| THEY
HUNGER (Pinnacle Books, April 2007) By Scott Nicholson CHAPTER
ONE Shoulda ditched the bitch back in
Marietta. Ace Goodall was tempted to open his fist
and let her tumble down the ravine. She was dead weight,
dragging him down, same as any woman. Thats all
they were good for, except on those cold nights when they
opened their legs and gave up their heat the way God
intended. It was September, and the nights had definitely
taken a turn toward chilly in the He pulled, wrapping his other arm around
a maple sapling for balance. She barely weighed a hundred
pounds, though she was nearly as tall as he was. Five
feet five inches, not much rump to speak of, knockers the
size of peaches but not nearly as fuzzy. Her hair was
black and stringy, but considering she hadnt bathed
since the last rain a week ago, she looked pretty good.
Plus she was rich, or had been once. Not that money was
much use out here in the wilderness. He squeezed her wrist a little harder
than needed as she scrambled for purchase on the
leaf-covered loam. Clara Bannister. An uppity fucking
name if there ever was one. You think they saw us? she
whispered. No, but they sure as hell are going
to hear us if you dont shut that trap. She couldnt. Figured. Anyway, the
river throbbed in the background with a white wash of
sound, so they werent likely to be heard. Was it some of them? Dont rightly know. Its
not like they wore dark suits and sunglasses like the
spooks on TV. Who else would be way out here on a
weekday? Ace wondered that himself. Theyd
encountered a few serious hikers, and those were pretty
easy to spot in their worn leather boots, sweaty
bandanas, and oily hair. Most had fancy backpacks with
aluminum framework, far superior to the ratty Army
surplus canvas jobs that he and Clara carried. Hed
been tempted to pull out his Colt Python and ask politely
if one of the Greenpeace freaks cared to trade, but then
hed probably end up shooting somebody. Word would
get around, and the peaceful back-to-nature bit would go
all to hell. Hikers were no trouble, because even if
they knew about Ace Goodalls track record, they
would never expect to meet him face-to-face, especially
thirty miles from the closest convenience store. Normal
people had a hard time believing Aces kind existed,
and probably slept better that way. They didnt
understand that Ace was toiling on their behalf, doing
The Lords dirty work himself because they lacked
the balls and faith and outrage. No, hikers wouldnt
give him a second glance. These last two had been different. Sure,
they packed all the right brand-name gear, sported a
touch of stubble, and bore that gritty-eyed look of men
who had recently slept under the stars. But something
wasnt right. Maybe their steel-toed Timberlands
werent scuffed enough, or their gaits too precise,
like soldiers on a field exercise. They didnt
droop. They stood upright, alert, as if paying close
attention to their surroundings. More like hunters than
hikers. If Ace and Clara hadnt been resting
on a slight rise, under the shade of a lightning-charred
oak, they probably would have bumped into the pair on the
trail. Ace trusted his instincts, what he called his
little messages from above, and his gut
reaction had been that these guys were trouble. Not
trouble like Ace, who could cut you open and count your
ribs from the inside before your heart stopped beating,
but trouble of the long-armed-law variety. Something aint right about
them, he said, wiping sweat from the back of his
neck. Though the nights had hinted at frost, it was still
Indian summer during the day. The woods were rich with
the smell of goldenrod, daisies, and ironweed, as well as
the ripe odor of rotting leaves. They didnt see us,
though. Clara gave him a smile, and those neat
white teeth irritated him, a reminder of his own
upbringing. His family couldnt afford dental care.
Though Ace had just crossed that hallowed ground into his
thirties, hed already lost three adult teeth, only
one of them from a fist fight. Some of the others were
black, and a cavity in his bottom left molar had hit the
roots and tongued him with hellfire. I told you, The Lords looking
after us. Its holy work. I believe you. Sometimes I feel like I could drive
right up to the biggest police station in the South, park
right out front in a handicapped spot, wave my pecker
around, and theyd never even give me a
ticket. Ace forgot to keep his voice down. A prison
chaplain had once explained to him about religious
mania, but though Ace had a fondness for crazy
people, he didnt cotton much to maniacs. Besides,
the two hikers were probably a mile away by now. What do we do now?
