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Authors: Brian Garfield

BOOK: Relentless
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Vickers said, “Don't be ridiculous,” and pulled the walkie-talkie out of his saddlebag and punched it up and talked into it, and listened, and said, “Still nothing.”

Watchman wasn't surprised. Walkie-talkies didn't have much of a daytime range and the bulk of the mountains lay between here and Constable Cunningham.

They had had no contact with the outside world for more than twenty-four hours and Vickers was obviously restless about that. By now the case would be in all the headlines and on all the networks. Probably journalists had descended on San Miguel in battalions with sound trucks and camera crews. All that potential publicity and here the nominal commander of the chase was incommunicado in the wilderness. It made Watchman smile a little. Actually it probably wasn't the reporters so much as his own superiors who had Vickers worried: right now there was probably a good bit of apoplexy in Phoenix and Washington.

Vickers inquired drily, “Is there some compelling reason why we're just sitting here?”

“Could be.”

Buck Stevens said, “We were getting ready to fix up an invitation for Hargit and his crowd. It looks like they may have beat us to it.”

“Now I do recognize that,” Vickers said. “I may learn slowly, but I do learn. And it may amaze you to know this but I've had a small bit of experience with criminal types in my time. Now I'd suggest we don't follow the horse tracks into those trees. It might well be a trap, as you say, but we can't very well sit here until we get boils on the off-chance of avoiding an ambush. The thing to do is swing to one side and get into those trees over there”—he pointed off to the left, then swung his arm to the right—“or over there. Come in from one side or the other and, if they're in there waiting for us, flank them.”

During the FBI agent's pedantic sarcasms Watchman was looking and thinking. Stalking and being stalked in country like this required levels of sophistication considerably beyond what Vickers was willing to credit. A good deal of the maneuvering consisted of double and treble bluffs. At the single level you set up an ambush which you hoped your enemy wouldn't detect, you waited for him to walk into it, and you jumped him. At the double level you set out an obvious invitation, making it so obvious that your enemy would take pains to avoid it, because you expected him in avoiding it to fall into another trap you had set. At the treble level you set up an invitation so obvious that your enemy would recognize its clumsiness as a fraud and would come ahead and investigate it because he believed you didn't expect him to investigate it. You could go on working out reverse bluffs like this to infinite levels but in the end your only real guide was your own judgment of your enemy's level of sophistication—and
his
judgment of your judgment of it. It wasn't only Hargit's woodcraft that had to be taken into account; it was also Hargit's assessment of the intelligence of his pursuers. You would set a different kind of trap for a crafty man from the kind you would set for a fool. In a way it was exactly like the psychology of the game of poker; and Sam Watchman was a fair poker player.

Now Hargit had set out an obvious invitation. It had to be one of two things. A trap or a time killer: something calculated to draw the police into an ambush, or something calculated to keep them busy circling slowly around because they thought it was an ambush, to give Hargit plenty of time to get away while his pursuers fooled around in the woods here.

In two hours it would be sunset. Hargit probably felt his chances of escape would be far better after dark. Possibly they were, but the clouds were clearing off and there would be a three-quarter moon tonight.

Vickers was scowling at him. “Did you hear what I said?”

“Does it matter?” Watchman was cool because he was running out of patience with him. “We'll circle it. I want to find out if they're still in there.”

“Circle it? How far out?”

Watchman made a sweep with his arm. It encompassed the aspens in front of them and the mountain above, with the shale slide at the center.

“Do you have any idea how long it will take us to make that circuit?” Vickers demanded.

“I'd say an hour and a half. Maybe two.”

“And give them just that much more of a lead on us.”

“You can go right on in straight up if you want to. I'm tired of arguing with you. Come on, Buck.”

In the end, of course, Vickers came along.

2

It took almost the two full hours. They entered the aspens about a quarter mile upstream from the point where the long snow-trench ended at the creekbank; so far they had crossed no tracks except those of the two abandoned horses. They went up through the pines and over the crest of the ridge, and ten minutes down the back of it Watchman began to circle to the right. About half a mile along the back of the ridge they found the tracks of the seven horses where they had come in from the southwest and gone up to the top of the ridge above the shale slide. This was where they had come in; it remained to be seen where, or if, they had gone out.

Watchman continued along the backside of the ridge about two miles, keeping to the trees, and circled the end of it with his rifle across his saddle horn and all his senses keyed up atavistically. They rode in a spread-out single file, fifty feet apart, and Watchman was alert to the possibility of tripwires stretched across his path: God knew how many more grenades the fugitives were armed with.

They reached the creek at a point more than two miles below their original crossing. Watchman looked both ways with considerable care before he put his horse across and ran into the aspens. He didn't circle to the right; he went straight ahead through the fringe of sycamores and leafless aspens, angling up a little slope so that when he reached the edge of the trees he was on an elevation overlooking the scrubby flat they had crossed two hours ago. The sun threw long shadows across the flats and it was not hard to make out the dotted shadow-line of two groups of tracks emerging from the trees quite a distance to the south and crossing the flat. One set belonged to the abandoned horses and the other set was the tracks Watchman and Vickers and Stevens had left two hours earlier.

“It doesn't have to mean they're still in there,” he said. “They may have seen what we were up to and decided to go around behind us and clear out. But they were still in there until recently, we know that much, and I wouldn't be surprised if they've stayed put and decided to wait us out.”

“All right,” Vickers said testily, “we've killed a couple of hours and most of the daylight we had left. What bright idea comes next?”

“We go in after them.”

