The passageway came to an abrupt end at a rock ledge that jutted out into the swift-moving water. Matt directed his light downstream. Stalactites dangled from the ceiling like sinister chandeliers, waiting to fall on unsuspecting travelers.
“So, do we swim it?” Tam pursed her lips, looking doubtfully at the dark water.
“We can take off our pants and make flotation devices out of them.” Bones sounded eager. “Ladies first!”
“You couldn’t handle it, sweetie,” Tam said. “Not in a million years.”
Something in the corner of his eye caught Dane’s attention. “Matt, turn your light this way.” Leaning against the wall, just a few feet upstream from where they stood, was a raft.
“A two thousand year-old raft from Carthage? No thank you,” Bones scoffed. “I say we put my ‘no pants’ idea to a vote. Who’s with me?”
Dane and Matt took a closer look and were surprised by what they found.
“This thing is new.” Matt rapped on the logs and tested the vines which bound it together. “I wonder who put it here and why?”
Dane knew in an instant. “It was Fawcett. He was the one who told me about this place.”
“How do you think he got it down here without them noticing?” This was the first thing Kaylin had said since leaving the temple.
“I got the impression he has someone, maybe a girlfriend, in the temple priesthood. I suppose she could have let him slip a few things down here at a time. It wouldn’t have taken much.”
“Look here, Maddock!” Matt knelt and looked behind the raft. “There’s a basket of food here: nuts, dried fruit and meat. There’s even a gourd for water. You don’t think…” He looked up at Dane.
“He was planning on leaving.” The full impact of what Fawcett had done for them hit him hard. Fawcett had been preparing for his escape, was possibly even planning on taking his priestess girlfriend with him, but he had given it up so they could get away.
“We’d better not let his sacrifice go for nothing, then.” Kaylin’s voice was husky with emotion, but her resolve was clear. “Let’s get out of this place.”
The raft could not bear everyone’s weight, so Dane and Bones handed their guns over to the others for safe-keeping, and swam behind, holding on to the back. The water was frigid and Dane immediately missed his diving suit.
“Dude, I am never going to be able to have kids after this,” Bones said. “Matt, we’re trading places in a few!”
“Can’t. Somebody has to hold this flashlight.”
Dane laughed. “Bones, you don’t want to have kids anyway.”
“I don’t know. Heck, I might already have kids scattered all over the world. Who can say? Lots of little Bones running around.”
“Stirrups,” Tam said absently.
“Say what?” Bones looked at her like she was crazy.
“The stirrup is the smallest bone in the human body. You know, ‘lots of little Bones…’”
Bones grimaced. “Science hurts my head. Of course, I’m not feeling any other pain thanks to this ice water. I might not feel anything ever again.”
“Do us all a favor,” Dane said, “and stick your mouth in the water until it’s numb.”
Everyone, including Kaylin, laughed, and they relaxed as the current swept them along. They shared some of the food Matt had found, and as the distance between them and Kephises increased, their spirits rose in turn. Soon, they were laughing as they ducked low-hanging stalactites and the miles swept away behind them.
It was difficult to track the passage of time, but Dane knew they were making much better time floating down this river than they had hiking through the jungle. He assumed they had to be getting close to their destination.
“Um, Maddock,” Matt called. “Do you see what I see?”
Dane peered up over the raft and saw a faint glow in the distance.
“We must be getting close to the end. Cool!” It would be a relief to get out of this cold water and onto dry ground.”
“That’s not what I’m talking about!” Matt’s voice rose as he called out. “Look in front of us!”
At first, Dane saw nothing but low-hanging stalactites shrouded in gray mist. Then he realized that the sound of the river had been growing progressively louder for some time now. He raised up a little higher to get a better look.
“Aw, hell!” Willis exclaimed. “Waterfall!”
Thirty feet ahead and closing fast, the river poured out over a rock shelf and tumbled into a void. There was no way they could all leap from the raft to the rock shelf — the water was moving too fast.
Dane and Bones grabbed hold of the vines that knotted the raft together and began kicking furiously, trying in vain to swim against the current and arrest the raft’s momentum. Tam and Willis both began paddling backward on the same side, almost upending the craft.
“It’s not going to work!” Dane looked all around, but the walls were worn smooth by the passage of water and time. There was nowhere to get a handhold. And then he looked up. “Grab a stalactite!”
Everyone looked at him as if he was crazy, but then understanding dawned on Willis’s face. He reached up and grabbed hold of the closest one.
It broke off in his hand.
“Damn!” Willis tossed the stalactite aside and reached for another, but by this time, Matt had stood and wrapped his arms around the biggest stalactite he could reach. The raft pivoted under his feet and Dane and Bones were spun about so that they were now downstream of the craft, their feet precariously close to the edge of the fall.
“It’s going out from under me!” Matt shouted, still hanging on. By this time, Willis had gained his feet and found two handholds. He stood, arms spread apart, holding on for dear life.
“You look like Samson!” Bones shouted. How he could still make his wisecracks at a time like this was beyond Dane.
“Let’s hope for a better outcome than that story.” Tam grunted, struggling to find a handhold of her own without tipping the raft.
“Bones, can you at least be serious when we’re feet from going over a waterfall?” Dane was working his way to the corner of the raft, which would put him close to the rock shelf, but still not close enough to reach. “Okay,” he called to the others on the raft. “We need to start working the raft over to one side. Willis, can you reach a little to your left and grab that next one?” Willis nodded and shifted his grip. The raft wobbled as he reached out, but didn’t tip. One at a time, each person on the raft took hold of a new stalactite and, on Dane’s command, pulled. The raft inched closer to the side.
“Again!” Dane shouted. He was holding on, still kicking for all he was worth, but he could feel the water inching him closer to the edge. The moments seemed to melt into hours as they hauled the raft ever closer to the edge.
Finally, the raft struck the side and Dane scrambled out onto the ledge. He hauled Bones up, and the two of them helped Kaylin and Tam to safety. Now only Matt and Willis remained.
“You first!” Matt shouted.
“Naw, man. I’m closest to the edge. You’d never make it over.”
“But you’ve got the hurt leg.”
“Just go, and make it fast. And when you get off this thing, get the hell out of my way.” Willis took a deep breath and tightened his grip. Veins bulged in his neck and cords of muscle on his powerful arms rippled in the half-light under a sheen of sweat and mist as he held the raft in place against the powerful current.
Matt took two steps, leaped, and rolled as he landed, clearing the way for Willis, from under whom the raft was already moving.