Grantville Gazette 37 gg-37
Page 12
All of a sudden the feel of the rope screamed for attention. It hadn't just been carelessly abused by ignorant beginners, it had been torn up, practically wrecked. It had been dragged through mud and not cleaned, it had been scraped over sharp rock edges . . . a terrible certainty seized her. She reached down and felt it. Right below her knee it was torn nearly through. For a moment she was paralyzed with fear. She didn't dare go any further down and put her weight on it. Throw a knot in it and re-rig the harness? How, with no handholds or footholds to unload the line, and no spare gear? She hauled up a hundred feet or so and looked at it; it wasn't in much better condition; there were scrapes and broken strands everywhere.
What the hell am I going to do? She was getting dizzy again-whether that was the lingering dope or the blood loss, there was no way to tell. Well, one of the first things that was drilled into every new climber was: if you're in trouble and you've got a little time, use some of it to think. Olivia looked around.
From up there she had a pretty good view all around the coal mine's pithead, but there wasn't anybody outside. Probably wouldn't be until the shift change, and then no telling whether anybody would look up, or if they did, realize a climber just hanging out in space needed help. Some loud piece of machinery was going; she tried shouting anyway, on the chance it might do some good.
Well, there was one thing. Not too far off to the left was one of those cramped little down-time mine tunnels the Ring cut through. If she could get herself swinging the right way, and get about ten feet higher up the rope, it didn't look too far to reach. That was going to be no fun. I can manage ten feet. Sure I can.
Getting the swinging right was the hardest part, but finally she got a hand on the edge of the tunnel and held off the dizziness long enough to work her way around the corner and inside. By then she needed to sit down. She started letting out a little slack so she could get further inside and sit. After that, pull up the rest of the rope and check it all, and see if there was any way to rig it to reach the bottom safely. Once her head stopped spinning.
Somehow she fumbled it. The rope got away and slithered out of the tunnel, hanging straight down from above the cave, and a long way out of reach. Oh, God.
For the first five minutes she slumped against the rough interior wall and caught her breath. Then she figured she'd better find out whether there was anything there she could use. It didn't take long. The place turned out to be an irregular drift where they'd been digging into an ore seam for thirty feet or so, before the mine it belonged to flew away up-time. Some places were wider than others, but there wasn't anywhere high enough to stand up straight. Near the outside where there was some daylight, there was a little soot on the wall and ceiling, where their candles or lanterns must have rested, but that was all. Whoever ran that mine must have been the kind of neat freak who picked everything up at the end of the day; there wasn't so much as a candle stub lying around. About the only good thing was that it was shelter from the wind.
She drank a little water and closed her eyes for what seemed like a minute-twilight had crept up once more. For sure she'd been missed by now, but in this light it would be pretty hard to see anything in here even if they looked. Maybe in the morning . . . For now, she moved a little further in. Even in July the nights could get cool.
July 12, the third day
Deborah drew a pot of water to boil for porridge. There was no more labor to it than turning a handle right there in her kitchen. If she and Timothy had to work for the rest of their lives to pay off the mortgage on this house and land, and their children after them, it would be worth it. She happened to glance out the window above the sink, to see what the day's weather looked like. Some of the maize stalks were moving. But there was no wind, at this early hour. "Tim! Jack! Someone is picking in our field!"
****
Tim belted on his sword, but in his hands he carried a hunting rifle. Jack took a double-barreled shotgun from the closet beside the back door. The disturbance, they saw, was over toward the Wall, as close to it as they'd dared plant. They separated, to catch the intruder between them.
A popinjay in a lavender coat was scrabbling about in their garden, blundering into the plants and breaking some, picking up bits of something from the ground. A couple of times he looked up sharply at the cliff.
It was no trouble at all for Tim to walk up to within ten feet of the man and point his rifle an inch to one side. "You want to die, bastard?"
The man looked up at Tim and raised his hands in surrender.
"George Bennet. I never thought I would see you again this side of the Styx. What a pity." He gestured with his rifle to move him along to the front porch, Jack walking on the other side. "What mischief are you making here on my property?"
