his way past them.

But Amrita still blocked his way. “I see you’re impatient, Mr. Barrow, but sometimes it’s better to pause and meditate about your course.”

“Not when a friend is injured.”

She held his eye for a moment, his gaze sliding uncomfortably away, and then stood aside. “Of course. I’ll take some acolytes and look to your companions while you hurry.”

“Bless you. Good-bye.” The ring holding the key to the iron door was hung nearby.

While Amrita called out for help he rounded the Buddha, feeling squeezed by its presence, its consciousness concentrated inside instead of out. No Nazi statue would ever pose in such a pensive, passive, decadent way. Then he hid in shadow. He needed as much time as possible.

Three other young nuns appeared with bandages, cloths, and what looked like their own herbal medicines. The nuns lit lamps small enough to carry by hand and, Amrita leading, disappeared down the winding stairs.

Jake slipped back, looked quickly about, and slammed the iron door shut, locking it with the ring of keys. These he pocketed. Then he hurried to his room, scooped up his backpack, and crossed the nunnery courtyard. A nun said something to him in Tibetan and he tensed, ready to draw and shoot her through the eye if he had to, the horror of it making the others hesitate. His hand curled on the grip. But while he didn’t understand Tibetan, he did know one name.

“Amrita?” He held his other hand palm out in a gesture of confusion and nodded toward the gate.

The nun shook her head as if she didn’t know.

He nodded as if searching and was past her, out the gate, and down the mountain, cold wind snapping at his clothes. He hurried to the plain where the Land Cruiser waited, keys still in the ignition. Even if they realized where Amrita was trapped, it would take them hours to pry that iron door back open.

He’d put the pieces in motion. And he hadn’t killed anyone, he told himself, not yet. Even when surprised by Rominy’s tackle, he had aimed very carefully.

R ominy’s tomb was absolutely dark, absolutely hard, and absolutely silent, except for Sam’s labored breathing. Terror was held at bay only by her mental paralysis; she was in shock at her own catastrophic misjudgment. Why had she followed anyone into the bowels of Tibet? Because of vanity, curiosity at her own heritage and importance, and belief that Jake Barrow had fallen hard for her. It had been the full-blown fairy tale, a kind of adventurous elopement complete with fake wedding ring.

What a fool she was.

The jewelry burned on her finger and she tugged it off, hurling it against the closed door.

It made a little clink as it fell.

She was going to suffocate and no one would even know where she died.

“Mu-thur- fucker!” Sam coughed, groaning. “I can’t believe that lunatic shot me.”

“It doesn’t matter, Sam,” Rominy said dully. “He locked us in. We’re both going to die.”

“It matters to me.”

Of course. Her guide was shot, and she was just sitting here, feeling sorry for herself. Attention, Kmart shopper. There’s a man bleeding to death right next to you.

“I’m sorry, I just feel so dumb… Where are you hit, Sam? Can we stop the bleeding?”

He coughed again. “He hit me in the most vital part.”

“Your heart?”

“My iPhone.”

“What?”

“It was in my shirt pocket, under my jacket. The bastard just plugged two hundred dollars’ worth of hardware, bruised a rib or two, and made me feel like I’ve been kicked by a mule.”

“You mean the bullet didn’t go in?”

“I can feel it squashed in the ruins. All my contacts were in there.”

“You mean you’re not dying?”

“You just said I am going to die.”

“Well, yes, but from lack of oxygen or water, not bleeding. This is good news, isn’t it?” It was odd how his survival cheered her.

“Good news how?”

“I don’t want to suffocate alone.”

He was dead silent for a moment. Then he barked a laugh, a gasping chuckle, and then coughed. “Ow! Jeez, that hurts. Oh, man, what a crazy chick you are. No wonder you wound up with losers like me and Jake Nazi. Geez, I’m glad to accommodate you, Rominy. That will be another three hundred dollars, please.”

“Sam, I’m really, really sorry. I don’t understand any of this. I wasn’t with Jake on this at all. I mean, I was with him, but I thought he was a reporter and we were on this treasure hunt. I got

… greedy, I think. I wanted to matter. And he babbled about atom smashers and funny little strings and it all seemed to make… sense. Until it didn’t.”

“I’ve heard of getting dumped, but man, that guy is cold. Why do women have such bad taste in men?”

“Because we hope.” But what had she even been hoping for? Excitement. Purpose. Love. Oh, God, how she ached.

They were quiet for a moment. Then Sam spoke again. “So what’s with the stick he grabbed? Is it a light saber, or what?”

“A magic wand, he called it. A wizard’s staff. He thinks ancient people knew about particle physics and could do advanced science we’d think was magic.”

“So now he’s a sorcerer?”

“My guess is he’s fetching for somebody else. If they really knew how such a thing works, why would they need an old one? I’ll bet he’s taking it somewhere to study. He wants to see if they have this power called Vril from Shambhala.”

“Man, I must be one lousy guide. That’s why I draw the lunatics.”

“At least you try.”

“That’s supposed to make me feel better?”

“I think trying to do good counts. Trying to do bad, counts bad.”

“I’m just doing this because I ran out of trekking money. College dropout, drifter, slacker. But I speak a little Tibetan and here I am. Locked in Shambhala’s bowel.”

They were quiet. “Should we stop talking to conserve oxygen?” Rominy finally asked.

“If we do that, I’ll start to cry. No, better to curse that sonofabitch to the final breath. Maybe if we try hard enough, we can levitate our way out of here.”

“If only that were true.” But she decided to try, to not just wish but pray, to see if thoughts really could somehow affect the tons of rock hemming them in. So she concentrated, calling on the help of every Catholic saint she could remember, and Buddha to boot.

Nothing happened. It was as dark and confining as ever.

She could hear Sam wheezing like an old man.

She could feel the throb of her heart in her temples.

And then there was a clunk, a whir, and the door locking them in split in half and the soft, flickering light of carried butter lamps found its way inside. A miracle? Prayers answered? They blinked, from both the light and tears.

“Who’s there?”

A tall, slender, robed woman was silhouetted in the doorway. “It’s Amrita, Rominy. We came to let you out.”

They stood, balancing against the wall and then stumbling into the arms of the nuns. Rominy was shaking with deliverance, her mind whirling. Sam’s shirt was blotched with red.

“But how could you open it? He said it was a blood lock. He said it could only be opened with my blood.” She lifted her crudely bandaged hand.

“Or the blood of your ancestors.” Amrita smiled and lifted a vial. “Mr. Barrow never thought to ask if we’d kept something like this.”

“But you’ve never used it?”

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