See part one for explanation and disclaimers. Hallmark & James Gurney still own the characters and I’m
still not profiting from this. Hope you’re enjoying this. Still recommended for teens and up for action/violence
and mild language.
It was the distant roar of a T-Rex that brought Frank back to consciousness. The last thing Frank remembered was the burly dark-skinned man who clobbered him with some sort of powder and the sound of Jack calling to him…and then nothing until he’d awakened to cold, dampness, darkness, and the sounds of the forest. He became aware of his arms next---of burning from his shoulders all the way to his numb wrists, owing to the fact that he was hanging by his bound wrists at the end of a rope several feet above the ground. There was an iron grate, which covered a dark pit, in the clearing directly below him. It could only be a hunter’s trap.
Also below him was Payden
Borale. The Outsider crouched among the
underbrush near the edge of the clearing, unmoving. Not even the cries of the nearby predators elicited a movement or
a response from the man.
Frank didn’t know where they
were, other than that they were in the middle of the woods somewhere near (or
inside) carnosaur territory. There
wasn’t even the glow of a sunstone here, only the moon lit the landscape. There must have been a river not far
away…only far enough away that the pounding of the water wouldn’t mask the
sounds of approaching predators. A
trail disappeared into the forest, leading in the direction of the sounds of
the river. Payden stared in the direction of the river noises as if expecting
someone or something to come up the trail.
“So, I guess I know who to
thank for that trap that almost took off my leg,” Frank growled at the
Outsider. Payden didn’t even twitch in
response. “If you’ve hurt one of my
kids…”
“Your children aren’t my
concern, Scott. It’s not my way to hunt
children…most of the time.” Payden
spoke softly, accustomed to moving through carnivore territory without detection. He would have silenced Frank with a blow to
the chest, but if David Barrett was in the vicinity, the boy could follow the
babblings of the off-worlder to Payden’s trap.
“But you’re fine with
kidnapping?” Frank asked sardonically.
“A trap needs the proper
bait to lure its prey. You’ve nothing to
fear…unless you keep speaking so loudly that a predator decides to hunt you,”
the Outsider warned, still not moving.
What ‘prey’ could Payden
possibly expect to catch using Frank as bait?
The Outsider wouldn’t have come halfway across the island to specifically
abduct Scott just to lure a dinosaur---that would have been way too much
work. If he wanted live bait for a
carnosaur, he could have grabbed anyone on the island. If Payden wanted Frank, he had to be after
something that would come after Frank…or someone.
“What prey---?” And then Scott remembered: He had told Karl about Dane’s meeting with
David Barrett that morning. That
meeting was surely over with now, but Frank hasn’t heard back from Karl. That wasn’t unusual, given his relationship
with his older son of late, however Karl’s errand and Payden’s sudden interest
in Frank couldn’t be coincidental.
Maybe Karl ruined their plans and they were after some payback by way of
his father. “Is it Karl? I told you if you hurt one of my kids, I’ll…”
“And I told you, your
children are not my concern.”
“Then who?” Frank demanded.
The Outsider still wasn’t a
bit perturbed by his complaining prisoner’s threats or insistence of bellowing
in carnivore territory. “That is not
your concern either.”
“It sure the hell is if
you’re using me as bait!” Frank disagreed.
“I have a big problem with that.
Aren’t you supposed to be on a submarine heading for the Razor Reef with
your buddy Dane?”
There it was---Payden
twitched, almost imperceptibly, in surprise.
“What?” Frank grinned. “You
think I can’t figure out why Dane’s in Gull’s Bay? You want off this island as bad as I do. Personally I don’t care
if you both end up at the bottom of the sea---” As long as you don’t take David down with you, he added to himself.
Payden now turned his head
towards Frank, just a bit, keeping the trail visible from the corner of his
eye. “The arrogance of the off-worlders
is amazing. Not everyone on this island
longs for life in your off-world land.
Your ‘home’ is of no interest to me.
I have a home already right here.
I don’t share your desperation to abandon this island.”
“I’m only thinking of my
children.”
“As am I,” the Outsider
said. “My children are safe from the
evils of your world here…the monsters
here can be exterminated.”
“Better living through saurian genocide? That’s inhumane,” Frank spat.
