Authors: Douglas Preston
Carson watered the horses again in the cave and then hobbled them in a fresh patch of tobosa grass. Then, locating a mesquite bush, he used his spearpoint to cut off a long flexible sucker, with a cluster of stobs and thorns at the end. He walked out of the lava and into the desert, examining the sand carefully as he went. Soon, he found what he was looking for: the tracks of a rabbit, still young and relatively small. He followed them for a hundred yards until they disappeared into a hole underneath a Mormon-tea bush. Squatting down, he shoved the thorny end of the stick down the hole, threading it through several turns, andâwhen it reached the denâprodding and twisting, feeling a furry resistance. Twisting more vigorously now, he slowly pulled the stick back out of the hole. A young rabbit, whose loose skin had been caught and twisted up in the stobs, struggled and grunted. Carson pinned it with his foot and cut off its head, letting the blood drain into the sand. Then he gutted, skinned, and spitted it, buried the offal in the sand to deter buzzards, and returned to the cave.
De Vaca was still sleeping. At the mouth of the cave he built a small fire, rubbed the rabbit with more alkali salt from his pocket, and began roasting it. The meat spit and sizzled, the blue smoke drifting into the clear air.
Now at last the sun came above the horizon, throwing a brilliant shower of golden light across the desert floor and deep into the cave, illuminating its dark surfaces. There was a noise and Carson turned to see de Vaca, sitting up at last and rubbing her eyes sleepily.
“Ouch,” she said as the golden light flared in her face and turned her black hair to bronze.
Carson watched her with the smugly virtuous smile of an early riser. His eyes strayed from her to the interior of the cave. De Vaca, seeing his expression change, turned to follow his gaze.
The rising sun was shining through a crack in the cave opening, striping a needle of orange light across the floor of the cave and halfway up its rear wall. Balanced atop the needle and illuminated against the rough rock was a jagged, yet immediately recognizable image: an eagle, wings spread and head upraised as if about to burst into flight.
They watched in silence as the image grew brighter, until it seemed it would be forever branded into the rear of the cave. And then, as suddenly as it had flared up, it died away; the sun rose above the mouth of the cave, and the eagle vanished into the growing superfluity of light.
“
El Ojo del águila
,” De Vaca said. “The Spring of the Eagle. Now we know we found it. Incredible to think that this same spring saved my ancestors' lives four hundred years ago.”
“And now it's saving ours,” Carson murmured. He continued to stare at the dark space where the image had been for a moment, as if trying to recall a thought that was dancing just beyond the verge of consciousness. Then the wonderful aroma of roasting meat filled his nostrils, and he turned back to the rabbit.
“Hungry?” he asked.
“You're damn right. What is it?”
“Rabbit.” He turned it, then pulled it from the fire and stuck the spit upright in the sand. Taking out the spearpoint, he sliced off a haunch and handed it to de Vaca.
“Careful, it's hot.”
Gingerly, she took a bite.
“Delicious. You can cook, too. I assumed all you cowboys knew how to make was beans in bacon fat.”
She sank her teeth into the haunch, peeling off another piece of meat. “And it's not even tough, like the rabbits my grandfather used to bring home.” She spat out a small bone. Carson watched her eat with a cook's secret pride.
In ten minutes the rabbit was gone and the cleaned bones burning in the fire. De Vaca sat back, licking her fingers. “How'd you catch that rabbit?” she asked.
Carson shrugged. “Just something I picked up on the ranch as a kid.”
De Vaca nodded. Then she smiled wickedly. “That's right, I forgot. All Indians know how to hunt. It's an instinct, right?”
Carson frowned, his complacence dissolving under this unwarranted dig. “Give it a rest,” he grumbled. “It wasn't funny the first time, and it certainly isn't funny now.”
But de Vaca was still smiling. “You should see yourself. That day in the sun did you good. A few more like it, and you'll look right at home on the Big Rez.”
Despite himself, Carson felt a hot fury mounting inside. De Vaca had an unerring instinct for searching out his sensitive spots and homing in on them mercilessly. Somehow, he'd allowed himself to believe that the terrifying ordeal they had shared would change her. Now he wasn't sure if he was more angry with de Vaca for remaining her sarcastic self, or at himself for his foolish self-delusion.
“
Tú eres una desagradecida hija de puta
,” he said, the anger giving his words a startling clarity.
A curious expression came over de Vaca's face as the whites of her eyes grew large and distinct. Her casual pose in the sand grew rigid.
“So the
cabrón
knows more of the mother tongue than he's let on,” she said in a low voice. “I'm an ingrate, am I? Typical.”
“You call me typical?” Carson retorted. “I saved your ass yesterday. Yet here you are again today, slinging the same shit.”
“
You
saved my ass?” de Vaca snapped. “You're a fool,
cabrón
. It was your Ute ancestor who saved us. And your great-uncle, who passed down his stories to you. Those fine people that you treat like blots on your pedigree. You've got a great heritage, something to be proud of. And what do you do? You hide it. Ignore it. Sweep it under the rug. As if you're a better person without it.” Her voice was rising now, echoing crazily inside the cave. “And you know what, Carson? Without it, you're nothing. You're not a cowboy. You're not a Harvard WASP. You're just an empty redneck shell that can't even reconcile its own past.”
As he listened, Carson's fury turned cold. “Still playing the would-be analyst?” he said. “When I'm ready to confront my inner child, I'll go to somebody with a diplomaânot a snake-oil peddler who's more comfortable in a poncho than a lab coat.
TodavÃa tienes la mÃerda del barrio en tus zapatos
.”
