Shiva (77 page)

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Authors: Carolyn McCray

BOOK: Shiva
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Still
,
she couldn

t help but scream.

* * *

A pained cry filled the air. Brandt pushed the priest back, but the guy just would not give up. And Brandt really needed him to get over it. Rebecca needed him.


You will have to kill me
.

T
he priest sneered.

Could he? Could he kill a priest
,
even if he
was
one evil son of a bitch? Brandt raised his gun, a prayer on his lips
,
when a plume of lava jetted through one of the fissures on the floor, dousing the priest in molten flame.

The man flailed, spraying himself further with liquid heat.

Brandt backed away as the priest lunged for him. Blinded
,
the father must not have seen the growing gap. He fell headfirst into the churning orange lava, boiling the priest as he hit the surface.

Crossing himself, Brandt backed away as the floor split in two.

Throwing caution to the wind

since how much had it really helped him in the past?
—h
e charged forward
,
to find Rebecca crumpled beneath the Black Madonna. Even injured, she tried to keep Monnie away from Vakasa. The little girl tried to cling to Rebecca but Monnie, jerked her to her feet, put a knife to the child

s neck.


Drop the weapon,

she demanded.


You won

t kill her…

Brandt said, advancing slowly
,
trying to find a window.

Monnie

s eyebrow went up.

Clearly
,
you don

t know exactly how nice it is to be the Master.

The woman brought the knife even closer to Vakasa

s jugular.

It would have been far better to bring her to the
s
anctuary to prove my devotion th
a
n have the girl die a tragic accident, but I am sure I can wing something.

Brandt wanted to believe Monnie was bluffing, but the cold look in her eyes didn

t melt as the room steamed up. He was going to have to take a shot, any shot
.
T
hen the entire chamber shook, cracking like it was a snow
globe. Only
,
it wasn

t snow that welled up from the floor
,
but lava.

Monnie lost her balance, Vakasa rushed away from the woman. Unbalanced
,
as the marble underfoot
had
tilted forty-five degrees, Brandt tried to shoot
,
but Monnie launc
h
ed at him. His shot would have tagged her if the slab hadn

t shifted another twenty degrees. Now he couldn

t worry about firing, Brandt had to worry about not falling in the bubbling, gurgling lava.

Everything the liquid magma touched. And given that everything in the shrine was gilded, the gold melted off, dripping into the lava, giving it a golden sheen
.

The chick threw a kick, knocking Brandt

s gun from his hands. It slid into the maw, sinking beneath the molten surface.


Will you fight a woman?


I just killed a priest, bitch.

She spun, bringing the knife around. Brandt blocked it with
his
left hand as his right hand jabbed her in the solar plexus. He had to give the chick credit. She didn

t double over or even stop. The only concession to the injury was her arm tucked against her side. She kicked again. Brandt blocked again.

The blade sliced through the air. Too bad Monnie had a tell as obvious as Rebecca

s. Brandt caught her wrist, bending it backward. She tried a knee to the groin. Monnie found out that was what knees were for. To block a move like that.

Brandt was two moves away from not only disarming her but subduing her.

Too bad the floor lurched up three feet.

* * *


That was not me!

Levont yelled.

Davidson believed him, but then what was that…
?

Wait. It wasn

t over. The ground beneath their feet split, sending chunks of hillside tumbling down the ravine. They all scrambled to get to higher ground as the outline of the temple broke through the surface.
Hold on.


What the


Lopez said, focusing his camera on the next hill over. It was getting lower. Or were they getting higher?

Lava burst through the dirt, flowing in a swift river. Yet still they climbed.


Is this

?

Levont didn

t seem able to finish the sentence.


The birth of a volcano?

Davidson obliged.

Yes.


With us on top of it?

Lopez added.


And them inside of it,

Davidson concluded.

 

* * *

Rebecca clutched her belly. Blood still oozed through her fingers, but adrenaline must have kicked in
,
as she rose to her elbow, trying to find Brandt amongst the chaos. Huge slabs of wall and roof fell all around, smashing through the floor, bringing more lava to the surface.

