At that moment, Ben stumbled and pitched forward, slamming heavily into a massive granite rock face that was four or five feet taller than he was. The rising ground around the monolith made Ben think he could at least make it up to the top. Then what? The best he could think of was throwing himself down onto the killer and trying for one of the arrows. The best of no options.

'Fifteen seconds!'

Ben wondered how far he had gone. A hundred yards? Probably much less.

On his hands and knees, he forced himself uphill and around the huge boulder. He was light-headed and gasping for air, but inch by inch, he moved ahead.

'All right, asshole!' Vincent called out. 'Time to die.'

Ben flattened himself near the top of the rock. He was probably at such an angle from the ground that he couldn't be seen, but he still felt exposed. He held his breath and listened. There was only the machine thrum of thousands of insects. He glanced about. There were some tall trees — maybe mahogany or eucalyptus — and thick undergrowth, extending six or seven feet off the ground, but his chance to run was gone. His only hope was to stay out of sight and pray that Vincent passed directly beneath him, or that somehow, he had started off in the opposite direction.

Again, Ben held his breath. This time, he heard something — a rustling of the brush not far to his left. Vincent was close — very close. Ben turned his head, but did not lift it. Instead, he pressed his cheek against the granite and peered in the direction of the noise. The underbrush was definitely moving, and the moving force was headed in his direction. If Vincent circled the rock to the uphill side, that was it. Hunt over. Ben knew he should have kept running. His only chance now, and not much of one at that, was to wait until it seemed the killer was right beneath him, then hurl himself down.

The noise of cracking twigs and shifting brush was even closer now. Just to the left of where Ben lay. Staying flat, he shifted his weight as best he could. At the movement from above, Vincent would be swinging his bow upward, trying to get off a quick shot. Ben would avoid the arrowhead, fall on him, and quickly go for the quiver.

Quiet…listen…look…Don't breathe…Don't breathe…Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee…and… NOW!

Ben pushed to his knees, prepared to leap, but Vincent wasn't beneath him. Instead, an emaciated feral dog, tan with white legs and a long, narrow snout, was sniffing its way through the bushes. Ben felt a surge of hope. Maybe Vincent had gone the other way after all. Maybe there was still time to run. At that moment, he was shot from behind. The arrow slammed through the muscle at the base of his neck, glancing off his collarbone before exiting with the arrowhead and four inches of shaft exposed just below his jaw.

Stunned by the impact and the shocking pain, Ben pitched to his right, fell heavily onto the surface of the huge rock, and then toppled off. He landed on his side, air exploding from his lungs. Through the corner of his eye he could see the point of the arrow, and the part of the shaft that was protruding from his body.

Holy Mary, mother of God, mother of God, pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death -

But in that minute, death did not come, nor in the next. Ben lay motionless, beyond feeling pain, tasting the coarse dirt of the rain forest floor, the surrounding greens and browns a blur. Finally, there was movement from behind him to the edge of his field of vision.

'That was for Cincinnati,' Vincent said. 'This one is for all the smart-asses in the world who think they're putting something over on the rest of us.'

In a final moment of absolute clarity, Ben's vision sharpened, and he saw the camouflage-painted apparition, fifteen yards away, grinning as he raised his bow and drew back. Suddenly, Vincent jerked his head back and swatted at his cheek as if he had been bitten by a gigantic insect.

'What the — ?'

They were the killer's last words. From somewhere in the forest, a long, thin blade flashed from the trees, and pierced his neck through and through. Blood from a severed artery was spewing from the wound before he even began to fall. Widened eyes, a muffled cry, and a graceless pirouette, and the behemoth slumped to the ground, dead before he even hit.

Ben, not being able to completely comprehend what had happened, felt blackness closing in. At the last moment, before total darkness, he felt a light touch on his shoulder, and heard a voice — a soft, reassuring woman's voice.

'It's going to be all right,' she said.

CHAPTER 34

Our guardians, as far as men can be, should be true worshipers of the Gods and like them.

— PLATO, The Republic, Book II

Dr. Anson, please come quickly. It's Rennie. I think this is the end for him. He's still awake, but his blood pressure is gone.'

Anson followed the young nurse to room 10 — the quasi-isolation room at the far end of the hospital. Rennie Ono, a woodcarver in his early forties, was getting ready to die. He had battled his AIDS for a decade, but after years of quality living, he had lost out to a combination of infection and sarcoma. There was nothing else that could be done — at least nothing medically.

Anson pulled a chair to the bedside and sat down, taking the man's emaciated hand in his.

'Rennie, are you able to hear me?'

Faintly, Ono nodded, although he was beyond speech.

'Rennie, you are a good and kind man. It will go well for you in the life after this one. You have fought your illness bravely. Are you afraid now?'

Ono shook his head.

'May I read to you, Rennie? May I read to you? May I read you through the passage? Good.'

Anson opened a well-worn looseleaf notebook — his notebook. It was filled with drawings, short essays, diary entries, and poems, and he added to it in some way nearly every day. There was no title to what he was about to read, only the words, carefully printed on a sheet that was whiter than the others:

The world can be hard, full of trickery,

Full of deceit,

Full of injustice,

Full of pain.

But there is an emptiness waiting, my friend — a great, glowing emptiness,

Soft and fragrant with the essence of peace,

The essence of serenity.

You are almost there, my friend.

The magnificent emptiness is the eternal harbor for your soul.

Take my hand, friend.

Take my hand and take a step, just one more step,

And you are there.

Anson felt Rennie Ono's grip go slack. The faint rise and fall of the sheet over his chest vanished. For several minutes they remained silent and motionless — nurse, doctor, patient. Finally, Anson stood, bent low, and gently kissed the man's forehead. Then, without a word, he left the room.

It was nearing dawn, the most cherished time of Anson's day. From the moment in Amritsar when he had realized the deception of the surgeon Khanduri and the woman claiming to be Narendra Narjot, along with the tacit participation of his dearest friend, Elizabeth, he had been sad and perplexed. Sleeping little, he had thrown himself as never before into his work and into caring for the patients in the clinic and hospital. All the while, he waited for understanding of what his response should be. Now, after several conversations with the nurse Claudine, who had

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