He stepped on the accelerator just as the second motorcyclist fired. Three shots tore up the dashboard. The front wheel of the Rockster suddenly broke free. It rolled back down along the Saxo’s trunk, bounced on the bumper, and dropped back to the road.
The motorcyclist tried desperately to regain control. He was almost upright when Decker applied the breaks again.
This time the motorcycle clipped the bumper, bucked like a bronco and hurled the driver up into the air, directly over Decker’s car, the windshield and the hood. He landed somewhere just ahead. Decker heard the grim, telltale thump thump as he crushed the man against the road. He turned and saw the crimson helmet shatter like an egg, the head unraveling, unwinding from the body as he pirouetted out of sight.
Decker stepped on the accelerator. He straightened up and felt the wind assault his face. His eyes were tearing, but he could clearly see the ocean to his left, a vast expanse of blue. He was paralleling a plantation, a banana farm below, and it appeared as though he were driving on the palms themselves, across their very branches. He pulled up sharply and almost struck the dirt embankment. He saw the Clio up ahead. He was gaining on them once again. He was finally catching up. Then they turned off without warning, into the trees, and disappeared from view.
Decker skidded off the main road, straightened out, and barreled down a dirt path through the trees. Green palms and flowers blocked the sun. Bright vines, broad leaves and long tenacious grasses grasped at the wheels, smacked at the Saxo’s flanks. The vegetation was so thick that Decker couldn’t really see the path. He moved ahead by instinct, following the contours of the land.
The path seemed to run around the border of a grand plantation. It snaked and turned and meandered through a kind of gully. Then it simply petered out. Decker kept driving. He bulldozed his way through fronds and flowers and emerged, at last, along a small bald ridge, right at the base of the volcano.
There was the car — the two-door, off-white Renault Clio. It was parked only a dozen yards away, and it was empty.
Emily was gone.
Chapter 39
Decker jumped out of the Saxo, tore across the open ground, and knelt down by the Clio. There was some kind of cavern entrance just ahead. It was large and round, and Decker suddenly realized that it was probably a lava tube, a holdover from some previous eruption. It poured out of the mountainside.
He sprinted toward the cavern. He paused for a moment just outside the entrance, painfully aware of his black silhouette against the open lava tube. He’d make an easy target, he thought. But he had no choice. He rolled across the ground. Nobody fired at him. He looked about. The lava tube was large, at least ten feet across and ten feet tall. The air was cool and somewhat moist inside. He leapt to his feet and started running down the tunnel.
It didn’t take long for his eyes to adjust to the dark. Decker had only gone about twenty yards when he noticed a kind of mining car or cart up ahead. As he drew closer he realized it was just an ordinary golf cart. He climbed in. Someone or something was moving down the tunnel. He felt the dashboard with his hands, felt for a key, and turned it. A moment later the golf cart came to life. Decker flipped on the headlights and the lava tube unrolled before him, glassy and black. He touched the accelerator. The cart began to move down the path.
Decker had to concentrate to keep her steady through the tunnel. He traveled in this way for what seemed like miles when he sensed a change in the air temperature. The tunnel doglegged left, then right. He saw another cart parked up ahead. He pressed the breaks, slowed down, and took his weapon out.
The other cart looked abandoned. Decker got out and approached the vehicle with care. No, he was wrong. It wasn’t empty. Two men were lying in the back. They were both dead. And then he noticed that the tunnel appeared to be blocked just up ahead, by a large boulder. It had been placed there in the center of the path on purpose.
Decker knelt down. He cocked his head. He tried to sense if anyone else was in the tunnel. But there was nothing, no one. He was alone… except for the two corpses in the cart. Decker checked their pockets. There. He felt a wallet. He pulled it out and held it up before him in the headlights. The CIA ID stood up just like a little flag — the photograph, the name Colin L. Strand. And this must be Nick Thompson, Decker thought, Warhaftig’s other man. He dropped the wallet in the cart. He backed away and started up the tunnel.
After only about ten yards, as he was beginning to lose visibility, he noticed a break in the stone wall. It was another tunnel, just a few feet off the ground. Decker climbed into the opening. He started to sweat. Then he realized that the temperature was rising. The lava tube had taken him due south from underneath the extinct volcano outside of Santa Cruz, all the way to the Cumbre Vieja. This volcano was still active. It was only then that he noticed the faint smell of obnoxious fumes. He held his nose. There was a light on just ahead. He pressed on through the tunnel, turned right and came upon another lava tube, much larger than the last. It led into some sort of cavern. He could see it clearly now; it was well lit. He could hear the purring of machinery.
Decker crawled forward on his hands and knees along the tunnel floor. When he reached the mouth of the lava tube, he finally got his first good look inside the cavern. It was huge. It must have been at least thirty feet high, or higher, and a couple of hundred yards in length. Roughly circular, it looked like a cathedral carved out the heart of the volcano. The ceiling was decorated with black stalactites, shiny, obsidianesque, Goth chandeliers. It was even hotter here and Decker wondered just how close he was to some still active lava tube. It felt as though he were standing in a cauldron. Somewhere, only a few yards underneath his feet, perhaps, the stone was percolating. He scanned the cave, taking in each detail.
There were two sets of lights mounted on towers across the way. They looked like concert lights. Immediately below the tower, on the left, was a kind of makeshift hut made out of packing crates and strips of black tarpaulin. Other crates and boxes were stacked around the cave. A golf cart was parked roughly in the middle. And by the tower on the other side, someone had pitched two tents. Decker crawled forward carefully. He heard voices up ahead. Despite the humming of what he guessed must be a generator, he could clearly hear the guttural sound of Arabic conversation. Decker looked up. A pair of crates blocked his view. He shimmied forward slowly, dragging his legs, and stopped.
There was a foot in front of him. It was wearing a lady’s shoe. The crate shielded the remainder of the body. He turned the corner and came upon the prostrate figure of a woman. She was bald, and rather old. And she was very dead. Doris White; it had to be. There was another body next to her — a man. Who else but Dr. White? He looked just like his photographs. He looked still warm. He was holding the woman’s hand, Decker noticed, even in death, and this trivial detail stung like a paper cut across his heart.
“Agent Decker,” somebody said. He spun about. There was no one there. He curled into a ball behind the crates. The voice had sounded like it was coming from immediately behind him.
“Agent Decker, we know you’re there. Why don’t you come out and join your lady friend?”
Decker got up on his knees. He took his gun out of his holster and peeked around the crate.
Two Arabic-looking men were standing by the tents. Swenson was on her knees, in front of them. One of the men held her by the hair. He was tall and muscular, with a thick mustache. But it was the smaller man who captured Decker’s gaze.