Clara asked. If we go back to the trail, we might
run into them. We got an hour or so before
sundown. Ace squinted through the sparse foliage of
the treetops to the smeared patch of purple sunset in the
west. Lets just stick to the ridge and then
set up camp when we find a flat spot. He turned and walked between the towering
hardwoods, knowing she would follow without question. The
river pulsed with a constant dull roar below them, a
white noise that washed over the sounds of birds and
small animals. The force of the river made the ridge
vibrate. Ace could dig that raw power. Like the bombs in
his knapsack. Ace wasnt much of a nature freak, but
hed learned the best way to evade attention was to
go where no one else bothered. If that meant hiding out
for a while in the ass end of Possum Paradise, then so be
it. They had been following the Unegama for
three days, though the trail sometimes meandered away
from the rivers course because of the steepness of
the grade. Ace had seen the foaming brown-green water
and, even from a safe distance, he could visualize it
churning around rocks and making its mad dash for the
Atlantic Ocean. He bent, kicked up a fist-sized stone,
and hurled it into the gorge. If he had bigger balls,
hed stand on the rocky ledge and take a piss.
Nothing like heights to make a man want to arc a yellow
rainbow. But he figured water made its way downhill no
matter what and eventually it all ended up in the same
place. They came to a group of jagged gray
stones protruding from the black dirt like the fingers of
a premature burial victim. A fine, chilly spray added
weight to the air. The trees thinned and Ace could make
out the walls of the gorge. Off-white rock plunged eighty
feet down, worn smooth by eons of running water that had
probably started as a ridge-top trickle and then cut its
way deep into the skin of the Earth. The rock bore the
stubble of twisted, stunted balsams and veins of quartz
crystal glittered in the dying daylight. Though they were
fifty feet from the ledge, Ace got vertigo from the
yawning space of the gorge. A section of the ledge had recently given
way, judging by the dirt clinging to the upturned roots.
The rocks were different, too, not worn and splotched
with gray moss like those across the rest of the ridge.
Clara had told him the Appalachian chain was the oldest
stretch of mountains in the world, which Ace thought was
dumb, because the Book of Genesis set down the creation
date of the heavens and Earth as all at once. So how
could one mountain be older than another? At any rate,
Ace didnt like the thought of standing anywhere
near that ledge. The walls of the gorge looked like so
many stacked pieces of rock, anyway, and if a piece
kicked out somewhere near the bottom, the whole ridge
might tumble down. He moved away from the ledge, heading
into the woods. It would be time to camp soon. Clara
stood a moment longer, looking out over the ripples of
soil and trees that spread as far as the eye could see
before vanishing into a soft, blue haze on the horizon.
Ace waited for her footsteps in the leaves behind him. Haircuts, he shouted,
loudly enough to be heard over the river. Huh? Claras pretty pink
mouth was hanging open. If he were a violent man,
hed backhand her for looking like an idiotic
mouth-breather. Haircuts. Thats what was
wrong with them. Trimmed above the ears, the kind that
dont need no comb. She nodded, finally closing her mouth.
Ace unclenched his fists and rubbed a palm over his own
greasy, tangled scalp. Think of the people weve seen
out here, he said. None of them looked like
they been in spitting distance of a bar of soap. Pretty
much, most of them looked like they had fleas. Clara scratched her underarm, as if
remembering some of their sleazy lodgings of the few
weeks. Those guys looked clean, like something out
of the Ivy League, she said. Ace didnt know fuck about the Ivy
League. Sounded like soccer, or some other foreign sport.
Or maybe Quantico, he said. Good thing they didnt see us,
then. Ace smiled, curling his tongue in the gap
of a missing canine. Told ya, its Gods
doing, he said. Just like God had helped him rig
the time-delay fuses on those bombs in Birmingham and
Tupelo. A little fire and brimstone for the baby
butchers. He waved toward a small clearing away
from the ledge Come on, lets make camp before
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