53

TEMPLE CHAMBER.

Yank slipped over the side and lowered himself sixty feet down the rope. He slid to the ground in less than a moment. The rope was retrieved almost as fast and pulled into the hide site Walker had created in the mouth of the tunnel. To anyone looking it would appear as nothing more than a raised section of floor. It enabled Walker to provide overwatch, but limited his ability to fire directly beneath his position. Luckily, the only thing beneath his position was a pile of broken metal which looked as if it had once been a scaffold or a staircase to the tunnel above.

Hiding inside the stack of metal, Yank had a ground view of the excavated temple area, or as Yank was referring to it in his mind, the Secret Evil Temple of the Zetas. The ground was comprised of concrete and rock substrate. It looked as if it had been compacted, but here and there were rock protrusions that would trip someone not paying attention.

Yank low-crawled to the left edge of the metal. To his immediate front was one of the depressions with snakes in it. He hated snakes. But looking at the wide, flat area between the depression and the nearest building, an obsidian butterfly mausoleum, there was no way he’d make it any other way without being seen by the leper magicians preparing things atop the pyramid.

“Oh look, it’s a SEAL trying to infiltrate our Secret Evil Temple.” Then they all shoot magic necrotizing lasers from their fingers and he puffs into dust. He realized his version of things had a comic book quality to them, but it was his way of dealing with the irrational fact that he was about to attack monsters, magic, and the supernatural. The ghost had totally freaked him out. If he encountered one of those now, he might not be able to make it. That he had a blue Mary blanket helped, but not much. So the idea of getting into a pit with a bunch of scrawny snakes didn’t seem like a big deal at all to him.

After ensuring that no one was looking in his direction, he leaped to his feet and sprinted the fifty meters to the depression. His HK416 was strapped to his back. He had a knife in each hand, so when he reached the pit and slid into it, he’d be ready. But it didn’t happen that way. When he reached the lip and began to slide down, he saw that there weren’t a bunch of scrawny little snakes inside. There was one impossibly large snake in it. It was white and yellow, and he could tell it was albino. He hit it and bounced across its back. He stabbed it with the knife in his right hand, sending six inches of steel into the snake’s flesh.

The snake’s head whipped around and clamped down on his left hand, completely engulfing it, the knife in his hand, and his arm up to his elbow. The snake’s coils moved beneath him and one came up and wrapped itself around his stomach and began to squeeze.

“Ghost Three, you okay?”

“Yep. Okay. Just fine,” Yank whispered.

He was thankful he didn’t have to talk out loud. He didn’t have enough oxygen. He needed to extract himself. If Walker had to save his sorry ass, the report of the shot, even with the suppressor, would most likely be noticed. Yank needed to take care of this without Walker coming to his rescue.

He tried to grab the knife that had become embedded in the snake. As the coils of the snake danced around him and squeezed, the blade came within his reach several times. One time his fingers slid across the grip, but he wasn’t close enough to snag it.

Then the snake took another bite. His entire arm was now inside the snake’s mouth up to his shoulder. Not that it was chewing on him. Snakes ate things whole, letting their digestive juices kill and decompose the unlucky meal inside. They ate things like rats, and squirrels, and mice, and, apparently, U.S. Navy SEALs.

Yank turned his head and found himself staring into the face of the creature now mere inches away. The next gulp would take his head. He had very little time.

Not only was he almost out of air, but the stench of the creature was getting to him. It had a foul odor, a combination of mulch and urine. It wasn’t coming from its mouth, but rather its whole body.

In a desperate move, Yank reached into the front of his vest with his right hand, rifled in the central pouch until he found what he wanted, then brought it to bear—his weapon’s cleaning kit. He held a long nylon pouch and tried one-handed to get it open.

A single great green eye watched him, its oval north-south iris making it as alien as anything he’d come in contact with.

“You sure you’re okay?” Walker asked.

Yank wasn’t sure of anything except for the fact that if he didn’t get this fucking pouch open in the next few seconds, SEAL Team 666 would be hosting open auditions for the next great SEAL to do something stupid and die. At last the pouch opened, and as it did everything fell out. He squeezed it, hoping he wasn’t too late. He felt a length of metal inside and let it drop into his hand.

Just then the snake opened its mouth. The coils helped push Yank’s head and shoulder inside and the jaw snapped shut. He couldn’t count the levels of fucked up he now found himself in. He felt his vision dimming. He felt his head beginning to grow fuzzy. At the last moment he realized that the arm with the length of metal, part of a cleaning rod for his rifle, was still outside the mouth of the snake. He also realized that his left hand still held a knife inside the mouth of the snake. He simultaneously tried to stab the snake with both hands, but his left hand refused to move. Either the arm was broken or the hand had gone numb. His right hand moved rapidly, however, stabbing the snake’s face over and over, searching blindly for the great green eye, which when—

He felt his hand stab something that gave.

