Midnight Moon
Page 13Chapter Twelve
“This is it,” Murphy murmured. “The bokor lives here.”
I glanced around. “Where?”
“Legend says there’s a cave behind the waterfall and on the other side of the cave… the bokor.”
“Legends begin in reality,” I murmured.
I’d known that even before I’d j oined the Jäger-Suchers.
There was a bokor with enough power to bring the dead, to send Sarah’s ghost or, considering the footprints, something a little more corporeal, which made one part of the tale a reality. Why wouldn’t the part about where he lived be true, too?
“Thanks for bringing me,” I said. “I’ll be OK now.”
“I’ve come this far; I’m going, too.”
“Why risk your life?”
“Why risk yours?”
I met his gaze, refusing to look away.
“Oh.” His eyes widened, then narrowed. “You didn’t tell me your daughter was dead.”
I should have known a man like Murphy was adept at reading faces, putting together a few bits of info, and guessing the truth. He wouldn’t have survived as long as he had otherwise.
I turned away. The rain continued to beat down, as if it were trying to compete with the force of the waterfall.
“Why would you think that?” I asked, my voice too high and falsely bright.
“A better question would be why I didn’t think it before.”
He put his hands on my shoulders. Despite the rain, the warmth of his skin seeped into mine, and I had to force myself not to lean on him. Murphy was still a stranger, and now he knew my deepest, darkest secret.
“It won’t work, Cassandra.”
I curled my fingers into my palms so tightly my nails bit crescent moons into my flesh. “It will.”
“Death is the end; there’s no coming back.”
“You’re wrong. Death is a beginning.”
“If that’s the case, it’s the beginning of something else. Something she won’t want to come back from.”
I heard the echo of Renee’s words but ignored them now as I had then.
“Of course she will.”
“Even if it were possible to raise the dead, is a zombie existence one you’d wish on anyone?”
I spun around. “This bokor can raise the dead to live again. Just as they were before.”
Murphy shook his head, the storm—or maybe just concern for my sanity—darkening his eyes nearly to black. “That’s impossible.”
“I won’t believe that. I can’t.”
“I’m sure losing a child is a terrible thing, but what you’re doing isn’t going to fix it.”
“You’re wrong. Raising Sarah will fix everything.”
Including me.
“The bokor is a dangerous man. He’s up to something out here.”
“Exactly.”
“I meant drugs. Gunrunning.” He frowned. “Maybe slavery. Which would explain the disappearing visitors.”
“Slavery. Are we still in the same century?”
“You’ve never heard of white slavery?”
“Of course, but I don’t think there are too many white people out here.”
“There’s us.”
I bit my lip. Whoops.
” White slavery doesn’t actually refer to race anyway,” Murphy said. “It’s sexual slavery—all races.”
“You’ve lost your mind,” I muttered.
“No, that would be you.”
I lost my patience. “If you’re so worried about what the bokor will do to me, why did you bring me here at all?”
Murphy glanced away.
Hmm. He was hiding something, too. But what?
I had a moment’s unease. Perhaps Murphy was in league with Mezareau in his white slavery scheme, which meant I might find myself locked in a foreign brothel come next week.
My fingers stroked my knife. Or not. Either way, it wouldn’t hurt to make Murphy nervous.
“I work for the government,” I blurted. “They know I’m here.”
Not here, here, but Haiti here. However, Murphy didn’t need to know that.
I had no doubt Edward would find me if I disappeared—or at least send someone to try. If he let his agents get sold into white slavery how would that look?
I was grasping at straws, but right now straws were all I had.
“What exactly do you do for the government?”
“I’m a Jäger-Sucher. Monster-hunting society. Very hush-hush.”
Murphy stared at me for several seconds; then he laughed. “You had me going there.”
“I’m serious.”
His laughter died; his eyes had gone gray in the misty half-light that preceded dusk. “You don’t have to make up stories. I’m not going to kill you and toss you over a cliff, or keep you alive and sell you to the highest bidder.”
I’d never convince Murphy the Jäger-Suchers existed until I convinced him the monsters did. I had a feeling that wouldn’t be too much of a problem once we reached the other side of the waterfall. I waded into the pond.
“Where are you going?”
“Where do you think?”
I heard a loud, annoyed sigh, followed by a splash; then Murphy was at my side.
