HELL-O-WEEN Chapter One "Yo, dweeb! Are you ready to go monster hunting?" Seventeen year-old Cory Fleming knew those words were addressed at him even though the speaker was behind him. He also knew who it was and knew why the word 'dweeb' had been stressed to give the insult extra emphasis. So he pushed his glasses higher on the bridge of his nose, a nervous habit he had formed years ago, before he reluctantly spun around and said, "Don't call me that, Wes. I don't like it." Wesley Eagen, seated behind the steering wheel of the brand-new jeep he had just angled over to the curb, blinked in surprise, then laughed. "Whoa! The worm turns." The three other high school seniors in the jeep all smirked at Cory, who withered inside under their looks of ill-concealed contempt. Across from Wesley sat Leslie Vanderhorst, daughter of the richest man in Pagosa Springs. Behind Wes was a fellow star member of the football team, Jay Thorpe, and next to Jay sat Stacy Curvin, the vivacious blonde who was a shoo-in to be Homecoming Queen that year. "Hello, Cory said, then added the thought upper-most on his mind. "Where's Ann?" "Where do you think?" Wesley retorted and jerked his thumb over his shoulder. "She's riding with Scott." Cory shifted as a second jeep braked behind the first. He saw Scott Miklin driving and frowned ever so 7 David Robbins slightly. This is stupid, stupid, stu id! he told himself, He had no business going out to thp e cave with guys and girls who wouldn't give him the time of day in school except to knock on him when the mood struck them. Then his gaze fell on the brunette beside Scott, and he forgot all of his worries as her rosy mouth curled in a genuinely friendly smile. "Hi, Cory. Glad you could make it," Ann Weatherby said. "Wouldn't miss it for the world," Cory lied. The only reason he had accepted Scott's invitation was because of Ann. If she wasn't going he would have told Scott to get screwed-tactfully, of course. "Hello, Cory," chimed in the bleached blonde seated behind Scott. Terri Sheehan was Ann's best friend. Where Ann went, Terri went. What Ann did, Terri did. They had been inseparable since childhood. "Terri," Cory said, stepping over to their jeep, a brown model almost as new as Wesley's red one. He simply nodded at Scott. "How's it hanging, brother?" Scott Miklin asked in his marked New England accent. Born and raised in Massachusetts, he had moved with his family to Colorado a year and a half ago. In that time he had become one of the most popular guys at Pagosa Springs Senior High. At least once a month he held parties at his house that were the talk of the school. "You all set?" "Yeah," Cory replied. "But are you sure I shouldn't bring some food and a flashlight?" Scott nodded at a green backpack resting on the console between his seat and Ann's. "We have everything we'll need. Hop in and we'll get this show on the road." . Although Cory would much rather have sat next to Ann, he climbed in the back with Terri Sheehan and promptly buckled his seat belt. "Good idea," Scott said, grinning. "We wouldn't want you to fall out. Some of the back country roads are Hell-O-Ween rough." He faced front and honked his hom. "Lead the way, Wes!" Wesley Eagen gave the thumbs-up sign, checked the traffic flow on U.S. Highway 160 and accelerated. "Here we go, ladies and germs," Scott said, stomping on the gas pedal and pulling out so quickly that his passengers were slammed against the backrests of their seats. "Scott, please," Ann said in reproach. "Oh, sorry," Milkin responded, his blue eyes twinkling, giving her a grin that revealed all of his perfect white teeth. He reached out to stroke her neck. "Didn't mean to rattle your bones, babe. I'll be careful from here on out." Cory averted his gaze, unable to bear the sight of Scott touching her. He absently stared up at the Pizza House situated on a low hill to the north of the highway, regretting the fact he hadn t gone there after school instead of agreeing to meet Scott's crowd for this insane trip to the cave. For someone who got all A's, sometimes he displayed all the intelligence of a lobotomized baboon. "So tell me, Cory, " Scott said, "ever been to this Cavern del-whatever before?" "It's called La Cavema del Diablo," Cory said. "Got its name from the Spanish conquistadors who came to this region searching for gold. And yes, I was there once with my dad. We. only went in partway, though." "Why only part of the way?" Scott asked while concentrating on his driving. "Afraid the monster would nail you?" Cory ignored the barb. "No one has ever gone all the way. It's one of the biggest caverns in the entire country, maybe the whole world. Several groups of professional spelunkers have gone down in, but even they weren't able to find the bottom." "What the hell are spelunkers?" David Robbins "People who explore caves," Cory explained. "They have a national organization, and there are several grottos here in Colorado." "What the hell are grottos?" "Local spelunker clubs. My uncle belongs to one up in Fort Collins. They spend their weekends traveling to caves all over the state. He invited me along on a trip to the Groaning Cave once, and I had a great time. We went in over a thousand feet." "Sounds like fun," Scott said with all the enthusiasm he might apply to being consumed by a great white shark. "Gosh, you sure know a lot, Cory," Terri interjected, brushing her short bangs aside. "I'm glad you came along. I've never been in a cave before, and frankly I'm not too keen on the idea." "There's nothing to be afraid of," Cory assured her. Terri's brown eyes narrowed. "But what about all this monster business? They say it killed someone a long time ago." Scott cackled. "Oh, really! Don't tell me you believe that bullshit, Terri? Only a moron would think there really is a monster down in there." "Of course I don't," Terri said defensively. "I was just wondering about the legend, that's all." "Well, I'm sure digithead can tell you," Scott replied. "He knows everything. That's why everyone calls him a walking encyclopedia." Cory scowled and looked away so Scott wouldn't notice in the rearview mirror. The wind stirred his brown hair and felt cool on his face, relieving some of the burning fury that raged within him. He was such a twink! He should have known better than to expect to be treated differently after so many years of being viewed as Pagosa Springs's prime dork. And all because he would rather read a good book than go see a stupid 10 Hell-O-Ween slasher movie or work on a science experiment instead of cruising for foxes or guzzling six-packs until he dropped. Oh, he had his share of close friends, mainly brains like him. But the jocks and the in-crowd had always looked down their collective noses at him and undoubtedly always would. He sat in morose silence, idly observing the magnificent scenery as the jeeps passed beyond the town limits of Pagosa Springs and traveled southwest on 160 until they came to a dirt road that branched off to the northwest. Wesley and Scott turned onto it, and for the next few miles the only buildings they saw were ranch houses and barns. Soon a sign appeared informing them that they were about to enter the San Juan National Forest, and a minute later they were hemmed in on both sides by virgin wilderness, sur- rounded by a green sea of towering somber pines. Far to the north of them reared the mysterious San Juan Mountains, one of the least explored regions in the entire United States. Jagged peaks over two and a half miles high were capped with sparkling snow, resembling ghostly spires as they shimmered in the late afternoon sun. Cory looked to the east and spied the pale full moon already above the horizon. Good, he thought. The trick or treaters would have the benefit of bright moonlight when they made their rounds. His younger brother, Bert, who was only six, would be going out with their mother. He recalled how Bert had begged him to go along and how he had refused. "Halloween is for kids," he had said, pretending not to notice the hurt in Bert's innocent eyes. Guilt assailed him, and he sank back in his seat. Here he was, the big, mature high school senior on his way to the infamous Caverna del Diablo to spend Halloween with other seniors who felt it was beneath I I David Robbins their dignity to go out trick or treating at their age. Instead, they were going to spend the evening in a supposedly haunted cave. Now that he viewed the matter objectively he realized they were being as juvenile as his little brother, maybe more so. At least his brother had the good sense not to enter a cave where a number of people had disappeared. Say, Cory," Ann Weatherby unexpectedly said, twisting in her seat. "What have you been up to lately?" "Oh, the usual," he responded lamely, deliber-ately avoiding her gaze. "You haven't been over in a long time," Ann added. Cory shrugged. "Been busy. You know how it is." "I miss our talks," Ann said. Scott Miklin glanced over his right shoulder. "That's right, dude. Ann tells me the two of you have been next-door neighbors since you were munchkins. Grew up together and all that." "We're good friends," Cory said, although deep down he longed to be so much more. Ann Weatherby had always held a special place in his heart, especially after that time when they were ten and had hidden in her father's shed so they could play doctor undisturbed. Playing doctor had always been a favorite game of theirs. But after that day they had never played it again, nor had Ann spoken to him for two years. "And in all that time you never hit on her?" Scott inquired ever so politely. "Scott!" Ann said. "Sorry, babe," Scott responded, smiling sweetly. "But your good friend must have rocks for br-ains. If you were my neighbor I would have latched onto you ages ago." Cory felt his cheeks tingle and hoped he wasn't blushing. Memories of that day in the shed overwhelmed him, and he squirmed uncomfortably. Dear God! What had he been thinking of? And at his age, too! Who 12 Hell-O-Ween would ever expect a ten year-old to do such a thing? "You promised that you wouldn't give Cory a hard time,'nr1T1'V Wlol@@!, Scott. "And I'm keeping my word," Scott retorted indignantly. He glanced at Cory once more. "Hey, dude, do you think I'm picking on you?" "Not at all," Cory said, secretly wishing he could bash Scott's head in with a baseball bat. "See." Scott gloated at Ann. "I promised you we'd all be on our best behavior and we will be. You'll see. Your good friend will feel right at home." Why did Scott keep referring to him that way? Cory wondered. Ann gave him a reassuring smile, and he smiled back, then made bold to ask, "Whose idea was this?" "What do you mean?" she rejoined. "Who came up with the idea to ask me to come along?" Cory clarified, dreading her answer. I did," Ann confessed. "You don't get out much, and I figured you would like to have some fun. Scott agreed and invited you. Is there something wrong?" "No," Cory said, his stomach doing flip-flops. So there it was. But why should she be concerned about his well-being after all this time? It was true that they had become friends again two years after the shed incident and he had spent many a lazy afternoon shooting the breeze with her about everything under the sun, but they had never been as close as they were before the shed. And due to her outstanding looks and outgoing nature she had easily fitted into the most exclusive clique in the school, they had rarely mingled socially. Now all of a sudden she wanted him to join them on an outing deep into the mountains. It made no sense. The dirt road forked, and the two jeeps swung to the left. Immediately the road narrowed and became rockier. Countless ruts marred the surface, the result of heavy erosion caused by frequent thunderstorms 13 David Robbins during the spring and summer months, and Wesley and Scott had to steer carefully to avoid becoming hung up or damaging the undercarriages on their jeeps. From that point onward only four-wheel-drive vehicles could negotiate the twisting roadway. At that time of year and so late in the day it was unlikely they would encounter other four-wheelers. To the west loomed Horse Mountain. South of it, invisible from where they were, was Chimney Rock. In the summer the area would be crawling with campers and hikers, but this late in the season only hunters penetrated any distance into the national- forest, and they seldom if ever ventured into the area near the cave. Old-timers like Cory's grandfather swore there was little game in the general vicinity of the Cavema del Diablo although the mountains around it teemed with mule deer and bears. "Hey, Cory," Scott said, "you didn't tell your folks, did you?" "No," Cory replied. "I kept it a secret like you wanted." He wished now he had told his mom and dad. If something should go wrong and they wound up stranded, it would be nice to know a rescue party would soon be sent to find them. But Scott had insisted on keeping their jaunt to themselves, and he'd had a valid reason. The cave was in a remote area, and although it wasn't hard to find and contained no hazards for those who stayed in the upper levels, there was always an element of risk involved. It was unlikely any of their parents would have permitted them to go. 11 Excellent," Scott Said, then added suspiciously, "What did you tell them?" "That I was going to be at Zack McCoy's until late, working on our joint entry in the science fair. They know we've been developing a project to demonstrate how industrial and automobile pollution deranges the global ecosystem and-." 14 Hell-O-Ween "Yeah, yeah," Scott interrupted. "Just so they won't come looking for you." He snickered. "We don't need our parents messing up all our plans. This is shaping up to be one def Halloween. Besides, we're old enough to decide what we want to do without having them looking over our shoulders every damn minute of every day." Terri opened her mouth to say something but apparently changed her mind and glumly stared down at her lap. The short black skirt she wore was riding high on her pudgy thighs so she smoothed it down, then frowned. Cory looked at Ann. "What did you tell your folks?" "That I was spending the night at Terri's. Terri told her parents that she was spending the night with me. With luck they won't suspect a thing." As the road started to climb the air became cooler. Dense walls of vegetation partially obstructed the views to the tight and the left. After five minutes the road slanted to the northwest, skirting Horse Moun@ tain and bearing into the very heart of the foreboding San Juan Mountains. They came over a rise, descended a hill and crossed a shallow creek between a pair of deep pools. "Look at those," Ann commented. "I bet my dad would like to fish here. He's always looking for new spots." "He'd be wasting his time," Cory said. "This is Devil Creek. Has hardly any fish in it. Something to do with enhanced acidity in the water. I once read an article on the imbalance in a regional science journal. They say this is the only stream in the state that has the problem." Scott took his eyes off the road long enough to caustically ask, "Is there anything you don't know?" Again Cory lapsed into silence. Despite himself, he was intimidated by Scott's attitude. All those years of 15 David Robbins being the brunt of countless jokes about his 10 had taken their emotional toll. Rather than make an issue of an insult and perhaps spark a fight, he had learned to keep his mouth shut and weather the slings and barbs of his callous classmates. He'd been in more than his share of scraps when he was younger, and he'd learned the hard way that earning a bloody nose or a black eye in the defense of his dignity wasn't worth it. The bumpy road wound ever deeper into the San Juans. They continued to climb steadily, and the temperature continued to gradually drop. Through valleys and over mountains they went, at times carefully navigating a ribbon of roadway that seemed glued to the sheer side of a cliff while above them perched massive boulders capable of crushing their vehicles to bits should a rock slide accidentally start. "Geez," Terri breathed at one point as they crested a ridge thousands of feet above a verdant valley floor. "This gives me the creeps. What if we go over the side?" "Then theyll be scraping us up with putty knives," Scott said and laughed. I don't think that's funny," Terri said anxiously. "I'm not very fond of heights." "Don't worry. We won't go over the edge," Ann assured her and shot Scott a hard glance. Cory saw Miklin look at her, grin and blow her a kiss. Peeved, he gazed past them out the windshield and was alarmed to behold a sharp curve abruptly appear. With a start he realized the jeep was making str-aight for the brink! "Look out!" he cried, leaning forward, and listened in dismay to the screeching of the tires as Scott slammed on the brakes and the wheels locked. The jeep went into a skid, raising a cloud of dust as it slid closer and closer to the rim. Terri screamed. Ann gripped the dashboard with both hands. 16 Hell-O-Ween Stark fear rippled down Cory's spine. He saw the edge sweep toward them and mentally ticked off the distance. Ten feet. Eight feet. Six feet. He threw an arm out to clutch Ann's shoulder and hold her steady so she wouldn't crash through the windshield when they went over. Then the jeep slowed dramatically, gravel spewing out from under its skewing tires, and came to a lurching halt within inches of eternity. For a minute no one uttered a word as dirt and small stones cascaded over the brink and rained down on a section of woodland over 1000 feet below. "Jesus!" Terri Sheehan finally exclaimed, glaring at Scott. "You nearly got us all killed." "Oh, bull. I had everything under control," Scott retorted angrily. Cory exhaled in relief. Ann turned to regard him with a strange expression, and he became aware that his hand still rested on her shoulder. "Oh, sorry," he mumbled, jerking it back. "I thought you might go through the windshield." "Thank you," Ann said softly. "Hell!" Scott growled. "Let's catch up with the others before they become worried about us." He spun the steering wheel and got them back in the middle of the road. Leaning back, Cory closed his eyes and waited for his racing pulse to return to normal. His heart thumped heavily. Another second or two and they would all have been goners. The mishap reminded him that their jaunt into the remote mountains wasn't to be taken lightly. Up to a dozen or more people lost their lives from a variety of causes each and every year in Colorado's vast wilderness. They might become lost while out hunting or hiking and succumb to hypothermia. They might be skiing out of bounds and be caught in an avalanche. Or, like Scott, they might fail to pay attention to the serpentine mountain 17 David Robbins highways and pay for their neglect with their mangled bodies. The close call had a positive effect on Scott. He now devoted his entire attention to driving and maintained a prudent speed for the next six miles. Gradually the sun sank toward the horizon. In the valleys the dark shadows lengthened. The heights were still aglow for awhile, but eventually the crags and peaks were likewise shrouded in twilight. Wes and Scott flicked on their jeep headlights. A thin ring of rosy sunlight crowned the mountains to the west when the two vehicles rumbled up a steep incline and came out in a great natural bowl hemmed in on three sides by enormous cliffs that gave the illusion of touching the few gray clouds drifting like eerie wraiths across the murky sky. At the base of the cliff to the north was an immense black opening. "Hot damn!" Scott whooped. "We're here!" Cory stared at the inky entrance to the Caverna del Diablo and felt his mouth go inexplicably dry. 18 Chapter Two Wesley Eagen slid out of his father's new jeep, stretched and breathed deep. The rarified air bit deep into his lungs, invigorating him. All that bouncing had jarred his kidneys mercilessly, and he couldn't wait to relieve himself. He turned as Scott parked next to his vehicle, killed the engine and hopped out. "About damn time we got here," he declared. I didn't expect it to be quite this far." "We made it, Wes. That's all that counts," Scott said and winked. Everyone else was piling out. The sight of Cory Fleming caused Wes to turn away so the dork wouldn't see the anger that hardened his features. He had to-will himself to calm down, to not let his hatred show. After all the trouble Scott and he had gone to in tricking Fleming into joining their Halloween outing, he didn't want to ruin everything by giving their intention away too soon. He composed himself just as a hand touched his left arm. "You okay, lover?" Wes turned and nearly bumped into Leslie Vanderhorst. She was standing so close to him that her full breasts brushed against his chest-not that he minded. He inhaled the tantalizing fragrance of her perfume, gazed into her concerned lake-blue eyes and impulsively grabbed her to plant a kiss on her full red lips. Of all the babes he had ever dated, she was the best, the 19 David Robbins cr@me de la cr@me as his French teacher might say. .What was that for?" she asked, giggling. "Can't a guy kiss his girl without the third degree)" Wes rejoined and playfully gave her thigh a light pinch. "You looked upset a second ago," Leslie said. "Me? When do I ever let anything get to me?" "Hardly ever," Leslie admitted, idly brushing at her hip-length red hair. Her lavender blouse, which fit her as tightly as her panty hose, threatened to burst with the movement. It was all Wes could do not to grab her globes and squeeze until she squealed. Next to Stacy Curvin, Leslie had the best body in the whole student body at Pagosa Springs High School. And he wasn't the only guy who thought so. Before he came along she had dated every jock in the school, never sticking with one for very long. Then, two months ago, he had dated her for the first time and screwed her senseless in the back seat of his father's Caddy. She had been with him ever since, exclusively his. Scott Miklin cleared his throat. "Let's pass out the backpacks, people. Everyone will need a flashlight. And anyone who has to take a leak should do so before we get down in the cave." He caught Wes's eye and nodded at a cluster of bushes ten yards from the jeeps. "I need to empty the old bladder," Wesley said and trailed Scott to the bushes. Once they were out of sight of the others, he unzipped his fly and began saturating the soil at his feet. "What's up?" Scott had turned sideways so Wes couldn't see his organ. He grunted as he sprayed a rock and said over his shoulder, "So far, so good. Cory doesn't suspect a thing." I can hardly wait to roast that son of a bitch," Wes declared. "just don't give everything away before we're down far enough. We want him where it won't be easy for 20 Hell-O-Ween him to get out of the cave once the fun begins." Wes chuckled in keen anticipation. "I can't believe the dweeb was stupid enough to fall for this. How could he think that we really wanted him along?" "It's Ann," Scott said gruffly. "You still figure Cory has the hots; for her?" "I know the bastard does. I was keeping my eye on him in the rearview mirTor all the way up here. You should have seen the way he looked at her, like a lousy puppy in love." "Think she likes him?" "I don't know," Scott said. "I've only been out with her twice." He stopped peeing and shook his pecker, spattering a few lingering drops on the ground. I really don't give a damn one way or the other. She was the bait to get him here." Wesley slipped his manhood back into his pants. "I appreciate all the trouble you've gone to for me. Hope I can pay you back one day." "Once you told me that you wanted to nail his ass, it was the least I could do," Scott said, zipping up and pivoting. "We're best buddies, aren't we?" "You know it," Wes agreed and sniffed. "Say, did you bring some stuff along?" Scott grinned. "Does a bear crap in the woods?." "Excellent," Wes said and led the way back to the jeeps. Leslie, Ann, and Terri were chatting away next to his. Everyone else, including that prick Cory, was straying in from different directions, having heeded the call of nature. In a pile in front of Scott's jeep were the four backpacks. Nearby were four flashlights. Jay Thorpe, who topped out at six-foot-two and weighed 250 pounds, whooped and jabbed a finger at the cave entrance. "What a bodacious way to spend Halloween! It will be just like back in caveman times." He thumped his huge chest like a gorilla and did a pathetic imitation of a Tarzan yell, then beamed at his 21 David Robbins cleverness. Stacy Curvin, his girlfriend, was the only one who bothered to laugh. Wesley had always considered Jay as being about 90 bricks shy of a 100 brick load, but he wasn't about to say as much when Jay could break every bone in his body without working up a sweat. Another reason Wes never made fun of the hulking mass of muscle was that Jay qualified as the football team's best guard, and since as quarterback Wes relied on Jay to protect him from onrushing opponents who wanted to separate his head from his body, Wes always made it a point to never, ever antagonize Pagosa Springs's answer to King Kong. Scott stepped over to their gear. "Each of the guys will take a backpack and a flashlight." "What about us?" Ann asked. "Your hands will be free to do with them as you please," Scott replied and leered suggestively. "And I trust you ladies know what to do with them." "Don't be crude," Ann chided him. Stacy Curvin, every inch a blonde bombshell, her thin pink top and short pink shorts leaving nothing to the imagination, looked at Ann and frowned. "Who died and appointed you the Virgin Mary?" "why, Stacy," Ann replied coolly, "I'm surprised you've even heard of her. When do you find the time to read the Bible when you spend most of each day flat on your back?" Wes winced. The last thing they needed was for the girls to get into it right now. A serious argument or a cat fight would jeopardize the whole deal. The girls might want to be taken home, spoiling his well-laid plans. He saw Stacy ball her fist and take a step toward Ann, tensed for the worst. "Ladies! Ladies!" Scott cried, moving quickly between them with his arms extended to keep them from each other's throat. "What's with all this hostility? 22 Hell-O-Ween We're all friends, aren't we? And didn't we drive all this distance to spend a bitchin'Halloween in the cave?" He glanced at each of them. "it would be a shame to spoil everything because the two of you can't control your tempers." He paused and lowered his voice, pretending he didn't want anyone else to hear but them. "What is it? The time of the month?" Jay roared, and as if on cue Stacy laughed heartily. Wes noticed that Ann didn't so much as crack a grin. Now there was a cold mama! he told himself, which was a pity. Ann Weatherby was almost as choice a fox as Stacy or Leslie, but where those two knew how to treat a guy to a great time Ann had a reputation for being as frigid as an iceberg. She'd neck heavy and let a guy play finger tag with her box, but she refused to go all the way. Must have been her upbringing, he reasoned. Her parents warped her for life. "If you want a flashlight," Scott was telling Ann, "you can have mine." He leaned down and picked up one of the bright yellow jobs. "But as you can see these are big mothers. Four of them will light up the cave as if it were daylight in there." He motioned for her to take the one he held. I just figured you'd want your hands free in case we have to do any climbing." "Oh," Ann said. "You keep it then. I'll be fine." Wesley grinned. He had to hand it to Scott. The guy had a golden tongue. If Scott ever became a car salesman he'd sell more cars in one month than most salesmen did in a year. "What did you bring in those backpacks?" Cory inquired. .Munchies galore, rope in case we need it, spare batteries and plenty of candles and matches," Scott answered. "Why? Don't you believe I'm smart enough to pack everything we'd need?" I never said that,' Cory replied, walking over and taking one of the red packs. "I was just curious." He 23 David Robbins hefted it, testing its weight. "Did you bring a cornpass?" "What the hell do we need a compass for? We go down, we come up. It's as simple as that." Cory slipped an arm into one of the straps on his backpack. "Hundreds of passageways are repor-ted to be in the Cavema del Diablo, and many of them twist and turn every which way. It's like a maze down there. The cave hasn't even been fully mapped out yet. Only 4* about a third of the tunnels have been properly measured and documented by the speleological society." "The what?" "Those spelunkers I told you about." Scott gestured angrily at the cave with the yellow flashlight. "We don't need a damn compass and we sure don't need a stinking map. We're high school seniors. I think we're bright enough to find our way out." He nodded at the packs. "And for your infor-niation, in one of those I put a rock hammer and chisel. We can mark the tunnels we take if we have to and find our way back up easily." "Sounds good to me," Wes said, in-itated that Cory would see fit to question Scott's ability. By common consent Scott was the leader of their little foray into the depths of the cave, as he was on most of their outings whether it be to the big mall in Durango or merely a hike into the national forest. * I guess that will have to do," Cory said, his iefiei lackin conviction. 9 Jay Thorpe jabbed a thick finger at him. "If you don't I like it, Fleming, you don't have to come in with us." 11 Panic seized Wesley. He was afraid Jay would antagonize Cory and the dweeb would change his mind and j decide to stay up above with the jeeps. If that happened I all their scheming would have been wasted. So in order to pacify Cory, as much as he disliked doing so, he came to the dork's defense. "Lighten up, you guys. Cory is a 24 Hell-O-Ween brain, remember? It's only natural for him to consider every angle. We should be grateful he's so concerned about our safety." Scott caught on instantly. "Yeah, Wes is right. SorTy, Cory. Nothing personal." . "No harm done," Cory said, putting his other arm through the opposite strap. Wes stepped up to get one of the backpacks and a flashlight for himself. He adjusted the straps to give the pack a snug fit, then tested the push-button switch on the flashlight. A wide beam of incredibly bright light stabbed the darkness, illuminating the cave entrance and the rock wall surTounding it. "Jesus, you weren't kidding about these things. I could reach the moon with this baby," he said, tilting the beam toward the impassive lunar face dominating the heavens. Scott and Jay donned their backpacks, and everyone moved toward the cavemous mouth that seemed to be gaping wide to admit them. "Hey, listen!" Terri Sheehan exclaimed. They all halted, and Wes turned toward her, straining his ears to catch the faintest sounds. But there were none. "I don't hear a thing," he said. "That's just it. There should be animal and insect noises, yet it's as quiet as a tomb. It's not natural," Ter-ri said. "The cliffs probably block off most sounds," Wes said testily. Next to Cory Fleming, he despised Ter-ri the most. It wasn't her personality, since he never hung around with her and didn't know her well enough to know what she was like. He despised her because she was a leech, a bimbo who glued herself to a more attractive and popular friend, in this case Ann Weatherby, and got a free ride as a result. Because everyone knew the two were like sisters, whenever someone wanted to invite Ann to a party or to go somewhere they had to invite Ter-ri along also. Terri didn't ear-n her social 25 David Robbins status. She was Ann's shadow, nothing more. "Oh, I never thought of that," she now responded. "We can't all be an Einstein," Wes said, resisting an urge to give Fleming a meaningful look so everyone would know who he meant. Instead, he hiked up a faint path to the cave and played his flashlight beam over the imposing cliffs on either side. The others joined him. "Hey, what are those?" Stacy asked, pointing at a spot just above the opening. Cory, Scott and Jay trained their lights on the smooth rock wall. "Whoa!" Wes said, amused by the sight the combined illumination revealed. Ages ago a series of symbols had been painted on the stone surface. The passage of time and the onslaught of the elements had eroded them to where they were barely legible. Not so, though, with the bizarre figure painted in bright red underneath the symbols. Almost the size of a full- il grown man, the creature depicted had a repulsive face, a lean torso and legs like the rear legs of an elk. Hairless and slightly stooped, it also sported fingers that w @ were more like talons and twin knobs a fe long jutting upward from the top of its forehead. Leslie giggled. "That thing looks like the Devil." "Some religious nut must have painted it," Stacy said. "Not exactly," Cory stated. "Experts say the symbols were painted by the Spanish centuries ago." "What do they mean?" Leslie asked. "No one knows for certain," Cory said. Wes could see why. The symbols made no sense whatsoever. There were four of them arranged in a row, as if they formed a sentence. On the far left was what appeared to be an odd sort of hat or helmet with a creased crown that came to a point at the front. Next to it were two curved lines aligned vertically so that 26 Hell-O-Ween their curves touched, while down the center of each ran a straight line. The third symbol was a crude cross, drawn as two posts, the vertical post thicker and more pointed than the horizontal one. And finally the fourth consisted of a rectangle bisected by short vertical lines. it was all Greek to him. "What about that monster?" Terri inquired. "Did the Spanish paint that, too?" "The experts don't think so, but they have no idea who, did. Oddly, the paint never fades. They guess it has something to do with the rare pigments used," Cory explained. Terri moved closer and stared at the crimson form. "it does look like the Devil, doesn't it?" "Don't be stupid," Wes snapped. "It's some goblin or other. Those old-timers were a bunch of superstitious geeks." "I wouldn't dismiss Terri's statement out of hand," Cory said. "This is the Caverna del Diablo." "Yeah? So?" Wes responded, peeved yet again by Fleming's know-everything attitude. Cory sighed. "The Caverna del Diablo is Spanish for the Cavern of the Devil." Wes glanced at the red creature again. Maybe there was a similarity between it and the pictures of Satan he remembered from Sunday School. But so what? He'd stopped going to church when he turned 16 because by then he'd learned the truth. All those boring sermons and all that constant quoting from the Bible had just been so much mumbo jumbo the church used to keep the dumb sheep in line. He knew better. He wasn't anyone's fool. "Big frigging deal," he said. "The Devil is nothing but a fairy tale. Only an idiot would think it's real." "I'm not an idiot," Ann Weatherby said, "and I happen to believe there is such a thing as the Devil." "Yeah, me too," Terri said. 27 David Robbins Scott stepped forward. "Does it matter one way or the other? Whether the Devil does or doesn't exist, he sure as hell doesn't live in this cave. So why don't we quit bickering and get on with it? We're wasting valuable time." "You've got that straight, dude," Jay declared while moving into the opening, Stacy walking by his si@e; with her hand in his. "Let's cut the bullshit and explore this sucker." "Now you're talking," Wes said. "I'll take the lead," Scott offered and stepped a few yards in advance of the group. "Keep close to one another, and if you should stray off and get lost give a yell and the rest of us will come running." He looked at Cory. "Is that adequate or should we tie the rope around our waists?" Wes could almost see Cory squirm inside. The dork didn't like the sarcasm in Scott's tone, but he wasn't man enough to do anything about it. "The rope shouldn't be necessary," Cory said. "Then let's go," Scott stated, starting forward. Beyond the entrance was a spacious level chamber with a high vaulted ceiling. in the dust at their feet were scores of footprints left by previous souls brave enough to venture deep into the unknown. Wes stayed behind Jay and Stacy. He admired the way her tight ass wiggled when she walked, then quickly glanced away when Leslie came up beside him. "Wasn't that painting a little spooky?" she asked almost in a whisper, as if afraid to naise her voice in the cavern. "Only for kids," Wesley responded, letting his eyes rove over her assets. Why had he risked life and limb ogling Jay@s girl when he had one who was every bit as gorgeous? Leslie's full breasts were enough to make any guy drool. And if all went right, he'd be holding them in his hot hands before the night was out. The 28 Hell-O-Wei@n thought made his manhood twitch, and he grinned. "Are you laughing at me? Do you think I'm a kid?" "No, of course not," Wes said and lied to avoid arousing her touchy temper. I was thinking of all the fun we're going to have with the-` Suddenly he stopped, aware he was about to blurt out the secret behind inviting Cory along. Only Scott and he knew the real reason they'd asked the bastard to come. The others might not appreciate the humor of it, not even Jay. Thorpe was a monster on the playing field but had a soft heart at times. Once Jay had caught a guy tying firecrackers to a cat's tail and beaten the poor slob within an inch of his life. Another time an idiot had thrown a balloon filled with water at Jay's younger sister at the swimming pool. It had taken three lifeguards to pull Jay off the sap before Jay drowned him. "With the what?" Leslie probed. "What were you about to say?" Wesley's mind raced. "With the bunch of beautiful babes we have with us tonight," he said and leaned toward her so only she would hear. "Myself, I can't wait to get you alone for a while. We haven't necked in over a week, and I'm going through withdrawal. I've started to act weird." He contorted his face in a goofy expression to demonstrate his point. "Oh, you!" Leslie said and laughed. "You've always been weird if you ask me." She took his hand. "That's Part of your charm." They crossed the spacious chamber and reached a narrow tunnel, the four flashlights bathing them and the immediate area around them in light bright enough to read by. Scott paused at the tunnel and swept it with his beam, then beckoned for them to follow and entered the passage. Wes glanced over his shoulder and saw Cory and Ann walking together. Bringing up the rear, and looking as if she would rather be anywhere than in the 29 David Robbins cave, was Terri. He snickered and kept going into the tunnel. The walls were as smooth as polished glass, the passage barely the width of his shoulders. Halfway through he had to turn sideways for a few feet. It was then, with his back to one wall and his nose almost touching the other, that an intense sensation of claustrophobia hit him. For a fleeting interval he felt completely hemmed in and helpless. He stopped and fought back an urge to flee. "Why'd you stop, lover?" Leslie asked. ."No reason," Wes answered and took another step. The sensation subsided as quickly as it had struck, and within 15 seconds he stepped from the tunnel into another large chamber, only this one was totally different from the first. The ceiling was 20 feet high and dotted with small stalactites, slender formations much like icicles in shape. Spaced at random along the floor were outlandish rock formations, some half as high as the ceiling, others so tiny they could be stepped over. "Wow, " Leslie said as they advanced. "This is rad." "It gets better below," Cory commented. "Some of the chambers and rooms are spectacular." "Rooms?" Wes said, eager for any chance to make a fool of the bastard who had cost him the championship and a new Corvette. "Rooms are what you find in a house. In case you hadn't noticed, Fleming, we're in a cave. "Precisely," Cory said. "And spelunkers, the people who explore caves, refer to parts of a cave that are bigger than passages but smaller than chambers as rooms. Anyone who knows anything about caves knows that." Wes wanted to slug Fleming right then and there. How dare the geek try to show him up for a moron in front of his girl and all the others! He turned and glared, ready to wade in if Fleming so much as grinned. But, as usual, Scott intervened. 30 HeH-O-Ween "Cory, enough already about the damn spelunkers. And Wes, let's stick close together, shall we?" Frustrated, Wes resumed wending his way through the chamber. He hardly noticed the marvelous formations. In his mind's eye he was reliving that day in May when he competed in the school's annual archery competition. Archery had always been a special love of his, ever since childhood when he was first introduced to the story of Robin Hood. Nowadays his compound bow hung on a polished mahogany rack above his bed. Every Sunday for years he had tried to get in a half hour of practice, a habit that helped develop the keen eye and steady nerves he found so useful in playing baseball, football and basketball. He was an outstanding all-around athlete and enjoyed high prospects for being awarded a scholarship. But archery remained his first love, and he had always taken special satisfaction in winning the archery championship. Until last May. Who would have thought it? Beaten by Cory Fleming, who had never entered an archery competition in his life. By Cory Fleming, who had never joined an archery team before. By Cory Fleming, the dork of dorks. His ears burned at the memory of the ribbing his friends had given him. They had delighted in rubbing his nose in his loss. "Hey, Wes, we heard Fleming gave you the shaft!" "Wes, next time you should remember to string your bow." "Maybe you should take on Fleming at checkers the next time!" Had he lost to anyone other than Cory, no one would have given a darrm. Instead his defeat had become a running joke that seemed to go on forever. The jibes had tapered off a couple of weeks after the match, but seldom had a month gone by that someone hadn't reminded him of his loss. And although he'd laughed along with his friends, deep down he'd simmered. 31 David Robbins The ribbing, bad as it had been, wasn't the worst aspect of losing. For almost a whole school year he had looked forward to the new Corvette his dad had promised him. As usual, there had been strings attached. Since grade school his parents had enticed him to get better grades and to perform better at sports by offering to reward his performance with his heart's desire. In grade school they had given him money and toys. Later it had been money and clothes. in high school there had been a vacation in Bennuda, an unchaperoned weekend of skiing at Vail and the usual money. So it had been only natural for his fathet to set conditions if he wanted to eam the car. All Wes had to do was be picked as first-string quarterback on the football team, have a good season pitching for the baseball team, and win the archery competition. When his father had made the proposal, Wes had laughed. The car was his! he had told himself. The football coach had made him first-string quarterback the season before and was bound to do so again. He was one of the top two pitchers on the baseball team, his fastball the talk of the league. And he had won the archery trophy during his sophomore year and was certain to repeat. Or so he had thought. Then Cory Fleming came along and beat him by ten points. He had tried explaining to his father that Cory's win had been a fluke, a once in a lifetime occurrence, and that technically.he had deserved the top trophy because he was a far better bowman. But his dad had refused to break their agreement, and since he had failed to live up to the conditions he wasn't awarded the new Corvette. Cory Fleming had cost him the car of his dreams. Right then and there he had vowed to- "Wes!" Leslie suddenly exclaimed, grubbing his ann. "What?" Wes responded, distracted by his thoughts. 32 Hell-O-Ween "Don't you hear it?" Leslie whispered. He looked around in confusion and realized everyone else had stopped. It was then he heard the eerie sound wafting up from the Stygian depths of the cave, a quavering moan like that of an anguished soul in torment. 33 Chapter Three Cory Fleming had stopped dead in his tracks on hearing the moan. He saw Wesley halt and gape, and he would have laughed if not for being preoccupied with the sound. What in the world was it? Something touched his hand and he jumped, then was embarrassed when he glanced down and discovered Ann's hand had bumped his. "Sony," she said. The moan howled through the cavern for over a minute, rising and falling like the wail of a coyote. As abruptly as it had started, it ceased. "What the hell was that?-' Jay asked. "The wind," Scott replied.. "There are a lot of hidden cracks in caves this size up near the surface where the wind can get in." He shifted so he could see Cory. "Isntt that right, Fleming?" "Yeah," Cory responded, although bothered by a feeling that in this instance the wind had not been responsible. Which was utterly ridiculous. No animals lived in the Caverna del Diablo. He dispelled the feeling with a shake of his head and moved out when Leslie and Wes did. They crossed the chamber, went through a long, wide passage, then stopped in a circular area. Ahead the passage forked. "Now which way?" Scott wondered aloud, shining his flashlight down both branches. "Fleming, you were 34 Hefl-O-Ween in here once before. Which way did you take?" "We took the right fork," Cory said. "It takes you down to what's called the Rainbow Room, where the ceiling is all different colors. It's the most popular spot in the whole cave, and families go down there a lot to have picnics." "Way cool!" Stacy said. "Let's go." Scott turned. "This is Halloween, remember? The whole purpose for coming out here was to have some fun, to put a little excitement into our lives." He indicated the right fork. "Where's the fun in taking the branch everyone else takes? And who cares about a dumb Rainbow Room? We're not here for a picnic. We're here to do some monster hunting and scare ourselves shitless. Isn't that what Halloween is all about?" "Right on," Wes said. "I vote we take the left branch." He imitated the voice of a certain actor on television. "Let's boldly go where no one has gone before." "Whatever you guys decide is fine," Cory said, although secretly he would have been happier going down to the Rainbow Room. He knew the route, and the passages were so arranged that it was impossible for anyone to become lost. The left fork was a whole different story. It was reputed to be a maze down there. "Girls?" Scott said. Stacy grinned and rubbed against Jay. I go where my hunk goes." "The left branch is okay with me," Leslie said. Ann pursed her lips and gazed uncertainly at the forks. I know this is Halloween and all, but shouldn't we Play it safe? No one knows we're up here, and if something happens we could be in big trouble." "Spare me the gloom and doom," Scott responded. "We're all big kids now, honey. The left branch will be more of a challenge." He reached out to tap Jay@s backpack. "You have nothing to worry about. We came prepared for every contingency." 35 David Robbins Ann shrugged. "I suppose it's okay." "And you, Terri?" Scott asked. "I don't much care one way or the other. I just want to get out of here as soon as possible." Wesley laughed. "Scared already? Hell, we've hardly gone more than a couple of hundred yards." "This place is spooky," Terri said, gazing apprehensively at the shadows ringing the ceiling. "That's the whole point," Scott declared happily, "Just think! We're the only ones in here. We have the whole cave all to ourselves, thousands of feet of tunnels where we can party to our heart's content. And I've brought all we need to do just that." Cory didn't like the sound of that. If the others drank heavily it would invite an accident. "What exactly did you bring?" "Wait and see," Scott replied and wheeled around to stride into the left tunnel. With grave misgivings Cory held back at the fork to allow Ann and Terri to go ahead of him, then shined his light on the tunnel floor so they could see any obstacles in advance. Why was Ann hanging back near him instead of walking up front with Scott? He stared at her long hair, at the curve of her back, and finally at her hips as they swayed provocatively with every step fo ;o ol she took. Lord, she was beautiful! And he was a I to think he had a chance with her. She had made M, plain years ago. So why did he keep on hoping? The passage narrowed, then curved to the left for 50 yards. A cool breeze blew on their faces until they arrived at a chamber filled with rimstone dams. From there they carefully negotiated a steep incline until it bottomed out in a pit littered with tiny fragments of rock mixed with dirt. A cloud of dust enveloped them as they crossed the pit to another tunnel and set them all to coughing. 36 HeU-0-Ween Cory covered his mouth with his left hand until they were out of the dust. The new tunnel had a high ceiling creased in the center by a thin cleft. He detected a faint whisper of chill air and licked his forefinger to determine the direction from which itcame. But when he raised his arm the air seemed to strike his finger from all sides at once, making it impossible to tell. Next they entered a room where the ceiling was covered with calcium helictites, worm-like protrusions of varying sizes. The floor slanted downward ever so gradually, and after passing under an arch that glittered when struck by their flashlight beams, they encountered another fork. Scott stopped and examined both. "Okay, gang, which way now?" It didn't matter to Cory. They hadn't listened to his advice the last time, so he didn't bother to voice an opinion until everyone else had voted to take the left branch and Scott looked directly at him. "And you, br-ain? What do you say?" "You're the leader, Scott. Whichever one you pick is fine with me," Cory answered. "We're trying to keep this democratic, Fleming. Isn't that the way our old civics teacher says things should be run? So out with it. Vote like everyone else." Cory became uncomfortably aware that some of the others were gazing impatiently at him. "The left fork is okay," he quickly said. "Figured it would be," Scott said and chuckled, He aimed his flashlight straight ahead and headed out. Twenty minutes of traversing various tunnels brought them to the narrowest passage they had found so far. They had to turn sideways again to squeeze through. Cory was the last to enter. He removed his backPack and dangled it at his side, then eased into the 37 David Robbins passageway. Ordinarily confined spaces never bothered him, but in this instance he abruptly experienced an unreasoning flood of fear that erupted from the core of his being and pervaded his every pore. He paused, his breath catching in his throat, then fought off the fear and moved on. It was silly to be afraid, he told himself. The walls weren't about to close in and crush him. The cave had existed for centuries, and it was highly unlikely any part of it would collapse while they were inside. The walls and ceiling were solid rock, as sturdy and as safe as a concrete bunker. Partway along the passage angled sharply to the left. He saw Terri go around the corner, leaving him momentarily cut off from the others. With hurried steps he went to catch up when a second bout of fear overcame him. Shuddetirig uncontrollably, he leaned his forehead on the wall and took deep breaths. What was going on? Logically, there was no reason to feel as he did. Yet here he was acting like a six year old terrified of the dark instead of a high school senior. That thought comforted him. He was almost a man, damn it, not a child any longer. He had to get his act together. Cory moved to the corner, slid past it and froze in bewilderment. His bright beam of light illuminated the passage for almost 100 feet-and no one was there! The others shouldn't be more than a dozen yards in front of him. Stunned, he hastened forward but stopped in midstride when a blast of cool air hit him and Ann's voice called out. "Cory? We're in here. Are you coming?" He turned, surprised to see a yard-wide gap in the wall. Stepping into it, he found a wide passage slanting to the right. Twenty feet off waited Ann and Terri, their figures silhouetted by the glow of the flashlights ahead. 38 Hell-O-Ween "What the hell is the holdup back there?" Scott bellowed. Cory hastened to the girls. "Sorry. I was studying an interesting quartz vein," he said, filled with guilt by the lie. But he wasn't about to make a fool of himself and confess the truth. Avoiding their eyes, he gazed toward the head of the line and yelled, "We're okay. Keep going. 11 "Don't fall behind like that," Terri said. "We'd hate to lose you." She lowered her voice. "You're the only guy in this bunch I trust." "Terri! P' Ann said. "Well, I'm right, and you know it," Terri said defensively. I know you like Scott and all, but I don't think he's so great. You've heard the rumors that have been going around school about him." "What rumors?" Cory asked. "Never mind," Ann said angrily, facing Terri. "I credited you with better sense than to talk about someone behind their back. Rumors don't mean a thing, as you should well know." Cory could have sworn that Terri blushed. He hadn't heard any rumors about Miklin, but then his circle of friends was small and limited to those normally excluded from the gab sessions in the hallways and at the lunch tables. Wesley's shout interrupted their conversation. "Are you three with us or what? Get the lead out of your butts." Ann spun and hastened away. "What's this all about?" Cory inquired as he trailed after Terri. "Why ask me? I never know anything." Cory detected the hurt in her tone and felt sorry for her. Terri had few friends besides Ann. Like him, she was shunned by the majority of her peers. They shared the mutual bond of being social outcasts. He 39 David Robbins decided to shoot the breeze with her later and get to know her a little better. Outcasts should stick together' he reasoned, because they needed friends as much as anyone else. Perhaps even more. Being a social pariah was a terrible stigma. The tunnel tilted downward by gradual degrees, twisting and turning every 40 or 50 feet. It broadened out, the walls shrouded in flickering shadows. Twice they passed narrow passages, offshoots of the one they followed, and each time Scott stuck to the main tunnel. Cory was bothered by the fact that Scott wasn't bothering to mark their route in some way. The deeper they progressed, the greater the risk of becoming lost. Speaking up, though, might invite criticism, and he was deten-nined not to come across as a dork again. The cool breeze intensified, as if they were directly under a fissure that reached to the surface far above. Faint rustlings seemed to emanate from the stalactites overhead. Pondering whether to secretly make marks of his own, Cory had his eyes on the ground when he heard an indistinct squeak high up. He swept the flashlight beam vertical but saw no movement. Had it been his imagination or did bats dwell this far down? Or were there mice in. the cave? There had been no evidence of animal droppings so he was inclined to doubt any wildlife inhabited the cavern. It must have been a freak of the wind. Excited yells broke out ahead. Cory lowered the beam and discovered that the tunnel led to a chamber. He was the last to go in, and he gaped in delighted amazement at the staggering dimensions. Mile High Stadium in Denver, home to the Denver Broncos, would not begin to fill it. Moonmilk, composed of crystals of hydromagnesite and water, covered the walls in a dazzling.white coat 40 Hell-O-Ween that resembled a layer of plaster of Paris. Caramelcolored formations adorned the upper rim. Gypsum encrustations layered large sections of the roof. "Oh, this is incredibly beautiful!" Leslie Vanderhorst exclaimed. "Out of sight!" Stacy agreed, spinning in a circle as she surveyed the natural wonder. "How about if we stop and rest here?" Scott proposed. "We can break out the munchies and tell scary stories to put us in the Halloween spirit." Cory listened as everyone agreed and shone his beam over the wall above the tunnel, then blinked in disbelief "Hey!" he declared. "Look!" Everyone turned. There were three tunnels, not just one, arranged in a row along the base of the cavern wall at regular intervals of ten yards or so. The openings were virtually identical, high and smooth and lacking any distinguishing marks. "How do we know which tunnel is the one we used?" TerTi asked. "ItIl be the one with all the footprints;" Scott replied, gesturing at the floor. "Look. No one else has been down in this part of the cave for ages." Cory glanced down and realized Miklin was right. Other than their own tracks, the dust underfoot was undisturbed. What if no one else had ever been in this Particular chamber? That gap in the wall he had nearly missed back a ways was virtually invisible unless someone happened to turn or glance over a shoulder at just the right moment. It was possible even the professional explorers were unaware of its existence. "We shouldn't wander off too far," he cautioned, forgetting himself in his worry for their safety. Wesley chortled. "Afraid the boogeyman will get you, Fleming? And here I thought you Einstein types don't believe in monsters!" 