The others just stared at him.
“We can last without food. It’s water that matters. We’ll have to keep out of the sun, spend as much time as we can under the tents.”
Stacy felt sick, listening to him. He was acting as if they were going to be here for some time, as if they were trapped here, and the idea filled her with panic. She had the urge to cover her ears with her hands; she wanted him to stop talking. “Can’t we sneak away when it gets dark?” she asked. “Eric said we could sneak away.”
Jeff shook his head. He waved across the hilltop, toward where he and Mathias had been standing. “They keep coming,” he said. “More and more of them. They’re all armed, and the bald one sends them out along the clearing. They’re surrounding us.”
“Why don’t they just kill us?” Eric asked.
“I don’t know. It seems like it’s something to do with the hill. Once you step onto the hill, you’re not allowed to step off it. Something like that. They won’t step on it themselves, but now that we’re on it, they won’t let us leave. They’ll shoot us if we try. So we have to figure out a way to survive until someone comes and finds us.”
“Who?” Amy asked.
Jeff shrugged. “The Greeks, maybe—that would be quickest. Or else, when we don’t come home, our parents will—”
“We’re not supposed to leave for another week,” Amy said.
Jeff nodded.
“And then they’d have to come searching for us.”
Again, he nodded.
“So you’re talking—what, a month?”
He shrugged. “Maybe.”
Amy looked appalled by this. Her voice jumped a notch. “We can’t live here for a month, Jeff.”
“If we try to leave, they’ll shoot us. That’s the one thing we know for certain.”
“But what will we eat? How will we—”
“Maybe the Greeks will come,” Jeff said. “They could come tomorrow, for all we know.”
“And then what? They’ll just end up trapped here with us.”
Jeff shook his head. “We’ll keep someone posted at the base of the hill. To warn them away.”
“But those men won’t let us. They’ll force them—”
Again, Jeff shook his head. “I don’t think so,” he said. “It wasn’t until you stepped beyond the clearing that they made us climb the hill. In the beginning, they were trying to keep us away. I think they’ll try to stop the Greeks from coming up, too. All we have to do is figure out a way to communicate to them, to let them know what’s happened, so that they can go get help.”
“Pablo,” Eric said.
Jeff nodded. “If we can get him to understand, then he can warn them off.”
They all turned and stared at Pablo. He’d emerged from the blue tent and was wandering around the hilltop. He seemed to be talking to himself, very softly, muttering. He had his hands in his pants pockets, his shoulders hunched. He didn’t sense them watching him.
“Planes might fly over, too,” Jeff said. “We can signal to them with something reflective. Or maybe pull up some of the vines, dry them out, start a fire. Three fires in a triangle—that’s supposed to be a signal for help.”
He stopped talking then; he didn’t have any more ideas. And neither Stacy nor the others had any ideas at all, so they just sat without speaking for a stretch. In the silence, Stacy gradually became aware of a strange chirping sound—steady, insistent, barely audible. A bird, she thought, then knew immediately she was wrong. No one else seemed to notice the noise, and she was turning to track its source when Pablo started yelling. He was jumping up and down beside the mine shaft, pointing into it.
“What’s he doing?” Amy asked.
Stacy watched him pressing his hand to his head, to his ear, as if he were miming talking on a phone, and she sprang to her feet, started quickly toward him. “Hurry,” she said to the others, waving for them to follow. She’d realized suddenly what that steady chirping was: somehow—miraculously, inexplicably—there was a cell phone ringing at the bottom of the hole.
Amy didn’t believe it. She could hear the noise coming from the hole, and—along with the others—she had to admit it sounded like a cell phone, yet even so, she had no faith in it. Jeff had told her not to pack her own phone before they left; it would be too expensive to use in Mexico. But that didn’t mean there weren’t local networks, of course, and why shouldn’t it be possible that what they were hearing was a phone linked to one of these? It should be possible—there was no reason for it not to be possible—and Amy struggled to convince herself of this. It wasn’t working, though. Inside, in her heart, she’d already dropped into a place of doom, and the plaintive beeping coming from the darkness wasn’t enough to pull her free. When she peered into the hole, what she imagined was not a phone calling out to them, but a baby bird, open-beaked, begging to be fed—chirrrp…chirrrp…chirrrp—a thing of need rather than assistance.
The others were enthusiastic, however, and who was Amy to question this? She stayed silent; she feigned hope along with the rest of them.
Pablo had already uncoiled a short length of rope from the windlass. He was wrapping it around his chest, tying it into a knot. It seemed he wanted them to lower him into the hole.
“He won’t be able to answer it,” Eric said. “We have to send someone who speaks Spanish.” He reached for the rope, but Pablo wouldn’t relinquish it. He was tying one knot after another across his chest: big, sloppy tangles of hemp. It didn’t look like he knew what he was doing.
“It doesn’t matter,” Jeff said. “He can bring it back up, and we’ll try calling from here.”
