“No time!” Henry herded them all onward. Denal and Norman ran ahead, while Henry and Maggie helped Sam on his wobbly legs. As they fled, Henry recalled Joan’s final warning: Prometheus packs a vicious punch! Like plastic explosive!
Her words proved too true. As they reached the tunnel’s end, a massive explosion rocked the ground under their feet. A blast of superheated air rocketed the entire group down the path, tumbling, bruising. The passage behind them coughed out smoke and debris.
“On your feet!” Henry called as he bumped to a stop. “Keep going!”
The group obeyed with groaned complaints, limping and racing onward. The trail continued to tremble under their heels. “Don’t stop!” Henry called.
Boulders crashed down from the volcanic heights. The shaking in the ground grew even worse. Below, hundreds of parrots screeched and flew out of the jungle canopy.
What was happening?
As Henry reached the escarpment below the cliffs, he risked a glance back up. A monstrous crack in the rock face trailed from the tunnel straight up the side of the cone.
Sam leaned on Maggie, both catching their breath. The others hovered nearby. Sam’s eyes suddenly grew wide. “Oh, God!” he yelled. “Look!” He pointed across the valley.
Henry stared. The original steam vents had become spewing geysers of scalding water. New cracks appeared throughout the valley, belching more foggy steam and water into the sky. One section of the volcanic cone fell away with a grinding roar. “It’s coming apart!” Henry realized.
Maggie pointed behind them, toward the volcanic peak to the south. Black smoke billowed skyward. The scent of sulfur and burning rock filled the valley.
Sam straightened. “The explosion must have triggered a fault. A chain reaction. Hurry! To the helicopter!”
Norman chimed in with even more good news. “We’ve got company, folks!” He pointed to the smoking tunnel.
From the heart of the enveloping blackness, pale shapes leaped forth like demons from hell. The creatures piled and writhed from the opening, screeching, bellowing. Claws scrabbled on rock.
“The explosions must have panicked them,” Maggie said. “Overcoming their fear of the tunnel.”
From the heights, black eyes swung in their direction. The keening wail changed in pitch.
“Run!” Henry bellowed, terrified at the sight. “Now!”
The group fled across the rough terrain. Chunks of basalt now rattled upon the quaking ground, sounding like the chatter of teeth. It made running difficult. Henry fell, scraping his palms on the jagged stone. Then Sam was there, pulling him to his feet.
“Can you make it, Uncle Hank?” he asked, puffing himself.
“I’m gonna have to, aren’t I?” Henry took off again, but black spots swam across his vision.
Sam lent him an arm, and Maggie suddenly appeared on his other side. Together, they helped Henry across the rough terrain to the flat meadow. Ahead, Norman was already pulling Denal and the abbey guardsman into the belly of the chopper. The photographer’s eyes met theirs across the meadow. “Hurry! They’re at your heels!”
Henry made the mistake of looking back. The quicker of the pale creatures already flanked them. Not far behind, larger creatures bearing clubs and stones bore down upon them.
Henry suddenly tripped and almost brought them all down. But as a group, they managed to keep their feet and continued running. Henry found himself beginning to black out here and there. Soon he was being carried between Sam and Maggie.
“Let me go…save yourselves.”
“Yeah, right,” Sam answered.
“Who does he think we are?” Maggie added with forced indifference.
Everything went black for a few seconds.
Then hands were pulling Henry into the helicopter. He felt the rush of wind and realized the helicopter’s rotors were already twirling. A loud metallic crash sounded near his head.
“They’re lobbing boulders,” Norman called out.
“But they’re not coming any closer,” Maggie added from the doorway. “The helicopter has them spooked.”
A second ringing jolt struck the helicopter’s fuselage. The whole vehicle shuddered.
“Well, they’re damn close enough!” Norman turned and hollered to the pilot. “Get this bird off the ground!
Henry struggled to sit as the door slammed shut. “Sam…?”
He felt a pat on his shoulder as he was hauled into his seat and strapped in. “I’m here.” He turned to see Sam smiling at him, Maggie at his shoulder.
“Thank God,” Henry sighed.
“God? Which one?” Norman asked with a grin, settling into his seat.
The helicopter suddenly shuddered again-not from the bombardment of boulders, but from a hurried liftoff. The bird tilted, then rose slowly. A final crash on the underside rocked the chopper.
“A parting kiss,” Norman said, staring out the window at the cavorting and gamboling throng down below.
The helicopter then climbed faster, beyond the reach of their stones.
Henry joined the photographer in staring over the valley. Below, the jungle was on fire. Smoke and steam almost entirely obscured the view. Fires lit up patches of the dense fog. A view of Dante’s Hell.