Lines in Shadow: Walking in the Rain Read online




  LINES IN SHADOW

  BOOK SIX

  WALKING IN THE RAIN

  By

  WILLIAM ALLEN

  Copyright November 2016

  All Rights Reserved

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  Malleus Publishing Website

  This story is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locales, or organizations is entirely coincidental.

  All Rights Are Reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the author.

  Copyright November 2016 William Allen

  Malleus Publishing

  Other Books in the Walking in the Rain series:

  Surviving the Fall

  Homes Fires Burning

  Hard Rain Falling

  Dark Sky Thunder

  Firestorm (by MC Allen)

  The Short Stories

  Going for the Horse Doc

  While the Cat’s Away

  PROLOGUE

  The jungle was a riot of noise and color. Never silent, except for when outsiders came stumbling into the green hell, and then the lack of animal noise clued him when to hide. He’d gotten good at reading the signs. When next came the warning quiet, the ragged Marine snuggled beneath the lacy tendrils of a spiky fruit plant nestled against a fallen tree trunk. Mouthing a silent prayer that no snakes found his hiding spot, he fought to stay awake as the insects droned in his ears. Sleep was death, but the hunters had dogged his heels for days, and the Marine was so tired.

  After what seemed like hours but must have only been twenty minutes, movement out of rhythm with the jungle caught his drooping attention. He saw the faint shape of worn and tape patched boots as one of his pursuers crept past the position. Gripping the rifle close, the man hoped these hunters would not search too closely. Since he’d managed to kill what he thought of as their tracker the day before, the Marine still figured his position had some small chance of going unnoticed. They’d started out with nine men, but he’d whittled down the numbers a little at a time. Unless they somehow picked up more men, the Marine thought there were only four left. Maybe three if the one he’d lung shot two days before had either been left behind or succumbed to his wounds. His plan was to break contact, changing directions, and hole up before they sent in more reinforcements.

  The Marine only had two magazines left for the M16, and then he would be reduced to using Ritter’s Beretta. Of course, that was assuming the abused rifle would even fire. Twice the damned thing had jammed on him since this terrible ordeal had begun. One of the hundred worries plaguing him at that moment was whether the temperamental weapon would even get off one shot before he was left banging the forward assist.

  The guerilla said something, but his words meant nothing. The local dialect was so different from the classroom Spanish the Marine had learned in school that their words would have been meaningless even in ideal circumstances. Didn’t matter. The watcher could figure out the meaning from the frantic tone.

  The fugitive came up firing, his first two bullets lashing the speaker’s chest at a range of three feet. Before the man had a chance to register his death, the Marine was on the move, rolling over the rotting log and facing another of the hated pursuers. He was dressed in threadbare peasant garb but carrying a meticulously clean Soviet-made AK-47 rifle that was nearly to his shoulder when the Marine fired again. The shot took him under the chin and snapped his head back in a shower of blood. The spray looked nearly black against the contrast of the deep greens of the jungle.

  As the rifle tumbled from the dying man’s suddenly nerveless fingers, the Marine spun looking for another target.

  Every time, every single replay in his mind, the desperate Marine thought he clocked the shooter first, but he was always too slow. The other one always fired first, and then it was too late. He took the first bullet in the side, low down at the waist, and the second was a ricochet that caught him in the upper left arm, pinging off a hard tree trunk to his left. In memory, the pain was there, but at the moment the bullets struck, the Marine did not really register this hurt.

  He finally caught view of the third member of the group that had been dogging his heels for days, weeks even, and shot her twice, center mass, before she could bring the rifle back down. In her haste, she’d gone full auto and sprayed half a magazine into the branches overhead. He triggered another shot, blowing out the side of her head, and then the rifle jammed yet again.

  The nightmare should have ended in his death, of course, to be a real screamer of a nightmare. That was the rules, or so he thought. He’d experienced that version of the nightmare many times too, of course, as his brain played out a different scenario. His capture, his torture, and eventual execution. Pretty graphic, and blood curdling in the details.

  No, the real horror to this nightmare came to the tattered, sore-covered and bleeding Marine as he lurched forward to claim the dead girl’s rifle as his own, and he stopped to regard that bullet ravaged face. Because now, every time he stopped to look at the girl on the ground, he saw Isabella. This was his Isabella, the tiny daughter he’d sworn to protect, now dead at his own hands. He looked down again.

  And then he screamed…

  “You alright?”

  Kevin Perkins asked the question in the same soft voice he used for everything. He was one of the guys from Branson, come in with Scott’s nephew, Glenn, and one of the steadier gunhands the older man had to work with. He claimed the bunk next to Scott in the barracks and didn’t seem to mind the nightmares. Heck, everybody had them, Scott realized, so it wasn’t out of the ordinary. Just part of the new normal.

  “Yeah,” Scott mumbled. “Sorry.”

  He saw an indistinct motion in the darkness and read it as a shrug.

  “No big. I gotta get up in a half hour for guard duty anyway.”

