Clearly, it wasn’t done yet.
“She’s following us,” Makara said.
Makara flipped on the LCD screen in the center of the dashboard. It revealed the dirt road behind us, and a single headlight, growing larger and brighter. The shape of a motorcycle appeared, and the shadowy form of its rider: a woman with black hair blowing in the wind.
“When we get to the bottom, I’m gunning it,” Makara said. “We’ll leave her in our dust.”
“Makara, just stop the car,” I said. “That thing can go faster than us, and you know it. She might have something important to say.”
“She wants to come with us,” Makara said. “I’m not having it.”
“I don’t get it. She’d be useful. You saw what she did with that sword.”
She ignored me as the two vehicles kept an even distance. We snaked back and forth down the mesa. When we reached the bottom, Makara sped up, heading due east toward a brightening crimson sky. Anna matched our pace. That motorcycle could go faster than us, easy. But still, Makara pressed the accelerator until the Recon’s engine was roaring, until the hydrogen fuel tank gave a miserable high whine. The pressure needle climbed and climbed, into the red. She was going to make the thing explode.
“Makara, pull over!” Samuel said.
“No.”
“Pull over, goddamn it! She’s coming with us whether you like it or not!”
Makara slammed on the brakes, causing us all to rock forward in our seats. The seatbelt pressed into my neck, constricting my breathing. On the LCD screen, the headlight grew brighter and brighter.
Anna was going to crash into us.
Anna veered off and flashed by the Recon’s right side in a speedy whir. She circled around to the Recon’s driver’s side and halted, shutting off the engine. Her face was calm and implacable. To her, a couple brushes with death in ten minutes’ time were all in a day’s work.
Samuel and I got out of the Recon, but Makara and Lisa stayed in. Outside, the air was sharp and dry. The sun had lit the land dull red from behind the equally red clouds. The mountains towered in the distance to the east, and the desert of rock and sand stretched flat to meet them. Behind us, Raider Bluff sat on its cliff, dark and brooding in the early hour.
“I’m coming with you,” Anna said simply.
Her eyes flicked up to meet mine. In them I saw determination, and the unwillingness to take no as an answer.
“You know,” I said, “if you wanted to come with us, all you had to do was ask. You didn’t have to audition or anything.”
“Did Char send you?” Samuel asked. “Makara will give me hell if I let you into the Recon.”
“No, Char did not send me. That’s why I met you at the gate. He wouldn’t want me to come. But Char is selfish, and you guys need me. The terrain is dangerous, and I’m the only one in Bluff who can lead you to the Great Blight.”
“And nearly got yourself killed in the process,” I said.
“I’m hard to kill,” Anna said. She turned to Samuel. “I’m telling the truth. You’ll die without my help. My bike can be stored in the cargo bay until I need to return home. It’s capable of high mileage, so getting home shouldn’t be an issue, even if I can’t find water.”
At that moment, Makara jumped from the Recon and walked up to Anna.
“You are not coming,” she said.
“You are wrong.”
Makara’s eyes cut dangerously at Anna. It looked as if things were going to come to blows.
“I don’t want you here,” Makara said. “End of story.”
“You do want me here. You just don’t realize it, yet. As I was telling Samuel, you will need a guide to get you across the Boundless. Before I moved to Bluff, the Boundless was my home. I survived there for years, even with the hostile Desert Tribes roaming around. Trust me, you’ll want my guidance.”
Makara’s face reddened. Her hand, out of habit, made its way to her holstered handgun. The movement didn’t escape Anna’s eye.
“Don’t even try it,” Anna said. “I’m here for one reason and one reason only. You’ll never make it past the Boundless to the Great Blight without my help. It has nothing to do with annoying you, I promise.”
“We don’t need your help.”
Anna stepped forward, her eyes challenging. “You don’t? Spoken like someone who has never seen the Boundless. Do you know where the Desert Tribes camp? Do you know where to find water? Do you know which mesas are safe to hide behind in a dust storm? A dust storm in the Boundless is a thousand times worse than one in the Wasteland.”
It looked as if Anna could go on, but Makara held up a hand. “I admit, you might have a point. But I promise you this. If you don’t leave voluntarily by the time we reach the Great Blight, I’ll make sure you leave by compulsion. Is that understood?”
Anna gave a slight smile. “If this mission is anything like what Char says it is, trust me; I’ll be out of your hair by then.”
“Fine,” Makara said. “Let’s move out.”
Makara went back into the Recon, followed by Lisa.
“Don’t say anything to incite Makara,” Samuel said to Anna. “If you’re going to be with us for the next few days, I want the trip to be as peaceful as possible.”
Anna nodded. “I know. I’m sorry. I know this is last-minute, but I believe you guys will need my help. But after the Great Blight, you’ll be on your own.”
“We need to get moving,” Samuel said. “We can’t get bogged down on who doesn’t like whom. We have a mission to finish.”
Once the cycle was stowed, the rest of us piled into the Recon and we continued our journey. As the day brightened, the crimson Wasteland fell speedily behind us. It was amazing how fast this thing could go.
“We should be there in a few days, right?” I said.
“Now is the easy part,” Makara said.
As the day wore on, large dunes replaced the flat and rocky ground. It was difficult to pick our way past them. Anna pointed the way. I could not tell how she discerned one dune from the other.
By midday, our progress slowed to a near standstill. We were doing twenty-five miles an hour over the dunes, Makara doing her best to keep us going east.
“We made it to the Boundless,” Anna said. “No trick here, just keep heading east.”
After we slogged through the dunes a couple more hours, I saw a long jagged line in the distance.
“What’s that?” I asked.
“Looks like a canyon,” Makara said. “Does it head the right way?”
Anna didn’t answer for a bit. “I’ve never seen it before…”
“You’re the expert here,” Makara said with biting sarcasm. “Are we going in, or what?”
Anna hesitated a moment. “Yeah. Go in. My mind’s eye was just ten miles north of where we actually are.”
I spoke up. “I don’t know if it’s from some book or a movie I saw, but I think going in there is a really, really bad idea…”
No one answered me. Makara headed for the canyon. A few minutes later we entered its gaping entrance. As we headed deeper within, the jagged brown rock on either side rose higher and higher. It zigzagged back and forth, making it difficult to see too far ahead. We were doing forty miles an hour. Finally, we made a turn, entering a long, wide stretch where sheer cliff rose up on either side.
I guessed this might have been a good idea.
Just as I thought that, a bullet splattered into the Recon’s windshield.
Chapter 9
Wild-haired men appeared along the rim of the canyon, aiming rifles down at the Recon. Bullets dinged the metal and cracked the windshield. Makara sped up, weaving through the canyon.