“Piranha.” Bauru grimaced as his fingers probed the wound on his chest. The skin was torn for almost ten inches, the edges of the wound rough. Blood oozed out over Bauru’s fingers.
Mualama tried to help him, but they had nothing to stop the bleeding with. “We have to get out of here,” Mualama insisted.
“How?
“We wait for the fish to leave?” Mualama suggested.
Bauru looked up at Mualama, his face resigned.
“They have tasted me. They have the blood scent. They will not leave. I have seen such fish block a river crossing for four days after taking down the lead horse in a column. They stripped it down to a skeleton, then waited for more.”
Mualama took a deep breath to steady his nerves, but all that served to do was remind how stale the air in their small prison was. He tried to help the other man stop the bleeding, but the wounds were too wide and long. A pool of blood was forming on the rock beneath Bauru.
Mualama looked over at the dark surface of the (…)
“There is no other way out than through the tunnel.” Mualama said.
Bauru laughed, a manic edge to it. “I know that. The only choice to be made is to die here slowly or to go in the water and die quickly.” He leaned back, hissing in pain. “What did you find?” he asked, nodding toward the packet stuck in Mualama’s belt.
“I don’t know.”
“Is it important?”
“I believe so.”
“Worth our lives?”
“Yes.”
“Even though you don’t know what it is?” Bauru was surprised and interested in spite of his pain and the situation.
“1 have been tracking down…” Mualama paused. He’d never explained what he was doing to anyone, even his wife. “I have been searching for the truth.”
“The truth?”
“About the aliens. About our… the human race’s past. I think this”… Mualama tapped the packet wrapped in oilskins… “is the next clue in a long line leading me to the ultimate truth.”
“Ah.” Bauru nodded. “That they destroyed the people of the great city of Tiahuanaco in ancient times.”
Mualama nodded. “The Mission has been around for a long time. It was behind the Black Death that killed many of your countrymen in Vilhena just recently.”
There was silence for several minutes. Mualama kept pressure on the wounds as best he could, but the rips were too long and wide.
“I am going to die here,” Bauru finally said.
“I will go and get help,” Mualama said.
“You will die before you make twenty feet. And help where? We are over a hundred miles from the nearest help. Even if I get out of here, I am still a dead man.”
Mualama didn’t answer, because he knew what Bauru was saying was true. “What religion are you?” Bauru asked unexpectedly.
“I was born Muslim.”
Bauru laughed softly. “I am Catholic… will it make any difference if you pray for me?”
“I think we all look to the same God with different names.” Mualama said. Bauru looked down at his wound. “I am a dead man already. I will help you escape.”
“How?”
When Bauru explained his plan, Mualama did not argue.
He knew that to protest would insult the other man’s brave offer. And he knew it was the only chance he had to get out of the cave and away, alive with the packet.
“Are you ready?” Bauru asked.
Mualama nodded.
Bauru closed his eyes, and his lips moved in prayer. Mualama murmured his own prayer to Allah for his companion.
Bauru scooted over to the edge and looked down at the dark water. “I am ready.”
Mualama clasped the other man on the shoulder. “I thank you.”
“Use my gift well,” Bauru said. Then he dove into the water and disappeared from sight.
Mualama slowly began counting to ten.
Bauru made it into the tunnel before the first piranha struck. They were of the Serrasalmus piraya species, the largest of the deadly fish, the biggest in the pack almost twenty inches long. They had a stocky body, with a large head, sporting a domed forehead, and were also among the most aggressive of the family of piranha. Their lower jaws opened wide, revealing rows of sharp, serrated teeth. They slammed into Bauru’s body, teeth clamping down, ripping flesh free. Still Bauru pulled and kicked, getting to the end of the tunnel, pushing free into the river, his body covered with predators. He continued kicking, a trail of blood bringing those that weren’t already feasting in for the kill. Even though they traveled in a loose pack, there was no love lost among the fish, some even fighting each other to get at the meat. As Bauru splashed downstream, the pack followed him.
On the ridge above, those waiting saw the bloody struggle, and their eyes followed until the body stopped flailing and the feeding frenzy drifted downstream.
Mualama reached ten and dove into the water. He made it through the tunnel unscathed. Holding his breath, he angled left, heading for the far shore. His muscles were tight; at any moment he expected to feel teeth tearing into his flesh.
He bumped into a rock, then another, tumbled about in the current, pulled himself around a boulder, sheltering him from view from the far side, and surfaced.
Sucking in a lungful of oxygen, Mualama carefully peered around the boulder. He saw those on top of the gorge looking farther downstream at Bauru’s fate. Mualama pulled himself out of the water and onto a rocky ledge, still keeping the boulder between him and the others. He waited until, after another hour, they finally turned and disappeared into the jungle, satisfied they had accomplished their task.
Mualama climbed on top of the boulder. He could jump from there to the rock face on this side of the gorge. He knew he had a hard climb, and then an even harder forced march to civilization, but there was no doubt in his mind he would make it. All he had to do was look over his shoulder and see the remains of Bauru, stripped to the bone, washed up between two rocks downstream and on the other side.
And he had the package tucked into his pants. He had to make it to the next step in the riddled path that Richard Francis Burton had left behind as his secret legacy.
CHAPTER 4
The gusts of wind coming off the peaks picked up sand and carried the fine particles with them, limiting visibility to less than two hundred feet in any direction. Area 51 was completely covered by the storm.
Captain Mike Turcotte kept one hand on the goggles strapped around his head, the other on the MP-5 submachine gun slung over his left shoulder. To his right, another figure braved the scouring wind, striding forward, away from the side of the mountain where the massive hangar doors that had opened slightly to allow them out, now slid closed. The doors were painted the same color as the mountain, a dull, sandy tone, and they appeared to become part of the slope as they shut.
“At our Area 51 it was snow that the wind carried,” the other man yelled, his strong accent audible above the howling shrieks.
Turcotte didn’t acknowledge the Russian’s comment. Already the mountain from which they had emerged had faded into the brown, swirling fog. He concentrated on moving in a straight line, knowing how easy it would be to become disoriented and wander into the wasteland that surrounded Area 51.
Turcotte held up his right arm, fist closed, the military signal to stop. Yakov, the Russian, lumbered to a halt, waiting. Almost seven feet tall, Yakov seemed little bothered by either the wind or blowing sand. He wore a long black coat that flapped behind him. A short black beard covered his lower face. A fur hat, incongruous in the sandstorm, topped his large head.
“The runway.” Turcotte pointed ahead at the edge of concrete that was visible in the relative lulls between the stronger gusts. He turned to the right and moved in that direction, using the edge of the runway as his guide. After several minutes he came to another stop. To the right, in between surges of the wind, they could make out the gutted ruins of the hangar that had been destroyed by the blast from space.