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Authors: M. G. Harris

BOOK: Invisible City
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I test the flashlight under my T-shirt, just for a second. It works.

Without any way of telling where I'm going, I realize it's too dangerous to keep walking. We came off Highway 186, heading east to west. From what I remember of maps, it is the only major road for hundreds of miles. Sure, there are dirt tracks. I might stumble upon one of them. But they won't be easy to find. They won't hum with the sound of faraway traffic the way a smooth highway does.

It's as though hours go by, hours in which I'm rigid, frozen. I can't make a decision without changing it two seconds later.
Stay put
. (But I might be wasting valuable time. Tomorrow I'm going to be pretty thirsty. It'll get hot. I'll pass out before I can get closer to safety.)
Keep moving
. (But I might walk into a snake's nest, or a jaguar. I might go in the wrong direction—even farther from safety.)
Keep the flashlight on
. (It might attract creatures, or Blue Nissan and the other U.S. agents.)
Stay in the dark
. (Spiders! Snakes!)

Slowly, surely, the nightmarish quality of my predicament dawns on me. It's like being suffocated. I feel the panic rising in me, swamping me. It takes hold of my legs and I literally can't move. If a helicopter appears, I decide, I'm flashing the flashlight at it. I'll take my chances with the NRO any day rather than face this jungle. What was I thinking, running? I must be crazy. Watching Camila's motionless body sink under the water, seeing the headlight flicker and die—it must have sent me over the edge. Fight or flight, and I'd automatically gone for flight.

But the helicopter doesn't come. The sky bulges with sounds, though: distant airplanes on their way to Cancún, the grumbles of thunder, the whoosh and flutter of bats. And a low humming, which I'm guessing is a swarm of bees or insects. But bees at night? It's weird, but that's the closest match to the sound.

I can hardly even think about Camila. Every time my memory starts to revisit the horror of that crash, it seems like I'm quickly led away. Something inside my brain is taking me firmly by the hand, saying,
Pal, you really don't want to go there again
.

Come on, Garcia, I tell myself. Think of it as an adventure.
What would Bear Grylls do? Now that I'm feeling a bit calmer, I run through every detail I can remember from his wilderness survival TV show. I decide that he'd make a fire. He always makes a fire; it cheers you up and keeps you warm while you make a plan.

Of course, he always carries a hefty knife and dry tinder. Camila packed that stuff, but it's gone. I could go looking for it, but then we're back to the whole
to-move-or-not-to-move-that-is-the-question
.

Survival is all about making decisions.

I can't remember if Bear Grylls said it, but it sounds like something he'd say. I take a deep breath and make my first survival decision.

I turn back the way I came. I try not to think of the fact that I ran every which way I could, then fell over, then fell asleep. It's a guess, based on a feeling, the faintest memory.

I switch my flashlight on. The beam lights up a short corridor in front of me. Dark shadows twist around and behind it. I walk for about ten minutes, but it's impossible to walk in a straight line. I can't see where I'm going or where I've been. There's nothing to get a bearing on in the cloudy sky. Every so often a tree completely bars my path and I make a turn. Pretty soon I realize I've probably turned all the way around. This was a stupid decision. I've taken a step closer to death.

Then I hear an unmistakable sound—a twig cracking. A soft rustling movement through leaves. I swing the light around,
shining on the trees in a circle around me. On an impulse, I switch the flashlight off. I realize that the hairs on my arms and neck are totally standing on end. I have to fight to stay still.

Something—or someone—is out there in the jungle. And they know I'm here.

There's another sound. It seems low, close to the ground. I move backward and then I hear an unmistakable hiss. That's followed almost immediately by a bite. Just one—to the ankle. I fall to the ground screaming. I couldn't care less if there's a great big jaguar ten yards away. A snake's bitten me and I'm probably a goner.

The last thing I remember is like a hallucination. There's a loud crunch in the undergrowth. Something rushes toward me. There's another sharp pain as something new bites into my leg. The pain around the snakebite becomes intense, like someone's holding a blowtorch to my skin. I see a flash of movement above me.

