by Cari Cole
Lucy shook her head. "Don't get all dramatic about it. Mae's the one who saved both our asses."
"We did it together. All three of us," Mae said.
"I had a premonition I was going to die in that crack," Lucy said. "Sometimes it feels great to be wrong." She looked around. "Where's the water going?"
They all looked around.
"It's running over into that other corner," Mae said, pointing across the crazy space. "There must be another outlet over there somewhere that we missed on the way in."
"As long as this room doesn't turn into a lake," Lucy said.
"It doesn't seem to be backing up," Mae said.
"Let's not do this again," Jane said.
"Let's finish this," Lucy said. "Where's your pack?"
"Here," Mae said. "Still attached to the rope"
Lucy pulled the pack to her and looked inside. "The jar's still here and in one piece. Now we need to get Belle back."
"And woe be unto the asshole who took her if he's hurt her," Mae said.
"Amen," Jane said. "It wouldn't pay to fuck with three recently tattooed women who just won a face-off with the grim reaper."
"If you're feeling up to it, I think you should go for the cavalry," Mae said to Lucy. "No doubt you'd like to get above ground."
"I would walk barefoot across a bed of broken glass to get the hell out of here."
"I'm not sure, but I think you were only drowned for a minute or so," Jane said. "I guess I win the breath holding contest."
"And I win the intact limb contest." Lucy opened her pack. "I'm leaving the jar and as much of the rest of this as I can. I don't think I'm going to need anything except water and light."
"You definitely need your whistle," Mae said.
"Fine, I'll take the damn whistle."
"Make sure to tell them to bring the good drugs," Jane said.
"Good drugs it is." Lucy rigged her ascenders to the rope and started back up to the daylight.
I'll Take That
Lucy took the final step up and draped her upper body over the edge of the hole. She'd made it! Daylight, albeit rainy daylight was just a minute away. If she had more energy she'd do the dance of joy as soon as she unclipped from the rope.
As it was she'd settle for having enough energy to make it back to the van.
"Just stay right there."
Lucy screamed in girly alarm at the male voice. "Who . . ." She tried to put a face to the voice. Was it the ranger?
"It doesn't matter. I want the Declaration. If you want to see daylight again, you'll stay right there until we figure out how I'm going to get it."
Definitely not the ranger. Perry Thiel? The voice didn't sound right.
"You have got to be kidding," she said. Honest to God she hadn't wondered what else could go wrong. She hadn't tempted fate that brazenly.
She shifted her weight to take the pressure off her diaphragm and tried to get a look at him.
He was a large silhouette near the tunnel entrance, backlit by cloudy sunlight. He had a very big, very bright flashlight pointed in her direction. She couldn't see past it to get a look at his face and she didn't trust her perspective to judge his size and build.
"I am definitely not kidding. Where is the Declaration?"
"Where's my aunt?"
"You don't get to ask questions."
"Well, if you want the Declaration you're going to have to take me to Belle first."
Lucy saw his negative head shake behind the flashlight.
"If you want to get a rescue team here for your friend, I suggest you cooperate."
He knew Jane was hurt. He must have been up here listening to them.
Lucy wondered if she could throw a rock or something at him and escape. That might be a good idea if she was capable of hitting something smaller than the broadside of a barn or if there was a suitable rock at hand.
"I don't have it," she said.
"Guess you really trust your friends," he said. "Tell one of them to bring it up."
So far all he'd done was make vague threats. But putting Mae in harm's way seemed like a very bad idea. "What if I refuse?"
The answer was the sound of the slide on a semi-automatic pistol being pulled back and released to chamber a bullet. "I'd have to take you out of the way and go down for it myself."
Guess that answered the vague threat question. "I'll go get it."
"No. I want you up here."
"Lucy? What's going on?" Mae called from below.
"We have a little problem," Lucy answered.
"Quit screwing around and get her up here," the man said.
He sounded nervous. That wasn't good.
A nervous amateur was a lot scarier than an all-business professional thief.
"I need you to bring the jar up here to me," Lucy said.
"What?" Mae called. "Don't you think you should be more worried about getting some help for Jane?"
"There's someone up here who wants the jar."
"Don't tell me Ranger Rick found us. Tell him to forget about the jar and radio for some help," Mae said.
"Tell her to shut up and get her ass up here with that document."
"It isn't the ranger," Lucy said. "Just bring the jar. Now."
"Fine. Give me a minute to rig my ascender."
Lucy turned her attention back to the man with the gun. "How did you find out about the Declaration?" Wasn't that what movie heroines did? Keep the bad guy talking until help arrives?
Of course there wasn't a chance in hell that any help was going to arrive.
"Shut up. I don't want to carry on a dialog with you," he said. "Your aunt thought she was entertaining too. She was wrong. Now tell me what the jar business is about."
Oh God, she knew who it was.
A rat bastard, no conscience academic nutball named Dawson. The freaking professor! She couldn't believe he'd fooled her so easily with his hints that Perry was the crazy one. Of course, the fact that he'd told her what she expected to hear helped a lot.
