their  entropy.  It  was  too  soon  to  be  lying  around dying.

'I'll come with you,' Kora said.

It  took them three  minutes to reach the entranceway.

'I don't hear the wind anymore,' Kora said. 'Maybe  the storm's stopped.'

But  the  entry  was  plugged  by  a  ten-foot-high  drift,  complete  with  a  wicked  cornice curling  in  at  the  crown.  It  allowed  no  light  or  sound  from  the  outer  world.  'I  don't believe it,' Kora said.

Ike  kick-stepped  his  boot  toes  into  the  hard  crust  and  climbed  to  where  his  head bumped  the  ceiling.  With  one  hand  he  karate-chopped  the  snow  and  managed  a  thin view.  The  light  was  gray  out  there,  and  hurricane-force  winds  were  skinning  the surface  with  a  freight-train  roar.  Even  as  he  watched,  his  little  opening  sealed  shut again. They  were  bottled up.

He  slid  back  to  the  base  of  the  snow.  For  the  moment  he  forgot  about  the  missing client.

'Now what?' Kora asked behind him.

Her faith in him was a gift. Ike  took it. She – they  – needed him to be strong.

'One  thing's  certain,'  he  said.  'Our  missing  man  didn't  come  this  way.  No  footprints, and he couldn't have  gotten out through that snow anyway.'

'But where  could he have  gone?'

'There  might be some other exit.' Firmly  he added, 'We may  need one.'

He had  suspected  the  existence  of  a  secondary  feeder  tunnel.  Their  dead  RAF  pilot had written  about  being  reborn  from  a  'mineral  womb'  and  climbing  into  an  'agony  of light.'  On  the  one  hand,  Isaac  could  have  been  describing  every  ascetic's  reentry  into reality  after  prolonged  meditation.  But  Ike  was  beginning  to  think  the  words  were more than spiritual metaphor. Isaac had been a warrior, after  all, trained for hardship. Everything  about  him  declared  the  literal  physical  world.  At  any  rate,  Ike  wanted  to believe that the dead man might have  been talking about some  subterranean  passage. If  he  could  escape  through  it  to  here,  maybe  they  could  escape  through  it  to  there , wherever  that might be.

Back in the central chamber, he prodded the group to life.  'Folks,'  he  announced,  'we could use a hand.'

A camper's groan emitted  from  one  cluster  of  Gore-Tex  and  fiberfill.  'Don't  tell  me,'

someone complained, 'we have  to go save  him.'

'If he found a way  out of here,' Ike  retorted,  'then he's saved us. But  first  we  have  to find him.'

Grumbling,  they  rose.  Bags  unzipped.  By  the  light  of  his  headlamp,  Ike  watched their pockets of body heat drift off in vaporous bursts,  like souls.  From  here  on,  it  was imperative  to  keep  them  on  their  feet.  He  led  them  to  the  back  of  the  cave.  There were  a  dozen  portals   honeycombing  the   chamber's   walls,  though  only  two   were man-sized.  With  all  the  authority  he  could  muster,  Ike  formed  two  teams:  them  all together, and him. Alone. 'This way  we can cover  twice the distance,' he explained.

'He's leaving us,' Cleo despaired. 'He's saving himself.'

'You don't know Ike,'  Kora said.

'You won't leave  us?' Cleo asked him. Ike  looked at her, hard. 'I won't.'

Their relief showed in long streams  of exhaled frost.

'You  need  to  stick  together,'  he  instructed  them  solemnly.  'Move  slowly.  Stay  in flashlight range at all times. Take  no chances. I don't want  any  sprained  ankles.  If  you get  tired  and  need  to  sit  down  for  a  while,  make  sure  a  buddy  stays   with  you. Questions? None? Good. Now let's synchronize watches....'

He  gave  the  group  three  plastic  'candles,'  six-inch  tubes  of  luminescent  chemicals that could  be  activated  with  a  twist.  The  green  glow  didn't  light  much  space  and  only lasted two or three  hours. But they  would serve  as beacons  every  few  hundred  yards: crumbs upon the forest floor.

'Let me go with you,' Kora murmured to him. Her yearning surprised him.

'You're  the  only  one  I  trust  with  them,'  he  said.  'You  take  the  right  tunnel,  I'll  take the  left.  Meet  me  back  here  in  an  hour.'  He  turned  to  go.  But  they  didn't  move.  He realized  they  weren't  just  watching  him  and  Kora,  but  waiting  for  his  blessing.  'Vaya con Dios,' he said gruffly.

Then,  in  full  view  of  the  others,  he  kissed  Kora.  One  from  the  heart,  broad,  a breath-taker.  For a moment, Kora held on tight,  and  he  knew  things  were  going  to  be all right between  them, they  were  going to find a way.

