AUTUMNAL EQUINOX, ALMOST NOON
Skye walked slowly.
Like glacially slow. Like her feet had turned to lead, or maybe she was trying to drag out the trip; I honestly couldn’t figure out if her snail’s pace was intentional or not. Neither made sense.
After all, she was the one who’d chosen today to die.
“Skye,” I said for the twentieth time this morning, “we have to move faster. We’re not even in sight of the meadow yet.”
“I know. I’m trying.” Her voice sounded weak.
“I can carry you,” Hafthor volunteered.
Skye shook her head. “You’ve got the fuse. I’m fine.” For a few minutes, her pace picked up, then lagged again, her expression a spaced-out look. I didn’t know if Skye was losing time, but we sure as hell were.
We’d never make the platform by noon. Even midnight wasn’t a given, not at this rate.
“That’s it.” I handed my unlit torches to Hafthor and scooped her up. “We’re never going to make it to your farewell party if we don’t pick up the pace, which means I’m picking you up.” My breath came in spurts.
“Put me down,” she snapped.
“When we get there,” I replied. “But it’s nice to see a little spark is still left in there.”
She fumed, which made me feel better. And somehow, infinitely worse. Because this was my Skye, and she’d chosen death. Death by Nil, for Nil, and without me.
I saved my breath for walking. With me carrying her, we made better time. I blocked everything else out of my head except for the ground, the girl in my arms, and the now.
Step. Move left. Watch the hole. Watch ahead.
At least I had Hafthor and Calvin watching our backs.
Look around.
Pay attention.
The south lava field stretched before us, black and empty, save for one lone moose. He didn’t know it, but his clock was ticking too. At the field’s end, Mount Nil rose into wispy clouds, still farther away than I’d like. I wanted to already be there, setting the fuse, laying the line, arguing with Skye.
Changing her mind.
Deep down, I still believed she’d change her mind.
Liar, the breeze whispered. You know her. And you know you’ve lost her.
Out of my head, I snarled.
I forced myself to focus.
Look around.
Pay attention.
Blue sky stretched overhead, clear and stunning. Greenery dotted the horizon like life, like hope. It was an island paradise, a beautiful lie.
Skye, in my arms, was a dead girl walking in every way that mattered.
“Do you hear that?” Calvin asked, looking around. “A voice?”
I shook my head.
“Never mind. It’s nothing.” He rubbed his head with one hand. “Damn. This place creeps me out sometimes. I can’t wait to leave. I’m driving myself crazy.”
There were no people in sight, not now, not yesterday. No new people this trip at all, as expected. And disturbingly, as we closed in on the meadow, there was no sign of the other teams. Most should have beaten us, given our poor pace.
But the meadow wasn’t empty.
Near the far trees, a rhino stood guard. A zebra flicked its tail in the swath of new growth.
Where were the people?
I had the crazy thought that we’d missed the equinox gate—that I’d screwed up, miscalculated the date. That somehow Nil had stolen time—an entire day.
My sixth sense flared, full-blown worry erupting.
Had we missed the gate?
No, I reasoned, we couldn’t all have lost a full day. Maybe one person, but not four. Not even when yesterday’s detour to see about another of Calvin’s voices chewed up time, a wild goose chase around the lava rock until I’d had the sense to call it off.
No, we still had time.
Around us, the clear air felt heavy. Expectant. Like the island was holding its breath, waiting to see what would happen. The stillness crept under my skin; it felt like the moment before a gate flashed, the quiet just before noon. But today no outbounds would flash, not until midnight.
Unless I was one day off.
“Put me down,” Skye said suddenly. “Now!”
I set her down, gently. Her soles touched rock as the first tremor hit. For a cold instant, the ground and air blurred, like a dimension had slipped, like the mother of all gates was ready to rise. All four of us dropped to our knees as one. Beneath us, the ground groaned and shifted. A massive crack opened four meters away, an angry split, spilling black rock below, a creepy rockslide crooning our names. We scrambled back, me grabbing Skye and swinging her away from another crack snaking toward her. Hafthor slipped, windmilling as he fought to stay upright; four unlit torches went flying. Calvin reached for them, stumbling and slipping, clawing at rock as he made a mad grab for the torches. He missed by millimeters; they dropped into a fresh crack out of sight. Gone.
Meters away, the meadow was chaos, a carbonated bottle shaken too long.
A pair of lions sprinted toward the mountain, shining brilliant gold in the sunlight; they streaked past the rhino at the far edge. A whistle blew in the distance, a clear SOS that cut off abruptly. Wolves howled. A honey badger darted out of the low grasses and slid into the crack; the zebra galloped diagonally toward us then cut away, frantic. An elephant sounded behind us, a trumpet of fear.
The quake stopped as abruptly as it had begun.
