s what he’s supposed to be wearing, all right.”
Sollis grunted.
Uncomfortable with the way things were playing out, Farkus swallowed and said, “Sheriff?”
“What, Farkus?”
“Don’t you think we ought to consider talking to him? Maybe giving him a chance to give himself up?”
McLanahan snorted his answer.
Farkus tried another tack. “It’ll be a lot easier getting him back to the truck if he’s upright. I’m just sayin’. .”
McLanahan said wearily, “Here’s some wisdom that comes from being sheriff for six years: the thing about armed men is they can shoot back. So it’s best to take them down before they know we’re coming. Got that?”
“What if you just wound him? What happens if you wing him and then he takes off running?”
“We follow the blood trail until we find the body,” McLanahan said. “Just like hunting.”
“I’m just thinking about the money, you understand. I don’t want my reward money running away from us through the trees,” Farkus lied.
Sollis said to Farkus, “I don’t shoot to wound, you dweeb. I won’t take the shot unless it’s dead-on perfect.”
Farkus sighed, and Sollis turned back to his scope.
That’s when Farkus heard it: the high-pitched whine of an engine again. Like the one they’d heard earlier.
He could see everything from their vantage point, and without binoculars: the small white drone appearing over the horizon and flying just above the treetops toward the elk camp. Sun glinted from its wings and tail. The whine increased in volume as it flew closer.
“Jesus Christ,” McLanahan said with irritation, “they’ve got an eye in the sky. Those bastards sent an unmanned drone to look for him.”
Farkus had never seen one before, and it was moving so quickly in the distance he couldn’t get a good look at it now. The front of the drone was egg-shaped, and there were no windows. It was tough to tell how big it was, although it stood out against the dark sea of trees.
“If the drone sees him,” McLanahan said, “we’ve lost our advantage. He’ll take to the trees again, and we might never see him again. Plus, the Feds will know where to look.”
“He’s got to hear it, too,” Farkus observed.
“What a bad fucking break,” McLanahan said, angry enough that his West Virginian drawl came through.
“He’s standing up,” Sollis said quietly. “Nobody talk or breathe. I may get a shot.”
Farkus thought, Run, you hardheaded son of a bitch. Don’t let them see you. And don’t come our direction. .
For a brief moment, Farkus assumed the popping noises were coming from the drone itself. They were measured but rapid, one after the other.
Pop. Pop. Pop. Pop. Pop.
Before he could open his mouth and ask what it was, the drone shivered, dropped in altitude, tilted to its left, then readjusted severely back the other way, and the right wing tip caught the top of a pine tree and exploded through it with a burst of needles and branches.
“Wow,” McLanahan said.
The drone cart wheeled through the sky on the other side of the canyon and dropped into the timber with the violent sound of sheet metal buckling and tree trunks snapping. It was swallowed by the dark forest as if it had never been there at all.
And suddenly there was silence.
“He shot it down,” McLanahan said with awe. “Our boy shot that bastard out of the sky.”
Farkus barely heard Sollis whisper: “Shut up, please,” then BOOM, his 6.5x284 rifle rocked and sounded even louder in the narrow confines of the wall crack.
Through ringing ears, Farkus heard Sollis say with triumph: “He’s down.”
16
Joe saddled Toby away from the chaos of a command center of sorts that was slowly morphing from too many disparate vehicles and law enforcement officials. Two large canvas tents were being erected by members of the sheriff’s department-they’d borrowed them from local elk outfitters-next to two high-tech portable tent structures marked EPA on the sidewalls. The location for the FOB was on a bench less than two hundred yards from the Forest Service boundary fence. Within the scrum of tents and vehicles moved EPA special agents, sheriff’s department deputies, Forest Service rangers and special agents, BLM employees, and other men and women Joe couldn’t identify and didn’t want to meet.
He could feel the tension and excitement from the FOB as he cinched the saddle tight and Toby glared back at him in faux discomfort. Voices were pronounced and high and talking over one another, laughter was barked, and flare-ups of anger punctuated the hum. It was the same combination of anticipation and bloodlust he’d witnessed at elk hunting camps or from within the vehicles of hunting parties setting out on opening day of the season.
Joe kept his eye on a group of four men in the temporary corral set up on the edge of the FOB. They were black-clad and sober, unlike the others, and going about their business with quiet gravitas. They seemed to have no interest interacting with the others in the camp. The men stood in a knot, intently listening to a local wrangler who had brought the horses as he outlined the personalities and problems with each mount. It was obvious they were unfamiliar with horses, Joe thought. As they climbed into their saddles, the wrangler adjusted stirrups and walked each horse away from the corral to await the others. Heinz Underwood shadowed the wrangler, muttering things into his ear and to his team. When all the agents were mounted, the wrangler helped Underwood stuff gear into the panniers of a set of packhorses. It looked like too much gear to Joe, who kept his distance even as Underwood spotted him and walked his horse over.