shit himself.'
'His feet,' Amy whispered again, nudging Jeff. For some reason, she wouldn't shout it herself.
'Eric?' Jeff yelled.
'What?'
'Take off one of his shoes.'
'His shoes?'
'Take it off-his sock, too. Then scrape the bottom of his foot with your thumbnail. Do it hard. See if there's a reaction.'
Amy and Jeff leaned over the shaft, watching Eric crouch beside Pablo's feet, pull off his tennis shoe, his sock. Stacy came over to watch, too. Mathias had resumed his braiding.
Eric lifted his head toward them. 'Nothing,' he called.
'Oh God,' Amy whispered. 'Oh Jesus.'
'We need to make a backboard,' Jeff said to her. 'How can we make a backboard?'
Amy shook her head. 'No, Jeff. No way. We can't move him.'
'We have to-we can't just leave him down there.'
'We'll only make it worse. We'll jostle him and he'll-'
'We'll use the tent poles,' Jeff said. 'We'll strap him to them, and then-'
'
He stopped, stared at her. He was thinking about the tent poles, trying to imagine them as a backboard. He didn't know if it would work, but he couldn't think of anything else for them to use. Then he remembered the backpacks, their metal frames.
'We have to get him to a hospital,' Amy said.
Jeff didn't respond to this, just kept watching her, taking the backpacks apart in his mind, using the tent poles for added support. How did she imagine them getting him to a hospital?
'This is bad,' Amy said. 'This is so, so bad.' She'd started to cry but was struggling not to, wiping the tears away with the heel of her hand, shaking her head. 'If we move him…' she began, but didn't finish.
'We can't leave him down there, Amy,' he said. 'You know that, don't you? It's not possible.'
She considered this for a long moment, then nodded.
Jeff leaned over the hole, shouted, 'Eric?'
'What?'
'We have to make a backboard before we can bring him up.'
'Okay.'
'We'll do it as fast as we can, but it might take a little while. Just keep talking to him.'
'There's not much oil left in the lamp. Only a little.'
'Then blow it out.'
'Blow it out?' Eric sounded frightened by this idea.
'We'll need it later. When we come down. We'll need it to get him on the backboard.'
Eric didn't respond.
'All right?' Jeff called.
Perhaps Eric nodded; it was hard to tell. They watched him bend over the lamp, and then-abruptly-they couldn't see him anymore. Once again, the bottom of the shaft was hidden in darkness.
Stacy and Amy resumed the braiding of the nylon strips while Jeff and Mathias struggled to make a backboard. The boys were muttering together, arguing over the possibilities. They had the tent poles, a backpack frame, and a roll of duct tape Mathias had found among the archaeologists' supplies, and they kept putting things together, then taking them apart again. Stacy and Amy worked in silence. There ought to have been something soothing in the task-so simple, so mindless, their hands moving right to left to right to left-but the longer Stacy kept at it, the worse she began to feel. Her stomach was sour from the tequila she'd chugged; she was cotton-mouthed, her skin prickly from the heat, her head aching. She wanted to ask for some water but was afraid that Jeff would say no. And she was growing hungry, too, light-headed with it. She wished she could have a snack, drink something cool, find a shady place to lie down, and the fact that none of this was possible gave her a tight, breathless feeling of near panic. She tried to remember what she and Eric had in their pack: a small bottle of water, a bag of pretzels, a can of mixed nuts, a pair of too-ripe bananas. They'd have to share, of course; everyone would. They'd put all their food together and then ration it out as slowly as they could.
Left to right to left to right to left to right…
'Shit,' she heard Jeff say quite distinctly from across the clearing; then they began to tear apart their latest attempt at a backboard, the aluminum poles clinking dully as they knocked one against another. Stacy couldn't even look at the two of them. Pablo had broken his back, and she just couldn't face it. They needed help. They needed a team of paramedics to come in a helicopter and fly him to a hospital. Instead, they were going to pull him up on their own, bumping and jostling him all the way to the surface. And when they got him out-then what? He'd lie in the orange tent, she supposed, moaning or screaming, and there wasn't a thing they'd be able to do for him.
Aspirin. Pablo's back was broken, and Jeff had dropped him a bottle of aspirin.
Jeff took a break, walked across the clearing, stared down the hill. Everyone stopped to watch him.
Left to right to left to right to left to right…
The sun was beginning its implacable slippage toward the west. How long had this been happening? Stacy didn't know what time it was; she'd left her watch back in her hotel room, forgotten it on the table beside the bed. Realizing this, she felt a momentary tug of anxiety, thinking that the maid might steal it, a graduation present from her parents. She was always expecting hotel maids to steal her things, and yet in all the traveling she'd done it hadn't happened, not once. Perhaps it wasn't as easy to get away with as it seemed, or maybe people were simply more honest than she assumed. In her head, she could hear the watch ticking, could picture it lying on the glass tabletop, patiently counting off the seconds, the minutes, the hours, waiting for her return. The maids turned down their beds for them in the early evening, placed tiny chocolates on their pillows, leaving the radio playing so softly that sometimes Stacy didn't notice it until after they'd turned out the lights.
'What time is it?' she asked.
Amy paused in her work, checked her watch. 'Five-thirty-five,' she said.
When they finished with the braiding, they'd need to haul up the rope and knot the sections of nylon onto its end. Then someone would have to descend into the hole with the improvised backboard and help Eric lift Pablo onto it, somehow securing him to the metal frame so that they could pull him safely back to the surface. After that, they'd drop the rope down yet again and ferry the other two, one after the other, to the top.
Stacy tried to imagine how long all this might take, and she knew it was too long, that they were running out of time. Because if it was 5:35 now, creeping toward 5:40, then they had only another hour and a half before dark.
In the end, they had to braid a total of five strips. They knotted the first three onto the rope, then dropped it back down the shaft to see if it was long enough, but Eric shouted up to them, saying it was still out of reach. So they braided a fourth section, only to realize when it came time to attach their improvised backboard that they'd need two separate strips hanging from the bottom of the rope, one to connect to the head of the aluminum frame, the other to its foot.
While Mathias was quickly braiding this final addition, Jeff took Amy aside. 'Are you okay with this?' he