“Let’s move.” Hafthor hauled Calvin to his feet. Blood trickled down one of Calvin’s arms, mixing with sweat. “I think that tremor was the beginning of something.” Hafthor glanced at the mountain briefly before pointing to the ground. “And we do not want to be stuck on this side of that divide today if it grows.”
Ten meters away, a massive crack blocked access to the meadow in both directions for a good thirty meters, at least.
Moving parallel to the crack, we headed north, hunting for an access point, all four walking. My eyes went from Skye to the fresh crack in the rock, to our perimeter and then around again. Still no sign of any of the other teams. The crack narrowed enough to cross, putting us at the far end of the meadow.
We leaped across near the decimated rain forest, close enough to make out the individual leaves on new trees and old ones that somehow survived the fire. From here, the mountain platform was a good hour away. And we still had to lay the fuse line, get the torches lit, and get everyone in place.
The Nil clock ticked faster in my head.
I gestured to Hafthor for my satchel, needing my fire bow. “We need a lit torch to keep the big cats away.”
“We don’t have one,” Hafthor said. “We lost them all.”
“Seriously?”
Hafthor nodded. Of course he was serious.
“Rives, has the mountain always smoked like that?” Calvin asked, pointing.
Steam hissed into the air near the peak. More steam than usual, but nothing alarming, not yet anyway.
“Yes and no,” I said, studying the mountain. “It looks a little hot.”
Like Skye, I thought. Her skin still ran hot, like she was on fire. When I’d carried her, I’d begun to sweat from her body heat as much as my exertion.
Right now her skin had faded to a deathly pale, the moons beneath her eyes a dull Nil black.
I passed over my water gourd; there wasn’t much left. “Drink. You need it.”
Skye shook her head.
“Don’t be a martyr,” I said. One second late, I realized what I’d said and how I’d said it. “Take the water.” My voice was gruff. “Please.”
As she lifted the gourd, a knife struck it dead center, knocking it from her hand.
I swept her behind me with one arm as Carmen strode out from behind a swath of deadleaf bushes, her dark eyes flush with island insanity. “You can’t do this!” she cried, pointing accusingly at Skye. “You don’t understand the beauty of this place. The power, and the future. It’s as old as time, as life itself,” she crooned. “You can’t understand it, not like I do.” Her silken tone caressed each word, as if she spoke of a lover. Another knife appeared in her hand as Skye pressed into my back. “And you can’t kill it, Skye. Can’t hurt it. I won’t let you.”
“And I won’t let you hurt Skye.” My voice was hard.
Carmen’s eyes slid to me, narrowing in annoyance. “Move,” she commanded. She flicked her knife at me. “This is not your fight.”
“Wrong,” I said. “It’s not your fight.”
“Carmen.” Skye’s tone was inordinately calm and soft. “It’s you who doesn’t understand this place—its history, and its pain. It’s hurting, and hurting others.” Skye’s gentle voice hardened. “When midnight comes, I will do what must be done.”
Carmen’s mouth curved. “As must I.” She raised her weapon, then cried out as the knife flew out of her grasp. It skipped twice across the black rock before falling into the crack, swallowed by the darkness below. She spun around. James stood behind her.
“You fool! You don’t know what you’ve done!” Carmen yelled, swinging at James. He grabbed her fist and held it tight.
“I do,” he said calmly. “You will hurt no one here.” He looked at me. “Rope?”
“Calvin’s got some.”
A few minutes later, Carmen’s hands were bound with some of the extra twine.
“Where’s Paulo?” Skye asked.
“With Kenji. I saw Carmen and followed her. I knew three would make too much noise so I asked them to stay behind.”
A triple danger alert sounded, turning quickly into an SOS call. Make that two. One from past the meadow, by the sea; the other to the south, a chorus of trouble.
Look around, pay attention.
Barks and growls echoed in the distance, a Nil nightmare in play.
“James, do you have a torch?” I asked.
“One.”
“Okay, that’ll have to do. Light it now. Calvin, I want you to head down to lay the fuse. Go east, avoid the meadow if you can. You may have to tack north slightly and descend near the ruins to get to the coast. Be careful as you feed it into the cave, giving yourself plenty of distance, all right? If you have any problems, blow your whistle two times, both long. That way I’ll know it’s you. I’ll try to get back as fast as I can. James, you stay with Carmen. Head for the platform. Hafthor, you stay with Skye. You two follow Calvin, see what’s going on. Stay by the coast, take the first path so you can steer clear of the lions until you all have torches. But don’t leave Skye.” That last bit was a command. Hafthor nodded.
And then, repeating the past, I ran. Toward the mountain, away from Skye, angling slightly south, following a constant SOS whistle, refusing to look back. My mind had leaped ahead, toward Thad and his crew. I ran in the direction his team should be.
No, I thought, they should already be at the mountain. The SOS punctuated what I already knew.
Thad’s team was in serious trouble.