Read Breaking Point Page 25


  “Anywhere you want.”

  McLanahan gestured behind them. “There’s fire everywhere. Where do you expect us to go?”

  “I’m sticking with you,” Farkus said to Butch. Butch nodded reluctantly.

  He said, “I can’t guarantee your safety if you stay with me.”

  “I’d rather take my chances with you than stay with Fatty.”

  McLanahan reacted with anger and panic, and turned so he could look behind them, as if to find a path through the oncoming fire. He spat a curse and shook his head.

  At that moment, less than a mile away, was a loud popping sound, followed by another.

  “Is somebody shooting?” Farkus asked Butch.

  “No,” Butch said, shaking his head. “Those are trees exploding. When the sap in the trees gets superheated, trees literally blow up.”

  “Jesus,” Farkus said. “Exploding trees.”

  “That’s going to be us if we don’t get moving,” McLanahan said. His eyes were wet and bloodshot, rimmed with red.

  Butch unshouldered his pack and dug into it and emerged with a spare long-sleeved shirt. He used his knife to cut it into wide strips, then doused the strips with water from his Nalgene bottle.

  “Tie these around your mouths,” he said. Then, to McLanahan: “Tie yours extra tight.”

  “Are we still headed for the canyon?” Farkus asked as he covered his mouth with the cool, wet cloth and knotted it at the nape of his neck. It felt good.

  Butch nodded. “I don’t think we have any choice but you can do whatever you want. I doubt the fire can jump the canyon, and I know Batista can’t. So if we can get there, we might have a chance to get out of this.”

  Farkus nodded, ready to go.

  “How in the hell are you going to get across?” McLanahan said.

  Butch threaded his arms through his pack and buckled it back on.

  “I guess we’ll find out,” he said.

  “That’s bullshit,” McLanahan said. He looked over his shoulder at the oncoming fire. They couldn’t actually see leaping flames yet, but the air was getting hotter and exploding trees signaled the approach of the flames.

  “I’m going to make my stand,” McLanahan said. “I’ll find a ditch, cover myself with dirt, and let it pass over the top of me.”

  “Fine,” Butch said. “Suit yourself. Have you ever heard of the Mann Gulch fire in Montana?”

  “The what?”

  “That’s right, you’re from West Virginia,” Butch said. “In 1949, smoke jumpers got caught in a situation like this and thirteen died. Those that didn’t suffocate from the smoke tried to hunker down and ride it out like you were describing. They were baked like potatoes.”

  At that moment, a long and heavily muscled mountain lion appeared out of nowhere and ran right through the three of them, threading silkily around their legs, and ran toward higher ground. Farkus was astounded.

  “He didn’t even care we were here,” Farkus said.

  “Okay,” McLanahan said to Butch. “I’ll go with you.”

  “You can stay,” Butch said. “Mountain lions have to eat, too.”

  “I’m going with you,” McLanahan said, defeated. “But no one knows how to get across. I can see us standing there on the edge as the fire comes straight at us.”

  “I know that canyon has been crossed.”

  “That’s Indian hokum,” McLanahan said. “Have you seen it?”

  Farkus had, that time he was hunting with Butch. They’d stood on the rim and looked down. Butch had pointed out the knife-sharp walls, a terrifying distance from the rim to the narrow canyon floor, and virtually no breaks or cracks through the rocks to assure a crossing. The canyon was so steep and narrow that sunlight rarely shone on the surface of the Middle Fork. Butch said it cut through eight different archaeological strata before it hit the bottom.

  “It’s been done,” Butch said, holding McLanahan’s eye. “Once by those Cheyenne back in the old days when the Pawnee closed in on their camp, and they did it at night. And Joe Pickett did it.”

  McLanahan shook his head in disgust. “He claims he did it. He’s a pain in my ass, you know.”

  “If Joe says he did it, he did it,” Butch said.

  “And there he is,” Farkus said, doubting his eyes, as Joe appeared on horseback through a haze of smoke and rode right toward them.