The heat was unbearable. It was like standing in the Sahara in the noonday sun. Her face felt baked through and through. How did Brandt feel standing out on a precipice only inches from falling into the abyss?

Monnie parried and stabbed, knowing that he had no way to maneuver. Brandt was so skilled, but none of that mattered when you couldn

t back
up
a step.

Another violent jerk of the ground and the onyx statue cracked at its base as the ceiling shattered. Debris reigned down
,
making Brandt

s position even more dangerous.


Help me,

Rebecca urged Vakasa as she dragged herself over to the Black Madonna.

Push, baby, push,

she urged.

The statue teetered on its broken legs. Rebecca forced herself to her feet, putting all of her weight into the onyx. For once
,
being a size eight was actually beneficial. The Black Madonna leaned, then fell to the side.


Left!

Rebecca screamed.

* * *

Brandt didn

t have time to have his brain register, process, and decide what the hell Rebecca meant. Instead
,
he just flung himself to the left. Monnie backed away from the precipice.


You can

t run forever.

No. No, he certainly couldn

t. Luckily
,
he didn

t need forever
,
as the huge black statue fell. At the last moment
,
Monnie must have sense
d
the rush of air above her. She turned, but too late.

The statue creamed her. Smashing her body against the marble. Her knife falling useless beside her.

He did not have time to gloat
,
however
,
as the entire section of floor quavered, then broke, chunk by chunk
,
into the lava. Just like he used to play

hot
lava

when he was a kid, jumping from chair to couch to chair again pretending the floor was on fire until his mother scolded him, Brandt leapt from foothold to foothold

only
,
in this scenario
,
it really was lava.

Landing on the only stable piece of floor, Brandt rushed over to Rebecca. Her midriff was a bloody mess. She tried to smile but only managed to grimace. Vakasa smoothed Rebecca

s forehead as Brandt pulled up her shirt.


Let

s see how bad it is.


Pretty bad,

Rebecca groaned.

But what he found was a minor gash
.
S
ure
,
it was bleeding
,
but it was a gash
,
after all.

You

re good. Let

s get you up.


No,

Rebecca said
,
looking down, fingering the wound.

That went in my abdomen.

Brandt helped her up.

I felt the knife bounce off my spine, Brandt.

He draped her arm over his shoulder.

You know that little fat pooch on your belly you hate so much?

Off her nod
,
he continued.

It saved your life
,
so can we take this as a win and get the fuck out of here?

Feeling stronger, Rebecca was more than happy to, only how? And where? They were standing in the middle of a boiling cauldron of lava.

* * *

Bunny gripped Prenner

s sleeve. She didn

t know why she did, but she had to have something to hold on
to as the hill shattered. Davidson and the other men desperate
ly
sought stable ground, only there wasn

t any.

From five different satellites
,
they watched the dome of the hillside bulge
.
T
hen
,
from
deep belowground, lava burst forth, pushing up with it an island of marble. Standing atop of it where Rebecca, Brandt
,
and Vakasa! Her joy was short
-
lived
,
as the lava churned and overturned their stone raft. The three seemed prepared for that
,
though
,
as they
jumped
in unison

onto a huge onyx slab.

No, not a slab, a statue turned on its side. A statue of the Black Madonna.

As the volcano erupted around them, they rode the statue down the lava flow.

What
about
Davidson and the others?

* * *

Rebecca clung to a fold in the statue

s dress, practically covering little
Vakasa
with her body. Brandt

s arm was over both of them, trying to keep them on their extremely slick raft.

Then
,
from above, a slab of marble angled toward them, carrying Davidson. He tossed a rope to Brandt.

It should stabilize us!

She wasn

t so sure about that but was so glad to see the sniper. Before she could ask about the others, another slab jettisoned from above them. Lopez rode the marble like a board.


Lava surfing!

he cried out as he worked that molten wave.

A last slab tried to make it past the crest, but just couldn

t. It carried Levont. As the stone raft angled back
,
their point man waved.


Tell my parents. Off. The


Then he was gone.

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