Hunted Past Reason

Hunted Past Reason by Richard Matheson

Book: Hunted Past Reason by Richard Matheson Read Free Book Online
Authors: Richard Matheson
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers
he'd made that clear too. It would make his novel more authentic if he'd taken a backpack trip personally. But uneasy? Yes, he was. Not a problem, Doug had assured him. They'd take it easy, be in no rush. It wouldn't be that difficult.
    No rush? he thought. Then why had Doug left him alone to hurry on and get the campsite ready? He must have known— he must have— that it would be unnerving for him. But he'd done it anyway. And, by God, it had been unnerving. An arrow made of stones? How the hell did Doug expect him to see that in the shadowy gloom of the forest?
    But it was more than that, again of course. It was Doug's personality. They'd never spent more than a day or two together— and that always in the company of Nicole and Marian.
    Three days— possibly four alone with Doug? He realized that he didn't know Doug well at all. And there had been hints— more than hints— clear signs— of aspects in Doug's behavior that, frankly, made him nervous. What, actually, was going on in Doug's head? That he was embittered had become more than clear. He'd always known that Doug had felt frustrated about the lack of real success in his acting career.
    Now he realized— he'd only suspected it before— that Doug was also bitter about his divorce from Nicole. Even though Nicole had had every reason to divorce him because of Doug's— openly admitted— numerous infidelities. He knew that Doug had a pretty shaky relationship with his daughter. And as for Artie . . . Well, he hoped the subject never came up again.
    Did Doug resent him? Clearly, his words had made it obvious that Doug envied him. But was the envy verging on the border of dislike, perhaps intense dislike? Why had Doug brought up the idea of him being lucky because of his career, his marriage, his parenthood? Why call it luck? He'd earned it with hard work and dedication. Goddamn it, he thought, was Doug going to make the next three days a penance for him? Doug had all the trump cards in his hand. He could make the entire hike a nightmare if he chose to— and all in the name of being Bob's "guide and protector."
    He was aware of how knotted his stomach muscles felt. God damn it, he wished he could take a Valium.
    Then reaction set in. Don't be so damn melodramatic, he told himself. So Doug might be a pain in the ass for a few days. Period. By the end of the week, he and Marian would be home with all this angst forgotten. End of story.
    It seemed to help. He closed his eyes and started to use fractional hypnosis on himself, starting with his stomach muscles. Your stomach muscles are relaxed, relaxed. All tension gone. Relaxed. Relaxed.
    Just before he drifted into sleep, he heard the distant howling of a coyote. The wilderness speaking, he thought with a faint smile. Canis latrans , he remembered reading somewhere. "Barking dog."
    Darkness soon enveloped him.



7:01 AM
    It was an odd sensation.
    He knew he was asleep but he could hear the bedroom door opening and knew, somehow, that it was Marian. Even more odd was his awareness that she was carrying a breakfast tray for him— freshly squeezed orange juice, crisp bacon and eggs, a well-toasted English muffin, and freshly brewed coffee. He could actually smell the amalgam of delicious aromas.
    Then she was beside the bed and putting the tray down quietly on the bedside table. He tried not to smile so she wouldn't know that he was awake enough to know she was there— even though (how really odd) he still was actually asleep.
    "Sweetheart." He heard her gentle voice.
    He pretended that he barely heard by making a soft noise. He stretched his legs and sighed. He felt so wonderfully comfortable. After that damn hike with Doug, this was sheer heaven— the warm, inviting bed, the soft pillow. Never again, he thought with regard to the hike.
    "Honey?" she said, a little more loudly now.
    "Mmm." He knew he was smiling now. So let her see.
    "Wake up. Breakfast in bed," she told him.
    He made a sound of pleased

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