I frowned and said, “What do…” when what he’d said hit me like a sledge, smashing open the doors of my rusty memory. The newspapers. My notes. Until this day, I’d last seen the papers Friday night when I parked at the campground. The two-week-old papers, one of them with the front page headline…my notes in the margin.
I breathed a silent curse. We’d received the bulletin from Washington State along with a thousand other law enforcement agencies. We were close to the border. It made sense.
H. T. Finn had seen the newspaper when he’d stolen the radio—the headline and my notes. He had assumed that I’d made the connection, knew who he was, what he’d done.
“Arajanian did those hits for you, too,” I said, trying to keep my voice calm and hoping that he didn’t recognize the guess.
“He learned well,” Finn said. “He would have been of great use to me.”
My mind raced. “No, he did just what you wanted,” I said. “It worked out better the way it was…you left the rifle with him for the police to find. It’s probably the same rifle you had him use on the governor of Washington and the prison warden, isn’t it? If there was a matchup, it’d tie those shootings to the kid, and you’d be long gone. No witnesses to say otherwise after you shot us…and set the mountain on fire.”
“Cleansing fire,” Finn said softly, and his voice drifted off as he recited, “‘And the fire shall cleanse the evil from the earth and…’” His voice became indistinct.
“And they don’t know you as Finn in Washington, do they?” I said, but he refused the bait.
Finally he said, “You will make arrangements, Sheriff. Listen carefully.” I wasn’t in a position to do otherwise, but I wanted answers to a flood of questions. Finn continued, “I want a fully fueled helicopter. The television station has one. The helicopter, one reporter, and a pilot. That’s all. It will land immediately beside the mouth of the shaft, close enough that I can see the flash of its blades over the opening.”
I sighed. Why was an aircraft always such magic to these fruitcakes? Where would he go, other than Mexico? And what made him think Mexico would want him? He wanted a reporter, and that meant he thought the world would be interested in hearing his sorry tale.
My eyes ached with the strain of trying to see him in the darkness, and my finger itched to reach for the Colt automatic. But he had the girl, and we would play his game until the time was right.
“That’s all?”
“As a beginning, yes.”
“You’ll let them send down two more ropes, one for the girl and one for you?”
“No!” he said sharply. “Ruth and I will use the ladder. We will go out the way we came in.” He laughed softly. “You’d like me in harness, helpless. You’d like that, wouldn’t you. Oh no. That’s how they killed my Ruth. It won’t happen again. Never again.”
Another Ruth. But now it was the little girl I worried about. “It’s a long climb. I was just trying to make it safe for Daisy.”
“You don’t need to be concerned. Just do as I say.”
“All right.”
“Talk to the ones on the surface now,” he commanded. I keyed the mike. “Gastner here.”
“Go ahead, Gastner.”
“Listen carefully, and get this right the first time. Finn wants Channel 8’s Jet Ranger, fully fueled, with a pilot and a reporter on board. He wants it to set down immediately beside the mine shaft. We have to be able to see the blades flash, or he won’t go for it. No one else in the way. The three of us will come up. The three of us will board the chopper. Is that understood?”
After a pause, I heard Pat Tate’s voice. “Understand: Channel 8’s chopper, one pilot, one reporter. They might not agree to that.”
“Don’t waste time, Pat.” The television crew would leap at the chance to be evening news. “And nothing else. Tell everyone to keep their fingers off the damn triggers. I don’t want the girl hurt.”
“Ten four. Search and rescue wants the girl in a harness, on a rope.”
“No,” Finn said loudly.
“Look,” I said. “It’s for her own safety, Finn. Use your head. You could slip. Without a harness, there’s nothing between you and 400 feet of shaft.”
His voice regained its original composure. “If you and your men do as I say, there won’t be any slips, will there?”
“Gastner, did you copy?”
I keyed the mike. “Negative on the rope,” I said. My brain raced. There was no way a four-year-old child was going to be carried up 300 feet of rusted, slippery ladder.
