by T A Williams
Secrets on the Italian Island
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Acknowledgements
Escape to Tuscany
About the Author
Also by T.A. Williams
Copyright
Cover
Table of Contents
Start of Content
Dedicated to my much-loved and sorely-missed brother-in-law, Guido.
He first introduced me to the wonderful island of Elba and passed on his love of rocks.
Chapter 1
There comes a time in the lives of many of us when we find ourselves at a crossroads, hanging by a thread, undecided as to the right direction to chose. In Anna’s case, this moment came for her as she was suspended partway down a very deep and dilapidated Cornish mineshaft, swinging gently from side to side as she studied the rough-hewn rocky tunnel entrances looming out of the darkness to her left and her right. The rain, which had been pouring relentlessly for two days and nights, cascaded down the shaft from the surface high above, beating against her helmet and penetrating her waterproofs. As she raised her hand to wipe her face, a stream of cold water got past her glove and ran along her left arm to her armpit and beyond. She hastily lowered her hand again, shivered and took stock, doing her best not to look down into the murky depths far below as she did so.
She was wet, she was cold, she was covered in mud, but she was happy… well, sort of, at least for now. Here she was, her twenty-ninth birthday only a matter of weeks away, and the realisation had finally dawned that the time was rapidly approaching when she had to make a big decision. She loved her job – most of the time – but would she still love it when she was thirty, forty or fifty?
Being a geologist was all she had ever wanted to do since the time her dad had first taken her to visit the caves at Wookey Hole in Somerset as a little girl. The monumental caverns, the sparkling crystals in the rocks, the iridescence of the water in the underground lakes and the legions of stalactites clinging to the cave roofs had impressed her deeply and had set her inexorably along a career path that had led her here to this abandoned mineshaft today.
In its heyday a hundred years ago the mine where she now found herself, Wheal Molly on the westernmost tip of Cornwall, had been one of the world’s most successful mines, one of the biggest global producers of copper, with miles of tunnels – what miners and geologists like her often referred to as adits – extending out under the Atlantic Ocean. Now the only traces left of Wheal Molly’s past glory were a few crumbling shaft entrances enclosed by fencing hung with warning signs, and the ruins of a granite engine house built at the very edge of the rocky headland overlooking the stormy sea below.
And hanging down here in the darkness today was Anna Porter, exploratory geologist with New Metals Mining Ltd. The company’s slick head office was situated roughly as far up the Shard as she was from the bottom of this two-hundred-metre vertical mineshaft. The irascible multi-millionaire owner of the company was probably even now sipping his morning coffee as he looked out over the London skyline, blissfully unaware – and quite probably unconcerned – that all that separated his youngest female geoscientist from certain death was a length of reinforced polyester climbing rope attached to a winch mounted on the back of Charlie’s Land Rover. As she hung there, mulling over her future, she heard Charlie himself.
‘How’re you doing, Anna? Want any more rope?’
His voice crackled out of the two-way radio clipped to her chest and she reached up to press Transmit, feeling another trickle of cold water run along her arm as she did so.
‘I’m fine as I am, Charlie – but if you could turn off the rain I’d be grateful.’
‘You and me both. If anything, the wind and rain are getting worse up here – and it’s still summer for crying out loud. It feels like I’m going to be blown off the cliff any moment now. At least you’re nice and sheltered down there.’
‘Nice and sheltered?’
For a moment her eyes flicked down past her dangling feet into the depths below. The water in the flooded sump of the shaft was so far below her she couldn’t hear even the biggest raindrops hitting the surface. She might be sheltered from the wind, but she had enough to contend with as it was. It was dark, wet and potentially very dangerous. Could she see herself still doing this kind of thing in ten, twenty years’ time?
What was the alternative? An office job, maybe, but after years on the road she knew she would miss the excitement of discovering new places, new countries, new continents and, of course, of exploring underground, fuelled by the tantalising prospect of making a significant discovery. What she wouldn’t miss, she reminded herself, would be the hours she had been spending on aircraft and in hotels – some of them of very dubious quality – over the past few years. She had accumulated so many frequent flier miles she could probably go round the world two or three times for free if she wanted – but only if she could find the time, seeing as the company kept her on the road almost without a break. The other thing she wouldn’t miss would be the loneliness. Although she did most of her travelling with Charlie, she still ended up spending many hours alone in her hotel room, or walking through unfamiliar streets where she knew nobody and nobody knew her.
The problem was that a warm cosy office in London, while very appealing compared to her present circumstances here in wet and chilly Cornwall, would mean giving up her first love – rocks.
As for love of a more personal nature, this had never been a successful aspect of her life. She had always been far more comfortable a hundred metres below ground than in most social situations on the surface. Apart from her natural shyness, her itinerant lifestyle had put paid to any hopes in that department. Not knowing where she would be from one month to the other had made forming meaningful relationships a near impossible dream. Since starting this job six years earlier, she had barely had a handful of embryonic romances, all of which had ended not so much with a bang as with a whimper. Literally.