“Are these backpacks waterproof?” I asked.
“A little late to be asking that, but yes.”
About a hundred yards later we reached the falling water; I braced myself to dive through.
“Hold on.” Murphy grabbed my hand. “Let’s do this together.”
I was touched by the gesture. I should insist he stay behind; we could be going to our deaths. Instead, I tightened my fingers, and we went into the waterfall.
By all rights, we should have been driven to the bottom of the pond by the force of the cascading water, or at least pummeled hard enough to get a headache. But I popped out on the other side with nothing more than a momentary lapse in breathing.
I still held Murphy’s hand, but he seemed to be stuck. I tugged; nothing happened. The spray from the falling water made it hard for me to see; the wetness made it hard to hold on. If I lost my grip, what would happen? I didn’t want to find out.
I couldn’t touch bottom, so I had no leverage. Was he on the other side, or stuck in between? If it was the latter, I didn’t have much time before he drowned.
Was the waterfall a trial by faith? Like the Indiana Jones movie where Indy had to step into the abyss and then the bridge appears? If so, how would I ever get Murphy through—oh, he of little faith?
My own would have to be enough.
Reaching forward, I clasped my hands around his. “Please,” I whispered, and yanked with both my mind and my body.
Murphy erupted, landing on top of me, dunking me in midgasp. My mouth filled with brackish water and I struggled, kicked, then shot to the surface choking and spitting. I could swear I had a minnow in my mouth.
“You OK?” Murphy asked.
“No thanks to you. What happened?”
He started to cough as if he’d swallowed half an ocean. I eased my frustration by whacking him on the back. After a few good ones, he grabbed my wrist and made me stop. Spoilsport.
“You went through,” he said, “but I was stuck in between. My mouth kept filling up; I had to swallow or drown.”
“Why didn’t you drop my hand?”
He stared at me as if I were nuts. “I couldn’t let you go on alone.”
Murphy had risked drowning for me? He was almost like a hero.
“Then I heard you say, ‘Please,’” he continued, “and suddenly I was flying.”
His wet hair kept falling in his eyes, and the feathers hung limply by his cheek. Murphy snatched them out and tossed them aside. The beads were still braided firmly in place.
“I didn’t know you were that strong,” he said.
“Neither did I.” I contemplated the water. “It was like… magic.”
He snorted. “That was adrenaline, sweet thing, pure and simple.”
Some hero. I don’t know why I bothered to confide in him at all.
Murphy slogged toward the rocky rim of the pond. We’d landed in a cave, just as he’d predicted. Very dark, the only light came from the fading sun beyond the waterfall. A single tunnel led onward— a black gaping maw that promised answers, or perhaps more questions.
I was momentarily distracted by the flex of Murphy’s biceps against the sleeves of his T-shirt, the ripple of muscle appearing particularly fetching beneath wet skin as he hoisted his body upward.
Remember, I admonished. You ’re in the land that condom f orgot.
Then I dunked myself.
When I resurfaced, Murphy helped me out of the water without mentioning my sudden penchant for it.
He lifted me up as if I weighed no more than a twig, and my foolish heart went pitter-pat.
As soon as my feet touched the cave floor, complete darkness descended along with utter silence. That silence bothered me more than the darkness ever could.
Murphy slid off his backpack, rustled around. Then a click was followed by a white beam of light splashing from one rock face to the next.
“No such thing as magic, huh?” I murmured.
Murphy continued to flash the light from wall to wall and back again, but he couldn’t change the truth.
The waterfall was gone.
“There has to be a logical explanation,” he said.
“For water morphing into rock? If you can find one, I’d love to hear it.”
My voice was annoyingly cheerful. I couldn’t help myself. If the entrance to the cave was magic, there had to be a lot more magic to come.
Murphy shot me a glare. “I wouldn’t be so all-fired happy about it if I were you. How the hell are we going to get out of here?”
“We’ll worry about that when the time comes.”
“We’ll worry about it now.”
He took a step toward the water, and I grabbed his arm. The flashlight plunked into the pond, and the cave went black again.
“I don’t suppose that was waterproof?” I asked.
Murphy’s answer was a curse.
“Got another one?”
“No.”
“Maybe I do.” I shifted my pack.
“You don’t.”
“Well, that wasn’t very good planning, was it?”
