one in Mendocino. He hit the blue medical alert button and the red button for fire.
At once a whooping shrieking wail erupted in the stillness.
He covered his ears as he cried out. The pain was unbearable; his head throbbed. There was no time to find the source of this deafening sound and stop it.
He had to hurry. The sound was driving him mad.
He reached the doors of the barn in a split second, and ripped off the locks, fracturing and splintering the doors as they fell in.
There in the bright light from the house, he saw the bus, draped in chains and tied around and around with duct tape - a torture chamber.
The children were squealing in a frenzy, their cries thin, and shrill, the whooping clarion of the alarm almost swallowing the sound. He could smell their terror, their desperate excitement. They thought they were about to die. In a matter of seconds they would know they had been saved. They would know that they were free.
His claws tore the tape as if it were tissue paper. With one paw he smashed the glass of the door and then ripped the door off the bus.
A revolting smell assailed his nostrils - feces, vomit, urine, sweat. Oh, the cruelty of it. He wanted to howl.
He backed up. The blaring alarm was disorienting him, crippling him. But the job was nearly done.
He made his way out of the barn, back into the rain, the ground mushy beneath his feet, wanting desperately to recover the dead child from the Land Rover, and put its body where it would surely be found, but he could not endure the noise anymore. They would have to find it, and surely they would. Yet it felt wrong to leave it. Wrong, not to somehow prepare for them the entire scene.
Out of the corner of his eye he saw the figures, large and small, scrambling from the bus.
They were moving towards him. And surely they saw him, saw what he was, saw in the lights from the windows behind him the blood drenching his paws, his fur.
They were going to be more afraid! He had to get away.
He made for the wet shining trees at the back of the property, and headed for the great silent forest that lay directly west - Muir Woods.
Chapter Eleven
MUIR WOODS STRETCHED for some five hundred and fifty acres, including some of the oldest redwoods yet standing in California, trees that soared over two hundred feet, and had been alive for over a thousand years. At least two creeks ran through the deep canyon of the park. And Reuben had traveled its hiking trails many a time.
He plunged into the enveloping stillness now, hungry for the solitude that had driven him to Mendocino, and glorying in his strength as he climbed the immense trees, leaping from the branches of one to another as if he had wings. Everywhere the scent of other animals tantalized him.
Deeper into the park he went, only dropping down to the soft leafy floor when all the human voices of the night had died, and only the rain sang to him, and the muted sounds of a thousand little creatures, nestled in the ferns and the leaves, whose names he couldn,t know. Above, the birds rustled in the branches.
He was laughing out loud, singing nonsense syllables, roaming, staggering, and then scaling a tree again, as high as he could go, the rain falling like needles on his eyes, until the trunk was too thin for his weight and he had to seek another perch and then another and descend once more to dance in circles with his arms out.
He threw back his head and roared again, and then let the roar round itself into a deep howl. Nothing answered him in the night except the crackling flight of other living things, living things that fled from him.
Suddenly descending to all fours he ran as a wolf would run, swiftly through the dense foliage. He caught the scent of an animal - bobcat - fleeing before him, flushed from its lair, and after that scent he went with unstoppable hunger until he reached out, and caught the furry snarling creature in his claws, and drove his fangs into its throat.
This time nothing held him back from the feast.
He stripped succulent muscle from bone, and crunched both in his jaws as he devoured the beast with its brittle yellowish fur, slurping up its blood, its soft innards, the rich