Those Who Wish Me Dead

Those Who Wish Me Dead Read Free Page B

Book: Those Who Wish Me Dead Read Free
Author: Michael Koryta
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers
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was a professional bodyguard. Since leaving the Air Force, Ethan had taught survival instruction as a private contractor, working with civilians and government groups. Jamie had been in a session he’d taught a year ago. He’d liked her, and she was good, competent if a bit cocky, but he could not imagine what had her driving over the Beartooth Pass in a snowstorm in search of him.
    “What’s her story?” Claude Kitna asked.
    Ethan couldn’t begin to answer that.
    “I’ll head your way,” Ethan said. “And I guess I’ll find out.”
    “Copy that. Be careful, now. It’s rough out here tonight.”
    “I’ll be careful. See you soon, Claude.”
    In the bedroom, Allison propped herself up on one arm and looked at him in the shadows as he pulled his clothes on.
    “Where are you headed?”
    “Up to the pass.”
    “Somebody try to walk away from a car wreck?”
    That had happened before. Scared of staying in one place, people would panic and set off down the highway, and, in the blowing snow, they’d lose the highway. It seemed like an impossible thing to lose, until you experienced a Rocky Mountain blizzard at night.
    “No. Jamie Bennett was trying to get through.”
    “The marshal? The one from last spring?”
    “Yes.”
    “What is she doing in Montana?”
    “Coming to find me, is what I was told.”
    “In the middle of the night?”
    “That’s what I was told,” he repeated.
    “This can’t be good,” Allison said.
    “I’m sure it’s fine.”
    But as he left the cabin and walked to his snowmobile in the howling white winds, he knew that it wasn’t.
      
    The night landscape refused full dark in that magical way that only snow could provide, soaking in the starlight and moonlight and offering it back as a trapped blue iridescence. Claude Kitna hadn’t been lying—the wind was working hard, shifting north to northeast in savage gusts, flinging thick, wet snow. Ethan rode alone and he rode slow, even though he knew 212 as well as anyone up here, and he’d logged more hours on it in bad weather than most. That was exactly why he kept his speed down even when it felt as if the big sled could handle more. Of the rescues-turned-to-corpse discoveries he’d participated in, far too many involved snowmobiles and ATVs, people getting cocky about driving vehicles built to handle the elements. One thing he’d learned while training all over the world—and the lesson had been hammered home here in Montana—was that believing a tool could handle the elements was a recipe for disaster. You adapted to the elements with respect; you did not control them.
    It took him an hour to make what was usually a twenty-minute ride, and he was greeted at Beartooth Pass by orange flares, which threw the surrounding peaks into silhouette against the night sky, one plow, and one police vehicle parked in the road. A black Chevy Tahoe was crushed against the guardrail. Ethan looked at its position, leaned up on one side, and shook his head. She’d come awfully damn close. Pull that same maneuver on one of the switchbacks and that Tahoe would have fallen a long way before it hit rock.
    He parked the snowmobile, watching the snow swirl into the dark canyons below, lit orange by the flares as it fell, and he wondered if there was anyone out there in the wilderness whom they didn’t know about, anyone who hadn’t been as lucky as Jamie Bennett. There were tall, thin poles spaced out along the winding highway, markers to help the plows maneuver when the snow turned the road into a blind man’s guessing game, and on the downwind side of the road, the snow was already two feet high against them, three feet in areas where the drifts caught.
    The passenger-side door of the plow truck banged open, and Jamie Bennett stepped out of the cab and into the snow before Ethan had cut his engine. Her feet slipped out from under her and she nearly ended up on her ass before she caught herself on the door handle.
    “What frigging country do

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