Someone's here.

All I catch is the golden yellow of a shirt. My vision becomes blurry and my breath starts to come in shallow gulps. A hand grabs my leg and I feel a sudden burst of ice against my skin. The pain of the snakebite eases at once.

There's a soft voice, a girl's voice.

“Take it easy, keep still.”

I try to move around to see her, but I can't move … and then I fade out, fall into blackness.

Chapter 18

I wake up to find myself next to a roaring fire. A girl not much older than twelve throws a handful of something on the flames. The air fills with a sweet, lemony smell that takes me back to evenings on verandas of vacation homes with my parents, listening to crickets and Stan Getz's saxophone, watching Dad smoke Cuban cigars while Mom drinks gin and tonics.

I sit up, look at the girl. She's looking at me too.

“You were bitten by a snake,” she tells me bluntly, speaking in Spanish.

“Yeah, I know,” I reply. Obviously not the ten-step variety, though—I seem pretty much alive.

This seems like enough conversation for the girl. From a shoulder bag made of woven sisal cactus fibers, she takes out a bottle of water and offers it to me. “
Muchas gracias
,” I say, taking a long drink.

She doesn't answer—there's no “You're most welcome” or “It's nothing.”

We stare at each other again. There's something odd about the way she looks me over. It actually makes me feel pretty uncomfortable.

So—I check her out too. She's taller and fairer-skinned than you'd expect for a local Maya girl. Her eyes are rounder and her shoulder-length hair looks like it's been conditioned and styled. She's dressed in blue jeans, scuffed old Nikes, and a soccer top—the golden yellow shirt of the Mexico City Pumas.

The more I look at her, the more suspicious I become. She's no typical village girl.

Who is she?

“You saved me?”

Without looking up, she nods.

“You had antivenom?” I ask incredulously. For a second she flashes me a contemptuous grin, as if to say,
Sure, bozo; what kind of idiot goes into the jungle without antivenom?

“Who are you?” I ask.

“Ixchel.”

“Ixchel,” I repeat carefully, pronouncing it something like
Eeshell
.

“Is that Mayan?”

She nods.

“I'm Josh.”

Again she nods.

“You like the Pumas?” I ask.

“Uh-huh,” she replies, but she doesn't sound convinced.

“I prefer Chivas,” I tell her. Her only reply is a shrug that
seems to say
whatever
. “I even prefer their uniform. Y'know, stripes. They're cool.”

“My clothes are secondhand,” says Ixchel, cutting across my attempts to make conversation.

I have sudden visions of charity collection bags and I'm embarrassed. I'm silent for a few minutes, trying to find another way in.

“Where are you from?” I ask.

“From a place nearby.”

“There's a village close by?”

“It's not too far.”

“Wow.” For a second I'm brought back down to earth. Looks like my terrified ravings about being miles from anywhere were way off.

“How did you find me?”

Ixchel doesn't answer this, but rummages in her bag. She takes a Snickers bar from it, passes it to me.

She watches me tear the wrapper, then says, “You were in a car accident?”

I give her a confused look. “How did you know?”

“I heard it.”

“Well, yeah. A car ran us off the road. A guy driving a blue Nissan.”

She mulls this over for about ten seconds. “You and who else?”

And I literally can't answer—the words stick in my throat,
right under the chocolate. Ixchel just gives me a little nod, then goes back to looking all self-contained and impassive.

“How old are you?” I ask.

“Fourteen.”


Fourteen?

Are you sure?” It's out of my mouth before I can stop myself. One look at her reaction tells me it was definitely the wrong thing to say.

“It's just that fourteen …,” I mumble, “seems pretty young to be out here all alone.”

Blandly, without a trace of irony or resentment, she comments, “I'm doing better at it than you.”

I'm about to reply when she cuts in with, “How's your ankle? Can you walk yet?”

I stand up, test the foot. “I think I can, yeah.”

I'm lying. My ankle is burning like crazy; walking on it will be torture.

