it fall to his knee. “You can’t really risk being sore.”
“Goddamnit.” Cameron pushed herself back in the chair, then slumped down.
The nurse waited, tapping the clipboard against her thigh, her breath a rattle in her throat. Justin faced his wife, speaking gently. “It’s only a week, honey. That’ll even give me time to knock you up again.”
Cameron’s frown lightened, almost imperceptibly. “That’s not how it works.”
“Oh yeah,” Justin said. Reluctantly, Cameron pushed herself up in her seat. Justin turned to the nurse. “I think we’re gonna have to reschedule.”
“Talk to the receptionist,” the nurse said before disappearing behind the door.
“She’s pleasant,” Cameron muttered.
“I’m surprised she didn’t call you ‘dearie.’”
Justin stood, but Cameron didn’t budge. He took her hands in his and pulled her up from the chair. She rose with melodramatic slowness, and he looped his arms beneath hers to hold her up. She kissed him softly on the mouth before turning to leave.
“Christ,” she said over her shoulder. “No wonder they don’t want broads in the military.”
CHAPTER 5
His gold scraggly coat spotted with brown and draped sheetlike over his gaunt frame, the feral dog paused at the edge of the field facing the Scalesia forest of Sangre de Dios. A garúa haunted the curves of the forest, lurking in the trees’ rounded domes.
Shrubs and plants tangled the forest understory, and the tree branches were draped with moss and festooned with twisting vines, giv-ing the forest a massy thickness from ground to treetop. Usually white, but sometimes a surprising red or orange, the lichen on the tree trunks broke up the greens and browns of the forest.
Hunger had driven the dog up into the highlands; the departure of most of Sangre de Dios’s farm families meant fewer compost heaps to raid outside the rugged houses. The chickens left behind had already been slaughtered in their coops by a fortunate pack of dogs, but they had driven him away when he’d tried to sneak in on the kill. He had returned the next day, but little had been left aside from a few blood stains on the wooden planks, which he had licked until his tongue bled. Managing to unearth a couple of tortoise nests in the fallow fields that had been cleared beside the forest, he’d eaten a few eggs, but that had been the previous week, and he’d found no food since then.
He moved forward between the trees, his eyes glinting yellow. A stone lodged in the pad of his front foot made his gait awkward, but as he hit the soft ground of the forest, his trot smoothed into the effortless glide of a predator.
He sensed movement up ahead and caught a whiff of something when the wind shifted. Something living. His nose twitched, his lip drawing back from his teeth in a silent snarl that gleamed in the night. Dark streaks of dried mucus trailed from the corners of his eyes.
Slinking forward, the soft pads of his feet sinking in the mud, the dog lowered his head, his skin rippling in waves of coarse hair. He crept past a cluster of trees, the long trunks lost among the leaves and stalks of lesser plants. The path widened into a clearing, trees lining the edges of a mud wallow like sentinels. Wind whispered through the dead sprays of elephant grass.
Abruptly, the dog halted, sensing an odd blend of danger and oppor-tunity. One foot raised above the ground and angled back like a pointer’s, the other three sunk in the mud, he stopped breathing. His eyes were wide, but he didn’t turn his head. The rise and fall of his ribs beneath his coat died. He was still. He was almost invisible in the night.
Suddenly, a plant right beside him sprang to life, lunging at him with two raptorial legs. The spiked appendages folded back on themselves, snapping shut around the dog’s midsection. The dog emitted a pained grunt as he was lifted into the air. He struggled in the grasp of the mas-sive clamp, yelping. The strike occurred
Richard Ellis Preston Jr.