He rode slowly back to the creekbank and turned left to ride upstream, keening the forest, scouting for tracks. About a half mile downstream from the point where the object had rolled down the slide to the creek, Watchman dismounted. “One of us stays here—that's you, Buck. If I sing out bring the horses along fast. Vickers, we go on foot from here.”

3

“If anybody starts shooting don't crawl. It just makes you a slow target instead of a fast one. Run like hell and get behind a tree. If we lose touch stay put. Don't move.
I'll find you
.”

“You don't have to treat me like a novice Boy Scout.”

Watchman shook his head and said, “Just give me room, then—don't crowd too close behind me,” and moved away.

He stayed inside the trees some distance back from the creekbank, moving upstream parallel to it. The sun had gone beyond the ridge; shadows shifted and settled. The snow was soft and loose and his boots sank through the surface without sound. As long as he was traversing snow that had not been disturbed he was fairly confident there were no boobytraps and so he was able to move at a steady speed through the trees. At any point an unseen rifleman might open up on him but if you used that possibility as your basis for movement you would never move at all. The trees were without leaves down here and it was possible to see eighty or a hundred feet in most directions, even with the light fading, and he was willing to gamble that the range of his visibility was as great or greater than the effective range of any rifle in these trees: it only took one twig to deflect an aimed bullet.

He had glimpses of the stream off to his right and when he estimated he was at the right point he stopped and turned and began to move, much more slowly now, toward the stream. Vickers was too close behind him and he made a hand signal that slowed Vickers down and put ten yards' distance between them.

He had brought Vickers along rather than Stevens because he wanted Vickers where he could see him. Leave Vickers off by himself and he might start shooting at anything that moved and it might turn out to be yourself.

From forty feet inside the trees he caught his first glimpse of the body in the creek. He crouched down and moved forward a further ten feet and studied it.

The body lay on its stomach with its arms and legs asprawl, face buried in the creek. From the gray hair that floated out from it he surmised it was the one called Hanratty. Either that or a stranger who'd got in their way.

Vickers crawled up beside him. “It could be booby-trapped.”

“Likely is.”

“But we need to know who he is.”

That was true: they needed to know how many guns there were against them.

Twilight ran red along the crest of the ridge above the shale slide. Watchman studied the lie of it. Thick pines growing close together surrounded the rockslide in a horseshoe the ends of which descended to the far bank of the creek. If Hargit and his men were waiting in ambush they could be anywhere along that fringe and still have a good field of fire across the creek. On the other hand they might be gone by now, counting on their pursuers to lie up in these woods for a while investigating, giving Hargit time to get clear.

The first thing to do was to find out which it was, and the second thing to do was to be ready to take advantage of whatever disclosures Hargit might be kind enough to make.

Watchman moved back a few yards and picked up one of the dead saplings the storm had blown down; they were all over the woods. He chose one that seemed long enough and hacked off branches with his sheath knife until he had it trimmed to his satisfaction. Dragged it past Vickers and laid it on the ground. He positioned himself behind the bole of a sycamore trunk and pushed the sapling out toward the creekbank as if it were an oversized pool cue. It reached, just; he pushed the end into the corpse's armpit and let the sapling lie like that, where one good shove would overturn the corpse, but he didn't shove it yet. He left it there and slid back into the denser trees and said, “We can't spend half the night here, we seem to be agreed on that much. If they're not around here we need to know that, and if they are we'll want to draw their fire.”

“You're asking for a volunteer.”

“That's right,” Watchman said evenly, and watched his face.

Vickers said, “Tell me what you've got in mind.”

“Get behind that sycamore and get ready to roll him over. If there's a grenade under him you'll hear the handle click—drop flat behind the tree and cover your head. Now either he's booby-trapped or he's not. Either way I want you to make a little run after you've flipped him over. Run out into the open three or four paces as if you're going out to have a closer look at the corpse. Give them enough time to see you but not enough time to snug down their aim. Three or four steps, and then break right and dive into those trees on your belly. Then run back through the trees and hope they take a few shots at you.”

“I see. And you'll be where?”

“Down there.” Watchman pointed toward the lower end of the pine-forest horseshoe. “We'll be on horseback and if you can draw their fire I'll be able to spot their muzzle flashes. We can get close pretty fast on horseback, before they've had time to fade back into the timber, and we'll have a crack at them. How about it?”

Vickers thought about it, visibly. Watchman looked at the sky through the bare treetops. Dusk; a handful of stars already showing on a field of navy velvet. Moonrise in maybe half an hour. “All right, we'll try it,” Vickers said.

“One other thing. I'll need to know if that's Hanratty. You'll get a look at him when you flip him over. If you're pretty sure it's Hanratty fire three quick shots as soon as you have time.”

“Then what?”

“You'd better stay right here so I'll know where you are. I know you don't like that but if you come chasing along after us you're likely to get yourself shot at by both sides.”

“It's not appetizing. What makes you so sure they've waited around all this time?”

“I couldn't put words to it. Maybe a feeling they need to get us off their backs—they don't want to waste any more time than they have to. They want to get it over with.” It was a lame explanation but he didn't add to it. The subconscious sorts and files according to experienced intuitions; what came to the surface was mostly hunch. He was beginning to develop a feeling about the way Hargit did his thinking.

“We may as well try it,” Vickers conceded. “How much lead time do you want?”

“What time do you have?”

“Eight minutes past six.”

Watchman took off his glove to set his watch back from six-eleven. “Roll him over at six-forty.”

“That long?”

“We'll have the moon by then.”

“All right,” Vickers said, and when Watchman turned away Vickers said in a softer voice, “Good luck, Trooper.”

“Sure.” Watchman waved a hand and kept moving.

CHAPTER

10

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