As a trickle of cold water infiltrated its way past her collar and ran all the way down her back to her knickers, she shook herself into action and decided she had better get on with the job in hand. Any decisions as far as her career was concerned would have to wait. For now she had a job to do and that meant deciding which tunnel to choose.
She started to swing herself slowly from side to side like a pendulum until she was able to touch the rocky walls of the shaft on either side first with her boots and then with her gloved hands. As she did so, she checked out both tunnels and chose the one on the left. After hunting around she located a metal stanchion set at the mouth of this adit and caught hold, pulling herself out of the vertical shaft and into the horizontal tunnel that led off into the rock. She took a couple of steps in, away from the edge of the precipice, and unhooked the climbing rope from her harness. Very carefully she wound it around an outcrop of rock and locked the carabineer so as to ensure that her only means of escape would still be waiting for her when she emerged. Then she
pressed Transmit once more.
‘Hi, Charlie. I’m off the rope. I’ll try the west adit at level two now. They’ve laid rails here so this one must have been fairly important and fairly long. If you don’t hear from me for a bit, don’t be surprised.’
‘Okay, Anna. Just take care now.’
‘Don’t worry, I will. You’d better give me an hour before you send in the cavalry.’ She checked her watch. ‘I make it almost ten so give me until eleven, okay?’
They always set a deadline for her to make contact again. Down here in the solid rock, two-way radio and telephone communications were erratic and never to be trusted. Before setting off down the narrow tunnel she slipped off her little backpack and double-checked the two spare torches she always carried, although she had checked them only yesterday. Ever since the unforgettable and terrifying time in Patagonia back in the early days when she had broken her one and only torch and had had to feel her way back in the pitch dark along a two-hundred-metre tunnel infested with spiders the size of dinner plates, she always ensured she carried spares.
As she made her way along the tunnel, stopping from time to time to check the mineral strata in the walls, she nodded to herself in approval. This square tunnel had been blasted and carved out of solid rock and there were no timber supports to rot or give way. Compared to the ancient Inca gold mines in Peru she and Charlie had been investigating the previous month, this was a fine safe-looking environment. Also, it was reassuring to think that there would be no giant scorpions or deadly poisonous snakes here in Cornwall. As she walked along, the light of her torch bobbing about in front of her, her mind returned to the question of her future.
Unless she took decisive action, she appeared destined to spend the rest of her life like a mole, poking about underground, constantly moving from place to place, living out of a suitcase. Wouldn’t it be nice to settle down somewhere, maybe even find herself a partner, start a family…?
The answer to all these questions was, of course, yes, but not if it meant giving up her passion for her chosen subject of geology. Recently she had started thinking about looking for a job somewhere she could put down roots, like the diamond mines of South Africa or the big opencast gold mines of western Australia, but she knew hardly anybody on either continent. The idea of just pitching up somewhere and having to make a new set of friends was as intimidating to her as confronting an angry tarantula. By the time she reached the far end of the tunnel, occasionally pausing en route to chip off a few mineral samples and take photos of rock formations, she was no nearer to finding a solution to her personal dilemma.
As the tunnel finally petered out in a pile of spoil and a rough rock face, she came to a halt. There was still a pickaxe leaning against one wall, swathed in cobwebs like a cocoon, and a discarded spirit lamp on its side in one corner. It looked as though nothing had been touched for over a hundred years since the last miners had abandoned the tunnel, and she wondered how long it would be before this place received a visit from another geologist. The more she thought about it, the more convinced she was becoming that she wouldn’t be that geologist. The time for a change was fast approaching.
* * *
By the time she got back to her room at the hotel it was gone one o’clock. She hastily threw her filthy, sodden overalls into the bath to soak along with a generous handful of washing powder before stepping into the shower to scrub the mud and grime off herself. Barely ten minutes later she ran back out again to meet up with Charlie in the Nesting Chough, an old pub across the road from their hotel named after a rare Cornish bird. Not for the first time she was grateful for finally having had the courage a couple of years ago to have her lovely shoulder-length hair chopped off, leaving a much more manageable, and washable, bob. Over the years she had got used to these quick changes of clothing, although the memory of the time in the Himalayas when she had inadvertently emerged from her room with the rear of her skirt tucked into her pants would remain with her forever. Now, as she pushed open the door of the pub, she superstitiously ran her free hand over her bottom just to be on the safe side.
Inside the pub, Charlie had taken up position at the same table in the corner of the bar which they had been occupying all week and he was halfway through his favourite – the pub’s special all-day breakfast. The first time Anna had laid eyes on the huge fry-up of eggs, sausages, bacon, beans, fried tomatoes, black pudding and fried bread, she had had serious doubts as to whether even Charlie would be able to finish it. However, not only had he eaten the lot that time, she had even spotted him wiping the plate clean with a chunk of bread at the end. Today it looked as though his current plateful was destined to go the same way. She gave him a grin.
