“I’m taking us right to the caves. There’s a place the jeep will be fairly well hidden for a day or two. It will save us time.”
I nodded. Time was the key now.
“Almost there,” he said after a minute. He exhaled. “They’re waiting.”
I heard him fumbling beside me, heard a metal clank as he pulled the gun from the backseat.
“Don’t shoot anyone.”
“No promises.”
“Stop!” someone shouted. The sound carried in the empty desert air.
The jeep slowed and then idled.
“It’s just us,” Jared said. “Yes, yes, look. See? I’m still me.”
There was hesitation from the other side.
“Look—I’m bringing the jeep in under cover, okay? We’ve got meds for Jamie, and we’re in a hurry. I don’t care what you’re thinking, you’re not going to get in my way tonight.”
The jeep pulled forward. The sound changed and echoed as he found his cover.
“Okay, Wanda, everything’s fine. Let’s go.”
I already had the pack on my shoulders. I got out of the jeep carefully, not sure where the wall was. Jared caught my searching hands.
“Up you go,” he said, and lifted me over his shoulder again.
I wasn’t as secure as before. He used only one arm to hold me. The other must have had the gun. I didn’t like that.
But I was worried enough to be grateful for it when I heard the running footsteps approaching.
“Jared, you idiot!” Kyle shouted. “What were you thinking?”
“Ease up, Kyle,” Jeb said.
“Is she hurt?” Ian demanded.
“Get out of my way,” Jared said, his voice calm. “I’m in a hurry. Wanda’s in perfect shape, but she insisted on being blindfolded. How is Jamie?”
“Hot,” Jeb said.
“Wanda’s got what we need.” He was moving fast now, sliding downhill.
“I can carry her.” Ian, of course.
“She’s fine where she is.”
“I’m really okay,” I told Ian, my voice bouncing with Jared’s movement.
Uphill again, a steady jog despite my weight. I could hear the others running with us.
I knew when we were through to the main cavern—the angry hiss of voices swelled around us, turning into a clamor of sound.
“Out of my way,” Jared roared over their voices. “Is Doc with Jamie?”
I couldn’t make out the answer. Jared could have put me down, but he was in too much of a hurry to pause for that second.
The angry voices echoed behind us, the sound constricting as we entered the smaller tunnel. I could feel where we were now, follow the turns in my head as we raced through the junction to the third sleeping hall. I could almost count the doors as they passed me invisibly.
Jared jerked to a halt and let the sudden stop slide me down from his shoulder. My feet hit the floor. He ripped the blindfold from my eyes.
Our room was lit by several of the dim blue lanterns. Doc was standing rigidly, as if he’d just sprung to his feet. Kneeling beside him, her hand still holding a wet cloth to Jamie’s forehead, was Sharon. Her face was almost unrecognizable, it was so contorted with fury. Maggie was struggling to her feet on Jamie’s other side.
Jamie still lay limp and red, eyes closed, his chest barely moving to pull in air.
“You!” Sharon spit, and then she launched herself from her crouch. Like a cat, she sprang at Jared, nails reaching for his face.
Jared caught her hands and twisted her away from him, pulling her arms behind her back.
Maggie looked as if she was about to join her daughter, but Jeb stepped around the struggling Sharon and Jared to stand toe-to-toe with her.
“Let her go!” Doc cried.
Jared ignored him. “Wanda—heal him!”
Doc moved to put himself between Jamie and me.
“Doc,” I choked. The violence in the room, swirling around Jamie’s still form, scared me. “I need your help. Please. For Jamie.”
Doc didn’t move, his eyes on Sharon and Jared.
“C’mon, Doc,” Ian said. The little room was too crowded, claustrophobic, as Ian came to stand with his hand on my shoulder. “You gonna let the kid die for your pride?”
“It’s not pride. You don’t know what these foreign substances will do to him!”
“He can’t get much worse, can he?”
“Doc,” I said. “Look at my face.”
Doc wasn’t the only one who responded to my words. Jeb, Ian, and even Maggie looked and then did a double take. Maggie glanced away quickly, angry that she’d betrayed any interest.
“How?” Doc demanded.
“I’ll show you. Please. Jamie doesn’t need to suffer.”
Doc hesitated, staring at my face, and then let out a big sigh. “Ian’s right—he can’t get much worse. If this kills him…” He shrugged, and his shoulders slumped. He took a step back.
“No,” Sharon cried.
No one paid any attention to her.
I knelt beside Jamie, yanking the backpack off my shoulders and tugging it open. I fumbled until I found the No Pain. A bright light switched on beside me, pointed at Jamie’s face.
“Water, Ian?”
I twisted the lid open and pinched out one of the little tissue squares. When I pulled Jamie’s chin down, his skin burned my hand. I laid the square on his tongue and then held out my hand without looking up. Ian placed the bowl of water in it.
Carefully, I dripped enough water into his mouth to wash the medicine down his throat. The sound of his swallow was dry and painful.