by Brian Lumley
‘Fuel gauge is low/ Liz tapped on the gauge with a fingernail. ‘Are we sure there’s a gas station out here?’ In fact she knew there was; it was right there on the map. It was just the awful heat, the condition of the road, evening setting in, and a perfectly normal case of nerves. Liz’s tended to fray a little from time to time. As for Jake’s… well, she wasn’t entirely sure about his, didn’t even know if he had any.
‘Gas station?’ He glanced at her again. ‘Sure there is. To service the local “community”. Heck, around these parts there’s point nine persons per hundred square miles!’ While Jake’s sarcasm dripped, it wasn’t directed entirely at Liz but rather at their situation. Moreover, she thought she detected an unfamiliar edge to his voice. So perhaps he did have nerves after all. But still his completely humourless attitude irritated her.
‘That many people? Really?’ For a moment she’d felt goaded into playing this insufferable man at his own game… but only for a moment. Then, shrugging, she let it go. ‘So what’s it doing here? The gas station, I mean/
‘It’s a relic of the gold rush/ he answered. ‘The Australian Government keeps such places going with subsidies, or they simply couldn’t exist. They’re watering holes in the middle of nowhere, way stations for the occasional wanderer. Don’t expect too much, though. Maybe a bottle of warm beer — make sure you knock the cap off yourself… yes, I know you know that — no food, and if you need the loo you’d better do it before we get there.’ Good advice, around these parts.
The road vanished about a mile ahead: an optical illusion, just like the heat haze. As the hills got higher, so the road began to climb, making everything seem on a level, horizontal. Only the throb of the motor told the truth: that the Land Rover was in fact labouring, however slightly. And in another minute they crested the rise.
Then Jake brought the vehicle to a halt and they both went off into the scrub fifty yards in different directions. He got back first, was leaning on his open door, peering through binoculars and checking the way ahead when Liz returned.
‘See anything?’ she asked, secretly admiring Jake where he stood unselfconsciously posed, with one booted foot on the door sill, his jeans outlining a small backside and narrow hips. But the rest of him wasn’t small. He was tall, maybe six-two, leggy and with long arms to match. His hair was a deep brown like his eyes, and his face was lean, hollow-cheeked. He looked as if a good meal wouldn’t hurt… but, on the other hand, extra weight would certainly slow him down. His lips were thin, even cruel. And when he smiled you could never be sure there was any humour in it. Jake’s hair was long as a lion’s; he kept it swept back, braided into a pigtail. His jaw was angular, thinly scarred on the left side, and his nose had been broken high on the bridge so that it hung like a sheer cliff (like a native American Indian’s nose, Liz thought) instead of projecting. But despite his leanness, Jake’s shoulders were broad, and the sun-bronzed flesh of his upper arms was corded with muscle. His thighs, too, she imagined…
‘The gas station,’ he answered. ‘Sign at the roadside says “Old Mine Gas”. There’s a track off to the right from the road to the pumps… or rather the pump. What a dump.’ Another sign this side of the shack says… what?’ He frowned.
‘Well, what?’ Liz asked.
‘Says “See the Creature!’” Jake told her. ‘But it’s spelled C-r-e-e-c-h-u-r. Huh! Creechur…’ He shook his head.
‘Not much schooling around here,’ she said. Then, putting a hand to the left side of her face to shut out the last spears of sunlight from the west, ‘That’s some kind of eyesight you’ve got. Even with binoculars the letters on those signs have to be tiny.’
‘First requirement of a sniper,’ he grunted. ‘That his eyesight is one hundred per cent.’
‘But you’re not a sniper, or indeed any kind of killer, any longer,’ she told him — then caught her breath as she realized how wrong she might be. Except it was different now, surely.
Jake passed the binoculars, looked at her but made no comment. Peering through the glasses, she focused them to her own vision, picked up the gas station’s single forlorn pump and the shack standing — or leaning — behind it, apparently built right into the rocky base of a knoll, which itself bulged at the foot of a massive outcrop or butte. The road wound around the ridgy, shelved base of the outcrop and disappeared north.
And while she looked at the place, Jake looked at her. That was okay because she didn’t know he was looking.