She wondered whether he was interested in the money or the professional coup.
The rope below her went taut as Mae put her weight on it and started up.
"We found an old pottery jar where the document was supposed to be hidden. We haven't opened it yet but if the Declaration exists it has to be in the jar."
"You'd better hope so."
"Once you have the jar, you're going to tell me where Belle is and leave right?"
"Wrong question," Dawson said.
Lucy shivered. The nerves were back in his voice.
"What's the right question?"
"Am I going to leave you alive and well?"
Lucy swallowed. Better to know how far she was going to have to go to save herself and her friends. "Are you?"
"I haven't decided yet."
Just great.
Lucy glanced down. Mae's head was just coming into view. "Too bad I didn't follow my husband's lead and join the NRA. If I had a gun I'd drop back down in this hole and just wait for you to show your face."
"Talk like that won't push the life and death decision in your favor," he said.
She was hoping talk like that would send a message to Mae.
It did. Mae looked up and nodded.
She had the gun.
"Tell her to hurry up," he said.
"I can hear you now," Mae said. She'd reached Lucy's feet. She showed Lucy the gun she'd shoved into her harness.
Lucy winked at her. "Just give me a minute to get the jar out of her pack."
"If I see anything else come out of that hole you're going to find out how I handle a gun."
Lucy reached down toward the pack. "I'm going to have to get all the way up and sit on the edge. I can't reach it from this angle."
"Just get it done," he said.
Lucy levered herself up and back so that she was sitting on the opposite side of the hole from where he was standing. She unclipped from the rope and gestured for Mae to come up a little more.
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Mae took another step up, keeping her head below the rim of the hole and swung around so that Lucy could get to the backpack. She tried to hand Lucy the gun.
Lucy leaned down into the hole and whispered, "When I toss the jar to him I want you to shoot over the rim in his direction and zip back down to Jane."
"I'm not leaving you," Mae hissed.
"I'm going to run the other way. I'm sure he'll take the jar and run if we make it too hard for him to deal with us." At least she hoped he would, but no matter what, he wouldn't be able to get to Mae and Jane.
"What the hell's the problem," he said.
Lucy lifted her head to look in his direction. "The jar's a little unwieldy."
She leaned back down and pulled the jar out of the pack. "Do it," she said under her breath.
"What about Belle?" Mae asked.
"We can't help her if we're dead."
Mae frowned at her but nodded agreement. She turned off her headlamp so Dawson wouldn't know she was still up top.
Lucy wasn't expecting to get through the next minute unscathed but with luck she'd get through it alive. Then she'd deal with Dawson on her terms.
She straightened up out of the hole with the jar in her hands.
Dawson's light moved closer.
"Don't," Lucy said. "If you come any closer I'll drop the jar back into the hole. It's wet down there. The document would be ruined."
The light stopped moving. "I'm running out of patience."
"I'll toss the jar to you but I'm going to have to stand up. I can't throw it from here."
"Bad idea. That jar breaks it could damage the Declaration."
"I believe we have a stalemate," Lucy said. "The jar's pretty sturdy. I bet it won't do more than crack." If he shot her he'd take a chance on ruining the Declaration.
"Fine, toss the jar very gently."
"One more thing," Lucy said dangling the jar above the hole. "I'm going to make you sorry you were ever born if anything happens to Belle."
"All I want is the Declaration. Your aunt goes free as soon as I make sure it's genuine."
Lucy didn't believe him but she needed more options than she had with him pointing a gun at her. She brought her feet up out of the hole and stood, jar in hand. "Ready? One." She rocked a little swinging the jar. "Two." Another swing. "Three!"
She tossed the jar across the hole.
As soon as it left her hands, she turned to run.
She saw movement out of the corner of her eye as Mae somehow launched herself above the lip of the hole.
The gunshot was a huge boom in the confined space.
Lucy was already in mid-stride and picking up steam. She didn't look back to see what effect the shot had on Dawson.
She ran full out, her back tense waiting for Dawson's return bullet to find her, praying she didn't run into a dead end too soon or fall into another hole.
Another boom sounded.
Rock chips flew from the tunnel wall in front of her on the right.
A third boom sounded.
Pain streaked across Lucy's left side and more rock chips flew.
She gasped with the pain, her feet slowing, knowing that any second another burning pain would assault her body.
Mae squeezed her eyes shut as she bounced her way down the hole, rope zipping through her ascender and shots from another gun boomed above her.
When the wall dropped away from her she started feeling for the floor and risked a look down.
She landed hard, pain shooting through her ankles. Nothing snapped. She frantically unclipped from the rope.
"What the hell happened?" Jane demanded.
"Move away from the hole," Mae said, heading for the nearest boulder.
Jane hustled to join her and they took a position using the boulder as a shield.
There was no more sound from above and the rope Mae left swinging, stilled.
###
Lucy staggered forward.
As she waited for the next shot, her luck took a sudden turn for the better--and so did the tunnel.
She rounded the left hand turn in the tunnel, pulled up and turned off her headlamp. Please. Please. Please. Let him not be following her.