“We should get going, then,” she says. “It'll be light in two hours.”

She gathers up all the litter into her bag, carefully stamps out the fire, and picks up my flashlight.

I ask, “Where are we going?”

“Where do you want to go?”

“Your village?”

“Is that where you were going?”

“No.”

“Then where
were
you trying to get to?”

I hesitate for a fraction of a second. Can she be trusted? The dressing on my snake-bitten leg seems to say yes.

“Becan,” I reply. It's the only thing I can think of doing—to keep going, to find what my dad found, to discover whatever it is that Blue Nissan and his pals are so eager to stop me doing.

“Okay,” she says, apparently quite uninterested.

“You'll take me?”

“Mm-hmm,” she says vaguely. Her mind is already elsewhere.

“Is it close?”

“Maybe two hours.”

“I hope it's not out of your way.”

“No.”

“You really don't mind?”

“No.”

I follow Ixchel through a maze of trees. I'm mystified as to how she's keeping us walking straight until I notice that she keeps shining the flashlight on her wristwatch.

“You've got a compass there?”

There's silence, which I take to be another of her famous nods.

“You're pretty well set up for this wilderness stuff,” I comment.

“Yep.”

“What were you doing out here, all alone, at night?”

“Same as you,” replies Ixchel.

“Hmm. I don't think so. I was running away …”
From a
guy who killed my sister
, I'm about to say, but I remember just in time that despite the way she talks, she's still a kid, like me.

“Yeah, you said—from the blue Nissan guy. Well, me too. Not from the same guy, but running away.”

“From where?”

“From home.”

“I get it,” I say. “Why are you running away?”

“It's long and complicated.”

“I've got time.”

“No … you wouldn't believe me anyway.”

“Try me.”

“It's really none of your business,” she says, with such an air of finality that I shut up.

And it's like that all the way. Ixchel won't talk about herself or her village no matter what. She has this world-weariness about her that seems practically oblivious to my presence. I get the definite impression that to her I'm just a huge chore, something standing between her and fun.

I keep wanting to say,
Hey, what's your problem?

We walk in silence for a long time. I think about Tyler and Ollie being interrogated by the NRO. Even though I try hard not to, I think about Camila, drowned in the lagoon.

I can't bear to think about what will happen to Camila. Reduced to being a body in a bag. At that moment I wish with all my heart that I were safely at home.

But that wasn't really much better. Watching my mom break
down, forever trying to make sense of my dad's pointless death in Mexico.

My breathing must give me away because Ixchel stops to look at me.

“You're crying,” she says.

“I'm not.”

“Why bother to lie? I can hear you. What's wrong?”

Blood rushes to my cheeks and I realize that I'm in danger of serious blubbering.

“I don't want to talk about it, all right?” I shout. “Just lead the way!”

For a moment I sense a crack in Ixchel's expressionless mask. Her eyes grow wide, soften. It's a disaster. The more sympathetically she looks at me, the worse I feel.

“Come on!” I insist. “Who asked you, anyway?”

Tears roll down my cheeks and I wipe them away quickly. Ixchel stretches out a hand to touch my arm, stops when she notices me flinching.

I work hard on concentrating on the mission, to solve the mystery of Dad and the codex. I have to—it's all I have left.

As we walk, I feel for the Calakmul letter in my money belt. It's still there. Probably soaked and ruined, but by now I have the whole inscription memorized. Looks like I finally obeyed Dad's instruction to destroy the document.

After my outburst, Ixchel stays quiet but keeps glancing at me. She asks me just one more question as we walk.

“Why are you going to Becan?”

“I'm looking for something,” I tell her. “A lost Mayan codex.”

Her reaction is almost the last thing I expect. With a resigned sigh, she says, “Not you also.”

“You know other people who've been looking for a lost codex?” I ask, astonished.

Ixchel stops again. Her clear eyes stare straight into mine. “Some things are just
lost
, you know. People, things, causes. Sometimes all that counts is knowing when to give up.”

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