She was a girl — no, a woman — and a sight for sore eyes. But Jake Cutter couldn’t look at her that way. There had >em a woman, and after her there couldn’t be anything else. Not ever. But if there could have been… maybe it would have been someone like Liz Merrick. She was maybe five-seven, willow-waisted, and fully curved where it would matter to someone who mattered. And to whom she mattered. Well, and she did, but not like that. Her hair, black as night, cut in a boyish bob, wasn’t Natasha’s hair, and her long legs weren’t Natasha’s legs. But Liz’s smile… he had to admit there was something in her smile. Something like a ray of bright light, but one that Jake wished he’d never known — because he knew now how quickly a light can be switched off. Like Natasha’s light…
‘Not very appetizing,’ Liz commented, breathing with difficulty through her mouth.
‘Eh?’ He came back to earth.
‘The dump, as you called it.’
‘The name says it all.’ Jake was equally adenoidal. ‘Probably the entrance to an old mine. Hence “Old Mine Gas”.’
A great talent for the obvious, she wanted to tell him but didn’t. Sarcasm again, covering for something else.
‘So what do you think?’ she finally said, as they got back into the ‘Rover.
‘Good time not to think/ he answered, and Liz could only agree. At least he’d remembered what little he’d been told. So they tried not to think, and continued not thinking as he started up the vehicle and let her coast the downhill quarter-mile to the Old Mine Gas station…
Lights of a sort came on as they turned off the road to climb a hard-packed ramp to the elevated shelf that fronted the shack. The illuminated sign flickered and buzzed, finally lit up in a desultory, half-hearted neon glare; grimy windows in the shack itself burned a dusty, uncertain electrical yellow. In an ancient river valley like this, dry since prehistory, it got dark very quickly, even suddenly, when the sun went down.
It also got cooler; not cold by any means — not in this freakish El Nino weather — but cooler. After they pulled up at the lone pump, Jake helped Liz shrug herself into a thin safari jacket, took his own from the back of the ‘Rover and put it on. In the west, one shallow trough in the crest of the domed hills still held a golden glow. But the light was rapidly fading, and the amethyst draining from the sky, squeezed out by the descending sepia of space. To the east, the first stars were already winking into being over blackly silhouetted mountains.
Maybe twenty-five paces to the right of the main shack a lesser structure burrowed into the side of the steep knoll. The ‘See the Creechur’ sign pointed in that direction. Liz wondered out loud, ‘What sort of creature, do you reckon?’
But now there was a figure standing in the shadow of the shack’s suddenly open screen door. And it was that figure that answered her. ‘Well, it’s a bloody/wnnjy one, I guarantee that much, miss!’ And then a chuckle as the owner of the deep, gravelly voice stepped out into full view. ‘It’s a bit late in the day, though, so if ver want ter see ‘im, best take a torch with yer. Bloomin’ bulb’s blown again… or maybe ‘e did it ‘imself. Don’t much care for the light, that creechur feller. Now then, what can I do fer you folks? Gas, is it?’
Jake nodded and tilted his hat back. ‘Gas. Fill her up.’
‘Ah!’ The other’s gasp seemed genuine enough. ‘Eh? What’s this, then? Brits, are yer? A pair of whingein’ pommies way out ‘ere? Now I asks yer, what next!?’ He grinned, shook his head. ‘Just kiddin’. Don’t yer be takin’ no note o’ me, folks.’
To all appearances he was just a friendly old lad and entirely unaccustomed to company. His rheumy little pinprick eyes, long since abandoned to the wrinkles of a weathered face, gazed at his customers over a bristly beard like that of some garrulous stagecoach driver in an ancient Western. As he took the cap off the Land Rover’s tank, his wobbly spindle legs seemed about ready to collapse under him. And as if to make doubly sure he’d said nothing out of turn: ‘Er, no offence meant,’ he continued to mumble his apologies.
‘No offence taken,’ Liz gave a little laugh. And Jake had to admire her: her steady, give-away-nothing voice. She quickly went on, ‘Can we get a drink or something, while you’re filling her up? It’s been a long and thirsty road, and a way to go yet. Maybe a beer? You do have beer, right?’
‘Did yer ever meet up with an Australian’ (but in fact he said Orstrylian) ‘who didn’t have a beer close ter hand?’ The old man grinned again, started the pump and handed the nozzle to Jake, then hobbled back and ‘elp open the inner door to the shack for Liz. ‘Just you help yerself, miss. They’re all lined up on the shelves back o’ the bar there. Not a lot ter choose from, though — Fosters every one! It’s my favourite. And since I’m the one who drinks most of it, it’s my choice too.’
