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“Viv!” Amanda screamed.

The water kept widening. Amanda saw Viv struggle to keep her head above the surface while the current swept her along. She struck something — a boulder, Amanda realized — and clung to it.

“Yes!” Amanda shouted. “Hang on!”

As the torrent spread, it slowed. It dropped to a foot. Six inches. Viv released her hold on the boulder and slumped behind it.

“Keep your head up!” Amanda yelled. She splashed into the water. Even shallow, the current was powerful. She and Ray needed to hang on to each other to keep from falling. Then the water dropped to three inches, and Amanda hurried through it. Glancing upstream, she saw a massive hole in the embankment, emptiness beyond it, only a trickle coming out. She increased speed and came to the boulder.

Viv lay on her back, her face above water. Amanda reached for her. Ray pulled her hand away.

“Let go of me! We need to help her!”

“We can’t! She’s dead!”

“Like hell! I see her chest moving! Get your damned hands—” The words stuck in Amanda’s throat. A snake emerged from Viv’s jumpsuit, its black body slithering across her shoulder. The tail of another projected from Viv’s left pant leg. The snake made her leg seem to move. A third snake was halfway up her right sleeve.

“The force of the water,” Ray said. “It tore her boots off. It shoved the snakes into her clothes.”

Snakes writhed everywhere, visible now that the water was only a couple of inches deep.

“We need to get out of here,” Ray said, pulling her away.

“But… Viv… Maybe we can still help.”

“No. Look at her eyes.”

Despite the sun’s glare, they didn’t blink.

“Let’s go. Those snakes are awfully angry,” Ray said.

One hissed at them.

He tugged again, and this time, Amanda went with him. Numbed by grief, she kept looking back until the boulder obscured Viv’s body.

They reached dry ground. The snakes remained where the earth was wet. Amanda thought of Viv’s bulging eyes and trembled.

“When Viv saw how the dogs mutilated Derrick’s body, remember what she told us?” Amanda asked.

“She said she couldn’t bear this any longer.”

“Exactly.” Overwhelmed, Amanda sank to the ground. “I can’t bear this any longer.”

7

Balenger worked his way down a slope. His boots almost slipped on wet dead leaves, but he gripped a tree trunk, caught his balance, and continued down. He saw occasional patches of snow where the sun hadn’t reached and realized that here the storm the previous night had brought more than rain.

To his right, the foothills rose to mountains. A mile to his left, the foothills shrank, merging with the valley’s entrance. Knowing the Game Master’s fondness for monitoring devices, he expected that there’d be intrusion detectors. But four deer bounding away from him through the trees made him realize that intrusion detectors would be impractical. Animals would constantly set off alarms triggered by pressure sensors and infrared beams. Under the circumstances, video cameras were more reliable, and for now, the close cover of the aspen trees made this an unlikely area for the Game Master to hide any. The view would be limited. Better to aim cameras at open spaces where a few could accomplish a lot.

Balenger kept descending to the right, wanting to gain more distance from the valley’s entrance. He reached the slope’s bottom. Still encircled by trees, he took out his compass and terrain map. A mountain visible through the tree tops gave him a landmark to orient the map. He calculated that in another mile, he’d be in a north-south line with the reservoir.

He forced himself to drink some water, bit a piece from an energy bar, and continued through the trees, following the rim of the valley. He scanned everything ahead of him, reminding himself to think as if he were in Iraq, watching for any sign of an ambush or a bomb. He decided that buried explosives connected to trip wires or pressure plates weren’t practical in this location. Animals would constantly set them off. More likely, explosives would be radio controlled, triggered by a visual confirmation of the target. Just like the roadside bombs in Iraq. Although he remained convinced that cameras would be aimed toward open spaces, not into the limited viewpoint of the forest, he took the precaution of avoiding obvious routes through the trees — a game trail, for example, or a clearing.

A rumble made him pause. It sounded like distant thunder. The noise persisted, then faded. An explosion? he wondered. No, it lasted too long. Maybe the people on the embankment succeeded in breaching the dam. Although he couldn’t imagine why they’d work so hard to do that, he kept hoping Amanda was one of them. Worry for her made him want to hurry, but he restrained himself, knowing that he wouldn’t be any use to her if he allowed himself to get careless.

When his compass and map told him he was abreast of the reservoir, he turned left and moved cautiously through the trees. The forest thinned, revealing the extent of the valley and the mountains surrounding it. The passage of time weighed on him. Already, it was almost one p.m. Eleven hours until endgame at midnight. He held his gun at the ready and peered from the trees. Nothing on either side aroused his suspicions.

Wary, he stepped into the open. After the protection of the forest, the vastness before him was unnerving.

The BlackBerry vibrated. He took it from his camouflage suit and pressed its green button.

“Welcome to Scavenger,” the voice said.

Balenger studied the expanse in front of him. Sagebrush, a few pine trees, occasional boulders. Despite the rain the night before, the ground looked parched.

“After I learned about the Sepulcher of Worldly Desires, I bought this valley,” the Game Master said.

“Nice to be able to afford whatever you want.” Balenger turned to the left, and scanned the line of trees behind him, concentrating on the upper branches.

“I walked the valley until I knew it like an old friend.”

“You have friends?” Balenger turned to the right now, scanning the upper branches of the trees in that direction.

“I used a metal detector to search the cemetery in case the Sepulcher was buried there. But the only metal the detector reacted to came from jewelry that some of the townspeople were buried with.”

“You dug them up to find out?”

“I used the detector to scan the town, a painstaking process. As you might expect, the device reacted to all sorts of metal, from nails to hinges to rusted knives and forks. But no reaction was strong enough to indicate that the Sepulcher was buried under Avalon.”

“You assumed the Sepulcher was huge?” Balenger kept studying the trees as he pressed the phone to his ear. “Maybe it’s tiny, just room enough for a Bible and some handwritten prayers.”

“No,” the Game Master said. “It’s huge. I hired a plane and equipped it with an infrared camera, the kind that records variations of heat in landscapes. Soil absorbs heat, for example, while stone reflects it. Soil on top of rock has a different colored image than deep soil or soil with metal under it. Hot spots almost seem to glow on photographs this camera takes.”

Balenger saw what he looked for and nodded in a minor victory.

“The camera took thousands of photographs. It documented the heat signature of every part of the valley. The photography took days. Studying the results took weeks. A few aberrant images gave me hope, but when I had those areas excavated, I found nothing.”

“So maybe the Sepulcher’s a myth. Maybe it never existed. If it can’t be found, there’s another flaw in the game. Call it off.”