“I didn’t think you’d throw mine into the drink.”
“I didn’t throw it.”
“I may throw you,” he muttered.
I laughed. It felt good.
“You don’t think I will?” His voice was dangerously low.
I stopped laughing. “What happened to ‘full speed ahead, damn the torpedoes Murphy’ ?”
“He drowned.”
“You don’t like small, dark, enclosed spaces, do you?”
“Does anyone?”
I reached out, smacking him in the chest. He was closer than I’d thought.
“Oomph,” he said. “Watch it.”
I ran my hand over his shoulder, down his arm, then entwined our fingers. “Follow me.”
He held back. I tugged, but he wouldn’t budge.
“We should wait here,” he murmured.
“In case the waterfall magically reappears?”
“It could.”
“This is probably how all those people disappeared. They’re stuck. Somewhere.”
“Oh, that makes me feel a whole lot better.”
“Come on.” I tugged again. “There’s a tunnel.”
“Tunnel?” His voice—at first hoarse and low—went higher.
“Relax. It’s big enough to drive a car through. You’ll be fine.” This time Murphy let me lead him away from the water.
The dark had never bothered me. I’d always been able to find my way. Unless it was theoretical darkness of the soul, of course; then I was lost.
Free hand in front of me, I walked forward until I reached the far wall, then trailed my fingers across it until my arm fell into space. “Here we go.”
“Maybe we should use some matches.”
“Save them. You never know when we might need a fire.”
“Why would we need a fire?”
“To scare something away.”
“Still not helping,” he muttered.
I smiled into the darkness. He was sounding more like himself and less like a scared little boy. Although I’d begun to find that little boy just as appealing as the muscley man. My smile faded. I needed to get a grip.
Together we went on.
And on. And on.
Hours, days, weeks later, Murphy paused. “This is ridiculous, Cassandra. For all we know we could be walking in circles.”
He was right, but I couldn’t go back.
“A little farther,” I pleaded.
“All right.” His hand tightened on mine. “A little.”
Onward I went, both tired and exhilarated; the combination caused a buzzing in my ears. A buzzing I ignored until it started to remind me of something.
I stopped and Murphy bumped into me. “What—”
” Shh,” I breathed.
My ears were still buzzing. In the darkness I was disoriented; I couldn’t tell if the sound was coming from inside of me or not.
“Look,” Murphy whispered, and I saw them.
Just eyes, nothing else. They seemed to be floating in the air about fifty feet away. There was something off about them, but I didn’t have time to figure out what.
An unmistakable growl rumbled through the cave—more animal than human, though the echo made it hard to tell for sure.
In a distant corner of my mind I remembered Murphy telling me there were no large mammals on the island. He’d told me that after I’d seen the last pair of eyes, which had turned out to be human after all —or as human as zombies get.
“Your knife,” Murphy whispered.
I almost said, What about your gun? But he didn’t dare fire inside the cave for fear of a deadly ricochet.
Not that a gun had done any good the last time.
My hand lowered to my waist and hesitated. The silver blade hadn’t been any help, either. I needed the zombie-revealing powder, which, if it worked, should turn any zombie back to the dust from which it came.
My fingers traveled to the bag I’d concealed in my pants. I winced as I encountered my soaked j eans and prayed what was in my pocket wasn’t as ruined as I was.
I shook some powder into my palm, sighing in relief when the granules scratched against my skin. “Get a match. Don’t strike it until I say so.”
I didn’t need whatever was there to get spooked by the flare before I was close enough to toss the zombie-revealing powder in its face. Zombies didn’t much care for fire, either.
One hand out, one on the hilt of my knife, I inched forward, Murphy at my side. Before we’d moved five feet, the eyes blinked once and disappeared.
I was so startled I dropped the powder. Cursing, I thrust my hand forward and felt fur. I immediately yanked it back, afraid I’d get my fingers ripped off.
“Match,” I said.
A snick was immediately followed by a faint glowing light. My eyes, unaccustomed to it, struggled to focus. Something slid around the next curve, and without thinking, I ran.
I came around the bend just as the match went out. Tense, I waited for a sound, a movement, an attack.
“What did you see?” Murphy lit another match.
The wavering, golden glow illuminated rock, dirt, and nothing else. My gaze met his.
“A tail.”