  31

  “YOU’RE NOT GONNA SHOOT ME, ARE YOU, BUTCH?” Joe called out, after reining Toby to a stop. He knew the answer, though, because Roberson was lowering the rifle he’d raised instinctively when Joe appeared.

  “I don’t think so,” Butch responded, “or I’d have already done it.”

  “That’s good,” Joe mumbled aloud to himself, and nudged Toby’s flanks toward the three men who stood staring at him from within a sparse stand of twisted and ancient mountain juniper that was just a little taller than themselves.

  Through burning eyes, he noted that Farkus wasn’t dead after all, and that both Farkus and McLanahan weren’t cuffed or bound. They stood on either side of Butch Roberson, who squinted at him through the haze and waves of heat, wearing his backpack and cradling his AR-15.

  —

  HE’D FOUND THEM more by intuition and strategic luck than anything else, Joe thought. After he’d left Underwood and the agents, he’d ridden south, cutting across the face of the mountain from clearing to clearing so he could look back and down and see the progress of the fire. He tried to skirt dry grassy areas and stick to the shade and rock on the side of the meadows because he knew how fast fire could consume it and he didn’t want to be trapped.

  The fire was amazing and terrifying to behold, and as he rode he got the clear feeling that all rules had been suspended, all bets were off, all was forgotten, and it was suddenly every man for himself. Even the wildlife had jettisoned its instincts and caution, and ran across his path up the mountain with no more than a passing glance. Elk, mule deer, mountain lions, bobcats, three black bears (two with cubs), and a lone black wolf he thought he’d seen before. Only the wolf hesitated as it loped along, and locked eyes with Joe for a momentary and primal exchange of information—run—before vanishing into the timber.

  “You again,” Joe had said.

  —

  WHEN HE COULD SEE clearly from the edges of the meadows, which wasn’t often, Joe noted how the fire was racing up and across the mountain in what looked like reverse molten rivers of flame. It was ravenous and craven, without thought or mercy, and it either roared up ravines from the ground up or jumped from crown to crown of high dead pine trees like a manic gremlin, consuming everything it wanted to consume. The fire was so huge and so voracious that it seemed to be creating its own weather; hot blasts of air rocketed up the mountain and primed the dry timber for oncoming destruction. Long-standing trees went whumpf and exploded into flame, and the underbrush snapped and crackled with a high-pitched fury.

  At one point he saw a wall of flame shoot through a stand of aspen, linger a moment among the live green trees as if taking a breather, then squirt out the side onto low-hanging dead pine boughs and continue its course. Ash behaved like snow, either swirling horizontally along the ground as if in a ground blizzard or floating down softly through the air, depending on the wind speed and direction of the moment.

  It was a maelstrom. The hot dry wind blew steadily to the east, but at times it swirled and reversed direction and blew like a blowtorch and blew north, then west.

  Twice, he witnessed fire whirls that emerged from the trees in thirty-foot columns of flame. The whirls whipped back and forth as if they were being shaken. One fire whirl was slapped down by a gust of wind but continued to burn as a horizontal fire worm that ignited all the grass in its path.

  Joe knew from the speed of the fire’s advance that there would be no putting it out. This fire, in perfect conditions of hot, dry weather with an endless supply of dead and low-moisture fuel, would burn until it burned out. Joe had heard of fires that burned so hot they literally
sterilized the ground for years after they’d passed through, and he guessed this was going to be one of those.

  He could only speculate how big the fire would become, because it was already out of control and growing. If it found enough fuel at the summit, it could flow over the top and into Big Stream Valley. Airborne embers could be blown through the wind to land on dry trees hundreds of yards from the source. He felt both sick to his stomach and humbled by the awesome power of nature at the same time. It wasn’t the first forest fire he’d seen—far from it—but it was already the biggest and fastest. Previously, he’d observed fires from a safe distance.

  Fire was natural, he knew that. Forests had to regenerate, and fire jump-started the process by opening the canopy, clearing debris, and activating aspen shoots and pine seeds. The mountain had burned countless times over the ages, long before there were humans to run from it.

  Yet . . .

  So he continued to head south, toward Savage Run Canyon. Not only because he’d speculated that Butch had chosen the same route and everything else was misdirection but because it was the only terrain that wasn’t yet in flames.

