of breaking glass, someone trying to enter through a window. Eli smiled grimly. He’d left that window unlocked deliberately, with a tripwire just inside.
A crash and curse told him the wire had done its job. More shots rang out, but they were wild, undisciplined. Bullets thudded into the the thick walls, or went high into the night. Eli’s return fire remained measured, precise. He never aimed to kill, not yet. Instead, he herded them like cattle, using fear and confusion as weapons. A flicker of movement caught his eye.
Someone was trying to reach the barn, probably planning to set it ablaze. Eli’s bullet splintered a support beam inches from the man’s head. The would-be arsonist fled, torch dropped and forgotten in the dirt. From his hidden position near Carter’s Creek, Caleb Johnson watched the chaos unfold.
The boy had disobeyed Eli’s order to go home, instead positioning himself where he could see both the house and the main road. He witnessed the Klan’s confident advance dissolve into disarray.