Ike    had    never    had    much    stomach    for    caving.    The    enclosure    made    him claustrophobic. Just the same, he had good instincts  for  it.  On  the  face  of  it,  ascending a  mountain  was   the   exact   reverse   of  descending  into  a  cave.   A  mountain  gave freedoms  that  could  be  equally  horrifying  and  liberating.  In  Ike's  experience,  caves took  away  freedom  in  the  same  proportions.  Their  darkness  and  sheer  gravity  were tyrants.  They  compressed  the  imagination  and  deformed  the  spirit.  And  yet  both mountains  and  caves  involved  climbing.  And  when  you  came  right  down  to  it,  there was  no  difference  between  ascent  and  descent.  It  was  all  the  same  circle.  And  so  he made swift progress.

Five  minutes deep, he heard a sound and paused, 'Owen?'

His  senses  were  in  flux,  not  just  heightened  by  the  darkness  and  silence,  but  also subtly  changed.  It  was  hard  to  put  words  to,  the  clean  dry  scent  of  dust  rendered  by mountains  still  in  birth,  the  scaly  touch  of  lichen  that  had  never  seen  sunshine.  The visuals  were  not  completely  trustworthy.  You  saw  like  this  on  very  dark  nights  on  a mountain, a headlight view  of the world, one beam wide, truncated, partial.

A  muffled  voice  reached  him.  He  wanted  it  to  be  Owen  so  the  search  could  be  over and  he  could  return  to  Kora.  But  the  tunnels  apparently  shared  a  common  wall.  Ike put  his  head  against  the  stone  –  chill,  but  not  bitterly  cold  –  and  could  hear  Bernard calling for Owen.

Farther  on,  Ike's  tunnel  became  a  slot  at  shoulder  height.  'Hello?'  he  called  into  the slot. For some reason, he felt his animal core bristle. It  was  like  standing  at  the  mouth of  a  deep,  dark  alleyway.  Nothing  was  out  of  place.  Yet  the  very  ordinariness  of  the walls and empty  stone seemed  to promise menace.

Ike  shone  his  headlamp  through  the  slot.  As  he  stood  peering  into  the  depths  at  a tube  of  fractured  limestone  identical  to  the  one  he  was  already  occupying,  he  saw nothing  in  itself  to  fear.  Yet  the  air  was  so...  inhuman.  The  smells  were  so  faint  and

unadulterated  that  they  verged  on  no  smell,  Zen-like,  clear  as  water.  It  was  almost refreshing. That  made him more afraid.

The  corridor  extended  in  a  straight  line  into  darkness.   He  checked   his  watch: thirty-two  minutes  had  passed.  It  was  time  to  backtrack  and  meet  the  group.  That was the arrangement, one hour, round trip. But then, at the far edge of  his  light  beam, something glittered.

Ike  couldn't  resist.  It  was  like  a  tiny  fallen  star  in  there.  And  if  he  was  quick,  the whole  exercise  wouldn't  last  more  than  a  minute.  He  found  a  foothold  and  pulled himself in. The  slot was just big enough to squeeze  through, feetfirst.

On the other side of the wall, nothing had changed. This part  of  the  tunnel  looked  no different  from  the  other.  His  light  ahead  picked  out  the  same  gleam  twinkling  in  the far darkness.

Slowly  he  brought  his  light  down  to  his  feet.  Beside  one  boot,  he  found  another reflection identical to the one glinting in the distance. It  gave  the same dull gleam.

He lifted his boot. It  was a gold coin.

Carefully,  blood  knocking  through  his  veins,  Ike  stopped.  A  tiny  voice  warned  him not to pick it up. But there  was no way...

The  coin's  antiquity  was  sensuous.  Its  lettering  had  worn  away  long  ago,  and  the shape was asymmetrical, nothing stamped by  any  machine.  Only  a  vague,  amorphous bust of some king or deity  still showed.

Ike  shone his light down the tunnel. Past  the next  coin he saw a  third  one  winking  in the blackness. Could it be? The  naked Isaac had fled from some precious  underground reserve,  even  dropping his pilfered fortune along the way.

The  coins  blinked  like  feral  eyes.  Otherwise  the  stone  throat  lay  bare,  too  bright  in the  foreground,  too  dark  in  the  back.   Too  neatly   appointed  with  one  coin,  then another.

What if the  coins  had  not  been  dropped?  What  if  they'd  been  placed?  The  thought knifed him. Like bait.

He slugged his back against the cold stone. The  coins were  a trap.

He swallowed hard, forced himself to think it through.

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