Horror replaced sorrow. Her eyes widened. She pictured the Sapa Inca’s pale body and remembered what lay in the neighboring valley. She slowly shook her head. The temple held no salvation. She could not imagine giving Sam’s body over to it.
Henry spoke, his voice coarse with tears. “Wh… what temple?”
Norman pointed toward the volcanic wall. “Up there! Something the Incas found. A structure that heals.” Norman stood and exposed his knee. He told of the injury he sustained.
The professor’s face grew incredulous. He turned to Maggie for confirmation.
She slowly nodded her head.
“But Sam’s d… dead,” Henry said.
“And the king was beheaded,” Norman countered. He looked to Maggie for support. “We owe it to Sam at least to try.”
Henry stood as another grenade exploded, and gunfire grew heated again. The weapons fire sounded much closer. “We can’t risk it,” he said sternly. “I need to get you all into hiding. It’s our only hope of surviving.”
Maggie had stopped listening after the word
“No,” Maggie said softly. She reached and took Sam’s Stetson from where it had fallen in the damp grass, then swung to face the others. “No,” she said more forcefully. “We take Sam to the temple. I won’t let them win.”
“But -”
Maggie shoved to her feet. “No, Professor, this is our choice. If there is even a chance of saving Sam, we attempt it!”
Norman was nodding. “I saw a stretcher in the helicopter when I got the rope to tie up the monk.”
Maggie glanced to where the man who had shot Sam still lay unconscious in the grass. His breath was ragged, his pallor extreme. He would probably die from the blow to the skull, but as an extra precaution, they had lashed his legs and arms. They stopped at gagging him, mostly because of his labored breathing. Her chest tightened with anger at the sight of him. She glanced away, to the helicopter. “Get the stretcher!”
Norman and Denal hurried to the chopper’s open door.
Henry stepped to her side. “Maggie, Sam’s dead. Not only is this wrong, it’s likely to get everyone killed.”
Maggie stood up to the professor. “I’m done hiding in ditches,” she said. She remembered Sam’s scathing words last night when she resisted eavesdropping on the shaman and the king. She had tried to justify her reluctance, but Sam had been closer to the truth. Even then,
Norman and Denal arrived with a khaki-colored army stretcher, ending further discussion. Henry frowned but helped lift Sam onto the stretcher. Soon they were under way. Henry stopped only to grab the monk’s pistol from the weeds and stuff it into his waistband.
With the four of them, Sam’s weight was manageable. Still, the climb up the switchback seemed endless. Maggie’s nagging fear and the need for speed stretched time interminably. Once they reached the tunnel, she checked her watch. Only twenty minutes had passed. But even that was too long. The jungle gunfire had grown ominously silent.
“Hurry,” Maggie said. “We need to be out of sight!”
With straining arms and legs, they trundled into the gloom of the passage.
“It’s just a nit farther,” she encouraged. “C’mon.”
Ahead, the torches still glowed at the entrance to the gold chamber, though now they just sputtered. As they pulled even with the temple, Maggie heard the professor gasp behind her. She turned, helping to lower Sam.
Henry gaped at the chamber, his face a little sick. “It’s
Maggie knew enough Spanish to frown at his words. “The blood of the Devil?”
“It’s what the abbot’s men have come searching for. The mother lode -”
Norman interrupted, “We need to get Sam in there. I’m sure there’s a time factor involved in this resurrection business.”
Henry nodded. “But what do we do? How do we get it to work?”
They all looked at each other. No one had an answer.
The photographer pointed into the chamber. “I don’t have an operator’s manual. But there’s an altar. I’d say first thing is to get Sam on it.”
Henry nodded. “Let’s do it.”
They hauled Sam up, each person grasping a limb, and eased him onto the gold altar. Maggie’s skin crawled as she stepped into the chamber. It was like a thousand eyes were staring at her. Her fingers brushed against the altar’s surface as she placed Sam down. She yanked her hand away. The surface had felt warm, like something living.