The chirping stopped, and they stood over the hole, waiting, listening. After a long moment, it started up again. They all smiled at one another, and Pablo moved to the edge of the shaft, eager to begin his descent. The flowering vine had twined itself around the windlass, growing on the rope, the axle, the crank, the sawhorse and its little wheel; Jeff pulled much of it off, careful not to get the sap on his skin. Mathias had vanished into the blue tent. When he reappeared, he was carrying an oil lamp and a box of matches. He set the lamp on the ground beside the hole, scratched one of the matches into flame, and carefully lighted the wick. Then he handed the lamp to Pablo.
The windlass was a primitive piece of equipment: jerry-built, flimsy-looking. It sat beside the shaft on a small steel platform, which appeared to have been bolted somehow into the rock-hard dirt. Its barrel was mounted on an axle that was rusting in places and in definite need of greasing. The crank didn’t have a brake to it; if it became necessary to hold it in place midway down or up, this would have to be accomplished by brute strength. Amy didn’t believe the apparatus could support Pablo’s weight; she thought he’d step into the open space above the hole and the entire contraption would give way. He’d drop into the darkness—fall and fall and fall—and they’d never see him again. But, after the exchange of many hand signals and gestures and pats of encouragement, when he finally began his descent, the windlass groaned, settling into its mount, and then started to turn, creaking loudly as Jeff and Eric strained against its hand crank, slowly lowering the Greek into the shaft.
It was working. And, despite herself, Amy felt her heart lift. Maybe it was a cell phone after all. Pablo would find it down there in the darkness; they’d hoist him back up and then call for help: the police, the American embassy, their parents. The beeping had stopped once more, and this time it didn’t resume, but it didn’t matter. It was down there. Amy was beginning to believe now—she wanted to believe, had given herself permission to believe—they were going to be saved. She stood beside the hole, peering over its edge, with Stacy on her right and Mathias across from her, watching Pablo drop foot by foot into the earth. His oil lamp illuminated the walls of the shaft: the dirt was black and pitted with rocks toward the top, but it became brown and then tan and then a deep orange-yellow as he descended. Ten feet, fifteen, twenty, twenty-five, and they still couldn’t see the bottom. Pab
lo smiled up at them, dangling, one hand reaching out to steady himself against the shaft’s wall. Amy and Stacy waved to him. But not Mathias. Mathias was staring at the slowly uncoiling rope.
“Stop!” he shouted suddenly, and everyone jumped.
Jeff and Eric were straining against the crank, both of them sweating already, their hair sticking to their foreheads. Amy could see the muscles standing out on Jeff’s neck—taut, tendoned—and it gave her a sense of the immense tension on the rope, gravity grasping at the Greek, dragging him downward.
Mathias was growing frantic now, yelling, “Pull him up! Pull him up!”
Jeff and Eric hesitated, uncertain. “What?” Eric said, blinking at him stupidly.
“The vine,” Mathias shouted, his voice urgent, waving for them to start reeling Pablo back up. “The rope.”
And then they saw it. Jeff had stripped most of the vine off the windlass, but not all of it. The tendrils he’d left behind had burrowed their way into the spool of rope and now, as the windlass turned, they were being crushed, their milky sap oozing out, darkening the rope’s hemp, eating away at it.
Pablo shouted up to them, a short string of Greek words, a question, and Amy had a brief glimpse of him, swinging gently back and forth there, twenty-five feet down the shaft, the oil lamp in his hand; then she was rushing with Stacy and Mathias toward the crank, all of them struggling to help, getting in one another’s way, putting their weight into it, the sap visibly burning into the rope now—implacably, too fast, faster than they could work. Pablo was just beginning to bump his way upward when there was an abrupt, gut-dropping jerk, and they fell forward onto one another, the windlass spinning wildly behind them, free of its weight. There was a long silence—too long, far too long—and then a thump they seemed to feel more than hear, a jump in the earth beneath them, which was followed an instant later by the shattering pop of the lamp. They scrambled to the hole, peered into it, but there was nothing for them to see.
Darkness. Silence.
“Pablo?” Eric called, his voice echoing down the shaft.
And then, sounding impossibly far away, but somehow close, too—suffocatingly close—as if it were coming from inside Amy’s own body, the Greek began to scream.
The screaming filled Eric with a sense of panic. Pablo was down in the hole, in the darkness, in terrible pain, and Eric couldn’t think what to do, where to turn, how to make it better. They needed to help him, and it was taking too long. It ought to be happening now, instantly, but it wasn’t; it couldn’t. They had to come up with a plan first, and none of them seemed to know how to do this. Stacy just stood beside the windlass, wide-eyed, biting her hand. Amy was peering down into the hole. “Pablo?” she kept calling. “Pablo?” She was shouting, but even so, it was hard to hear her over his screams, which refused to stop, which went on and on and on, without diminishment or pause.
Mathias ran off toward the orange tent, disappeared inside. Jeff was pulling the rope back up from the shaft. He uncoiled it from the windlass, spreading it out in big looping circles across the little clearing. Then he began to work down its length, carefully removing all traces of the vine from it, examining the rope foot by foot, searching for sections where the sap might’ve weakened the hemp. It was a slow process, and he was going about it in an excruciatingly methodical manner, as if there were no rush at all, as if he couldn’t even hear the Greek’s screams. Eric stood beside him, too stunned to be of any assistance, motionless, yet feeling as if he were running inside—in full, headlong flight—his heart beating itself into a blur behind his ribs. And the screaming wouldn’t stop.
