Fever Dream - Douglas Preston [81]
“Christ,” murmured D’Agosta, taking a tight grip on the handle of the passenger door.
Flashing his lights and leaning on the horn, Pendergast found a lane between the cars ahead and the oncoming traffic. A fresh volley of honks sounded as they hurtled through the rain-slick crossing, barely missing an eighteen-wheeler that was nosing into the intersection. Pendergast had not taken his foot from the accelerator, and the needle was now trembling past one hundred.
“Maybe we should just stop and confront the guy,” said D’Agosta. “Ask him who he’s working for.”
“How dull. And we know who he’s working for.”
They whipped past one car, then another and another, the vehicles merely blurs of stationary color on the road. Now the traffic was all behind them and the road ahead was empty. Houses, commercial buildings, and the occasional sad-looking feed or supply store fell away as they entered the swamplands. A stand of crape trees, bleak sentinels under the gunmetal sky, whisked past in an instant. The windshield wipers beat their regular cadence against the glass. D’Agosta allowed his grip on the door handle to relax somewhat.
He glanced over his shoulder again. All clear.
No—no, it wasn’t. From among the vague outlines of vehicles behind them, a single shape resolved itself. It was the dark sedan, far behind but coming up fast.
“Shit,” D’Agosta said. “He got through that intersection. Tenacious bastard.”
“We have what he wants,” Pendergast said. “Another reason we mustn’t let him catch up to us.”
The road narrowed as they plunged deeper into the marshy lowlands. D’Agosta kept his gaze rearward while they negotiated a long, screaming turn. As the sedan dropped out of sight behind the curve and tall marsh grass, he felt the car decelerate.
“Now’s our chance to—” he began.
All of a sudden the Rolls swerved violently to one side. Tumbled almost into the back of the car, D’Agosta fought to reseat himself. They had veered off the road onto a narrow dirt track that snaked into thick swamp. A dirty, dented sign read DESMIRAIL WILDLIFE AREA—SERVICE VEHICLES ONLY.
The car bucked fiercely from side to side as they tore down the muddy track. One moment D’Agosta felt himself thrown against the door; the next he was lifted bodily out of his seat, prevented from concussing himself against the roof only by the shoulder strap. Another minute of this, he thought grimly, and we’ll break both axles. He ventured another look in the rearview mirror, but the path was too sinuous to see more than a hundred yards behind them.
Ahead, the service path narrowed and forked. A much narrower and rougher footpath diverged from it and ran straight ahead alongside a bayou, a chain of steel links stretched across it, marked by the sign WARNING: NO VEHICLES PAST THIS POINT.
Instead of slowing for the turn, Pendergast goosed the accelerator.
“Hey, whoa!” D’Agosta cried as they headed straight for the footpath. “Jesus—!”
They broke through the chain with a sound like a rifle shot. A profusion of egrets, vultures, and wood ducks rose from the surrounding yellowtop fields and bald cypresses, honking and shrieking in protest. The big car lurched left, then right, again and again, blurring D’Agosta’s vision and making his teeth rattle in his skull. They plunged into a stand of umbrella grass, the big stems parting before them with a strange whack, whack.
D’Agosta had been in some hair-raising car chases in his day, but nothing like this. The swamp grass had grown so thick and tall they could see only a few car lengths ahead of them. Yet instead of reducing speed, Pendergast reached over and—still without decelerating—switched on the headlights.
D’Agosta hung on for dear life, afraid to tear his eyes from the view ahead even for a second. “Pendergast, slow down!” he yelled. “We’ve lost him! For chrissakes, slow—”
And then, quite suddenly, they were out of the grass. The car went over a rise of earth and they