“We’ll see what we can do,” Tate said, and the shaft fell silent. I shifted in the harness, trying to let some blood down my right leg.
“Finn, listen to me. Turn your light on.” To my surprise he did so, keeping the beam centered on my torso. “Are you wearing a heavy belt?”
He didn’t answer.
“Look, if you are, use this.” I turned and groped with my left hand for the small harness that the deputy had clipped to my own. “They gave me this. Put it on Daisy, and clip her to your belt. At least do that.”
“No.” He turned off the light.
“Damn it, she’ll be clipped to you. She’ll be safe that way. What can we do if she’s clipped to you? No one can make a move to grab her. And it keeps your arms free. It will be even better.”
Finn was silent, and I hoped he was weighing his options. “All right,” he said. “Throw the harness into the tunnel.” He turned on the light. I breathed a sigh or relief. For several minutes I fumbled with the carabiner before the big steel ring snapped open. I tossed the smaller of the two extra harnesses into the drift.
The beam always fastened on me, Finn made his way through the scattered junk. He stopped when the line of pump foundations separated us. I couldn’t tell if he held a weapon in his other hand. “Tell them to pull you up ten feet.”
The bastard was shrewd. I keyed the mike and repeated his order. I had no sense of moving. Rather, the entrance of the drift sank, as if the wall itself slid downward. My feet were just above the top of the tunnel mouth when the pull stopped.
“Finn, do you know how to hook up that harness? Do it properly now.” I shouted, suddenly frantic at not being able to see inside the drift.
He didn’t respond, but I heard his footfalls as he advanced and picked up the harness. I tried to picture him bending down, then straightening up, and then retreating back down the shaft. I counted eight footfalls, then lost him. There was no other time to take the gamble. I reached up and gently keyed the mike. I kept my voice a husky whisper.
“Don’t answer,” I whispered. “Give me five bites down.”
Their response was immediate. In the darkness I felt the wall slide by, felt the breath of air as the drift yawned in front of me. I’d have one chance. I stretched out my feet, my toes reaching for rock. The floor of the drift touched my left foot and I grabbed with my left hand, my teeth clenched.
I felt wood, slipped, and grabbed a rough crack in the timber. I yanked with all my strength, pulling the rope in after me. As the downward bite continued, I let my weight carry me into the drift until I was resting on my left hand and both knees. My right leg, until then sound asleep, tingled sharply with the new movement.
Above they would continue to pay out the rope, giving me three more bites of slack…about eighteen feet of line. I hoped they wouldn’t ask questions when the weight left the line. I straightened up slightly and pulled out the Colt automatic.
The murmurings of soft voices reached me. I tried to judge the distance, but the sound bounced and echoed. I recognized Daisy’s little voice, high-pitched and confused.
Finn hadn’t heard me. I kept my mouth closed, forcing my breathing quiet. My heart hammered in my ears. Slowly I shuffled forward five feet, a third of the distance to the pump foundations.
In minutes Finn would return with Daisy. I knew I’d have the time and the strength for only one try.
Chapter 32
I edged my way toward
the old pump foundation. When I thought I was close, I reared up on my knees like an old dinosaur, hand outstretched and groping.
The edge of my hand touched cold, damp concrete. With infinite care I palmed the small automatic, held it against my chest, and pushed off the safety. I took a deep breath and braced my forearm on the concrete. The darkness in front of me was a solid door.
Finn would have to use the light to walk Daisy out. I strained to hear. Nothing.
“Keep your eyes on your feet, Ruth,” he said. The voice took me completely by surprise. I crouched as low as my belly would allow. Their feet made soft shuffling sounds with an occasional tinkle as some small piece of mining detritus was kicked from their path.
The light cut the darkness over my head, darting out into the shaft. I kept my head down. My hand on the automatic was wet with sweat. The sounds stopped. Had the son of a bitch seen the rope?
“Gastner!” His voice was strong…and close. The beam of light twitched, swinging from one side to the other. “I’ve got the girl with me.”