The snake began to writhe violently. It opened its mouth.

He brought his right hand to his left, transferred the knife, then brought it upward where he felt the snake’s brain should be. He jabbed it three times. Each time the blade ate up to the hilt.

The snake shuddered and went limp. Its head came down on Yank’s chest. The coils loosened. He stopped jabbing. He was fucking exhausted, but he was alive.

He lay like that for several moments before he asked, “Why didn’t you shoot?”

“Looked like you had everything under control.”

“Under control, my ass.”

“Whatever you do with your ass is not my business.”

Yank thought about laughing, but as he moved, he realized he might have a broken rib. “What about the others?”

“They looked toward the pit, but I don’t think they can see into it from their position.”

Yank pulled one leg free, then the other. He realized that somehow his HK had come free from the sling. He reached down and yanked it out from under the snake. What he saw made his heart sink. The sighting device was twisted fifty degrees and the magazine was bent. Without a screwdriver, he couldn’t remove the rail system and the sight. Even if he could, the injection mechanism might be completely fucked. To try and fire the weapon now would be suicide.

He tossed the rifle aside and pulled his P229 free from its holster. Although the holster had twisted on his leg, the SIG Sauer still functioned. At least he had his knives and a pistol. He also had two M18 colored-smoke grenades, two M84 stun grenades, and two M67 fragmentation grenades. Given a choice, he’d much rather use a knife than a grenade. Things that exploded were too messy.

“Am I clear?” he asked.

It took a moment for Walker to respond. When he did, it wasn’t what he expected. “Fuck me. YaYa is a dog.”

Yank closed his eyes briefly. “What do you see?”

He heard the barking before Walker answered. It sounded almost like a human, but with something more, something that resonated.

“Coming from the underground temple is another leper. He’s holding a leash attached to a collar around YaYa’s neck.”

“Oh, shit. Where are they going?”

“The temple.” Walker paused a moment. “He’s moving like a dog. His legs… they’re reversed. Fuck!”

Yank tried to imagine what Walker was describing, giving YaYa a dog’s legs that had knees that bent backward instead of the forward-bending knees of a human. It was a hard thing, but the image was ugly.

“He’s staking YaYa to the base of the temple. Now’s the time to go, if you’re going to do it. Keep low.”

Yank turned and got his hands and feet under him. He felt the twinge in his lower left side. Probably his floating rib. Then he was up and running. He saw the activity at the temple pyramid. He also saw YaYa, and as if the SEAL-turned-dog knew what was happening, it turned and barked at him.

Twenty meters.

Ten meters.

Yank slammed into the side of the left-most obsidian butterfly mausoleum, out of breath and afraid he’d been seen.

“Clear?”

“Clear.”

From his vantage point, Yank could see into the Yopico. Beneath an overhanging roof was a wall with images in relief carved upon it. He couldn’t make out all the details, but it had images of men cowering beneath giant winged beings. A door on the left side was lit from behind. Shadows cast themselves back and forth, promising that there were more things in the interior of the underground temple. What those things were was another matter.

Yank turned and examined the mausoleum. Made of stone, it was cut with smooth sides and sharp corners that rose about seven feet high. He could reach up and grasp the top. He was able to check three sides but still couldn’t find an opening, which meant that the opening had to be on the front.

His gaze was drawn to the left, where the water fell from the pipe. The foul liquid caught in a wide pool that flowed toward the rear of the chamber and seemed to disappear. Besides the way they came and the stairs, it might prove to be another way for them to escape.

“Ghost Four, any news about One and Two?” The others were due to come in contact anytime now.

“Nothing, Three. Should be hearing something real soon.”

Yank hoped that Laws and Holmes were okay. They should have been on-site by now. He was sure they’d run into something. It could have been an apparition like he and Walker had seen, or it could have been something worse. The longer he survived SEAL Team 666, the more Yank realized it wasn’t what you knew, or what you’d practiced, but how well you reacted when the supernatural shit hit the fan.

Suddenly he heard a great grinding of stone. He ducked and put his back against the rear of the mausoleum. Pieces of rock rained down on him.

“Do not. Fucking. Move,” Walker said in his ear.

Rock broke and crumbled, then there was a beating of wings.

“Seriously. Don’t move.

“What is it?”

“Remember the chacmools?”

“Yeah.”

“They’re not there anymore.”

“Where are they?”

“In the air. Now they are scary-as-fuck skull-faced obsidian butterflies.”

Against his better judgment, Yank looked upward. Out of the corner of his eye he saw just a hint of movement. An eye, blazing white. The feet and legs of a giant bird beneath a woman’s iron torso. A wing cut like a giant Damascus blade, layers and layers of metal, swirling to create an almost beautiful pattern.

Beautiful if it wasn’t so damned terrible.

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