‘How come you never put on weight, Charlie? If I ate even half what you do, the rope would snap next time I went down a shaft.’
‘Mary’s always saying the same thing. It’s my metabolism, I suppose.’
‘Have you spoken to her today? How’s she holding up?’ Charlie’s long-suffering wife was in her final month of pregnancy. Long-suffering because Charlie, like Anna, probably spent more time on the road than at home.
‘She’s all right. Just wants to get it over with now.’
‘I can imagine. Give her my love next time you talk to her.’
Although almost ten years older than Anna, Charlie was just about her closest friend. Unlike with so many other men on the planet, with him she felt safe and secure and her normal reticence had gradually evaporated until she could now talk to him freely about almost anything. Over the years of travelling together, the two of them had built up a close rapport and they had very few secrets from each other. She knew that underneath his gruff manner and thick Yorkshire accent he was terrified for his wife’s well-being as their first child was about to put in an appearance in the world. In turn, many was the time he had provided a shoulder for Anna to cry on as she had picked herself up after the disastrous conclusion of yet another of her ill-fated attempts at romance. He was the best friend and the best colleague she could ask for and he always looked out for her.
He waved vaguely across towards the bar. ‘You’d better get your order in quick before they close the kitchen. You look as if you could do with a square meal.’
Anna nodded and went across to order something to eat. Although she had been sticking to light lunches most of the time since arriving in Cornwall, after this morning’s soaking she agreed that she deserved something more substantial, so she ordered one of the local pasties and a pot of tea.
As they ate their lunch, she filled him in on what she had – or rather hadn’t – found down the shaft. ‘It looks as though we’ve drawn another blank. Copper and some traces of tin yes, but not a sniff of rhodium- or palladium-bearing rock, I’m afraid.’
As its name implied, New Metals Mining Ltd specialised in seeking out new and rare minerals, mainly for the electronic and automotive industries. Some of these rare metals were more valuable than gold, and their value was a reflection of their rarity. Any company that could locate viable deposits of highly prized metals such as rhodium, palladium or iridium would strike it rich, and that was why Charlie and Anna, along with other teams of geologists from around the world, were constantly on the trail of these treasures.
‘So does that mean we’re moving on?’ Charlie drained the last of his pint of Doom Bar and sat back with a contented sigh. ‘Can’t say I’ll be sorry. All it ever does down here is rain.’
‘I’m sure that’s a bit unfair, Charlie. It’s bound to be sunny some of the time. We’ve just picked the wrong week, I’m afraid.’ A glance out of the window revealed no breaks in the grey clouds overhead. ‘Although, I’ll grant you, today’s particularly grim. Anyway, the rain shouldn’t bother us for much longer. I’ll send in my report this afternoon and I would imagine we’ll get our marching orders pretty soon. No point flogging a dead horse.’
As she spoke, her phone started ringing. It was the head of their section, Douglas.
‘Hi, Douglas,
is it raining in London as well?’
‘Hi, Anna. No, the sun’s shining here. So did you find anything?’ He had never been big on small talk.
She gave him a précis of the findings that would make their way into her report and she could almost hear him shrug his shoulders over the phone. In their line of work, nine times out of ten they drew a blank when prospecting. Still, there was always the lure of the next mission to keep their hopes alive. She heard him give a resigned grunt.
‘I wasn’t expecting much. There’s lithium near St Austell but all the mining licences have already been snapped up. There’s copper, of course, but down where you are there’s not much of anything else. Stick it all in your report and I’ll send it up the line to Sir Graham.’
Sir Graham Moreton-Cummings, the owner and CEO of New Metals Mining Ltd, had founded the company thirty years ago and was well past retirement age by now but he still insisted on calling the shots, and he did so in no uncertain terms. Anna, like most of her colleagues, tried to stay away from him as much as possible, but she had met him enough times to be familiar with his steely side and to agree that his reputation for being ruthless was well justified. Even so, in spite of his short-tempered and confrontational nature, she did have grudging respect for his hands-on experience and expertise gained in the mining industry all over the world, from the Rockies to the Hindu Kush. He had made the transformation from impoverished prospector to multi-millionaire by his own efforts, but success hadn’t rubbed off his rough edges.
‘Please tell Sir Graham we’re sorry. We’ve done our best but there’s nothing to be found here.’
‘You can tell him yourself. Pack up and head back to London in the morning. He wants to see you tomorrow afternoon. He’s got plans for you.’
Anna’s heart sank at the thought of a meeting with the boss. ‘Don’t tell me, we’re going straight back out on the road again. Where is it this time – Alaska? Antarctica?’
‘Not quite straight back off again. It’ll be in two weeks’ time and it sounds a whole lot more pleasant for a change. He wants you to go to the island of Elba.’