De Vaca drew in her breath with a sharp hiss, and her nostrils flared. Suddenly she drew back her hand and slapped him across the face with all her strength. Carson's cheek burned and his ear began to buzz. He shook his head in surprise, noticed she had drawn back to hit him again, and caught her hand as it swung toward him a second time. Balling her other hand into a fist, de Vaca lashed out at him, but he ducked, tightening his grip on her imprisoned hand and thrusting it from him. Overextended, de Vaca fell backward into the pool and Carson, caught off guard, fell across her.
The slap and the sudden fall had driven the fury out of Carson. Now, as he lay across de Vacaâas he felt her hard lithe body struggle beneath hisâan entirely different kind of hunger seized him. Before he could stop himself he leaned forward and kissed her, deliberately, on the lips.
“
Pendejo
,” de Vaca gasped, fighting for breath. “
Nobody
kisses me.” With a violent wrench, she freed her arms, balling her dripping hands into fists. Carson watched her warily.
They stared at each other for a moment, motionless. Water dripped from de Vaca's fists onto the dark, warm surface of the pool. The echoes died away until the only sounds that remained were those made by the droplets of water, falling between their labored breaths. Suddenly, she grabbed Carson by the hair with both hands and crushed her mouth to his.
In a moment her hands were everywhere, sliding up beneath his shirt, caressing his chest, teasing his nipples, tugging at his belt and worrying down his fly and easing him out and stroking him with long urgent movements. She sat up and raised her arms as he shrugged off her top, tossed it aside, and then pulled hungrily at her jeans, already soaked black with the warm spring water. An arm went around his neck as her lips brushed his bruised ear and her pink cat's tongue darted in and she whispered words that brought a burning to the back of his scalp. He tore her panties away as she fell into the water, gasping or crying, he wasn't sure which, her breasts and the small curve of her belly rising slick from the surface of the spring. Then he was in her and her legs were locked over the small of his back as they found their rhythm and the water rose and fell around them, crashing against the sand like the surf of the world's dawn.
Later, de Vaca looked over at Carson, lying naked on the wet sand.
“I don't know whether to stab you or fuck you,” she said, grinning.
Carson glanced up. Then he rolled toward her, raising an arm to gently smooth a tangle of black hair that had fallen across her face.
“Let's have another go at the latter,” he said. “Then we'll talk.”
The dawn turned to noon, and they slept.
Carson was flying, soaring above the desert, the twisted ribbons of lava mere specks beneath him. He struggled higher, lifting himself toward the hot sun. Ahead, a huge narrow spire of rock thrust itself up from the desert, ending in a sharp point miles above the sands. He tried to crest the point, but it seemed to grow as he climbed, taller and taller, reaching for the sunâ¦.
He awoke with a start, heart racing. Sitting up in the cool darkness, he looked out at the mouth of the cave, then back toward its dim interior, as the realization that had escaped him earlier burned its way into him like a firebrand.
He stood, put on his clothes, and stepped outside. It was almost two o'clock, the hottest time of the day. The horses had recovered well, but would need to be watered once more. They'd have to leave within the hour if they wanted to make Lava Gate by sunset. That would get them to Lava Camp by midnight, or perhaps a little later. They would still have thirty-six hours to get their information into the hands of the FDA before the scheduled release of PurBlood.
But they couldn't leave. Not yet.
Turning to the horses, he tore two strips of leather from the saddle rigging. Then he gathered up an armful of mesquite sticks and dead creosotebush, which he arranged into two tight bundles. Lashing the bundles together with the leather strips, he turned and walked back toward the cave.
De Vaca was up and dressed. “Afternoon, cowboy,” she said as he entered the cave.
He grinned and approached her.
“Not again,” she said, poking him playfully in the stomach.
He leaned closer and whispered in her ear. “
Al despertar la hora el águila del sol se levanta en una aguja del fuego
.”
“At dawn the eagle of the sun rises on a needle of fire,” she translated, a puzzled expression on her face. “That was the legend on Nye's treasure map. I didn't get it then, and I don't get it today.”
She looked at him a moment, frowning perplexedly. Then her eyes widened. “We saw an eagle this morning,” she said. “Silhouetted against the rear of the cave by the dawn sun.”
Carson nodded.
“That means we've found the placeâ”
“âThe place Nye has been searching for all these years,” Carson interrupted. “The location of Mondragón's gold.”
“Only he was off by almost a hundred miles.” De Vaca glanced back into the darkness. Then she turned toward Carson. “What are we waiting for?”
Carson lighted the end of one of the bundles, and together they moved back into the recesses of the cave.
From the large pool where it emerged out of the earth, the spring flowed back into the cave in a narrow rivulet, sloping downward at a slight angle. Carson and de Vaca followed its course, peering into the ruddy gloom created by the torch. As they approached the rear wall of the cave, Carson realized it was not a wall after all, but a sudden drop in the level of the ceiling. The floor of the cave dropped as well, leaving a narrow tunnel through which they had to stoop. In the darkness ahead, Carson could hear the sound of splashing water.
The tunnel opened into a high narrow cavern, perhaps ten feet across and thirty feet high. Carson held the torch aloft, illuminating the mottled yellow surface of the rock face. He moved forward, then stopped abruptly. At his feet, the stream tumbled off a cliff, splashing down into a yawning pool of blackness. Holding the torch in front of him, Carson peered over the edge.
“See anything?” de Vaca asked.
“I can just barely see the bottom,” he said. “It must be fifty feet down, at least.”
There was a sliding sound and Carson instinctively drew back. A handful of small rocks crumbled off the lip of the cliff and bounced down into the darkness, echoing hollowly as they went.
Carson tested the ground in front of him. “All of this rock is loose and rotten,” he said, moving gingerly along the cliff face. Finding a more stable spot, he dropped to his knees and leaned over the edge again.
“There's something down there,” de Vaca said from the far side of the cliff edge.