41 David Robbins "We don't," Cory said. "Not even Bigfoot?" Terri asked. Scott stopped and turned. "Save the monster ta until we make ourselves nice and comfortable. The we can scare ourselves silly." "Screw the monsters," Jay said. I want to eat. 11 starved." "You're always starved, honeybuns," Stacy told hi and then placed a finger on her chin and pretended t be deep in thought. "You know, it might be radical t the fifth dimension to get horizontal with a monster like Bigfoot. Just imagine the size of him!" "How gross," Leslie said and laughed. "How crude," Ann amended. "What's the matter, Weatherby?" Stacy shot back "Couldn't you handle a magnum that size? Why, I be you've never even had your plumbing snaked." Jay and Wesley roared. "That's enough!" Scott barked. "We're all suppose to be friends on this outing of ours. So no more cuts all right?" He gave Stacy a hard look until Jay did t same to him. Then he pivoted and pointed at a larg flat boulder 20 yards away. "Let's kick back and rel there." Cory moved toward it, glad Scott had come to Ann' rescue. Another instant and he would have made remark that would have brought Jay down on his he like a ton of bricks. Jay defended Stacy's honor vi orously, and any insult, however slight, merited e immediate retaliation. Everyone in high school . kn it was certain suicide to mess with Stacy, in more wa than one. He stripped off the backpack and placed it on the, boulder. The rest of the guys were doing the same,, while Stacy and Leslie had gone around the boulder to sit on the other side' away from Ann and Terri. The rift promised trouble ahead. Stacy wasn't the type to 42 Hell-O-Ween take being called 'Crude' lightly. She might try to take petty revenge later. He made a mental note to keep his eyes on her just in case. Scott and Wesley began opening the backpacks and pulling out packages of food. There were pretzels, potato chips, cheese crackers, sausages and much more. " Leslie "You've got enough there to feed an army, joked. "We knew Jay was coming," Scott said and gave Jay a beaming smile to emphasize the comment had been a joke and not a dig. He reached into a second backpack and extracted a six-pack of beer, then another and another. "About damn time!" Thorpe declared, grabbing one of the cans and popping the tab with a flick of his thick wrist. In great gulps he downed the contents in seconds, tossed the can aside and uttered a belch that stirred the dust on the boulder. Stacy, Wes and Scott all laughed. Butterflies formed in CorYs stomach. He suppressed a frown and gazed at the three tunnels, afraid his feelings would be reflected in his eyes. Of all the stupid stunts! No one with half a mind would get drunk in the depths of an enormous cavern when all their wits might be needed to find their way back out. Again a beer can popped, and he glanced around to find Wes trying to duplicate Jay's feat. Both of them were as dumb as bricks! Scott opened a beer for himself and jerked a thumb at the collection of eats. "Help yourselves, people." Any appetite Cory had developed on the trek into the cave had evaporated in the heat of his annoyance. He stood, picked up his flashlight and trained it on the ceiling to admire the gypsum. "What's the matter, Fleming?" Wes asked. "Aren't you hungry?" 43 David Robbins "Not at the moment,' "Get it while it lasts. We wouldn't want you stumbling around in the dark hungry." Puzzled by the remark, Cory turned. For a fleeting instant both Wes and Scott were smirking at him as if they were ravenous cats and he was a helpless canary. Their expressions shifted and became models of polite friendliness. Now what the hell was that all about? 44 Chapter Four Jay Thorpe polished off his sixth beer, tossed the can as far as he could and listened to it clatter among a cluster of weird rock formations. He had to take a leak, and after ogling Stacy for the past 20 minutes he was in the mood to relieve another basic need. He grabbed Stacy's arm and said, "Let's go for a walk." About to take a bite from a pretzel, Stacy cocked an eye and grinned slyly. "What do you have in mind?" "Let's go and you'll find out," Jay said. Vivid memories of the night before, when they had made it in the park behind a thicket, fueled his lust and sparked a twitching in his loins. He pulled her along as he headed for the opposite end of the chamber from the three tunnels. They needed privacy. She was always ready and willing, and although she didn't care where they got it on she drew the line at letting anyone watch. Which was too bad. He'd always wondered what it would be lik e- to bang a fox while another looked onor, better yet, joined in. "Stay close, Jay," Scott called. "You didn't take a flashlight. We don't want you getting lost." "Yeah, yeah," Jay responded, then said softly to Stacy, "Sometimes that guy is worse than my mother. Him and Wes, both. They treat me like I don't have any smarts at all." "Wes has always been a snotnose," Stacy reminded him. "He sucks up to you because without you his ass 45 David Robbins would have been grass ages ago. You're the one who keeps the other team off his butt all the time." "True," Jay said, amazed at her insight. He'd never even considered that Wesley's friendship was based on his football ability, but now that she mentioned it the idea made a lot of sense. Wesley was a rich snot, while he came from a blue-collar family. Wesley's dad was a real estate bigwig; his dad worked as a maintenance man. It always had struck him as a bit odd that Wes hung around with him so much. So she must be right. She usually was, which only made him love her the more. He didn't mind that she was more intelligent. In his opinion her smarts and his brawn made a perfect combination. Little did she know that he planned to pop the question at the school p@om in the spring. "What about Scott?" he asked. "He likes anyone Wes likes. Hell, he wouldn't do anything to get his best customer mad. His kind sucks up to anyone who has the green for their goodies." I know," Jay said. He'd already figured that much out for himself, not that it really mattered to him one way or the other. He hung out with Wes because Wes always had money to blow and there was no end of partying, food and beer. So if Wes wanted Scott to always tag along, it was okay by him. "How far are we going to go?" Stacy asked, glancing at the shadowy formations among which they were wending. "Don't tell me you're scared," Jay teased. He pressed on until they were at the limit of the glow cast by the flashlights. Looking back, he saw the others flapping their gums. To the right reared yet another strange formation, this one the size of a van. He hauled Stacy behind it. "How about here?" She studied their surroundings and smiled. "Sort of kinky, but I like it, honeybuns. I've never made it in a cave before." 46 HeH-O-Ween "Hold that thought," Jay said, moving off to take his leak. He liked beer, but the damn stuff went througg him like water through a sieve. "Don't take too long." The hint of tension in her voice amused Jay. He was sure she felt nervous about being so far down in the cave, but he wasn't going to make an issue of it. If he got her angry he risked having her tell him to go take a flying leap. It would take hours to calm her down, and by then they would be back on the surface. She might be too pooped to pop. He took care of his business quickly, zipped up his jeans and strolled back. Stacy was leaning on the formation, her arms crossed under her breasts, her right leg bent seductively. "Looking for a good time, sailor?" "Ain't I always," Jay replied, halting in front of her, his chest brushing against hers. She puckered and blew him a silent kiss, then giggled. Her hip-length blonde hair seemed to shine even in the gloom, drawing his thick fingers as a flame would draw moths. He stroked it, enjoying its silken texture, entwining his fingers. "Is that all you want to play with?" she taunted him. "Not hardly," Jay responded and suddenly swooped his hands to her breasts. She stiffened and gasped as he squeezed hard, feeling her nipples bud and harden under his palm. The sheer pink blouse she had on did little to conceal her charms, and he now yanked it up so he could reach underneath and cup both of her gorgeous mounds in his enormous paws. "I like it when you play rough," Stacy said huskily. "Then you're in for a treat, babe," Jay assured her, wedging his thigh between her legs and molding his massive form to hers so he could plant a kiss. She opened her mouth to receive his tongue and gripped his broad shoulders. Beneath his belt his manhood surged 47 David Robbins to attention, rising to its full enormous height. It wasn't for nothing that many of his teammates had nicknamed him "the Bull." No one else at Pagosa Springs High could boast of ten inches of prime boner. Stacy moaned as he continued to massage her breasts and ground her legs into him. The tantalizing perfume she wore was enough to send Jay into seventh heaven. Combined with the exquisite feel of her full body, it ignited the animal in him, stoking his desire. He lowered his right hand to the junction of her legs and slid his forefinger between them. The heat she radiated could have melted a tank. He rubbed against her pink shorts, and she squirmed deliciously. 11ohhhh, honeybuns," she breathed @vhen he broke for air. Jay clamped his lips on her right tit and sucked as would a small child. She cooed and wiggled so he sucked harder while continuing to rub her furnace. Her warm breath fanned his ear, and her fingers gripped his hair. He wanted her in the worst way but had no intention of rushing things. Quickies never had appealed to him. When he got his rocks off, he liked to savor every second. He trunsferred his mouth to her other breast and gave it the same treatment. The bottom of her pants were now moist, and he deftly slipped his finger under her lacy undies and into her hot hole. The slick walls closed around him. For a moment she held herself still, then she began grinding into his hand as if she were riding a bucking horse. "Uhhh," Stacy said, her eyes closed, her head tossed back. "What you do to me!" Jay truced a path with his tongue down to her tight tummy, then licked her right side all the way up to her arm. She drew his face to hers, and they locked lips once more. He chose that moment to begin working 48 Hell-O-Ween his forefinger as if it were a plunger, letting the friction build and build. His hand became drenched with her juices as she thrashed madly. "Do me, honeybuns. Please do me." "Not yet, babe," Jay responded. He was about to pick her up and lay her on the floor when he remembered the thick layer of dust. She would be annoyed if he got her clothes all dirty. Fair enough. He'd be the perfect gentleman and make it while standing. He tugged her shorts over her hips and down her legs, having to bend in the bargain, until he could remove them. Rather than drop them in the dust, he wadded them into a ball and tucked them under his belt. Then he unzipped, adjusted his jeans so he could expose his rigid pole and immediately felt her hands close on it. "My big boy," Stacy said, leering. "My big, lovable honeybuns." "Ready for the main event?" "I was born ready." Back at the flat boulder Cory grabbed a handful of Potato chips and took a bite out of the biggest. The salty tangy flavor made his mouth water but did little to revive his appetite. For the past ten minutes he had suffered through Wes, Scott and Leslie bragging about a party held at Eagen's house several weeks ago. They rated it as the best party all year since a third of the participants had become so drunk they Passed out, others had stripped down to their bir-thdays suits and taken a plunge in the pool, and the tight end had been caught in the shower with not one, not two, but three of the cheerleaders. Who ever said life was dull? "Let's get to the nitty-gritty," Scott was now saying. "We came down here because it's Halloween and we might get to see the monster." 49 David Robbins "What's this monster you keep talking about?" Terri Sheehan asked. "You haven't heard the stories?" Scott responded, he chomped on a cheese cracker. "Let's see. It beg back in the prospecting days when the mountains we crawling with guys wanting to strike it rich by findin gold." "It began before that," Cory said. "What?" Scott responded, not too pleased at bein interrupted. "The stories started with the Spaniards. Remembe those symbols? They supposedly came into thi cave is in search of gold and were driven out by a demon." "A demon?" Scott laughed. "Hell, they were probab chased out by a bear and told the demon story to cov their asses." Cory continued. "The next tales came from the Ute' who took over this region and made it their home. The claimed that for more years than they could reme ber a horrible creature had terrorized their tribe. I was supposed to live in this cavern, which was wh they would never set up their lodges anywhere ne it. Some of their bravest warriors came in here t challenge the thing, and that was the last anyone sa of them." "They probably got lost and couldn't find their w out," Wesley remarked. "And everyone knows India were afraid of their own shadows." "Tell that to Custer," Cory retorted, then went o quickly, ignoring Wesleys glare. "Then along came t trappers and mountain men. They were the ones wh s. w named Devil Creek after something that kept raidin their camps at night and killing their horses and so of them." "It could have been a grizzly or a mountain lion, Scott said. "They didn't think so." 50 Hell-O-Ween Terri was hanging on every word. She leaned forward and asked, "Is that it? There are no recent reports?" She sounded vastly relieved that there might not be. "A few," Cory said. "Back in the twenties a couple was found torn to shreds in a side passage." "A bear," Scott stated. "I'd bet anything." "And in the sixties three people were discovered with their throats slit," Cory detailed. "All the blood had been drained from their bodies and their clothes were nowhere around." "Tell the rest of it," Scott said gruffly and gave Ann a reassuring smile. "The police decided the three were murdered and even had a few suspects, but they could never prove which one did it." "So no one has died in the cave since then?" Ann inquired. "Nope," Scott said. He stood, stretched and began collecting the various packs of munchies. "And now that Fleming has so kindly put us in the right mood, we can have some real fun." "What do you have in mind?" Ann asked. "Oh, a little exploring, a little monster hunting, and a little peekaboo," Scott said as he stuffed the packages into a backpack. "I'd rather not," Terri said. Wes frowned. "Hey, if you want to go to the surface, be our guest. But we're not about to spoil Halloween because you might wet your panties." Ann angrily came up off the boulder and jabbed a finger at him. "Don't talk to her like that." "He didn't mean anything by it," Scott said and encompassed them all in a friendly glance. 'Why don't we quit getting on each other's nerves and get down to some serious partying?" Cory noted that Scott had not bothered to stick their trash in the packs. The empty cans were left lying scattered about, as were the plastic holders the cans 51 David Robbins had come in and bits of the pretzel and potato 4-10, bags. "Did you bring any garbage bags?" he asked. 1 "What in the world for?" Scott said, surveying Ir boulder. "Oh, you mean this mess. Leave it for one @-`, those ecology buffs. A few wrappers and cans tx#)#@, hurt anything." He lifted a pack and slid his under the straps. Wesley was doing the same. Why the big rush to get on with the fun? Cory ,ve)s@i dered. He glanced at Ann, who was being stoististal(i quiet. What was going through her mind? Was as sorry she had tagged along as he was? Who ITI-Mil Maybe she liked being with Miklin, the jerk. Scott turned and cupped his hands to his e-eveita" "Yo, Jay! Are you going to take all night?" From the far end of the chamber came, "Up law "Are they doing what I think they're doing?" TQv' asked. Leslie, sipping at a beer, nodded. "Of course. '11M@ Thorpe is an animal. Stacy says that he likes to do twice a day, three times on Sunday." She shook '1W head in amazement. I don't know how she IT "111 all that screwing. I mean, there's such a thing as much, even with sex." V "How would Terri know?" Wes said, then uproariously at his wit. "That does it," Ann snapped. She stood and Mes; Terri's hand. "Come on. We're going back to the Wgi I've put up with all the insults I'm going to take." 41@" "Ann, wait," Scott said, moving around the 9TIMPIN, to take her hand. "What's with you tonight? Y@111(@, ready to fly off the handle every time Wes opens $11,1 mouth." R I want to go home." "Right this minute? What about the long drive here? What about this being Halloween? Don't want to have a few cheap thrills?" 52 Hefl-O-Ween "No." "Youll spoil the night for the rest of us just because you're ticked off at Wes? I didn't think you were so selfish." Cory saw Ann bow her head and knew the argument had worked. He felt his dislike of Scott growing by the minute. The guy said whatever it took to have his own way. And after that strange look Miklin and Eagen had given him earlier, he didn't trust either of them as far as he could throw the flat boulder. t"All right," Ann said softly. "We'll stay a while longer." "That's my girl," Scott said and pecked her on the cheek. From out of the shadows walked Jay and Stacy, arm in arm, Jay grinning like a little boy who had just successfully naided the cookie jar and Stacy wearing a contented expression. They strolled over to the group, and Jay gazed around in surprise. "Hey, where's the rest of the brews? I'm thirsty enough to drain a well." "Later, big guy," Scott said. "We want to get this show on the road. Put on your pack and grab your flashlight. You can take the lead." "Where to?" Jay responded as he obeyed. "Pick a tunnel. Any one will do." Cory, reluctant to join in the so-called fun, took his time shrugging into his pack. The others had all moved out, Jay and Stacy in the lead, Ann, Terri and Leslie right behind them, when he finally moved away from the boulder. Five yards in front of him were Scott and Wes, whispering and chuckling. What now? he mused. Jay shone his light over the different tunnels as he approached. Without hesitation he entered the third one and took a sharp left. "Watch your head in here," he shouted, ducking low and disappearing. The girls dutifully filed in. 53 David Robbins Scott was almost to the opening when he stopped. So did Wes. They faced Cory, Scott folding his arms, and waited for him to catch up. "Thanks," Cory said, joining them. "We wouldn't want to lose you," Wes said, grinning A from ear to ear. ,X "That's right," Scott said. He suddenly glanced c iver Cory's shoulder as if he had spotted something back in f the chamber. "What the hell is that?" he exclaimed. Cory automatically spun and went to sweep his flashlight from right to left when he was struck in the - small of his back and knocked to his knees. Before he could hope to react the flashlight was roughly snatched from his hand and a shove sent him sprawling onto his stomach. He heard Scott and Wes laughing as he struggled to his knees. They were already gone, vanished down the third tunnel. He could see the glow of theirt! flashlights becoming rapidly dimmer as they sped off. Darkness abruptly enveloped him like a glove. Furious, he rose and darted forward, but in his haste he tripped over his own feet and toppled, throwing his arms out in a vain effort to recover his balance. l'i Too late he realized he was going to smash into the rock rim, and an instant later he did. VxTrIMMI ! MI. pain flared in his forehead and wet drops sp?J"LLT"- s(, onto his cheeks. Dizziness flooded through him. Mj smacked onto the ground, tasted dirt in his mouth osiot'! tried to rise. The dizziness intensified, becoming a Fro MO wave and drowning him in acute vertigo. He saxrg"g again to stand. Then everything faded to black. 54 Chapter Five Ann Weatherby was unhappy. Nothing was going as she had planned, and to make matters worse she was winding ever deeper into the Caverria del Diablo, which was the very last thing she wanted to do. The gloomy confines of the cave gave her the creeps. She longed to be back on the surface but hesitated to raise the issue again since the others would make fun of her. This was what she got for letting Scott talk her out of going up earlier. The five minutes since leaving the big chamber had een spent in following the twisting passages into the very bowels of the mountain. Although the tunnels were wide and the going easy, she felt as if she were in the depths of a monumental tomb and kept imagining what would happen if the ceiling should unexpectedly collapse. When Scott had initially invited her, she had envisioned a pleasant evening of strolling about in passages much closer to the cave entrance. If she had known Scott intended to penetrate into unexplored subterranean regions, she never would have agreed to go. Speaking of the devil, where was he? Ann looked over her shoulder for the third time in the past 30 seconds but still saw no sign of Scott, Wes or Cory, which struck her as strange. Jay and Stacy were only a few feet ahead, Jay's flashlight their only source of illumination. Behind her came Terri and 55 David Robbins Leslie, neither appearing very pleased by the turn of events. But for once Leslie didn't seem to mind being in Terri's company. "How much farther are we going?" Stacy asked her boyfriend. Jay looped a brawny arm around her trim waist and smirked. "As far as you want, babe." Every time Ann saw them acting so lovey-dovey, she felt uncomfortable. Why, she couldn't say. She had nothing against either of them. Jay was a typical jock, Stacy a typical bimbo. She wasn't close to either one although she had talked to Stacy on occasion. "Jay," she now said. Neither of them heard. "Jay!" Ann repeated, louder this time, and halted. The hulking bruiser stopped and glanced at her. "What is it, Weatherby?" "Where are the others?" "Huh?" Ann pointed back the way they had come. "There's no sign of Scott, Wes and Cory. Where could they be?" "I don't know," Jay said in surprise, aiming his beam past her. "I thought they were with us the whole time. Why didn't you say something sooner?" "I kept expecting them to catch up." "Let's go find them," Leslie proposed. "I want to be with Wes." It figures, Ann thought, but made no comment. Wesley and Leslie were flip sides of the same coin, spoiled rich kids who had been born with silver spoons in their mouths. She knew Leslie well. Back in junior high they had been close friends until Leslie developed an interest in boys. "Let me lead," Jay said, stepping around them, Stacy as usual glued to the end of his arm. The flashlight probed into the encroaching darkness, revealing a few 56 Hell-O-Ween stalactites on the ceiling and their distinct footprints in the dust. He began retracing their route. Ann let Terri and Leslie go before her. She brought up the rear, thinking of Cory and hoping he was okay. By all rights she shouldn't care one way or the other, but she did. Even after what he had done, even after keeping her distance from him for years, she still liked him, liked him a lot. Hell, he was practically the brother she never had, living as he did right next door to her. All those times they had played together as kids, all the fun they had. It seemed as if it was only yesterday. What was that? Ann halted and twisted, cer-tain a faint noise had disturbed the heavy silence behind her-a scratching noise, like fingernail scraping along a rock. Could it be the guys? Were they playing some sort of trick? It was Halloween, after all. The scratching wasn't repeated, and she decided she had been mistaken. "Something wrong?" Terri asked, slowing down. "No," Ann said and quickened her pace to rejoin her companions. "I'm just hearing things." "Oh?" Terri peered into the black blanket of e ,mptiness and shuddered as if from a cold wind. "Don't joke about something like that. Not even a little." "Sorry," Ann responded. She saw Jay, Stacy and Leslie negotiate a bend. Instantly the light dimmed, "Whoop . We'd better move it or they'll leave us behind." Terri took one look and gasped. She sped toward the bend as if her life depended on it. Amused by her friend's terror, Ann smiled and ran around the corner. She had to dig in her toes to stop in order to avoid colliding with Terri and the other girls. A few feet away stood Jay, his flashlight trained on the cave floor. "What the hell!" he blurted, as he crouched to touch the ground. "This is impossible." 57 David Robbins Ann joined the rest in moving forward. She stare over Jay's broad right shoulder, realized why he wa so upset and recoiled in shock. Logic told her she musi be wrong, but they had gone less than ten yards since@ turning around and the tunnel had not forked. This' was the passage they had followed since leaving the huge chamber. She was sure of it. "I don't understand," Leslie said. "What's the big deal?" "The floor," Jay said, his voice stnained. "Look at the floor!" Leslie did. "I am. So?" "So where the hell are our footprints?" Comprehension made Leslie cover h6r mouth wit@ her hand and mumble, "Oh, my God!" Jay rose and took a few steps, his beam roving ahea of them to reveal that for as far as the light extende the floor was the same-coated with a layer of undi turbed, smooth dust. "I just don't get it," he said. "This is the right tunnel," Stacy said, touching le hand wall. "I know it is." Terri fidgeted nervously. "Let's just keep going, okay,The sooner we get the hell out of here, the bette@111 III feel." "Yeah," Leslie said. "And we have to find Wes and@ the other guys. Don't forget them." "Come on," Jay said, beckoning with a wave. "And stay close. I don't want to lose anyone else." Once again Ann was the last one in line. She hugged TerTi's heels, her mind awhirl as she tried to make sense of the unfolding events. Maybe those blockheads Scott and Wes had planned the whole thing. Maybe sl they had somehow erased all the footprints. If so, how could they have done it? With a broom, by sweep'Mgt dust over the tracks? Possibly, she reasoned, but n one had brought a broom into the cavern. Then anot er idea blossomed. What if Scott and Wes had visite 58 @i Hell-O-Ween the cave earlier in the week and stashed the broom and additional items for later use? They were notorious practical jokers, and she wouldn't put anything past them. Convinced she must be tight, she - mentioned her deduction to the others. "You know," Leslie responded, "Wes has been hinting that he planned something special for tonight. And I know Scott was in on it but they wouldn't breathe a word to me." "They have been whispering together a lot lately," Stacy said, "and a stunt like this would be right up their alley." "I have news for those two," Jay announced. "I don't like having tricks played on me. Wherever they are, when I get my hands on them they're going to be a pair of very sorry troopers." "Where the hell are we?" Wesley snapped, flashing his light at the varied columns and formations adorning the chamber in which they found themselves after hiking for 15 minutes. "More importantly," Scott countered, "where the hell are Jay and the girls? We should have caught up with them by now." "Beats me," Wes said, his annoyance transparent. He couldn't see how they had lost Godzilla and the foxes. One minute they had shoved that geek Fleming to the ground and left him in the dark without a flashlight, and the next they had raced along the passage after Jay and the rest. They should have rejoined the others within a minute or two at the most. Yet here they were, all alone. The thought disturbed him. "Hey, I have an idea," Scott said, turning his beam on the floor. He searched every square inch of the cavern, then looked at Wes. "The only tracks here are ours. "How can that be?" Wes said. "We didn't pass any 59 David Robbins fork " Ls. "I know." Confounded, Wes also scoured the ground in all directions, then stepped closer to Scott and locked eyes. -There must have been a fork that we didn't see. Either that, or those airheads are playing a joke on us." "Well retrace our steps until we find their tracks, then follow them," Scott said and started off. "I should have thought of this sooner." "We can't all be Cory Fleming," Wes remarked and laughed. Confident they would soon be reunited with the others, he whistled as he walked and ran the two flashlights he held over the walls and ceiling. Scott noticed the twin beams shooting overhead. He glanced over his shoulder, his mouth curling downward. "Put Fleming's flashlight in your pack. There's no sense in letting two batteries go dead at the same time." "You said that you brought spares," Wes noted. Two," Scott revealed, "but only one is brand new. So save the light for when we really need it." Wes flicked off the extr-a flashlight and began to remove the backpack. The tone of voice Scott had used rankled him, but he held his tongue. Sometimes, he, reflected, his good buddy Scott was a bit too bossy fo his taste. Not often, but usually when they were strun out, and Scott seemed to be slightly nervous now. B it wasn't worth fighting over, not when doing so mig turn Scott against him, forcing him to go elsewhere fo his candy-which reminded him. "Hey, any chance getting some stuff'X' "Later, Wes. This is more important." "I could really use some." "Youpre always ready to blast," Scott said. He chuc led. "Your darrm nose is like a bottomless pit. I've neve seen anyone go through snow like you do." 60 Hell-O-Ween "I have the money." "It's not the green, dude," Scott said impatiently and stopped. Hands on his hips, he rotated and stared at Wesley as he might a misbehaving child. "Don't you get it yet? We're lost." . "Like hell we are!" Wes said, finding the notion laughable. "We just took a wrong turn somewhere, that's all. We'll find our way out easy." "We won't if you get high. And what about Leslie?" "What about her?" "You wanted to screw her tonight, right? isn't that what you've been telling me all week? How you couldn't wait to get her alone down here and get your rocks off?" "Yeah. So?" Wes rejoined, not certain he liked having it rubbed in his face. The sexual aspect of his relationship with his girlfriend was personal. He might brag about her every so often, but no one else had the right to talk about her as if she were a common slut. "So we have to get her home by midnight," Scott was saying. "Every minute we waste is less time you can spend with her. if you want me to sell you the coke right this second, fine. But don't blame me if you don't have time for Leslie later." "I can wait for the snow," Wes said, struggling to keep his resentment from showing. "Good," Scott said. He resumed backtracking, his flashlight clearly revealing the prints they had made on the way into the tunnel. Wes sullenly tramped along behind. This was the first time Scott had ever refused to sell him coke, even temporarily, and he took the refusal as a personal insult. After all the money he had spent on the stuff, after all the bread Scott had made off of him, he felt it was his right to be granted coke on demand. Maybe he should find another source. It would serve Scott right. 61 David Robbins He unzipped the top of the backpack and stuffed the extra flashlight inside, then zipped it back up. Slipping into the straps, he settled the pack on his back again. His anger gradually subsided the farther he walked. Thinking about ditching Scott for another dealer was all well and good except for one small detail-Scott was the only dealer he knew. Pagosa Springs was hardly the drug capital of the Western Hemisphere. Until Scott came along, those who wanted grass or coke had to go all the way to Durango. Wes had never gone in for the stuff himself, not until Scott taught him the ropes. Scott had taught a lot of them the ropes. With his slick Eastern ways, his Massachusetts cool as it were, Scott had become the center of his very own clique shortly after arriving in Colorado. And soon Scott had offered those he could trust delights they couldn't buy at the corner drugstore. Wes had been honored to be considered as one of Scott's best friends. He'd grown to admire the glib, friendly Easterner who had an answer for everything and whose motto could be summed up as, "Party untTi you drop!" For Wes, who had become a bit bored by life and the same old dull daily routine, Scott was a godsend. Wes found his horizons broadened like never before, found a new thrill in simply being alive. So maybe staying pissed off at Scott wasn't such a great idea. He trudged quietly along, contenting himself by daydreaming about what he intended to do with Leslie later and reminiscing about their past marathon bouts in the sack, when suddenly Scott called out sharply. "Hey, look at this!" Wes glanced up to find that Scott had stopped at a point where the passage turned to the right and was closely examining the wall on the left. "What did you find?" he asked, stepping for-ward. 62 Hell-O-Ween Scott merely nodded at the spot he had examined. The wall wasn't a wall after all. It was a passage, narrow at the bend but wider farther in as their flashlights plainly revealed. The tunnel from the huge chamber had indeed forked, but so abruptly that someone in a hurry might well miss it. In their eagerness to outdistance Fleming so he would be stranded in the dark, and laughing their heads off as they had been, they had gone right by it. "Damn," Scott muttered, turning his beam on ground. Plainly revealed were the tracks of their companions, all pointing deeper into the cavern. "So this is where we lost them." He turned his flashlight to the right. Not 20 feet away was the entrance to the chamber. "They must be on their way back by now," Wes said. "Maybe we should wait for them on that big boulder where we ate the munchies." "And what if they don't come back? What if they find another way to the surface? Let's pick up the pace, and we'll over-take them in no time," Scott suggested, moving out before Wes could comment. "Say, what do you think happened to Fleming?" "Since he didn't take the same tunnel we did, he's probably rejoined Jay and the girls by now." The idea bothered Wes. He didn't like the notion of that geek being with Leslie while he wasn't around. Who knew what the bastard might say to make him look small in her eyes? "Go a little faster," he prompted. They hurried then, discovering the passage twisted and turned like none they had encountered so far. One minute it bore to the right, the next to the left. They had the footprints to guide them and made excellent progress. Wes was gleefully envisioning how he would break Fleming into tiny pieces if Cory had badmouthed him 63 David Robbins to Leslie, when he saw Scott stop on the proverbial dime, then glance at him in confusion. "What do you make of this?" The tracks they had been following ended-not at a fork or a side passage or the entrance to a room or chamber, but right there in the middle of the tunnel. Ahead lay a gray mantle of undisturbed dust. "I don't know what to make of it," Wes admitted. "They couldn't just vanish into thin air," Scott said, scouring the passage. Wes turned to the left and right, his eyes narrowing when he spied something lying at the base of the wall, some bundled material of some sort. He stepped nearer to pick it up, coughing as the material unf6lded in his grasp and spewed dust all over him. It appeared to be a large square piece from an old blue blanket, about the size of a dish towel and coated with dirt, its edges frayed. "Hey," he said. Scott turned, then snatched the blanket and studied it under his light. "That son of a bitch," he snapped. "Who?" Wes responded, confused. "Who else? Cory Fleming." "Huh?" "Sometimes, good buddy, you can be as dense as a brick," Scott said and sank to one knee. He began vigorously rubbing the dirty blanket over the last set of trucks, in seconds totally obliterating them and restor- ing the floor to it normal dusty condition. A light bulb went off in Wes's mind, and he balled his left fist. "The dork found that thing and used it to erase the rest of the print." Scott nodded. "Fleming must have seen we took a wrong turn, and he's trying to pay us back for the trick we played." Scowling, he threw the piece of blanket down in disgust. "The prick probably found this in that big chamber." "Yeah," Wes said, then was bothered by a doubt. 64 Hell-O-Ween "But how did he find it without a flashlight? How did he see we took that turn without a light?" "Hrrimmm," Scott said, rising. "You know, I wouldn't put it past that digithead to have brought his own flashlight, one of those kind you can buy about the size of a pencil." .So he could hide it in his pocket and we'd be none the wiser," Wes declared, admiring the dories resourcefulness despite himself "When I get my hands on that creep he's going to be sorry he messed with us." "First we have to catch him," Scott said, pivoting. "I say we jog from here on out. Since they're walking we should spot their lights in less than five minutes." "Go for it, brother," Wes urged and broke into a dog trot. As the first-string quarterback he was in superb physical shape. Daily he nan anywhere from three to five miles. On alternate days he pumped weights for half an hour. Also, he rigorously stuck to a regimen of calisthenics that heightened his stamina and agility. The tunnel continued to wend along like a gigantic coiled snake, with numerous switchbacks and curves, the width occasionally narrowing drastically, then broadening out again. As usual a sluggish cool breeze fanned the air. Wes, gazing over his friend's shoulder, spied yet another bend. He took it, jogging hard, and had to step nimbly to one side in order to keep from ramming into Scott's back when Scott halted without warning- "Why'd you-?" he began, then spotted the reason and gaped in astonishment. "This can't be," Scott said. Wes had to agree. For ten feet in front of them, completely blocking off the passage, was an immense rock slab. He advanced, running his flashlight &er the edges to see if there were any gaps large enough for a person to squeeze through. The slab fit as snugly as a door. 65 David Robbins Scott searched the walls on both sides. "This is a dead end," he said, sounding shocked. "There are no other tunnels." "We must have missed another lousy fork," Wes said. "They certainly didn't come this way." "No, they couldn't have," Scott agreed. At that very moment, from the other side of the massive slab, faint but nevertheless distinct, came a chilling sound that caused goosebumps to break out all over both of them-the piercing scream of a terrified young woman. 66 Chapter Six A. tidal wave of sheer pain pounded at Cory Fleming's head, the first sensation he became aware of as he struggled back to full consciousness. His eyes blinked open, and it was like gazing at the sky on a black as pitch night when clouds totally obscured the moon and the stars. An inky void enveloped him. He might as well be adrift in deepest, darkest space or at the very bottom of the sea where no light could penetrate. For a moment he blinked in confusion, disoriented, wondering where he was and how he got there. His memory returned with a vivid rush and he sat up. immediately, he regretted his rash action. The pain flared, becoming infinitely worse, the pounding like the beating of a drum; only in this case the dnrm was his brain. An involuntary gasp escaped his lips. He reached up and touched his forehead, flinching when his fingers contacted a ragged gash over two inches long and a quarter of an inch wide. Dried blood caked his lower brow, part of his nose, and had formed into thin streaks down across his cheeks and chin. How long had he been unconscious? He tried to read his watch but failed, although slowly but surely his eyes were adjusting to the murky conditions and he could distinguish various large shapes on the floor of the cavern. Rock forrnations, he deduced. He was grateful his glasses were still intact. Without 67 David Robbins them he would be completely helpless, unable to see his hand in front of his face. Wincing from the effort, he slowly stood and took stock. The flashlight was gone. He still had a backpack but had not examined it yet and had no idea what might be inside. For all he knew the pack might be crammed with a bunch of rags or whatever else Scott and Wes had tossed in to make him think he was carrying food or something else worthwhile. Scott and Wes. Thinking of them made his blood boil. They'd set him up, set him up but good. The whole thing must have been planned from the beginning as some sort of juvenile Halloween prank. Thanks to them he was stranded in the depths of the Caverna. del Diablo. It would take hours to find his way to the surface. Who was he kidding? It might take days. He aligned his glasses on his nose and turned. Before him loomed the three gaping maws of the various tunnels. Which one had the others taken? He believed it was the third one. But which one had brought them into the cavern in the first place? He remembered they hadn't bothered to check because Scott had made some comment about relying on their tracks to find their way out again, which put him in a bind. He certainly couldn't locate footprints in the dark. The gravity of his situation hit him then. Stark panic clutched at his soul. What if he never found his way out? What if he wandered along endlessly until he succumbed to hunger and thirst? What if the others intended to leave him there, to ride back to Pagosa Springs and never tell a soul where he was? He pressed a hand to his injured brow, willing him- self to calm down. Surely Ann wouldn't allow the rest to just ride off and abandon him. She would convince them to mount a search. At the very least she would 68 Hell-O-Ween tell his parents when she got back to town. Unless- A staggering thought caused him to close his eyes and groan, Could it be possible Ann was in league with Scott and Wes? Did that explain why she had invited him along in the first place? Was she the bait Scott and Wes had used to lure him into their little trap? if so, the plan had worked perfectly, all because deep down he still cared for her, indeed had carried a torch for her since childhood. Ann had probably sensed how he felt and mentioned it to Scott. He felt like the world's prize idiot. When word of the ruse got around school, which it was certain to do since Wes and Scott would be unable to resist the temptation to brag, he'd become the laughingstock of Pagosa Springs. His stupidity in falling for the trick would serve to confirm his reputation as a dork, and he could expect a whole new round of jokes about his manliness and character to spread by word of mouth among his peers. His panic was replaced by anger at the deception, and the angrier he became the less panic he felt. Opening his eyes again, he stepped toward the first two tunnels. He had an important decision to make, one that might make the difference between survival and the unappealing alternative. Which tunnel would take him to the surface? Was it the first or the second one.) Cory knelt and lightly ran his fingers over the ground at the bottom of each opening, trying to find footprints. The task proved hopeless. He thought his hand brushed a few shallow ridges here and there, but he wasn't certain. There were no evident marks that confirmed the presence of tracks. He would have to rely on logic instead of evidence. Standing, he moved from opening to opening, trying to deter-mine if there was a difference in the air current that might give him a clue. He got the impression that 69 David Robbins the air coming out of the first tunnel was cooler than the air around the mouth of the second tunnel, which might mean the first tunnel was more directly linked to the outer world where at that moment the Rockies were enveloped by the chill of night, especially at the altitude of the cave entrance. Cory hesitated, afraid of making a mistake. He took several steps into the first tunnel, then backed out and went a few feet into the second. Once more he backed out and looked at the third. Maybe it would be smarter to try and overtake the others. They had flashlights, they had food. So what if they would laugh their heads off? So what if they made fun of him? Like hell they would! He stepped to the first passage and boldly entered, staying in the center where there was less likelihood of bumping into an obstacle. The walls were blank slates, the ceiling invisible. Thanks to the layer of fine dust on the ground, the course of the cave floor formed a pale ribbon stretching away into seeming emptiness. It was surprisingly easy to follow. Cory thought about opening his pack to check the contents but opted to hold off until he stopped to rest. If he was lucky, if he didn't become lost, if he didn't slip and break a leg or worse, he might reach the surface in an hour-an hour and a half, tops. If not, he would hike until he dropped. The silence became oppressive. Except for the shuffling of his feet, the cavern was like a tomb. He listened intently, hoping against hope to hear distant voices. The tunnel mocked him with its eerie stillness. It was hard to imagine that on the surface teemed a lush world vibrant with life, with ceaseless motion and bright colors and continual sounds. The Cavema del Diablo was like another world, a nether realm of eternal quiet undisturbed by all the activity up above. Small wonder that the early Spaniards and 70 Hell-O-Ween the Indians had regarded it with awe and fear. He walked and walked, looking for spots he must have passed on the way down. Nothing was familiar. How far he went he had no idea. He was on the verge of turning around in the belief he had picked the wrong passage when he came to a room he vaguely thought was one the group had passed through earlier. In the dark positive identification was impossible. He had to rely on his best judgement, and his judgement told him to press onward. Cory became thirsty but ignored the sensation. He couldn't ignore the pain in his head, which to his relief had dwindled to a dull ache. Periodic twinges made him grimace. Otherwise, he felt fine. Over and over he told himself that soon he would be back on the surface, soon he would either be on his way to Pagosa Springs with the chumps who had played this dirty trick on him or else he would get a roaring fire going and wait until daylight to begin the long hike back if the jeeps were gone. He rounded a curve, then halted in astonishment. Before him unfolded a wondrous room where the ceiling glowed dimly, starkly revealing scores of arresting stalactites and stalagmites. He'd heard of such a rare phenomenon but had never before witnessed it. Advancing to a blunt stalagmite the size of a stool, he sat down to admire the golden glow and take a short break so he could examine his backpack. Suddenly he realized something that caused fleeting anxiety. At no time on the downward trek had they gone through a room remotely resembling this 9011TIP m1=1M *KMT- Mesr;mvjgott@, tunnel. The second tunnel must have been the one that linked the huge chamber to the outer world. Now he either turned around and retnaced his steps or else he kept his fingers crossed and continued in the direction he was going. 71 David Robbins Cory unzipped the backpack and rummaged inside. He found the rope Scott had mentioned, coiled neatly and filling most of the pack, plus a pair of spare batteries. That was it. There was no food, no water, not even beer, which at that point he would have enjoyed if only to calm his nerves. An oversight occurTed to him as he closed the pack. At no time had he thought to ask Scott if water had been brought along. Knowing Miklin as he did, Cory doubted it. Scott had probably only included beer because to Scott beer was the only refreshment that mattered. He tried not to dwell on the fact that the human body could go far longer without food than it could without water. Being three-fourths water itself,'the body required water for every bodily function. If a person went without the precious fluid for more than a few days, severe dehydration would set in, causing symptoms such as nausea, poor mental reasoning and sluggish muscle response. Shouldering the pack once more, Cory started to stand when he saw something move on the far side of the room. For a moment he thought his imagination was getting the better of him, yet when he cocked his head he saw an inky shape flick from one stalagmite to another. His mouth instantly went dry, his pulse raced. It must be an animal, he deduced. But when he slowly stood the shape glided into the open, and he saw it was almost as tall as he was and as thin as a broomstick. No animal had a shape like that. He fought back a surge of raw fear. Gulping, he licked his lips and took a step. The thing, whatever it was, moved a corTesponding distance backwards. His scalped tingled as he took another stride. The creature retreated as before. Was it afraid of him? He became emboldened by the possibility. Perhaps it was an animal after all, and since most wild animals fled on contact with humans he forced his lips apart and 72 Hell-O-Ween called out, "Scat! Get out of here! I don't want you around!" The thing stayed right where it was. Corys newfound resolve evaporated like blood under a scorching sun. He swung his head back and forth trying to get a better view of the creature. Incredibly, the thing seemed to jump to the left when he moved his head to the left and to the right when he moved his head to the right. How could it perform such a feat? he marveled, and the obvious conclusion struck him. No creature known to man was capable of doing so. His whole body tingled now. He began backing up. To his horror, the inky shape stalked toward him. With every step he took, it came closer. Frantic, he glanced around, seeking anything he could use as a weapon. He was shocked to suddenly see similar creatures materialize no matter which direction he looked. His horror became rampant terror, and he whirled to flee. There, blocking the tunnel, was yet another thin figure. "What are you?" Cory screeched and saw the figure bounce up and down with the movement of his glasses on his nose. How could that be? He reached up to adjust his glasses and felt a smooth substance on the temple piece, a coating that covered an inch or better of the metal. Understanding burst like a nova in his mind, and he tossed back his head and laughed. His glasses! His stupid glasses! He removed them and touched both lenses. On the right one he found a thin line of dried blood from the wound in his forehead. There was the explanation. It had been right in front of his eyes the whole time, so to speak. In the dark of the tunnel the line had been invisible, blending into the surrounding darkness. But here, in the dimly lit room, the line had seemed to have a life of its own because he had deceived himself into 73 David Robbins thinking the thin shape was much farther away than it actually had been. Cory laughed again, feeling the nervous tension disappear. He raised a finger to his mouth and licked it, then applied the moisture to the lens, rubbing vigorously. Several times he repeated the procedure, finally using the bottom of his sweat shirt to wipe both lenses clean. Satisfied, he perched the glasses on his nose, spun around and resumed walking. At the opposite end of the room was another passageway, quite narrow and black. He hesitated, uncertain, until a puff of cool air reminded him there must be a means of attaining the surface somewhere ahead. Onward he went. I The walls brushed his shoulders every few strides. Somehow he got the feeling the cave floor underfoot had not been trod on in ages although he had no real proof. Overhead the ceiling sank lower and lower, giving him the impression he was walking through solid rock. A sense of hopelessness closed in on him and he battled back with humor: Here I am! Cory Fleming, the human mole! The envy of mice and shrews everywhere! He laughed, but the laugh sounded flat and hollow. Not far along he noticed a change in the tunnel that made his spirits soar. The ground tilted upward! . He became certain that every step he took brought him that much closer to the surface. In confinnation a stiff breeze started to fan his face. He smiled for the first time in hours and quickened his pace, confident he would be stating up at stars any minute. The tunnel climbed and climbed. Cory noticed the walls were farther apart. The ceiling was again lost in the shadows. An opening of some sort, a great Stygian hole, presented itself as the floor became level. Boldly stepping through the opening, he halted and gazed about for the exit he believed lay 74 Hell-O-Ween close at hand. The full magnitude of the astounding vista numbed his brain, rendering him speechless; his senses staggered, his mind incapable of functioning. A chamber of tremendous magnitude stretched ahead as if to the far horizon, more like a world unto itself than a section of a cavern. The ceiling, as in the room earlier, radiated unearthly light. So did the floor, which was not a floor at all but resembled the Grand Canyon in its breadth and scope, with countless ravines and small canyons forming an alien landscape. Gargantuan spires reared higher than any skyscraper ever built, mingled among stone arches and outlandish forms that added to the spectral atmosphere. "I must be dreaming!" Cory blurted, able to think again although he felt dazed and weak at the knees. He put out a hand and leaned on the side of the opening. Why was it he had never heard of this magnificent chamber before? How could it go undiscovered over the decades? The truth slammed into him with the brutal force of a sledge hammer; no one else had ever been in this part of the Caverna del Diablo. He moved tentatively forward, his gaze roving over the grand scenery. Without warning his right foot bumped an object in his path and he absently looked down, expecting to see a rock or a mound of earth. A skull grinned up at him. Cory staggered backward as if drunk until his back collided with the wall. Stupefied, he gaped at a ten-foot square area covered with skeletons; scores of bones formed a carpet over ten inches high mingling with other objects. Beyond the appalling collection was a sheer drop-off to the floor of the chamber hundreds of feet below. A few bones perched on the very edge, ready to plunge into the abyss with the slightest nudge. He blinked in amazement, then realized he was holding his breath. Slowly he relaxed. His mind kicked into gear, and he started to logically assess the situation. 