“See if you can find a knife,” Jeff said.
Eric stared down at him.A knife? The word hung in his head, inert, as if it belonged to a foreign language. How was he supposed to find a knife?
“Check the tents,” Jeff said. He didn’t look up at him; he kept his gaze focused on the rope, crouched low over it, searching out the burned spots.
Eric went to the blue tent, unzipped its flap, stepped inside. It smelled musty, like an attic, the air still and hot. The blue nylon filtered the sunlight, muting it, giving everything a dreamlike, watery tint. There were four sleeping bags, three of them unrolled, looking as if they’d only recently disgorged their owners’ bodies.Dead now, Eric thought, and pushed the words aside. There was a transistor radio, and he had to resist the impulse to turn it on, to see if it worked, if he could find a station, music maybe, something to drown out Pablo’s screams. There were two backpacks, one dark green, one black, and he crouched beside the first of them, began to rifle through it, feeling like a thief, an old instinct, from another world entirely, that sense of transgression inherent in handling a stranger’s belongings.Dead now, he thought again, summoning the words this time, searching for courage in them, but they didn’t make it any better, only turned it into a different sort of violation. The green backpack seemed to belong to a man, the black one to a woman. Other people’s clothes: he could smell cigarette smoke on the man’s T-shirts, perfume on the woman’s. He wondered if they belonged to the woman whom Mathias’s brother had met on the beach, the one whose promised presence had drawn them all here—doomed them, perhaps.
The vine was growing on some of the objects: thin green tendrils of it, with tiny pale red flowers, almost pink. It was more prominent in the woman’s pack than the man’s, twining itself among her cotton blouses, her socks, her dirt-stained jeans. He found a windbreaker in the man’s backpack, gray, with blue stripes on the sleeves, a double of one he himself owned, hanging safely back in his closet at his parents’ house, so out of reach now, awaiting his return.A knife, he had to remind himself, and he turned away from the tangle of clothes, searching through other pockets, unzipping them, emptying their contents onto the tent’s floor. A camera, still loaded with film. Half a dozen spiral notebooks—journals, it looked like—filled nearly to capacity with the man’s jagged handwriting, blue ink, black ink, even red in places, but all in a language Eric not only couldn’t decipher but couldn’t even recognize: Dutch perhaps, or something Scandinavian. A deck of playing cards. A first-aid kit. A Frisbee. A tube of sunblock. A folded pair of eyeglasses with wire rims. A bottle of vitamins. An empty canteen. A flashlight. But noknife .
Eric emerged from the tent, carrying the flashlight, squinting at the sun’s sudden brightness, that sense of space abruptly opening around him after the airless confines of the tent. He turned on the flashlight, realized it didn’t work. He shook it, tried again: nothing. Pablo stopped screaming—for the space of two deep breaths—then he started up again. The stopping was almost as bad as the screaming, Eric decided, then immediately changed his mind: the stopping was worse. He dropped the flashlight to the ground, saw that Mathias had reappeared, bringing a second oil lamp from the orange tent, a large knife, another first-aid kit. He and Jeff were busily cutting the burned sections from the rope, working as a team, silently, efficiently. Mathias would cut away the weak spots; then Jeff would tie the rope back together again, grimacing as he tugged the knots tight. Eric stood above them, watching. He felt stupid: he should’ve taken the first-aid kit from the blue tent, too, should’ve at least checked to see what was inside. He wasn’t thinking. He wanted to help, wanted to stop Pablo’s screams, but he was stupid and useless and there was no way to change this. He felt the urge to pace, yet he just kept standing there, staring, instead. Stacy and Amy looked exactly like he felt: frantic, anxious, immobile. They all watched Jeff and Mathias work at the rope, cutting, tying, tugging. It was taking so long, so impossibly long.
“I’ll go,” Eric said. It wasn’t something he’d thought out before speaking; it emerged from his panic, from his need to hurry things along. “I’ll go down and get him.”
Jeff glanced up at him; he seemed surprised. “That’s okay,” he said. “I can do it.”
Jeff’s voice sounded so calm, so bizarrely unruffled, that for an instant Eric had difficulty understanding his words. It was as if he first had to transl
ate them into his own state of terror. Eric shook his head. “I’m lighter,” he said. “And I know him better.”
Jeff considered these two points, seemed to see their wisdom. He shrugged. “We’ll make a sling for him,” he said. “You may have to help him into it. Then we’ll pull it up. After we get him out, we’ll drop the rope back down and pull you up, too.”
Eric nodded. It sounded so simple, so straightforward, and he was trying to believe that it would be like that, wanting to believe it, but not quite accomplishing it. He felt the urge to pace again, and only managed to hold himself still through a jaw-tightening act of will.
Pablo stopped screaming. One breath, two breaths, three breaths, then he started up again.
“Talk to him, Amy,” Jeff said.
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