Breathing hard, not sure how badly she was wounded, she clamped her right hand over the pain in her left side.
She crept back toward the corner in the dark, eyes searching for any sign of Dawson's flashlight, listening for movement or voices.
Everything remained still and dark.
###
Evil bitches.
James Dawson clamped down on his rage.
Going after them was an indulgence he couldn't afford.
He didn't know which one of them had fired the lucky shot that had hit him in the leg but it didn't matter. Once he put the Declaration up for auction, he'd have more than enough money to pay off the treasure hunters and the doctors. He'd find a new doctor, a new treatment for Adele. And once she was well, he'd publish a book about the Declaration. His professional life was about to take off. Talk about turning lemons into lemonade.
It wasn't like he was stealing. No one really owned the document after all.
He pulled off his hood, folded it into a pad and strapped it to the wound on his leg with his belt. That would have to do until he was able to get somewhere safe.
There was no way of knowing how far the sound of the shots had carried and he wanted to be away from here before anyone had a chance to come investigate.
He picked up the cracked jar and headed out of the cave.
He'd been away from Adele for too long. She'd be worried about him and ready for her medication.
No Way In Hell
Lucy took a deep breath and peeked around the corner.
No sign of Dawson's light.
Either he was waiting in the dark for her to show herself or he was gone.
Lucy was betting her life on gone.
After all, he got what he came for.
She stepped out and shuffled a few steps back toward the hole, prepared to turn and run if the light reappeared.
It didn't.
She shuffled a few more steps in the pitch black, making enough noise that Dawson would be able to hear her if he was waiting in the dark.
When all remained quiet and dark, Lucy dared to turn her headlamp back on. She held her breath but no shot rang out and no light came on.
She hurried back to the hole ignoring the wetness under her right hand and called down to Mae and Jane. "Everyone okay down there?"
"No worse than before the shooting," Mae called back. "What about you?"
"I'm not sure. I think I have a little wound in my side."
Lucy heard Jane say, "Shit."
"I'm on my way up," Mae said.
Lucy sat down near the hole and waited clamping down on her impatience. She didn't want to waste time. If she was seriously wounded wouldn't she be feeling weak by now?
Mae climbed back out of the hole at a record pace without a single twinge of vertigo. Amazing what a crisis could do for a phobia.
When she saw the blood covering Lucy from just below her left breast to her knee, Mae blanched.
"Lay down," Mae ordered.
Seeing the look on Mae's face, Lucy didn't argue. She must be a pretty terrifying sight. "It doesn't really hurt now."
Mae knelt down next to her. "Move your hand so I can see."
"I'm afraid to," Lucy said. Now that it came to it, she was scared. She'd seen those war movies where the guy takes his hand away from a wound and his guts fall out. She didn't want her guts to fall out.
"You have to. I can't see anything."
Lucy took that as a good sign. Her hands weren't all that big. If one hand covered the wound it couldn't be too large. She lifted her hand. Nothing happened.
Mae leaned down, focusing her headlamp on Lucy's side.
There was a tear in Lucy's coveralls about two inches long. Mae spread the sides of the tear apart, looked in the gap and breathed a sigh of relie
f. "Looks like all the damage was to your skin. I think the bullet only grazed your side. It's still oozing but I think we can stop that with a makeshift bandage."
She rummaged through the pack she'd brought up with her and came up with an extra pair of socks. "This should do." She unrolled the balled socks, folded them in half and pulled the top of one back over making a thick, flat bandage.
Mae used her Swiss Army knife to cut a strap from Lucy's backpack to hold the bandage in place.
"You have to hurry," Lucy said as Mae strapped the bandage in place.
"What for? You're not bleeding to death and Jane seems to be past the shock stage," Mae said.
"No way in hell are we letting him get away with this. I need to get out of here and call down the fury of the B Girls on that asshole."
"You want to go after him?"
Lucy winced as Mae pressed the bandage to her side. "Hell yes I'm going after him. Belle still isn't safe."
"Shouldn't we just let the police go after him?"
Lucy nodded her head making her light dance over the ceiling. "Them too. But I have to make sure he doesn't get a chance to hurt Belle. Besides, I'm pissed."
Mae finished tying off the bandage. "Fine. But I still don't like it."
"Don't worry. Now, I need the gun and the van keys."
Mae handed them over and turned to the hole. "Problem."
Lucy got to her feet and looked toward the hole. "Well hell." The rope was right where it started out--on the other side of the hole.
Mae studied the hole. "There's a ledge on the right side. Like the one we crossed over the water."
"Excellent," Lucy said. "When I get to the other side I'll toss you the rope so you can get back to Jane."
"This hole isn't filled with water. If you fall . . ."
"I'm not going to fall," Lucy said. She stepped to the right side of the hole looking for some sort of handhold to steady herself on the way over. "I'll only have to take one or two steps."
"Be careful."
Lucy shook her head. "No. I thought I'd be totally reckless and break my neck." This close to escaping from the dark she didn't intend to take and unnecessary chances.