Bennet began a confused muttering of Ring's Fire, and from where it had fallen. It all began to come together in Morton's mind.
"Deborah, sweetheart, here's the one the police want so much. After you send for them, tell Villareal to come with his gear, too, will you? I believe there will be climbing to do today. Bess, there you are, kindly run and tell Master Oughtred the same."
Bennet suddenly seemed to focus. "Villareal? What is this? You are the Earl of Arundel's man, as I am. Where is your loyalty?"
"Loyalty? Loyalty? If you've done half of what I think, you've blackened the earl's name from here to Constantinople. Piss-poor loyalty that was! My loyalty is to this state where I took an oath of citizenship, and to my family here, and all the people who've treated me fair since I came. Jack and I did our job for Arundel, we got Master Oughtred here safe and sound, and the only thing I owe the old man now is the tavern gossip he pays me for. Loyalty!" He spit on the ground over the porch rail and moved his head fractionally toward the telephone. Deborah was already dialing.
****
Marvin Tipton was back on when the dispatcher hollered that Tim and Jack Morton had one of the arson suspects under citizen's arrest for, of all things, trespassing in a cornfield. The chief himself responded over the radio; he wanted to question this bum right away. Looked like Juergen Neubert's guess last night was right on the money. The longer ol' Juergen was on the job, the better he got. Marvin decided he'd better go out in the field and direct from there today, as soon as he could work up the search plan and get the teams on their way. Now, where were those jaegers and their dogs?
****
Leanna came running in from the bedroom. "Dad! Wake up! It's the Mortons on the phone. They think they know where Mom is. They want you out there with climbing gear, and anybody else you can round up."
Carlos levered himself off the camp mattress in the den, picked up the phone there, listened, organized priorities in his head. Leanna was already packing a lunch for him, and her husband Enrico had coffee brewing and his thermos on the kitchen counter ready to fill; Carlos didn't have to think about any of that.
First get some more help up and moving, then pull on yesterday's clothes and go. All his stuff was still in the truck from the other day. Too bad Sherrilyn Maddox wasn't in town, she was as good a rock climber as he'd ever met. The Fire Department high angle team, then. He called fire headquarters, gave them the what and where.
Leanna squeezed his arm as he ran out the door. Paola just looked at him wide-eyed.
****
When Carlos got to the Morton house, they had the creep in the purple coat leashed by his ankles to the porch post. They were watching him like a couple of guard dogs anyway.
Bennet was hollering, "What is the meaning of this, Morton? I am of the Earl of Arundel's companions. I have rights!"
Carlos blew his stack. He took the stairs in one stride, grabbed Bennet by his coat, and slammed him against the post. "You've got a right to keep silent and a right to a lawyer, you piece of shit, but I'm not a cop. Where's my wife?"
"I've seen you, you're no more than a tavern keeper. You dare lay hands on me?"
"I'm the guy who'll break your damn neck if you don't give me a straight answer. What'd you d
o to my wife?"
****
Fifty yards down the slope at the Mortons' parking turnout, Press Richards heard a roar that could lift a manhole cover. Oh, boy, that's Villareal. He slammed the cruiser's door and took off up the front walkway at a run. He wasn't worried Carlos would kill the guy, but he was a cop, and he had two priorities right then. First, get Olivia back safely, if at all possible. Second, make sure the charges stuck. Nobody was going to abuse a prisoner on his watch, and Villareal was big enough to do some serious damage without even intending to. The idea of playing a Pat-and-Mike routine with a civilian never even crossed his mind. He chose his words as he came within sight of the porch.
"Back off, Carlos. You don't want to give this guy's lawyer any ammunition." He pointed his finger at the perp in the purple coat. That long, curling blond hair he had was something else. "You're under arrest." He cuffed the prisoner, and rattled off his rights. "Morton, Oughtred, what can you tell me?"
Villareal suddenly went around behind purple-coat and grabbed his left wrist, turning the hand over.