I could hear her breathing, little chirpy breaths of raw fright. He took another step, and I watched the flashlight beam.
His voice was a soft whisper. “Stay close, Ruth.” She wasn’t linked. I gritted my teeth and slipped my index finger in the trigger guard of the Colt.
The flashlight beam was narrow and intense. He was close. Another step, you bastard, I thought. I saw the shadow of his hand behind the light, counted three, and moved.
Six feet away, the target for my automatic was just a murky figure behind the light. I saw Finn’s trick almost soon enough. The images registered just as I squeezed the trigger. The smaller of the two figures was holding the flashlight.
I pulled the shot, but too late. The little Colt coughed and spat. The bullet sang past the side of Daisy’s head, whined off the ceiling, and ricocheted down the drift.
Finn was already in motion, but he was a big target. I squeezed the trigger twice, and this time Finn yelped and spun sideways. In two staggering backward steps he crashed into the wall of the shaft.
Instinctively Daisy turned, and the beam turned with her. For a moment Finn was illuminated. He scrambled to his feet. In his right hand was my .45 automatic, and there was no silencer on the muzzle.
I pointed quickly and fired twice. Each time the little pellets struck him, he flinched and staggered back. But he didn’t go down. For a moment he stood motionless, his face looking up at the roof of the drift, as if he were lost and searching for direction from the rocks.
The little girl dropped the light. It clattered, rolled a couple of feet toward me, and lay against a length of rusted pipe. Its beam pointed back into the drift. She whimpered and sat down, a tiny, frightened ball.
I slapped the automatic down on the concrete foundation, lunged toward her, and grabbed the harness. I pulled the little girl to me. I saw motion and looked up to see Finn staggering like a drunk. He raised the .45 and held it in both hands.
“Don’t do it!” I shouted. Releasing my hold on Daisy, I made a wild grab at the little Colt. Finn swung toward me and pulled the trigger. The .45 bellowed, the explosion mind-numbing in the drift. The bullet passed harmlessly two feet over my head, crossed the main shaft, and thudded into a timber.
I locked my arm against the damp concrete, pointed the .380 toward the center of the shadow that was Finn’s torso, and pulled the trigger twice.
Finn staggered backward. The drift was filled with the crashes of the .45 as his finger jerked the trigger spasmodically. I cringed low, hugging Daisy to me. One of the fat, hollow-point bullets of the .45 glanced off an iron bracket and sang over our heads like a wasp. Finn had already lost his balance, the recoil of the gun adding to his backward dance.
Another sound became harmony to the big automatic. With a loud “whump,” a section of the wall just behind the timbers caved in, the mass striking Finn and carrying him to the other side of the drift. He screamed and went down. The dust billowed toward me.
I slapped the light switch on my helmet. In one desperate motion I stood up, pulled Daisy off her feet, and plunged the carabiner through the loop of my own harness. The spring snapped shut.
With the little girl hanging from my waist like a rag doll, I turned and waddled toward the vertical shaft.
Behind me, Finn screamed. “No! Listen to me!” he shrieked. The son of a bitch would have to talk to himself.
I fumbled with the mike switch on my collar. “Pull me up!” I bellowed into the mike.
Behind me, Finn continued to shriek and then he found the .45 again. Its last cartridge exploded. The flash illuminated the back of the drift, and the slug danced off the rock and dug into the dust. Even as the clip emptied, the rumble of the earth’s guts built, low and ominous.
A puff of air hit my face and with it came the acrid smell of fresh rock dust. A timber nearby cracked loudly and a shower of rocks clattered around my feet. I grabbed a fistful of Daisy’s jacket and reached the mouth of the drift just as the last of the rope’s slack snaked past. The rotten timbers above the pump station collapsed inward.
Something heavy struck my right foot and I spun sideways. “Son of a bitch!” I shouted and jumped into space.
The jolt of the rope damn near cut me in half. Daisy was a small child, but her weight pulled the harness off-sides.