“Humans are predators,
too. The most clever of predators. Both of your children are alive, Scott. When you’ve watched a scalie devour one of
your children, you can speak to me of what is ‘humane’ and what is not.” For the first time, Frank saw some emotion
in the stoic Outsider. It lasted only a
second, but grief darkened Borale’s eyes.
There was nothing Frank
could say to that. On his worst days on
this island, he’d have been glad to see the dinosaurs gone. He had wished away
the carnivores every time Karl had risked his life flying a mission against
them. He’d seen families devastated by the loss of loved ones to the monsters
of this island, and he’d sympathized with their anguish. It was a fact of life on Dinotopia that
dinosaurs killed people. Even though
the native population had learned to accept it as best they could, Frank knew
if he lost one of his boys---especially to those predators---he would simply cease
to exist, would be dead inside. He’d do
anything in his power to stop that from happening…but actively,
indiscriminately wiping them out as Dane and Payden were trying to do offended
Frank.
“And hunting people is okay,
too? You didn’t go to the trouble of
singling me out as bait for a dinosaur.
And if you don’t want Karl or Jack, who do you want? Whoever it is, I’m not going to sit here
while you murder them!” Frank promised.
He wished Payden were stupid enough to step closer. His hands might be tied, but Frank was sure
he could do the Outsider some damage just using his legs. This
guy is psycho…no wonder David ran from the pack…
…ran away and rescued Marion. She had said so. Rescued her and escaped through carnosaur territory. Through these hunting grounds. Right around the same time Gabriel Dane lost most of his hand…
Oh crap.
The brush along the
trail rustled, the noise barely audible above the sounds of the river. There was also the distinct noise of feet
crunching the dirt and twigs along the path.
It wasn’t the heavy, ground-jolting thuds of T-Rex steps; it was the
light gait of a human. Frank drew a
breath to shout a warning, but Payden guessed his intentions at once. In two steps, the Outsider strode over and
delivered a punch to Frank’s chest that knocked the wind—and any ability to
speak---right out of the off-worlder.
Frank could only gasp for air that wouldn’t come while Payden hid behind
the trees.
Moments later, even
as Frank struggled not to lose consciousness, David Barrett walked into the
clearing.
David looked around the clearing. Below Frank Scott was a steel gate covering one of the pits that Dane and Payden used to protect themselves from carnosaurs. A small fire burned near the pit. Beside the grate, there was a leg iron. It was meant to hold sheep and small animals in place to lure T-Rex and pteranodon into the clearing so Payden or Dane could kill the scalies. The small cuff that held small mammals had been replaced with a larger shackle…ankle sized. Obviously, Payden intended to use different bait for the carnosaurs tonight. Just out of reach of the leg shackle and chain was the lock for the grate. David was familiar with the lock. It would have two settings: The first was the weight-trigger setting, where any weight on the grate would open it. The second was the lock setting, where the grate wouldn’t open even if a T-Rex stood on it, thus protecting whoever was in the pit beneath the grate.
“We missed you at the rendezvous this morning, Payden,” David greeted. “Now I know why.” A bone dagger was tucked into Payden’s belt. Borale could draw the blade and slit Frank’s throat before David could run across the clearing, so Barrett stopped where he was.
“You didn’t expect forgiveness from Gabriel Dane, did you Barrett?” Payden tsked.
“No. I know---betrayal undermines authority with the pack, blah, blah, blah. I’d say kidnapping isn’t your style, Payden, but is there anything that isn’t your style?” David watched for any hint of movement from the larger man. “This is a lot of trouble just to kill me.”
“You’ve
caused Gabriel a lot of trouble. I
tried to warn him about you. From the
day I pulled you out of the sea, I knew it was a mistake bringing you into the
pack.”
“The
weakest link, right?”
“You
were never weak, Barrett. Not here…”
Payden pointed to his temple. “The
weak-minded can be trained. If they
can’t be educated, they’ll become obedient through discipline…”
“Discipline
as in kicking the crap out of them?”