75 David Robbins There were 14 skulls he could see on top, perhaps more buried in the mass. All of the bones had been picked clean of flesh and were as white as ivory. Inhaling deeply, Cory stepped forward. He saw a golden helmet lying a few feet to his left. Shocked, he recognized it from history books he'd read and movies he'd seen; the helmet was the kind worn by Spanish conquistadors, those intrepid explorers who had penetrated deep into North America centuries ago, in search of the fabled Seven Cities of Cibolla where reputedly Indians lived in opulent splendor. Near the helmet was a sword. A yard away, jutting upward from the mass, was the top of a tarnished breastplate. He took another pace. Farther in, lying on top of the bones, was an ancient stone tomahawk of the type used by the Indians who had first inhabited the Rookies. Next to it was what appeared to be a large wooden club. He halted, his toes almost touching the skull he had bumped, and tried to make sense of the strange assortment. There must an explanation! he told himself. As one who had always taken pride in his scientific ability and his logical reasoning, he was convinced that every problem, every puzzle, could be solved through the use of keen intellect. This instance would be no different. Quite obviously the skeletons were from men who had entered the Caverna del Diablo and never made it back to the surface. He knew both the Spaniards and the Utes were known to have visited the cave. These bones, then, were all that remained of the brave conquistadors and warriors who had contributed to the legend of the infamous cave by vanishing within its depths. But why were they all piled here at the very edge of the staggering precipice, overlooking the mysterious realm below? Surely not every single man had made it this far only to die on the spot. Someone must have brought the bodies here. Who? And why? 76 Hell-O-Ween H& squatted to examine the skull. Not being an expert, he couldn't determine its age, but he did notice something peculiar. Faint scratch marks covered the skull from crown to chin, some a quarter of an inch deep as if they had been gouged out with a knife or steel nails. A leg bone nearby was even stranger. Not only were there scratch marks, but there also appeared to be teeth marks ringing a section where the bone had been cracked. Evidently animals had gotten to the them. Thoroughly mystified, he stood. So far as he knew the cave did not contain wildlife. So what had gnawed on the bones and scratched the skulls? Giant mice? He chuckled at his joke and scanned the area again, seeking clues he might have missed. His gaze strayed out over the chamber. He admired a towering spire, saw an arch twice the size of his home-and then tingled from head to toe when he detected something moving. Cory's eyes narrowed. He must be imagining things again, he told himself. There couldn't possibly be a living being down there. Then he saw the thing move once more. Perhaps a quarter of a mile away, at the base of a canyon wall in deep shadows, a creature was definitely in motion. The distance prevented him from noting details. He could only tell it was big and walking on two legs, and that fact alone caused his heart to beat madly. If the thing was on two legs, it must be human. The only large animals in Colorado that did so were bears, but very infrequently. Could there be people living below? All kinds of crazy thoughts raced through his head. What if there was a lost tribe of Indians living in the cave, a tribe that had entered ages ago and decided to stay? Or what if it was a prospector? The Rockies were home to many colorful hermits who lived way off by themselves in the remotest regions and scratched out 77 a meager existence by panning for precious metals. Maybe one of them was exploring the nether region or had taken to living there. If so, how had the man reached the bottom? Cory could see no means of reaching the chamber floor. No single rope would be long enough; dozens would have to be used. Unless a person could sprout wings and fly like a bird, it seemed impossible. He cupped his hands to his mouth to call out in the belief that a prospector would help him reach the surface. An inner sensation stopped him, though, an inexplicable feeling of imminent danger. Sudden cold seized him. Annoyed by his foolishness, he opened his mouth. The creature in the canyon stepped into the open. Cory took one look, gasped and fled back along the tunnel as fast as his legs would carry him. 78 Chapter Seven "Did you girls hear something?" Jay Thorpe asked, certain he had detected a scraping noise from somewhere up ahead. He aimed his flashlight down the passageway but saw nothing out of the ordinary. "Not me, babe," Stacy said, giving his brawny hand a playful squeeze. "I didn't," Leslie said. Jay glanced at Ann and Terri. Both shook their heads. "I guess it was nothing," he told them and resumed hiking toward the chamber, where he expected to find Scott, Wes and Cory, eating and laughing merrily at the great trick they had played. Well, they'd be laughing out of their ears after he got through with them. "How much farther, honeybuns?" Stacy asked. "I don't know," Jay admitted, then added to reassure her, "Not far, I bet." "Hope you're right," Stacy said. "This whole deal has turned into a major drag. I'm not having any fun, and I'm royally pissed." "You're not half as pissed off as I am," Leslie snapped. "Wes should know better than to pull a stunt like this with me! I'll rip the sucker's eyes out." She grinned wickedly. "Better yet, I won't let him lay so much as a finger on me for the next month or so. I'll have him climbing the walls and begging for a little nookie." "I wonder--2' Ann said, then stopped. "You wonder what?" Leslie prompted. 79 I can see Scott and Wes playing a dumb joke like this, but never Cory. I wonder if he's really in on it." "He's not with us so he must be with Wes and Scott," Leslie said irritably. I suppose," Ann said, not sounding in the least convinced. Jay was growing weary of their constant chatter. Having to listen to one female ramble on as Stacy was prone to do often taxed his patience to its limits. Listening to four was enough to drive any guy up the wall. He suddenly heard the scratching, louder this time, leaving no doubt in his mind. "Hey, I heard that," Stacy said. "Me, too," Leslie confirmed. "What the hell was it?" "Probably Scott and Wes and more of their damn games," Terri said bitterly. "If I could, I'd punch their lights out. I'm sorry I ever agreed to come." Leslie glanced at her. "No one twisted your arm, girlie. You came because Ann came. The two of you'. are Siamese twins." "We are not," Terri responded. "And don't call me girlie." With a sigh Jay stopped and turned. "Give me a break, ladies," he said, attempting to keep his irritation under control. "Here I am trying to find a way out of this mess and all you do is ta-" He abruptly broke off, listening to a peculiar dull thud from farther along the tunnel, like the sound produced when a kicker punted a football only much louder. The girls were all frozen, Terri with her mouth hanging wide open. "Must be those sons of bitches," Stacy said after a bit, sliding closer to her hulking boyfriend. "I'll kill Wes!" Leslie declared. "I really will." "You% have to wait your turn," Ann said. "Come on," Jay growled and inadvertently almoyanked Stacy off her feet when he whirled and stormed 80 along the passageway, pulling her in his wake. He'd had enough of the practical jokes. in a couple of minutes they would be back at the big chamber. Then those clowns were going to pay the piper. As was often the case when Jay became angry, he thought of nothing else but the cause of his anger and how he would vent his temper. He paid scant attention to the tunnel as he hiked the next 100 yards. Suddenly his beam struck a solid object directly in their path, and he halted in surptise. Damned if that didn't look like a wall, he reflected. But that was impossible. He resumed walking, his flashlight trained on the spot, and was within 20 feet of it before he realized the awful truth. Stunned, he stopped. "What the hell is going on?" Stacy asked. "This is a dead end." "It can't be," Ann said. "We didn't pass any turnoffs. This is the tunnel we were following." "You're crazy," Leslie disagreed. She walked up and gave the rock wall in front of them a solid thump with her fist. "What did this do? Pop out of nowhere?" The only possible answer gave Jay a case of the willies. He touched the smooth surface, racking his brain for another explanation. The first to admit he had never been much of a heavy thinker, he now taxed his mental powers to their limit in an effort to come up with another solution. But there was none. He had to try twice before he could speak. "Someone put this here." "Are you stoned?" Stacy responded, snickering at the insane notion. "Never straighter," Jay said. "Somebody deliberately blocked off the tunnel with this thing. Remember those scratching noises we heard?" Leslie uttered a brittle laugh. "Is this a joke? If it is, I don't like it." Jay twisted, sweeping the beam over the slab. A cool 81 David Robbins breeze struck him as he faced to the left, and he was amazed to behold the opening to another passage. One of the girls gasped. Stacy pressed herself into his side, her nails biting into his bulging biceps. "That wasn@t here before," Terri said in the tone of a little child scared to death of the dark. "I'm positive." "So am I," Jay said. :,Maybe Scott and Wes set this up," Leslie suggested. 'Get real," Ann replied. "That slab must weight tons. How did they move it?" "I don't know," Leslie snapped. "But you can't tell me that someone else just happened to come along and put the damn thing here. Either Scott and Wes were responsible or we took a wrong turn somewhere." "The main question," Terri interjected, "is what do we do now?" Jay had been pondering the same problem. Should they turn around and continue in the tunnel they had been following? Or should they take this new passage and keep their fingers crossed that it led them to the big chamber or up to the surface? He presented the choice to the girls. "We take this new one," Leslie answered first. "No!" Terri blurted. Leslie glanced sharply at her. "What the hell is the matter with you? I'm getting sick of the way you're acting. If you're so scared, why don't you bury your head in the ground like an ostrich and wait until we send someone down to bring you back?" Ann put a hand on Terri's shoulder and glared at Leslie. "Leave her alone." "Sheehan's little protector," Leslie said sarcastically. She was on the verge of adding another insult or two when an iron hand clamped on her foreann and applied so much pressure that she let out a loud, "Ouch!" "Enough is enough," Jay stated, releasing his hold. "In case it hasn't hit you yet, Les, we're in trouble. 82 Hell-O-Ween Something really weird is going down. Like my coach is always telling us guys on the football team, we have to pull together to get out of this mess. So quit picking fights." Leslie seemed about to tear into him verbally, but when she gazed into his eyes she checked herself and simply nodded. "All right," she mumbled. "Just get us the hell out of this stinking place." "I'll do my best," Jay said and turned to Ann. "What do you think? Go back or go on?" "Go on'" Ann said, nodding at the new passage. "The other way will take us farther and farther away from the chamber where we last saw Cory, Wes and Scott. This one might take us back to them." "Please, no," Terri pleaded. "Why not?" Jay inquired. Terri shrugged. "I can't explain it. I just have this odd sort of feeling that if we go down this new tunnel something terrible will happen. Can't we keep on going the way we were?" Undecided, Jay hesitated. Even though he was certain someone had somehow rolled the slab into place, he had no idea what their motive might be. Like Ann, he doubted Wes and Scott had done it. But if not them, who? He guessed it would have taken five or six extremely strong men, maybe more. Out of the blue a possibility occurred to him, and he grinned at his own cleverness. "Maybe we're all worked up over nothing," he said. "How so, honeybuns?" Stacy asked. "It just hit me. What if Wes let others in on the tricks he wanted to play? What if he asked them for help?" "Like who?" "Like a bunch of the guys from the team. They could have followed us up here from town but hung far enough back that none of us saw them." 83 David Robbins "Of course!" Leslie cried. "Those jerks snuck in after us and trailed us all the way down." She laughed and pointed at the rock slab. "And a bunch of those morons would have no trouble moving that thing. They eat raw gorilla hormones for snacks." "III bet you're right," Stacy concurred, her hands on her hips. "Those guys would do anything for Wes, and they'd jump at the chance to pull one over on us." "I'll clobber'em," Jay said, peeved because he hadn't been included in on the practical joke. How dare those bozos play a prank on him! Ann was staring at them in open disbelief. "I don't know," she said. "I'd like to believe you, but it seems to me that Wes and his buddies are going to a lot trouble at our expense. I mean, if it is them, this is the most elaborate prank I ever heard of." "Never underestimate my Wes," Leslie stated proudly. "He has a devious mind. So, for that matter, does Scott. Between the two of those devils I wouldn't put anything past them." Stacy leaned on Jay's shoulder and rose on her toes to peck him on the cheek. "Pretty sharp, handsome, figuring this out. Those idiots who claim that all you have between your ears is muscle don't know what the hell they're talking about." Jay instantly bristled. "Who said so?" "It doesn't matter." "It does to me," Jay snarled, like a grizzly on the verge of attacking. "No one insults me and gets away with it." "I know, honeybuns," Stacy said. "But can you rein in that temper of yours until we're safe and sound back on the surface? Right now I want to get my ass out of here." "if that's what you want," Jay said. Whirling, he stalked into the new passageway, eager to find Wes and wring the S.O.B's neck. He heard Terri utter a 84 Hell-O-Ween low, "No, please!", but ignored her and felt a twinge of guilt in doing so. The tunnel wound to the right into a small room that smelled musty, then slanted to the left and gradually dipped lower and lower. Total darkness obscured the ceiling. Both walls were smooth as glass and reflected the light brilliantly. Engrossed in trying to figure out who had been cutting on him behind his back, Jay paid little attention to his surToundings. It ticked him off to no end that anyone would talk him down in front of Stacy. He knew himself well enough to know that he was teetering on the brink of one of his infrequent rages. Although he always tried to control his temper, at times he went off the deep end, and there was never any way to predict what would set him off. He disliked becoming so mad but was powerless to prevent it. One incident in particular stood out in his mind. He had been 12 at the time, playing baseball with his younger cousin when an older neighborhood kid came by and swiped their bat. The neighbor had teased them, pretending to hold out the bat for them to take and then snatching it away before they could grasp the handle. Once, when his cousin tried to grab hold, the bat smacked into his cousin's knuckles, and the boy had cried out in pain. That was all it took. Jay had barreled into the neighbor like a battering ram, knocking the older kid over and straddling him, then clamping his fingers around the kid's neck and squeezing for all he was worth. The neighbor had wheezed and sputtered and tried to break free, his face turning beet red. If not for Jay@s cousin suddenly stepping forward and pleading for Jay to let go, that neighbor would have been history. Jay knew that, and the knowledge frightened him. He never thought of himself as a violent person. Oh, he loved playing football and bashing heads with other 85 David Robbins guys on the field, but that was different from the wild rages that brought out the worst in him. Football was a sport. His temper was strictly personal. After five minutes the tunnel floor leveled off then climbed. Stalactites adorned the roof. Out of the @loorn a fork materialized. "Oh, great," Stacy said. "Which way now?" Leslie asked as they neared the junction. "This way," Jay said, indicating the right branch. He'd learned his lesson back at the slab. If he put the decision to a vote the girls would debate the choice forever. So to keep them on the go he decided to pick the passages from then on. Past the junction the tunnel widened considerably while the ceiling dipped lower until there was barely three feet between the top of Jay's head and the rock surface. He was sweeping the flashlight back and forth when he spied something lying directly in their path. "Hey, look," he said, moving forward to examine it. Partially covered by dust was an old wooden bow. "That must have belonged to an Indian," Stacy declared. "Remember Fleming told us about a tribe that used to live in these pails? The Utes, I think they were called." "It was the Utes," Ann confirmed. "Maybe we should take it with us," Leslie said. "it might be worth something." Jay straightened. "If you want to lug it around, be my guest. Me, I just want to find the way out." Adjusting the shoulder straps on the backpack to make them more comfortable, he moved out once more. His stomach rumbled, but he ignored the sensation. That was another of his problems. He was always hungry. No matter how much he ate at a single sitting, he'd be hungry again in an hour or two. His mom claimed he had a bottomless pit for a gut. Thinking of her 86 Hell-O-Ween made him smile. He was sorry he had lied to her in order to go out with Wes and Scott; he'd told her he was spending the night at another friend's. Should she call, the friend was going to cover for him by claiming he was asleep. Abruptly, another object appeared. This time it was part of a leather sheath, the colored beads and much of the fringe still intact. "Think this belonged to the same Indian?" Leslie wondered. "Who knows?" Stacy rejoined. "Who cares? Keep going, Jay. We must be close to the chamber by now." He was of the same opinion. The tunnel bad been meandering in the right direction. When a turn loomed before them he bore to the right, then halted in annoyance. Instead of a passage, he found the ceiling lowered to within several feet of the floor, leaving a crawl space barely large enough for a person to negotiate. "Oh, shit!" Stacy said. Jay knelt and extended his right arm. The beam showed him the crawl space ran for as far as he could see, probably farther. "I'll go first," he announced. "Count Me out," Leslie said. "Why?" -rm not about to get down on my hands and knees and make like a marmot. I'll get my clothes all dirty." Stacy laughed. "Would you rather spend the rest of your life in this armpit of a cave? If we don't get out of this naze, I can guarantee that your clothes will be the least of your worries." Leslie mumbled a few words, but by then Jay was s, ,@ t, in e he crawl space and advancing at a rapid clip. The closed confines didn't bother him half as much as what Stacy had said. The damn cave was a stinking Maze, and the farther they went the worse it got. He hoped they'd reach the chamber soon. If they became lost, he'd be embarrassed to the max when a rescue 87 David Robbins party showed up to lead their butts to the :mw Then a disturbing fact occurred to him. No one they were there except for Wes, Scott and Cory. If something should happen to those three, the rest of them would be stranded in the Cavema del Diablo. He shut the thought from his mind as he womil"'t;K4 to advance along the crawl space. If there was 01; lesson he had learned from his years in sports, it that mental attitude made all the difference in is world between winning and losing, success and R ure, persevering and giving up. As the coach of -11 football team was so fond of repeating, "Think - re and kick butt!" In this instance, if he let himsel a bunch of negative thoughts about how helpless they would be if they became stranded, then he wouldn't be functioning at his best and wouldn't work as hard to find a way out. The end of the crawl space abruptly appeared. He could tell there was a chamber or a room ahead and said over his shoulder, "We're almost to the end." "Good," Stacy replied.'"My knees are killing me." Jay reached the end and paused to survey the room illuminated by his flashlight. About the size of the school gym, there were stalagmites and stalactites in abundance plus more strange rock formations. Easing out, he straightened up, then turned to give Stacy an assist. "Damn, it's not the chamber we wanted," Stacy commented as she uncoiled. "We'll reach it soon, babe," Jay said. "We must be close by now." Leslie emerged and brushed dirt from her clothes while scanning their surroundings. "I'm growing sick and tired of all this wandering around. Wes will be lucky if I don't dump him." Jay politely gave Ann a hand, then turned to study the other side for another way out. Across from 4;1@, 88 Hell-O-Ween was a narrow tunnel. "Let's keep going," he prompted and took several strides before a cry from Ann stopped him dead in his tracks. "Where's Terri?" He spun and saw Ann peering into the crawl space, a hand pressed to her throat. "What do you mean?" he demanded, stepping to her side. "She should have been right behind you." Bending over, he aimed the beam down the crawl space and felt his pulse quicken upon discovering it was empty. "Terri? Where the hell are you?" Dust sifted from the ceiling. Otherwise, nothing moved. No one answered. "Oh, God!" Ann exclaimed. "Calm down," Jay advised. "She must be in there. Maybe she hit her head or something. I'll go check." He crawled in and started back. "What about us?" Stacy called. "Stay put. I won't be a minute," Jay promised, moving as fast as he could, his flashlight revealing the trail they had made. Aligned in a row as they had been, it was impossible for him to tell which hand print or scuff mark was made by whom. "Give a yell if you can hear me, Terri!" he shouted but with no result. Where the hell could she be? He figured she had been afraid to enter the crawl space and was still standing at the opening, shivering in her undies. Jay hurried up, not at all pleased at being separated from Stacy. He spied the end ahead and grinned, but the very next moment his grin was erased by a horrifying sound from somewhere far off-the hair-raising sound of a woman screeching at the top of her lungs. 89 Chapter Eight Terri Sheehan had never been so scared in her os= life. One second she had been standing behind Ann, waiting her turn to enter the crawl space, and the next a huge hand had clamped on her mouth from behindt and an arm as hard as solid steel had looped around her stomach and lifted her bodily from the cave floor. Shocked to her core, she had dumbly gawked at the backs of her friends as she was silently spirited away from them at frightening speed. Belatedly, she stirred to terrified life, kicking and thrashing and trying to wrench her mouth free so she could scream. Whoever held her never broke stride, and a second later they rounded a comer and her friends were no longer in sight. No! Terri wailed in her mind. This can't be happening! Tears formed in the comers of her eyes. She pounded the arm encircling her waist to no avail. in a flash of inspiration she gouged her nails into her abductoes flesh-or tried to. Her nails barely scraped the skin. Suddenly the hand over her mouth shifted to cover her nose as well and clamped down even more, cutting off her air. Panic washed over her as she 1 realized the kidnapper was trying to suffocate her. She struggled with all her strength, kicking and scratching madly. In the end all her efforts did was hasten the 90 Hell-O-Ween inevitable. A veil of nothingness enveloped her, and she mercifully faded into oblivion. Terri became vaguely conscious of a swaying motion that became more pronounced as she slowly revived. She was aware of an arm about her waist and that she dangled like a limp rag at the side of whoever had kidnapped her. Grateful to be alive, she held herself still and took stock. The hand had been removed from her mouth so she could scream if she wished, but something told her that if she did no one would hear and she would arouse the wrath of her captor. They were moving along an inky tunnel at a bewildering speed, so rapidly that a breeze fanned her hair. She was amazed. How could anyone carry her so effortlessly? Not even Jay could do it. Thinking of him and his great rippling muscles almost prompted her to scream anyway. If anyone could save her, he was the one. She could hear her kidnapper breathing heavily. Every now and then he would grunt. An unusual odor tingled her nostrils, similar to the scent of a new leather coat only ten times stronger. Her left hand brushed against her abductors leg and she was startled to feel bare skin. Was he naked? Was it a pervert who lurked in the Caverna del Diablo and preyed on young girls? Grisly images of what he might do to her made her close her eyes and tremble. Her captor abruptly halted. Terri, petrified, held her breath. Had he felt the movement and suspected she had revived? A hand touched her hair, and she nearly recoiled in dread. Long fingers stroked the strands, then a fingernail lightly scraped her neck. It was replaced a second later by warm breath. Inadvertently, she trembled again. The kidnapper uttered a sound remarkably like the rattling of a sidewinders tail, then resumed walking. 91 David Robbins Relieved, Terri exhaled. How had he done that? wondered. A possible answer crept unbidden into son" brain, but it was so outrageously fantastic that -:14n. immediately chided herself for letting her tion get way out of hand. But how did the n all ITZ-oW,57107=1 Mle, anyone imitatate a rattler -rol, perfectly. The emotionally agonizing minutes dragged by. No wound ever deeper into the Cavema del Diablo. Initially she hoped her abductor would stop soon, until she realized that once he did, he might turn his undivided attention to her. Terri thought of the others and told herself Jay would be on their trail by now. Ann or someone else must have noticed she was missing, and the tracks would be easy for Jay to follow. If she could just hang in there and prevent her kidnapper from doing her harm, before long she would be rescued. She focused on that hope to the exclusion of all else. Her abductor came to a steep incline, and for the next ten minutes or more they descended. The air became warm, almost stuffy. She dared a peek and saw only smooth walls on either side and loose gravel underfoot. Small rocks clattered drown the slope, forming a cloud of white dust that tickled her nose and made her want to sneeze. Fortunately her captor was moving rapidly, causing her to sway harder. She doubted he would notice if she moved her arm, which she now did so she could pinch her nose and keep from giving herself away. As long as he believed she was unconscious, he might leave her alone. Such was her second hope. When, at long last, they reached level ground she was grateful for the respite. Her stomach and shoulders ached and she felt slightly dizzy from having her head upsidedown for so MT17M RTTISTM 11 like that of burnt food. She also felt a strong), willd 92 Hell-O-Ween on her skin. To her surprise, it was positively hot, in sharp contrast to the breeze in the tunnels. Where did it come from? Her kidnapper was flowing over the cave floor at the fastest clip so far. If she didn't know better she would swear he was going 50 or 60 miles an hour. She saw dirt and rocks and a few boulders then belatedly realized there was light somewhere a@ove them. Dim light, to be sure, but at least she could see again. No sooner did she smile than they moved into an area of deep shadow. She had the impression there was a high wall looming on their right. From up ahead arose a faint gurgling noise that grew in volume. The air acquired a dank quality. Just then a cramp lanced her stomach, and she was debating whether to try and shift in her captor's arm to make herself more comfortable when without warning she was dumped unceremoniously on the hard ground. Terri lay still on her left side, her eyelids pressed tight, her body tense, waiting for her captors next move. Shuffling footsteps moved away. She waited until she could no longer hear them, then cracked her eyes open and studied her surroundings. Complete astonishment gripped her. Not ten feet off was an immense pool of what appeared to be yellowish-brown water. At the very center the water bubbled and foamed, the source of the gurgling she had heard. On all sides but one towered sheer cliffs. Massive boulders dotted the vicinity. Overhead, so far up the stalactites seemed like toothpicks, was a ceiling that glowed with an eerie light. She twisted, searching for her abductor, but saw no one. Her throat and mouth were dry, and with the idea of quenching her thirst she crawled to the pool and dipped her left forefinger into the water. Too late she felt the heat. Pain seared through her like a razor-sharp knife, and she jerked her hand back. The water was 93 David Robbins hot enough to boil the flesh from her body! Her poo finger was blistered from the nail to the knuckle. Sh instinctively raised the finger to her lips to suck on i and relieve some of the anguish when it occurred t her that the water might be poisonous. Instead, sh wiped the finger on her pants and held it in her righ hand. Ripples of torment brought home the point Of ho stupid she had been. She knew nothing aboutcaves' but she should know better than to assume any wate she found was drinkable. Satisfying her thi Irst WO I have to wait. The temper-ature in that po I mustt over 150 degrees. Since Pagosa Springs was famous' for its hot springs, she figured the pool must be connected to the same underground system that lured i thousands of tourists every year. She rose to her knees and looked around, aft-ai her kidnapper would return. To her right the cliffs branched out to form a narrow canyon, and at the opposite end, 100 yards away, was a flat, and plain. Obviously she had been brought to the pool through the canyon. If she could get out and find the incline, she might be able to work her way back to her friends. The thought goaded her into running toward the plain. Her legs were wobbly at first, until the circulation was fully restored. Then she sprinted, puffi and huffing, her blouse working its way out of her black skirt. Her heart drummed wildly. Other than the pounding of her shoes the canyon was unnaturally quiet. Her footfalls seemed to echo off the cliffs, adding to her fear because her captor was certain to hear thern. She covered half the distance and began to slo1v down. A sharp pang under her ribs made every stride a grueling effort. This was what she got for being so badly out of shape. If she had bothered to go jogging every afternoon with her mom as her mom wanted, she'd be able to cover the 100 yards easily. 94 Hell-O-Ween Terri faltered, gasping for air, and glanced over her right shoulder. A tremor shook her on spying an enormous figure standing near the pool. Her abductor was back and had seen her! She faced the end of the canyon and pumped her legs in a frenzy of desper-ation, groaning low in her throat at the prospect of being thwarted. Please give me strength! she prayed. Don't let him catch me again! She covered 20 more yards. 30. 40. She was almost out of the murky shadows. Her legs protested every step. Each breath was labored anguish. Her head drooped, her knees threatened to buckle, and she was on the verge of collapse when she glanced up, skidded to a halt and screamed. Her captor stood before her. For the first time she saw him clearly, and the sight shriveled her soul. It was seven feet tall and possessed a physique that radiated raw power. The arms bulged with muscles, and the chest was three times the size of a professional wrestlees. Curved horns crowned its seamed brow. Most distinctive of all was its hideous face a horrid mix of reptilian and human features domina;ed by slanted eyes that blazed with an inner red light. It was completely naked, its skin like that of a snake. But no snake alive had skin the hue like this, a striking red tint the same color as human blood. "Oh, God!" Terri exclaimed aghast. She remembered the figure that had been painted above the entrance of the cave and recognized this creature as the being depicted. Some of the details were different, but this was it, a living, breathing, gruesome nightmare that regarded her coldly and began to lift its right hand. She took a step backwards and saw something move behind the thing, a flicker caused by the waving of a long, thin forked tail. Shaking uncontrollably, she retreated farther. "Please don't hurl me!" she pleaded. 95 David Robbins The creature made no reply, but the fire in its eyes grew more intense. "Please!" Terri repeated and whirled to flee. She took but a single step when fingers that might have been forged from metal closed on her upper arms and she was lifted bodily from the ground and hurled through the air. The cave floor seemed to rush up to meet her. She smashed onto her right side, the breath whooshing out of her lungs, and lay there dazed. Terror pervaded her being. She tried to collect her thoughts and put a hand on the ground to rise. From behind her came a whisper of sound and she was seized again, this time in one mighty arm. She recoiled in anticipation of being thrown but the creature merely carried her toward the pool. Lord, help me! Terri inwardly wailed. How could this be happening to her? Why was it happening? Such creatures couldn't possibly exist. They were supposed to be just legends, beings of myth believed in by superstitious, primitive people in the same vein as dragons and fairies. What did it want? Why had it abducted her? A number of ghastly possibilities occur-red to her, and she had to dispel the gruesome thoughts to retain her self-control, not to mention her very sanity. She would have screamed if not for a firm conviction the creature would become violent once more. When it let go she was unprepared. Still, she managed to land on her hands and knees and kept her head averted from the thing. By the gurgling she knew they were close to the water. What was so special about the spot that the creature came back to it again and again? She heard the soft pad of its feet as it moved to the pool, followed by splashing. Risking a look, she discovered the thing was washing its crimson hands. But how could it bear to touch that scalding water? 96 Hell-O-Ween Flabbergasted, she saw the creature put its palms on the ground and bend down to take long, loud sips. What in heaven's name was it? Terri recalled Leslie making a comment to the effect that the painting above the entrance had looked like the Devil. Indeed this thing did. But it couldn't possibly be the real Satan she had read about in Sunday School and heard the minister refer to in his sermons. The creature suddenly stood and turned. As desperately as Terri wanted to run, she was unable to set her body into motion. Her limbs were mush. Her brain became a vacuum empty of all save pure fear as the being came toward her. She gazed up into its red orbs and wished she would die right then and there. No such luck. Terri whined when the creature sat down beside her, picked her up and deposited her in its lap. She shook violently as it began stroking her hair with one hand while rubbing her back with the other. Bile rose in her throat, and she dreaded being sick. The next moment that became the least of her worries because the thing suddenly put a massive hand on her left breast. She went berserk. Throwing back her head, she screeched like a banshee and clawed at the thing's smooth hand, trying to tear it from her body. Unfazed, the creature gave her breast a slight squeeze, and she nearly fainted. The cavern spun. Dimly, she was aware of its hands roving over her at will. One hand dipped under her skirt, and she feebly tried to stop it from going any further but her effort was in vain. It groped her, exploring between her legs and tugging at her panties. A long nail lightly truced a line from her underwear to her knee. Terri stared numbly at the pool. She wished she would pass out. Barring that, she wished she could enclose her mind in an impenetrable mental vault and not emerge until the creature was done playing with 97 David Robbins her. But she couldn't ignore the hand that had crept under her blouse and was massaging her breasts any more than she could the other hand stroking her legs. She knew what it was up to. There was no denying the obvious. And the obscene abomination was taking its deliberate time, compounding her humiliation. A hand fell on the back of her neck and her head was roughly twisted upward until her face was inches from the creature's. She tried to pull away but was held fast in an unbreakable vise. The thing smiled. Terri saw tapered teeth and smelled fetid breath. She almost gagged. Eyes wide, she beheld its tongue slither out of its mouth, a thin, forked tongue exactly like the creature's forked tail. Nausea welled up within her as the tip touched her lips. She pressed her mouth tightly shut and was again frustrated. The tongue slid into her mouth, filling her with the taste of garlic, entwining with her own, causing her to shudder in disgust. Mercifully, her senses succumbed to the loathsome violation and she finally did faint. How long she was in limbo she had no idea, but when next her eyes opened she blinked in joyous astonishment at finding the creature had gone. The joy was short-lived, though, disappearing a second later when she realized she was stark naked. She sat up, her hand brushing a garment lying at her side. She grabbed it, thinking it was her blouse, but found in her hand a single sleeve. Scattered in profusion all around her were bits and pieces of the rest of her clothing. Without thinking she leaped to her feet and fled, fixing on the end of the canyon as her salvation. If she could only locate a way out of the vast chamber before the thing came back! Suddenly the creature was light there, running at her side as if mimicking her or taunting her. 98 Hell-O-Ween Sobbing, Terri angled to the right. it kept pace for ten yards, then caught her up in both hands and halted. She was elevated until her navel was level with its mouth. Anger flooded through her when the creature's tongue darted out and licked her bellybutton. "Leave me alone!" she shouted, squirming uselessly. "Damn you all to hell!" The creature's mouth twisted in what could only be constructed as a grin. Terri continued to squirm. She gasped when the thing began licking her all over as if she were an oversized lollipop, its tongue running up over her belly, then along her right side to her arm. Her body shuddered uncontrollably and her teeth chattered from aject fear. The monstrosity r-aised its head, then flicked its tongue at her ear. Taking a seat, the creature again let its hands roam over her body, exploring every nook and cranny. Terri twisted helplessly in its grasp. She felt sick and longed to faint once more to spare herself from whatever vile act was to follow. Those leathery hands caressed her shoulders, her neck, her arms. "Please," she mumbled. The thing shifted its attention to her breasts and squeezed until her head swam with pain. "Spare me!" she blubbered, her consciousness slipping. The last sensations she felt before an inky void claimed her was that of having her breasts ripped from her body and the creature's teeth slicing into her throat. 99 Nine No sooner did the screech die away than Jay -9 scrambled to the end of the crawl space and out. His flashlight speared down the tunnel AMVWM@ nothing but the dusty walls andthe ceiling. He several strides, certain Terri was th& one who eme,' screamed and intending to go to her aid. Then 'ITi@ stopped short, his beam revealing a series of on top of those the five of them had made wow enormous tracks that obliterated those twell-o"Mo tracks at least 18 inches long and 12 inches %,itv - Even more remarkable, each footprint exhibited ow three large toes. "What the hell!" Jay exclaimed, crouching to place hand in the center of one of the tracks. His hand wa dwarfed by the impression. Awed, he straightened -1 tried to envision the size of the thing that made go - prints. It must be huge, even bigger than he was. , I it must have Terri. He glanced at the crawl space, uncertain of what do. Maybe, he reflected, the scream and the F M., were more pranks played by Scott and Wes. He We TM at the footprints again. They could have been M.TTm But what about the scream? That had seemed terribl realistic. Something deep down inside told him 'a buddies had not been responsible. And although I mind balked at the notion, he accepted the evidence ja 100 Hell-O-Ween hand and concluded Terri had been taken by whatever made the tracks. Jay began chewing on his lower lip, a habit he had when thinking heavily. Normally he avoided serious pondering on any subject. Give him a brew and his babe and let him play sports whenever he wanted and he was a supremely content trooper. It explained why his performance on the playing field was so outstanding while his classroom performance was mediocre at best. Should he go after Terri? The tracks would be easy to follow. But going after Terri meant leaving Stacy, Leslie and Ann alone. if he took them with him they might find their lives endangered by the thing that took Terri, and under no circumstances whatsoever would he put Stacy in a situation where she was at risk. He loved her more than he did life itself. He gazed along the tunnel and listened but heard no more screams. Reluctantly, he moved to the crawl space and headed back to the other girls. Guilt racked him. He tried not to think of what might be happening to Terri at that very minute. Halfway through the crawl space he debated whether to tell the girls the truth or not. If he mentioned the tracks he might wind up with three hysterical females on his hands, the last thing he wanted. Maybe it would be best to fib. He could always come clean later, and for all he knew he was wrong and Scott and Wes were up to their usual dirty tricks. If he claimed there was some sort of monster in the cave and then later it turned out his friends had pulled a fast one, he'd look like the prize chump of Pagosa Springs Senior High School. The kids at school would never let him hear the end of it. Having made that determination, Jay put a smile on his face as he emerged and found three anxious faces fixed on his. "Miss me?" he quipped. What the hell happened back there?" Leslie snapped. 101 David Robbins "We thought we heard a scream." "Where's Terri? Is she all right?" Ann asked. Stacy promptly added, "Is everything cool, M)$ buns?" Jay forced a laugh. "Whoa, there, ladies. One at -.I,, time." He stepped past them so he could sweep 174 room with his beam. Nothing out of the oteffm on, was visible. Plastering the smile on his lips -I--- - =* he rotated. "Now then, none of you have anything rel', worry about. Terri is gone, but I saw other,relff Me with hers leading back along the tunnel and I Scott and Wes are with her now." "What about the scream?" Ann pressed him. "Did you hear it clearly?" Jay inquired, knowing Mit well the crawl space would have distorted and somINIT-11 the sound. "Not really," Leslie answ ered. "Well, I did. And I can tell you that it was as phony o0t, a three-dollar bill. Right after the scream I heard laughter, and we all know what that means," Jay said. Leslie had the look of a hungry hawk about to down on its prey. "Wes and Scott are playing more their damn jokes! I can't wait to get my hands on -M@ sucker!" "I find it hard to believe," Ann declared, studying P%' critically. "Neither Scott nor Wes cares much for T;;v#l and she knows it. Why would she go along with osw of their juvenile pranks?" "How should I know?" Jay responded with a NiTt"T "You can ask her when we find them." He @;= Met' toward the tunnel across the way, certain Ann didn believe him and not about to let her give him the third degree. Hiking briskly, his nerves on edge, he crossed the room and halted to verify all three girls were right behind him before stepping into the passageway. Fifteen minutes of traveling a twisting course brought them to a chamber containing more stalagmites than ti 102 Hell-O-Ween anywhere else they had seen so far. The high ceiling was vaulted like a cathedral and sparkled when the flashlight struck it. Jay wended his way among the forest of stalagmites feeling more uneasy the farther he went. He tried to convinced himself there was nothing to worry about. If a flesh and blood beast had made those strange tracks, it was undoubtedly far off already, moving in the exact opposite direction. He and the girls had nothing to fear. He was convincing himself of that fact when he rounded a squat stalagmite and halted in consternation on seeing a wide fissure bisecting the middle of the chamber floor. "Damn," he muttered, stepping cautiously to the brink. Eight feet. separated the two sides. He might be able to get a running start and jump the gap, but what about the girls? "Oh, wonderful," Leslie groused. "How are we supposed to get over there?" "We don't," Ann said. "I vote we turn around and go back." "No," Jay responded. "Let's put it to a vote," Ann suggested. "What do the others say?" "None of us have wings so we can forget continuing this way," Leslie said. "We have to!" Jay said sharply, a bit gruffer than he intended. If they retraced their route, they stood a good chance of running into the thing that took Terri. He had to keep the three girls moving in the direction they were going. But how? Leslie had a point. Without wings there was no way they could get across. He swung the beam to the right and the left, seeking a Point where the fissure was not as wide, and instead spotted a stone bridge 15 yards from where they stood. "Look," he said, moving closer, It appeared to be five feet wide, a foot thick and arched in the middle. 103 David Robbins "You've got to be kidding!" Leslie stated. Stacy came up alongside Jay. "Do you really expect us to step out on that? What if it can't hold our weight." "It looks sturdy," Jay said, although secretly he had his own doubts. "To be on the safe side I'll go first." Halting in front of the bridge, he gingerly placed a foot on the pitted surface to test if the bridge would support him. "Do you have a death wish?" Leslie asked. "Not funny,". Stacy said. Jay paid no attention to their bickering. He eased his other foot out and stood stock-still, barely breathing. The bridge gave no indication of imminent collapse so he took another stride, his legs tensed to leap for the rim should he be proven wrong. "Be careful, lover," Stacy urged. He bobbed his chin and eased out farther, his arms at his sides. The flashlight stabbed into the fissure, revealing cracks in the sides and jagged boulders 40 feet below. If the bridge were to buckle and he couldn't reach either rim, certain death would result. He licked his lips, then dared another short step and bumped a pebble that plummeted over the side, clattering when it hit the boulders. Stacy had her hands pressed to her throat. "Oh, God, watch it, Jay," she warned. What did she expect? Jay wondered. That he'd suddenly start break dancing in the middle of the bridge? He grinned at his wit and moved onto the arched portion, treading carefully for fear of slipping. "I can't stand to watch," Stacy declared, covering her eyes. "Let me know if he makes it." "I'll make it," Jay shot back, ruffled by her lack of confidence. The arch was only six inches higher than the rest of the bridge and extended for only a yard. He crossed it quickly, then took a breath and bolted the remaining distance. Once he stood on firm ground 104 Hell-O-Ween again he beamed and motioned at the girls while training the flashlight on the bridge surface so they could see clearly. "All right. Who's next?" "Do we have to?" Leslie asked anxiously. "You sure as hell do," Jay said. "Come on. We don't have all night." "I'll go," Ann offered. "No. Let me," Stacy said. Without warning she rushed onto the bridge, her shapely legs pumping. instead of stepping on the arch she vaulted over it, and when her feet came down the bridge shuddered, cascading dust into the fissure. "Stacy!" Leslie cried. Jay, his heart pounding, had his right arm extended. The instant her hand touched his he gripped her firmly and hauled her off the span so fast she nearly tripped. "Don't ever pull a stunt like that again," he said, inwardly quaking at the mere thought of losing her. "Chill out, handsome," Stacy responded. "You damn near pulled my arm out of its socket." "Here I come," Leslie called out. Facing around, Jay opened his mouth to tell Leslie to take it easy when she suddenly imitated Stacy's example, fear lining her features as she made a mad dash across the bridge. "No!" he blurted, but too late. Leslie also jumped over the arch. Her right foot smacked down first, and all of them heard the loud snap that ensued. She took two more strides, the span splitting and crumbling under her, and executed a frantic leap. Jay caught hold of her arm and pulled her to safety, then stood, aghast, as the section near his sneakers gave way, breaking completely off and tumbling into the fissure. Leslie exhaled in relief. "That could have been me," she exclaimed. "What about Ann?" Stacy asked. 105 David Robbins Jay aimed his flashlight at Ann, who was staring down into the gap at the smashed bits of bridge. The rest of the span was intact but she would have to jump the final three feet to attain the side they were on. "Think you can do it?" he inquired. Ann tentatively moved a few inches out onto the bridge and gave it a close scrutiny. "I'm afraid the whole thing will break off if I try." "You only live once, girlie," Leslie said. "Go for the gusto. I made it. You can, too." Annoyed, Jay turned on Leslie. "If you'd taken your time this wouldn't have happened. Now she's stranded over there, and there isn't a damn thing we can do to help her." I did the same as Stacy," Leslie replied angrily. "Why are you getting on my case and not her@, too?" Rather than answer, Jay played his light over the cave floor, seeking a means of getting Ann across. All he saw were stalagmites and dust. Close by was a stalagmite that had tipped over and broken ages ago, and he walked over to retrieve a large chunk weighing about 15 pounds. "What are you doing?" Stacy asked. "We'll test the bridge to see if it's safe for Ann to use," Jay said, returning to the edge. He hefted the piece of stalagmite, aimed at the center of the span and heaved. The chunk hit with a loud thud. More dust and stone fragments rained into the fissure but the bridge held. "What do you think?" he asked Ann. "I can try," she said, not sounding at all pleased at the prospect. "Tell me, though. Scott mentioned bringing rope on this expedition of ours. Do you have it in your backpack?" "I don't know," Jay said. He quickly stripped off the pack and checked. Inside was plenty of food, a six-pack of beer, a box of wooden matches, a rock hammer and a chisel. "No rope," he announced. 106 Hell-O-Ween "At least we won't starve," Leslie commented. Until that very moment Jay had never quite realized how inconsiderate Leslie could be. He'd always rated her as too stuck-up for her own good, but as he looked up he saw her in a whole new light. She was all smiles because they had eats; Ann's predicament meant nothing to her. Indignant, he said curtly, "You'll get some food when I say you can and not before." "Who died and made you leader?" "I'm the only guy here in case you haven't noticed." Leslie reacted as if he had slapped her on the cheek. "What the hell does that mean? Just because you're a male you get to boss us around? In case you haven't noticed, that macho crap doesn't cut it anymore. If I get hungry I'll eat whether you like it or not." "Go ahead and try," Jay invited her. The growl in his voice made Leslie take a step backwards. She glanced at Stacy and snapped, "What is this bogus? Do you put up with this crap? I can tell you right now that I won't. When Wes is out of line I let him know it, and you should do the same with this gorilla of yours." "I don't need your advice on how to run my life," Stacy said. "And if you ever call Jay a gorilla again I'll rip your face off." "You two are perfect for each other, you know that?" Leslie retorted, then fell silent, her faced flushed as she folded her arms across her chest. Jay zipped up the backpack and fixed the flashlight on Ann. Her conspicuous anxiety made him wish he could fly. "I'm not about to leave you here alone, but I'll be damned if I know how to get you safely to our side. Do you have any ideas?" I wish I did." "How about if I try the bridge from this end? I can jump out to it, and if it supports my weight we know it will support yours." 