He followed.
Cold water sent a chill through him that actually felt good considering the amount of sweat that covered his body. The riverbed was smooth stones in varying sizes that challenged his rubber-soled shoes and made footing tricky. Twice he almost lost his balance. If he fell and allowed the current to take him, he’d be gone in a matter of seconds. Luckily, the water ran shallow.
Rowe made it to the dam, hopped on top and reholstered the gun.
Tom did the same.
They both shone their lights on the other side, into the cave opening. Some water leaked through the dam and trickled inside, down a flat, smooth, chutelike incline about ten feet wide.
“This river once flowed into there,” he said.
“And someone dammed it up.”
A sign was posted adjacent to the entrance labeling the cave Darby’s Hole. The warning made clear NO ADMITTANCE. Unchecked water flows, unexplored and unmarked passages, dangerous pits, and unpredictable surges were listed as reasons.
“That’s comforting,” he said.
But Rowe had turned from the placard, studying the trees on the river’s far bank.
No more wails had been heard.
“What aren’t you telling me?” he asked Rowe.
“Let’s go inside.”
CHAPTER SEVENTY-TWO
ZACHARIAH CHECKED THE MAP. THEY’D FOUND THE HIGHWAY marked A3, just as Rowe had instructed, then sped north through a series of dark towns. Just past one named Noland the road began to climb into the Blue Mountains. A bright moon sheathed the landscape in a wondrous, divine light and he wondered if its presence was a sign.
“Mahoe Hill is only a few more kilometers,” he told Rócha. “There we go west.”
Falcon Ridge was on the map, with an elevation of 130 meters noted.
“You okay back there,” he said to Alle.
“I’m fine.”
His head spun a little from the twists and turns in the road. He’d never been fond of mountain drives. “I think we are only a few hours away from finding what we are after.”
He wanted to reassure her, calm any fears she may have. The violence at the airport had been necessary, but he’d told Rócha to keep it discreet.
And that he had.
He wondered if Berlinger’s body had been found. Nothing linked him to the rabbi’s house, and he’d been careful inside to stand and to touch nothing. He’d opened the door through his jacket and wiped the knob clean. He’d seen no one, and nothing had occurred that would alert anyone.
Now to finish this matter.
Where they were headed seemed isolated.
Exactly what he needed.
———
TOM HOPPED OFF THE DAM ONTO SLICK ROCK. HE KEPT HIS LIGHT angled down, watching each step through the steady flow of inch-deep water that seeped from the makeshift dam into the cave. Both the warning sign and Rowe’s evasiveness unnerved him. He’d never been inside a cave before, much less one advertised as dangerous with a man who was clearly not telling him everything. Yet here he was, in the middle of Jamaica, doing just that.
Rowe entered first, his halogen light casting a bright cone ahead. They were standing on a ledge, twenty feet wide, the roof thirty feet or more overhead. The rock beneath their feet extended ahead another twenty feet then stopped, water pouring over the side, splashing somewhere below. Rowe crept to the edge, but the thought of what might be on the other side unnerved Tom. Heights were not a favorite of his, and the swift-moving water and polished floor made footing chancy at best. One slip and there was no telling what waited in the blackness beyond.
Rowe stopped at the edge and shone his light into the abyss.
Tom saw a rocky cavern extending out and up, the far wall a good fifty feet away. Vertical strata of sandy-colored limestone soared upward to form a rough dome. The cave was like a chute that funneled water in, then down, the cascade’s roar loud but not deafening.
“It drops a long way,” Rowe said. “There are steps the water follows. The next one is three meters beneath us.”
He crept closer to the edge and peered over. His light revealed the next level down, maybe ten feet below, which jutted out to another black edge where water disappeared over the side.
“Do you have any idea what we’re supposed to do here?” Rowe asked.
He shook his head. “Not a clue.”
A loud smack could be heard over the falling water.
Then another.
They stared at each other.
The sound came from outside.
They both doused their lights and walked cautiously back to the exit. Outside, atop the dam, stood a man. Tall and thin. Swinging the outline of what appeared to be a sledgehammer, smacking the stones with full force.
“Stop that,” Rowe yelled.
The man’s head glanced up, then he lashed down with another blow.
Rowe unsnapped his holster and removed the gun. He pointed the weapon toward the blackened figure.
“I said stop.”
The man swung one more time.
Rowe fired.
But his target had disappeared over the side into the river.
The dam burst open, water and rock exploding toward them. Twenty feet separated them from the calamity, which bought maybe three seconds. Alarm sent Tom darting left, away from the entrance, hoping that he could move out of the onslaught’s path.
Rowe was not as quick.
The water, which before had been a few inches deep, was now a raging flood, full of projectiles, pouring into the cave.
Tom yelled, but it was too late.
Rowe was swept off his feet and disappeared in the darkness.
———
ZACHARIAH EMERGED FROM THE CAR. RÓCHA HAD PARKED A few meters away from a pickup truck that sat just off a narrow graveled road. They were high on a bluff overlooking dark forest, the Caribbean a few kilometers to the north.
Falcon Ridge.
He inspected the truck’s bed. Full of tools. Rowe had come prepared. But for what? Rócha and Alle were now out of the car, Rócha checking the cliff edge, staring down. Water rushed below.
He heard a shout.
Then another.
And a gunshot.
“It came from down there,” Rócha said.
———
BÉNE REALIZED HE WAS IN TROUBLE. EVERYTHING BLURRED INTO one whirling spiral. The swift current surged him toward the edge and there was nothing he could use to stop himself. He knew the drop on the other side was about three meters, and he hoped there was enough water down there to cushion his fall. Otherwise, bones were going to break.
He plunged over the side.
He tried to right himself and land on his feet, but gravity’s pull on both him and the water was relentless. He hit the next ledge with his boots, rebounded, then slammed to the rock. Water battered his body. He gasped for breath and bit his tongue, tasting blood. The flow was deeper here, maybe half a meter, the current fast, but not overpowering. He was planted on his soles, body not moving. Splashes around him signaled rock from the dam raining from above. He still held the light in his right hand.
More splashes.
He had to move.
He turned and spotted a ledge extending from the vertical wall, where the water from above was diverted, creating a waterfall within a waterfall.
Cover.
Not much, but maybe enough.
He leaped toward it and pressed his body close, water pouring down only a few centimeters away.
More thuds came as boulders from the dam kept falling.
———
TOM COULD NOT GO AFTER ROWE. TOO MUCH DEBRIS WAS SWEEPING in from the collapsed dam, the largest chunks wobbling to a halt just past the opening, most of the others vanishing over the edge.
Why had somebody deliberately burst the barrier?
The flow continued in a brisk current, the water now knee-high, but the debris had lessened. He risked walking ahead, the larger rocks making good handholds. He made his way to one side of the cavern and pressed himself close to the wall, keeping his flashlight aimed at his feet, watching every step.