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They weren’t looking in my direction.

I started running toward the third truck.

I heard someone yell out as I reached the back. I’d been seen.

Then they opened fire.

“Hold your fire!” someone yelled. I think it was Justin.

They didn’t hold it.

“Stop shooting, dammit!” Justin yelled again. “Don’t hit my girls!”

The shooting stopped.

I saw Justin running up from the entrance to the lab. He’d dropped a box of glass equipment in the snow.

I waved Kayla and Gwyneth down from the back of the cargo truck. “Head into the trees,” I said. “Towards the highway.”

I opened the fuel line of my foam pack. I pointed the hose toward the trucks and pulled the trigger.

The canvas caught fire.

I released the trigger. I didn’t have much fuel.

I pulled one of the last two grenades from my pack.

I threw it at the far truck. It hit.

They wouldn’t be able to chase Fiona.

I started walking backward, behind the girls, making sure that I kept enough of a buffer that the girls would be out of firing range.

Once I reached the trees, I aimed for a stand of birch and pressed the trigger again.

I tore the cap off of the half-empty bottle of lighter fluid. I tossed the bottle at the burgeoning fire.

I heard the gunfire again.

I guess Justin had given up much hope of keeping any of the girls.

“They’re clear!” Matt yelled from behind me.

I was almost at the truck.

I dropped down to the ground.

Matt opened up with the C12. Not much accuracy, but enough to slow them down.

I crawled over to Matt.

He handed me the gun and his pack with the extra magazines.

I was a little overloaded; I could feel my breath shortening.

I put down the suppressant pack.

“Get the SIG from Fiona,” I told him. “Then climb in the back and go.”

I couldn’t leave with them; I couldn’t leave until Justin was no longer a threat to us.

I changed magazines in the C12 and fired a burst. I fired again until the chamber was empty.

I checked back.

Fiona had put the truck in reverse. They were almost at the highway.

I heard another volley from the north.

I picked up the foam pack and started moving again.

I felt my left leg give out on me.

I looked down and saw the blood.

Not far from the last hole they’d put in that thigh.

There was no way I could carry the C12 and the foam pack across the highway.

I wasn’t going to be able to lead them on a chase, to pick them off in pieces.

Whoever was left would come for me, and they’d find me.

So I had to make it count.

The flames from the stand of birch had spread, but not by much, since the ground was cold and wet with snow. I limped over to the edge of the fire, dragging the suppressant pack behind me and hoping that it wasn’t particularly susceptible to exploding from the bumps.

I put the C12 down and threw the suppressant pack over my shoulders.

I pulled the trigger and drew an arc around me with the flames, leaving only two small gaps, one between me and Justin’s men, and the other to my rear.

That was all the fuel I had in that suppressor.

I dropped the pack and picked up my light machine gun.

I waited.

Two men approached, Leopard Spots and what looked like Bee Stripes. Or maybe a wasp.

They walked into the gap.

I opened fire.

I got one in his side.

Leopard Spots fell into the snow.

The other took cover before I could hit him.

I felt a sharp pain in my left shoulder.

I pushed back through the narrowing gap behind me.

I heard one of the men coming after me.

I saw Bee Stripes.

I fired at his right kidney.

He dropped his gun.

I rushed him. I knelt down and pulled off his helmet.

I took out my steak knife and slit his throat.

I fell back farther as the flames started to follow me. The fire was heating up, to the point where I wasn’t sure they’d be able to reach me.

One gunman was dead, one was wounded. Those were the numbers I had so far.

I headed west. I’d sweep that way and then I’d head south to meet anyone taking the highway.

Some might choose to cut through the woods to McCartney Lake.

It wouldn’t matter.

My people were halfway to Helena.

As I moved west I saw another, the man with the Tiger Stripes.

I got low; he hadn’t sighted me.

“Did you see him?” I called out.

No answer.

I tried again. “Porter says he was heading west.”

“Nothing here,” Tiger said. “I bet he caught up to that truck.”

“He’s laid out traps,” I said. “I’m caught on some type of snare.”

“Don’t you have something to cut it?”

“Dropped my knife.”

“Jesus…”

I’d irritated him enough to lower his weapon.

I stood up and started firing.

Tiger Stripes dropped.

I couldn’t tell if I’d hit him.

I heard a radio call.

“Pull back. I repeat… pull back to the rally point.”

Justin was ordering a withdrawal.

I wouldn’t get my shot at him.

I heard more gunfire. I dropped to the ground.

It was probably Tiger Stripe. Covering his exit.

He hadn’t hit me.

But I’d already been shot twice. The leg wasn’t bad; I could find some way to tourniquet it… but the shoulder… the shoulder was going to be a problem.

I was feeling the blood loss. I was weak… I wasn’t sure I could get up.

The flames had caught up to me. It had reached a point where the snow and damp weren’t stopping it anymore. I wasn’t sure if it had enough heat to jump the highway in the middle of winter… but I realized that I wasn’t going to make it to the highway.

I wasn’t going to make it back to being upright.

I heard the handheld.

It was Matt.

“Baptiste… come in.”

I reached into the pack that Matt had given me. I found a handheld tucked inside.

“I won’t be coming in,” I said. “Hopefully I’ll bleed out before I’m burned alive.”

“What’s your twenty?”

“You mean where am I, jackass?”

“I’m coming to get you. Where are you?”

“I’m gone, Matt. And you don’t owe me anything.”

“I’m coming―”

“You need to get those girls to Aiguebelle. Do whatever it takes to get them across the border. Do not come for me.”

I turned off the handheld.

I didn’t want to give him more of a reason to think he’d find me.

I knew Matt was an idiot… but I hoped for once he’d use his head.

I was slipping… I could feel it…

I closed my eyes.

And wondered if I’d see Cassy again.

I woke up in the backseat of a car.

The car wasn’t moving.

The fabric seats smelled like canned ham.

“Your car stinks,” I said to whoever.

I tried to get up, but it hurt.

So I decided against it.

I saw that my shoulder was bandaged up; not professionally, but better than I could have done at the time. My thigh was bandaged, too.

“Is your place safe?” someone asked me.

I thought I knew the voice. “What?”

“Your place… McCartney Lake. I need to know if it’s safe, Baptiste.”

I realized who it was. Fisher Livingston apparently drove a car that smelled like canned ham.

“Did you spill something on the seat?” I asked.