‘Well, good/ said Liz. ‘It’s my favourite, too.’ Jake watched them go inside, frowned at the nozzle in his hand. Just like that, he’d accepted the bloody thing. Damn!
After that… but it seemed it was going to take forever to satisfy the ‘Rover’s greedy guzzling. So Jake quit when the tank was only three-quarters full, slammed the nozzle into the pump’s housing, tried not to look too concerned as he followed Liz and the old boy into the shack. But he’d hated to lose contact with her, lose sight of her like that, even for a few seconds. And she’d looked back at him just before she passed from view, her green eyes a fraction too narrow, too anxious.
Inside, however, it wasn’t as bad as he’d thought it would be. Or as it might have been.
It was the grime, the blown dust of the desert, clinging to the outside of the windows, that had shut the light in and made the place seem so dim from outside. But within — this might be typical of any outback filling station a million miles from nowhere. That was Jake’s first impression. The bar was a plank on two barrels, with a bead curtain hanging from the plank to the floor in front, and smaller barrels for seats. Liz was perched on one of them, and the old man had passed her a beer that she held unopened in her hand.
She must have asked him if he was all alone out here, and he was in the process of answering: ‘Alone? Me? Naw, not much. And anyway I enjoys bein’ on me ownsome. Oh, I got a couple o’ boys to ‘elp out. They ain’t ‘ere right now, is all. It ain’t so bad, actu’ly. ‘Ad a truck through just a day or so ago.’
‘A truck?’ Liz said, all innocence and light. ‘Out here?’ And the old man nodded. ‘Gawd knows where they’d be goin’! But for that matter, where be you goin’, eh? What’re yer doin’ out ‘ere anyway?’
Having taken in much of the single room at a glance, Jake strode to the bar and asked for a beer. Without waiting for an answer from Liz, the old man reached for a bottle and turned to Jake. ‘Well now, you was a mite quick!’ he said. ‘Yer just topped ‘er up, am I right? I mean, yer’d never fill a big tank as quick as that/
‘Right/ said Jake, accepting the beer. He gave the bottle a quick shake, forced the top off with a practised thumb. Then, changing the subject as the warm beer foamed, ‘No cans?’ he inquired. He passed the bottle to Liz, took hers and repeated his trick, with the same result. The beer wasn’t flat; these bottles were old stock, but they hadn’t been opened previously.
And meanwhile: ‘Cans? I don’t hold with ‘em/ the oldster told him. ‘All this newfangled shite! But yer can trust a bottle/ And turning to Liz again, ‘You were sayin’?’
‘No/ she answered, ‘you were saying. You asked what we’re doing out here/
‘Well then?’ he pressed.
She smiled. ‘Can you keep a secret?’
He shrugged his hunched shoulders, sat down on a barrel on his side of the plank and chuckled. ‘And who do yer reckon I’d be tellin’?’
Liz nodded. ‘We were visiting kin in Wiluna, decided to get married sort of quick. So here we are, run off where no one can find us/
‘Eh? Honeymooners, yer say? Run off on yer ownsome and left no forwardin’ address? All out o’ touch, secret an’ private in the Gibson Desert? Huh! Hell o’ a place fer a honeymoon.. p>
‘I told him the very same thing/ Liz nodded her agreement, shaking an I-told-you-so finger at Jake.
And Jake said, ‘Anyway, we’re headed north. We thought we’d take a look at the lakes, and—’
‘Lakes?’ the old fellow cut in, frowning. ‘Yer visitin’ the lakes?’ Then, with a knowing nod of his head, he muttered, ‘Big disappointment, that/
‘Oh?’ Jake lifted an eyebrow.
But the oldster only laughed out loud and slapped his thigh. ‘Lake Disappointment!’ he guffawed. ‘Way up north o’ here. Damn me, they falls fer it every time!’ He sobered up, said, ‘Lakes, eh? Somethin’ ter see, is it? Huh! Plenty o’ mud and salt, but that’s about all IQ
‘And wildlife!’ Liz protested.
