Page 61 of Cooper


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I hadn’t fully realized how much of an advantage Mia’s shoe choice would give her. Everyone would be looking for high-heel-shaped tracks she wasn’t providing. Maybe any Converse tracks would be mistaken as fellow hunters.

“What if someone tries hiding nearby instead of running?”

His eyes sharpened. “We had one who tried hiding close—behind the generator shed, if memory serves. She thought we’d search far and miss what was near.”

“Smart.”

“Not smart enough. I found her within minutes.” His smile turned predatory at the memory. “When I dragged her out…” He paused, savoring it. “Claimed my prize right there, actually. The others watched. It was a nice teaching moment.”

Teaching moment.My hand twitched with the need to wrap around Oliver’s throat. Not yet. Not until Mia had more distance.

“Almost time for your advantage.” Oliver gestured toward the door. “Ten minutes to use however you desire. Use them wisely.”

I headed for the door, then paused by the fireplace. The kindling box caught my eye—thin stakes of wood for startingfires. I grabbed one, testing its point against my thumb. Hardly big or sharp enough to use as a weapon, but would definitely work for what I needed.

“Good hunting, Coop.” Oliver raised his espresso in a mock toast as I left.

Outside, I headed south because that’s the way they’d most expect Mia to go. The slope was gentler here, the path obvious even in the dim light of the moon. I pressed the stake into soft earth at an angle, creating marks that could pass for heel prints if you didn’t look too close. Every few yards, I added stumble marks, drag patterns, the story of a panicked woman in an impossible dress trying to flee.

The false trail led three hundred yards to a stream that cut through the property. Perfect. Let them think she’d tried to hide her tracks in water. Let them waste precious time following the stream both directions while she was nowhere in either direction.

Shouts erupted behind me. My ten minutes were up. The others were loose.

I doubled back, this time leaving obvious boot prints heading east. Fresh tracks that screamedfollow me—and someone would. They’d think I knew where Mia would run, so following me would be the best way to follow her.

The forest came alive with crashing footsteps and excited voices. No skill in most of their movements, just enthusiasm and blood lust. City boys playing at being predators.

Many of them followed the heels, but a couple found my tracks and began following them. Two shapes materialized through the trees—the tech moguls, apparently maintaining their partnership. They charged through the underbrush like wounded buffalo, following my breadcrumbs without question.

Perfect. Oliver’s rules said no weapons, but he’d never said anything about hunters taking each other out of the game. Everyman I dropped was one less threat to Mia. One less pair of hands that could grab her, hurt her. If I could thin the field enough, maybe knock out half of them, her odds would improve dramatically.

I circled behind them, placing each foot with practiced silence. Eight years of moving through hostile territory, eight years of being the thing that killed in darkness—muscle memory took over.

The first one never saw me coming. I swept his legs while driving an elbow into his kidney, and he went down hard. His head connected with a rock with a wet thud that meant concussion at minimum. The second managed to turn, attempted to start raising his hands, but my palm strike to his solar plexus doubled him over. A knee to the temple finished it. Both down, breathing but useless. They’d wake up puking and disoriented, if they woke up at all.

“Impressive.”

The voice came from directly behind me. I spun to find Snake leaning against an oak, that scarred face showing something between approval and anticipation. He’d been watching the whole time.

“Just thinning the competition.” I kept my tone casual while cataloging distances, angles, options.

“Competition.” He pushed off the tree, and I saw the knife in his hand—a serious blade, not some pocketknife but a combat weapon. “I guess that’s a good way of thinking of this.”

“Pretty sure that’s against Oliver’s rules.” I nodded at the blade, keeping my tone conversational while calculating distances. “No weapons, remember?”

Snake laughed, the sound like gravel in a blender. “You think Oliver gives a shit if I gut you out here? He’ll probably thank me for removing a problem. Plus, he also says no gear but then uses thermal goggles and has sensors all around this place.”

Fuck. No wonder he’d been the victor so many times. The mud I’d told Mia to use would help with the thermal or night vision goggles, but the sensors could definitely tip things in Oliver’s direction.

“I don’t have time to fuck with you, Snake. Get the hell out of here.”

“You’ve been around for six weeks, acting like you own the place. Getting special treatment, private meetings with Oliver.” The knife shifted to a forward grip.

“This is about jealousy? Really?”

“This is about you being a problem that needs solving. After I gut you, I’ll find that sweet little thing myself. Oliver will be grateful. Grateful enough to share, maybe. Been thinking about that mouth of hers, what it would feel like around my?—”

The rage that flooded through me was absolute zero, so cold it burned. But I kept it leashed. Anger made you stupid, and stupid got you dead.