"It's a cenote. A well where the people who lived here came for their water. I found it on my second trip. Come, I'll show you."
They went in for about a hundred feet. The darkness deepened then lightened as they came to a large pool of water. The light streamed from an opening in the rocky roof she estimated was about sixty feet high. On the far side of the basin was a steep wall that went up to the ghostly glow of the ceiling.
"The water is pure," Dr. Chi said. "The rainfall collects under the limestone and finds its way here and there to the surface through holes like this and underground caves."
Gamay sat on a low ledge. "You know this breed," she said. "What do you think they'll do?"
Dr. Chi was amazed at his companion's calm manner. He shouldn't be surprised, he reminded himself. She had shown no fear defending him and going after the man who attacked him.
"We have some time. They won't do anything until they confer with the traffickers who hired them about what to do with an American."
"Then what?"
He spread his hands. "They have little choice. This is a lucrative excavation that they won't want to abandon. Which is what they will have to do if they let us go."
"So it will be better for them if we disappear from the face of the earth. Nobody knows where we are, although they don't know that. People might think we'd been eaten by a jaguar."
He raised a brow "They wouldn't have been so free in showing us their loot if they thought we'd be around to tell anybody"
She looked around. "You wouldn't know a secret way out of here?"
"There are passageways off the main chamber. They either end or descend below the water table and are impassable."
Gamay got up and walked over to the edge of the water. "How deep do you suppose this is?"
"It's hard to say"
"You mentioned underwater caves. Any chance that this comes up someplace else?"
"Possible. Yes. There are other water holes in the area."
Gamay stood a minute at the water's edge trying to probe the depths with her eyes.
"Wha
t are you doing?" the professor called after her.
"You heard what that creep said. He wants a date with me." She dove in, breaststroked out into the middle of the basin. "Well, he's not my type," she said, her voice echoing in the chamber. And with a splash she disappeared beneath , the still water.
Nine Mile Hole, Arizona
19 FOR A TIME AUSTIN THOUGHT THE thunderstorm would hold off. Festering dark clouds that had been piling up all afternoon in ominous layers had snagged on a jagged peak. As Austin and Nina strolled around the edge of the ranch property they could have been a relaxed couple out for a walk, which was the impression Austin wanted to convey to any unseen watchers. They stopped under the bluegreen branches of a palo verde tree and looked off into the vast stillness. Rays from the lowering sun cast the wrinkled faces of the mountains in brilliant tones of gold, bronze, and copper.
Austin took Nina gently by the shoulders, encountering no resistance as he pulled her toward him, so close he could feel the heat coming off her body.
Are you sure I can't persuade you to leave?"
"It would be a waste of time," she said. "I want to see this thing through."
Their lips were almost touching, and at any other time the romance of the setting would have concluded in a kiss. Austin looked into the gray eyes flecked with orange from the setting sun and sensed Nina was far away, her mind with her murdered friends and colleagues.
"I understand," he said.
"Thank you. I appreciate that." She gazed at the darkening desert. "Do you think they will come?" she asked.
"There's no doubt in my mind. How could they resist the bait?"
"I'm not sure they're still interested in me.