107 David Robbins Both Ann and Stacy said "No!" in unison. "I don't want you killed, lover," Stacy added. "You weigh more than two of us combined. Go out on that bridge and you're history." "We can't just leave her there," Jay said. Ann shifted to stare back the way they had come. "I have an idea." "What?" "Maybe if I hurry I can catch up with Terri, Scott and Wes. Shouldn't take me more than half an hour." Vivid images of the enormous three-toed tracks branded themselves on Jay's mind. "You'd be stumbling around in the dark all that time. It would be too easy for you to become lost and there's no telling where you'd wind up." I can't think of anything else to try." "There must be a better way," Jay insisted. "Let me look around this chamber and see what I can find." He hurried off, sweeping the flashlight back and forth, hoping against hope for a miracle. If Ann went back she might run into the thing that grabbed Terri. He never should have lied to them. Now he either had to admit the truth or pull a rabbit out of the hat and get her across the gap. A complete sweep, though, turned up zip. There was nothing he could use. Dejected, he walked toward the fissure and girded himself for the tongue-lashings they would give him once they learned about his deception. Suddenly Jay stopped and aimed his flashlight at the mouth of the tunnel to his rear, positive he had heard a faint noise-a scraping sound, perhaps, like before. The tunnel slanted to the left just inside the opening, and he was unable to see what lay beyond. Although tempted to take a look, he didn't want to leave the girls alone for too long, not with whatever made those tracks on the loose. "What the hell is keeping you?" Leslie shouted. 108 Hell-O-Ween Jay hastened to their side. Neither Stacy nor Leslie had budged from the spot where they had stood when he left. "I came up empty-handed," he said and turned the light on Ann. "How are you holding up?" "Fine," she answered softly. Peering into the gap, Jay had an idea. "Hey! What if we inspect the fissure from one end to the other? Maybe somewhere else it narrows down to a foot or two and you can jump across with ease." "Lead the way," Ann responded. "And please try to keep some of the light on my side so I don't fall in." Jay moved to the right, staying close to the edge, his fingers crossed. He wanted to inform them of the huge footprints, but the words seemed to catch in his throat. "I wish to hell we'd never gotten separated from the others," he mentioned to keep the conversation going as he struggled to muster the courage to tell what he knew. I wish to hell I'd never come," Ann said. "This outing has turned into a fiasco, and Scott and Wes are to blame." Leslie came to her boyfriend's defense. "Don't blame Wes. It's not his fault we're lost. If our fearless leader had half a brain we'd be up on the surface by now, on our way home." "Lay off Jay," Stacy said. "I'm sick and tired of you threatening me," Leslie countered. So much for getting a conversation going, Jay mused. He noticed a point ten yards ahead where the fissure narrowed to six feet, which still wasn't enough. His thoughts strayed to Scott, Wes and Cory, and he speculated on where they might be. If, as he believed, they weren't involved in Terri's disappearance, and if those tracks had been made by the thing that was, maybe the same creature had taken them. "If only this was narrower," Ann said, stepping to 109 David Robbins the rim at the point he had noticed. She frowned and leaned forward, examining the walls. "Don't get too close to the edge," Jay advised. "That's a long drop." "Tell me something I don't know," Ann said, taking a pace backwards and stamping her right foot in frustration. To Jay's dismay the ground under her abruptly gave way. As if in slow motion he saw the earth collapse in upon itself and saw Ann throw her arms out and desperately try to leap to a firmer footing, but the dirt and stones poured into the fissure so swiftly she was unable to stop herself from being carried over the edge and in a twinkling she was plummeting into the fissure. 110 IV,- Chapter Ten "What the hell was that?" Wes blurted as the scream ended, his palm slick on the flashlight handle, his mouth as dry as a desert. "One of the girls," Scott said. "Leslie!" Wes cried and furiously threw himself at the smooth slab blocking their route, vainly applying his shoulder to the obstruction and shoving with all his might. "It might be Les. We've got to reach her." "How?" "I don't know. There has to be a way," Wes responded, grunting as he strained and gouged his heels into the cave floor to gain more leverage. "You're wasting your time," Scott remarked. "We have to go back and find another tunnel." "Like hell!" Wes snarled. His face was crimson, his veins bulging, his stomach muscles as tight as a drum. The slab never so much as moved a fraction. He pushed and pushed until his shoulder throbbed, then stepped back, panting, and gave the slab a fierce kick. "Are you ready to listen to reason now?" Wes whirled on his friend. "How can you be so calm when one of them is in trouble? Leslie might be lying somewhere in this stinking cave with a broken leg, and You stand there like we're getting set to order at Pizza House." "First of all, we don't know if that was Leslie. It could have been any of the others. Second, unless you ill David Robbins brought along dynamite we're certainly not going any further in this passage. Our best bet is to find another tunnel going in the same direction." "Then let's find it," Wes said irritably, taking the lead this time. Part of his irritation had nothing to do with his failure to budge the slab. He was also mad at himself for being one of the geniuses who had planned the trip to the Caverna del Diablo. Since ditching Cory Fleming nothing had gone right, and he had a terrible feeling things were going to get worse before they got better. Come to think of it, why should he blame himself when the whole mess was all that geeles fault? Fleming was a jinx as well as a dork. Everyone knew that. Look it what had happened during the archery contest. Fleming had jinxed his chances to win and lost him the Corvette of his dreams. "Slow down, will you?" Scott said. "Youll wear both of us out before we find anyone." Wes realized he had been practically running, his long legs taking strides Scott couldn't hope to match. He slowed, his blood still on fire, filled with regret that Fleming wasn't there right that minute so he could pound the bastard to a pulp. "Are you still in the mood for some blow?" Scott asked. The question caused Wes to break stride. He halted and turned, the old familiar hunger creeping over him. "Now?" he said, thinking of Leslie. Reaching her quickly was imper-ative. 'Why not? Coke always helps me unwind, and with all that's happening I'm wound up. Aren't you?" ('YeA,' Wes said, his hunger warring with his conscience. He knew what would happen if he indulged. Snorting cocaine always made him so spaced out he felt like he could fly. Back when he started, his ability to concentrate and think coherently had not been drastically affected, but the longer he used the drug 112 Hell-O-Ween the more of an airhead he became during his highs. And lately he had noticed a disturbing trend. He was using more and more of the stuff in order to reach the same plateau that lesser amounts had always produced before. If he kept going at his current rate, pretty soon he'd need to win the Colorado Lottery to support his habit. "So is your answer yes or no?" Wes remembered that horrible scream, licked his lips and answered with full knowledge of the consequences. "Let's get it on, brother." How far Cory Fleming ran he had no way of knowing. He raced recklessly along tunnel after tunnel, heedless of the risk of being injured if he should trip in the dark or round a comer and crash into a dead end. His only concern was putting as much distance between the creature he had seen in the vast chamber and himself. Red! The thing had been red! As the old clich6 went, if he hadn't seen whatever it was with his own eyes he would never believe such a creature existed. What could it have been? Why had the mere sight of it sparked such intense fear? Was it an animal-or something else? The same questions repeated themselves over and over, and by the time he finally stopped in a small room to take a breather he still had no answers. The image of the being painted at the entrance to the i caverna del Diablo was upper-most in his mind. Both the creature in the depth of the cave and the painting were red. Coincidence? Or had he actually glimpsed one of the descendants of the legendary monster? His scientific nature rebelled at such a crazy idea, but there was no denying the testimony of his own eyes. Oh, God, what was he going to do? 113 David Robbins Hell-O-Ween Cory leaned against a wall and tried to stabilize M He had to assume the creature resembled the being er-ratic breathing. His lungs ached, his stomach vlkl is the painting even though he hadn't gotten a close queasy, and his legs were sore from exercising -lowfol M-, MIM, at it. If so, of one aspect he felt fairly positive. The little used. He speculated on whether he had '180,: wasn't the Devil, not the Biblical entity believed the whole incident. Perhaps a trick of the lighting I orl M191(@ for all evil and wickedness in the world, made him think he saw a living being where 01OUT4 Tns :the high being of light who had rebelled against existed. WITL If not Lucifer, then what else might it be? No, he had seen it, all right, and he had to As with most boys, he had gone through a phase attempting to convince himself otherwise. A --***rQsiFe-M4 . his childhood where he had been fascinated should never be afraid to face new facts, no onsters of every shape and size. Vampire movies, go in how inconsistent they might appear at first glance, -3s@, 10 Me I movies, movies about bloodthirsty beings the fact of the matter was that an unknown asiassf,'. idoss outer@ space-they had all been part of his childor creature lurked in the bowels of the Caverna sr@ MTM fare. He had also bought monster magazines, Diablo, a beast no doubt related to the very eitw-Mrk acostim and books. The phase had lasted about a year, encountered by the Spanish conquistadors and the IR, 11M, in that time he had been exposed to pictures and warriors. It couldn't possibly be the'same one, ov, L=.%(.w., of hundreds of savage beasties and groafter so many centuries. i j1LOM, beings. He remembered the collection of bones and slTral The thing in the painting resembled one kind more dered. They took on a whole new meaning now. -11T; Ist-so any other, a nefarious breed said to plague creature must have placed them there. It must be wo@' 12M M-1 Mos from the dawn of recorded history, creanivorous, roaming the immense cavern in search 0. 11s9w reputed to be in thrall to the Devil and to comprise prey and feasting on whatever was foolhardy Q4141leg. os; infernal army in Hell. It was a breed chronicled in to enter its subterranean domain. The Spaniards -isTij .1*@ records of every ancient nation known, a breed that the Utes had been right in warning everyone to OT'J'ZCMMU@- hated humanity and wanted to wipe human out. AJAU-w, from the face of the planet. An alarming conclusion increased his -A&) Demons. There must be more than one! In order to He recalled in particular a reproduction of a paintthe species a viable core colony or pack Must in a book on supernatural beings such as sprites, i , centaurs, gargoyles, elves and many others. Either that or the creature enjoyed an incre ibly 0 '' - life span, which he was inclined painting, done by a medieval master during the But why weren't the things spotted more often'@ IN, 11;@ Ages, showed the realm of Hades complete d they only venture into the upper levels on rare a gigantic winged Devil and a horde of demons, ,- ,I sions? If so, what did they subsist on in the i I creatures sporting small horns and barbed Were they like bears, capable of hibernating for 0 stretches and only roaming abroad now and a ain?, What the hell was he doing? p -cies 10011K.." Cory straightened up and moved off across the room, were they so totally alien to any known s e. f their capabilities were beyond human ken? logic reasserting itself after his initial panic. How David Robbins could any person in their right mind believe in -61 existence of literal demons? Such creatures were III product of ignorant superstition. He was supposed 4 be an aspiring scientist, and scientists didn't -Teraral. the existence of anything without concrete So what if he had spotted a strange bipedd in that chamber? So what if it had been red? 1 could very well have been someone wearing d* clothing. d He wiped his perspiring brow with the back of sT right hand and tried not to think about how iff= and hungry he was. It had been stupid to run so 01 without good cause. Now he had depleted his sTeraLl energy and would need food and water, neither which he had. I Damn him for being a dummy! Cory hiked onward, completely lost, resisting 1 raw despair that tried to overwhelm him. s7 any battle required the right mental attitude, and _1V knew he was in a battle for his life. It was the INUMFol, del Diablo against him. If he didn't succumb to if he applied his deductive powers and conserved II strength, he might survive. Might? No, he would -of vive, and then he would pay Wes and Scott back what they had done to him. He didn't know ox-tai how, but he would come up with a way. Somewhere in the dark far behind him arose a sound uncannily similar to the rattling of a realng snake's tail. lei Surprised, Cory stopped and looked back. could it have been? There were no rattlers so R-71 in the cave so it must have been something oo Then he heard it again, faint but noticeably aw-wd Whatever was making the sounds was heading in e% direction. J He swallowed hard and nan, annoyed at letting tvC tional fright dictate his actions. Yet he had to -orlit 116 Hell-O-Ween that he was scared, an extremely unscientific attitude to say the least. Instinct was in control, and his every instinct, his intuition, told him that he must avoid the source of those strange sounds at all costs. So he fled again, winding into the bowels of the earth until he reached a fork where three tunnels branched off. His eyes were well-adjusted to the lack of light, and he could see the openings even if he couldn't distinguish details. Which one should he take? On impulse he took the passage on his right and almost immediately the cave floor angled upward instead of going lower. He settled into a jogging rhythm, sweating profusely, tempted to discard the backpack so he could go faster but knowing he might need some of the contents later. Another fork appeared and he again took the right one, the ground continuing to rise gradually. Every step was bringing him closer to the surface and safety. The rattling broke the stillness once more, so distant as to be barely audible. Good, Cory thought and smiled. He had a substantial lead and shouldn't have to worry about whatever was back there catching him. Slowing to a walk, he slid out of the backpack and held it by the strup. His shirt was plastered to his body, his feet ached. He had gotten more exercise since entering this lousy cave than he had in the past year. Chuckling, he walked around a corner into another of those chambers where the ceiling glowed dimly. He halted, braced his buttocks against a stalagmite and searched for an exit. There were two, a narrow tunnel off to the left and a wide tunnel directly ahead. He was in no hurry. A little rest would rejuvenate him for the next stage of his ascent. Squatting, he thought about Ann. Was she safe? Since she was with the others and they had flashlights and food, she must 117 David Robbins be. All of them were probably in the jeeps -MMIRIT, homeward. Why should he care anyway? She sneki have been in on the perverted prank Scott and Wes IM played on him. After almost eight years she was -sll-( trying to get back at him for one inadvertent isit-M-T, in judgement. His mind flashed back to that day in the shed. A usual the two of them had kissed and hugged 1111t they were both warm and tingly all over, and 117M she had suggested they play doctor, her favorite M= Their version had called for her to point out a ao s on her body and claim it hurt, then he would it better. That day they became more carried than usual, and Ann had pulled up her shirt so Mll, he could kiss her skin. Swept up in the passion ei the moment, he had begun kissing every square livelf" of her body while his hands roved up and down 'IM slender form. Since he had known virtually steall "I,, of the female anatomy, he had not realized there .vQt., certain parts of a girl's body that were normally F1,7671 for a boy to touch. So he had been horrified when MITI had suddenly stepped back, her face registering MR shock until she hauled off and smacked him so ITIM his ears had rung. She had pulled her shirt a =*V, smacked him again and raced out of the shed MJV tears streaming down her red cheeks. Not until a and a half later, when his dad finally got around explaining the birds and the bees, had he fully dwo'@ ized why Ann had reacted the way she did. By 11M @ it was too late to apologize, and since she had dei been speaking to him there was no opportunity any case. So much for his first true love. Ever since he had carried a torch for her. Stupid o'@ it sounded, he had never developed a deep -All, for any other girl. He'd dated occasionally, . 11M.1vit-w with Plain Jane types who were also social -omnm,(@ 118 Hell-O-Ween at school. A few he'd liked immensely and considered good friends, but none captured his heart the way Ann had. How happy he had been when she finally broke her silence and talked to him! From that day on he had been very careful about how he acted around her so as to never antagonize her again. His fear made him seem shy in her presence when there wasn't a shy bone in his body. But he couldn't bring himself to express how he really felt, afraid she would laugh at him and never come near him. And now this. He should be mad at her, but he wasn't. He should despise her for being a party to the prank, but he didn't. In his heart of hearts he still cared for her and forgave her. Was he being foolish? Being hopelessly romantic? Probably, but he didn't care. Cory stood and walked toward the wide opening. Fatigue and anxiety were taking their toll. He craved more than anything else to curl up in a soft bed and sleep for 12 hours. Near the tunnel he paused to glance over his shoulder, and it was then he heard the rattling noise again. Only this time it came from right outside the chamber. In four bounds Cory was behind a thick stalagmite. He held the backpack close to his side, his nerves jangling. Something shuffled into view, filling the tunnel he had emerged from. It stood there, apparently surveying the chamber, and when satisfied the chamber was empty moved into the open. Cory couldn't breathe. Before his astounded'gaze appeared the embodiment of the creature in the painting at the cave entrance as well as of those creatures in the medieval painting of Hades. Lacking a better name he identified the red giant as a demon-a real, live &mon. 119 David Robbins The creature advanced a dozen yards, then IMM, and gazed at the ceiling. Its lips moved, and from *t( throat issued the by now familiar sound of a owsnake. Stupefied, Cory watched, unblinking, as the OW411OW. moved in a small circle as if admiring a Ops-M-Iff section of the ceiling. But that was only an -mousi tion. He had no idea what it was really doing. All .11 could think of was that this shouldn't be 'MrajejEE; that it was impossible, that demons did not exist --Ili] never had. With quick steps the thing moved to the wide -IF Mse and cocked its head, evidently listening. Its huge ITI "Iel capped by long nails, were clenching and aterair. MoMi. as if in anger. What was it upset about? Cory wondered. He IT ; to exhale and did so slowly so as not to make -w noise. The demon took another step, and he ft. 7 to relax in the belief it was leaving and he was :toi .(, when suddenly the creature whirled and stared 'isitt the chamber, stared -directly at the stalagmite -AM reff#,, him from the monstrosity. 120 4 Chapter Eleven Ann Weatherby's heart was in her mouth as she plummeted over the brink of the fissure. Frantically she tried to regain her balance, but gravity was stronger. She twisted as she fell, heard someone scream an clawed at the side of the fissure to try and halt her descent. Pain lanced her hands as some of her fingernails were snapped off. Her knees banged against the wall. She threw back her head to scream herself when her feet hit the bottom. Agony speared up her spine, the impact stunning her so that she sagged and her forehead hit the wall. "Ann! Ann! Are you all right?" Jay's words seemed to reverberate in her skull. She was aware of being alive but felt sure both of her legs and possibly her back must be broken. Through a haze of anguish she managed to lift her head and peer upward where the bright circle of light from the flAshlight pinpointed the position of her friends. She squinted, the agony surprisingly subsiding, and looked down at herself. For a moment she thought her legs had been sheared off by a boulder. All she could see was her thighs a few inches above the knees and then the floor of the fissure. The sight panicked her and she tottered backwards, only to behold the ground around her thighs shift and more of her legs appear. Slowly the significance sank into her dazed mind. The floor of the fis- 121 David Robbins sure wasn't solid rock; it was composed of a layer of loose dirt over two feet deep having the consistency of quicksand. Her legs were intact. The layer had cushioned her fall, saving her from serious injury, and she was now imbedded in it. "Ann, how badly are you hur-t?" She craned her neck, smiling in relief. I don't think I'm hurt badly at all," she responded and tried moving her legs. It was like trying to walk through water, only more difficult. ."Are you sure?" Jay asked. Ann nodded while gingerly trying to lift first her right leg, then her left. Although she was unable to raise either leg out of the fine mantle of dirt there was no pain. "But you fell so far," Leslie yelled. "Really?" Ann replied curtly. "Can you climb back up?" Stacy inquired. Her relief at being spared from harm dissolved. She studied both walls and saw nowhere she could gain a handhold. The fall had trapped her in the fissure. "Can you?" Stacy prompted. "I don't see how." "Damn it!" Jay snapped. I wish we had the rope. I wonder who does?" "What does it matter?" Leslie responded. "We don't even know where any of the others are. Now what are we going to do? I, for one, don't intend to wait around here forever." ,"Boy, are you a real cheesehead," Jay said. "What are you cutting on me for?" "Because you have the consideration of a rock. Ann is in serious shit, you idiot, and all you can think of is yourself. I wish you were the one who fell in, not her," Jay declared. "Just wait, Thorpe. I'm going to tell Wes all about how you've treated me. He won't like it one bit." 122 Hell-O-Ween "So tell him. See if I care." "He'll talk to the coach and have you kicked off the team. 11 "Don't make me laugh. If the coach was to give one of us the boot, it wouldn't be me. I'm not a coke head." "Are you threatening to tell the coach on Wes?" "I don't have to. The way he's been playing lately the coach will figure it out for himself. Now keep your mouth shut and let me think." "With what'Y' Ann sighed and struggled to get a leg free. She raised it as high as her ankle, then had to give up. Walking would be impossible. If she was to get around she must do so another way. Leaning over, she pressed her upper body onto the dir-t and discovered it would support her weight. Then she wiggled her legs, felt them loosen and crawled forward until both of her feet were out. Dust got into her nose and she sneezed. "Clever move," Jay shouted down. But what good had it done her? Ann mused. She snaked far-ther, up to a boulder low enough for her to grip the top with both hands. If she had landed a couple of yards to the right of where she did, the fall would have killed her. Tightening her grip, she pulled herself up until she could take a seat. Jay was sweeping the flashlight along the fissure in both directions. "There has to be somewhere she can climb out," he stated. Ann watched him move along the rim and prayed he would find a way out. The high walls reared above her like a stone prison, imbuing her with dread at the idea of being stuck down there while the others went on. Even if the three of them reached the surface, it would take hours to drive to Pagosa Springs and organize a rescue par-ty. And there was no guarantee the rescuers would find her since it was unlikely Jay, 123 David Robbins Stacy or Leslie would be able to find their way back to the fissure. "Don't worry, Ann," Stacy said. "You'll be fine. On Monday you'll be back in school and have forgotten that any of this ever happened." "I'll never forget this nightmare," Ann said, conscious of the darkness closing in on her as Jay moved farther away. "You and me, both," Leslie stated. Jay hiked 20 yards, his beam illuminating the fissure. He abruptly halted, the flashlight trained on a spot at the base of the opposite wall. "Hey, Ann, come and take at look at this. Is it a tunnel?" Hopefully Ann slid off the boulder onto her stomach and crawled as rapidly as she was able toward the spot. Dust caked her clothes and hands. The tips of her fingers were exceedingly sore, but she refrained from examining them. She had always been squeamish about personal injuries; as a little girl she had fainted a few times at the sight of her own blood. Rather than risk passing out or becoming sick, she crawled until she was at the area revealed by the beam. Apparently Stacy and Leslie had kept abreast of her because Stacy yelled out a question. "What is that?" At the bottom of the wall was a black area the shape of a half-moon. Four feet high and twice that in length, it might just be a hole. Ann snaked closer. Suddenly she could see her hands clearly. Three of the fingernails on her right hand and two on the left had been sheared off at the fingertips and a pair of fingers on each hand had been torn open. A strip of skin dangled from her right forefinger. She felt nauseous, fought off the sensation and moved to the opening. "Are you okay?" Jay asked. "Fine," Ann lied, peering in. She noticed what 124 Hell-O-Ween appeared to be the ceiling of a room or chamber but nothing else. "Move the flashlight around to get a better angle," she directed, and she was gratified when the beam lowered a bit, revealing a slope of loose earth angling down into a spacious room. Straight across from her was the vague outline of a tunnel. "What's in there?" Jay asked. Ann described what she saw. "I have no idea where that tunnel will take me," she concluded, "but it's a way out of the fissure. I don't have any choice except to follow it even though I don't much like the idea of wandering around in the dark." "If only we had another flashlight," Jay said. "You could give her ours," Leslie said sarcastically. "Or 1, can throw you down there so she'll have some company," Jay retorted. "You wouldn't dare." "Keep flapping your gums, bitch, and you'll learn the hard way." "Who are you calling a bitch?" As if Ann didn't have enough weighing heavily on her mind with her injuries and the dire straits she was in, the constant bickering of her companions only aggravated her emotional turmoil. She wanted to cover her ears so she wouldn't hear them. And she wanted to kick herself where it would hurt the most for coming to the Caverna del Diablo in the first place. Scott wasn't her type. She didn't feel especially close to him. He was simply a handsome guy who had asked her out * few times, and she had agreed to go, more out of * desire to alleviate the boredom of staying home and watching the idiot box than any interest in him as a steady boyfriend. "Ann, I don't think you should go in there," Jay said. "Stay right where you are until we get back with help." She twisted onto her side to stare up at them. In the 125 David Robbins peripher-al glow of the flashlight their faces appeared pale, like ghostly visages detached from corporal forms. "And how long will that be?" Jay shrugged. "There's no way of telling." "I've already given the matter some thought," Ann informed him. "How can you be certain you'll locate this fissure again once you leave it?" Jay gazed around the chamber, then sighed. "To be honest, I don't know'if I can." "You can use the hammer and chisel to mark the passages we take, can't you?" Stacy asked. "That's right!" Jay exclaimed and hastily removed the backpack. He extr-acted the rock hammer and chisel and held them aloft. "See, Ann? Itll be easy for us to find you again. I'll carve notches in every damn tunnel between here and the surface." A flicker of hope flared in Ann's soul. A rescue team could easily follow a marked tnail and have her out quickly. All she must endure was the long wait between the time Jay and the others left until the rescue team arrived, which would take hours-hours spent alone in Stygian gloom in the depths of the earth. The very thought terrified her. "What do you say?" Jay asked. "Will you sit tight until we get help? I promise well hustle our asses off." "III stay right here," Ann said reluctantly. "We'll make the stay easier on you," Jay said, reaching into the backpack again. He pulled out the partially eaten bags of potato chips and pretzels and extended his right arm out over the fissure. "You can munch on these while you wait." it Hold on there, buster," Leslie declared. "What if we need the food ourselves?" "We still have some," Jay responded and let go of the bags. They fell stnaight down and landed with twin plops, swirling small clouds of dust into the air. 126 Hell-O-Ween Ann crawled to the munchies. "Thank you, Jay," she shouted. "This will help a lot." "Okay, then," Jay said, "well be on our way." He trained the flashlight on her, his features revealing his worry. "Is there anything else we can do that you can think of?" There was. "I could use that box of matches," Ann said. "You've got them," Jay told her and leaned to one side to rummage in the pack again. "Now just a damn minute," Leslie objected. "I don't mind going hungry on her account, but I draw the line at giving her the matches. What if we need them later to see with or to start a fire or something?" "There's nothing in this cave we could use to start a fire," Jay said. "And we have the flashlight to see with. We don't need the matches." He lifted the box out. "Don't give her all of them," Leslie cried. Jay slowly stood, glared at Leslie, then deliberately held his arm over the gap and pitched the box toward Ann. It tumbled end over end to smack down within inches of her left arm. "Now you won't be in the dark all the time," he said. "Thanks again," Ann shouted, clutching the matches as if they were the source of life itself. If she used them sparingly they would last until help arrived and in the process give her some peace of mind. "Keep your chin up, kiddo," Jay said with a grin. He zipped the pack closed, shrugged into the straps and waved. "By morning you'll be sound asleep in your own bed." "I hope so." Jay moved off. Stacy also waved, then she and Leslie followed him. Almost immediately darkness reclaimed the fissure. Ann listened but was unable to hear their footsteps or their voices. After a minute she knew they were 127 David Robbins gone and she was alone. Alone. The word conjured up frightening memories of her childhood when often she had become scared to death while lying in her room alone at night, the result of her fertile mind fabricating all sorts of monsters and demons that lurked in every shadowy comer or peeked at her from out of the closet. Many times she had asked her father for a night light, and he had always refused, claiming it would be a crutch that fed her fear rather than cured it. Her father, a Pagosa Springs policeman, was a loving but stern man who had tried to instill in all of his children a firm self-reliance that would serve them well as adults. "The only way to conquer your fears is to face them head-on," he constantly asserted. Easy for him to say. He'd never been stuck in her situation. She peered into the room again while waiting for her eyes to adjust. Her hands ached, but she suppressed the pain. They would get worse before the night was done, and she regretted not having water to cleanse them. If they should become infected the agony would be unbearable. Sliding over to the wall, she sat up and rested her back on the smooth stone surface. She placed the two bags and the box between her legs, then gingerly opened the bag she believed contained the pretzels. Being careful not to bump her fingers, she reached inside and pulled a pretzel out. The chamber was as silent as a cemetery at midnight. Ann took a bite, savoring the salty taste, and chewed hungrily. Her thoughts drifted to Cory. Was he with Scott and Wes? Had he actually participated in their asinine pranks? She didn't believe that for a minute. Cory was too level-headed, too serious in his thinking, too mature to ever pull the kinds of stunts Scott and Wes delighted in. 128 Hell-O-Ween She had her doubts about the pranks themselves. It would have been easy for those two dummies to erase the tracks, but impossible for them to move that mas sive slab to block the tunnel. They would have needed a lot of help. Although Jay's idea that some other members of the football team had shadowed them to the cavern and were helping Scott and Wes was plausible, somehow she doubted such was the case. Doubts, doubts, doubts. She'd had her doubts about the wisdom of persuading Scott to invite Cory, too. She'd only done so because she felt sorry for the poor guy. Cory rarely went out, rarely went anywhere. He was a bookworm, his first love science. In all the years she'd known him she'd never heard him talk about having a girlfriend. He had no social life to speak of. As his closest friend she had felt obligated to do something to break him out of his self-imposed cocoon. Humans were social beings. Living in isolation from one's peers was detrimental to a person's mental and emotional health. This exalted thought made her grin. Since when had she become the patron saint of loners and losers? Not that she ever considered Cory a loser-but many did at school. Many branded him a misfit and refused to have anything to do with him. How he tolerated their attitude she would never know. He must have a shell like a turtle. Why was he so much on her mind lately? Seldom did a day go by where she didn't think about him. She had even taken to calling him more frequently than usual and sitting next to the living room window so she would spot him leaving his house and could rush out to talk to him. He was easy to talk with, and he was one of the few guys she knew who wasn't always pawing her or trying to charm her into the sack. Cory treated her with respect. Terri had started to tease her about hanging around 129 David Robbins with him, hinting there must be a deeper reason, which was patently ridiculous. Terri was her best friend and as sweet as could be, but she knew nothing about girl-boy relationships. If a boy so much as talked to her nicely, Terri almost swooned at his feet. She remembered the scream, her brow furrowing. Jay had insisted Terri's disappearance was due to Scott and Wes. Knowing Ten-i's dislike of the pair, she couldn't see Terri doing anything those clowns wanted. Nor would Terri play a practical joke on her. They were too close for that. Was it possible Jay had lied? Was she in on the pranks? Had Wes and Scott forced Terri to go along with them against her will? Suddenly something clattered among the boulders off to the right. Ann sat up, puzzled. It, had sounded like a pebble fell from above. She glanced up, scanning the top of the fissure. Although the dark veil prevented her from noting details, she distinctly spotted an enormous figure poised on the rim. This time there could be no doubts because as she laid eyes on it the figure moved. 130 Chapter Twelve "Where the hell are we?" "Who the hell knows?" Wes Eagen snickered and swung his flashlight in a circle, surveying the chamber in which they found themselves. "This sure ain't the one where we stopped earlier," he said. Scott nodded. "Id say we're lost, old buddy." They both laughed. "Oh, well," Wes said. "Shit happens." He resumed hiking, not in the least bothered by the situation. Confidence flowed through his veins now, supreme confidence in his ability to tackle any problem, to surmount any difficulty. He was Wesley Aaron Eagen, star quarterback, the guy all the girls wanted and every other guy envied. He was the best at everything he did, which was why he always came out on top, why he was a natural-born winner. He'd find his way out of the stupid cave before too long. It was inevitable. "You know, I've been thinking," Scott said. "About what?" "This cave would be a great place to stash some of my goodies. No one would ever find the stuff. It's a lot safer than keeping it in my room or down in the basement where one of my folks might discover it." "You're cr-azy. You'd ride all the way out here every time someone wanted to make a buy?" "Get real. I'd keep plenty handy for my everyday 131 David Robbins needs. But let's say I wanted to stash a couple of kilos of Mary Jane. Can you think of a better spot?" Wes could think of a dozen, but he kept his mouth shut. Scott sometimes became as goofy as all get-out when high, saying the dumbest things and coming up with the looniest notions. If Scott wanted to store drugs in this rotten cave, that was his business. But Wes suspected that once Scott came down to earth he would change his mind. Wes approached a passage and searched the cave floor for footprints. There had been no sign of the others, not so much as a single track, for the better part of an hour. It would serve those idiots right if they were never found, even Leslie. She should have stuck by his side instead of traipsing off with Jay and the rest of the bimbos. The passage slanted to the tight, and Wes turned a corner. Ahead the tunnel forked so he halted to get Scott's opinion. "Which way this time?" "Left." "Any reason?" "I'm left-handed." "Makes sense to me," Wes said, going on. His stomach rumbled, calling to mind his hunger. "Hey, do we have any beer left?" "You want a beer after all that coke you snorted) Don't you know better than to mix your poisons?" "Do we or don't we?" "You bet your ass we do." "Hand one over." They stopped, and Scott opened his backpack, producing a six-pack with a flourish. "Here we go, bro. I guess I'll have one, too. If we're going to spend the rest of our life in this armpit of a cave, we might as well do it totally blitzed." "We'll be out in an hour," Wes predicted. "Leave it to me. I've lived in Colorado since day one and I know 132 Hell-O-Ween how to survive in these mountains. Hell, I was even a cub scout for a while. I'll get us out pronto." "Is it okay if I don't hold my breath?" Scott asked and cackled. "You wait and see," Wes responded, miffed by his friend's lack of confidence. He opened his can, took a long swig and let out a great belch. "Pig," Scott said, then did the same. Holding the beer in his left hand and the flashlight in his right, Wes advanced. "You know what really gets MY goat?" he asked. "Nope." "We've been down in this frigging cave all this time and we haven't seen any sign of the so-called monster. What's this world coming to when you can't trust legends to be true?" Scott chortled. "It's the drugs, man. Haven't you heard? There's too much dope in this country and it's ruining everything. The schools, the inner cities, even us rural types now. Everyone is 'getting swacked on either coke, grass, crack, the big H, you name it." "You're talking bullshit again." "Like hell I am. I read the newspapers. I read magazines. Anything having to do with drugs I read because drugs are my life." "Why?" "What?" Wes glanced over his shoulder. "I've never asked you why you sell drugs, and I've always been meaning to. It's not exactly the safest line of work. If the coke doesn't get you, the cops will. You must have a reason for doing it." "That I do, buc*ko," Scott said, nodding. He polished off half of his beer in large gulps, then wiped his sleeve across his dripping mouth. "And I'll tell you a secret I,ve never told anyone. I do it because I hate my old man. 133 David Robbins "Your dad? What did he ever do to you?" "Everything, dude. The man is the ultimate liberal VvUss. I mean, he's so liberal he thinks the Democratic party is right wing." "I don't get it," Wes admitted. He never had paid much attention to politics, and his political science and history classes had bored him to tears. Who cares who wrote the Declaration of Independence or who shot Abraham Lincoln? It all happened ages ago to geeks who had long been dead. None of that jazz was relevant any more. "Okay. Let me explain," Scott said and took a sip of brew. "My old man, as you know, is a newspaper editor. Journalism is his life. It's all he talks about and thinks about. Every day at mealtime I've had to listen to him ramble on about how liberals have all the answers to all of society's pr6blems. If a liberal was elected President we'd have this country running like clockwork in no time. If liberals could educate young people the way they wanted our schools would be turning out perfect citizens. I'm sick to death of hearing his same tired garbage day after day. Follow me so far?" "Not exactly," Wes said. "What is it you don't understand?" "What's a liberal?" "You're kidding?" "I'm not Cory Fleming. I don't know everything." "All right." Scott said and sighed. "A liberal is someone who thinks the answer to every social problem is bigger government and higher taxes." "Was Reagan a liberal? He's my dad's hero." Scott pursed his lips and said irritably, "It doesn't matter what a liberal is. The important point is that my old man is the biggest hypocrite who ever lived. He claims his kind have all the answers to everything when he really doesn't know diddly squat. Mom left 134 Hell-O-Ween him because he's such a jerk. They used to argue all the time, and I'd listen at their door. She used to tell him that he knew how to talk a good life but he sure as hell didn't know how to live one." Wes said nothing. He still didn't see where all this was leading and was embarrassed to admit it. "Do you know my old man never once came to any of the ballgames I played in when I was a kid? Do you know he never once took me fishing or hunting?" "Why not?" "Because he thinks guys who kill animals are Neanderthals. He always wanted to drag me off to art shows and museums and crap like that. He even despises sports. To this day I have never even tossed a baseball with him." Wes shook his head in amazement. How could any man not like sports? "Something else about him I hate," Scott went on passionately. "He likes to manipulate people. All those editorials and stories he writes are slanted to get his view across. He's told me so himself. He uses the newspaper to try and get people to think the way he thinks. If they don't, he considers them jerks." "How the hell does all this tie in with you selling drugs?" "I'm getting to that." I hope so." "He likes to think of himself as a rebel. He smokes a little pot now and then. He cheats on his income tax. He steals pens and tablets from work. He runs red lights." "Who doesn't?" Wes responded. "Will you get to the damn point before the suspense kills me?" "Don't you see? My old man acts like he's perfect and most everyone else is either a mental defective or just plain dumb. Yet he's as screwed up as anyone, Probably more than most." 135 David Robbins "so?" "So all my life I've had to put up with him preaching at me from his soap box and have him looking down his nose at me because I liked to do the same things all the others boys did. He always wanted me to be better than them, to be smarter, more cultured. He wanted me to think just like he does, and I never will." "So? So?" Wes prompted. He'd forgotten how longwinded Scott could be when high. The guy never knew when to shut up and babbled in circles. Scott sighed. "Once, a few years back, he sat me down at the kitchen table and told me how disappointed he was that I didn't have any intention of following in his footsteps. He said he had high hopes for me when I was young but I'd never come around to his way of thinking. And then he grinned and said the thing that I remember the most." Scott paused. "He said he should be grateful that at least I wasn't a criminal and hadn't wound up in prison." "So you went right out and became a dealer?" "Not overnight, but that's what I eventually did. I wanted to rub his nose in it. Understand now?" "Yeah," Wes lied. He didn't have the slightest idea what Scott meant. How did dealing dope get back at Scott's old man for being a lousy father? Jesus, give him his dad any day. Now there was a man who understood what made a guy tick-sports, girls and gobs of money. What else did life have to offer? "After I got into dealing I grew to like it," Scott went on. "I mean, all the foxes and the money and being so damn popular. All of a sudden I had more friends than I knew what to do with. There's nothing like it." "And your dad doesn't suspect?" "Hell, no. The man is an idiot. Any lie I feed him, he believes." The flashlight revealed another bend. Wes was almost to it when from their rear arose a sound so 136 Hell-O-Ween bizarre he stopped short in astonishment. At first he entertained the ridiculous idea someone was shaking a baby rattle. Then he pegged the noise as more like that made by an angry rattlesnake. For 30 seconds the rattling filled the tunnel, then suddenly ceased. Scott had spun around and was sweeping his beam down the passageway. "What the hell was that?" "I don't know." "Aren't you the one who knows these mountains? Was it some kind of animal? I thought it was a rattler." I doubt there are any snakes down this far." "Let's go see," Scott said and began to retrace their steps. "If it's an animal maybe it knows a way back to the surface. We can follow its tracks." I think we should just keep going." "What's the matter? Are you scared?" Scott teased him. He polished off his beer, then tossed the can aside. It banged against the wall and made considerable noise when it hit the floor. From beyond a comer ahead arose a series of tremendously loud thumps, as if someone was pounding on a wall. Scott halted. "Damn, that sure as hell isn't a snake." "Told you," Wes said. He was at a loss to explain it and felt vaguely uneasy until an obvious possibility occurred to him. "Hey," he whispered so the person doing the pounding wouldn't hear, "maybe it's the dork." "Fleming?" "Did any other dorks tag along?" A wicked grin creased Scott's mouth. "So he wants to Play games, does he? Well, letys give the prick what he wants." He quickly removed the backpack as the thumping continued. "What are you planning to do?" Wes whispered. "He must be right around that corner," Scott said, 137 David Robbins nodding at the bend. "You stay here and talk loud he thinks we're still here." He chuckled. "And I'm going to rush the son of a bitch." "What will you do when you catch him?" "Give him a boot in the butt so hard he won't be able to sit down for a month," Scott said, depositing the pack at Wes's feet. Then he handed over his flashlight. "I don't want him to see me coming until it's too late." "Watch yourself" "With Fleming? Was that a joke? What can a wimp like him do to me?" "He might be pissed off because we ditched him and be out for revenge," Wes noted. "What's he going to do? Smack my hand and tell me, what a bad boy I've been?" Scott retorted. With a wink he turned and tiptoed toward the corner. Wes broke into a fit of laughter, but at a hard lo from Scott he caught himself and cleared his thro "The others must be around here somewhere," he st ed loud enough to be heard 100 yards away. "All have to do is keep looking and they'll turn P." u] snickered as Scott neared the bend. "Say, @ho w you think will win the game this weekend betwe the Broncos and Seattle? I put my money on Denv Those Seahawks always have a hard time of it at M High Stadium. Must be the altitude." Scott paused at the comer to look back and grin. Wes gave a little wave and resumed chatting to th air. "Yeah, Denver will beat Seattle by eighteen poi or I don't know anything about football. I also some bread down on the Philadelphia Eagles." ud The pounding came to an end. Giving Wes a wink, Scott dar-ted from view. "Nail the sucker!" Wes yelled, running forward be in on the kill. "Give it to him good!" He was t feet from the bend when he heard a strangled cry a 138 Hell-O-Ween knew Scott had caught Fleming, There was the sound of a solid blow, a thud, and then another cry, a piercing wail that brought goosebumps to Wes's skin and made 'qim stop on a dime. Was that Fleming? Scott must be killing him! He took another step, wanting to give his Friend a hand, when the wail was transformed into an articulate cry that didn't come from Cory Fleming's throat. It was Scott, shrieking at the top of his lungs. "Weeessssssss! Help meeeee!" Startled, Wes felt the short hairs at the nape of his neck tingle as if electrified. He thought that Scott must be playing a joke on him. The next instant, however, there was a distinct snap, reminding him of the sound made when someone broke a dry branch in half, and Scott vented a bloodcurdling scream. Wes wanted to go to his friend's aid but couldn't. He was rooted to the spot, petrified, afraid to help Scott and afraid to flee, his mind a blank as he listened to another chilling snap. Then it got worse. Scott commenced blubbering incoherently like a terrified small child. He alternately whined and bawled and screeched. Mixed in with his pathetic cries were crunching sounds and low grunts, as if something was eating him alive. Wes took a faltering step closer to the corner. His body had broken out in a cold sweat. This must be a prank, he told himself. Scott was having some fun at his expense. Any moment now Scott would pop in sight laughing his fool head off. Any moment now. But the crunching and blubbering went on and on and on. He tried to call out but couldn't seem to find his voice. A quavering shriek reverberated in the tunnel. Suddenly fainthearted, Wes backed away from the comer. He heard a new sound, totally unlike any he had ever known, and Scott's cries became muffled as if someone had a hand pressed over his mouth. What 139 David Robbins 13@ was happening back there? Firming his resolve, I - reversed direction and moved toward the bend, a light in each hand. He couldn't just run off and &T his best friend. He had to find out what was going on. At that juncture the blubbering stopped, and a sec ond later an oval object sailed out into the open and feiA to the cave floor not three yards from Wes's feet. The twin beams brilliantly revealed every grisly feature the blood-spattered hair, the jagged flesh ringing the!; neck and the protruding, partially severed tongue. It was Scott Miklin's head. 140 Chapter Thirteen Cory Fleming was as rigid and motionless as the stalagmite in front of him as the demon gazed in his direction. He froze with his eyes wide open, scared to even blink because the thing might detect the movement. The demon intently regarded the stalagmite, its eyes shimmering with flames of fire; then the thing pivoted and hastened out the wide tunnel so rapidly that Cory couldn't believe it was gone. Was it hunting him? Dazed, he stayed where he was and debated his next move. The thing must know he was in the cave. Some- how it had spotted him on the ledge above that enormous chamber and it was after him. What would it do when it caught up? Reduce him to a pile of pale bones? His gaze fell on his tracks. In its haste the demon had not bothered to glance at the floor and in so doing had blundered. His life, for the time being, had been spared. The next encounter, however, might have grave consequences. He slowly sat up and donned the backpack. Should he go on or go back? Going back would take him near the chamber where the demons, or whatever they were, apparently dwelled, increasing the odds of running into one. Since the creature he'd just seen took the wide tunnel, he wasn't about to do the same, leaving him the narrow tunnel which he promptly sped into. 141 David Robbins Cory ran with all his might, the backpack slapping 4 against his shoulder blades, constantly on the lookout for dark patches against the backdrop of the lighter dusty floor, patches that might be obstacles such as small boulders or stalagmites. The ground angled upward, but he knew enough not to count on the tunnel taking him to the surface. The Caverna del Diablo was so vast, with hundreds if not thousands of tunnels twisting every which way and rising and falling more frequently than a roller coaster, that it was impos- I'll sible to determine whether he was nearing the *.