“Come on, you mother.” Bones hauled on the stone with renewed vigor, and, a millimeter at a time, the stone tile came free. They laid the heavy tile to the side and Dane looked down into the hole. Cool air drifted up into the room, carrying with at a faint scent of something unpleasant.
“Okay, Andy Dufresne. You going to crawl through the sewage to freedom?” Bones clapped him on the shoulder.
“Matt and I are the only ones who’ll fit,” Dane said, looking down into the darkness. The drain was just wide enough that he could work his way through, provided it did not grow narrower at any point further up.
“At least it’s a small population,” Matt observed. “In a bigger settlement, this thing would be stanky.” He sighed deeply. “All right. You first, or me?”
“I’ll take the lead. You can pull me out if I get stuck.” He turned to Bones. “We’ll get back as quick as we can to let you out.”
“No problem, bro. If they find you’re gone, I’ll just bash them in the head with this tile.” He grinned at the thought.
“Don’t get yourself killed, Bones. I’m serious. Worst case, they come looking for us. I doubt they’ll hurt you, unless you give them reason.”
“You take the fun out of everything.” Bones frowned.
“You heard me. I need you to stay alive in case I have to sacrifice you to the Mot’jabbur on the way back.” He ignored Bones’s insult and, crinkling his nose, slid headfirst into the tunnel.
Four inches of cold water flowed along the bottom of the drain. He headed upstream, in the direction from which the drain would be fed. Matt was right — the smell was not as bad as it could have been, and soon his olfactory senses tuned it out entirely.
“I hope nobody decides to take a leak right now.” Matt couldn’t hide the disgust in his voice.
“At least we could see something,” Dane whispered. They were moving forward blindly, feeling their way through the dark, smelly drain. Dane’s shoulder’s scraped the walls, and he felt that familiar warning flash of alarm that divers feel when they find themselves in a precariously tight position. He wasn’t diving right now, of course, and if he were to feel like he was getting stuck, he and Matt could simply back up.
They continued on, time seeming to grind nearly to a standstill in the darkness. It was difficult to tell what kind of progress they were making, which made it feel even more frustratingly like they weren’t moving at all.
“What do you think?” Matt finally whispered. “Did we make the wrong move?”
Just then, Dane caught a glimpse of gray in the distance. “I see light. I think we’re almost there.” Now, with a visible goal in front of him, Dane moved as fast as he dared, devouring the space between himself and what he could now see was the night sky shining into the drain.
When they reached the end of the drain, he took a breath of fresh air and peeked his head out. Here, a stream, probably the one that fed the waterfall back in the valley, wrapped around the edge of the village. The drain angled in from the side, so the current and gravity would naturally carry water through it. The calm rush of water was the only sound in the quiet night.
Staying low in the water, Dane crawled out of the drain, and Matt followed. The faint moonlight cast the village in a silvery haze. Firelight flickered in a few nearby windows, but no one was out. He was about to lead the way out when a figure appeared from the darkness, strolling their way.
Fawcett!
Dane froze. He didn’t need to warn Matt to be quiet. The man knew his business. He waited until Fawcett passed them, then rose up quickly and quietly, grabbed Fawcett in a chokehold with one arm, and clamped a hand over the man’s nose and mouth. Fawcett grabbed Dane’s forearm, but could not dislodge his powerful hold.
“Don’t make a sound,” he hissed into Fawcett’s ear. “It’s Maddock. He felt the man relax. I don’t want to hurt you, but if you call out, I will. Blink twice if you understand.”
Fawcett deliberately closed and opened his eyes two times.
“Do you know where our weapons are?” Fawcett blinked twice. “Good. I’m going to uncover your mouth, and you’re going to tell me where they are. Try to give us away and I knock you out and hold you face-down in the water until you stop kicking. Understand?” Two more blinks.
Fawcett sucked in a rasping breath, and coughed. “For God’s sake, man,” he gasped, his eyes and nose running, “I’ll not betray you. I’m trying to help you, remember?”
“Where are our weapons and supplies?”
“They are in Mago’s quarters. Right there.” He indicated the first door of the building from underneath which they had just crawled. “He is with his father right now, but his door it is locked up tight. You won’t get in, at least not without bashing in the door and drawing attention.”
Matt smiled at Dane. “I got this” He took a long look at the space between the stream and the stone building, gauging the distance. “You just be ready when I open the door.”
Fawcett frowned as Matt slipped back down into the water. “I’ll assume he knows what he is doing.” He rounded on Dane like an angry schoolteacher. “You promised me you would not do anything reckless.”
“I didn’t. If I’d wanted to be reckless, I would have sent my friend Bones through the tunnel. He’d have scalped you and set half this place on fire. And that would just be for starters.”
“I actually believe you.” Fawcett grinned. “Let’s move closer to Mago’s door and wait for your friend.”
They slipped into the shadows of a nearby palm tree and waited for Matt.
“Did you talk to Hamilcar about us?” Dane whispered.
“Yes. He said to treat you well until he decided what to do about you.” Fawcett’s eyes narrowed and his lips pursed. “I am worried about these ScanoGen people. I fear he does not take the threat seriously enough. He believes our guards will suffice.”
Just then, Dane caught a glimpse of movement in the shadows of a nearby hut. He ducked down behind the pitiful screen of the tree trunk, pulling Fawcett down with him. The figure moved closer, the moonlight outlining its frame. Dane could not believe his eyes.
“Tam,” he whispered, just loud enough for her to hear. At the sound of her name, she jerked like a hooked fish. Her eyes searched the darkness and finally fell upon Dane. Dane held up a hand, signaling her to wait, and she nodded.
Less than a minute later, they heard a rattling sound, and the door to Mago’s quarters opened. Dane waved for Tam to come on, and they all hurried into the room and closed the door behind them.
“How did you get out?” Dane asked Tam.
“They underestimated me, like always. They only put one guard on us. I acted all girly and helpless, and yelled to him that I was hurt. When he opened the door, I took him down and tied him up. You know the drill.”
Fawcett looked dumbstruck, but Dane just grinned as he and Matt gathered their weapons. He handed Tam her Makarov and her flash gun.
“How about you?” she asked. “I was trying to figure out how I was going to disarm four guards and spring you guys.”
“Came through the drains,” Matt proclaimed proudly proclaimed. “That’s how I got in here, too.”
“So that’s what that smell is.” Tam grimaced. “Okay, what’s the plan?”
“We leave the tents and the camping gear. Just take ammunition and what food we can carry in a day pack. We’ll get the others, and get out of here.”
They grabbed packs for everyone, and Dane remembered his sat phone, which he hastily pocketed, just in case. Now ready to move, he turned to Fawcett. “Do you know where Thomas is?”