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Chapter Eleven

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Jack hadn’t been lying—you could fly a kite in the cavern. Maybe a couple of kites. The ceiling yawned above Josie so high her light bounced off distant crystals and wet rocks as if they were distant stars or the misty Milky Way. The cavern embraced the nighttime sky, took it inside the bowels of the earth and claimed it as its own. The air was rich, moist and fresh, replenished by unseen holes in the rocky ceiling. Josie inhaled deeply and greedily. She imagined she was sleeping beneath a vast awning of tree branches, feeling the cool night air on her face and listening to crickets.

She wanted desperately to be anywhere other than beneath ten tons of rock and earth and mountain, pressing down, down, down. Jack’s silent, shuddering body was sprawled beside her.

Josie made herself move. She clambered wearily to her feet and tugged Jack up with her. His nearly naked body swayed dangerously. Immediately, she offered a supporting hand, but he winced as her fingers brushed his raw, torn up skin.

“Are you all right?”

“I feel like I’ve been through a meat grinder.”

Josie fell silent, trying to keep calm. She was faring better than Jack, it was up to her to keep them moving. They were both very tired now. They’d gone too long without food or water. Adrenaline and fear had milked their muscles dry, and now they stood bonelessly, too fatigued to think. In the meantime, the cool cavern air hit the perspiration coating their skins, chilling them too fast for safety.

Josie had her orange jumpsuit, but Jack could only shift in place for warmth, his threadbare socks and B.V.D.s not offering enough cover for a tropical beach, let alone an underground cave. His dress shirt still hung in tatters on the handcuffs between them, but he appeared too tired and dazed to put it on.

“We need water,” he mumbled thickly. “The…cavern…”

Josie frowned, not understanding, but then her ears picked out what her eyes couldn’t—the rhythmic sound of water slapping against stone.

“Okay, Stryker,” she said firmly. “Time to move.”

He gave a hoarse bark of laughter that ended as a groan.

“Come on,” she said, hands on her hips, face determined. “You were a Boy Scout. Surely you can handle more than this. Time to march!”

“Yeah.” He tried to step, but his overwrought muscles gave out and his legs folded beneath him instantly. He grimaced, his hands struggling for something to hold on to. “I swear I didn’t think I’d had that many beers,” he muttered.

Partners In Crime Part 3

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