pouch sheath he kept laced over his right calf.
Chambering another round, Walters turned back to face Savage, who was slipping the harness over his shoulders. “What the hell are you doing?” he shouted. Catching another glimpse of the sow, he hastily raised the rifle and fired.
Savage tied the harness to a thick, braided rope that was coiled on the floor beside him. The other end of the rope was secured to a carabiner, which he clipped to the helo rigging. Pausing to light another cigarette, he looked at Walters. “To kill a grizzly, you gotta hit it the right way. Face, lungs, or heart. Even the top of the head won’t cut it. Got a skull like plate armor. You need a clear shot, and it ain’t gonna happen with meat-stick up there swooping like a kite and the bear in full sprint beneath the tree cover.”
“You heard the pilot—we can’t set down anywhere. This is the best angle I’m gonna get. ”
The Blackhawk pulled to a midair halt, quivering beneath the whirring rotors. “I lost her,” the pilot said. “Fuck. I lost her.” A blast of wind hit the helo, wobbling it.
“Do I have to do everything here?” Walters yelled. “You people only give me a twelve-hour window on the Blackhawk and now I’m supposed to navigate the thing too?” He threw the rifle down on the floor. Savage picked it up and angled it, eyeing the scope.
“Keep going south,” Savage said softly.
The pilot looked over at Walters, unsure if he should obey the order. “What the fuck are you talking about, Savage?” Walters said. “We need to circle in and find her.”
Savage dragged deep and dragoned twin streams of smoke through his nostrils. “We have about three minutes to head south to where that gorge ends in a cliff. That’s the direction she was heading, and she’s gonna follow the ridge. Now you can sit here like the pencil-pushing cocksucker that you are, or you can act like the man you wish you were. Just try to make up your mind sometime in the next ten seconds so I have at least a small chance of getting in position.”
Walters bit the inside of his lip, staring at Savage. Savage returned the glare. “All right,” Walters finally said. He waved a hand at the pilot and settled back in his seat. “Give the felon a go at it.”
Savage set the rifle down and pulled himself up to a crouch. “I want you to trace the line of this gorge until it falls away at the cliff face. Pull about twenty yards off the lip when we hit it and hold steady.”
“All right,” the pilot said. “I’m not dipping lower than the top of the tree line, though. We’re gonna have problems with the wind against the cliff, and there’s nowhere to land down there if we need to back down.”
“Just let me worry about that,” Savage said.
The helicopter tilted forward and thundered down the gorge. Walters searched the woods for the bear but saw nothing except the waving firs. “I hope you know what you’re doing, Savage,” he said.
Savage tightened the modified harness around his shoulders and slid one arm loophole down over his waist as the helicopter shot along the ridge.
They passed the cliff and were suddenly out several hundred yards above a stone basin cut by a rushing river. The pilot swung the helicopter to face the line of trees at the edge of the cliff. Nothing was visible but foliage.
“How the fuck are you gonna get a shot here?” Walters said, his anger intensifying. “It’s all foliage from this angle and we can’t drop the helo any lower!”
Savage smiled around his cigarette and leaned backward out of the helicopter, grabbing the Win Mag with one hand. His tattered sock was the last thing to disappear over the side of the Blackhawk. Until the cara-biner pulled tight on the rigging, it seemed from the helicopter that he’d gone over in a suicide dive.
Falling the twenty-foot length of the rope, Savage snapped to a halt. Flat on his stomach, he floated in a sniper’s stance. Below him, the drop stretched