%#= ern entrance or merely plunging deeper into the vasr', underground maze. He ran until he was too tired to run any more. Then he walked, sweat dribbling down his back, and tried to see the face of his watch. Even though he held the timepiece right in front of his eyes he coaldn't tell the time. He made a mental note to ask his folks for -4 digital for Christmas, one that not only glowed in the dark but could perform 56 separate functions and do everything except microwave food. By his estimation he had been traveling for 40 min- f utes when, after a sharp turn and a dip, he entered a spacious room, Halting, he scanned the walls and saw I no other way out. The far wall seemed different from the others so he moved forward to investigate, and on drawing within a few feet of it realized it wasn't a wall at all but rather a huge mound of earth. Sighing, he turned to go when a timid voice addressed him from above and to the rear. "Who's there?" Coiys heart beat like a triphammer. He knew that , voice as well as he did his own. No, better! Whirling, he stared up at the top of the mound and saw an opening. "Ann? That's you, isn't it?" "oh, God! Cory!" He started up the slope but she was quicker, diving 142 Hell-O-Ween feet first through the opening and sliding swiftly down the mound. Grinning happily, he held out his arms to help her up but she needed no assistance. Ann leaped to her feet when still a yard off and literally threw herself on him, almost bowling him over, causing him to teeter backwards until his feet rested on level ground. She uttered a low sob and embraced him, her lips close to his cheek, her warm breath fanning his ear. "It's you! It's really and truly you!" Cory didn't know what to say. An odd lump constricted his throat. He inhaled the pleasant scent of her hair and felt her breasts flush with his chest. Suddenly the room became five to ten degrees warmer. "I thought you were the thing I saw earlier," Ann commented. instantly Cory's elation dissipated. "What thing?" he croaked, still holding her close and wishing he could do so forever. "About half an hour ago, I guess. I saw something at the top of the fissure. It jumped across and kept going. Had me scared silly." Cory wondered if it had been the same one he saw or another. He tried to calculate the time frame but was distracted by the feel of her, the warmth of her, the sheer joy of being alone with her. "Where are the others? I haven't seen anyone since Scott and Wes I trick on me.y' - Ann stepped back. "What trick?" Briefly, Cory told her about the incident and his wanderings since. He mentioned the vast chamber but refrained from telling her about the creatures he had seen. There was no sense in scaring her more than she already was although he knew he must inforin her soon. "I had no idea you were nearby when I came into this room," he said and grinned. "Had I known You were here I would have come sooner." "I've never been so glad to see anyone in my life." 143 David Robbins Those words were ambrosia to Cory's soul. He went to take her hands when she flinched and drew them away. "I hurt myself," she said. "How?" In precise detail Ann related everything that had happened to her since last they saw one another, including Terri's disappearance and her fall into the fissure. "I was sitting up there nibbling on my fifth pretzel when I heard footsteps and looked down," she concluded. I couldn't tell who it was but I knew it wasn't the big thing that jumped across the fissure." "You have food?" Cory asked excitedly. "Some pretzels and some potato chips. Oh, and a@ box of matches. I left them on top," Ann said, turning and pointing at the half-moon opening. "Wait here. I'll get them," Cory offered. He went up the slope stooped over, scrambling energetically, his stomach rumbling in anticipation. Finding the bags and box proved easy; all three were next to the opening and he only had to sweep his hand back and forth once before he touched them. Grabbing them in his left arm he hurried to the bottom. "Don't ever leave me again," Ann said. "What?" Cory responded, knowing she couldn't possibly mean what he thought she meant. "This place gives me the creeps. I can't stand being alone. Promise me you won't go off and leave me until after we're back on the surface." "You have my word," Cory said, striving to hide his disappointment. "Is something wrong?" "No," Cory equivocated. He was set to tear into one of the bags when he recalled her hands. "Take a seat so I can see how bad off you are." "I'll be okay." "Take a seat," Cory insisted and knelt next to her 144 Hell-O-Ween when she sat down. Placing the bags of chips and pretzels beside her, he opened the matchbox and removed a large wooden match. The box was only half-full. "How many matches have you used?" "None. After seeing that thing I didn't want to draw attention to myself by using them." "Smart move," Cory said and struck the match on the side of the box. When he laid eyes on her fingers he cringed inwardly. They were covered with dried blood and a piece of skin hung from her right forefinger. Four had been tipped open, although not seriously. "They must hurt like the dickens," he commented. "Only when I breathe." Cory smiled and moved the flame closer to the dangling piece of skin, over an inch long, which was attached to her finger by a thin strip less than an eighth of an inch wide. "I can pull that off for you." "Must you?" "It will pick up a lot of dust and will sting like crazy if you brush your hand against something." "You're right, of course." Ann took a breath. "Go ahead." "Close your eyes," Cory directed. Once she complied, he gripped the skin tightly and gave a sharp yank. Other than a flickering frown she gave no indication of feeling pain. "All done," he said, casting the piece over his shoulder. The flame chose that moment to go out. "Thanks," Ann said. "We have to get you to a doctor. You say there's no way out of that fissure?" "Not unless you can leap tall buildings at a single bound." "Then we'll go back down the tunnel I used to come in and look for a passage out of here," Cory said with as much confidence as he could muster. He unslung the backpack, placed both bags inside after removing 145 David Robbins three pretzels and eased it over his arms yet again. The box of matches he tucked into his front pocket so they would be handy in an emergency. "Are you ready?" "Home, James, and don't spare the gas." Cory admired her spunk. After all she had been through she could still make jokes. He took her by the right wrist and led her into the tunnel, delighted at the legitimate opportunity to touch her. She could hardly object under the circumstances. "What do you figure that thing was I saw?" Ann inquired. Here it was-the moment of truth. Should he or fill her in? I know what it is," he replied, posi-* tive she would handle the revelation intelligently and le calmly. Leaving nothing out, he told her all about the two creatures he had observed. Her arm became tense when he described the things, but she maintained her composure. "This is a nightmare," she remarked, "a horrible nightmare brought to life." "If we're lucky we'll be able to avoid them, no matter how many there are," Cory said. "This cavern is tremendous in size. They can't be everywhere at once." "We don't know that. What if they are demons, like you believe? They might be able to accomplish feats we can only dream of." Ann paused. "Demons? Did I really say that? This whole business is insane." "People have been reporting strange creatures in caves since time began," Cory mentioned. "Not just from the U.S. either, but from all over the globe. Huge lizards, albino amphibians, bats the size of condors, and things that resemble men but aren't men. "Let's change the topic." "Don't worry. I'll do my best to get you to safety. I won't let anything happen to you if I can prevent it," Cory said and saw the white of her teeth against the 146 Hell-O-Ween canvas of inky murk. Despite the danger they were in he was ecstatic. He had her all to himself and could, if he dared get up the courage, tell her his true feelings. For the moment he was content to walk along, feeling her skin on the palm of his hand and occasionally having her brush against him. "I'll never go out with Scott Miklin again," she declared. "The trick he and Wes played on you was despicable. Your forehead must be hurting something fierce." "Not really," Cory said. "Most of the pain has gone away by now." I had no idea Scott and Wes were planning to do that to you. Please believe me." The sincerity in her tone was self-evident. "I do," Cory said. "It's all my fault, though," Ann sadly went on. I was the one who wanted to invite you in the first place, and I talked Scott into agreeing. If I wasn't such a gimp I would have caught on when Scott told me he had to check with Wes first. I'm sorTy I put you through all this." "Inviting me was a kind thing to do," Cory said. You can't blame yourself for how those two idiots behaved." He gave her wrist a light squeeze. "And don't let me hear you calling yourself a gimp again. You're anything but a loser, and the nicest, prettiest girl I know." "Why, thank you, kind sir. If you could see me in the dark you'd laugh at how I'm blushing." "I mean it," Cory stated firmly, wondering if he had made too big an issue of it because she fell silent. At length they reached the chamber where he had seen the creature. He tookher straight across and was almost to the far side when she stopped and gasped, her eyes on the floor. "I had no idea!" 147 David Robbins There in the dust were the creature's gargantuan footprints, each bearing the impression of only three toes. Cory had been aware of them before, but in his haste to quit the chamber he had not taken the time to examine them. He remediect his oversight, sinking to one knee to compute the dimensions of the prints and learn what little else he could from them. Each was a foot and a half in length and about 12 inches in width. The tracks alone were enough to confirm that no creature known to science had made them. Unlike human tracks, where the heel of the foot produced a heavier impression than the ball and the toes, these prints indicated the creature's weight was evenly distributed along the entire sole. The big toes were circular, and at the tip of each was a fine line that might have been made by slender, claws. "Let's hurry," Ann urged. "Please." He didn't need prompting. No one wanted to get her out of the damn cave more than he did. On their way out of the chamber and along the meandering tunnel he thought about Ten-i's disappearance and its implications. There was a remote chance Wes and Scott were to blame, but he personally believed the creature had been the culprit. What would it do with her? Kill her on the spot? Or take her back to its lair in the vast chamber and finish her off there? He contemplated going to her rescue but thought better of the idea. For one thing, she might already be dead and he would be wasting the effort. For another, the creature appeared capable of crushing him with one swat of its huge hands. And going there would expose Ann to the same fate as Terri, which he would not do under any circumstances. When the tunnel forked he took the left branch, one he had not used. Immediately the ground sloped steeply upward, forcing them to lean forward as they 148 Hell-O-Ween climbed to maintain their balance. At the top the tunnel widened and leveled off. The walls were faintly phosphorescent, enabling them to see a few feet in any direction. "Too bad the entire cave isn't like this," Ann said, breaking the silence. "It would make life easier," Cory agreed. "What causes the glowing?" "If I had to make a guess I'd say the luminosity is produced by the slow oxidation of phosphorus in the walls." Ann giggled. "I love it when you talk like that. No wonder everybody thinks you're another Albert Einstein." "Sorry," Cory said, embarrassed by the comparison. Too many times he'd heard the same statement in an insulting vein. At school he consciously kept his speech simplistic so the other kids wouldn't rib him. "No need to apologize," Ann said. "It's a refreshing change from guys who only talk about themselves or sports or cars as if that's all that matters in the whole universe." She glanced at the left wall. "Girls have to put up with a lot of crap from guys, Cory. You must know that females mature earlier than males. About the time girls are starting to have serious thoughts about a career or motherhood boys are just entering their second childhood, doing quaint things like having belching contests or drag racing or trying to see how far they can go with every girl they meet." "Not all guys are like that," Cory said, trying to come up with something else to talk about. The subject of sex made him uncomfortable, especially since he had never gone all the way. If the raunchy talk in the locker room during gym class was reliable, he must be the only guy in Pagosa Springs High who had yet to make the big score. "You're a rare exception," Ann said, "and I never 149 David Robbins appreciated how much that means until now." At "Oh?" Cory said, his hopes again flaring at the "I". of affection in her words. "Yeah. If Wes or S@ott had found me, I'd be iT"Well", to listen to Wes's endless talk about football and Scott',T go on and on about the par-ties he's thrown." "You know those two," Cory said softly, disappoint ed. "Which reminds me. Have you heard any rumors going around school about Scott? Terri brought it up earlier, but I snapped at her and shouldn't have." "What kind of rumors?" "There's been some talk that he's heavy into drugs and might even be a pusher." Surprised, Cory looked at her. "I've never heard a word, but then I'm not the most popular guy in school so few bother to confide in me. And I'm hardly in Scott's clique." "I figured the stories were just wild talk. He's never offered to sell me any drugs." "Maybe he's selective about who he picks to be his customers, Cory said. "Or maybe he's afraid you'd go to the police if you learned the truth." "I would," -Arm stated. "Anyone who'd ruin the lives of others just to get rich quick should be locked up and have the key thrown away." Cory agreed with her. A cousin of his in Portland had become a drug addict several years ago. Her family had gone through sheer hell before she was finally able to kick the habit and get her life in order. She still attended support sessions weekly and went for Vil regular therapy so she wouldn't give in to temptation and go back to using cocaine. The tunnel narTowed. Soon they took a left turn and were plunged into darkness. A strong, cool breeze hit their faces, coming from above. He gazed upward and was startled to behold a patch 150 Hell-O-Ween of stars way up high. The ceiling had to be hundreds of feet overhead, and in the center was a rectangular opening to the surface. If only they could reach it! He halted, mesmerized by the elusive promise of escape, and his right foot bumped a small stone that smacked into an object directly ahead. Then he heard it clattering downward, the noise growing fainter and fainter until he couldn't hear it any more. "Don't move," Cory cautioned, removing the matches from his pocket. On striking one he found a pair of stalagmites a yard away. Beyond them loomed the mouth of a great pit. If he had kept going he might have tripped over the stalagmites and fallen to his death. "We'll have to turn around," Ann said.. "Let's see," Cory responded and edged between the stalagmites to the rim. By lowering his arm as far as he could he determined the sides were smooth, and by the curvature of the wall he estimated the circumference as 30 feet or better, although that was a wild guess at best. He couldn't see the bottom. "You're not thinking of going down in there?" "For all we know there might be a tunnel to the surface below us," Cory said. "We can't afford not to check." "How? You certainly can't jump." "Take these and keep one lit," Cory instructed as he gave her the box. Unzipping the backpack and removing the rope took a minute. Then he stepped to the stouter of the stalagmites and made a loop to drape over it. "What if the rope doesn't hold?" Ann asked. "It appears to be a new rope and it's thick enough to bear my weight." "But what if you go to the end and still don't touch bottom? Or what if you slip and fall? How will I get you out?" 151 David Robbins Cory gave her a reassuring glance. "Stop worrying. I'll be fine. If I don't reach the bottom I'll climb back up. It's as simple as that." "And if you slip?" Ann persisted. ,He put a hand on her shoulder. "If we're to get out J, is one of them. Since we don't have a flashlight the only way to find out if there is a tunnel below is to go have a look." I wish you wouldn't." Cory began tying knots at regular intervals of a or so, and when he was done he secured the loop over the stalagmite and pitched the rope over the rim. I" Averting his eyes from Ann's, he turned, straddled the I rope and gripped it firmly in both hands. "Wish me, luck," he said. "Oh, God, be careful. I don't want, anything to happen to you." He eased down slowly, his shoulders and upper diiwi& straining, applying pressure on the rope with his hands and his feet, inching from knot to knot. Ann's face, lit up by the rosy glow of a match, materialized at the rim like a disembodied head hovering in the oppressive gloom. "Are you okay?" 1@ ft Cory grunted and went lower, his shoulders pvt testing the unusual exertion. Except for gym class I - rarely exercised, an oversight he intended to iowiTS-1 provided he lived long enough. The rope was 40 long but seemed twice that to him. His arms xQV trembling when he reached the 38th knot, and as he let his legs fall further his feet made contact with solid k it M' y f e ground. He gingerly felt around with his toes until certain it was safe, then let go and relaxed. Cory? "I made it," he replied. "Hang on a second." Pivoting, he moved along the base of the pit until his probing 152 Hell-O-Ween fingers found an entrance to another passageway. Retracing his steps until the rope bumped against his cheek, he seized hold and craned his neck to see Ann. "There's a tunnel down here," he shouted. "Your turn to climb down." "I'll try," she replied and shook her left hand until the match went out, enfolding the rim in a pitch black blanket. "Take your time. Rest when you have to," Cory advised, trying not to think of the horrible consequences should she slip in the early stage of her descent. "I'll hold the rope steady for you." He thought he heard rustling, then dust rained on his shoulders. "Have you started yet?" "Just did," Ann yelled. "Had to put on the backpack first." Invisible pins pricked Cory's skin as he waited in breathless eagerness for her to reach the bottom. He would have brought the pack himself, but he had wanted her to have the munchies in case something happened to him. The rope shook in his hands and he braced his feet. Already he was planning the next phase of their search. If the tunnel should prove to be a dead end they would return to the pit and climb out. By then they would be in need of rest and could do so in the phosphorescent passage. After a few chips and pretzels they would press on, refreshed. At no time must he give in to the growing sense of desperation eating at his insides. They would find a way out. They had to or perish. A sole of Ann's foot brushed against his hair, shattering his reflections, and he stepped aside to allow her to reach the pit floor. He reached up, found her waist and guided her to his side. "Glad you could drop in," he joked, letting his hands linger on her hips. "The next time I'll use a parachute," Ann responded. Cory laughed and impulsively pursed his lips to kiss 153 David Robbins her. In the nick of time he caught himself and jerked his hands away as if they were on fire. "Something the matter?" "No. What could be wrong?" "I don't bite, you know." Was that an invitation? Did she know he had almos' kissed her? Cory's head swam with thoughts better left alone until they were safe and sound. They were standing nose to nose, her warm breath caressing his face, and he swore he could feel the heat of her body through his clothes. "We'd better get moving," he said huskily. "Yes." But neither of them moved. Cory could distinguish the whites of her eyes but was unable to read her expression. "Let me have the matches," he said. I stuck them in my pocket," Ann said, drawing the box out and holding it close to his chest. As Cory took them his fingers enfolded hers, and it was as if an electrical charge zapped his body. He tingled all over and broke out in a sweat. His manhood leaped to attention, bulging against his pants. "Cory-" Ann started to speak. Suddenly the rope swung into Cory's left cheek, chafing his skin as it moved back and forth. "What are you doing with the rope?" he asked. "Me? I'm not touching it." As the rope swung away Cory grabbed at it but missed. Bewildered, he opened the matchbox and swiftly lit one. As the tiny flame crackled to life he saw the end of the rope retreating into the darkness above as sorneone-or something-pulled it up. "No!" S he cried, as he leaped, but he was too late. His fingers raked the air and down he came, striking the wall with his shoulder. An instant later the rope vanished. 154 Cha%pter Fourteen Jay Thorpe's muscles rippled as he swung the rock hammer again and again, the tip of the chisel biting into the rock wall with every blow. This was the fourth arrow he had made and he was becoming adept at completing them fast, which still didn't satisfy the snippy bitch standing behind him. "Must we stop at every damn fork to do this?" Leslie snapped, impatiently tapping her right foot as she waited for him to get done. "We do if we want to find Ann again." - "At this rate we won't get out of this stinking cave until Christmas." Stacy stepped closer and placed a hand on Jay's back. "Quit your griping, Les. Jay is doing the best he can. I swear you're going to drive both of us nuts if you don't stop complaining." "You'd be upset too if we were with my hunk instead of yours and you had no idea where Jay was," Leslie shot back. "Can I help it if I miss Wes?" "You wanted to kill him for his little prank, remember*)" I'll kill him, all right. Then I'll screw his brains out and have him begging for more," Leslie said. "You're such a slut," Stacy said. "Takes one to know one." The arrow completed, Jay stood and admired his handiwork. When the rescue party entered the Caverna 155 David Robbins del Diablo they would have no difficulty in locatin. Ann. He felt profoundly guilty over having left her an fervently wished it had not been necessary. By leavin a trail of arrows any moron could follow, guaranteein her rescue, he partially soothed his guilt. "Are you tw at it again?" he idly asked while putting the hamme and the chisel into his backpack. "Let's just get on with this, shall we?" Leslie rejoined. Jay sighed. The two of them had been arguing since,' they left the fissure, and he had taken about all he, was going to. It was hard to believe they were best friends-or used to be before coming to the blasted cave. He entered a new tunnel, the flashlight in his right hand. Was the beam a bit weaker than it had been earlier? As a test he held the flashlight at waist height and roughly gauged how much of the passage7 the beam illuminated. Yes, most definitely the battery was gradually wearing down, which was to be expected since he had the light on all the time. He debated on whether to turn it off to conserve the battery but decided against it. Walking in the dark was bound to upset the girls even more than they already were. Then, too, he felt confident they would soon be back at the jeeps. There was no cause for worry. So he kept the light on and hiked boldly along the narrow passage. "Wait up," Stacy said, stepping beside him and taking his left hand. I don't want to walk with Grumpy." "Aren't you being rather hard on her?" Jay asked. "She's the one who can't stop shooting her mouth off," Stacy said. "As if things aren't bad enough, we have to listen to her whine every two minutes. I didn't realize how much of a crybaby she is until now." Leslie abruptly grabbed Stacys shoulder and spun her around. "Enough is enough, already! I won't take another darrin insult off of you." "And what will you do?" Stacy responded contemptuously, clenching her fists. 156 Hell-O-Ween Jay moved between them. "Girls, please. Settle this once we're out of the cave." "We'll settle it now," Stacy said, shoving Jay away and giving Leslie a hard push. Leslie returned the favor, and a moment later the two of them were going at it like two alley cats, punching and clawing and tearing at each other's hair. "Damn it," Jay grumbled, as he snatched at Stacy's arm. His fingers slid off as she spun. Now what was he supposed to do? Put a stop to the fight or '@ Rather than let them get it out of their systems. step in and possibly have Stacy get mad at him, he stood next to the wall and watched them go at it. Neither appeared to be doing serious damage to the other although they were flailing away like madwomen. Stacy raked Leslie's cheek with her nails, and Leslie retaliated by yanking on Stacy's hair. Clenching, they kicked and screeched, raising a fine cloud of dust. Jay began to find the fight amusing and not a little arousing. Stacy had torn the front of Leslie's blouse, exposing the upper half of Leslie's right breast. And Stacy's own honeydews were heaving from her strenuous exertion. Grinning, he licked his lips and waited for the outcome. The fight was decided when Stacy hooked a leg behind Leslie's ankle and shoved, sending Leslie crashing to the floor. "Had enough, bitch?" Stacy asked, her features livid. Leslie put her hands on the ground and was all set to get up when she glanced down and saw her ripped blouse. "Look at what you did!" she wailed. "This blouse cost me thirty-four dollars! My mother will have a fit." "Serves you right," Stacy said, moving backwards. "Lay a hand on me again and I'll. tear all your clothes off.,, 157 David Robbins Jays eyes lit up at the image of Leslie naked and iqd,_ for the plucking. She was as much a fox as Stacy, zilrowl", there had been occasions when he imagined what would be like to get horizontal with her. He'd szwi;4@ followed through on his lustful urges because he'.T$MRW',' Stacy would dump him if she ever found out. After ssMg" castrated him, of course. Leslie suddenly burst into tears, her hands over s - eyes, her shoulders shaking uncontrollably. "What a baby!" Stacy said. Moved to pity, Jay came for-ward and rested a M "M on Leslie's arm. "Come on "I he tried to soothe her "Itps not as bad as all that. Get up and we can going." Leslie cried louder. "Leave her alone," Stacy said. "She got what s @m' deserved." IK Jay was turning when Leslie swept off the floor -w-r` embraced him, burying her face in his shirt -.-relon-VITT", pitiably. Shocked, he delicately tried to pry Ker' but her arms were corded bands. "Get a grip, Les, he said and cast a sheepish glance at Stacy, who positively furious. Leslie's breasts poked again @tss jiggling with every heave of her shoulders, S; his organ to a full erection. He became hot all i@o and nervously licked his lips. "Let go of her," Stacy said. "Me?" Jay responded. "She's the one doing- the m4l, ing here." Again he tried to pry Leslie off, @ifll 0 not nearly as hard as he tried before. Stacy, in at - -01 whirled and folded her arms, her spine as stiff as a u.T-*, by-four. Smirking, Jay took advantage of the :fkarl 0 0 @er to place his hand on Leslie's back and begin asiol, i up and down. "There, there," he said. "Shape up, -.0 you?" Leslie's sobs became fewer and less severe. 4M-Z' turned her head to one side and sniffled loudly. 158 Hell-O-Ween Keeping a watchful eye on Stacy, Jay allowed his hand to drift around Leslie's back to her right breast, brushing it lightly with his palm. To his amazement, she ground her hips into him and he thought he would explode in his jeans. "Feeling better now?" he casually asked, struggling to keep his tone even. "Yes," Leslie said, looking up, her eyes wide as if in surprise. Her cheeks were moist, her nose red. "I'm sony. I don't know what's gotten into me." "It's the strain," Jay said, glancing at Stacy's back. He started to pull away when Leslie did an incredible thing; she gripped his hand and pressed it to her exposed breast. For a second her hard nipple mashed into his palm, and then she released him, her mouth curling in an enigmatic smile. "I'll be okay," Leslie said, adjusting her blouse to cover as much of her breast as she could. "Thank you." Stacy finally turned. "Are you done being the Good Samaritan?" she demanded of Jay. "Hey, don't blame me. You two started this." "I'm to blame," Leslie said contritely, looking at Stacy. "Will you ever forgive me for being such a jerk? I promise it won't happen again." "No problem," Stacy said, taken aback by the admission. "Like honeybuns said, it's the strain getting to all of us. All this lousy wandering around is enough to make anyone bitchy." Jay slipped past her to take the lead and to prevent her from noticing the bulge in his pants. The flashlight flickered, then steadied. He wondered who had the backpack containing the extra batteries and figured it must be Scott or Wes. They would be sure to keep the spares handy. As he hiked he thought about Terri. There had been no sign of any additional unusual tracks, certainly not so much as a glimpse of any creature that might have made those he saw. Was he wrong? Had Ten-i's scream 159 been faked? Was it, all part of some weird game Wes and Scott were playing? Thinking of Wes brought Leslie to mind. Why had she deliberately turned him on? What was she trying to prove? She was supposed to be Wes's babe, yet she acted as if she had the hots for him. Should he follow through and see if she was serious or playing around? He grinned. Sure, the thought of poking her got him all excited, but he was risking romantic suicide if he did it. And how could he even entertain the notion of losing Stacy since she meant so much to him? He glance over his shoulder at the two of them now walking quietly side-by-side and drank in the beauty of their lovely bodies. Both smiled at him. Fifteen minutes later Jay entered a room where the ceiling glowed dimly. There were two exits, a narrow tunnel on the right and another passage across the way. He clicked off the flashlight and leaned against a stalagmite. "How about a short break?" he inquired. Leslie nodded and brushed her bangs out of her eyes. "I need to weewee," Stacy announced. "Which tunnel aren't we taking?" Jay pointed at the passage on the opposite side of the room. "We'll leave that way." "Fine, Stacy said. "Give me a minute." She hurried into the narrow tunnel without looking back. Here was the perfect chance for Jay to learn whether Leslie wanted him or not, but he hesitated to make the first move, fearful of being seen by Stacy. He gazed at Leslie, who smirked and reached up to cup her breast. "Did you like it?" she whispered. "If you did, there's more where that came from." He was in front of her in two strides, his big hands covering her globes and squeezing as his lips locked on hers and his tongue darted into her mouth. He felt 160 her hand slide between their bodies and stroke his pole. Burning with desire, he lowered his left hand to the junction of her smooth thighs and rubbed his forefinger against her crack. She squirmed and cooed, her tongue deliciously sweet as she kissed him. It took all of his self-control not to rip her blouse and pants off right then and there. As it was he had to force himself to push her back; then he quickly stepped a few feet away and tried to recover his composure before his woman returned. Not five seconds elapsed before Stacy did, grinning and asking, "Anyone else have to use the facilities?" "I'm fine," Jay said, shrugging out of the backpack. "What do you say to some food and some brew?" "I'm thirsty enough to drink a river," Leslie answered, her hips swaying slightly as she gave him a meaningful stare. Jay swiftly opened the pack, hoping Stacy hadn't noticed. He pulled out the six-pack and gave each of them a Can, then popped another and gulped the tangy beer greedily, trying to quench the fire in his loins. Damn, that girl could kiss! And there was no doubt she was wann for his form. All he had to do was think of a way to be alone with her. Suddenly a hand fell on his wrist and he inadvertently jumped, spilling beer on himself as he hastily lowered the can. Beside him Stacy broke into laughter. "Jesus, lighten up, honeybuns. You're wound up as tight as can be." "Sorry. I didn't know who it was," Jay blurted and immediately regretted his rashness. "Who else would it be?" Stacy asked suspiciously. ,(No one," Jay said, taking another swallow so she couldn't see his eyes. That had been too close for comfort. He had to be careful from now on and not say or do anything that would give Stacy the slightest cause to suspect he was hot for Leslie. If he played his cards 161 right he could have his cake and eat it too, as the old saying went. Stacy grubbed a box of cheese crackers from the pack and took out a handful. "Anyone else want some?" I do," Leslie said, sashaying up and removing five. She made a point of smiling at Jay the whole time. What the hell was she trying to do? Jay wondered in a panic. If Leslie kept it up, Stacy would figure out what was going on. Fortunately Leslie turned away and stared at the ceiling. "Any idea what makes it glow like that?" "Beats me," Stacy said. "It's pretty, though." "I bet Einstein would know," Jay said. "He's the only guy I know of who gets straight As in every stinking class. Can you believe it? Every stinking class. I wish I had his smarts." "You'll do fine with the brains you have if you don't over-reach your limits," Stacy commented. Jay nodded although he had no idea what she meant. He took the cracker box from her and jammed a halfdozen into his mouth at once. "Maybe we should go easy on the food for now, Stacy said. "We might need it later on." Leslie turned toward them. "I have no idea how close we are to surface. Do either of you?" All Jay could do was shake his head while chomping . on the crackers. He carefully avoided looking at Leslie and let his gaze wander around the room. By chance he glanced down at the cave floor and beheld a sight that turned him into a block of ice, his mouth hanging open in the act of chewing. His pulse rate speeded up dramatically. It couldn't be! But there, etched in the dust, was one of the monstrous footprints complete with the three odd toes. "What are you ... ?" Stacy began and looked at the ground. A sharp intake of breath signified she saw the'i track. 162 Jay took a step and spotted others, some partially smudged by their own prints. He closed his mouth and gulped, then began a systematic sweep of the floor. Toward the opposite side the tracks told the whole story. Someone else had recently been through this very room, perhaps one of their friends. The size of the footprints indicated it had been a guy, possibly Scott, Wes or Cory. Whoever, his tracks were as clear as those of the creature, which seemed to have entered the room after their friend since some of the thing's tracks had partly wiped out some of the sneaker prints. "Son of a bitch!" Leslie exclaimed after studying the line of impressions. "What made those huge tracks? A bear?" "No bear has only three toes," Stacy said. "How would you know?" Leslie asked. I watch the Discovery Channel." "Stacy is right," Jay confirmed to forestall another argument. "These tracks weren't made by a bear. And they're the same kind as the ones I saw earlier." Both girls swung toward him. "Whoa, there," Leslie said. "What tracks did you see? You never told us about them." "Yeah," Stacy said. "Spill the beans, lover," Cursing his own stupidity, Jay recounted how he found similar tracks when he went after Terri. "I didn't say anything at the time because I didn It want to worry you," he admitted. "Who's wor-ried?" Leslie replied. I don't care what you guys think; it has to be a bear. There are no other animals in Color-ado that leave trucks this size." "Then why are there only three toes?" Stacy asked. "Maybe some of its toes didn't show up clearly," Leslie answered. "Who knows?" She beamed at Jay. "And even if it is a bear we don't have anything to worry about with your boyfriend here. He can handle anything that comes along." 163 "Really?" Stacy said, her tone dripping acid. "Bear or not," Jay stated hastily, "I don't want to run into the thing. We don't have any weapons." "So?" Leslie said. "Nine times out of ten bears run from people they encounter. My dad told me that." "What if this is the tenth time?" Stacy asked. "We should be more concerned about whoever the animal was trailing," Jay commented. "Maybe we should try and catch up with him." He walked beside the prints and ascertained the per-son had entered the same narrow tunnel where Stacy had heeded nature's call. "Forget it. I'm not going in there," Leslie said. "It'll probably take us back in the direction we came from. And what if we run into the bear? No, let's keep going like we are so we can get out of this damn cave that much sooner." Stacy touched one of the sneaker prints with her toe. "What if this was Wes?" "I doubt it. He's with Scott and that dork, Fleming. I don't think he'd be truipsing around by his lonesome," Leslie said. "Hell, for all we know there might even be someone else in the cavern." Jay didn't believe that for a second, but he held his tongue. More arguing would waste precious time. His main concern was getting the girls to safety, and with that in mind he hurriedly removed the hammer and chisel and marked the tunnel they were about to take in half his usual time. "What's the big rush?" Leslie asked with a snicker. "Afraid the bogeyman will nab YOU?" Ignoring her, Jay replaced the tools and resumed their trek, switching on the flashlight once they were in the murky passageway. The crackers had barely whetted his appetite, and he longed for a nice, thick, juicy steak with all the trimmings, his favorite meal in all the world. He imagined a simmering platter, the steak 164 heaped high with succulent mushrooms, beside it a baked potato smothered in butter. His mouth watered, and he felt an ache in the pit of his stomach. Another hour or so and he'd be tempted to rip open the backpack and devour every last bit of food they had left. The tunnel, as was typical, pursued a sinuous course. Jay occasionally trained his beam on the tracks in the dust. If it had been one of their friends, then the tunnel they were in must not take them anywhere near the cave entrance. He was of half a mind to turn around and take that narrow tunnel whether Leslie liked the idea or not. But since doing so might lead to another argument-and he was sick and tired of all the verbal sparring-he decided to press on until the tunnel forked and take whichever branch did not have prints. Ten minutes of steady hiking brought them to a fork. He halted, scanned the ground and learned the tracks came out of the right-hand passage. "We'll go up this one," he announced, taking the other branch before anyone could object. They covered 100 yards in silence. "Is it me or is the flashlight growing weaker?" Stacy asked as they crossed a wide room where the roof was covered with thin stalactites. "It is a little weaker," Jay admitted. "We'd better find the entrance before it goes out completely." "Don't I know it," Jay said, bothered by the idea of being lost in the dark with the thing that made those three-toed tracks. Consequently he picked up speed, moving as rapidly as the girls could comfortably manage, his long legs effortlessly eating up the distance. The tunnel floor elevated upward by gradual degrees, inspiring him to hope they were finally on the right track. His hopes were dashed, however, when before too long the tunnel widened out and they 165 found themselves on the rim of a precipice over 100 feet in height, He pointed the flashlight at the bottom, resisting the tide of anger trying to engulf him, then stiffened on hearing a most bizarre noise to their rear, a noise similar to one he'd heard a year or so ago when he had been out hiking with his dad and had nearly stepped on a snake sunning itself on a flat rock. It was like the buzzing of a rattlesnake's tail. 166 Chapter Fifteen Scott is dead! Scott is dead! Those words echoed over and over in Wesley Eagen's head as he raced pell-mell down a tunnel, oblivious to his surroundings, aware only of the raw fear dominating his being. His legs churned, his arms pumped, and the twin flashlights moved up and down with the rhythm of his movements, casting eerie dancing shadows on the walls. He had been running for over five minutes, and his chest ached abominably. Still he forged onward, panic-stricken that he would share the same revolting fate as his best friend. What had done it? What had killed Scott? He couldn't conceive of any animal capable of ripping a man's head from his shoulders except a bear, and there were no bears in the Caverna del Diablo so far as anyone knew. Were mountain lions capable of such an atrocious feat? He recalled reading about a jogger slain by a cougar only a month before, but in that instance the big cat had leaped on the unfortunate man from behind and snapped the jogger's neck with a single swipe of its powerful paw. The man had not been decapitated. He came to a curve and halted to catch his breath, leaning on the wall for support. Beads of perspiration trickled down his brow. His shirt was clammy and stuck to his sides. Shifting, he aimed both flashlights 167 back down the tunnel but saw nothing in pursuit. Evidently the animal had been too busy consuming Scott to bother giving chase. Wesley slumped, his mind abruptly awhirl, everything catching up with him at once. What with the coke and the beer and now the grisly death of Scott he could scarcely form a coherent train of thought. Get a hold on yourself! he mentally thundered. The lark to the cave had become a matter of literal life and death, and he must get himself under control. He must devote his entire energies to escaping from this cavern. Finding the others was out of the question. They would have to fend for themselves-even Leslie. He frowned, thinking of her torn to pieces and being feasted on by some unknown beast, and then he shrugged. She was practically a grown woman and could take care of herself. He had to look out for number one. In a certain respect he was lucky. The thing had jumped Scott first, so now he knew they were all in danger and wouldn't blunder into another attack. And he also had three flashlights-his own, Scott's, and Fleming's in his backpack. So he need not worry about being left in the dark when one failed. Too bad he didn't have the spare batteries also. Who did? he wondered and suddenly cursed aloud. He'd forgotten all about Scott's backpack. In his haste to flee he had left it lying back there on the tunnel floor. Maybe the batteries were in it. He debated whether to go back and immediately rated the idea as insane. The thing was back there. A few batteries weren't worth his precious life. Wes straightened up and hastened farther along the passage. He switched off the flashlight in his left hand but held it ready for instant use. Bright lights often scared off or confused animals, which was why it wasl illegal to hunt game at night using spotlights. All w 168 hunter had to do was shine a light on a buck or doe and the dumb animal would stand there and stare at the glare, hypnotized in a sense, giving the hunter plenty of time to aim and put a bullet in its brain. He knew the technique well because he had hunted illegally several times with his older brother. There was no harm in the practice that he could see. Colorado had an abundance of mule deer. One buck or doe less wouldn't make any difference come rutting season. He had a thought that made him chuckle. Scott's supply of coke was in the backpack left behind. What would happen if the animal got into the pack and inhaled some of the blow? The drug might drive it totally bonkers. He imagined a wasted bear or cougar bumbling around the cave, bumping into walls and staggering all over the place. The passage seemed to wind haphazardly forever. No forks appeared. He was beginning to think he had made a mistake and would wind up at a dead end when he emerged into an enormous chamber much like the one in which they had eaten some munchies before ditching the dork. He headed for the far side, seeking an exit, and was halfway across before it dawned on him that there was only the one way in and out. Perturbed, he pivoted and made for the sole tunnel, taking only four steps when from outside there issued the nerve-shattering rattle he had heard prior to Scott's death. The thing was out there! Instantly he turned off the light and dived behind an oval rock formation. Had the animal trailed him? Did it know he was in the chamber? He huddled against the formation and shivered as if from intense cold. The rattling grew louder. Suddenly the creature was in the chamber. Dull footfalls heralded its arrival, as did heavy, raspy breathing. Wes quaked in fear. Could the thing hear him or sniff him out even if he stayed still? His heart was 169 doing a tango in his chest, and he tried willing it to stop without success. The footsteps had ceased, but he didn't know if that meant the creature was standing and listening or whether it was creeping silently toward him. He bit his lower lip to keep from screaming. Every nerve jangled. His eyes were wide with fear. The seconds were like hours, each unending unto itself, stretching his self-discipline to its limits. His teeth started chattering so he bit down harder on his lip. Was that a footstep? A tremendous urge to relieve his bladder flooded through him, and he almost wet his jeans. He touched his forehead to the cool stone, fervently wishing the whole affair was nothing but a nightmare and he would wake up safe in his bed. Then he would phone Scott and tell him to forget about going to the stinking Caverna del Diablo, and he would never go near it himself for as long as he lived. A hand fell on his shoulder. Wes screeched and leaped erect, spinning as he did to see the black outline of an enormous creature that towered over him like a mammoth grizzly. His reaction was automatic. He extended both arms and switched on both flashlights. Caught full in the glare was the living embodiment of the being painted at the entrance to the cave, a monster with reddish skin and horris and a long forked tail that waved in the air like a cobra entranced by a snake charmer. The eyes blazed with fire. Great, ponderous breasts perched high on its chest, breasts every inch as naked as the rest of the creature's body. All this Wes observed the moment his twin beams struck the creature. Then the thing recoiled, hissing like hundreds of vipers, and frantically back-pedaled while covering its eyes with its hands. In a flash of insight Wes comprehended the reason. 170 b he thing couldn't endure bright light! He fixed both eams on its face and cackled crazily when the thing whirled and raced behind another fonnation. It was still hissing savagely. He retreated, making for the passage, his flashlights constantly bathing the creature's hiding place, his confidence growing with every step he took. Whatever the hell that thing was, he could keep it at bay until he reached the surface provided he did so before his batteries went dead. At the tunnel he paused. The creature had not shown so much as a finger. Grinning, he spun and sped off, repeatedly glancing back to see if it came after him. it didrA. The fear drained from him like water from a sink, leaving him rejuvenated and brimming with newfound courage. If he kept his head he would survive, he would win just as he always did-well, almost always. Not that he could fault himself for his one major loss. Cory Fleming's archery triumph had been a one in a million fluke. He suddenly realized the dork might run into the same creature and laughed aloud. If that happened, Fleming was as good as dead. The geek didn't have a flashlight. "Catch it!" Ann shouted. "Too late," Cory said, frowning up into the enshrouding blackness. He should have held onto the rope the whole time and jerked it off the stalagmite the moment she touched the ground. "Who would do such a thing?" she asked in amazement. "Not who. What," Cory corrected her. "If it was Wes or Scott they'd be laughing their fool heads off and insulting us for being such idiots." .You think one of those things is responsible?" "I'd bet my life on it." They both fell silent and heard soft scraping as the rope was pulled all the way out of the pit. Then a hiss 171 punctuated the stillness. "Dear God!" Ann said. "What if it comes down here after us? How will we fight it?" "We won't even try. We'll run," Cory said. He noticed the match was about burnt to within a fraction of hi fingers. "Quick. Light another match before this one goes out. It can probably see better than us in the dark, and we don't want to be taken by surprise." Ann grabbed the box and fumbled awkwardly because of her injured fingers before she got one lit. "Now back into the tunnel," Cory directed. "Take it slow and cup your hand around the match." He waited until she was in motion, then followed, prepared to defend her with his life if the creature should jump down to attack them. Having seen the thing close up he had no illusions about its capabilities. Such a massive brute, layered thick with muscles, would possess remarkable strength and agility. He would be no match for it in a physical confrontation. Somehow, he must rely on his intellect to prevail, which was easier said than done. "What now?" Ann asked, stopping a few yards into the passage. "The match is almost out." "We run," Cory said, grabbing her left wrist fleeing into the depths. They ran side-by-side, their shoulders brushing one another, pacing themselves so they could cover more distance. "Will it come after us?" Ann asked. "Probably." "What will we do?" "I'm open to any ideas you might have," Cory said, but none were forthcoming. They were both in the same boat. Lacking knowledge of the creature's weaknesses, if any, they had no insights into how to defeat the brute if that was at all possible. Was he right in refer-ring to it as a brute? Twice he'd done so, yet given the level of intelligence the thing 172 demonstrated by waiting until they were both at the bottom of the pit and then pulling up their lifeline, it must be smarter than he gave it credit for being. How smart, though? Did it, say, have intelligence comparable to a dog's? A chimpanzee's? Or a human's? The difference might mean the whole world to them when the final battle came. Another chilling possibility hit him. What if the creature was more intelligent than they were? If it was a demon, as he'd surmised, then it might be able to outthink them as easily as they could outthink a small child. Demons were notoriously devious and cruel, and only intelligent beings could be devious. If the creature did indeed fit that profile, then the thing might be toying with them. Perhaps it knew they were hopelessly lost and was letting them tire themselves out before moving in for the kill. He mustn't make the mistake of underestimating the thing. "My hands are bleeding again," Ann said. "When we can stop I'll see what I can do." The tunnel walls closed in on them, giving Cory the impression they were speeding through solid earth. He noted with dismay the floor was tilting downward, which made it unlikely they were nearing the entrance. "We're going deeper," Ann said, a tremor in her voice. "Chin up. We'll make it.put yet." "Thank you, Cory." "For what?" he asked in surprise. "For being you." Now what was that supposed to mean? Cory mused and felt her other hand close on his wrist and squeeze. Was there deeper significance to her comment? He didn't know what to think. One minute she intimated she truly cared for him. The next, she treated him as she would any close friend. Was she sending mixed signals, or was he simply making an emotional moun_ 173 tain out of her clear-cut actions and words? Perhaps he saw hidden meanings where there were none because he wanted to see them. He wanted her to like him. Hell, he wanted her to love him. Maybe wishful thinking had tainted his perspective. They passed through a series of somber rooms. After four in a row Cory drew to a halt just inside the next passage. "Well rest for a bit," he declared. "Do you think it's safe to stop?" Ann asked, staring at the last room. . "Maybe not. But we won't do ourselves any good if we're too exhausted to put up much of a fight," Cory said and was shocked when she unexpectedly leaned on him and rested her cheek on his chest. "This might seem cruel to say, but I'm glad you're here. Without your help Id be lying back in that fissure, helpless, easy prey for the creature to pick off at its convenience." "I haven't done much," Cory said. .You 're too modest," Ann said and kissed him on the point of the chin. Cory felt warm all over. There she was, doing it again! Was the kiss just a friendly act, or was she expressing deeper feelings? How was a guy to know how to react to a girl when the females of the species were so damed confusing? Maybe he should ask his dad. After 21 years of marriage his father must understand women thoroughly. "Why don't you hand over the backpack?" he suggested. "I don't mind wearing it," Ann said. ."Without the rope it's not very heavy." "Humor me," Cory said, not wanting to burden her in any way. If the demon closed in she would need all the speed she could muster. "Such a gentleman. All tight, my knight errant." Ann stood back and wriggled out of the straps. "It's all yours. 174 He grabbed the backpack and was twisting to Slip it over his right arm when he spied an unusual object less than two yards away on the floor of the room. Either his eyes were deceiving him in the near total darkness or the object had the aspect of metal rather than rock, appearing exceptionally smooth and of a much lighter color than any of the nearby formations. "Give me the matches," he said, striking one after she did so. In the feeble glow of the flame he saw the object was indeed different. it was another Spanish-style helmet. He stepped closer and squatted. "What is that?" Ann asked. "If my guess is right this once belonged to a conquistador," Cory replied, lifting the helmet in his left hand. The crown had been dented, as if from a mighty blow, and the bottom bore scratch marks. "I saw others just like this one at the same spot where I saw the bones I told you about." "What's that under it?" Cory looked and was elated to see a piece of wood the thickness of his wrist and six inches long. One end had been charTed, convincing him the piece was all that remained of a torch the conquistador had brought into the cavern. Ordinarily the passage of so much time would have reduced the wood to dust, but lying deep in the cave where it had been sheltered from the elements and being further protected by the helmet had enabled the piece to remain intact. Gingerly, he touched it, afraid the torch would crumple at the slightest pressure. The wood was dry, even brittle, but he could hold the end that wasn't charred in his hand without the wood breaking apart. "Should we try to light it?" Ann inquired. "Not yet," Cory said. "We may need it more later." He gave the piece to her. "Would you put it in the backpack for now?" "Gladly, Sir," Ann said, stepping behind him. 175 He heard the zipper being worked, then she said, "Ouch." "Are you okay?" he asked. "Fine. I made the mistake of brushing a finger against the pack and scraped one of the cuts." "Sorry. I should have done it." "Don't be ridiculous. I'm not helpless." Cory waited impatiently for her to finish. The match,,,' ma"c went out so he lit another and turned. "Let me have a look at your hands again." "I'm fine," Ann said. "They don't hurt nearly half as much." "Let me see," Cory insisted, taking her left hand in his. All the fingers were caked with a fine layer of dust. Dried blood covered those that had been torn open. Only the middle finger showed signs of swelling. As yet there was no infection, but the risk was very real if she didn't wash her hands soon and apply antiseptic to kill any germs. The right hand was in much the same shape. "Will I live?" Ann joked. "You'd better," Cory said. "I've gotten used to your company." He gazed fondly into her eyes, girding himself to tell her how he truly felt, when the second match hissed out and they were again embraced by darkness. "Maybe we should haul butt. That thing might be after us." "Let's go," Cory said, rising. When his foot bumped the helmet he paused. If the demon did catch them he would need a weapon. So far all he had seen were rocks he could hurl at the thing, which would probably have as much effect as throwing stones at a tank, or he could clutch one and try to bash the creature sen@seless. The helmet might be better for that purpose; it was heavy and the top came to a point at the front. He wedged the box of matches into his pocket, then bent down and grabbed the ancient headpiece. 