He knew for sure that it wouldn’t be a good idea to sit any longer and listen to Price talk. Sound carried on cold, still nights.
—
Because it had been so dark outside, Joe thought the interior of the cabin seemed more lit up from the glow of the heating coil than when he’d left. He ushered Price through the door and closed it behind them.
Boedecker still sat at the table. There was maybe an inch of whiskey left in the bottle. The speargun was reassembled and armed with the short projectile.
“You found him,” Boedecker slurred. “Too bad.”
Then he raised the speargun and pointed it at Joe and Price. It went off with a metallic thunk .
The spear tip embedded in a log over the doorjamb, a foot above Joe’s head. He looked over his shoulder at it and saw the shaft quivering.
“Damn,” Boedecker said. “It works .”
Joe growled, “Point that at me again and things are going to get real western, Brock.”
Boedecker giggled and waved his left hand around in the air to indicate he meant no harm.
He stopped laughing when Joe said, “I think I heard a horse out there.”
EIGHTEEN
Are we safe?” Price whispered an hour later. “Do you think they’re gone?”
“For now, maybe,” Joe replied.
“Or maybe you didn’t hear anything at all in the first place,” Boedecker said to Joe.
“That’s possible, too,” Joe said.
The three of them were huddled together in the dark around the hissing orange glow of the heating coil. Their knees were nearly touching. They’d tamped down the flame so there was just enough heat but not enough light from it to be seen from the outside. It was getting colder by the minute, and Joe feared the propane would run out and leave them with only bad options.
“Maybe we’re okay,” Price said.
Joe hoped that was true. But if the Thomas clan had passed by the cabin a few hundred yards below in the timber and hadn’t cut their tracks, his guess was they’d double back at some point until they found the cabin.
They might wait until morning to do that, he thought. He knew that if it was him on horseback in the dark in a night steadily getting colder, he’d stop, build a fire, and make a camp. But Earl was known for his determination. Joe was aware of a few of Earl’s clients who had gone home in the middle of guided hunts they’d paid thousands for because he drove them too hard. Joe didn’t think there was much of a possibility that the men would give up and go down the mountain. Joe looked at his watch. It was nearly midnight.
Price said, “We just have to stay alive until morning, right? Then we can hike out of here and get back to civilization. Or at least your version of it.”
Boedecker moaned and rolled his eyes. Joe could see the whites of them in the glow of the coil. The rancher had been uncharacteristically silent the past hour, Joe thought. As if he were either drifting away or plotting something.
“That’s what we want,” Joe answered Price.
“I can only imagine what my execs and followers are thinking right now,” Price said. “Not to mention my shareholders. They haven’t seen a post from me since last night. If they don’t see a sign of life within twenty-four hours, I’d anticipate a lot of speculation out there in the online community.”
“You do think a lot of yourself, don’t you?” Boedecker said to Price.
“My life and my vision are worth billions,” Price said. “I’m not bragging. I’m just being realistic.”
Boedecker scoffed. “My life is worth thirteen cents on a good day, I reckon. What about yours, Joe?”
Joe didn’t answer.
Boedecker leaned into Price and said, “If you’re worth so much and we manage to get you out of here, you’ll probably want to reward us, right? Maybe give Joe and me a few stray million and some stock options?”
“That’s not necessary,” Joe said, but Boedecker cut him off.
“A few million is nothing to this guy,” he said. “He says his life is worth a lot more than that.”
“No,” Price said.
Boedecker sat back. “No?”
“No. I don’t believe in charity, just like Steve Jobs. Providing income for my thousands of employees and dividends to my shareholders is more than enough for any man to do.”
“Are you shitting me?” Boedecker asked.
Price shrugged. He apparently didn’t want to discuss it any further. “The people I’m associated with will hire guys to come find me if we can avoid the Thomases long enough. It’s in all of their best interests that I’m okay, after all.”
Joe didn’t know what to say.
“Even if that all happens,” Boedecker said, “any effort to rescue us won’t just happen in an instant. This isn’t downtown San Francisco.”
“I know that,” Price said defensively.
“They’ll need to put together a search-and-rescue effort and that takes time,” Boedecker said. “You’ve got to get people together, plus horses, helicopters, et cetera. It isn’t one of those flash-mob things you do online.”
Price looked to Joe for confirmation. Joe nodded.
As he did, Joe thought he heard a sound outside the cabin. It was a kind of muffled snap, as if someone had stepped on a dry branch and broken it through a layer of snow.
He sat back, suddenly on high alert. Boedecker did the same. He’d heard it, too. Price did a sharp intake of breath as if preparing to speak and Joe touched his index finger to his lips.
“Shhhhh . ”
“What?”
Joe chinned toward the front door.
Price questioned Joe by raising his hands, palms up.
Boedecker rose and got to his feet with a slight wobble. The alcohol still dampened his movements. He reached out to the table for his speargun, which he’d re-armed.
Joe stood as well and sidled over to the bed. He didn’t want to unfurl the bedroll until he had to. But he wanted to be in position to do so.
He surveyed the interior of the cabin once again. There was only one way out, which was through the front door. The window frames on each wall were too small for a man to fit his shoulders through. They were trapped inside, but it also meant there was only one way in .
Boedecker padded over to Joe and gestured toward the door. “Should we rush it?” he whispered.
Joe shook his head. He thought that the sound they’d heard might be a moose or elk outside, or possibly a dry branch breaking because it couldn’t hold the weight of the snow on it. But he had to hear another sound in order to confirm the first.
Then he heard the clearing of a throat, and: “Joe? Are you in there?”
It was Earl Thomas. He sounded as if he were fifteen to twenty yards away and directly in front of the cabin. Probably looking out from around a tree trunk, Joe thought.
Joe didn’t reply.
“Brock? You in there?”
Boedecker looked to Joe and they exchanged worried glances. Joe tried to calculate the odds. Was it a legitimate strategy to simply wait in silence? Would the Thomases decide the cabin was empty and move on without checking inside?
Not with all the tracks outside in the snow, Joe thought.
“They know we’re in here,” he mouthed to Boedecker.
Boedecker nodded.
Price still sat in front of the heated coil. There was fear on his face. He looked from Joe to Boedecker and back to Joe.
“ Answer him ,” Boedecker whispered to Joe.
Before he could, Earl said, “We know you’re in there, Joe. We don’t want any trouble with you. We just want that son of a bitch Price. He has to pay for what he’s done.”
Joe glanced at Price. His face went slack and he closed his eyes as if to accept the inevitable.
“We know you’re not armed,” Earl called. “We took all your guns and gear. The best thing for you to do is to come on out and leave Price to us. You don’t owe that man anything.”
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