Next, Nate cradled the bomb to his chest and snapped free his work knife. Clenching his teeth, he dug the blade into the meat of his thumb and sliced a deep gash. He needed the wound to bleed freely.

Once done, he used a secondary branch as support and climbed to his feet on the swaying perch. He pulled the bomb out with his bloodied hand and made sure he had a good grip. Stretching out over the water, Nate extended his arm, bomb in hand. Blood dripped over the weapon’s surface and down to the waters below, plopping in thick drops and sending out ripples.

He held steady, his thumb on the trigger button. “C’mon, damn you.” In Australia, he had once visited a live animal park and had seen a thirty-foot saltwater crocodile trained to leap after a freshly decapitated chicken on a pole.

Nate’s plan wasn’t much different. Only he was the chicken.

He slightly shook his arm, scattering more drops. “Where are you?” he hissed. His arm was getting tired.

Down below, he watched a small pool of his own blood forming on the surface of the water. A caiman could smell blood in the water from miles away. “C’mon!”

Squinting, he risked a peek toward the others still afloat in the debris field. With no way of knowing where the caiman was, neither of the other two rafts dared paddle to their mates’ rescue.

Distracted, Nate almost missed the flash of something large heaving through the shallows toward him.

“Nate!” Kelly called.

He saw it.

The caiman lunged out of the water, blasting straight out of the lake and springing toward him, jaws wide open, roaring.

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Nate hit the bomb’s trigger, then dropped the blood-slick device down the open mouth. He realized at the same time that he had vastly underestimated how high a giant swamp caiman could leap.

Nate crouched on his branch, then leaped straight up, propelled by both his legs and the spring in the branch. Crashing through leaves, Nate grabbed a limb overhead. He yanked his feet out of the way just as the monster’s jaws snapped shut under the seat of his pants. He felt its huffed breath on his back. Denied its prey, it fell back to the water, shooting spray almost as high as its leap.

Staring down, Nate saw the branch he had been perched on. It was gone, a stump, cleaved clean through by those mighty jaws. If he had still been standing there…

Nate saw the caiman again glide from the shallows into the deeper waters, but now it remained floating on the surface, revealing its length. A male, 120 feet if it was an inch.

Hanging from the branch, Nate caught a frustrated glower directed up at him. It slowly turned toward where the others were floating, giving up on him for the moment and going after easier prey.

Before it could complete its turn, Nate saw the beast suddenly shudder. He had forgotten to count the seconds.

Suddenly the belly of the beast swelled immensely. It opened its maw to scream but all that came out were jets of flame. The caiman had become a veritable flaming dragon. It rolled on its side and sank into the murkier depths, then a huge whoosh exploded upward in a column of water, flames, and caiman.

Nate clung to his perch with his arms and legs. Down below in the roots, Kelly yelled in shock.

The blast ended as quickly as it blew. In the aftermath, bits and pieces of flaming flesh showered harmlessly around the swamp. Insulated by the armored bulk of the great giant, the worst of the bomb’s effect had been contained.

A shout of triumph arose from the others.

Nate climbed down the tree and retrieved Kelly. “Are you okay?” he asked her.

She nodded, fingering a gash at her hairline. “Head hurts a little, but I’ll be fine.” She coughed hoarsely. “I must’ve swallowed a gallon of swamp water.”

He helped her down to the water’s edge. While Kostos’s raft went to collect the swimmers and packs, Nate’s own raft, manned by his friends and Ranger Carrera, glided over to the pair to keep them from having to swim.

Carrera helped pull Kelly aboard. Manny grabbed Nate’s wrist and hauled him up onto the bamboo planks. “That was some pretty fast thinking, doc,” Manny said with a grin.

“Necessity is the mother of invention,” Nate said, matching his expression with a tired smile. “But I’ll be damned glad to be on dry land again.”

“Could there be more of them out there?” Kelly asked as the group paddled toward the other raft.

“I doubt it,” Manny said with a strange trace of regret. “Even with an ecosystem this large, I can’t imagine there’s enough food to support more than two of these gigantic predators. Still, I’d keep a watch out for any off-spring. Even baby giants could be trouble.”

Carrera kept watch with her rifle as the others paddled. “Do you think that the Ban-ali sent these after us, like the locusts and piranhas?”

Kouwe answered, “No, but I would not put it past them to have nurtured this pair as some de facto gatekeepers to their lands, permanently stationed guards against any who dared to enter their territory.”

Gatekeepers? Nate stared at the far shore. The broken highlands were now clear in the afternoon brightness. Waterfalls were splashes of silver flowing down cliffs the color of spilled blood. The jungled summits and valleys were verdant.

If the professor was right about the caiman being gatekeepers, then ahead of them stretched the lands of the Ban-ali, the heart of their deadly territory.

He stared at the other raft, counting heads. Waxman, Kostos, Warczak, and Carrera. Only four Rangers remained of the twelve sent out here—and they hadn’t even crossed into the true heart of the Ban-ali lands. “We’ll never make it,” he mumbled as he paddled.

Carrera heard him. “Don’t worry. We’ll dig in until reinforcements can be flown here. It can’t take more than a day.”

Nate frowned. They had lost three men today, elite military professionals. A day was not insignificant. As he stared at the growing heights of the far shore, Nate was suddenly less sure he wanted to reach dry land, especially that dry land. But they had no choice. A plague was spreading through the States, and their small party was as close to an answer to the puzzle as anyone. There was no turning back.

Besides, his father had taken this route, run this biological gauntlet. Nate could not retreat now. Despite the deaths, the dangers, and the risks, he had to find out what had happened to his father. Plague or not, he could only go forward.

Waxman called as they neared the far shore. “Stay alert! Once we pull up, move quickly away from the swamp. We’ll set up a base camp a short distance into the forest.”




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