  —

  AS JOE RODE UP on the three men, he said, “Butch, when this is over I’m going to place you under arrest. You understand that, right?”

  Butch nodded.

  Joe said, “Just so we’re clear. I’m going to try to get this handled aboveboard and locally. I’ll get Dulcie involved, and we’ll do our best to keep the Feds out.”

  “I appreciate that.”

  “But right now we’re going to put that all aside and try to survive this. Does that sound like a deal to you?”

  “Yes, Joe.”

  “Okay, then.”

  “How far from here to the canyon?” McLanahan asked Joe, without any preamble.

  “Couple of miles,” Joe said.

  “Can you get us across?”

  “I can’t promise it,” Joe said. “It’s been years and I haven’t been back.”

  “Jesus Christ,” McLanahan said. “We’re going to burn to death up here.”

  Joe shrugged. He didn’t have the time or inclination to talk to McLanahan, even when there wasn’t a forest fire racing toward them.

  “I thought you were dead,” Joe said to Farkus, as he climbed off Toby.

  “So did I,” Farkus said, rolling his eyes toward Butch Roberson. “That trick was his idea.”

  Joe asked Farkus, “Why is it you always seem to be in the middle of every bad situation there is?”

  “I don’t know!” Farkus said, almost howling. “But the same could be said about you.”

  “Point taken,” Joe said.

  “It was spur-of-the-moment,” Butch said, referring to his claim that he killed Farkus. “That guy Batista just pissed me off so bad I needed to convince him I was a serious man and I’d kill hostages if I had to.”

  “Why not McLanahan, then?” Joe asked. “That would make the world a better place.”

  “Hey!” the ex-sheriff cried, hurt. “That was uncalled for.”

  But Joe noticed Butch was stifling a grin.

  “You know there was never any helicopter,” Joe said.

  “I figured as much.”

  Joe said, “Did you know when you sent the shooter away they’d try to blow him up?”

  “No,” Butch said.

  “Then why’d you give him that satellite phone?”

  “I knew it had GPS. I figured they’d track him thinking it was me and give me some time to get out of here. I had no idea they’d shoot a goddamned missile at him.”

  “This fire isn’t the only thing out of control,” Joe said.

  —

  JOE LOOKED AROUND where they stood. It was dry and rocky except for the junipers. He said, “I’ve read where you can start a personal grass fire and lay down in it when it goes out. That way, the fire will go around you because you’ve already used up the fuel.”

  The others looked at him optimistically. Except Butch.

  “That won’t work here, though,” Joe said. “Not enough grass and the brush is over our heads. Plus, the fire is burning too hot. People die from smoke and heat, mostly. They don’t burn up.”

  “The canyon is our only choice,” Butch said.

  “Yup.”

  While Butch, Farkus, and McLanahan waited anxiously, Joe said, “Give me a minute.”

  “We don’t have a minute,” McLanahan shouted. He was looking at actual flames advancing on them from tree to tree in the direction from which Joe had come.

  “You’re free to go on ahead,” Butch said to McLanahan, which shut him up.

  Unsaddling Toby, Joe quickly dug into his essentials bag for a canvas evidence pouch and a length of leather string. He dug out the digital recorder from his pocket, put it in the pouch and cinched it, and wrote FOR GOV RULON ONLY on the canvas with a black marker. He tied the string around Toby’s neck and said, “Be safe, buddy,” and slapped his horse on the flank.

  Toby bunched up and took off. He looked back only once.

  “Go!” Joe hollered.

  “He’s got a better chance without my weight and that saddle,” Joe said. But as he watched his horse thunder up the mountain, his eyes stung, and it wasn’t from the smoke.

  He dug the satellite phone out of the saddlebag.

  He turned to Roberson. “Butch, I’d jettison that pack if I were you.”

  Butch looked back, conflicted.

  “Remember our deal,” Joe said.

  Butch nodded and lowered the pack. “What about my rifle?”

  “I’d leave that, too.”

  “No. It goes with me.”