176 "You're bringing that with us?" Cory explained while taking her wrist and resuming their flight. "Keep your eyes peeled for anything else we can use. I'm not letting that thing get us without a fight." "My hero," Ann said, but there was no sarcasm in her voice. "And to think I wouldn't give you the time of day for such a long time. You've always treated me with kindness and respect, which is more than I can say about some guys I've known." "Ann, there's something I'd like to say," Cory said, glad he wasn't facing her or he might not have the nerve. "I should have said it ages ago. It's about-2' "It's about what happened in the shed," Ann said, cutting him off. "You know, I've been thinking about that a lot lately. I was so young, Cory. We both were. And young girls are taught by their mothers to never, ever let a boy touch them where you touched me." "But I didn't--2' Cory began, and again she interrupted. "You didn't mean to do it," Ann said. I know that now. Back then I thought you were being indecent, even sinful. I thought you had done the worst thing a boy could do to a girl, and I felt deeply hurt and betrayed because I liked you and trusted you." She paused. "Now I see the incident in a whole new light. Neither of us knew anything about sex. You were as ignorant as I was of the human body and its functions. We were two dumb kids playing doctor, and your touching me was an accident . "Exactly," Cory said, flooded with relief. They had finally gotten the mess out in the open. And, wonder of wonders, she saw his side at last! He felt positively giddy. "I'm sorry it took me so long to realize you weren't the worst lecher in the Western Hemisphere." Cory laughed. "Better late than never." 177 "So we can be close friends again?" "Whatever you want," Cory replied, although he would rather have confessed he wanted to be so much more to her than a bosom buddy. "Good. No matter what happens next, at least we've cleared the air. We can start over again." "I'm glad--!' Cory started to speak and was cut off once more, but this time Ann wasn't responsible. This time he stopped because of a sound coming from somewhere behind them, a thumping sound as if someone was beating on the cave floor or a wall. He heard Ann's intake of breath and felt his own skin crawl. "It's the creature!" 178 Chapter Sixteen "What the hell is that?" Leslie Vanderhurst snapped, spinning so fast she nearly tripped over her own feet and caused dust to sprinkle over the edge of the precipice. Jay also had turned. He tr-ained the flashlight along the tunnel but saw nothing. Right away he thought of the strange tracks and wondered if the thing that made them was also making the rattling noise. "Should we all go see?" Stacy asked. "I'd rather not," Jay said. "Why?" Leslie demanded. She had recovered her composure and took a step. "It might be Wes or Scott playing one of their tricks." I don't think it is," Jay said. "If you're scared I'll go by myself," Leslie stated and nonchalantly began to walk off. "No!" Jay exclaimed, grabbing her arm, his gut instinct telling him there was more to the situation than their dipstick friends indulging in a childish prank. "We should stick together until we're out of this damn cave. If we become separated we might never find each other." "Don't have a cow, handsome. I'm only going down the tunnel a ways," Leslie said. "I'll be fine." i'WeP11 go together," Jay stressed, stepping in front of her before he let go of her arm because he suspected 179 she might try to run on ahead of him to see Wes. He advanced cautiously, the flashlight fixed on a bend in the passage 30 yards off. Where previously the beam would have lit up the whole stretch of tunnel, now the bend was barely discernible. "Those tracks have turned you into a worrywart," Leslie remarked. "Maybe," Jay acknowledged. He glanced at Stacy, who had not uttered a word and seemed oddly distracted, then at the bend. What he wouldn't give to have his da&s .357 Magnum or shotgun right at that moment! He hefted the flashlight, pondering whether to use it as a club if his instincts were proven correct. The rattling stopped. "It's got to be those two clowns," Leslie said. "This is just their style." Jay didn't bother to comment. He stayed close to the right-hand wall until only a few feet from the bend, then he boldly dashed forward and swept the flashlight around the comer. Again the next section of passage was empty, but this time there was proof his hunch had been on target, for mixed in the dust among the tracks they had left were more of the three-toed variety. "There's no one here," he said and tried to draw back before the girls could see. "Look!" Stacy said. "That animal has been following us." "Well, what do you know?" Leslie said, stepping over to study the impressions. She thoughtfully stroked her chin, then grinned. "The two of you were right. I now seriously doubt these were made by a bear." "You do?" Stacy responded. "Yep. I'm convinced Wes and Scott are to blame," Leslie said. "Hear me out. You've both seen those phony Bigfoot feet sold in stores, haven't you? The kind you can put on to run around in the woods and leave 180 a bunch of tracks so folks will think a real Bigfoot did it?" "I've seen them," Jay said. "Well, the way I see it, Wes and Scott got their hands on a set and modified them to look like the tracks we have here. All they'd have to do is cut off a couple of toes and presto, instant alien monster feet." Despite himself, Jay had to concede the idea made more sense than there being an unknown animal roaming the tunnels of the Cavema del Diablo. And the stunt was certainly typical of one Wes and Scott would pull. He felt mildly foolish for not having come up with the explanation himself. "Could be," Stacy said, her tone implying she was not completely convinced. "You should have let me run on ahead," Leslie told Jay. "By now I'd be giving my Wes a piece of my mind." "if it is them why didn't they stick around?" Stacy asked. "They've carried this game far enough already." "Those two space cadets never know when to quit," Leslie said. "Theyll keep this up until we catch them in the act or they become bored." "How did they make the rattling soun&" Stacy queried. "Maybe they bought a rattlesnake tail or killed a rattler to get it. I wouldn't put anything past them." For the first time since Terri had vanished, Jay relaxed. Leslie had a logical answer for everything. Although he was still annoyed that Wes and Scott hadn't taken him into their confidence, he grudgingly admired them for their clever scheme. It was no wonder those two guys were the life of every party. "Let's try to catch those clowns," Leslie proposed. Whirling, she raced down the tunnel, beckoning for them to join her. 181 "Wait?" Jay said knowing full well she wouldn't. Sighing, he glanced at Stacy, and together they jogged after Leslie, who was running flat out. "Be careful!" he called. "You might hurt yourself." "Bull!" Already Leslie was near the limit of the flashlight's illumination and about to turn another bend. "What an airhead," Stacy muttered. Jay saw Leslie reach the comer, then suddenly skid to a stop and gape at something beyond. She staggered backwards until she bumped into the wall, pressed her hands to her face and cringed. "What's this bogus? Is she playing games now?" Stacy wondered. "Les?" Jay said, reaching the comer several strides ahead of Stacy. He glanced down the passage, bringing the flashlight to bear, and was mystified to see only the walls and ceiling until his gaze dropped to the ground within inches of his toes. Pure horror seized him at the sight of a severed human hand lying palm up; the fingers formed into rigid claws, the flesh grimy and discolored with thin strips of skin dangling from the bottom. "Son of a bitch!" he exclaimed and felt Stacy's hand close on his arm. "Is it real?" "Looks that way," Jay said, stooping and lowering the flashlight. The long fingernails were painted red, the fingers pudgy and pale. On the ring finger was a thin golden ring with a red stone in the setting. "Oh, God!" Stacy whispered. "It's one of Terri's hands! I recognize the ring she was wearing." "Are you sure?" Jay asked absently, so shocked he could barely think. it Of course I'm sure. That's her birthstone, a ruby. Her mother gave that ring to her for her last birthday-" Leslie burst into tears and blurted, "No, no, no!" over and over again. 182 "Hell," Jay mumbled, backing away from the hand and pulling Stacy with him, the two of then gazing apprehensively along the empty tunnel. "Whatever did that will come back," Stacy predicted, which set Leslie to crying harder. "We don't want to be here when it does," Jay said, facing Leslie and placing a hand on her quaking shoulder. "Listen, Les, we have to get the hell out of here. Shape up and move your butt." stuttering and blubbering, Leslie seemed to be trying to melt into the wall to escape the horrid sight. "Come on!" Jay urged, shaking her roughly with no result. He lifted his hand, on the verge of slapping her to, bring her around, when she dabbed at her eyes, coughed and croaked a question. "Where can we go that will be safe?" "Anywhere, just so we stay on the move and don't give whatever killed Terri a chance to get us," Jay said, grasping her wrist and hauling her after him as he retraced their steps to the precipice. Stacy stayed glued to his other side. Once on the rim he swept the light over the sheer rock face again, seeking a means to the bottom. They didn't dare go back the other way. The thing might be waiting for them. "There!" Stacy cried, pointing to their right. "What's that?" He swiveled and spied a narrow ledge or shelf extending from the top to the floor. It couldn't be more than I I or 12 inches wide at the most. A single misstep would hurtle them to their doom far below. "We'll use that only as a last resort," he said and moved along the rim to find an alternate route. A complete sweep turned up none. "Listen," Stacy said. Far off arose a faint nattling. "It's coming for us!" Leslie whined, beginning to tremble. 183 '%11 - "Then we won't be here when it anives," Jay said, stepping to the spot where the ledge jutted from the cliff. "Who wants to go first?" "Down there?" Leslie responded, recoiling in terror. "You must be nuts. None of us will make it." "We all will," Jay growled, snatching her arm. She fought him, trying to pull free, but he held fast. "Maybe you should take the lead, honeybuns," Stacy proposed. "We'll put her between us so we can stop her if she starts to fall." The suggestion was sound, but Jay hesitated. He preferred to have Stacy close to him where he could grab her if she should slip. With Leslie between them he might not be able to come to her rescue in time. "Well?" Stacy prompted as the rattling became louder. "All right," Jay reluctantly said and eased onto the ledge. When Leslie pulled back he glared at her. "Do that once more and I'll throw you over the side myself. You need to get a grip, Les, until we're at the bottom. Screw up and we all could die. Understand?" Her lips trembling, her eyes rimmed with moisture, Leslie nodded and gulped. "Go ahead. III do my best." Jay released her. Keeping his back to the cliff, the flashlight in his right hand and aimed back up the ledge, he used tiny steps to descend until his head was below the rim. Then he stopped and waited for Leslie to join him. She balked until prodded by Stacy, but once started she slid down to his side and nearly knocked him off his perch when she clutched at his shirt. "Take it easy, girl," he chided. "Unless you're fixing to scr-ape me up with a spatula after I hit the ground." .Sorry.,, He waited tensely while Stacy joined them, admiring the way she held her head up and refused to stare out over the abyss. Looking down from high elevations 184 sometimes made a person dizzy, susceptible to falling. He kept his own gaze on the girls as he continued to descend, his heels scraping the wall with each sideways step. The rattling, he realized, had stopped. An ordeal of grueling proportions ensued. They moved at a snail's pace, their shoe§ shuffling slowly, their backbones as straight as broomsticks, no one venturing to utter a word or so much as sneeze. After a while, it seemed to Jay as if he were suspended in the midst of a great inky void. They were adrift in the cosmos, lost in space. On all sides, above and below, lay a mantle of impenetrable darkness broken only by the slowly dying beam of his flashlight. They were in an alien world where sunshine was unheard of and gloom prevailed. His sole contacts with reality were his shoulder blades and his heels; if not for them touching the stone he would have sworn he was a balloon slowly drifting to the ground, detached from all earthly ties. "How much farther?" Leslie inquired at one point. ,,I don't know and I'm ndt looking to find out so just keep going," Jay said. He tilted his head forward to verify Stacy was still with them before snaking lower. "How are you holding up, babe?" "Just peachy." He lost track of time. Instead of uselessly trying to guess how far they had gone, he took the descent one step at a time, concentrating on every movement to prevent an accident. He half-expected Leslie to give them trouble but she made it all the way without once complaining. Maybe the thought of what was after them had a sobering effect on her. When at long, long last he realized they were almost to the bottom he glanced down and saw the floor less than a yard below. Grinning, he jumped and pivoted to survey the rim. If the thing was up there it was hiding. 185 "I never want to do something like that again," Stacy stated as she stepped off the ledge. "My heart was in my mouth from beginning to end." "How are you?" Jay asked Leslie. "Better," she replied, biting her lower lip. "I'm sorry about the way I behaved when I saw the hand. It just blew me away, you know? You guys were right on the mark. There is some kind of animal in this rotten cave, and it wants to kill us." "It won't if I can help it," Jay pledged. He turned the flashlight on the chamber around them, discovering the usual stalagmites, stalactites and assorted outlandish formations. Twenty yards off was a tunnel. "Keep your fingers crossed that we find a way to the surface." The passage was wide and smooth, barren of tracks. "The thing hasn't been here before," Stacy said. "Perhaps it's afraid to come down the cliff." I wouldn't count on it," Jay said. The creature had to know the cavern like the back of its hand. It must know every main passage, every side tunnel, every room, chamber and dead end. It knew every shortcut, too, which meant it could get ahead of them and lie in wait at a convenient spot. He must be on his guard every second from now on. His immediate concern was the flashlight. If he was to judge by the strength of the beam, they would be lucky if there was an hour of battery power left. Hopelessly lost as they were, locating the entrance in 60 minutes would be a genuine miracle. And he had stopped believing in Santa Claus at the age of seven. He walked swiftly, aware the girls were pressed to keep up but anxious to put as much yardage behind them as they could. If he was wrong about the animal knowing shortcuts, by the time it climbed down the precipice they would be long gone and hopefully it would never overtake them. 186 They traversed a spacious room and another length of tunnel, then reached a second room where the walls cast a pale radiance but not the ceiling. "We'll rest for two minutes," Jay stated. "I could use another beer," Leslie said. "Sorry, not yet. I know you, remember? Two beers can make you ditzy as a loon, and you'd best stay straight until we're in the clear." "If we ever are." Jay walked over to Stacy, draped his brawny arm across her shoulders and kissed her on the neck. "Sorry I dragged you along and got you into this damn mess. I should have told Scott and Wes to take a flying leap and stayed home to cuddle with you in front of the tube." "Don't blame yourself. We both figured spending Halloween at the Caverna del Diablo would be a blast. We were looking forward to going monster hunting," Stacy said bitterly. "The monster!" Leslie cried, clapping her hands. "That's it! That's what killed Terri and what is after us! The famous monster, the red thing painted up top by those Spaniards or whoever. Not some stupid animal. It all makes sense now." The whites of her eyes resembled saucers. "Don't you see? It's Halloween, when all the spooks and goblins and demons are supposed to come out and roam the earth. It's the night of witches and werewolves and ghosts, the night of the walking dead." She cowered against a stalagmite. "We're goners. We're all goners." "You're losing it again," Jay warned. He slid his arm off Stacy and stepped in front of Les. "Listen to me. That monster jive is a bunch of crap." "Are you blind? What else could have killed Terri?" Leslie replied, then suddenly placed a hand on her forehead. "Oh, no! What if it got Wes and Scott? Or Ann?" 187 "Or Cory," Stacy added. I Jay glanced at her. "Don't tell me you believe t garbage? There are no such things as monsters." "You saw the tracks. You saw the hand. And you know there are no wild animals down this deep. As much as I hate to admit it, yeah, I think Leslie is right." "You've both flipped." "I'm worried, honeybuns." Jay chewed on his lower lip, trying to sort everything out. Why was he resisting the idea so much? It made sense. And he could tell Stacy was sincerely scared, which impressed him more than the tracks and the severed hand combined. During the year and a half they had been dating he had never known her to show any fear whatsoever. Never. Not when they were drag racing, hurtling down a road at over 100 miles an hour. Not when they went cliff climbing, as they did a few times each summer. Not even when her old man had caught them necking heavy in her bedroom one night. She wag always cool and collecteduntil now. Okay. He would assume the girls were right, that the legendary monster of the Caverna del Diablo was real and somehow alive and stalking them. What should he do? Running aimlessly was pointless. They definitely had to find a way out, but in the meantime they must be able to protect themselves in case the monster attacked. He stripped off the backpack, removed the rock hammer and grinned. "If that thing shows up I'll bash it's head in." Putting on the pack, he rose. "Let's go." @Us is Jay exited the room, Stacy right behind him, Leslie sticking close to her. The narrow passage twisted this way and that. His flashlight became noticeably weaker, and he feared the battery would die much sooner than he had anticipated. 188 They reached a section of tunnel where the ceiling had partially collapsed, littering the floor with chunks of stone, small rocks and dirt. Their feet crunched underfoot, and they had to step carefully to avoid tripping. Ahead, past the debris, the passage narrowed even more to about the width of an average doorway.. Jay had the flashlight truined on the ground in front of him and was almost to the end of the clutter when he shifted to check on the girls. It was then out of the comer of his eye, that he saw a vague shape materialize directly in front of him and suddenly rush straight at him. 189 Chapter Seventeen Cory Fleming and Ann Weatherby ran for their lives, They ran in mutual silence, enveloped in blackness, as the thumping grew fainter and fainter. Through two rooms they went and finally up an incline composed of loose earth that made traction difficult. At the top they stopped and looked back. I don't see anything," Ann whispered. "Neither do I, but it doesn't mean a thing," Cory replied, taking her wrist in his left hand. The heavy helmet in his right gave him little reassurance. Against a demon the size of the one he had seen, using it would be like swatting a bull buffalo with a silk handkerchief. The tunnel was level for 100 yards, then another incline led them ever upward. Out of nowhere a strong cool breeze whipped their hair. "That feels good," Ann said softly. "There must be a cleft in the ceiling," Cory said. The inky darkness overhead made finding it impossible. He was encouraged by the fact the passage was leading them progressively higher, and he entertained the slim hope that they would come out somewhere near the entrance. He surveyed the tunnel ahead, aware of a subtle difference he couldn't pinpoint. Something didn't seem right, though. "Do you-?" he began to ask, when the ground unexpectedly gave way under his feet and he fell, aware that Ann had also fallen. Terror seized him at the thought of plunging into a 190 virtually bottomless chasm or a deep fissure and having every bone in his body smashed to bits when he hit the bottom. ItNo!" Ann cried. And then they hit, both thrown off balance on a slope and unable to check their momentum as they both tumbled and rolled a half-dozen yards and came to a stop side-by-side. Cory was on his back, the piece of wood in the backpack gouging into his spine. He sat up, taking stock, and reached out to touch Ann. "Are you okay, )11 gorgeous. (I I think so," she said uncertainly, also sitting up. "What the hell happened?" "I'm not sure," Cory said, realizing he still held the conquistador helmet. Releasing it, he extructed the box of matches from his pocket and hastily lit one, then raised his arm on high to increase the radius of the glow. They had inadvertently stumbled into a bowl-shaped pit in the middle of the incline. Twenty feet in diameter and less than ten feet deep, the sides slanted upward at an angle that would allow for an easy climb out. "We were lucky," Ann said. Nodding idly, Cory rose to his knees and looked behind him. His skin crawled on seeing a skull lying nearby. Other bones were scattered about. One, a thigh bone, had been underneath him. It, not the piece of wood, had been gouging his spine. Damn! He quickly stood up. Ann turned and gasped. Tattered strips of clothing were mixed among the bones. A pair of boots, covered with dust, lay a couple of yards away. To the right, partially buried by loose earth, was a large leather bag of some sort. A hat, or what was left of it after the ravages of time had taken their toll, was near the bag. 191 Cory had to light a second match. He squatted to briefly examine the skull and the bones and found no evidence of scratch marks or teeth marks. Whoever this man had been, he apparently died of natural causes. Cory moved to the leather bag and brushed off enough loose dirt to grip the top and heave. To his amazement, out came a pair of saddlebags still intact although the leather felt dry and brittle. "This poor soul must have died a long time ago," Ann commented. "Yeah," Cory said, depositing the saddlebags so he could unfasten the buckle securing one of the flaps. He unfastened the other buckle, then upended the twin pouches and let the contents cascade out. The assortment was incredible-a pipe, a pack of tobacco, a bundle wrapped in buckskin, a large key, a pair of crum- pled socks, five short steel bits, a flask containing a yellow liquid, a spare shirt, a six-inch knife in a leather sheath, and, wonder of wonders, a compass! He threw the saddlebags down and snatched up the compass. The needle quivered as he moved his arm, the colored tip swinging in endless circles, first clockwise, then counterclockwise. "It's broken," he remarked. "Or else the ferreous mineral content in the cave is so high that the needle can't get a fix on the North Magnetic Pole." "Would it help us get out of here even if it did work?" "It might," Cory said. "The cave entrance is supposed to be at the south end of the cavern. if we knew which direction was due south we could concentrate on the tunnels in that direction. One would eventually take us to the surface." "What's this?" Ann asked, picking up the buckskin bundle. She unwrapped it in her lap, exposing a score of thin brown strips that gave off a sharp odor. "Yuck. What is this stuff?" "Jerky," Cory said, putting down the compass to take one. The match flared out, forcing him to light another 192 @efor@e he could hold the meat up to his nose and sniff. Venison, if I don't miss my guess. From a mule deer. crudely cut, too. I'd say our friend here packed in his own food supply." "Is it edible?" "There's only one way to find out," Cory said. He nibbled on an end. The meat tasted salty and slightly bitter, but not rancid. "I think it is if you're not too squeamish," he said. "I've heard tell jerky will last forever under the right conditions." Ann picked up a strip. "What if it makes us sick?" "Don't eat one if you don't want to. We still have pretzels and chips left. We can save the jerky until we run out of them." "Good idea, handsome." Cory handed the jerky back for her to wrap up, then glanced at her face. Had she just called him handsome? Him? Cory Fleming? El Geeko Supremo? Was she repaying his compliment in referring to her as gorgeous? Or had she meant it? The last notion made him grin. No female in her right mind would seriously regard him as good-looking. He was the bookish, frail type, the type other guys always threw sand on at the beach or shoved aside in the school hallway, the type who never, ever got the girl of his dreams. Yet there she was, a foot away, and staring at him looking perplexed. "What's so funny?" "IT tell you another time," Cory hedged. Picking up the knife, he unfastened his belt and strapped the leather sheath around his waist. The blade wasn't razor-sharp, but it would suffice. At last he had a serviceable weapon. Ann lifted the flask. "What do you figure this stuff is?" , "Obviously our late friend took a nip now and then," Cory said, gripping the bottle and unscrewing the top. 193 A pungent odor wafted to his nostrils. He took a breath, then pressed the flask to his lips and sipped. Immediately a burning sensation seared across his mouth and down his throat, causing him to double over and cough violently. His stomach was set on fire. For a few seconds he thought he might be sick, but the sensation quickly subsided. "Are you all right?" Ann asked, her hand on his shoulder. "Fine," Cory rasped. "But you'd better do the driving when we head home." Chuckling, he capped the flask. "This stuff must be one hundred proof. Well take it with us." "Are you planning to get drunk?" "It might come in handy in other respects," Cory said but didn't elaborate. He removed the backpack and began stuffing in everything they had found, even the crumpled socks. "You're taking all that junk?" Ann asked, sounding surprised. "Everything. Look around and see if there's anything else," Cory directed. He was going to zip up the pack when he changed his mind and withdrew two of the steel bits. Each was six inches long and tapered to a point. He wedged them under his belt, one on either side of the buckle. Ann was watching him. "What are they?" "Bits used by miners and prospectors. They're sharp enough to do some real damage at close quarters." "This guy must have been a prospector then." "Most likely," Cory agreed. Again his match went out and he struck another. "He probably came into the cavern to look for gold or silver." "Think he dug this pit?" "Maybe, but I suspect a section of the tunnel just buckled , Cory answered as he bent over to scour the ground. The flame sputtered so he held his hand still. 194 In the middle of the bones a metallic surface glittered. Curious, he leaned down and discovered a metal spike jutting from the earth. He knelt and used his left hand to scrape sufficient dirt aside to see the spike better. It was curved, thicker at the base than the top. The shape brought a certain implement to mind, and he suddenly began furiously scooping away the earth, eager to determine if his deduction was correct. Shortly he had most of the head and part of the handle uncovered. Rising, he gripped the tapered head in his left hand and pulled with all of his might. Gnadually the tool came free, and he held it aloft, beaming like a kid who had just been given a new toy. "Look!" he declared. "What is it?" "A pick. And it's in one piece!" Cory exulted. Now he had a real weapon. Between the pick and the knife he might be able to keep the demon at bay, if not even slay it. He noticed reddish rust on the tapered end and held the head closer to the match. "I wonder. . ." he mused aloud. "About what?" "I have an idea how this prospector died," Cory said and wagged the pick toward the pit rim. "I think he fell in here just like we did, and landed on his pick. The point ;@nctured his chest, perhaps perforating the heart or his lung." Ann was ten feet off, stooped low. "Hey, I found something." "What?" Cory asked, just as the match went out. He was growing tired of constantly striking new ones but did so one more time. She walked toward him, grinning, and clutched in her left hand was a filthy antique lantern. "Son of a gun!" he exclaimed in delight. "Think it still works?" -It all depends if there's any fuel left," Cory said, dropping the pick and grasping the thin handle. He 195 placed the lantern between them, then knelt and raised the globe. "This is an old carbide lantern," he disclosed. "Used coal oil for fuel, which is just another name for kerosene." The wick was dry but firm to the touch. Would it bum? He opened the tank and sniffed. The distinctive acrid aroma of kerosene was still strong. By poking a finger in the hole he learned the tank was half-full with a gummy substance that showed up as black on his fingertip when he pulled his finger out. "No go?" Ann inquired. "No," Cory said, then had an idea. "Get me the flask out of the pack, would you?" While he waited he tried to stir the substance with his middle finger. "Here," Ann said, producing the whiskey. "This may not work so don't get your hopes up," Cory told her, passing over the box of matches. She lit one and he flung his to the right. Tilting the lantern, he poured some of the alcohol into the fuel tank, then swung the lantern in a small circle to slosh the whiskey around. After a minute he added more alcohol, then gently shook the lantern until his anns were tired. Again he inserted a finger. The whiskey was doing as planned, mixing with what was left of the kerosene and liquefying the gummy substance. He kept adding small amounts and shaking the lantern until the fuel tank was two-thirds full, Then he coated his forefinger with the mixture and applied a layer to the wick. Ann observed his every move intently. "I never would have thought of this," she said. "You're a genius." "It could be a waste of our time," Cory said, putting the lantern down. He wiped his fingers on his pants, then took the matchbox and anxiously lit a match. His fingers were actually shaking as he applied the flame to the wick and waited with bated breath. The wick sputtered and gave off black smoke but stubbornly refused to catch. He held the match there until the flame went out, then lit another. 196 "Please let it work," Ann prayed. This time the wick crackled loudly and spewed off more black smoke, yet it still wouldn't light. "Once more into the breach," Cory quipped, striking a third match. He crossed the fingers of his left hand, then pressed the burning tip hard against the wick. A puff of black smoke shrouded his face, making him cough and lower his head to avoid inhaling more. He heard a squeal from Ann and looked up to see the wick glowing feebly. "Catch, damn you!" he snapped, holding the match in place, not caring if it burned down to his fingers or not. The wick abruptly flared and stabilized, the smoke changed to a gray hue. Overjoyed, he tossed the match over his shoulder and lowered the glass globe. Both of them were now bathed in a warm golden glow. "You did it!" Ann exclaimed, sliding around the lantem and throwing her arms around his neck. Cory felt her breasts mash into his chest. They were nose to nose, her breath on his cheeks, when suddenly she clamped her lips on his and gave him the kind of kiss he had only read about in books and magazines, a passionate kiss where her supple tongue entwined with his while her fingers ran through his hair and her body flamed hotter than the lantern. Shocked, he nonetheless responded ardently, his manhood rising to the occasion. From within her came a low moan. When, at length, she broke the kiss and leaned back there were tears in the comers of her eyes. He gaped, bewildered. "Did I do something wrong?" "No," Ann said, looking away. She wiped the back of her hand across both eyes. "I'm the one who did. I shouldn't have done that." "Why not?" Cory asked, grinning to show her no harm had been done. "I didn't mind." "It wasn't fair to you." "Me?" 197 "Here you are trying so hard to get us out of this nightmare alive and I go and take advantage of you." Had he heard cor-rectlv? Mavbe there was something wrong with his ears. First she called him handsomeand now this. Cory tried to put himself in her shoes and figure out what she meant, but he was at a totall loss. "I don't understand," he conceded. "You think of yourself as my friend," Ann said. "Even if I now know I care for you as more than a friend, I have no right to throw myself at you at a time like this. You have enough on your mind without being bothered by me." "Bothered? Are you wacko, woman, or what) I love you. I think I've always loved you." Ann finally glanced at him, astonished. Her mouth worked but no sounds came out until she said hoarsely, "You're joking, right?" "Do I look like I'm joking, ding-a-ling?" Cory countered and was nearly bowled over when she threw herself against him and clasped him so tightly it hur-t. Her face rested on his left shoulder, and she trembled as if crying. Baffled, he rubbed her back and stroked her hair, wondering how she had stroked his with her fingers in such bad condition. Which brought to mind the whiskey. "How are your hands?" he asked. "What?" "Your hands. Your fingers. I have another idea." Ann cleared her throat, sniffed a few times and moved back. Tear tracks marked her cheeks. Her eyes glistened. "Sorry. You must think I'm an idiot." "Quit apologizing. And don't call this a nightmare. It just tumed into my dream come true." "Why didn't you ever say anything?" Ann inquired, then shook her head, adding, "No. There's no need to answer. I can imagine why." Cory fondly gazed at her, the pent-up feelings he had suppressed for seven years nearly overwhelming 198 him. He almost broke into tears himself, but now was hardly the proper time or place. As much as he wanted to hold her, to comfort her, he had to keep the danger they were in uppermost in mind. He put a palm on her moist cheek. "We'll have plenty of time to talk after we're safe. Right now I want to disinfect your fingers, but I wam you it will smart." "How?" she asked. "The whiskey," Cory answered, retrieving the flask. He held the open bottle over her right hand. "Hold out all your fingers." She obeyed, and he slowly trickled the alcohol over the tom flesh and ravaged nails. Ann arched her back but made no outcry. When he was done he closed the flask and slid it into the backpack. "There. That stuff is strong enough to kill any germs. You won't become infected now." "Thank you," Ann said softly. "We'd best boogie," Cory advised, slipping on the backpack. He lifted the pick, then the lantem. "I should cany something." "With your hands in the shape they are? Get real," Cory said. He started up the far side of the bowl, marveling at the wondrous tum of events. For the first time in his life the future held the promise of romance and steady companionship. He had someone he could take on dates, someone he would see, every day and could share the lunch hour with at school, someone to buy special gifts for, someone he could smother with the affection smoldering within him. Cory grinned. All Ann had done was kiss him, and he was ready to walk her down the aisle. Talk about getting canied away! He had to keep his cool or she would think he was a childish digithead, just like most of the other kids did. He must take their relationship one step at a time. Once they were out of the cavern he would ask her for a date, and if all went well he would ask for another and another, and when he was 199 1@., ultimately satisfied she cared for him as much as he did for her, only then would he make a fool of himself and do something ridiculous like buy her an incredibly expensive gift or ask her to wear his class ring. He stepped onto the rim and turned to help her up. She was smiling at him, but her smile changed to horror as her eyes went over his shoulder. Her mouth opened to scream. He heard the patter of onrushing feet and whirled, glimpsing a muscular reddish arm as it swept into his forehead with the force of a pile driver. His head snapped back. Stars exploded before his eyes like fireworks on the fourth of July. Dimly, he was aware of his feet leaving the ground and of sailing like an ungainly bird until he crashed down with a gutwrenching shock that made the tunnel spin wildly. Ann screamed. He tried to get up, to go to her aid, when his mind switched off as abruptly as a light bulb. 200 Chapter Eighteen "Boo!" Wesley Eagen shouted and extended both arms toward Jay Thorpe, switching on both flashlights as he did. The fleeting fright on Jay's face was too comical for words. Wes burst into hearty laughter and Jabbed a hand at his teammate. "You should see your face," he said. Jay's fright vanished instantly, to be replaced by simmering anger. He waved the rock hammer menacingly and took a stride closer to Wes. "You stupid son of a bitch! Don't you have any brains? A joke like that could get you killed." "Oh, yeah?" Wes said skeptically while trying to bring his mirth under control. "Yeah," Jay snapped. "For a second there I thought you were the monster, and I was all set to bash your head in with this." He wagged the hammer and glowered. "Calm down, big guy," Wes said, chuckling. "You don't have to worry about gruesome. The thing is a wimp." "What are you talking about?" "I've seen the thing, too," Wes disclosed, "and I learned it can't stand bright light. All I have to do is point my flashlight at it and it runs off like a big coward." Uttering a cry of delight, Leslie hurled herself past Jay and embraced Wes. "Oh, lover," she cried happily, 201 squeezing him close, her cheek against his neck, her entire body trembling from the intensity of her jubilation. "You don't know how good it is to see you again." "Missed me, did you?" Wes said, conscious of her breasts rubbing his chest and her hips flush with his. "You know it," Leslie declared, kissing him. Sh: moved back and giggled in girlish delight. "What the hell happened to you?" Wes asked, notin the hole in her blouse for the first time and the streaks of dirt on her clothing and skin. "Stacy and I had a little disagreement." Wes saw Stacy step up on Jay's right. "What's the big idea of beating on my girl?" Stacy ignored the question. "You say you've seen the monster? What does it look like?" "Just like that thing painted above the cave entrance," Wes said, "only a lot bigger and uglier." He paused. "it killed Scott." They all registered shock and sorrow. "He's not the only one," Jay said. "Terri is dead, too. We found one of her hands lying in a tunnel." "Have you seen any sign of Fleming?" "No," Jay said. "We figured he was with you guys." "We became separated," Wes said and let it go at that. There was no sense in admitting the entire truth since Jay and Stacy might hold it against him, especially Jay, who was a softy at heart. He tilted his head to peer past the group. "Hey, where's Ann? Don't tell me the monster nailed her ass also?" "She was alive the last we saw her," Jay said and detailed the incident at the fissure, finishing with, "I didn't like leaving her but there was no choice. At least I've marked every passage we've taken since so the rescue team can find her again." "Now all we have to do is find a way out of this hellhole," Wes commented, looping an arm around Leslie's 202 slim waist. He could see part of her breast through her torn blouse, and the sight of it rising and falling rhythmically as she breathed set his organ to pulsing. Maybe he could salvage something from this farce after all. "How did you find us?" Stacy inquired. "I didn't," Wes said. "It's more like we found each other. I've been wandering around these rotten tunnels forever, it seems like. Every so often I'd stop and listen. A couple of minutes ago I thought I heard someone coming, so I slid into a cruck in the wall and turned off my flashlights. I figured the light would just draw the creature right to me. If it did spot me, I'd just zap it in the eyes again and haul butt. Then I recognized your voices and decided to spring a surprise on you." He looked at Jay. "No hard feelings, I trust?" "No," Jay said. "But don't do it again. I meant what I said. If anything comes at me again, III swing first and ask questions later." "You have my word," Wes said solemnly. He gazed at Jays flashlight. "Looks as if your battery is almost dead." "It is. I was worried we'd be clumping around in the dark before too long." "Here, take one of these," Wes said, offering the flashlight in his left hand. "It was Scott's and he won't be needing it." "Thanks, buddy," Jay said gratefully. "It's no big deal," Wes said. I . . he began and caught himself, about to say he had Fleming's flashlight in his backpack. Instead, he quickly stated ...... wouldn't want anything to happen to any of you. God only knows how concerned I've been. I could barely think straight." Leslie put a hand on his arm and gave a tender squeeze. "I knew you'd come to my rescue. You're my knight in shining armor, just like that Ivanhoe dude we read about in English class." 203 "You know it," Wes said with a grin. He pecked her neck and rubbed the small of her back, his manhood starting to rise. Somehow he had to get her alone he could indulge himself. Jay turned off the weak flashlight and handed it t Stacy. "Okay. What now? Go back the way you came? There's nothing back our way." "Sure," Wes said. "You and Stacy can take the lead. Leslie and I will be right behind you." "Fair enough," Jay said, walking forward. Stacy trailed along, a finger looped in his leather belt. "Now then," Wes said as he turned, "why don't you tell me again how much you missed me?" "I truly did,- Leslie said, sighing and resting her head on his shoulder. "I wanted you with me in the worst . way. "Do tell," Wes said. He waited until they reached a bend, then stopped and faced her. "What are you up to?" Leslie asked, staring at the comer around which Jay and Stacy had disappeared. "Oh, about six inches," Wes joked and took her hand in his to rub her knuckles along the length of his organ. Her cheeks flushed pink, and she licked her red lips. "You're not serious?" 4$Try me." "Right here and now? What if Jay comes back to see what's keeping us?" "We'll see his flashlight beam, and III tell him to get lost for a while," Wes said, switching off his own light. He gripped her buttocks and ground her body into his so she would feel how hard he was. It never failed to stoke her passion. r "But . . ." Leslie protested-or tried to. Wes covered her mouth with his own and speared his tongue into her mouth. She hesitated briefly, then responded as she always did with unrestrained sexual desire, her hands roaming over his back as their 204 1 tongues danced a sensuous tango. His free hand strayed to the hole in her blouse, his fingers slipping in to fondle her hardening nipple. She squirmed and grasped his shoulders. "I want you, babe," Wes said huskily when he broke for air. He leaned to the right and let the flashlight drop a couple of feet to the cave floor, then applied both hands to her twin mounds, massaging them through the sheer material. "But what about the monster?" Leslie asked softly. "I told you. The thing is scared of bright light. If it shows up I'll turn the flashlight on it," Wes said and began kissing and lathering her smooth neck. A tiny voice in the back of his mind told him he was taking an enormous risk, but he really didn't care. He was high and horny as hell and wanted to screw Les silly. And monster or no monster, that was exactly what he intended to do. He tugged on her blouse freeing it from her pants, and swiftly unbuttoned it to expose her glorious breasts. As big as ripe cantaloupes, they swayed as she leaned over to suck on his ear lobe. He cupped both of them, reveling in their softness and the pliant way they molded to his squeezing fingers. Some nights he could play with them for hours. Not tonight. Tonight his manhood positively throbbed, and he couldn't wait to plunge it inside her. "Oh, honey," Leslie breathed in his ear, "The best is yet to come," Wes quipped. He began lowering her pants to get at her panty hose. Why she always wore the hosiery he didn't know, but she always did. Whether she was wearing a dress, shorts or pants, she had on panty hose underneath. Maybe it was something her mother made her do. He glanced at the bend, which was barely visible, and saw the glow of Jay's flashlight growing dimmer and dimmer. The dummy hadn't even realized they 205 were missing yet. Perfect. Lowering his mouth to her nipples, he pulled her pants down to her knees, then fiddled with the panty hose and got the skintight garment below her pubic mound. Leslie inhaled loudly and clutched his head to her breasts when he slid a finger between her legs and rubbed it against her moist crack. "I love the way youdo me," she cooed. Wes smiled inwardly. He always did have away witlf., the babes, and he had banged more than his fair sharel before Leslie came along. In a way he was surprised' he had stayed with her as long as he had. Usually he became bored with a girl after five or six months and wanted some new fluff. But not Les. She was the best he'd ever had in a lengthy string of conquests. When a guy was good-looking and had money to blow, girls flocked to him like kids to'candy. Without waming he bunied his forefinger in her slit and felt her quiver and gasp. He stroked away, giving her a pleasurable foretaste of the main event, while alternately sucking on her right and left nipples. The aromatic scent of her perfume, which she used lavishly before dressing, titillated him. He cupped her right buttock, digging his fingers into her yielding flesh. "Yessss," Leslie whispered in erotic abandon. "Bring me off, lover." He certainly would try. Kissing the creamy skin, below her breasts, he inserted a second finger into her snatch. Her hips moved of their own accord, swaying suggestively, as she ground her sex into his palm, which became damp with her flowing juices. Eager to get to the nitty-gritty, he hastily unbuckled his belt and unzipped his fly. He reached in, pulled his pole out and was lowering the tip toward her core when she said the single word he hated most. "Condom." Wes paused. He was sure he had brought one along, 206 but for the life of him he couldn't recall where it was. "Condom?" Leslie repeated, her hooded eyes gazing into his. "I have one," Wes said thickly, removing his fingers from her and fi-antically poking his hands into his pockets. What the hell had he done with the damn thing? Next to her panty hose fetish, the most annoying habit she had was always insisting on his wearing a rubber before they could make love. All that business in the news about rampant sexual diseases had gotten to her, and she was absolutely paranoid about coupling unprotected. No condom, no fun and games. "Condom?" she said a third time. "Just a second," Wes said, struggling to keep the annoyance out of his voice or she really would be pissed off. Many times he had tried to convince her condoms were unnecessary where they were concemed. Pagosa Springs, after all, was har-dly New York City or Los Angeles. The incidence of venereal disease was practically nonexistent, and it usually happened to guys who went off to big cities like Denver for a little fun in the hay with a lady of the night. But would Leslie listen to him? No way! Sometimes she was as stubbom as a mule. "If you don't have one we can't do it," she now said. Wes's left hand sank into his back pocket and found the familiar packet. He yanked it out, tipped it open and swiftly slipped the rubber over his member. "Satisfied?" he said as he reached down to part her legs. Bending at the knees, he aligned himself between her satiny thighs, found her slit and rammed into her like a battering ram into a portcullis. "Aaahhhl" Les cried, stiffening, her fingemails biting into his anns. "Yeah, babe. That's it." You're telling me, Wes almost said, but held his peace. He could feel her exquisite sheath enfolding his 207 @_11 organ, and he held himself still to keep from spurting prematurely. Another glance at the bend showed him Jay and Stacy were still not coming back to check on them. Lord, but Thorpe was as dense as a brick! He began a rocking motion, using his tool to arouse her to heights of ecstasy. Her lips and hands were all over him, which was the part of her lovemaking expertise he liked the best. Some girls just lay there like limp sacks of flour. A few had enough sense to grunt now and then to show they were still alive. Some gave as good as they got, tit for tat so to speak. And a rare girl like Leslie became a sexual tigress, trying to devour her lover with her mouth and her hands. Give him a tigress any day. His temples pounded, his pulse raced. He panted as he stroked, stroked, stroked, savoring the unadulterated bliss. To his way of thinking this was the reason for man's existence. Money was handy to have and drugs made life sweeter, but sex was the only experience that made life worth living. "God, you get to me," Le,s said in his ear, her breath hot and tingly. Wes pounded like a madman. He paced himself, wanting her to get off first, and he didn't have to wait as long as he normally did. Whether it was the excitement of making love in the Caverna del Diablo or what, she climaxed intensely, shuddering and squealing and biting his neck and cheeks. He waited until she began to coast down from her peak, then let himself go, feeling the explosion build and build until finally he came, his ears ringing, his face turning beet red; as he tried to impale her on his organ. In the midst of his release, when he was oblivious to everything else around them, he thought he felt something brush against his ankle and immediately assumed it was Leslie's foot. Then came the slow descent from the peak of emo- 208 tion as he sagged against her and she against the cave wall. His loins were drenched, as were her thighs. They kissed lightly until he roused himself and carefully stepped back to tuck his Manhood into his pants. "That was great, babe," he said. "You haven't lost your touch." "Neither have you. Thanks. I needed that," Leslie responded, beginning to pull herself together. "I wonder what happened to those two dummies?" Wes remarked, gazing in the direction Jay and Stacy had gone. "Maybe they heard us and decided to leave us in peace. "Maybe," Wes said, securing his belt buckle. "Now where did I drop that flashlight?" He bent down and scoured the floor, moving his hands in small circles, first to the right and then to the left, but found no trace of it. "We must have moved a bit," he said, shifting to check farther in every direction. In the dark the yellow flashlight should be easy to spot, but it wasn It. Annoyed, he squatted and ran his hands over the ground, getting dust all over his fingers. "Damn it." "What's the matter?" "I can't find the stinking flashlight." "How can that be?" Leslie asked nervously. "Don't lay an egg," Wes said. "I have another one in my backpack." "You do? Where did you get it?'Y "Itys a spare Scott brought along," Wes lied. "Been in there the whole time." He stripped off the pack, found the flashlight and flicked it on. To his astonishment, when he swept the floor he saw the other flashlight was gone. "What the hell is this action?" "Where is it?" Leslie wondered, stepping to his side. Wes double-checked, then scratched his head in confusion. "Makes no sense," he said sourly. Suddenly 209 he remembered something brushing his ankle, and a shiver ran down his spine. Had the monster taken it? No, he told himself. The monster would have attacked them on the spot rather than play hide and seek with., the flashlight. Leslie took a few paces, then laughed and clapped", her hands. "Oh, I get it! That Jay is sneaky." 'Vhat the hell are you babbling about?" "Don't you see?" Les replied. "Jay heard us going at" it, so he turned off his light, snuck back here and took yours. What else could have happened to it?" "You must be right," Wes said, although in his hea he had grave misgivings. "Let's find those airheads s I can give them a piece of my mind." "Now don't go off the deep end," Leslie said. 31 1 "Remember, Jay owes you one for scaring us half to death when you popped out at us." "Do you think I'm stupid? I'm not about to say anything that will get King Kong ticked off at me." V "You shouldn't call him that name. He doesn't like, ',J it." "Just so he doesn't hear me is all that matters"' W said, grabbing her hand and hurrying around the bend His beam revealed. an empty stretch of passage I feet in length. "They must be around the next curve, he guessed and hiked for-ward. The more he though about the missing flashlight, the more convinced became Leslie was right. If the monster had been the he would have seen its tracks unless it crept up li a lizard on its fingers and toes. Come to think of it there had been a few peculiar oval impressions mix in with their footprints, hadn't there? He was inclin Im esm h r k e to turn around and go back but opted to keep going There was safety in numbers, so the sooner they we reunited with King Kong and the blonde bimbo, th better off he would feel. He saw their tracks in the dust at his feet and fol 210 lowed them to the next bend. Once again a long section of empty tunnel presented itself to his irate view. ,,Where the hell are they?" "Maybe they're playing tricks on us now." "Even they wouldn't be that stupid." "They're our friends. It's not nice for you to insult them." "Friends? Stacy and you went a few rounds a while ago and you still like her?" "of course, silly. Friends fight all the time. You don't stop being someone's friend just because you have a spat." "Maybe you don't, but I'm not the forgiving type. If someone messes with me I hate them for life." "Sometimes you can be so immature." "Listen to who's talking. A girl who still plays with dolls." Leslie wrenched her hand loose and halted. "As you damn well know, I collect dolls; I don't play with them. Collecting is my hobby. It's taken me years to get a doll from almost every country in the world, and one day my collection will be worth a lot of money." Wes had stopped and turned. "Yeah, yeah," he said impatiently and motioned for her to move. "Let's go." "I want an apology." "Jesus!" "I mean it. I'm tired of you insulting everyone all the time. First Jay and Stacy, now me. What's the matter with you?" "Nothing," Wes said, although in truth he was feeling extremely imitable. He usually did after coming down off a high, but lately the blahs were lasting longer and longer each time. "Then apologize." Wes came close to slugging her. An unreasoning rage flared within him, and he clenched his left fist, ready to swing. At the last moment he realized what he was 211 about to do and turned sharply away from her. "I'm sorry," he blurted. "I didn't hear you." Striving to maintain his cool, Wes rotated. I said I'm sorry. Now are you satisfied? Can we keep going?" "Start walking. I'll be tight behind you." Wes held out his hand for her to take, but she shook her head. "Suit yourself," he growled and stalked off. The bitch! One minute she was humping him silly, the next she was getting all bent out of shape over nothing. Lately they had been fighting much more than ever before. Why? Was it his fault? He couldn't see how. Maybe he was bored with her and wouldn't admit the fact. Maybe it was time for him to latch onto a new babe. There was always Lori Donovan. She was a Grade-A fox and had been flirting a lot with him recently. One word from him and she'd leap at the chance to go out on a date. And it shouldn't take more than two or three outings until she took off her panties for him. The tracks led around a curve to the left, and white stalactites appeared overhead. There were clefts and cracks in the walls on both sides, lending the tunnel an unstable aspect. Wes gazed at the ceiling, hoping the lousy tunnel wouldn't cave in with him in it. He swiveled and saw Leslie eight feet behind him, her features downcast. What did she have to be sad about? Didn't he always try to treat her right, to show her a fun time every minute of every day? Parties, movies, dances, you name it, he took her. She ate at the best restaurants. And when they occasionally drove to Durango for an all-nighter, didn't he always book a room at the ritziest hotel in the whole town using the phony I.D. he had bought up in Alamosa? Women never appreciated anything. 