Like a twisting, turning pendulum, we snapped out away from the drift and then crashed back against the side of the shaft, the iron of the ladder cracking my helmet. If Daisy screamed, I never heard it.
The rumble of the collapse died away in the drift even as we were lifted toward the surface. I hung limp, head back and eyes locked on the patch of light above me.
It was almost a relief to hang in the quiet shaft.
“Gastner, you copy?”
In order to key the mike, I would have had to release my hold on Daisy. That would have been a hell of a way to test whether or not the carabiner still locked her harness to mine. I didn’t have the strength to yell. Let ’em wait, I thought.
Chapter 33
A thousand hands hoisted us out of the shaft. The ground under my feet was hard and firm—with nothing hanging over my head but the night sky.
“Be careful with the child,” someone said. Her eyes were tightly closed, with her arms drawn up tightly to her chest and her fists balled under her chin.
I struggled to my feet and saw Nolan Parris. The priest was trying to reach the child, trying to push his way past the medical team and the assisting cops. His face was as white as his Roman collar and his eyes wide with concern for the child…but he was heading for disaster.
“Parris!” I shouted at him. He jerked up and saw me. I wrenched my arm away from someone and staggered toward the priest. I caught him by the shirtfront and for a minute we both executed a slow, clumsy dance as I tried to keep my balance.
I shook Parris until he was looking me in the eye.
“Listen!” I shouted at him and then I lowered my voice. “Listen to me. Now’s not the time. You’re a stranger to her, just like the rest of us.”
“But I…”
I shook him, but it was a damn feeble shake. “Stay out of their way. She’s in good hands. And you’re not going to be able to just walk back into her life. She doesn’t know you. You’ll make matters worse.” He turned in my grip and watched the medics bundle the little girl toward the medivac helicopter.
Hell, I knew what he wanted. He’d made up his mind and now wanted to make up for four lost years. But he had no idea how tough that road was going to be. The little girl wasn’t going to run into his arms, shouting, “Daddy, Daddy!” I figured she’d had her fill of adults for a while. If I’d been her, I’d have wanted to stay catatonic for about a month until I sorted life out.
Camera lights bathed the helicopter as the reporters got what they had come for. A little, helpless, battered child made damn good copy.
I could see Nolan Parris wasn’t going to do anything stupid, and I released my
hold on him. “Help me over to the chopper. We’ll ride into the hospital with her.”
***
Twenty hours later Pat Tate answered the telephone for me. I was standing in front of the small mirror that hung over the nightstand in my hospital room, trying to manipulate the electric shaver so I didn’t hack my chin wattles to pieces. Even over the buzz of the razor, I heard the caller’s ranting and knew right away who it was.
“You betcha,” Sheriff Tate said. He nodded and repeated himself, then added, “Here he is.” He held out the receiver, and I set the razor down.
“Holman?”
“Himself.”
Posadas County Sheriff Martin Holman was pissed. I got in the first word.
“Yup,” I said into the phone and the tirade began.
“What the hell is going on up there with you?” he shouted, and I held the receiver away from my ear. Tate grinned, tapped his watch, and mouthed that he’d be back in a few minutes. Holman was still barking, and I let him roll on until he lost some momentum.
“My God, all I see in the papers and on television is your mug, and for Christ’s sakes you don’t even work for them.”
“Those are the breaks,” I said.
Holman almost choked, and I listened to him cough for a minute before he got control. “Do you know how many times I’ve called?”
“No, sir,” I said. He was twenty years my junior, but what the hell. He signed my paychecks. “No one told me you’d called.”
“Three times yesterday,” Holman barked. He really was angry. “Three goddamned times. And shit…four times today, at least.”
“Sorry about that. Things were hectic though.” Pat Tate must have been having fun. And the son of a gun never had told me.
“They said you were asleep.”
“The docs wouldn’t let anyone in to see me. They were worried about me combining exhaustion with coronary stress.”
“Coronary stress, hell. You’ve got the next best thing to a new one. No one can kill you.” His tone modulated a little. “They could have at least told you I called.”
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