"Hey, I told you to stand back."
"Look at this silver ring on his finger, Chief. It's Olivia's. I made it." Villareal let go.
Richards, Villareal and Morton all looked at each other. Tim Morton began to recount what he'd seen and heard. After a while the prisoner began to babble something about the goddess Calypso, above all earthly things. The geologist, Oughtred, agreed with Morton's thinking. She was likely up on the Wall someplace, and there was only one place up there they knew of that made any sense. That rope hanging there pretty well clinched it. The rescue truck was already pulling up; four of the Benedictine Brothers in fire department uniform got out and started up the front walk. Briefing time.
****
"Sounds like a plan, Brother Girard. Let's get out of here, before the road is full of buses."
"As soon as you can shift your equipment into our truck. And you can just call me Girard, while we're on fire department business."
"Fine, I'm Carlos and this is Will." He reached down and helped Will pick up his climbing gear off the porch. Moving his own was just a matter of snatching a few old milk crates out of the back of his pickup and passing them across.
The last thing he saw before they closed the doors and rolled away was Tim's stepdaughter Bess Lacey at the corner of the porch, patiently searching all around the Wall with Will's big tripod telescope.
There wasn't much to say, on the ride up to Schwarzburg. With two extra people sitting on top of the rock climbing equipment, it was cramped enough in back. Will was refreshing his memory of a few details from the little notebook he'd found on the grass by his path the previous day-no idea how it had gotten lost there. Their seatmates were praying silently.
The little dirt parking spot at the north end of the upper village was as far as they could take the rescue truck. From there, it was half a mile along a pack trail, then a rough path up-slope to the clifftop above the cave. Carlos looked around at everything they were unloading for the job. "Three trips to carry this stuff up, you think? What goes first?"
Brother Girard smiled. "Look behind you, Carlos. I made certain arrangements through fire headquarters while we drove up."
Carlos turned and looked up the road-several soldiers were bringing horses down from the castle.
The Morton family's side porch
Jack stood looking at the Wall. Nobody was talking to him just now; Father had gone off to guide the jaegers and their hounds while they worked through their land. Beside him, stepsister Bess was making good use of Master Oughtred's big telescope. What she could see through it, she could see very well, but she could see only a small patch of the Wall or the lower slopes at a time. If something was there for just a moment or two, and the telescope was looking in the wrong place . . . they needed more eyes.
He stepped around the house to where he could see the buses unloading, and smiled. He cupped his hands to his mouth and shouted his loudest, "Beaver Patrol! Beaver Patrol! To me!" Five faces turned toward him, and he swung his arm in the signal "Assemble" and then "Hurry."
Jan Brinker was first up the walkway as they came all in a rush. "Hello, Mister Morton. What is going on?"
"Troop 9 will take on a task no one else has thought of. Very likely Mrs. Villareal is up there somewhere, maybe not where anyone thinks. We will stand here and watch the Wall, steadily, for any clue. Point at anything you see, until Bess here can bring Master Oughtred's telescope on it. Did any of you bring telescopes or binoculars?"
Ralph Onofrio had. Karl Blume had. The boys and their Assistant Scoutmaster divided up the cliff into search sectors and went to it. Bess concentrated on stepping the big telescope from pocket to cliff-edge to cave-opening. After a time Stepmother brought them breakfast; they ate with their eyes on the Wall.
Above Murphy's Run
"Holy cow, look what those klutzes did with that rope! It's lucky the thing didn't come loose with them on it! And Livie."
"Carlos, if you must blaspheme in front of four monks, it's as well you chose to blaspheme the Hindu beliefs."
Brother Girard laughed.
"Mmp. Sorry. What do you want us to do, Girard? Belay Marcel, there?"
"No, he just needs to rig his rope and descender, so he can go down to assess the situation. I'll assist him as needed."
"Suggestion? No telling who or what is in that cave. Somebody else should go with him for backup, and they should both be armed."
Brother Girard gave him a startled look, then nodded. "Indeed. Marcel and Andre together, then. Carlos and Will, secure your own safety lines, then help Mario place the hoisting rig over the cliff edge; we may well need it."