212 He faced forward, his beam sweeping the ground at his feet, and suddenly halted in midstride. The footprints came to an abrupt end. Superimposed on top of them were the huge three-toed tracks he had come to know so well. The monster had Jay and Stacy! 213 Chapter Nineteen Not again. Those were the first words that flashed across Cory Fleming's mind when he abruptly revived. Then the pain hit, pain so intense he inadvertently cried out, pain so severe he curled into a ball, his palms pressed to his throbbing temples. The mere act of trying to think heightened the agony. He gritted his teeth and let the torment take its course. After a while he was able to focus his thoughts. He recalled being struck on the forehead, on the exact same spot where he had hit his head when he fell earlier. If the blow had been a shade more powerful the demon would have caved in his cranium. As it was, his head and neck had never, ever hurt so much. Where was Ann? Cory opened his eyes and was surprised to see the lantern, still lit and glowing, lying at an angle on the slope in front of him. He was near the bottom of the pit, where he must have landed after being attacked. Why hadn't the creature finished him off? Grunting, he sat up, searching for Ann. She was gone. Panic brought him to his feet, but he promptly regretted moving because the pain worsened terribly, driving him to his knees. He spotted the pick a few feet off. And the backpack was on his back. if his head would only stop pounding he could begin 214 AA%111_%_R_ VV VA-111 hunting for clues as to Ann's fate. The idea of her being dead filled him with stark, almost paralyzing dread. She couldn't be! Not now! Not after they had finally cleared the air and confessed their true feelings. Fate couldn't be so cruel as to deprive him of the girl he loved on the very day she at long last opened her heart to him. Who was he kidding? As a budding scientist he knew the one inalienable law that governed human existence-there were no guarantees in life. The rich and the poor, the self-styled aristocrats and the common people, media superstars and the average men and women on the street, they were all subject to the cosmic constant of random occurrences and all had to take what life had to offer when it was offered. It was as if everyone on the planet was engaged in a game of roulette, where life, health and happiness were theirs if they survived the daily spinning of the great wheel of chance. No one could predict the future, so everyone was a potential victim of the present. A person who had everything one day might lose it all the next. Someone who had never been sick a day in his life might suffer a heart attack and keel over. Absolutely nothing was certain. So it was more than likely the demon had already ripped Ann to shreds. It was possible her remains were lying out there somewhere, cold and drained of her vital lifeblood. But until he actually saw them he would persist in believing she was alive. She must be alive. In his soul he knew she was the one for him, the woman who would one day be his wife, who might one day bear their children and be his partner in providing a home and the stable love all kids needed. If she was dead, all his dreams were so much shiftless mist, lacking substance and meaning. Somehow he sensed there would never be another girl he cared for as much as her. Without her, his life would be empty. Without 215 JJUv1U her, he would bury himself in his test tubes and micr scopes and go through life a mindless automaton lik' 90% of humanity already did. Whoops. There he was doing it again, getting carried awa One kiss did not a wife make. H attempted to stand again and succeededI e Shuffling to the lantern, he slowly leaned over and... gripped the handle. Straightening caused a spasm t rack his head, and he paused until the pang went awa He stepped to the pick, lifted it in his right hand, then climbed the slope until he stood at the same spot where he had been when the demon pounced. There in the dirt were his footprints, as plain as day, and also the demon's tracks. He saw where the creature had jumped, saw where it alighted next to where Ann had stood, and discovered only the demon's tracks leading back up and over the rim. The significance was clear. The thing had grabbed Ann and made off with her. He started up the tunnel, resolved to follow th demon to the bowels of the earth if need be, wherever the creature had taken her. Nowhere i, the passage was there any sign of blood or torn' clothing. His hopes rose by the yard. Soon he came to a fork, the lantern revealing the demon had taken the left branch. Not only that, the thing had set Ann down and apparently began pulling her along by the arm. Cory hurried. The movement was helping his head to clear and the pain to go away. Once more he gave thanks his glasses had not been shattered or he would be up the proverbial creek without a paddle. Had the demon's arm been half an inch lower, he would now be running around bumping into walls and other objects, totally helpless. Oddly, he felt no fear, only anger, a burning anger that grew and grew the farther he walked. He wanted 216 rien-U-ween to find the demon and kill it, to destroy the monstrosity so no more innocent victims would ever again fall prey to this scourge of the subterranean domain. If the bones he'd seen were any indication, the creature had killed scores. The scientist in him, however, was more curious, than enraged. If the demon that took Ann was the same one that killed the conquistadors and the Utes, how had it survived for so long? Did it enjoy an exceptional life span? Or was it a descendant of the original monster? Was there a viable breeding population inhabiting the Caverna del Diablo? He wondered if there were similar creatures elsewhere in the world. If so, perhaps they had been responsible for spawning the human legends of an infernal underworld populated by evil, bloodthirsty fiends. He could readily imagine a few primitive men wandering into a cave in Europe or Asia and encountering some of the creatures, then fleeing. Back on the surface they would have told embellished tales of their adventure, and before long the word would spread among the various tribes that there existed an underground realm inhabited by vile demons. Why was it none had been reported in recent years? Given all the spelunkers in the U.S. and Europe, someone should have seen one of the things and reported the sighting. Or would they? Why would anyone in their right mind report seeing a demon when they were bound to be laughed at? Ridicule was the typical reaction of those whose preconceived notions of reality were threatened by reputed encounters with the unknown. Just look at the public reaction to reports of flying saucers, Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster. Most thought the stories were quaint cases of mistaken identity, nothing more. Before this night he had been the same way. Now he knew better. 217 Cory easily followed the tracks. From the length of the demon's stride, which was twice his own, he guessed the thing had been in a hurry. Accordingly, when he felt up to it, he began jogging, the lantern swaying at the end of its thin handle, his shadow performing a macabre dance on the walls he passed. The pick was a heavy burden, but he sure as hell wasn't about to discard it. Glancing down, he checked his other weapons; the knife and the two steel bits were still in place. He ran and ran, taking short rests every five minutes. Sometimes the passages were as straight as arrows, while at other times they wound like a slack rope, seemingly taking him nowhere. The creature's tracks gave evidence of slowing only once, when the demon had evidently scooped Ann into its arms or thrown her over its shoulder. The deduction was obvious because her footprints ended at that point and the demon's stride became shorter, as if it was now burdened with extra weight. As he crossed another of those rooms where the ceiling glowed eerily, Cory suddenly realized the demon was heading for that vast chamber he considered a world unto itself, the one where he had first spotted the creature. How he knew, he couldn't say. Intuition, perhaps, or a subliminal hunch. Whichever, he felt certain the tracks would lead him into that boundless, dominion the demon must call home. Getting there would probably take a while yet. Getting out might take his life. "Where are they?" Leslie wailed, turning in small,' circles as she scoured the ground. "They couldn't just up and vanish!" "Calm down," Wes snapped. "I'm trying to think He was on his knees, examining the ground closely. 218 "Oh, God," Leslie said, "what if they're dead? What if we're the only ones left? We don't stand a prayer. That thing will hunt us down and kill us just like it has the others." "Shut up, damn it." "I want out of here, Wes. Do you hear me? You're my boyfriend. Do something! Get us to the surface or we're as good as dead. You're supposed to be the big, tough, quarter-" Wes uncoiled like a snake and grabbed the front of her blouse. Her frenzied chatter had stretched his nerves beyond their breaking point, and he was livid as he glared into her suddenly frightened eyes and said coldly, "Not another word, bitch, not one damn word. I'm trying to figure out what happened to Jay and Stacy, and I can't do that with you running off at the mouth." He gave her a shove, then turned to the ground at the base of the left wall where the tracks were jumbled and distorted. How the hell had the thing grabbed Jay without a struggle? Jay was no 90-pound weakling. The guy could pick up the front end of trucks, for crying out loud, and Jay had beaten everyone else in school at ann wrestling. There should be evidence of a fight, but there wasn't. And why did the creature's tracks mysteriously appear in the middle of the tunnel, when there were none past the point where he stood and none on the floor behind him? It was as if the thing had popped out of thin air, which was impossible. Wes trained the flashlight on the wall itself and ran his fingers over the smooth stone surface. There had to be an explanation. A few seconds later he found a clue, a hairline crack extending from the floor to the ceiling. Moving to the right, he found an identical crack. The implications made him step back in horror. "What is it?" Les asked. 219 "A secret passage." "A what?" "Are you hard of hearing?" Wes rejoined. He pointed at the section of wall bounded by the cracks. "There must be another tunnel behind this wall, covered by this big slab." Suddenly he remembered the slab he and Scott had stumbled on earlier. "This whole cavern must be honeycombed with secret passages, just like in those castles over in England and Spain and places like that." "You mean the thing came out of the wall?" "It moved pail of the wall aside, then gr-abbed Jay and Stacy from behind. They never knew what hit them." Leslie gasped and touched her hand to her throat. "It might pop out at us any second, too." Nodding, Wes backed away. Leslie quickly glued herself to his side, her hands clasped around his wrist. "Please don't let it get me." "I'll do the best I can," Wes said, although at the moment he didn't care one way or the other if the monster nailed her sorry ass or not. He definitely intended to give her the old heave-ho once they were back in Pagosa Springs. If she was to be killed by the monster it would spare him from having to put up with her tears and protests. In a perverse sort of way he wished she would be slain. They went ten yards, then Wes whirled and ran, going as fast as he dared and leaving it to Leslie to keep up or fall behind. Amazingly, she kept pace, her fear lending her speed she didn't ordinarily possess. When they reached a barren chamber he halted in the center of the floor where they could see anything coming at them. "Why are we stopping?" Leslie asked. "So you can catch your breath." "I'm not winded. You are." 220 Wes looked at her and discovered she was right. He was breathing heavily; she was as composed as if they were out for a moonlit stroll. It must be all the coke and beer, he reflected. Otherwise he'd run rings around her until she dropped. Leslie was staring at the flashlight. "Do you have another one of those?" "Nope." ,,what happens if it goes out?" "What do you think will happen?" Wes retorted. He hefted it. "But don't worry. Thc@,beam is bright so the battery must have plenty of energy. Well be out of here long before we're left in the dark." "I wish I had your confidence." "And I wish you'd stop being so negative. Think positive for once. It would do you a world of good." "Do you still love me, Wes?" The blunt query caught him off-guard. He blinked, then looked away, unwilling for her to see the truth in his eyes as he answered, "Of course I do. How can you ask such a dumb question?" "You're not acting like you do. In fact, you've been treating me like dirt since we argued after making love. You've insulted me and belittled me and you even came close to hitting me. Don't deny it. I could tell." "I was a little peeved, yeah. So what?" "So I know you. At times you act like a spoiled six year old, but this goes deeper. I think you don't love me any more and you're not man enough to admit it." "You're crazy." "Then why won't you look me in the eyes?" Leave it to her to start a romantic spat when they were thousands of feet below the earth and being stalked by an inhuman killer! He put a lid on his surging emotions and bestowed his most charming smile on her. "There. I'm looking right into your eyes. Satisfied?" he said and draped a hand on her shoulder. 221 "After all that's happened you're naturally upset. So your imagination is working overtime. Of course I love you and I always will. If I was gruff, I'm sorry. But you can understand why. We're both nervous wrecks, and we're jumping at shadows. So is it surprising I'm not my usual self?" "No, I guess not," Leslie said skeptically. Wes went to kiss her on the mouth, but she turned her face, offering her cheek instead. Provoked, he nearly drew back and told her to take a flying leap off a low cliff. To keep tha peace he planted his lips next to her ear, then smiled as if he didn't have a care in the world. "We should keep moving." "Whatever you want, honey," he said and took her hand before making for a tunnel etched in jagged rock across the way. He was pleased at his cleverness. She'd bought his lies-hook, line and sinker-which meant she'd be all the more shocked when he sprung his farewell speech on her later. Boy, would he enjoy telling her where to go! And he wouldn't feel any guilt whatsoever. She deserved being dumped for being such a putz. "Do you ever wish you'd lived your life differently?" Wes sighed. What the hell was this? Twenty questions? Did she think he was a shrink? "No, not ever," he responded. "Why, have you?" "Now and then. Sometimes I wish I could be a better person than I am, you know?" "You're fine the way you are," Wes said, concentrating on the passage ahead, seeking telltale cracks in the walls that might indicate another hidden passage. He didn't want the monster springing out at him when he least expected it. I think we can all stand some improvement." Wes glanced at her and was mildly surprised by her pensive features. She so rarely thought heavily about 222 I . . @@11 anything. He also gazed past her to make certain there was nothing sneaking up on them. "What in the world brought this up, anyway?" I flirted with Jay to get Stacy mad." He halted and turned. "When did this happen?" "Shortly before you showed up. I wanted to get back at Stacy for the fight we had, so I made a play at Jay to try and make her jealous and maybe cause the two of them to go at it." "What kind of play did you make?" "It doesn't matter." "Does to me. How far did you go with him?" "That's not the issue. The point is I shouldn't have tried to hurt my best friend by throwing myself at her hunk," Leslie said sadly. "And now theyre both gone and I may never have an opportunity to apologize." "So that's what this is about. You feel guilty because theyre probably lying in bits and pieces in one of these tunnels." "How could you?" Leslie responded, indignant. "Don't you have any feelings at all?" "Now don't start." "Fine. I% finish it, then." "Finish what?" "Us. As of this minute we're no longer going steady," Leslie declared. She tugged at his school ring, slipping it off her finger. "You can have your ring back, and I don't want to ever go out with you again." "You can't do this." "Why not?" "Because. . ." Wes said and let the sentence trail off. How could he tell her that she couldn't dump him because he was planning to dump @ her? This wasn't fair. "Now there's a wonderful reason," Leslie said sarcastically. "I'm right, aren't I? You don't love me any longer. )p 223 "This is hardly the time or place-" Wes began. "Answer me." "What has gotten into you?" "Answer me," Leslie demanded, violently throwing his ring to the ground. Wes couldn't take it any longer. His self-control snapped. As someone accustomed to always having his own way, he had a short fuse when it came to someone opposing his will or giving him a hard time. He naturally expected others to comply with his every wish since he always knew what was best for everyone. Unfortunately, on at least a dozen separate occasions he had been forced to give Leslie light slaps because she mouthed off once too often. This time she went way too far, driving him over the brink. His right fist swept up, connecting with her chin and rocking the startled girl on her heels. She staggered, and he slugged her again, grinning as he did, gratified by the feel of his knuckles on her flesh. There was a loud crunch, and her knees buckled. Leslie sprawled in a crumpled heap, blood dribbling from the comers of her mouth. only then did Wes realize what he had done. He swayed as if drunk and dropped to one knee. "Les? I'm sorry, babe. Really. Are you okay?" She made no reply, her eyes closed, the blood flowing faster. "Les, honey?" Wesley said, prodding her shoulder. "Come on. Snap out of it. I didn't hit you that hard." She didn't seem to be breathing. "Leslie?" Wes said urgently, touching her cheek. She felt cold. What had he done? Was she dead? He picked up her limp wrist and felt for a pulse. There was none. Horrified, he stood and took a step backwards. He hadn't meant to hit her with all his strength. It had just sort of happened. Now she'd gone and kicked the bucket. How could she do it? How could she go and 224 die on him at a time like this? If anyone ever found out he'd be thrown into prison. He glanced both ways and saw no one. Good. There were no witnesses to worTy about. Only he knew, and if he kept his mouth shut no one else would ever suspect the truth. He could claim the monster killed her. Or maybe he would say she had an accident, fell into a chasm or something like that. He could concoct a cock-and-bull story where he valiantly tried to save her but failed. Everyone would buy it. Practically the whole town knew they were a hot item, presumably deeply in love. The townspeople would believe any yam he told. He began to calm down. There was no way that he, Wesley Aaron Eagen, was ever going to prison. Prisons were for losers. Eagens were winners. It was that simple. If he kept his cool he'd come out on top, just like always. He breathed a sigh of relief and debated whether to leave her there or drag the body into a nook or cranny where no one would ever find her. Wes mopped his perspiring forehead, then crouched. Better to be safe than sorry. He tucked the flashlight under his right arm, grabbed her wrists and went to pull. From the direction of the barren chamber arose the rattling of a sidewinder. His beam pointed into the gloom. The monster was on their heels! He had to get the hell out of there. Spinning, he took several strides, then paused to stare at Leslie. The monster had perfect timing. It would come on her body and likely tear her apart as it had Scott and Terri. There would be no evidence left when it was through. He would be in the clear. "Come and get supper, bastard," Wes said, smirking, and raced down the passage. He covered ten yards when he thought he heard a loud moan behind him. Stunned, he stopped and looked, but Les was right where he'd 225 left her, not moving at all. "Babe?" he said and he the creature utter its weird cry again. Without anothe backward glance he fled, fear lending wings to his feet and put Leslie Vanderhurst out of his mind once an for all. Chapter Twenty 226 Jay Thorpe came to with a start and automatically sat bolt upright, his befuddled mind trying to come to terms with the staggering vista unfolding before his astonished eyes. He was seated on a high ridge in the midst of a Vast wasteland of canyons, ravines, plateaus, assorted monoliths and bizarre formations. For a few seconds he believed he was dreaming, believed he must be imagining himself on an alien world. Then he looked skyward and discovered there was no sky. Rather, where the clouds should be was a ceiling as vast as the landscape itself, a ceiling that gave off a preternatural glow. Recognition dawned. He was still in the Caverria del Diablo, but in a chamber that dwarfed all the others combined, a chamber encompassing more space than the entire town of Pagosa Springs. Glancing around in amazement, he realized the metropolis of Denver would scarcely cover a tenth of the ground he saw. Someone groaned behind him. Twisting, Jay saw Stacy and his heart leaped. He moved to her side, kneeling and cradling her head in his lap. She appeared to be unhurt; at least there were no bruises or wounds he could see. What in the world had happened? Jay remembered hiking along a tunnel with Wes and Leslie behind them. There had been a scratching noise, a puff of cool air, and he had started to turn when 227 something struck him on the side of the head and he had crumpled. It had all transpired so incredibly fast that there was no time for him to react or defend himself or Stacy. He stroked her brow, and she groaned again. "Honey?" he said softly. Her eyelids fluttered, then snapped open, her eyes reflecting unbridled fear. She saw his face, exhaled in relief and mustered a grin. "Hi there, handsome. What the hell happened?" "Take a look and maybe you can tell me." She sat up, her features registering dumfounded shock. She gawked at the wasteland, then clutched his wrist. "Tell me I'm having a nightmare, that none of this is real." "It's real, all right," Jay said, rising and giving her a hand up. "We're somewhere in the stinking cave. How we got here is anyone's guess." "The thing," Stacy said. "The thing must have knocked us out and brought us here." "Why?" Jay wondered. "It makes no sense. The monster had us dead to rights. It could have ripped us apart like it did the others, yet it didn't." "Maybe it has other plans for us," Stacy said anxiously. "Like whaO" Jay said, rotating a full 360 degrees, seeking signs of life. In all that near boundless region nothing stirred. "Why is it so warm?" Stacy inquired. Jay's brow knit. She was right. The tunnels had been cool, some even drafty. This place was uncomfortably warm, so much so he was sweating. The temperature must be 80 degrees or better. "Is that smoke?" Stacy asked, pointing off to their right. Turning, Jay spied several brownish tendrils perhaps a quarter of a mile away spiraling toward the ceiling. "I'll be damned. It is." 228 "We should go have a look. There might be people there. Maybe those are campfires." Jay made no comment although he felt she was grasping at straws. In the first place, there wasn't a tree, bush or any other combustible material anywhere in sight. Second, it was extremely unlikely anyone else was in the Caverna del Diablo. "Shall we?" Stacy prompted, gesturing at the smoke. "I suppose," Jay said, since he didn't have any better ideas. He headed out, then abruptly halted and reached back over his right shoulder to touch a hand to his spine between his shoulder blades. "What's the matter?" "Didn't you notice either? The backpack is gone," Jay said, scanning the nearby ground. "So is the flashlight and the rock hammer." "The monster must have taken them," Stacy said. "Damn it," Jay grumbled, putting on a front of being furious so she wouldn't guess the truth. He didn't want to tell her, but deep down inside he was scared. For the very first time in his life he was experiencing genuine fear. Always in the past he had relied on his great size and superbly conditioned physique to see him through any trouble, but this time neither was doing him much good. The monster had them right where it wanted them, and there was nothing he could do about it. He was helpless, a condition he had never known before. When he was younger, he had never had to worry about other boys trying to beat him up. They had all been too intimidated by his bulk and his muscles to dare pick on him. In high school it was much the same. Everyone knew he was as strong as an ox; no one was stupid enough to get him ticked off. Even on the football field he was top dog because he was so much bigger than his teammates and most opposing players. He'd never been in a situation where he was 229 1XVIll-ki- VV (Cull the underdog. All his life his exceptional strength and size had set him apart and above everyone else. Now he was being toyed with by a creature capable of ripping him to pieces, by something that must be equally as strong if not stronger, by something larger than he was. His life lay on the line. Worse, so did Stacy's, and much of his !ear was for her welfare more than his own. He couldn't bear the thought of her being slain. No matter what, he must protect'her and,@-,, get her to safety. "Come on," Stacy said, taking his hand. "There Is no use crying over spilt milk, as my mom always says." They walked in silence for a while. "Do you think the monster got Wes and Leslie, too?" she asked. "Probably. They were right behind us." "No, they weren't." "What?" "I was just about to say something to you when were jumped. They never followed us. I looked bbacc several times and couldn't understand what was keeping them." "We might be the last ones left," Jay said and fe her hand become a vise. To take her mind off the' plight he nodded at the smoke and commented, "The again, Fleming is unaccounted for. It would be jus like a brain like him to make some fires to try an signal us." "God, I hope you're right." They came to where the ridge sloped down to a b ren plain. From their vantage point they discovere the smoke arose on the far side of a gigantic roc formation shaped much like the Denver Coliseum, enormous dome covering several acres. They starte down the slope. Stacy surveyed the sprawling, desolate expanse an shuddered. "This place gives me the creeps. 230 "We'll be fine. I'll get you out. Wait and see," Jay earnestly assured her. "Sure." i'You don't believe me?" III have complete confidence in you." Jay was upset by her tone. He noted how she had danced around the question and wished there was something he could do or say to put her mind at ease. But he couldn't bring himself to lie. Besides, she would see right through him. She always did. "This is a hell of a way to spend Halloween," Stacy said. "Oh, I don't know," Jay responded, adopting a lighthearted attitude in the hope she would cheer up. "Being stalked by a monster is right in keeping with the holiday. Look at all those scary movies that Carpenter guy made." He grinned, but she merely scowled and stared at the smoke. The descent took over 15 minutes. Although the slope wasn't steep, there was a lot of loose earth underfoot so they had to exercise caution. A warm wind stroked their faces bearing with it a faint, offensive odor. "What is that smell?" Stacy asked when they stopped briefly at the base of the ridge. "Beats me, sugar," Jay said. "Reminds me of rotten eggs." He bore to the right, marveling at the immense, smooth dome they were going around. How had it been formed? He knew next to nothing about geology. Vaguely, he seemed to remember a few science classes dealing with volcanoes and the types of formations formed by volcanic activity. The dome in front of-them reminded him of a picture of a geothermal somethingor-other he'd seen in the textbook. Of course the notion was ridiculous. There were no volcanoes anywhere in the Rocky Mountains. They took half an hour to reach a point where they could see the land beyond the dome. 231 VaVIU r9louUMN Stacy stopped and cursed. "We should have known," Jay said, gazing forlorn-, ly at three large pools of bubbling yellowish-brown' water. Or was it water? He led her closer. The sme I of rotten eggs grew stronger, almost making him gag.' "This is far enough," Stacy said, tugging on his arm "What's wrong?" "I have a bad feeling." Jay would have liked to inspect the pools, but h'. decided not to make an issue of it. Sighing, he stretche to relieve the tension in his body and happened t swivel and gaze at the dome, then past the formatio at the section of ridge visible from where they stood He thought he would have a heart attack. Perched on the top of the ridge, silhouetted agains the backdrop of the incandescent ceiling, was a huge@ solitary red figure. It was simply standing there, star, ing at them. Stacy glanced at his face, then spun. "Oh, God!" sh cried and pivoted, about to flee blindly in the opposit direction. "It's after us." "Stay calm," Jay said, snatching her wrist. "If we los our heads now we're done for." The creature began to descend the ridge, walkin slowly and methodically, its arms swinging loosely a its sides. "Run!" Stacy screeched, her eyes pools of abject te ror as she tried to tear her arm free. "That thing wi kill us if it catches us!" Among the many lessons Jay had learned from play@ 0@n p ing football was that it never paid to lose o ie s head., Keeping cool when the going got tough was the trade.-I mark of the truly great players. if a man let the excitement get the better of him, he might forget which zone he was supposed to cover or which play the quarter-" back had just called. And one blunder could lose a game. 232 rien-ii-ween While to the casual fan it often appeared as if most players were reacting to plays on the spur of the moment, in reality the men performed according to strict guidelines, adhering to the strategies set down by the coach. As little as possible was left to chance because the team that could control the ball controlled the game. Planning and strategy always paid off. So he would much rather have taken a minute to think things out, to search for anything he could use as a weapon or some other means of stopping the monster cold. But when Stacy went crazy on him, frantically pulling on his hand and jumping up and down in panicked agitation, he gave in and let himself be prompted into full-fledged flight. They ran out onto the barren plain, a sea of red earth devoid of any other living things, their feet raising small swirls of reddish dust in their wake. On the plain the temperature rose higher, causing them to swelter as if they were running under the noonday sun in the middle of July. Both of them were in excellent condition. Jay figured they had gone half a mile when he slowed down and motioned for Stacy to do likewise. Halting to catch his breath, he looked back. Just passing the bubbling pools was the red figure. It still appeared to be walking, not running. "Maybe it can't move very fast," Stacy said hopefully. "If it catches up with us it'll be sorry," Jay boasted for her benefit. He studied the lay of the land surrounding them. Straight ahead lay more flat plain. To the right reared a series of ridges and hills. To their left was the gloomy mouth of a wide -canyon. He bore to the right. "What are you doing?" "We need somewhere to hide," Jay responded. "How about that canyon? It's a bit closer." 233 X,CLVI%A @@4_1"LfAAA@ "Too dark in there. I want to see the monster when it closes in on us." They jogged energetically until Stacy flagged. Jay could have sprinted for two more miles without tiring, but he slowed down to match her pace. "Go on," Stacy said, w aving her hand Don't wait for me. I don't have your endurance." Jay smiled at her. "That has got to be the stupidest thing you've ever said to me. What kind of guy would I be if I deserted you now?" He shook his head. "Sorry,, babe. You're stuck with me for the duration.' "You have your nerve calling me stupid." "I love you, too." Stacy, breathing through her nose, paused between each of her next words. "I'm serious. Only a dummy would have fallen for Leslie's ploy back there." "What ploy?" I "Don't play innocent with me, lover boy. Your hormones always have been hyperactive, and when Leslie threw herself at you, you just naturally went into heat." Jay was so flabbergasted that he temporarily forgot all about the creature. "I don't know what you're talking about," he said lamely. "Les and I are friends, nothing more." "Is that why you were kissing her and kept feeling her up when you thought I wasn't looking?" A rebuttal died on Jay@s lips. He felt like a kid who had been caught with his hand in the cookie jar. if he argued he would only make matters worse. It was better to stay quiet and take his lumps like a man. "I saw you smooching when I came back from tinkling," Stacy revealed. "You don't know how close you came to getting bashed in the head with a rock, if only I'd been able to find one handy." Jay stared at the hills and ridges. "Honestly, sometimes I wonder what you use for brains, honeybuns. Didn't it ever occur to you that 234 Leslie was only using you to get back at me?" "She was?" Jay replied, his curiosity getting the better of him. "Of course. She was mad because I kicked her ass, so she tried to get even by getting you all hot and bothered, figuring I'd notice and the two of us would wind up at each other's throats." Once again Jay was impressed by his girlfriend's insight. He'd been wondering why Leslie had displayed such a sudden interest in him, and now her behavior made sense. "Of all the dirty tricks," he muttered. "Blame yourself, not her. She set you up for a fall, and like a chump you took the bait." "Why didn't you chew me out on the spot?" "Because I wanted to see how far you'd go. If you hung yourself, I was planning to dump you once we made it back to town." Jay, thunder-struck, broke stride, then had to hurry to jog abreast of her again. "You really would have dumped me?" "Damn straight. What would you do if you caught me with another guy?" "Kill the bastard." "Certainly you would. You're a macho lunkhead. But what about us? Would you still want to be my steady?" "Always." Stacy looked at him and smirked. "You're a lunkhead, but an adorable one. Just remember this conversation the next time some bimbo puts the moves on you. Okay?" "Okay," Jay said, pleased he had briefly gotten her mind off the creature dogging them. He checked to see if they were maintaining their lead and nearly tripped when he saw no trace of the red monster. "What the hell!" he exclaimed, halting. "Where did the thing go?" After searching carefully, Stacy said, "Maybe it's hiding." 235 .1s" -1-11,1 David Robbins "There's nowhere to hide," Jay replied, scouring the empty plain between the dome and them. He was completely baffled. They hadn't seen any gullies or washes in which the thing could have taken cover, nor were there any mounds, hillocks or boulders to hide behind. In that open country a mouse would stand out like a sore thumb, yet the monster had mysteriously disappeared. "Do we keep going?" Stacy asked. "Might as well," Jay said. "We have nowhere else to go." He didn@t add that the creature might be lying in wait back there, perhaps in ditch or a crack they couldn't see from where they were. He continued toward a bald hill, going slowly so as not to force Stacy to overexert herself. "How far under the surface do you think we are?" "I wouldn't have any idea." "My guess would be a mile. They say the farther down you go, the hotter it gets, And this place is a hothouse." Jay gazed at the ceiling, speculating on whether she could possibly be correct. Science wasn't his strong suit-nor was Math, History, English, Economics and Music Appreciation-but he doubted they were a mile underground. Half a mile, maybe. In the long run it wasn't important. All that counted was reaching the surface alive. "There's something I've been meaning to tell you, Stacy said. "So shoot," Jay said, surprised at how talkative she had become. Probably nerves, he deduced, and if talking helped her cope, then he had no objection to her gabbing his ears off. "My folks want me to go off to college next year." "You mean go away? Leave Pagosa Springs?" "That's the general idea. They're insisting I need a college education, and they even have the college picked 236 Hell-O-Ween out for me. It's somewhere in Kansas, the same school my mom went to." "Kansas?" Jay repeated, thinking a drive there would take around 12 hours depending on where the college was located and whether he could keep the pedal to the metal most of the trip. "I don't want to go." "Then don't." "But if my dad puts his foot down I won't be able to say no. "Hell, you'll be eighteen by then. You can do as you want. Tell them you're not going and that's final." "They've offered to pay for my entire education." Extremely upset, Jay stopped and faced her. "And what about us? We'll be lucky if we see each other once a month." The thought of not seeing her every single day was more than he could bear. She was his life. He'd do anything for her. In his agitation he pounded his tight fist into his left palm. "Remember Vic and Sally? They were in love, too. Then he went off to Berkeley to study anthropology or some such bogus crap and the next time he came to visit he dumped her." "Yeah, but he also came back wearing an ear-ring. And there was a rumor going around town that he was sharing an apartment out in California with somebody named Maurice." "That's beside the point," Jay snapped. "Don't blow a gasket, honeybuns. If I go to Kansas I won't stop loving you." "You don't know that!" Jay bellowed. "You might meet some hunk who will sweet-talk you right off your feet. Then I'll receive a Dear John letter in the mail. If I do, I promise you I'll come to Kansas, find the son of a bitch, and bust him into so many pieces he'll look like Humpty Dumpty when I'm through." For the first time in hours Stacy laughed. She placed a hand on his forearm and said, "Whoa there, tiger. Get 237 a grip. We'll discuss this later, if and when we ever get out of the mess we're in." Jay refused to be appeased. "You'll go to Kansas over my dead body. No wife of mine is going off to another state and leaving me here to cool my heels and worry my ass off." "Wife?" "Yeah. I planned to ask you to marTy me at the@, prom," Jay explained. "I've already bought the ring., Have it on layaway at Driscoll's. Cost me every penny I had and then some," he added, breaking off when' Stacy uttered a cry of delight and leaped into his arms. 1i He clasped her to him, awash in a riptide of love, desperately trying to think of the right words to say,. the perfect words that would persuade her to say yes, that would keep her by his side forever. "Oh, you big lug!" Stacy exclaimed and kissed him on the ear. "Are you mad at me?" Stacy drew back and beamed. "Why would I be mad' at the guy who is going to be my husband?" "You mean .... ((Yep.)P Jay cackled and spun in circles, kissing her neck, her cheeks, her rosy lips. He felt deliriously happy, as if he would burst at the seams with pure joy. They were as good as married. Or were they? A sobering stumbling block gave him pause. "What about your folks? How will they take the news?" "My dad will want to take a baseball bat to your thickskull." "Then let's elope," Jay proposed. "What? And give up my chance at a big, formal wedding with all the trimmings?" Stacy responded, grinning. She pecked him on the nose, giggled and hugged him. "Will your folks come around to our way of think- 238 ing"" Jay inquired. Suddenly she stiffened in his gra .sp, and he heard a sharpintake of breath. She was gazing over his shoulder in the direction of the hill. Whirling, he spied the reason for her anxiety on the crown. It was the monster, and as he laid eyes on it the creature bounded toward them. 239 Chapter Twenty-One One minute Cory Fleming was rounding a comer in a pitch black tunnel, the darkness held back by the flickering glow of his smoking lantern, and the next he emerged from the passage into the stupendous chamber where perpetual twilight reigned. Towering above him was a spire as high as a Denver skyscraper. Nearby was a stone arch under which an elephant could walk with ease. He shut off the lantern to conserve the fuel, then surveyed the hellish landscape, seeking signs of the demon and Ann. The ground was either solid rock or hard-packed soil lacking the accumulation of dust found in most of the tunnels, so relying on tracks was out of the question. Tightening his grip on the pick handle, Cory hiked between the spire and the arch. All was still, the air much wanner than in the passages. He wondered if hidden eyes were watching his every move and fervently hoped such wasn't the case. With the element of surprise in his favor he stood a slim chance of rescuing Ann. Without it, if he was spotted beforehand, the demon could pick him off at its leisure since the creature must know every nook and cranny in the vast subterranean refuge. He entertained again another, equally disturbing, worry. What if there was more than one demon? According to all the tales and legends he had read 240 about or ever heard, demons had at one time been legion. There was supposed to be an army of them at the Devil's beck and call. Even allowing for gross exaggeration and distortion by the primitive people who encountered the creatures, there must have been more than one in order for the population to perpetuate itself. So there was a distinct possibility more than one dwelled in the Caverna del Diablo. The prospect was chilling. Ahead, the chamber was crisscrossed by canyons and ravines. Way off to the left lay a great plain. Mammoth rock formations were everywhere. Cory paused and adjusted his glasses. Where in that sprawling region was Ann? Locating her would be like finding the traditional needle in a haystack. He didn ,t dare shout to draw her attention because the yells would also draw the demon. His sole recourse was to keep hunting and pray for the best. He made for a ravine 100 yards off, running so he would not be in the open any longer than was necessary, his eyes constantly in motion. Not so much as a mouse stirred, which brought to mind another consideration. What did demons eat, if anything? From the marks on the bones he'd seen on the ledge hours ago, he concluded demons were carnivorous and one of their favorite meals consisted of human flesh. If true, there must be other sources of nourishment since humans rarely descended any great depth into the cave. Rodents, perhaps. Or lizards, since many caves were known to harbor such populations. Then again, the demons might subsist on something else entirely. He had no empirical evidence on which to base his speculation, and a scientist without empirical evidence was like a fish out of water, floundering for facts instead of oxygen. At the mouth of the ravine he halted to listen. The total silence was nerve-racking, more so than in the 241 tunnels. Holding the pick in front of him in his right hand, he cautiously advanced. Once the lantern cooled off he intended to stick it in the backpack to free both hands, but for the time being he must count on spotting the demon first so he could set the lantern down and employ the weapon effectively. The narrow ravine twisted and turned, its sides as smooth as marble, the stone the color of caramel. Vegetation was nonexistent. He hugged the right wall so his back would be protected and repeatedly checked to his rear to prevent the creature from sneaking up on him. Two minutes of travel brought him to the end, where the ravine opened out onto a level area embracing five acres or more. Domes the size of pickup trucks dotted the tract, behind any one of which the demon might be lurking. Cory bore to the left to skirt the domes. A quarter of the way around them he abruptly inhaled an offensive odor, a smell so rank it brought to mind the disgusting stench of long dead road kills crawling with maggots or rotten garbage so putrid even rats wouldn't touch the stuff. He also heard a gurgling sound and gazing to his left spied a small pool of bubbling yellowish-brown liquid. Fascinated, he walked over and squatted. He knew better than to touch the pool. The liquid possessed the same consistency as water, but the stench inclined him to the opinion it was liquid sulfur which had a boiling point of 832 degrees. One touch and he'd be badly burned. Rising, he moved off deep in thought. Where there was one pool there were bound to be others, which pointed at some degree of volcanic activity deep under the chamber. That would account for the elevated temperature and the muggy air. The chamber, in effect, was a unique microcosm within the vaster body of the earth proper, a habitat perhaps ideally suited to 242 the demons and whatever other life forms flourished. A rattlin arose near the domes. Insta 9 ntly Cory spun and raced behind a short spire a dozen yards off. No sooner did he take cover than the noise arose once more, louder and closer. He tried to slow his surging pulse and risked a peek. A demon was standing beside a dome near the pool, its head cocked, its features lined in intense concentration. The creature stared at the ravine, then at the pool, then walked forward. It stopped, threw back its head and vented the frightening cry a third time. Cory was glued to the spire, amazed at how the demon produced the noise. He saw the demon's forked tongue protrude from between its parted lips and vibrate just like a rattlesnake's tail, striking its upper and lower teeth as the forked tip danced wildly. The sight was hideous, but it was nothing compared to the creature's next act. Kneeling by the pool, the demon dipped a hand into the sulfur and greedily scooped the boiling substance into its mouth. Cory could barely credit the testimony of his own eyes. By all scientific standards the feat should be impossible, yet there the demon was, drinking away, unfazed. He watched as it dr-ank its fill, then wiped the back of its hand across its lower lip and stood. For a moment he feared the demon would come straight toward him, but it turned and disappeared among the domes. He sagged, feeling weak, the magnitude of the danger hitting home. That creature had been seven feet tall, minimum, and endowed with a physique a weightlifter would die for. What chance did he stand against such an adversary? Who was he trying to kid? All he had to rely on were his wits and his scientific expertise, neither of which seemed adequate for the task. Should he just give up and leave before he was found out and slain? 243 No! He thought of Ann, of the feel of her in his arms and the press of her soft lips. Renewed resolve flooded through him. He was her only hope. No one else knew where they were. No one else could help. if he ran out, if he let cowardice get the better of hirn, he might as well find a high cliff and leap off because he would never be able to live with himself afterward. Some might brand him crazy, but the true test of any love was devotion to your beloved. If he fled he was not only sealing Ann's fate, he was tacitly demonstrating his affection had been a sham. He looked out and saw no trace of the demon. Acting on the assumption that it was the one that had taken Ann, he crept toward the domes, setting each foot down softly. Suddenly he realized he was still holding the lantern in his left hand. By now it should be cool. He pressed his right wrist to the metal, confirmed the heat had dissipated and stopped so he could remove the backpack and place the lantern inside. After zipping the pack shut, he slipped the straps over his arms, gripped the pick in both hands and ventured among the domes to do battle for the life of the girl he loved. Provided she was still alive. "Run!" Jay shouted and gave Stacy a shove that was supposed to send her fleeing across the plain but instead caused her to stumble and fall to her knees. Before she could stand the monster was there, six feet away, staring at them with its mouth creased in a malevolent grin. "We're done for!" Stacy cried. Jay took in the creature's features in a glance-the red skin, the massive muscles, the fiery eyes, the horns and the forked tail. They filled him with dread, but he stayed rooted between the monster and Stacy. To get at her it must go through him. The thing seemed amused by his defiance. It scru- 244 @A tinized him from head to toe, then motioned as if inviting him to attack. "Don't go near it," Stacy urged, on her feet again, her palms flat against his back. "Please, Jay! Let's just back off and hope to hell it leaves us alone." "We have nowhere to run." "Look at that thing. You wouldn't last a minute. It wants you to move in close so it can kill you quickly." The monster glanced at her and hissed. Jay hesitated. He wasnpt completely convinced the creature could beat him so handily. The last time it had taken him unawares. Now he was braced and ready. Sure, it was taller than him, but he knew of basketball players who were even taller. And yes, the monster had more muscles, but muscles alone did not always denote great strength. There were skinny guys on the football team who were stronger than some of the beefier players. "Please!" Stacy pleaded. "For me." Reluctantly, Jay slowly retreated, exercising care not to entangle his feet with hers and trip. He tensed, anticipating the monster would rush them. It didn't move. Only after they had gone 15 feet did it take a ponderous stride and begin to follow them. "Why isn't it attacking?" he wondered aloud. "Who cares?" Stacy responded. "All that matters is it's letting us leave, so don't do anything to anger it." Jay knew better but kept quiet. The monster was in no rush because it knew they couldn't escape. It was toying with them as a cat toys with a mouse, allowing them to get their hopes up before closing for the kill. He must be ready when the charge came. There would only be one chance. The demon continued to trail them, making no attempt to pounce. "If only we had a gun," Stacy said. Mentally, Jay echoed those sentiments. He should 245 have thought to bring his dad's pistol or a knife alon But even if he had, the demon would have found t weapon after it had knocked them out and he wo I be no better off than he was now. He balled his fis and waited. An agonizing minute went by. "Leave us alone, damn you!" Stacy shouted strident ly. "Go away!" The monster paid no attention. Five more minute passed. And still the crimson fiend stalked them, exhi biting no aggression, grinning wickedly all the while taking deliberate step after deliberate step, utte silent. The ordeal got to Jay. His nerves were rubbed ra He wanted to end the stalemate, to buy Stacy ti to flee while he fought the creature off. But whe he slowed, thinking the thing would close in on 1 the monster also slowed, matching his speed pace fo pace. He went faster. So did the monster. He angled t the right. The thing did the same. It mimicked every thing they did, playing with them as a cat with a p of mice. Ten minutes longer the emotionally grueling purs lasted, until Stacy looked at Jay and suggested, "May we should run." "Go for it," Jay responded, spinning and sprint n on her heels. They were near the giant dome, almost back where they had started. He heard Stacy sniff at the same moment he smelled the stench of rotten eggs. and saw the bubbling pools giving off their tendrils of, upwardly spiraling smoke. If the water or whatever was in those pools was bubbling, then it must be boiling, and if it was boiling, it would bum anything that came in contact with the pools. A wild idea blossomed.He glanced over his shoulder and saw the monster,,, moving at the same speed they were, still playing its demented game. "When I stop, you keep going to the 246 far side of the closest pool," he said to Stacy. "I'm not leaving you behind." "This isn't the time to argue, damn it. I have a plan." "No." Exasperated, Jay jogged until he drew within a few feet of the edge of the pool. The rank smell was almost overpowering. Breathing shallowly, he halted and turned. The monster promptly stopped. "All right," he said to Stacy. "If you want to stay, then you can help me trick this son of a bitch." "How?" "Go around the pool to the other side." "I told you I'm not leaving you alone." "Damn your stubborn streak!" Jay spat, glancing at her. "Listen to me. My plan will work if you cooperate. Trust me. Go to the other side of this pool, and when I say the word, scream your lungs out." She looked at him, her eyes reflecting her affection. "Okay. But this had better work. If you get your ass killed, I'm going to be royally ticked off at you." "I'll keep it in mind." Stacy pivoted and did as he had instructed. When she was directly across from him she shouted, "All set." The monster was gazing from one to the other, apparently perplexed by the maneuver. "All right, you ugly fucker," Jay taunted. "Let's see how bright you are." He mimicked the creature's earlier gesture, inviting the thing to come at him. Oddly, the creature's grin widened, exposing tapered teeth capable of rending flesh with a single bite. "What are you waiting for?" Jay asked and slowly stepped to the right, starting to move in a circle, his attention riveted on the monsters legs. If the thing didn't do as he expected, he was as good as dead. "What's the matter? Are you too dumb to know when You've been insulted?" 