‘Oh, aye, that too,’ he said. ‘Anyway, what would I know or care? I ‘ave me own wildlife, after all.’
‘The creature?’ Jake swigged on his beer.
“Im’s the one,’ the old boy nodded. ‘Yer wanna see ‘im?’
Jake had done with studying the oldster. But he would certainly like to take a closer look at this shack — or what lay behind it or maybe beneath it. Liz could feel his curiosity, no matter how hard he tried to keep it from the old boy. Moreover, she knew that between them they must check this place out, and so decided to do her bit, create a diversion as best she could. And anyway (she told herself), the old man didn’t seem much of a threat.
I’d like to see him,’ she said. ‘I mean, what’s the mystery? What kind of creature is it, anyway? Or is it just a con — some mangy, diseased dingo crawled in out of the desert — to pull in a few more travellers?’ And to her partner, though she knew he wouldn’t take her up on it: ‘What about you, Jake? You want to come and see this thing?’
Jake shook his head, took another pull at his bottle. ‘Not me, Liz. I’ve a thirst to slake. But if you want to have a look at some mangy dog, well, go right ahead.’ Almost choking on the words, he got them out somehow. Damn it to hell — the idea was supposed to be that they didn’t get split up.’ He hoped she knew what she was doing. There again, she’d been in this game longer than he had. And that pissed Jake more than a little, too: the fact that Liz was in effect the boss here.
‘Torch,’ said the old boy, taking a heavy rubber-jacketed flashlight from the shelf and handing it to Liz. ‘Yer‘11 need it. I keeps ‘im in out o’ the sun, which would surely fry ‘is eyes. But it’s dark in the back o’ the shack there. And this time o’ evenin’ even darker in ‘is cage.’ When she looked uncertain, didn’t move, he cocked his head on one side and said, ‘Er, yer just follers the signs, is all.’
Liz looked at him, hefted the torch, said, ‘You want me to go alone?’
‘Can’t very well get lost!’ he said. But then, grumblingly, he hobbled out from behind the makeshift bar. ‘It’s these old pins o’ mine,’ he said. ‘See, they don’t much like ter go. But yer right — can’t let a little lady go wanderin’ about in the dark on ‘er own. So just you foller me, miss. Just you foller old Bruce.’ And then they were gone.
Jake took a small pager out of his pocket and switched it on. Now if Liz got in trouble she only had to press the button on her own beeper and he would know it… and vice versa. For in this game it was just as likely that he would be the one to make a wrong move.
Those were his thoughts as he stepped silently behind the bar, and passed through a second bead curtain hanging from the timbered ceiling to the floor. And as easily and as quickly as that he was into a horizont
al mineshaft, and almost as quickly into something far less mundane…
Liz had followed the old man (Bruce? Hell of a lot of Australians called Bruce, she thought. There had to >e at least as many as there were Johns in London) along the foot of the knoll to the lesser shack that leaned into an almost sheer cliff face.
It was quite dark now, and the torch he’d given her wasn’t nearly working on full charge. The batteries must be just about dead. Of course, knowing the place as he did, that wouldn’t much concern the old boy, but it concerned Liz. And despite that she followed slowly and carefully in old Bruce’s footsteps — mainly to give Jake the time he needed to look the place over — still she stumbled once or twice over large rocks or into this, that, or the other pothole. But, in truth, much of her stumbling was a ploy, too, so that it was perhaps a good thing after all that the torch was almost spent. She thought so at the outset, anyway.
Until eventually: ‘Here we are,’ the old man said, turning a key in a squealing lock and opening an exterior screen door. Beyond that a second door stood ajar; and as old Bruce, if that really was his name, reached out an incredibly long arm to one side of Liz to push it fully open — at the same time managing to bundle her inside — so she recognized the smell of a lair.
It was a primal thing, something that lies deep in the ancestral memories of every human being: to be able to recognize the habitat of a dangerous animal or animals. The musty, feral smell of a cavern where something dwells — or perhaps an attic where bats have hibernated for untold years — or maybe the reptile house in a zoo.
But there are smells and smells, and this wasn’t like anything Liz had ever come across before; or perhaps it was simply the tainted, composite smell of all of them. Until suddenly she realized that it wasn’t just a smell — wasn’t simply a smell — but her talent coming into play, and that the stench wasn’t in her nostrils alone but also in her mind.’