But Eli waited.
Patience had kept him alive for 47 years. It would serve him now. The first group reached his south fence. One man stumbled on the wire Eli had strung at ankle height. The curse was loud in the predawn stillness. Others turned at the noise, bunching together, exactly as Eli had planned. His first shot wasn’t meant to kill.
The rifle crack split the night, and the fence post beside the grouped men exploded into splinters. They scattered, shouting in confusion. Two more shots in quick succession kicked up dirt at their feet. “Sniper!” someone yelled. “Get down!” Eli was already moving to another window.
Twenty years of practice let him step silently despite his size. He’d memorized every creaking board, every loose nail. In the darkness, he was a ghost. From the north side of the house came the sound