247 Smiling, the creature took a stride. I "That's it, stupid," Jay went on, trying to distract the" brute with nonstop talk. If it didn't have a second to think, it wouldn't figure out what he was up to until too late. "Come toward me. Come to papa so he can give you exactly what you deserve for butchering Scott and Terri." As he talked, he edged farther from the pool. "I want to see your face when you buy the farm, bastard. I want to see you in pain." "Be careful!" Stacy shouted. The monster stared at her, then shifted to face Jay. "A little bit further should do it," Jay said, continuing to move in a circle. "Keep looking at me, moron. Don't pay any attention to anything else. Just me. That's it, gruesome. Seemingly intrigued by the words, the creature simply listened, moving an inch every so often to keep Jay directly in front of it. "Almost there," Jay said, elated at his success. Another sideways step put him at about the same spot occupied by the monster when he put his scheme into operation. The creature was about where he had been standing. They had reversed positions. The monster rumbled and began to raise an arm. "Now!" Jay yelled. "Do it now!" On cue, Stacy cupped her hands to her mouth and screamed long and loud, a shrill scream that echoed out across the infernal wasteland, distorted by the many canyon walls and the steep sides of the many ravines but nonetheless wafting far and wide. Cory Fleming, warily crossing the dome field, heard the scream and stopped. So, almost, did his heart. Was it Ann? He'd assumed she was somewhere nearby, not as distant as the source of the faint scream must be. Alarmed, he turned this way and that, trying to pinpoint the direction it came from, but in the middle of 248 the domes it seemed to be coming from every direction at once. He stood still, listening to the scream die out. Either he could go racing off in a desperate search or he could keep scouring the immediate area. Since the demon he had seen couldn't have gone all that far, he opted to confine his quest to the general vicinity and hoped to heaven he wasn't making a fatal mistake. Fatal for Ann, that is. In a room elsewhere in the Cavema del Diablo, Wesley Eagen took a sip of beer, then snapped to attention when a barely audible scream reached his ears. He knew it couldn't be Terri or Leslie, since they were both dead. So it was either Stacy or Ann. He liked Stacy, if only for her body. Ann, he didn't care for one bit. In any event, there was nothing he could do to help whoever it was so he shrugged and took another sip of brew. Much closer to the pools where Jay and Stacy were making their stand, Leslie stirred feebly. Vivid, horrifying memories of being struck by Wes made her cringe and whimper. Had she just screamed? She opened her eyes, feeling nauseous and thoroughly disoriented, then recoiled on seeing the most repulsive face imaginable not inches from her own, the face of a smirking red monster. A hand touched her stomach, another her thigh. Petrified, shocked to her core, she fainted dead away. At the sound of Stacy's scream the monster turned and stared at her with its forehead knit, as if puzzled by her behavior. It took a step nearer the pool and reached out although she was well beyond its reach. This was the moment Jay had been waiting for. He galvanized into action, lowering his right shoulder and charging, his powerful legs pumping, transforming 249 every square inch of his muscular frame, every ounce of his 250 pounds, into a living battering ram. The monster lifted its head ' evidently hearing him, and started to swing around. A heartbeat later he slammed into its back at the base of its spine. I The creature flew forward as if shot from a cannon, its arms flung out protectively, and hit the surface of the pool hard. Headfirst it went under, thrashing and flailing, and sank in a twinkling, its tail the last part of its body to sink from sight. Jay threw himself backwards as drops of the scalding liquid sprayed in all directions. A few spattered on his arms a drop on his neck. Those tiny amounts were enough to send waves of agony rippling through him. Landing on his right side, he -rolled onto his stomach and buried his face in the ground to keep any of the liquid from striking his face. The pool erupted in a foaming, bubbling cauldron, spewing streams of the buming substance, none of which hit him. Abruptly, the agitation subsided. Wonied about Stacy, Jay rose onto his elbows and glanced at the opposite side. She was also on her stomach, staring at the bubbling surface. Then she looked up, caught his eyes and laughed. "You did it, honeybuns! You did it!" Nodding, Jay pushed upright and ran around the pool. She met him halfway, jumping into his arms and giggling in girlish joy. "We're safe! We're safe!" "Yes," Jay said, swiveling so he could see the pool. He half-feared the monster would come roaring up out of the depths, but of course the idea was ridiculous. Nothing could survive such intense heat, not even that thing. "I'm so proud of you I could eat you whole," Stacy declared and bit his square chin to emphasize her point. 250 "Ouch," Jay said, wincing. He lowered her and chuck- led. "Any other time or place I'd take you up on your offer in a minute, but right now we should haul butt while the hauling is good." "You don't think it's dead?" "Of course it is," Jay said, scanning the surrounding ter-rain. "But what if it's not the only one?" Stacy sobered. "Oh, crap. I didn't think of that." "Come on," Jay said, taking her hand. Rather than thread among the three pools, he retraced his steps and turned to the left, heading toward a neighboring canyon. Beyond it appeared to be a high wall which might be the outer boundary of the chamber. If so, they stood a chance of finding a way out. "Wait until I tell the gang at school about this," Stacy said proudly. "My hunk took on the monster from the Caverna del Diablo and whipped its sony butt." "No one will believe you. 11 "Why not? All my friends know I don't lie." "Look around you," Jay said, encompassing the unworldly domain with a sweep of his arm. "Who in their right mind is going to believe this place exists? And do you really expect our friends to believe the monster was real?" He snorted. "They'll laugh you silly." "I don't. . ." Stacy began and suddenly fell silent. Jay knew why. He heard the same sound she did, the sound of liquid splashing over the edge of a pool behind them, and with a sinking sensation in the pit of his stomach he let go of her hand and spun on his heels, knowing what he would see before he saw it although his mind shrieked that it couldn't be, that it was impossible, that no living thing could have survived. But he was wrong. Climbing out of the pool, dripping wet, unscathed by its plunge into the boiling substance and as fonnidable as ever, was the red creature. 251 Chapter Twenty-Two When Cory Fleming saw her lying under a low rock overhang jutting from the canyon wall, he thought he must be seeing things. He blinked in astonishment, moved forward and verified it was indeed Ann Weatherby. Elated, he broke into a run and sped to her side. Only then did he think to look around for the demon. Five minutes ago he had passed through the dome field and entered the canyon, a miniature version of the Grand Canyon itself. Varied formations dotted the floor with more pools of liquid sulfur scattered among them. The same fetid odor as before, like that of a million rotten eggs, filled the air. He had found no trace of the demon or Ann until suddenly rounding a curve-and there she was, underneath the overhang. Cory held the pick so firmly his knuckles hurt. Where was the bloodthirsty monstrosity? Surely it hadn't just gone off and left her there? He surveyed the canyon in both directions, paying particular attention to the nearest rock formations, yet saw nothing. What if this was a trap? What if the creature had deliberately left Ann there so he would blunder into the open and be a sitting duck for whatever the demon had in mind? Ann moaned softly. Stepping over her so he could turn and face the canyon floor, Cory knelt, placed the pick by his side and gently lifted her head onto his leg. There was a nasty 252 bruise on her left temple. Otherwise, she appeared fine. He stroked her cheek, watching the rise and fall Of her blouse as she breathed, his relief at finding her alive knowing no bounds. Before he could speak he had to clear his throat. "Ann? Ann? It's Cory. I'm here." She moaned once more, and her eyelids quivered. "Ann?" As if she had been pricked by a pin, Ann abruptly sat up, her eyes snapping wide to reveal unadulterated terror. "Noooo!" she cried, then saw his hand on her shoulder and glanced up. "Cory? It's you! Thank goodness!" He wrapped his arms around her, as much to comfort her as to prevent her from noticing the moisture rimming his eyes. "I thought I'd lost you," he said, sounding as if he had a cold. "Where am I? How did you find me?" "it wasn't easy," Cory replied and tried to control the emotional whirlpool within himself. Brushing a hand across his face, he sat back and gave her a light kiss on the brow. "You're in that enormous chamber I told you about. I followed the demon's tracks most of the way, but once I got here I had no idea where you were. It was sheer dumb luck that I've found you." I thought you were dead," Ann said and kissed him in return; only she planted her lips on his mouth and let the kiss linger on and on before she drew back and grinned. "Ummmm. That was nice. I plan to do a lot of that from now on." I never knew you have such a one-track mind , Cory joked and then became deadly serious. "What happened to you? Did the demon give you this bruise?" he asked, pointing at the large black-and-blue blotch. Ann nodded, her grin becoming a scowl. I saw the thing hit you. You landed so hard I was sure I heard bones break. It starled to go down after you, then 253 changed its mind and grabbed me instead. I screame and fought, but it was no use. The thing pulled me b the arm through dozens of tunnels, until I couldn take it anymore and tried to get loose. That's whe it slugged me." "And carried you the rest of the way on its shoulder, Cory concluded. I don't need to tell you how scared I was. And might have been in shock, believing you were gone and all,- Ann said, touching his face. Cory rose and helped her to stand. "We've got to,. get out of here. The demon is bound to return." He snatched up the pick and stepped out from under the overhang. Which way should they go? Back the wa he came? Since he should be able to locate the tu nel that brought them to the chamber, it seemed th wisest choice. Accordingly, they hurried back down th, canyon. "Why did the thing just leave me there'>" Ann wo dered. "Count your blessings. Maybe it was saving you later." "How do you mean?" "Maybe it wasn't hungry yet." "Oh." Cory was a walking bundle of raw nerves. He fear they would encounter the creature on its way to th6` overhang and knew he would be virtually helplest:". against its superior size and strength. If only the were a way to kill the thing! "I came around once for a minute when it was c rying me," Ann mentioned. "The wind revived me"t guess. "The wind?" "Have you ever stuck your head out of the win of a moving car and felt the wind on your face?" "Sure. Who hasn't?" 254 "Well, that demon or whatever the hell it is was mov- ing as fast as a car. And it wasn't my imagination. If I had to guess, I'd say it was doing over fifty miles an hour, even with the burden of my weight." Could it actually go that fast? Cory speculated, wanting to accept her assessment although common sense and his innate scientific skepticism told him no biped could attain such speed. Why, 50 miles an hour was faster than a cheetah could run, and the cheetah was the fastest animal known to man. But what if she were right? If so, then unencumbered the creature must be capable of greater speed, perhaps on the order of 60 or 70 miles an hour. His mind boggled at the concept. It meant the demon could cover a mile in the time it took the average person to walk slightly over 150 feet. "There's something else I think you should know," Ann said. "What?" "The thing seemed to be afraid of the lantern." Cory glanced at her, his curiosity piqued. "What gives u that idea?" "Because of the way the thing acted when it went into the pit after you. The lantern had fallen from your hand and was between the creature and you. I saw the thing stop about a yard away, then shield its eyes with one hand and back off. The whole time it was hissing like a basketful of snakes. If you want my opinion, the lantern saved your life. I just know that monster was going to finish you off." A flicker of hope flared in Cory's breast. The demon must have an Achill@s heel. If he could discover what it was, they might-just might-make it to the surface alive. Think! he prodded himself. What could it be? What about the lantern would make such an immensely powerful being act timid? The heat? Obviously not. Any creature able to drink liquid sulfur could endure 255 temperatures that would roast a human alive. What else, then? Light? Was that it? The demon was accustomed to dwelling in near total darkness except for the few rooms and chambers where the walls or ceiling cast feeble illumination. He gazed up at the dimly glowing ceiling. As with most creatures, the demons were ideally adapted to their environment. Their entire metabolism was geared to subterranean living. Like bats, their hearing must be exceptional. But their sense of smell, since there were so few odors to stimulate their olfactory organ, was probably weak. So, too, must be their eyes in one respect. An eternity of existing in perpetual gloom had rendered their eyes incapable of standing bright light, which undoubtedly explained why they had never tried to establish a foothold outside on the surface. The sun would drive them all blind. Then again, maybe they had tried and learned from their failure. So for as long as the lantern's fuel held out, he could keep the things at bay. He frowned, recalling the incident at the pit. The lantern had been lit then, yet the demon still attacked. if he remembered correctly, though, the demon had rushed him from the rear. His own body had been blocking the light. He mustn't make the same mistake again. They passed a rock formation in a spiral shape. Before them appeared a boiling pool. Cory stared at it while mentally reviewing every fact he knew about sulfur. Something. nagged at him, something he felt might be impbrtant. Sulfur melted into a yellow liquid at a temperature of 230 degrees. At 250 degrees, though, it became so thick it couldn't be poured from a beaker. Above 250, oddly enough, sulfur became liquid again, and at 832 degrees reached its boiling point. What else? What were the commer- 256 cial applications of sulfur? The answer hit him like a physical blow. "Elementary," he said and smiled. "What is, Sherlock?" Ann asked. "Help me," Cory said, hurrying to the side of the pool where the ground was coated with fine yellow grains of powder. He quickly stripped off the backpack and removed the pair of dirty socks and the shirt they had found. Neither of the socks had holes. Giving one to Ann, he began filling his with the powder. "Pack yours almost to the top," he instructed her. Once they both were done, he drew his knife and cut thin strips of fabric from the shirt, then used the strips to tie the open ends of the socks closed. "What will this stuff do?" "Make the difference between life and death," Cory said, stuffing the socks into the pack. Next he spread out the shirt and dumped handfuls of powder on top, forming a mound in the middle. Ann joined in, her expression betraying her puzzled state of mind. Working swiftly, Cory cut off another strip, then lifted the edges of the shirt above the mound and looped the makeshift tie a few inches from the top to prevent the powder from leaking out. This, too, he put in the backpack. Cory removed the lantern and gave it to Ann, then adjusted the pack on his back and resumed hiking toward where he hoped to find a tunnel. I have a hunch the demon can't tolerate bright light," he explained. "The stuff we just collected is called sulfur. It ignites easily at low temperatures, so we can light it using our matches." He paused. "Sulfur bums very quickly and very brightly." I get it," Ann said, clapping him on the back. "My hunk, the genius." "Please don't call me that." "Why not? You are the smartest guy in school. Everyone knows it." 257 "Maybe I am," Cory begrudgingly acknowledged, "but the word makes me think of all the teasing I've had to endure, all the ribbing from kids who looked down their noses at me simply because I was smarter than they were. If I had a dollar for every time someone called me 'Einstein' or 'boy genius', I'd be a millionaire." "I'm sorry. I didn't know." "No big deal," Cory said with a shrug, regretting he had brought the subject up. It made him sound like a spiteful dork. He concentrated on escaping. Since leaving the tunnel he had never completely lost sight of the towering spire beside it. Such a prominent landmark was easy to see for miles around, and he now made straight toward its base. "Cory?" Ann said softly. "Yeah?" "No matter what happens next, I want you to know I won't ever forget that you came after me. No one else I know except maybe my parents would have risked their lives the way you have." Cory shrugged, feeling slightly embarTassed. I did what I had to." "I just wish we lidd time. . ." Ann said, but didn't finish her statement. "Time for what?" "Nothing. I'll tell you later." "Suit yourself." "There is one thing I can tell you, though." "Go ahead." "If anyone ever calls you 'Einstein' or 'boy genius' front of me, I'll punch their lights out." in "What do we do?" Stacy asked breathlessly as the dripping monster lumbered slowly toward them, its freakish features twisted in a sneer. "We run," Jay said and grabbed her arm as he took 258 off. They had outdistanced the creature before; they could do so again. To his amazement, the monster suddenly streaked out across the plain, moving so fast its body was no more than a red blur. it swung wide to their right, then curved in a partial loop until it halted directly in their path, not 20 feet from them. Smirking, the monster stood calmly as if waiting for their next move. "Oh, Lord," Stacy said, halting. Jay was stunned. The thing could move like greased lightning! Outdistancing it would be impossible. Whenever it so desired, it could run rings around them. But why hadn't it exhibited such speed before? He realized the creature must have been toying with them, playing some sort of perverse joke. "It's going to kill us," Stacy declared. "I can feel it." "Get behind me," Jay directed, pushing her back. The monster moved closer so he clenched his fists and assumed a boxing posture. "Run!" Stacy urged, tugging on his shirt. "We can't fight it!" "There's nothing else we can do," Jay countered. "You saw how fast it is." The monster seemed amused by their conversation. It strode to within six feet of them, then stopped and beckoned Jay, once again inviting him to attack. This time Jay did. He heard Stacy wail "No!" but he was already in@ motion, rushing in close and swinging his fists in furious cadence, pounding his knuckles into the creature's midsection. The monster grunted, then grinned, showing Jay the blows were having no effect. Enraged, Jay delivered a hook to the jaw that took the creature by surprise and caused it to stagger backwards. He closed in, certain he had found the monster's weak spot, but it recovered the very next instant and lashed out with an open-handed swing that caught Jay flush on the left cheek and sent him 259 sprawling onto his back with his ears ringing and his head throbbing. "You can't fight it!" Stacy cried, reaching his side and grabbing his arm. "Come on! Haul ass!" The monster grinned. "Stay back," Jay shouted, pushing Stacy aside as he rose and sprang, trying for a tackle this time, his shoulders slamming into the creature's shins with enough force to upend a Brahma bull. It was like slamming into the uprights in the end zone. Every bone from his head to his toes was jar-red violently, and he wound up on his stomach, stunned, in acute anguish, while abov him the monster tossed back its head and uttered it rattling cry. Suddenly he understood. The thing wa laughing at him! "Jay!" Stacy yelled in desperation. "Get up!" He did, but only because the monster permitted hi to rise without interfering. Raining blows, he steppe in close and pummeled the creature's massive body, his fear gone, replaced by an uncontrollable rage at being treated with such contempt. There had to be a way to beat the thing. He had never lost a figh yet. He was in excellent condition, a powerhouse i his own right. Everyone called him King Kong, th toughest guy in Pagosa Springs. Now he intended t be true to his reputation, to show this smirking deviate why he was the most feared football player in all of Colorado. Jay rammed his fists into the creature's stomach to no avail. He struck its chest, its neck, its chin. The monster never so much as flinched. He tried to punch the thing's nose, but it jerked its head aside. Then, n when he was overextended and off balance, the crea-, ture retaliated with a punch to the gut that doubled' Jay in half, all the air whooshing out of his lungs as torment racked his body. He tottered to one side and sank to his knees. 260 "Jay!" Stacy screeched, darting over and dr-aping her arm across his shoulders. "Oh, God, what are we going to do?" He tried to answer but couldn't. Beyond her the monster moved, and in horTor he saw it approach. Frantically, he attempted to speak, but all he could do was gurgle and gasp in inarticulate terror. Stacy stared at him in dismay. He saw the creature gr-asp her from behind, its hands on her hips, and lift her high into the air. Her face reflected utter shock. The monster shifted and carried her off. Belatedly, Stacy came to life and commenced kicking and flailing, but the creature totally ignored her. What was it doing? Jay got up, still doubled over and breathing in ragged gasps. He shuffled in pursuit, seeing Stacy twist her head and cast a pleading glance at him. She was helpless in the monster's grasp. Unless he saved her, there was no telling what it might do, but his body was awash in excruciating pain. He couldn't straighten up, let alone fight. "Jay, help me!" Stacy cried. He tried. Gritting his teeth against the ton-nent, he managed a tottering run, but despite his best effort he couldn't overtake them. Before he knew it the monster halted beside one of the boiling pools and rotated to face him, its features a mask of supreme evil. "Jay!" Stacy called, staring fearfully at the roiling surface. Startling insight made Jay halt in his tracks. He was five yards from them, too far to help her. If he tried a mad dash the thing might simply release her, and Stacy would fall into the pool. Or it might heave her into the middle. He stayed still, hoping against hope the monster wouldn't harm her. The creature hissed. "Please," Jay croaked. "Please." 261 Cocking its head, the monster studied him for a bit, then grinned. In a blinding display of speed and coordination, it changed its grip on Stacy, flipping her so that she dangled upside down while simultaneously grabbing her left ankle. "Don't!" Jay yelled, taking several steps. The monsters grin broadened, revealing most of its razor-sharp teeth. Exercising deliberate movements, it shifted and extended the arm from which Stacy dangled out over the pool. "Please, no!" Jay pleaded, taking another stride. Stacy had her eyes closed, her hands pressed to her throat. Her lips were moving soundlessly, as if she were praying. I love her," Jay said, saying the first thing that came into his head to distract the creature while he took one more step. He must get close enough to try and grab her. It was a long shot, but he couldn't stand there doing nothing. "Don't hurt her and I'll do anything you want. Just don't hurt her." Out flicked the creature's snake-like tongue, as if testing the air. It lowered its right arm an inch, dipping Stacy's head that much nearer the surface. She whimpered. "You chicken-shit son of a bitch!" Jay roared in impotent frustration, easing forward. If pleading did no good, maybe getting the thing angry would do the trick. Maybe, if the creature became mad enough, it would charge him and drop her on the ground instead of in the pool. "Why don't you leave her alone and take me on, bastard?" The creature lowered its arm another inch, and the tips of Stacy's hair touched the liquid. Immediately the hair sizzled and smoked. Stacy began trembling and crying. "Damn you!" Jay bellowed. He was two yards away. So close and yet so far! 262 Displaying casual indifference, the monster performed an exaggerated yawn. Its right arm dropped a fraction and more of Stacy's hair crackled and burned. Beside himself with fury, Jay clenched his fists and tensed to make a reckless bid for her life. He must save her no matter what the cost to himself. She was everything to him. "Jay. . ." Stacy unexpectedly said, gazing straight at him. Without warning the smirking monster suddenly lowered its brawny arm over a foot and a half, and in the blink of an eye Stacy's head sank beneath the bubbling surface. It happened so swiftly she didn't even have time to cry out. Her body promptly went into severe convulsions, her legs jerking spasmodically. The monster merely held its arm rigid and grinned at Jay. "Nooooooo!" Jay screamed, darting to the edge of the cauldron, his eyes misting over as he watched his beloved's death throes. Blindly, he threw himself at the creature, but it battered him aside with a disdainful sweep of its other arm. He landed on his buttocks, oblivious to a pang in his jaw, seeing Stacy's blistered right hand jut out of the liquid, the fingers clawing at the muggy air, Then the hand stiffened and went limp. Her legs went slack, her body sagged. In the same careless manner a human might cast aside a piece of useless trash, the monster now cast Stacy's body into the pool and turned toward Jay, its mocking grin wider than ever. A burning, berserk wrath erupted within Jay. He vented a bestial growl and came off the ground in a frenzied rush, hurtling at the demented monstrosity responsible for the death of his beloved. His hands outstretched, he leaped at the creature's throat. As if in slow motion he saw the monster glide aside and 263 knew he had been suckered into doing exactly what the thing wanted him to do. The pool was in front of him. Below him. Enveloping him. Searing heat encased him in a fiery blanket. He inadvertently opened his mouth to scream and felt the heat melt his insides. His world became a red infer-no. He weakly tried to move his arms and legs and felt his right hand bump an object in the liquid beside him. Somehow, even in his ravaged state, he realized he was touching Stacy's hand. His last conscious act was to close his fingers over what remained of hers, and then the red inferno engulfed him completely. 264 Chapter Twenty-Three "There it is!" Cory exclaimed in relief, pointing at the murky mouth of the tunnel ahead. "I can't believe we're going to make it," Ann said. "We're far from out of danger," Cory reminded her, scanning the subterranean empire once again. Their luck was holding. A demon had yet to show up, but he knew and she knew it was only a matter of time. "Let's light the lantern," he proposed and halted to dig the matchbox out of his pocket. "I'll keep watch." Cory nodded and set to work, anticipating the wick would be as hard to light as before. To his surprise, it caught at the first match. "There you go," he said, sticking the box back into his front pocket. He took the lead, anxious to put the chamber behind them. At the entrance he paused for one last look. Far off to the left, near a dry plain, was a red dot. His breath caught in his throat as he watched the dot move at an incredible speed in the general direction of the canyon where he had found Ann. It reminded him of the Indy 500 where the race cars zipped around the track at speeds in excess of 150 miles an hour; on the straightaways the cars were blurred steaks of color. "Dear Lord!" Ann said, having also seen the creature. "It will discover I'm gone." "So? We didn't leave any tracks, and I don't think it can follow our scent trail. It won't find us," Cory said, . 265 injecting more confidence into his voice than he felt. "Maybe it will figure you revived and wandered off. It should be busy for a while hunting you down." "Sooner or later it will check out this tunnel." Cory took the lantern from her and hastened into the passage. Now they would be leaving fresh footprints in the dust, and once the demon found the prints it would deduce what had happened and come after them with a vengeance. Since they couldn't possibly hope to outrun the thing, they must resort to outthinking it. Could they? How smart was a demon? Since apparently no one had ever administered a standard intelligence test to one, their intelligence quotient was an unknown factor. He had to assume a demon was at least as smart as a human; never under-rate your adversary. They hiked for hundreds of yards, until they came to a fork where Cory took the right branch because there were no tracks on the cave floor. He was wellaware their prints would be a beacon drawing their demonic pursuer but also aware the other fork would not take them near the surface since he had been through that passageway when he was chasing the creature and Ann. "Did you hear something?" Ann suddenly asked. Pausing, Cory listened, fearing the pad-pad-pad of onrushing feet. Other than her breathing, the tunnel was perfectly still. "No," he replied. "I thought I did. Sony." He doubted the demon was after them already, but he increased the pace to be on the safe side, walking rupidly with her by his left elbow. Twice more they reached forks. In each instance Cory relied on his gut instincts in picking the branch they took. After the second turn the tunnel slanted gradually upward. "Maybe this is the one that will finally bring us to the surface," Ann commented. 266 "Maybe," Cory said, reserving judgment. He had traversed other passages where the floor inclined upward, only to have them reverse their routes later and take him lower again. To par-aphrase an old adage, he'd believe a tunnel would take him to the surface when he actually arrived at the surface. They hurried on in mutual silence, each racked by trepidation. The tunnel wound through several rooms and grottos where Cory noticed unique helictite speleothems, formations composed of calcium carbonate. Elsewhere he saw dogtooth spar, crystallized calcite in the shape of small pyramids. Despite their plight he found himself admiring the special beauty of the underground domain. After crossing a stretch of tunnel where debris from the ceiling was lying inches deep from wall to wall, they came to a keyhole, a narrowing of the passage where they had to squeeze their way through with considerable effort. Cory was forced to remove the backpack in order to accomplish the task. A limestone passage beyond brought them 50 yards later to a dead end. Frowning, Cory lifted up the lantern, examining the walls, then the ceiling. In the process he discovered the dead end was in reality the base of a narrow chimney reaching up into the gloomy shadows far overhead. "Do we go back?" Ann inquired. "We could and run the risk of bumping into the demon," Cory said, 11 or we can scale this chimney and see where it leads." Ann craned her neck, regarding the shaft dubiously. "What if it leads nowhere?" "That's the chance we have to take. What do you say?" She gazed back down the tunnel, clearly displeased. "It's a case where we're darrmed if we do and damned if we don't." She sighed. "Hell, I guess we should try 267 the chirnney. You go first though, so you can warn me of trouble spots." The request was reasonable, but Cory would rather have had her go first so he would be in a position to retard her descent should she lose her purchase and fall. Once more he slipped out of the backpack, arranging it over his chest with his arms through the' strups. The pick went under his belt above his right" hip, an awkward position in which to carry the tool,," but he wasn't about to leave it behind. In his left hand he held the lantern handle. "All set," he announced, applying his back to the right side of the chimney and the soles of his feet to the other side. Slowly, he inched:,' upward by maintaining pressure on his back and feet while using his right hand to boost his body higher a few inches at a time. Twenty feet"up he broke into a sweat. The chimney was narrow enough so there was no need to extend his legs to their fullest, but the exertion nonetheless taxed his endurance to its utmost. Now and then his legs cramped, compelling him to stop and flex his muscles until the discomfort was gone. Fifty feet up there was still no sign of an end to the shaft. "How are you holding up?" he called down. "Just peachy," Ann replied. "But I'm telling you here and now that I'll never become one of those spelunkers you were telling us about. This is the first and absolutely the last cave I ever intend to visit." "Where's your sense of adventure?" Cory quipped. "Where it should be, back in my bedroom safe and sound." He chuckled and pressed on. At the 75-foot level he began to wonder if he had made a monumental mistake. The higher the shaft went, the harder thein descent would be should the chimney turn out to be',@ a dead end. aCory? 268 "Why haven't you ever gone out for any sports? I bet you'd be great at track or tennis." Cory peered between his legs, trying to see her face. Was she serious or what? And of all the times to ask such a question, why did she pick now? Sometimes the opposite gender could be downright mystifying. "Did you hear me?" she prompted. "Yeah," Cory said, pushing himself higher. "Why do you want to know?" "I'm curious." "Well, to put it bluntly, I've never had any great interest in running until I drop or swatting a little green ball with an oversized fly swatter. And don't tell anyone, because they all think I'm weird as it is, but I seldom if ever watch a Bronco game." "Isn't there a law that says every Colorado adult must watch at least six Bronco games a year?" Ann joked and grunted from her exertions. "You'd think so," Cory responded. Next to fishing, Bronco-mania had to be the preeminent preoccupation of nearly all grown men in the state. Once a week during football season they glued themselves to the tube and wouldn't budge for anything short of global disaster. His own dad was a Bronco nut. So, too, were his mother, sister and brother. As the lone holdout in his family, he was tacitly regarded as something of an outcast, a freak of nature who must be missing critical genetic material. "So why don't you have any interest in sports?" Ann probed. "Before I answer, let's clarify something. I have gone out for some sports, you know. I'm in the chess club, and I was on the archery squad last year, even won the championship." "That's right," Ann said. "I forgot about your interest in archery." She paused. "But I'm referring to real 269 sports like baseball or basketball, stuff like that." Real sports? Cory reflected, amused. Archery entailed as much skill, in its own right, as any of the so-called manly sports. And chess could be as grueling mentally as football was physically. But rather than go into a lengthy explanation when the job at hand required most of his attention, he replied, "When I was younger I was all skin and bones. I was also smaller than most of the other boys. For a while I tried different sports, until I found out that I couldn't run fast, couldn't throw a football for beans, and struck out every single time at the plate. So instead of making a fool of myself by pretending to be something I wasn't, I stayed at home all the time and read books." "But you've grown. You're no longer just skin and bones. Why stick with only archery and chess?" "Because I like them. Any objections?" "None at all. I just wanted to talk. I don't like being hemmed in like this." "I understand," Cory said, feeling the same way. Glancing up, he was surprised to see the top of the shaft not ten feet overhead. Just below it, on three sides, was either the rim of a ledge or the floor of another tunnel. "We're almost there," he informed Ann and quickly climbed to where he could twist to his right, grip the edge with his free hand and WIL11 U sharp flip roll out of the chinmey and sit up. Swinging the lantern from side to side revealed he was indeed in a tunnel. "How about giving a girl a hand?" He turned to find Ann almost to the rim. Grinning, he put the lantern down and reached out to grip both of her wrists. 'When I say go, shove off with your legs and roll," he directed. "Just don't let go or youll never know what a terrific kisser I am." "Brazen hussy." 270 "Say go, already." "Go," Cory declared and heaved, pulling her up beside him. Their faces nearly touched, and he couldn't resist the temptation to embrace and weld his lips to hers. She responded ardently, her hands running through his hair. When he broke off, she smirked and clucked in reproof. "I didn't mean for you to find out right this minute. it might be best to wait until we're out of the cave." "Blame my hormones," Cory said. "And if you-" he started to add, but instantly fell quiet on hearing the rattling cry of the demon waft up the shaft. "It's coming," Ann whispered fearfully. Cory nodded. The malevolent reminder of their dilemma had destroyed their light-hearted mood. He leaned out and gazed down the shaft but detected no movement-yet. "We'd better run," Ann suggested, gripping his arTn. "Maybe we can find a hiding place." About to grab the lantern, Cory hesitated, an idea flowering, his eyes narrowing as he studied the setup and estimated their chances of success. "No," he finally said, "well make our stand right here." "What? Why?" "This might be our only opportunity to put an end to the demon once and for all," Cory said and nodded at the smooth walls below them. "it has to climb the chimney just like we did to get at us, so it won't be able to use its hands until it's all the way out. For a few seconds the thing will be vulnerable." He seized the head of the pick and pulled the implement from under his belt. "One solid blow should do the job." "But what if you miss? What if it grabs you as you swing? You know how damn strong the creature is. It can crush you with two fingers." "Not if I don't let it," Cory said. He extended the pick, gauging the proper radius of his swing, and positioned 271 _t@ '111 himself near the left-hand wall. "Take this," he said, removing the backpack. "What can I do to help?" "Carry the lantern about ten feet off and blow out the flame," Cory said, tugging on the box of matches. He tossed them at her feet. "When you hear the demon coming over the edge, light the lantern again." .Why don't I just leave the light on so you can see?" "Because the creature will spot me before I can swing. If I pretend I'm a rock, it might not notice me until it's too late. And if you light the lantern at just the right moment the thing will be looking toward you when I make my play." "Your plan is too risky. What if I light the lantern too soon. It will see you," Ann objected. "Or if 1, light the lantern too late, the demon will be out of theshaft with both of its arms free. You'd be dead in seconds." Cory looked at her. "I'm open to suggestion if you have a better idea. Let's hear it." I don't have one," Ann reluctantly admitted. I just wish there was a better way." "So do 1, but beggars can't be choosers. Get cracking before the demon gets here." Pouting, she picked up the lantern, the matches and the pack, then stood up. Her eyes never left him as she took three steps, then stopped. I said ten feet." "I know you did, but I want to stay close in case you need me," Ann replied, arranging the articles beside her and crouching. She hastily opened the box, removed a match and bent over the lantern, then paused to bestow an affectionate look on him. "Do it," Cory said. A moment later the tunnel was plunged into darkness. He pressed his back against the wall, waiting for his eyes to adjust, feeling his heart thump wildly with valid reason. Somewhere in the shaft in front of him was a vile creature notorious 272 for hating humans with an abiding passion, a creature that wouldn't hesitate to rip him to shreds. If he screwed up he would certainly die. The air was musty, thanks to the dust they had raised. He kept his breaths shallow, trying to make as little noise as possible. The success of his scheme depended on not being detected. It also depended on whether the demon came up the shaft facing him or facing in the other direction. Either way he would attack, but if the thing was gazing toward him when he sprang it might be able to deflect the blow. Each second was an eternity. His body tingled from nervous anticipation. From out of the chimney there issued a low, sibilant hiss. Cory's arms began to tremble, and he willed them to stop. He must subjugate his fear or he would be a quivering mass of gelatin by the time the demon reached the top. Self-control was the key. As an aspiring scientist he prided himself on his inner discipline and logical frame of mind. Now he must apply both stringently in order to survive the impending confrontation. How long would the creature take to scale the shaft? He leaned forward a fraction, listening intently for the telltale sounds the demon would make as it strained upward. Then it hit him. Endowed as the thing was with prodigious strength, it wouldn't need to strain. It could easily ascend the chimney without uttering grunts or scraping against the walls. He imagined the worst-case scenario in which the creature moved as silently as a ghost, emerging before he realized it was there to clamp its huge hands around his throat and throttle the life out of him. The image made him shudder. How long? 273 Cory fidgeted, caught himself and held his body motionless. His eyes bored into the inky opening before him. Eventually the demon would arrive, and he must be ready. if there was no noise, then a hint of motion would be all he needed. He could only pray Ann was on the ball and also spied it. Suddenly, stunned to his core, he awakened to the fact that the creature was already there! The inky area marking the shaft shifted perceptibly, thickening like day-old black coffee as the vague outline of a great bulk materialized. He was scared out of his wits. Determining whether the demon was facing him or not was impossible. For all he knew, it had him pegged dead to rights. His palms became sweaty and his nose started to tingle from the dust. Not now! If he sneezed the creature would nail him for certain, but if he lifted his hand to pinch his nose, the creature might notice the movement. Hadn't Ann spotted the thing yet? He began to suspect she never would. The demon would slip out of the shaft and slay them both before they knew what hit them. Panic-stricken, he went to raise the pick when he remembered the creature's eyes, those fiery eyes that had seemed to glow with an inner light of their very own. Surely, if the demon was facing toward him, he would see those bestial orbs. The next second there was a rasping sound as one of the matches was struck against the side of the match box. A pinpoint of flame flared, caught and brightened, then was applied to the wick and the lantern burst to life. In the golden glow Cory saw the huge demon clearly at the very lip of the chimney, its shoulder blades less than a foot from his hands. The monstrosity's threetoed feet were braced against the opposite shaft wall, its broad back against the wall nearest to him. The 274 thing stared angrily at Ann, who was bathed in light and gaping in horror. Hissing louder than ever, the demon started to climb out. Cory had waited almost too long. Uncoiling, he swept the pick in an arc, driving the point into the rear of the creature's skull. The tip split the tough hide and sank in deep. Venting a roar like a dragon, the demon stiffened, then reached over its shoulders and grasped the pick handle. One of its unnaturally warm fingers brushed against Cotys hand, and he inadvertently jerked back, releasing the pick as he did so. The demon gurgled, let go of the handle and renewed its attempt to clamber from the shaft. A crimson fluid spurted from the hole in its cranium, flowing down its back in steady rivulets. "Kill it!" Ann cried. Cory grabbed at the pick, but the handle was slick with the demon's blood and his palm slipped off. With his left hand he yanked a steel bit free and lunged, just as the creature twisted and turned the blazing eyes he remembered so well on him. He couldn't stop. The bit sliced into the demon's throat just below the chin. The monster screeched. Something slammed into Corys chest, and he was thrown back against the wall, jarring his spine and causing fireworks to explode before his eyes. He slumped, dazed, expecting the thing to be on him in a flash, but the hands that grasped him as his vision cleared were those of the girl who meant more to him than life itself "Cory? Are you all right?" "Fine," he mumbled, glancing at the shaft. The demon was gone! "Where ... ?" he blurted, moving toward the opening. "It fell," Ann said. 275 Thrilled at his victory, Cory slid to the edge and gazed over the side. Too late he saw the demon a [[g 1 few feet below, its legs and shoulders suppor-tir its prodigious weight. He tried to scoot back, but a red hand shot up and grabbed him by the front of his shirt. "Cory!" Ann screeched. He clutched the creature's wrist and tugged, but it was like trying to move a steel bar. The demon hissed,,@@ its tongue darling out and brushing the tip of his nose. Slowly, inexorably, he felt himself being pulled down _s into the shaft. He flung out both hands and pD. s,@d against the wall, his body across the opening, his knees". gouging into the hard edge. "No! Fight it!" Ann shouted, seizing hold of his ankles. Cory was unable to do more than strain every muscle in his body in a desperate bid to keep from being torn from his precarious perch. The creature glared at him, its face neck and chest now covered with the thick fluid. Radiating raw, palpable hatred, it tightened its grip on his shirt. He swore he could see triumph in its satanic eyes. The demon had him right where i wanted him. His hands slipped, his body sagged. He was on the verge of being wrenched loose when the unforeseen transpired. His shift ripped apart. The demon's nails, which were more like talons or claws, shredded the fabric, tearing through the',..I., material as if the shirt was so much paper. Since the creature had been pulling so hard, abruptly losing its hold caused it to jerk downward. Its shoulders slipped, losing their purchase on the glassy shaft wall. The demon began to fall. Rattling like a diamondback, it lunged, trying to grasp Corys arm, making one last feral try to drag Cory down. It missed. A moment later the creature plummeted 276 headfirst into the chimney, its tail flapping wildly in its wake. Cory was unable to savor his victory because the very next instant his hands began to slide downward. Aghast, he realized he was about to plunge into the shaft himself. 277 Chapter Twenty-Four Wesley Eagen was one ticked-off guy. He halted in a room where the stalactites were especially long and slender and swept his flashlight beam over the floor. There were no tracks in the deep dust, which meant no one had been through this part of the cave in ages, not even the monster. Temporarily, at least, he was safe. He crossed the room and entered a wide tunnel. Safe he might be, but he was still lost and that had him mad as hell. It seemed as if he had been wandering in the lousy cave for years, and he was no closer to the entrance than he had been when Leslie bit the big one. Where could it be? What did he have to do to get out of there? Frowning in disgust, Wes walked rapidly. The faster he went, the sooner he would reach the surfaceor so he reasoned. All he had done so far was tire his legs and reinforce his belief that coming to the Caverna del Diablo was the dumbest thing he had ever done. When the idea had first been broached, he'd thought it was brilliant. Now, he wished he had never heard of the cave, never so much as heard its name. Everything had gone terribly wrong. The only person he knew who could supply him with cocaine was dead, so now he must find another source, another pusher. Fat chance the new one would give him the same deals Scott had and sometimes allow him to buy his coke af 278 a reduced price. He'd have to fork out big bucks each and every time. And as if having that cloud on his personal horizon wasn't bad enough, now he had to go to all the trouble of breaking in a new babe. Girls, he'd found, were a lot like dogs. They had to be properly trained before they knew how to behave. They had to learn basic manners, suc as never talking back to him and always going along with whatever he wanted to do when he wanted to do it. Once a girl learned the fundamentals, they would get along great. Leslie had been wonderful until that very night; then she had fallen to pieces. Hopefully his next one would never lose sight of the fact that he was the boss in their relationship. If she did, he could always dump her and get another. He wouldn't have had any problems if not for Cory Fleming. The geek was to blame for everything going wrong. if they hadn't decided to bring Fleming out to the cave, Scott and Leslie would still be alive. An evening of innocent fun, of playing pranks on the dork and repaying him for the archery championship loss, had turned into a major bummer. His only consolation was that Fleming must be dead, too. If he only knew where to find the body he would piss on it as his farewell salute. The thought made Wes chuckle. He negotiated a sharp curve, then stopped in surprise. Before him lay a large chamber, the ceiling aglow, the floor a jumble of formations and stalagmites. It was the brightest chamber he had yet stumbled on, and he switched off his beam to conserve the battery. Wearily, he walked to a rock formation in the shape of a toadstool and sat down on it. What he wouldn't give for a few hours of shut-eye! He felt burned out 'bummed out and depressed. The effects of the coke hadn't lasted nearly as long as usual. He was on the downward slide that always ended 279 with him feeling like walking puke. Combined with the effects of all the beer he had drunk, he wanted nothing more than to shut out the whole world, to forget all his cares and woes, to put his brain in neutral and give his body an opportunity to recover. There was a loud thump across the chamber. Startled, Wes jumped up and spun, flicking on the flashlight in case it was the creature. Nothing moved among the stalagmites or by the walls. He searched carefully, afraid the monster might be trying to sneak up on him. There was no trace of it. Still not convinced, he moved off toward a passage to his left. The thing might have nailed Scott and Les, but it wasn't about to nail him without a fight. The Eagen clan had never been quitters, and he wasn't about to roll over and do nothing while some freak tore him to ribbons. If it wanted him, it would have to work for its meal. At the tunnel he paused for a final check, then wheeled and hurried off. in the chamber the thump was repeated. He broke stride, debating whether to go back. The thing must be toying with him, just like earlier when it killed Scott. Well, he wasn't falling for its stupid trick. He was too smart to be suckered in by such a childish ploy. Squaring his shoulders, he resumed his quest for a way out of the cave. Leslie Vanderhurst fluttered to full consciousness and opened her eyes. She felt weak, confused and strange. There was a buzzing in her ears and her body was warm. Puzzled, she tried to recall where she was and what had happened. Once again she remembered being slugged by the boy she believed had loved her. Now she knew better. She couldn't wait to tell her father. Better yet, she would tell her cousin, Gary, who would drive on over to the Eagen house and beat 280 the crap out of Wes. She and Gary had always been tight, and he wouldn't sit still for anyone using her as a punching bag. She seemed to recall another disturbing memory. What had it been? Suddenly a mental image of the repulsive monster she had seen brought her to a sitting position, and she glanced around in stark fear. Where was she? Above her was a glowing ceiling as high as the sky. Near at hand were enormous spires and bizarre formations. She was in an oval depression in the ground with only her head higher than the rim. How had she gotten there? Quite distinctly she remembered being in a tunnel when Wes went into his Neanderthal act. Pain flared in her jaw when she moved her head. Gingerly, she touched the spot and discovered her jaw was badly swollen. Her teeth ached, and her tongue felt thick and sluggish. Damn Wesley Eagen to hell! She rose unsteadily and stepped to the side of the depression. Had Wes brought her to this place? If so, why? And what about the image of the monster? Had she really seen it or only dreamed she had? She felt confused and couldn't get her thoughts organized. Propping her palms on the rocky ground, she pushed up and swung her legs out, then slowly straightened. There was no sign of anyone anywhere in the vast chamber. No matter which way she looked, all she found was desolation. What should she do? Stay put and wait for Wes to return, or try to find a tunnel to the surface on her own? She certainly didn't want anything more to do with Wesley Eagen. Swinging to the right, she headed toward a high wall. Her jaw became worse, throbbing with every step. She wondered if it might be broken and tried opening her mouth. The Pain intensified terribly, making her 281 *61 groan. For a second she feared she would pass out, but she rallied, suppressing the agony while silently cursing Wes for being the worst son of a bitch on the planet. If her jaw was indeed broken, she'd press assault charges against the bastard. That would teach him to go around battering his girlfriends. Why hadn't she broken off with him before this? As soon as she had found out what he was truly like, about his violent temper and his drug addiction, she should have dropped him like a hot potato. Instead, she had stupidly continued to date him. And all because he always had money to spend and knew how to show a girl a fun time. She only had herself to blame. The constant fun and games had strongly appealed to her. Since her twelfth birthday she had lived on the wild side, a regular party animal from the word go. She liked to dance, drink and screw-and not necessarily in that order. Wesley certainly wasn't the best lover she'd ever had, nor did he have the biggest schlong, but he did always carry the biggest wad of bills she had ever laid eyes on, and to her way of thinking the guys with the bucks were the ones who got the most out of life and had the most to offer their babes. She should know. Since that day when she was 12 and her cousin had humped her in the back seat of his car, she had lived for sex. Being made a woman had aroused an insatiable need in her, a hunger for every male she saw. Well, not quite every male, just the good-looking ones. Some of her girlfriends claimed she had sex on the brain, but they were usually the frigid ones who had no intention of putting out until Mr. Right came along. What a drag! Life was too short to