“…but off-worlders have their own ideas. They’re intractable. Untrainable. Strong in the mind. Gabriel thought you could learn the ways of the pack. I didn’t. I saw in your eyes that you would never have the stomach for the pack life. You don’t have a hunter’s heart…a predator’s heart. I tried to tell Gabriel that, but he had to find out the hard way.” Payden grinned, almost in approval. “Still, I admit, you surprised me in one way---I never expected you’d have it in you to sic a T-Rex on Gabriel. Neither did he. Maybe you learned something after all. You must have—you kept yourself alive without us…until now.”
“And
that’s why we’re here? The T-Rex
thing? Dane takes things too
personally.”
“I
agree. Emotions get you killed…but look
who I’m talking to, a man foolish enough to die over an old off-worlder.”
“But
it’s real genius to abduct a dino-scout’s dad
just because Gabriel tells you.”
Payden
belly-laughed, nodding in concession. “I do miss our debates, Barrett.”
“Debates? I disagree, you beat me into a pulp. Not exactly an enlightened exchange.”
The outsider pulled a tightly-packed
bundle of leafs from his coat and tossed it onto the fire. Green smoke with a sweet odor filled the
air. “Do you remember what this is?” Payden asked.
“Brindlebar.” David worked to keep his tone neutral. The leaf was a favorite of the carnosaurs. The smell of its smoke was meant to attract the T-Rex.
“You always did have a good head for botany.” Payden’s smile turned to a scowl in the blink of an eye. The slightest twitch of his arm was David’s warning before the outsider pulled a bag of powder from his pocket and pitched it at the younger man. David dodged, his hand going into his own pocket. He withdrew an identical power bomb and hurled it at Payden. The large man sidestepped easily, and his smile returned. “You learned very well. Very well indeed. What a shame to have our lessons end here…but fitting.”
“Okay,
I’ll bite, how so?” David asked, keeping his eyes carefully on the outsider.
Behind Payden, his father was beginning to stir. David didn’t want to alert Payden to that fact.
“I
saved your life. Now I’ll correct that
mistake.”
“You
know you have to let the old man go, Payden.
You aren’t stupid enough to take on the entire dino-scout corps.”
“You
didn’t bring them along, did you?” Payden asked, suspiciously.
David
made a face. “Like they’d help me?”
Borale
shrugged. “I can’t be sure---you’ve
been making some strange friends lately:
Scalies, Le Sage…”
“You
know how it goes---just out of the pack, needed some new friends. Figured after you and Dane, the pterosaur
was a trade up.” It was no fun
insulting Payden—barbs just rolled off the man---but David couldn’t resist,
especially if it distracted the man from hurting Frank.
A
T-Rex bellowed in the distance…the agitated cry David knew all to well was in
response to its first sniff of brindlebar smoke. It would start seeking out of the source of the smell now. They were running out of time. He had to get Frank off that rope and into
the pit before the carnosaur showed up or he was going to die right along with
David. “What do you want, Payden?”
Payden
pointed to the shackle. “Step in.”
David
didn’t move. “The old man---put him in
the pit first.”
Frank
finally found his voice. He coughed out
a protest: “David, don’t---”
Payden
silently agreed. Without a word, he
swiftly drew the dagger and sliced through the rope holding Frank. Frank dropped onto the grate, which popped
open at his weight and dumped him into the pit. Payden kicked the trigger and the grate locked in place. David let out the breath he’d been holding:
Frank wouldn’t be able to get out until Karl came to get him, but at least he’d
be safe from the predators.
Payden
used the knife to point to the leg iron.
“You know better than to cross me.”
“Yeah,
yeah, let’s get this over with.” David
crossed over to the pit. Payden stepped
back, staying out of David’s reach, as the younger man put one foot into the
shackle. Holding the knife ready,
Payden checked to be sure the iron was secure around Barrett’s leg, then
produced a key and locked the shackle in place. It was painfully tight, even with David’s boot between his leg
and the cuff. “Happy now?”
Payden
didn’t look happy. He put the tip of
the dagger to David’s throat. “I
promised Dane to leave you for the predators.
He wanted you alive when they started chewing on you. I, on the other hand, hate messy endings…and
I think a sacrifice like the one your making for the old man merits a more
merciful death. Besides, the blood will
bring the predators faster…”
David
felt the blade pressing into his throat just as Karl’s voice boomed,
“David!”