Jack tugged at his knee and kicked out with his other leg, square in the dog’s chest.
The dog went flying down the stairs, bouncing hard, still latched on to her husband’s prosthetic leg. Jack had unstrapped the limb, freeing himself.
Harriet helped Jack up to the landing.
Below, the dog struck the wall and scrambled back to its paws. It refused to let go of the prosthetic leg, ripe with her husband’s scent. Angry, confused, it thrashed its head back and forth, tossing drool, shaking the captured limb.
Harriet drew Jack up the next set of stairs, passing the closed landing door. She glanced through its small window. Flashlights continued to search the top floor. That left Harriet and Jack only one way to go.
The roof.
Down the stairs, the dog continued savaging the captured limb, triumphant with its prize.
Jack leaned on her shoulder. He hopped and hauled his way to the roof door. They had already searched the exit and found it chained, but only loosely. At some point, someone had used a crowbar to bend back the lower corner of the steel door. There was just enough room to squirm under the loose chain and through the bend in the door.
Once out into the night, Jack used an abandoned length of pipe to prop the door closed. It wouldn’t hold long. But it didn’t much matter. There were a half-dozen other roof access points. They couldn’t block them all.
“This way,” Jack said, and pointed. He had scouted the roof and discovered an old heating-and-air-conditioning unit, half gutted of equipment. There was enough room inside to hide two people.
But neither held out much hope.
The dogs would scent them out before too long.
They crossed the roof to the unit, circled it to put its bulk between them and the door. Both sank to the tar paper roof, remaining outside the HVAC unit for the moment. The stars shone above, along with a sliver of a moon. A plane passed by far overhead, winking lights.
Jack put his arm around Harriet and drew her close to him.
“I love you,” he said.
It was a rare admission, seldom spoken aloud. Not that Harriet ever doubted it. Even now, he said the words matter-of-factly. Like saying the earth was round. So simple a truth.
She leaned into him. “I love you, too, Jack.”
Harriet clung to him. She didn’t know how much time they had left. Eventually the search below would end. Annishen would turn her attention to the roof.
They waited together in silence, having spent a lifetime together, sharing joy and heartbreak, tragedies and victories. Though not a word was spoken, they both knew what they were doing, fingers entwined. They were saying good-bye to each other.
17
Where Angels Fear to Tread
JULY 7, 9:55 A.M.
Angkor Thom, Cambodia
Gray leaned against the brick wall of the cavelike cell.
Beyond the narrow opening, a half-dozen men stood guard. The closest had their weapons in plain sight. Nasser had ordered them in here while he set about arranging for munitions to blow the altar stone. Gray checked the illuminated dial of his dive watch.
They’d been here almost an hour.
He prayed Nasser was busy enough with his plans to skip his hourly threat against his parents. Something had certainly upset Nasser — beyond the delay in obtaining armaments. After sending them here, he had stormed off, phone to his ear. Gray had overheard the mention of a cruise ship. It had to concern the scientific leg of the Guild’s operation. Painter had related the story of the hijacked ship and the unknown whereabouts of Monk and Lisa.
Something had plainly gone wrong.
But was that good news or bad regarding the fate of his friends?
Gray shoved off the wall and paced the length of the cell. Seichan sat on a stone bench next to Vigor.
Kowalski leaned near the opening. One of the guards had a rifle pointed at his stomach, but he ignored it. He spoke as Gray neared. “I just saw some guy climb past with a jackhammer.”
“They must be about ready,” Vigor said, and stood up.
“What’s taking so long?” Gray asked.
Seichan answered, still seated. “Bribes take time.”
Gray glanced back to her.
She explained, “I heard some shouting in Khmer. Nasser’s men are clearing the ruins of tourists, chasing them off. It seems the Guild has rented the Bayon for the remainder of this private party. It’s a poor region. It wouldn’t take much to get the local officials to look the other way.”
Gray had already guessed as much. The guards were no longer making any effort to hide their weapons.
Vigor leaned a palm on a column near the door. “Nasser must have convinced the Guild of the value in investigating the historical trail a bit longer.”
Gray suspected it was something more than that. He remembered the agitation concerning the cruise ship. If something had befallen the scientific trail, the value of the historical trail would be that much more important.
He had confirmation a moment later.
Nasser shoved through the guards. The earlier fury of his manner had died back down to his usual cold cunning. “We’re ready to proceed. But before we continue, it seems we’ve crossed another hour mark.”
Gray’s stomach muscles tightened.
Vigor came to his defense. “You’ve locked us up all this time. Surely you can’t expect us to have any further insight.”
Nasser cocked an eyebrow. “That’s not my concern. And Annishen grows impatient. She certainly needs something to entertain her.”
“Please,” Gray said. The word slipped out before he could stop it.
Nasser’s eyes sparked with amusement, allowing Gray to stew.
“Don’t be an ass, Amen,” Seichan said behind them. “If you’re going to do it, then do it.”
Gray’s fist squeezed. He had to resist swinging on her, to shut her up. He didn’t need Nasser antagonized. Not now.
The cool lines of Nasser’s brow had knotted up in anger. He raised his fingers and smoothed them out, refusing to rise to her bait. He turned away and headed back through his guards. He didn’t say a word.
“Nasser!” Gray called back to him, his voice cracking.
“If we skip this hour,” Nasser answered without turning, “I’ll expect even greater results once we penetrate the altar. Anything less, I’ll take more than a finger from your mother. It’s time we lit a larger fire under you, Commander Pierce.”
Nasser raised an arm, and the guards brought them out of the cell.
Seichan crossed past Gray, bumping his shoulder. Her words were low, barely discernible. “I was testing him.”
She continued past.
Gray, caught in her wake, followed — then edged next to her.
She spoke under her breath without looking at him. “He was bluffing…I could tell.”
Gray bit back an angry retort. She was risking his parents’ lives.
She glanced aside at him, perhaps sensing his anger. Even her words responded in kind, going harder. “What you must ask yourself, Gray, is why? Why is he bluffing?”
Gray relaxed his jaw. It was a good question. The back of her hand brushed his. He reached a finger toward her wrist, to acknowledge the merit. But she had already stepped beyond his reach.
Nasser led them back to the central sanctuary. The demolition team had been hard at work. Holes had been drilled into the massive, double slab of sandstone. Wires trailed out, winding together into a single braid. At the four exits, men stood with red fire extinguishers strapped to their backs.
Gray frowned. What did they expect to burn? It was all stone.
Nasser spoke to a dwarfish man wearing a vest full of tools and a coil of wire over one shoulder, plainly the demolition expert. Nasser got a nod from the man.