Chapter 21
MARCH 30, MID DAY
BY NOON, ADRIAN HAD PLACED three of the posters. He had covered a circle halfway around Fort Brazos. The other three posters would cover the other half of the circle. That would be enough, Adrian believed. He had been moving slowly and cautiously, looking for any sign of Rex as he went. Adrian knew the area thoroughly; he already knew the spots that would most likely attract Rex. Under normal circumstances he could have placed all six posters in only a couple of hours. These weren’t normal circumstances, though. He had a cold-blooded, highly trained, highly skilled, and experienced killer with a psychotic obsession of hunting for him, and while Adrian wanted to be found, he wanted to be found on his own terms. He wanted control of the situation when they fought.
By dark, he had the six posters placed. Now it was time to start on the second phase. Adrian walked back to the battlefield where the bodies were lying. Using a flashlight, he chose a dead raider that was nearly his size and had the same color hair. It was a gruesome task he had in mind, but he would carry it through. Heaving the already deteriorating body across his shoulders, he carried it the several miles to his chosen spot. It took him until nearly midnight to reach the area he wanted. He tossed the body on the ground, and in the dark, he stripped the man’s clothes off. Adrian had left several items in that spot earlier in the day; among them were the clothes that Adrian had worn during the battle. It was a struggle dressing the body in his clothes It was disgusting work, but it had to be done.
Adrian pushed up a pile of leaves a few yards from the body and lay down exhausted; it had been a long day. He had a restless night with strange dreams of being in the future, a place where tiny robots were injected into his blood stream. These robots provided access to knowledge he had never been exposed to. When he awoke, the dream stayed with him for most of the day, the images slowly fading.
At first light, Adrian began his preparations. He placed the body facedown next to a fallen log. With his knife, he ripped the body open with long slashes, imitating the cuts that a wild boar would have made. Then he opened a gallon jar of pig blood, which was already coagulating, and splashed and spread the blood on the “wounds” he had made, as well as on the log. Using a broken tree branch, he tore up the ground around the body as though there had been a big fight. He took his battle rifle, emptied the ammo, and placed the rounds in his pocket, reinserted the magazine, and then tossed the rifle next to the body. Standing back, he viewed his work. From a few yards away, it looked exactly as he wanted it to: as though Adrian had been attacked by a wild boar and lost the fight. Adrian made a blood trail leading away from the body, imitating a wounded hog leaving the area. The blood trail gradually disappeared a hundred yards away.
Adrian had chosen this spot carefully. A place where the body would be visible from the higher ground around it.
MARCH 31, MID DAY
Adrian wanted Rex to spot the body and assume it was Adrian. He knew that Rex wouldn’t be deceived when he came close to investigate, but by then, Adrian would have him in his sights. He also knew that if Rex did spot the body from a distance, he would have to move closer to investigate. Adrian had chosen the terrain well. Rex could approach from any direction, and would move in extremely cautiously. Rex was far from a fool and would suspect a trap, but he would have to check it out.
Adrian built and set three booby-traps, one at each of the most likely approaches that he thought Rex might take. Two of them were punji pits. If Rex stepped into one of them, it wouldn’t kill him, but it would slow him down quite a bit, an advantage Adrian would like to have. Eventually, the poisoned sharpened stakes would kill Rex if he didn’t get medical treatment. Adrian didn’t have much hope for these working, but they might.
The third trap was more complex. He’d made it with one of Matt’s hog guns loaded with double ought buck shot. The double-barreled gun was secured in a horizontal position and tied down then hidden with brush artfully arranged. A trip line of monofilament fishing line was placed under tension across the path, strung out an inch above the ground and then lightly covered with leaves. If Rex took that path and either stepped on the trip line or snagged it with his foot, the trip line would pull the trigger, unleashing a barrel of buck shot down the trail. The traps also served another purpose: they were located behind Adrian’s line of sight, and if one of them worked, it would act as a signal so Adrian could then leap to the attack.
By midday, Adrian had taken up his hiding position. He had chosen a simple but daring plan. He scooped out a spot in the ground that he could lay down flat in, hiding the dirt as he worked. Adrian placed a self-inflating sleeping pad in the depression. He lay down on his belly with his rifle in position, then, using his hands and a tree branch, he covered his body with leaves that he had brought in and piled up next to his shallow trench. Adrian covered his head last, carefully placing leaves over and around his face, leaving spaces to look through. From even a half dozen steps away, he was invisible under the leaves. He had a field of fire that covered the decoy body and the surrounding fifty yards. It would be an easy shot; only seventy-five yards away, and the rifle would only have to move a few inches to cover any part of the trap radius.
