Caleb dialed, keeping his eyes on Nina. Forgive her?
She glanced at him as she sped the Jeep over the ridge and into the air before it struck ground and dug in. He turned away, phone to his ear; and in the windshield’s reflection, against the nearly impenetrable blanket of snow, he saw his own face staring back at him.
First things first.
8.
Mount Shasta
Phoebe held on for dear life as the tram raced at top speed. Still, at the halfway point, she managed to free a hand and reach out to Orlando’s, clasping it tight. They shared a look of fear and confusion. She knew he was as blind as she was. Too much adrenaline, too much shouting, yelling and chaos. And… fear for the girl.
The Hummingbird, strapped in beside her father, clutching him tight. And Diana, on the other side, eyes wide, glancing out the windows as if expecting to observe a half-remembered face from her past somewhere in the darkness and flashing lights.
Temple yelled over the screeching metal, “Do you see anything? Any psychic intel? How close is it?”
“You mean, are we going to make it?” Phoebe asked, focusing the question.
Orlando shook his head, lost, unable to concentrate. “Can’t see a thing!”
Suddenly, something rocked the tram. Everyone jolted in their seats. Windows shattered, rocks pounded the ceiling. The mountain trembled. Aria screamed. Out the windows, the tunnel’s lights blinked off, then on, then off.
And they plunged into darkness.
Orlando tightened his grip on Phoebe and held onto one thought. That bald dude didn’t save me down there just so I could get flattened in this tin can on the way out. “I think we’re going to make it.”
“You think?” Temple shouted from the front, looking out over the driver’s shoulder. “Or you know?”
Orlando shrugged. “Just a—”
“Don’t say ‘hunch’.”
“—hunch.”
Temple shook his head.
“Just the same,” Diana called out from the back, “I hope the others made it out.”
Temple nodded. “One tram evacuated before us, and there were two teams of psychics in the field, and one in town on a training mission. At least they’ll be okay.”
“Yeah,” Orlando said dryly. “Stargate will live on!”
“No one will live on,” Phoebe countered. “Unless Caleb can find and stop Calderon.”
She dug her nails into Orlando’s hand. He was about to tell her to chill and enjoy the ride when the tram rocked violently. The driver screamed just before they impacted something and the car jumped the tracks.
“Oh, shi—”
It flipped, slammed off the walls, then careened forward, sparks roaring like the Fourth of July behind them, bounced again, and then, like in an underground rollercoaster, it simply dropped.
Down a huge incline where the rock floor had been, gliding on its belly until finally, slamming head-first into a barrier, punching through rocks and grinding to a stop.
“Everyone ok?” Orlando helped Phoebe up. He wanted to make sure neither of them had any broken bones before verifying the condition of the others, but she was already up and rushing for Aria.
“She’s okay,” Diana said, stepping in the way. Orlando couldn’t see around her in the blinking overhead lights and the sparks still flying from the smashed equipment, but he thought he saw the little girl leaning over her father.
“Give her a minute,” Diana whispered, shaking her head sadly.
Phoebe squeezed Orlando’s hand tighter. “Oh no…”
Someone behind them cleared his throat. Temple, limping, bleeding from half-dozen cuts on his face and neck. “Sorry, and I know this is no place for something like this, but we don’t have a minute.”
“Sir,” Diana pleaded. “She saw him die. She—”
“She’ll be fine,” Aria said, and they all turned to see her form in the shadows. Aria laid a gentle kiss on her father’s forehead, then backed away, head bowed. Then she turned and with eyes brimming with tears, she nodded. “And I know, we can’t take him with us.”
Phoebe gasped. “There’s got to be a way.”
“No,” said Aria, climbing over wrecked seats and broken glass. “There isn’t. Just like there isn’t time to climb back up and run to the exit.”
Temple let her pass, but shielded her from the cockpit, where another casualty lay impaled under a pile of granite. “Then?”
“We need to go ahead.”
Phoebe looked ahead, following the beam of light that Temple just turned on.
Aria’s little feet crunched as she moved ahead. “Into their place.”
Orlando swallowed with anticipation, and after another step he realized the hand he was holding was now smaller. Aria was between them, holding Phoebe’s hand as well as his, urging them forward.
Orlando blinked as she squeezed his fingers and he gasped, the same time as Phoebe.
“How did you do that?” She whispered, then looked over to Orlando. “Did you see it?”
He nodded, just as the flashlight beam fanned back to them, highlighting Aria’s grim but determined expression.
“See what?” Temple asked as Diana moved around and took the beam from him, then turned it off. And their eyes immediately picked up the local lighting, soft and ambient, revealing a widening chamber, largely undamaged except for a few cracks in the ceiling and walls.
“Oh,” Temple said. “This.”
Aria nodded, still leading Phoebe and Orlando, heading toward a rounded marble staircase that ascended to a second level. “I’ve seen this before,” Orlando said. “It’s where the UFO-things returned from outside.”
Temple looked doubtful. “But they all left, hightailed it out of here.”
“They did,” Phoebe agreed, “but not all their crafts left with them.”
“There,” Diana pointed, toward the second alcove from the right on the upper level. Something multi-hued, transparent. And inside…
“Room for four?” Orlando wondered, but Diana was already running up the stairs, leading Temple and Aria.
“Let’s hope,” she called back. “And let’s hope I can figure out how to fly it!”
“If anyone can,” Temple said. “It’s you.”
Orlando was about to race up after them when Phoebe held him back. He stopped and saw that her attention was riveted on the side wall. “What is that? Artwork? A mural?”
“A map, I’d say” Phoebe’s eyes bounced around from the colored circles to the elliptical lines drawn around the center object—a bright orange sun.
“There’s Saturn,” Orlando said, pointed to a striped, ringed circle. “But what’s that symbol over the smaller dot next to it? And there, the same thing on other dots.”
“They’re moons, idiot.” Phoebe smiled, looking at them all, taking in the whole scope. She was aware of Aria on the second level, watching them with interest while Diana and Temple tinkered with the craft’s controls. She hoped they could gain some insight without psychic intervention, and in time. But for now, she was engrossed with the map.
“Tell me,” said Orlando, “it’s not another Pharos-like door. Some kind of devilish test or code to break.”
Phoebe shook her head, her eyes shining, even as the room shook again and dust fell on them. “No code. No test. Just a map.”
“Of what?”
“Look closer at the symbols on those moons, Orlando.” She stepped closer as well, just to be certain her theory was correct. “Oh, if I’m right, big brother is going to be so jealous I figured this out without him.”