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George lunges for Kyle, but Kyle, true to his word, turns swift and snakes away, down the seam of the mountain, towards Karen, weaving between trees. George is having difficulty keeping up with the snake despite his gripping cleats, but as Kyle is leaving the web of light between trees, a galloping beast leaps in the air and onto Kyle. Kyle is stomped by the animal into the deep snow.

George sees his knife at the base of a Douglas fir, a tree owning layers of umbrella limbs that shield the earth beneath from too much snow. He grabs the knife and, looking at the animal that leapt, sees a familiar figure. It’s Cope all right. Several coyotes stand around in a circle, yipping at Kyle, and yipping at George’s pocket with the breakfast sandwich.

“Cope, off him now, Old Girl. Good Girl. Off.”

Cope, barking mad, backs off Kyle, who struggles to get out of the snow and off his back. George quick steps to Kyle, throwing Cope the breakfast sandwich, bends, and grabs Kyle around his scrawny neck with one bear claw of a hand. With his other, he holds the now unsheathed knife to Kyle’s temple. “You’re coming with me to the river,” he says.

George knows the cold side of the mountain like the back of his own ass. He’s the only one who can work it. He’s got Kyle tied with safety rope, hands and feet, sitting in his passenger seat, right where Reeker was only twenty minutes ago. George is not calling Karen on the walkie now. George has definitely forgotten he wanted to tell Karen he loves her tonight. He has a killer to kill. He has a wrong to right. He has his love’s murder to vindicate.

Has George ever been this homicidal?

No, not ever. But love will do that to you sometimes. Ten years of grief and guilt, guilt for not saving her, that will do that to you sometimes. Being stalked for ten years by a psychopath who wears a homemade robot head, that will fucking do that to you sometimes. Knowing your haste and inadvertent rudeness, a simple second of stepping on a stranger’s foot, led to death. Such snap insanity, such freak and fatal instances, will do that to you sometimes.

At the bottom of the cold side of the mountain, after barreling through the steeps, blind through the dark, which George did not fear, for he’s numb now, they reach the raging river, cold as arctic ice. This violent river never freezes given the constant current.

It’s loud here from the roiling water and the howling wind, which funnels through the basin’s valley. It sounds like a freight train colliding with a rocket during blast off. Around where George has dragged Kyle, light from the snowcat illuminates a bubble of river bank. George’s legs are a foot deep in snow as he removes, with one meatpaw of a hand, the ropes from Kyle’s hands and feet. The ropes go in the river. The entire while, George holds Kyle around his neck. He could crush his windpipe with a mere fraction more of pressure.

It must be 2:00 a.m. now, and, having left his gloves in the cab, George’s thick fingers are beginning to prickle in tightened circulation.

Ignoring Kyle’s throttled cries, which are drowned by the sounds of a train and a rocket, George lifts Kyle as if he’s a single log and thrusts him in the freezing cold water. The wild current sucks Kyle in and away, bangs his head against boulders, drowns him, crushes him, kills him of hypothermia in ten seconds flat.

George watches all ten seconds, and when he looks away for a break, there along the bank, in the far-reach edge of his snowcat’s light, stands Reeker, naked, his hat off, bald. He wears only snowshoes, which, George guesses, the fucker must have stowed in the woods or stolen from a staff cabin. He’s here premeditated. All his round parts, all there, now. Reeker holds a bar of soap in his hands. It dawns on George that this is the Spine Ripper’s modus operandi: Reeker cleans himself in freezing river water before a kill. At least George hopes it’s before, and that nobody from the mountain is already dead. He thinks this because he doesn’t see a body dragged here, waiting to be fileted and deboned, as other bodies were left at other watering holes.

“Reeker,” George says.

Reeker stares back, that same black-eyed, emotionless expression. Despite this blizzard, despite this cold air, despite it all, George notices the man is aroused. Reeker enjoys the fright he’s causing George, the power is a sexual charge. This threat is real. Sure enough, Reeker makes known his weapons by drawing George’s eyes to a tree stump, upon which sits a long serrated knife and a small carving knife.

They must have been in his coat pocket.

He looks to Reeker’s snowshoes.

Shit.

George is sinking deeper in the heavy snow where he stands, and now it’s too late. He might as well be in cement. He’s stuck. He can’t turn and run. He can’t reach any better packed glade, covered in powder, but at least not as keeping as this quicksand. And even if he could run, this larger man, this brutal murderer, would catch him in those snowshoes of his, thrust a knife in George’s back to slow him. Then gut him. Filet him.

George is out of moves, and he knows Reeker knows it.

“Saw you kill that man, George,” Reeker says, smiling by pushing both lips together in the middle and up. No blinking. His slow tone and cool demeanor changes when he lunges sideways for the tree stump and grabs the long serrated knife. He holds the handle with one hand and keeps the point poking into the palm of the other. He does that weird mouth middle push up thing again, watching George, who’s struggling and failing to lift his legs and step away. George keeps sinking.

“You threw him right in the river, George,” Reeker says. He slow blinks. Takes a step to George, and George counts the time it takes for Reeker to reach him: three snowshoe steps in three seconds. And in those three seconds, George’s body takes over, acting on pure instinct. He falls to his ass, which hard tree fall frees his feet, like a heavy redwood falling and dislodging its root balclass="underline" physics. As Reeker lunges down to follow George, leading with his long knife, George sets his spiked cleat feet to Reeker’s hip joints and pushes. George pushes the entire weight of his grief, of his guilt, in the thrust, sending Reeker to shimmy backwards — just far enough. Puncture holes from the cleats spray blood on the snow, quickly covered by more falling snow.

In this very second, a roar interrupts, something louder than the water and the wind. A dim light grows brighter through the trees, but blurred, as all is blurred in this blizzard. Out of the trees, a snowmobile bombs out of what was a blackened trail and straight into Reeker, punting him to the river’s edge. The snowmobile stops. Backs up. Revs and shoots forward, plowing Reeker into the river.

The river sucks Reeker’s circle-stacked body in, greedily dunks him, drowns him, bobbing, screaming and swallowing water, crashing his round skull into boulders, and freezing his balls off in fatal hypothermia in ten seconds flat.

George is on his ass stunned.

The snowmobile driver stands with her legs straddling the snowmobile seat. She takes off her helmet, releasing her sun-drenched California hair.

She looks over to George. “Oh, thank God, George. Thank God. The news kept escalating warnings. They pieced together his name, this guy, he didn’t even try to hide his identity. Reeker’s the Spine Ripper! I tracked you both by your walkies. They got the upgraded GPS, thank God. Thank Goodness I got here in time, George. I love you!”