The dog lunged at him, and Duane kicked the beast onto its back. He scrambled to his feet with a rock of his own and flung it at the thing, affecting its aim as it threw the boulder a second time. It landed clear, and Duane put away all thoughts of rescuing passengers. He ran for the road.
Another rock hit his thickly padded shoulder, and he slipped over the tarmac. The snow was up to his knees, slowing down his movements.
He heard snow crunching off the road to his left. The thing was pacing him. Thing? Why did he think that? It was some psycho local boy who liked auto accidents, wasn’t it? Big, though. Farm guy.
Duane instinctively stopped and jumped backward. Another rock made a hole in the air where his head had just been.
He was good with those rocks. He was better than Duane with a football. He had a fur coat, didn’t he? Had to. Arms and legs and everything.
Duane broke into a run, chewed up a few yards of road, and stopped to listen again. The psycho made a growling sound.
A tree branch propellered through the air against the wind and clawed up the ground, entangling his feet and tripping him. Duane rolled over as whoever or whatever it was bounded up. He jumped to his feet and ducked past a mountain of fur and gristle back toward the road.
Fear rose like smoke from Duane’s vitals up through his chest and permeated his head. He zigzagged his way back to the highway through clumps of buried grass and weed as the snow whirled around him. The ground formed ripple-shaped hummocks, their lee sides banked with deep, soft snow. That was when Duane had his idea. It was not a good idea, but ideas of any kind were hard to come by in this particular situation. That thing was a living snowplow, as unheeding of lumpy ground as a locomotive was of stopping. Duane turned back off the road, doubled around a few times, and managed to put some more yards between himself and the thing. He turned off the road one final time and body-flopped deep into a snowbank slanting up the side of a hummock.
With luck the storm would cover up his traces in seconds. He would be buried completely. If not that, at least his form would be indistinguishable from any of the branches lying around the meadow.
He felt the growing weight of snow on his back. He breathed shallowly, so as not to crack the precious mantle as it built up. Driven by the wind, the snow piled against every crevice of his body, the separation of arm and legs, the gentle rise of his back, past his ears and over his head, sending his consciousness into a limbo of unearthly frozen quiet.
It was not a bear, he thought. He wished it were a bear, so it would kill him quickly. More wind. More wind, more snow, let the storm burst open, let the heavens fall.
A foot sank down into the snow six inches in front of his head.
Jason put his fingertips together and said, “Moon? I will make you an offer. I will give you ten thousand dollars cash for the toe in your medicine bundle.”
“Sir,” Moon answered. “If you come near to me, I will cut your guts out and string them over that fireplace there.”
Helder wheeled around in his chair, a Scotch glass in his hand. “None of that, you two. Be nice. Be nice.” He sipped his Scotch, then said, “I say. What toe?”
“Moon’s got a Bigfoot toe in his medicine bundle.”
That detonated in Helder’s booze-fogged brain like a slow-burning phosphorus grenade, growing hotter and hotter until its heat broke through his drunkenness. “That leather thing?” He looked at the Indian, mouth open. “Moon, is that true?”
Moon’s jaw muscles bunched up. If looks were daggers, Jason would have been sliced to pieces.
“I don’t think so,” Jason said, slipping out his pistol and holding it loosely in his hands.
“Yeah, you are. You know why? ’Cause he’s
“How do you figure that?”
“ ’Cause you’re following him, just like I am.”
“Hardly for the same reason, Moon!”
Moon shook his head, the smile stamped on his face. “It don’t matter shit what your reasons are. Everybody’s got different reasons. Every day I said to myself, that’s it. I’ve had it. One more day and if he don’t give me my name I’ll quit. But you never quit. You just keep after him, and you find out one day he’s taken over your whole life.” He pointed the knife again. “That’s what a spirit does to you. That’s what he done to you and me.”
“He’s got you there,” said Martha, wanting to defuse the tension.