  Joe didn’t want to argue. The look in Butch’s eyes said it wouldn’t be productive.

  “Then let’s go,” Joe said, walking through them toward the south, still clutching the phone. He looked down and noticed there was a message on the screen. In all the commotion, he hadn’t heard it ring.

  He’d retrieve it as soon as he had a moment.

  “I hope you can find that passage again,” McLanahan shouted.

  “Yeah,” Joe said dourly. “Me, too.”

  32

  JOE COULD FEEL HEAT ON HIS BACK WHEN THEY reached the southern rim of Savage Run Canyon. The wind had kicked up, blowing from the northwest, and supercharged the wall of oncoming fire behind them. Occasionally, an ember carried by the wind blew across his vision and one had landed on his shoulder, burning a hole in the fabric. He’d slapped at it as if it were a wasp.

  The air was so hot it burned his lungs to breathe it, and each breath seemed hollow, devoid of oxygen. The smoke was thick and he felt more than saw the opening of the canyon ahead of him, and stopped short. Farkus bumped into him because he was apparently walking with his eyes shut.

  “Don’t do that,” Joe warned.

  “Sorry.”

  An arched eyebrow of prickly juniper rimmed the canyon, the foliage biting into the rocky soil and holding on for dear life. It made it hard to tell where the real edge of the canyon began.

  Joe looked up and was surprised to find out that at eye level he couldn’t even see the opposite rim of the canyon because of the smoke. Only when he ducked and trained his eyes down could he vaguely make out the opposing wall. The sheer cliff face was as vertical and slick as he remembered it in his nightmares, and he could see no sign of the passage.

  “How far?” Butch Roberson croaked, his voice thick with mucus.

  “I don’t know,” Joe said over his shoulder.

  Because he couldn’t see farther than thirty feet, he didn’t know if he was even in the vicinity of the old switchback trail he’d once found. He tried to conjure up a clear memory and convinced himself that he’d need to walk west, not east, along the edge of the rim to find it. The wrong choice, he knew, could be fatal.

  The problem with moving parallel to the rim of the canyon was that the fire would no longer be pushing them from the back, but from the side. The only way to escape as the flames closed in on th
em would be to jump and plunge into the void. There was no way he would do that. Even if he somehow avoided bouncing off the canyon wall on the way down, the impact of hitting the surface of the shallow river would kill him.

  —

  IT HAD BEEN ten years since he’d made the crossing. At that time, he was with an environmental terrorist named Stewie Woods and Woods’s girlfriend, Britney Earthshare. They were being pursued by a couple of aging hit men, and the only place to escape them was to cross the canyon. Joe had heard of the legend of the crossing. Supposedly, a band of Cheyenne Indians—mainly women and children because the warriors were hunting in another part of the mountains—defied certain death and made the crossing in the middle of the night before a murderous group of Pawnee closed in on them. No one knew if the Cheyenne knew about the location of the crossing before they were forced to find it, or whether it had been pure crazy luck. But most of the Cheyenne made it across, leaving tepee poles, travois, and a few broken bodies along the descent. Joe had originally found the location of the crossing because he discovered an ancient Cheyenne child’s doll made of leather and fur that had been discarded. The doll was displayed in his home.

  Now he wished he’d left the doll where he found it so he’d have some idea where the trailhead was located.

  More burning embers, like fireflies, floated through the air. The roar of the fire was so loud it was difficult to hear anything else.

  —

  HE REMEMBERED STEWIE had blundered over an outcropping of rock hidden in the brush, and had nearly fallen to his death in the canyon. The rock—if he’d gone the right direction and could find it again—would indicate the mouth of the trailhead to the Cheyenne Crossing. In the intervening years, the brush had become even taller and thicker than before.

  Joe felt panic start to set in. He hoped it wouldn’t turn into mindless shock, and he shook his head to clear it while he walked. His left shoulder, side, and leg were hot from the proximity of the flames. His skin tingled with it, and he tried to maintain a stride where he could avoid letting the hot fabric touch his flesh.

  “Oh God, oh God, oh God,” McLanahan moaned. “We’re going to die in the worst way.”