  Scott checked the luminous dial on his self-winding watch and saw it was just coming up on two thirty in the morning. All around, he caught the sound of snores and grunts in the night as men who’d worked hard all day tried to get some shuteye. Ignoring the interruption.

  “You want me to take it?” Scott offered. He’d gotten nearly four hours sleep and knew from experience that the dream wasn’t going to allow him any more.

  “Nah, that’s okay,” he replied genially, “I gotta go hang out in the woods and watch the front approach.”

  Scott knew what Perkins meant. He knew that stretch of woods better than anybody, almost. Played there as a kid, in fact, and hunted it when he had the chance as an adult. All part of his brother’s farm, but this patch was wild and had never been developed in living memory. Scott’s kind of place, in other words.

  “Look, I’m not going back to sleep anyway. You want the seven to eleven walking the ‘house instead? I’ll update the chart if you want.”

  Perkins considered his offer for a moment before softly replying. For a city boy, manning the blockhouse at the end of the road would be a much more suitable, and pleasant experience.

  “You sure you don’t mind? Gets awful lonely up there in the woods.”

  Scott chuckled darkly at that comment before answering.

  “No, I don’t mind. I like the alone time.”

  Which was true enough. If he wasn’t spending time with his daughter, Scott would just as soon be left to his own devices. Always been that way, he knew, but more so since the lights went out. Or so he told himself, wishing it was true. In reality, Scott knew there were times he wondered if he ever really came
home from the jungle. That green hell.

  CHAPTER ONE

  The intruder came from the south, winding through the tightly bunched trees like a wraith in the dark. Scott watched the newcomer’s progress and debated taking the shot. South of the homestead was more forest bordering the county road, and he knew of no one living that way for many miles. So, most likely, not a neighbor.

  The half-moon gave Scott all the light he needed, his dark-adapted eyes making out the shape even as she drew nearer. She, he knew, from the way she walked. Women walked differently than men, he’d observed, and most women never paid enough attention to disguise their gait. So, he held the intruder in his crosshairs for another long moment, and then set about scanning the area around her once again. If she had flankers out, or reinforcements behind, he would have shot without hesitation. A group moving at night would be up to no good, he reasoned, and he was their last line of defense outside the wire of the home place.

  Most of the stragglers who passed through were stopped at the blockhouses that guarded the routes into the tiny community. These heavily reinforced log structures were built to stop road traffic, be it vehicle, or most often, on foot. A few trespassers, like this one, tried the overland route and were stopped and sternly warned to turn around or directed to the shelter in Gentry. Not exactly a five-star hotel, but the small farming community did their best to furnish food to the church-run safehouse set up in the mostly-deserted nearby small town. Again, nothing fancy, but a person could live on beans and cornbread if starvation was the alternative. The shelter was open to residents of the town and provided a twenty-four-hour respite to travelers seeking a safe place to sleep.

  At night, though, all bets were off.

  So Scott scanned the woods, looking for those telltale signs that would alert him to others approaching. Straight lines breaking the shadows, or movement where there was no breeze to stir the bushes or disturb the grass. Night sounds that didn’t fit. Scott was searching for all these signs, and coming back with a big fat nothing.

  What did disturb Scott was the manner in which this woman moved. She wasn’t trying to be particularly quiet, after all, and instead seemed to be in a hurry but with stiff, almost pained movements indicating she’d come some ways in her travel. Could this still be some kind of trap, he wondered, and if so, what was the purpose?

  Deciding he needed a closer look, Scott radioed in the contact and asked for an alert team to be prepped. That meant getting a four-man fire team up and geared out, even though he didn’t think the woman herself was an immediate threat. Heck, though, he’d been wrong before. Especially when it came to women.

  Easily gauging her distance at one hundred meters from his position and estimating her rate of advance, Scott silently shimmied down from the hunting perch he’d placed on the side of an old oak tree and stepped out of the rope harness. Most hunters used a ladder to scale the tree, then hoisted up the aluminum frame and canvas-covered shelters, but Scott preferred using a rope for quicker descent. Slinging his long barreled Savage hunting rifle, he stopped to unfasten the retention strap on his pistol and palmed the holstered weapon for a moment, feeling the skater tape he’d wrapped around the butt of his Springfield XD.

  Taking a second to orient on the intruder’s position, Scott headed off to take an angle on her approach, choosing to move to his right, her left, in a looping stalk. This offered him cover in some old growth berry bushes that would bring him within a few dozen meters of the woman’s intended path. Plus, by going to her left, assuming she was right handed, she would have to aim across her body. He didn’t see a weapon, but everybody went armed these days. Everybody still alive, anyway.

  Moving quiet in the dark, especially in the woods, was no easy task, but Scott was good at it. He’d had the practice and the knack, something that’d proved to be a lifesaver more than once even before the lights went out. So he made his way carefully, minding the clutter underfoot and staying constantly aware of his surroundings as he took one cautious step after another.

  The secret was not to be silent, something only ninjas in the movies managed to pull off, and instead, to blend into the background and keep your noise down. A dog would have heard his movements, but the human ear lacked the discernment of a canine. And of course the dog, even a nose blind one, would have picked up his scent. Fortunately, the woman had no dog along to give her that warning.