"Right."
Stake down the base. Run backstays to handy trees. Thread the pulley. Lay out lines, ready to drop. Set down the rescue basket where it was out from underfoot, but easy to reach in a hurry if the team below called for it. Carlos's lips tightened at that.
Meanwhile, Brother Girard watched and waited with a walkie-talkie in his hand. It was a piece of junk. There were only two channels; the thing was made for kids to play with, and the effects of that were plain to see. Even the up-time duct tape repair was cheap stuff, it was starting to peel at the ends. The battery pack was a clunky thing with a belt clip, kluged on with a yard and a half of lamp wire. Still, it was the latest technology. It wouldn't dump acid out and quit working if it tipped over. Before long, it came alive.
"Rescue One Alfa, this is Rescue One Bravo, at the entrance."
"Rescue One Bravo, Alfa. You have found her?"
"Negative. Nobody is present, and we searched everywhere we could reach and called loudly. But there is a kind of camp a good distance inside, you can't see it from the entrance. I found damaged woman's clothing there. Does Carlos know what she wore that day?"
Brother Girard held out the radio.
"Carlos speaking. Most likely jeans, but sometimes she changes during the day. What kind of shirt did you see?"
"Plaid, mostly white with thin blue and red stripes."
Carlos groaned. "Has to be hers. She's got one like that."
What the hell? If she rappelled down, she'd have landed on the road and gone straight to the nearest house, the Morton place. Was she hiding from somebody? Could somebody else have taken her off somewhere?
****
Tipton heard it on his patrol car's CB rig. This was getting crazier and crazier. The chief had said Bennet didn't seem to have any notion about moving her after he and Chekhov hauled her up there-and where the hell was Chekhov?
The dogs hadn't scented Olivia anywhere but along the path between Oughtred's cabin, the Morton place, and the road to the foot of the Wall. The miners had stopped work; they were checking everything inside their own fence. The ground search teams were already moving in, best leave them to it. He was getting a sinking feeling about this, but if there was any chance at all. . . . What were they overlooking? Where else did they need to look?
Jac
k Morton and one of his Scouts were coming at a dead run.
****
"Rescue One Alfa, this is Bluelight Eight. Can you guys get a look into those cut-off mine tunnels below you?"
"Stand by, Bluelight Eight. This will require some thought."
A minute passed.
"Bluelight Eight, Rescue One Alfa. We have a plan. It will be necessary to place anchors on the way down in order to stay against the Wall. We have qualified rock climbers with us who can do this."
Marvin Tipton's mind was racing. Villareal and Oughtred could get there, but should they? If it was a wild goose chase, it could burn up a lot of time, and then they'd need to get back up before they could go anywhere else.
The kid with Jack Morton broke into his thoughts. "We can't see into there from this angle down here, Mr. Morton." His hand waved vaguely. "We'd have to be out there someplace."
Tipton's jaw dropped. He whirled to the car and twisted the channel knob. "Grantville Tower, this is Blue Light Eight. You got anybody who could do a flyby along the Ring Wall?"
****
The plane came skimming over the ridgeline, sideslipped down over the wooded slope, made a steep turn away from the Wall, poured on the power and climbed away again. A couple of miles away, it came around for another pass.
"What are you doing, Carlos?"
"Praying for the guys in that plane, Will. I've seen Belles fly. They're no crop-dusters, they're not built for this stuff."
Suddenly Brother Girard's walkie-talkie came alive again. "Blue Light Eight, this is Belle Three. My student caught a glimpse of something fluorescent pink. Going around for another pass."
"Blue Light Eight, roger." The radio went quiet.
"Do you think that's her, Carlos?"
"I don't know, Girard, I'm pretty sure she doesn't own anything that color, but no down-time dye looks like what he described." He looked out at the plane below them, maneuvering into position.
The plane came across the opposite slope this time, in a descending spiral toward the mine buildings. The engine started throttling up for the climb-out.