MARCH 31, EVENING
Once in place, Adrian was committed to lying still for however long it took. He was well aware that he might lie there for several days and would become extremely uncomfortable. He was also aware that if he had to move suddenly, his body would be stiff and slow. The self-inflating sleeping pad under him would insulate him from the ground, helping to maintain his body temperature. The thick pile of leaves above him would not only conceal him, but also help keep him a little warmer than lying directly exposed to the cold night and morning air. He had placed a canteen of water and a drinking tube of flexible plastic tubing ran from it into his mouth. He would not be eating for the duration, but he would need to stay hydrated. He would just have to urinate in place; messy, but necessary under the circumstances. . From now until he either trapped Rex or gave up waiting, it was all about mental discipline. Not moving, not scratching, just lying completely still—it was unnatural for a human, and was difficult to do for even an hour; doing so for days would be excruciating.
Time passed slowly. Mosquitoes found his face through the leaves and bit him almost continuously. It took all of his willpower to let them feast undisturbed. Adrian marked the passing of time during the day by tracking the movement of shadows. He slept only at night, and even then only in brief snatches. He could see a portion of the sky through a gap in the trees, and watched as stars moved in and then out of the gap. He meditated often, slowing his breathing. In between meditations, starting from his toes and moving up to his face, he slowly tensed one muscle group at a time and held the tension for as long as he could, then moved on to the next muscle group. To occupy his mind, he timed how long he could maintain tension in each muscle group by silently counting off the seconds. This exercise kept his blood from pooling in his extremities without him making overt movements. He hoped it would keep him from being too stiff when the time came to move.
Adrian observed the wildlife. A possum found the body and feasted on it for an hour before wandering off. Twice he saw deer browsing. He watched squirrels by the dozen and birds by the hundreds move around the area. He listened carefully for a sudden silence of birds or a squirrel fussing or a deer snorting or stamping—signs of something or someone coming. Adrian focused his attention on sounds by mentally charting out a full circle and dividing it into quarters. Every five minutes or so, he would focus on the next quarter in the circle and pay attention to just that one section. It didn’t take him long to pattern out the normal sounds. He knew where several squirrels called home, where different birds had staked out their territories. He became familiar with the hunting ranges of the owls at night. Adrian absorbed all this conscientiously because his natural radar system would alert him to the presence of something or someone that didn’t belong.
Of all the challenges he faced, staying mentally alert was the hardest. It was too easy to drift off into irrelevant thought, or to focus on the discomforts of being completely still. The meditation, muscle tension exercises, shifting his focus on listening to specific quadrants, and the occasional small sip of water were the only antidotes to mental distraction. They worked to a degree, but he still had to periodically bring his mind back to a focus after it had drifted off.
Frequently, his thoughts drifted to Linda and that parting hug and kiss. The more he thought about it, the more he became convinced that the feelings he was having for her were returned. It was natural, he supposed. Both of them had lost a loved one; both of them were in the physical prime of their lives. Being pushed together during a time of extreme stress and relying on each other for survival would naturally create a bond. She was an attractive woman, and not just physically; she was full of surprises. He liked her tough mental attitude, her ability to face her fears and keep moving forward. He loved the way she spoke honestly in line with her own integrity. She was, he knew, a prime candidate for a life-mate, especially so in this dangerous post-grid world. With plenty of time to think about her and the situation they were in, he became convinced that her parting kiss had been her way of saying how she felt about him, a sign that only a fool could ignore. He thought, well, when I get back, I’ll look into that, but right now, I have to concentrate!
APRIL 1, LATE MORNING
By day two of his vigil, the decoy body had begun to swell up and smell. Adrian would catch strong whiffs of it whenever the breeze blew in his direction. Fortunately, it mostly blew away from him. A few times, the wind blew with enough strength to scatter the leaves around on the ground. Any traces of his manipulating the leaves over him had been erased by those winds. No one would be able see any difference between where he lay now and the forest floor. It had sprinkled rain twice, light rains that penetrated the leaves and soaked his clothes. He was alternately hot and cold, depending on the shadow patterns as they moved during the day. The mosquitos were still working his face over, and he knew that it would be a nasty mess, but it would heal. He couldn’t wait to scratch at least three thousand places on his body, and would as soon as he could.
Adrian could occasionally hear the hum of flies that swarmed over the body. A small hog had found the body by following the stench, and had fed on it before wandering off again. All to the good, he thought. It made the body harder to identify as not his, and would help it look as natural as it should have.
Another long night passed in short bursts of deep sleep. The dream came back each night, but it was less intense each time. Visions of future humans that acted queerly flitted through his sleep. It was an odd sort of dream that Adrian thought about a lot, but could not decipher any meaning from.
It was on the third day that something slowly crept into his awareness as he lay aching and itching. He had become intimately attuned to the sounds around him, and slowly, he became aware of a small silence in the far background as birds quieted. He focused, listening, and noted that there was a circle of silence slowly moving toward him. It was still a long way off, but there was definitely something there. It could be a pack of hogs, or coyotes, a bobcat, or a hunter. Or Rex. Adrian strained to listen. He heard a squirrel begin fussing in the silent zone. Something was definitely moving there, something the native wildlife didn’t like.