legs felt like liquid.
A tremor moved through his left foot.
He leaned into the rock and clutched a handhold. Shut his eyes. Let the panic course through him and burn itself out.
The terror passed.
Ethan went on, pulling himself up foot by foot on the rusted cable as the abbies ripped apart the man who’d lost his footing on the cliff.
Ethan reached the plank walkway.
Six inches wide, it traversed the face of the cliff.
Hecter was already halfway across.
Ethan followed.
The forest was now three hundred feet below.
Wayward Pines was somewhere out there, the town still dark but filled with distant screams.
On the rock below, Ethan spotted movement.
White forms climbing toward him.
He shouted to Hecter, “They’re on the cliff!”
Hecter looked down.
The abbies climbed fast, fearlessly, like the possibility of falling did not exist.
Ethan stopped, holding the cable with one hand while he tried to get a decent grip on the Mossberg.
No use.
He called out to Hecter, “Come here!”
Hecter turned awkwardly on the narrow planks and headed back toward Ethan.
“I need you to hold my belt,” Ethan said.
“Why?”
“There’s not enough room up here for me to stand and aim.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Hold the cable with one hand, grab my belt with the other. I’m going to lean out over the edge and take a clean shot.”
Hecter sidestepped the last few feet to Ethan and grabbed hold of his belt.
“I assume it’s buckled?” he asked.
“Good one. You got me?”
“I got you.”
And still it took three seconds for Ethan to steel his nerve.
He let go of the cable and slid the strap of the shotgun off his shoulder, aimed the luminous sight down the face of the cliff.
Ten abbies were making an ascent in a tight cluster. He tried to focus, to put the fear out of his mind, but he kept seeing that man falling toward him, his head cracking open on the rock.
The scream.
The silence.
The scream.
The silence.
Ethan’s stomach turned. The world seemed to rush up at him and fall away at the same time.
Get it together.
Ethan drew a bead on the leader.
The shotgun bucked him back against the cliff and the report raced across the valley, bounced off the western wall of rock, and returned.
The slug hit the lead abby.
It peeled off with a shrill screech and tumbled down the rock, crashing into four more and knocking them over like bowling pins.
The others held fast.
They had climbed to within sixty feet of the plank.
Once again Ethan leaned out over the ledge, heard Hecter groaning, and imagined the cable biting into Hecter’s fingers.
The remaining abbies had taken the hint and spread out.
He took his time shooting them down from left to right.
No misses.
Watched them plunge into the darkness, taking out a handful of others who had just begun to climb.
He was out of ammo.
“All right,” Ethan said.
Hecter pulled him back onto the plank and they hurried on, crossing the rock face until they rounded the corner at the end.
They rushed up the widening ledge into the mountain.
Ethan could hardly see a thing in the passage, and up ahead, the door to the cavern was shut.
He pounded the wood.
“Two more out here! Open up!”
The bolt slid back on the other side, hinges creaking as it opened.
Ethan hadn’t noticed the door his first time here, but now he made a careful study. It had been constructed of pine logs stacked horizontally and cemented together with an earth-based mortar.
He followed Hecter inside.
Kate shut the door after him and shot a heavy steel rod back into its housing.
Ethan said, “My family—”
“They’re here. They’re safe.”
He spotted them over by the stage, flashed an I-love-you sign.
Ethan surveyed the cavern—several thousand square feet with kerosene lamps hanging from wires in the low rock ceiling.
A scattering of furniture.
Bar on the left.
Stage on the right.
Both rickety-looking, as if they’d been assembled out of scrap wood. At the
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