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“You are going to take this pack off him. You are going to care for his wounds, and you are going to help me get him to shelter. If you try to fuck with me or Kai in any way, I will make you incredibly sorry for it.”

He didn’t wait for or want a reply from me. He moved out of reach, nodded toward Kai, and said, “Get him into a condition that will allow us to move out of here, and quickly.”

A tall order, but I did as he asked. I found myself willing to ignore almost all the first aid training I’d ever had. I found a water bottle, didn’t check to see if the water in it was sterilized, and told Kai to drink from it. I used water from the stream to rinse off the cuts on his forehead. I dried his face and taped a big pad of gauze on the worst cut, the only one still bleeding. I paid no heed to concerns about sterile conditions, hand washing, hypothermia, head injuries, blisters, or even athlete’s foot. Let him suffer.

While I worked on Kai, Parrish looked toward the stream, walked to its edge, stared, then walked back. He paced this distance several times, then suddenly seemed resigned. I wasn’t sure what that was about.

Parrish walked back over to us, and together we helped Kai to his feet. Kai leaned on me while Parrish carried Kai’s pack in his free hand-the shovel had been lost out of it, and God knew I wasn’t going to point that out or go looking for it.

We hadn’t gone far before it was apparent that Kai was more bruised and shaken than seriously hurt. Foreheads can produce dramatic bleeding, but he didn’t show any signs of concussion, although those might appear later.

His skin was blue, though, and he shivered.

“Do you have a change of clothes in your pack?” I asked.

“He’ll be able to change his clothes not far from here,” Parrish said. “He’ll warm up as we move. Or maybe I should have you strip and give him your clothes.”

I ignored him. As we walked, Kai clung to me, in a way that both unsettled me and at first made it difficult to move. He seemed to figure out fairly quickly that he needed to loosen his hold at least a little, and he did so, but he kept his uninjured left arm around my shoulders.

We walked upstream, past a place where we could have stayed dry by crossing on a fallen log, a fact that made Kai shoot Parrish a dirty look. Not long after that, Kai played with my hair. I stepped away from him. He smiled but didn’t try to put his arm around me again. I felt queasy.

We reached a point where trees hid the sheer rock face from view. We left the stream and walked along the foot of this cliff. Moving was good-I warmed up a little.

Not much farther in, Parrish called a halt and told me to give Kai a boost up the rock face to a ledge. It was about ten feet above us.

“How is he supposed to reach that ledge with an injured arm?”

He sighed. “Do not try my patience. Give him a boost.”

For his part, Kai obeyed without hesitation. He struggled to pull himself up, but other than giving a grunt of pain as he rolled onto the ledge, he didn’t complain. He peered over the edge, his face pale, awaiting orders.

“Get the ladder,” Parrish said. “Anchor it the way I showed you at the lodge. And while you’re back there, get one of the other guns. Try not to lose this one. Tomorrow I’m going to send you in after the one you dropped into the water, and the shovel, too.”

So-that explained Parrish’s unhappy pacing near the stream.

Kai’s eyes widened at Parrish’s threat, but he scrambled to his feet. I heard scraping sounds, and a few minutes later, he dropped the ladder down. It was a fire escape ladder, the kind people keep in the bedrooms of two-story homes. Parrish tested it, then began calling more instructions up to Kai.

“I’m going to change,” Kai said. “I’m freezing.”

Parrish scowled up toward the ledge, but Kai had already retreated from view.

I was on the ground but knew I would soon be asked to climb into God knew what kind of lair Parrish had set up. He and his son had made it clear that they planned to torture me, sexually assault me, and kill me. If not there, at whatever other hideout he had in mind.

My hands and feet were free. Donovan was nowhere nearby. Kai was above me and injured and not in view.

I had one opponent, and he was reaching for me.

I made my move, a technique known in Kenpo as Covering the Flame. Rachel had been convinced-given who might be after me-that I needed to know this one, and she’d made me practice it again and again.

That practice allowed my next series of movements to go by in seconds. As Parrish stepped forward, I evaded his reaching left hand and continued moving, stepping with my left foot to his right side-his semiautomatic was held in his right hand.

Now facing his right side, I used my left hand to immediately take hold of the back of his right wrist in an iron grip. He began pulling the trigger, firing wildly, but I was outside his range, controlling his aim with control of his wrist. I used that grip to move him off balance even as I rapidly raised my own right hand to my shoulder. I pivoted on my left foot as I stepped forward with my right, landing my right foot behind his right leg, never letting go of his wrist. I brought my right arm in hard to bend his hand in, so that I now pinned the wrist of his gun hand with the bones of my right wrist and used my forearm to force his hand toward his shoulder. Soon my elbow was lodged against his shoulder.

With my hold on his wrist and the way my body was positioned, I completely controlled his movement and balance as I pivoted-twisting his wrist and shoulder and using my momentum. He followed where his wrist was being taken, but his leg encountered the back of mine, and he lost his balance. The motion pulled him down to the ground, so that he landed flat on his back with an “oof” at about the place I had been standing a moment before.

He had lost his grip on the gun, but I still had not lost mine on him. I kept hold of his wrist while I used my right foot to stomp hard on his right arm, his chest, his left arm, then jabbed the knuckles of my right hand into his eyes. He turned his head just before I made prime contact, but I still hit him hard enough to hurt him.

I knew I had taken him by surprise, I knew he had been underestimating me all along. But this was no time to gloat. I didn’t wait to see if I could take him in round two. I picked up the gun and ran like hell into the trees.

FORTY-SEVEN

Donovan heard shots and screams. He moved quickly toward the cave, then slowed and approached cautiously when he realized the screams belonged to Nick Parrish. Parrish was yelling something about his eyes and screeching, “Shoot her!”

He was on the ground, curled on his side, rubbing his chest and pressing one hand over his eyes.

By then Donovan was near enough to catch a glimpse of Kai before he turned back in to the cave. He noticed that Kai wore a bandage, looked unhappy-and, oddly enough, had most of his clothes off. Donovan thought over his options, waited until Parrish seemed to have himself under better control, then approached.

“Well, that ought to bring the rangers down on us in no time,” he said.

“Donovan?” Parrish said, peering out from between his fingers, wincing. “Where the hell have you been?”

“Exactly where I told you I’d be. I hid the car and then hiked back here.” He looked up at Kai. “What happened here?”

“He tripped over his own two feet and landed on his ass in the stream,” Parrish said.

Kai frowned, then said, “He got his ass kicked by a woman.”

They squabbled and denied and embellished, but out of all that mix, Donovan was able to roughly piece together what had happened.

“Why didn’t you shoot her?” Parrish demanded.

“The guns up here aren’t loaded,” Kai said. “I’ve never been here before, so I don’t know where the fuck you put the ammo.”

“Let’s deal with your wounds-and change your clothes,” Donovan said, hoping to stall long enough to give Irene the chance she needed to get away. He was concerned about the fact that she had no water with her, and he hoped she’d stay away from the stream, since Parrish would undoubtedly hunt for her there.