  “FREEZE,” Scott announced, assuming a shooter’s stance once the intruder was twenty feet past his position and snapping on his flashlight. “HANDS ON YOUR HEAD. HANDS ON YOUR HEAD! LET ME SEE YOUR HANDS! SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT! HANDS ON YOUR HEAD!”

  The call was instinctive, the same one he used in the field as a game warden. The woman, shocked and surprised from behind, made to grasp something on her hip and Scott nearly ended her right there, again driven by instinct.

  “LADY, IF I DON’T SEE YOUR HANDS, I WILL SHOOT, DAMNIT!”

  Scott Keller had been a game warden for fifteen years. In that time, he’d seen his share of tense takedowns, usually in conjunction with drug raids on state land, but he’d never come closer to killing someone during an arrest than right that moment. That he’d killed before, several times in fact, was probably what saved the woman’s life in that second. She panicked, and he didn’t.

  “Please, please, don’t shoot,” the woman cried out, and her hands swung out wide to settle on the top of her head. She was scared, shaking in fact, and Scott knew it was from terror. Now that she was compliant, he risked taking things down a notch, and spoke more calmly this time.

  “Ma’am. I don’t know what you are doing out here, but this is private property.”

  “Please, please, officer,” she began, her voice thick with fright, “I’m sorry, so sorry. I didn’t mean anything. If you can…If you can just…”

  “Well, spit it out,” Scott demanded, though not unkindly.

  “I was just trying to get to Kellerville, officer. Trying to get to the Guard base there. That’s all. My bike had a flat out on the road and I knew if I cut through these woods I would be close. I wasn’t trying to do anything but get help.”

  “Help for who?” Scott asked, still not relaxing his shooting stance. He hated keeping his flashlight trained on the woman, making himself a huge target in the dark, but the alternative was worse. Scott was reasonably sure she didn’t have backup close, but if this was some kind of trick, she would be making her move somewhere about now. That was the reason for keeping his distance. He was just outside the “killing space” of twenty feet, and if she attacked with a knife he would empty the magazine into her before she got that close.

  “The camp,” she said, the air seeming to deflate from her lungs. “Oh, my God, I think they killed them all, or they will soon. I have to get the Guard, or my family is dead.”

  Well, hell, Scott thought, and keyed the radio attached to his jacket. This was a fine mess. He delivered a terse message, requesting someone go wake the Guard CO and his nephew Nick. They needed to be in on whatever this turned out to be.

  “Alright, miss. I’ve got them moving, so if you will come with me, we’ll see what we can do. I’ll need to disarm you but I think we can forego the cuffs.”

  “Wait, you mean…this is Kellerville?” the woman stammered, then got a grip and continued. “Yeah, I guess it would be with this level of security. I’m sorry, I didn’t think. I was in such a hurry I just cut through the woods. I heard the Guard post was at the Keller farm and I’ve visited there a few years ago.”

  “Understood. I’m Scott Keller. You can turn around, slowly, and I’ll need to take your weapons.”

  Doing a quick bit thorough pat down, Scott pocketed a revolver of some type and slipped a three-inch folding knife out of its scabbard before taking a moment to examine the woman. Then he snapped off the flashlight and took three steps to the right of his last position, thinking about what he’d seen of the woman before she became just another shadow.

  She was about five seven, and he
placed her age anywhere from thirty to thirty-five with a slender build and an attractive face showing signs of hunger. With shoulder-length dark hair that looked to have reddish highlights in the illumination of the flashlight, she was a striking sight, and for some stupid reason he suddenly wondered if she was married or had a boyfriend. And if that worthy might still be out here with them in the dark.

  Woooh, boy, Scott thought, calm down there. Take it easy. She might be bait, or she might be just what she seemed. Either way he was maintaining a ‘Stranger Danger’ approach, as he’d hammered into his own daughter. I don’t know anything about this woman except she approached the home place in the dark with some story of an attack. Then he remembered her eyes were the same shade of caramel brown as Isabella’s, and wondered if that might be an omen of some kind.

  “So, like I said, I’m Scott. What’s your name and why were you here before?”

  The woman seemed to take a moment to compose herself before she answered, taking a few deep breaths.

  “You’re Scott, Mark’s uncle? I knew his wife. Candace and I, we went to college together. Roommates for our sophomore year, actually. I haven’t seen her in ages, but I heard you guys were hosting a National Guard outpost here, so when the attack came, I jumped on my bike and headed here.”

  Scott nodded, but remained on his guard as they started walking through the woods, towards the driveway and up towards the front gate.

  “So what’s your name?”

  “Oh, it’s Katrina. My friends call me Kat, though. Kat Warren. I was living in Little Rock when this all happened. I walked back to Siloam Springs to be with my folks when I figured out the power wasn’t coming back anytime soon.” She paused, as if gathering her courage before continuing.

  “But we’ve been living at a camp set up over in the northern part of Ozark National Forest, where Highway 412 goes into the forest. You know that area?”