Dead Air

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Dead Air Page 6

by Ash, C. B.


  Once past the pipes, Krumer eased away from the opening to allow room for the others. The bearded man watched them all enter warily.

  "It's alright Carlos, I know them." Adonia said evenly. The bearded man cast another glance over the group that entered, then nodded in a solemn reply. Adonia knelt next to the figure in the cot.

  "How is he? Has he improved any?" She asked while she adjusted the blanket.

  Carlos shook his head slightly. "No, senőra, the senőr still raves out of his mind. He still speaks of things only he can see." He replied in a rich Castillian accent.

  Adonia glanced over at Carlos. "Where is Andrew?"

  "Out on watch, senőra." The Spaniard answered with a weary sigh. "He left only a moment ago."

  She nodded with a momentary frown then looked over at Krumer, Thorias, Moira and O'Fallon while they eased in and around the outer edges of the makeshift room. Arcady, who had never laid eyes on even parts of a steam engine this large, tore himself away from his exploration to circle the group once and land on his customary perch, Thorias' shoulder. She patted the figure on the cot and stood.

  "I mentioned something of an explanation," she began hesitantly. "You all know Dr. James Von Patterson, I believe." Adonia said with a small, but gracious gesture towards the cot. "He is, as best as I understand it, the 'why' behind it all. The 'who' would be the people chasing him since I found him stumbling around in the forests near his campsite. Last few sensible things he said were then, and they were not much. Just that he found something and there are some very unpleasant people who desire it. Unfortunately, he's been ranting and mumbling since then and not been able to explain a thing. I doubt he knows where he is."

  "He taken with a fever?" Moira asked in concern. "An where'd his family get off ta? When last we were there, they seemed right as rain."

  "He sent them off on a supply ship to get some specific supplies from Paris. Lucky stroke, given that from what I could see, his entire camp was overrun. He's the only survivor. So, fortunately his wife and children were safe from harm, even if his own assistants, weren't. It is a good thing I believe. Miles and Angela shouldn't see more unpleasantries than they've had to live through." Adonia explained.

  "Ya sure know a bit about his family." Moira commented suspiciously.

  Adonia's yellow eyes widened in mild surprise at the tone, and her tendril-hair shifted slowly. "Well, of course. I've known James for many a year through the British Museum. You, however, seem to know quite a bit about him as well. Strange, he's never mentioned you before. You are ... ?"

  Moira own eyes narrowed with a stern, fiery look. She started to reply but Thorias put a hand on her shoulder and interrupted. "Whatever has taken hold of Dr. Von Patterson, I might could still deduce a way to help him. Moira, would you assist please? If he tosses about, I'll need your help in holding him still."

  The young woman paused. She started to finish her thought, but decided against it. Whatever help she could provide to Thorias, would in turn help Dr. Von Patterson. That was more important than her intense curiosity and the near-interrogation of the Charybdian woman. "All right Doc, tell me what ta do."

  Thorias smiled, with just a very faint air of relief. "Ah, just smashing. Come, lets see just what ails him, first."

  While Thorias and Moira walked across the small room to where Dr. Von Patterson lay, the ever-present Carlos watched them both, most specifically Moira, warily. Adonia stepped closer to Krumer and O'Fallon.

  Adonia glanced back at Moira and Thorias, then lowered her voice so only Krumer and O'Fallon could hear. "She's a touchy one. Where did you boys find her?"

  O'Fallon chuckled. "Moira? Ah, that'd be the wee pub brawl with that Spaniard crew in San Sebastian. She'd na more'n three tied up. Two under a chair, an one she be havin' by the ear with a set a' iron tongs."

  Adonia smiled and shook her head slightly in amazement. "No small wonder you kept her around."

  Krumer folded his arms over his chest. "Adonia, you wouldn't hole up in such a place if you didn't have an idea of what chased you. Nor would you post a hidden watch, given we never laid eyes upon him coming here. You may not know what Dr. Von Patterson found, but you know more than you're admitting to."

  Adonia grinned at the orc. "Ah, Krumer dear, direct as always. My, how I've missed working with all of you. You are quite correct. I have some idea. I don't know who they are exactly, but once we had made it back to the La Paloma, we thought we had left his assassins behind. We made preparations but our captain was not careful enough. They made it aboard. Shortly before we arrived here, they emerged and attacked. Caught the officers and crew unaware. We made it to port, but the captain abandoned ship. He told me he'd send someone back, but we've not heard from them."

  "La Paloma?" Krumer asked curiously.

  "The ship I was on." Adonia explained. "What's left of her is still tied at the dock."

  "Well then, that explains what her name was." The orc replied.

  O'Fallon frowned while he compared her story with the tracks he had been following for most of the day. "That be fittin' the tracks here and yon. Save fer the cat."

  "Cat?" Adonia asked, confused.

  Krumer nodded. "A large cat. Cougar or mountain lion. Odd thing is that it has an owner, or at least a keeper."

  It was the Charybdian's turn to frown. "Once on station, I remember thinking I heard a muffled scream from what would've been a mountain lion. But here? I dismissed it as nerves. So you say it's real?"

  O'Fallon nodded. "Be as real as either of us standin' here."

  Krumer looked over to where Thorias sat on a wooden box, examining Dr. Von Patterson. "Adonia ... my dear ... what did James find?"

  Adonia gave Krumer an innocent look. "I really don't know. I was only sent by the Royal Museum to check on him in response to a letter they received."

  "Yes, of that I've no doubt." The orc replied with his own knowing smile. "And that is what the museum's official communications will read as well. However, I know you quite well. You are not one to travel in the company of some possibly valuable or dangerous object and remain ignorant of it. So ... what did he find?"

  She grinned and her yellow eyes lit up slightly with a mix of amusement and excitement. "A jade statue. Ah, but not just any, a rare one from the Roman times. According to legend, these statues could control the minds of whatever creature that the statue was a likeness of."

  "What was this one of?" Krumer asked curiously.

  "A lightning drake."

  Krumer and O'Fallon exchanged a glance. It had only been the better part of a season since they had their all-to-close encounter with a lightning drake. One that nearly took Captain Hunter's life, all originally due to the machinations of a vampiric thief.

  It was O'Fallon that spoke first. "Adonia, where be the thing now?"

  She gave the two of them a dejected look. "On the station ... somewhere. When the assassins attacked, I grabbed the good Dr. Von Patterson and some crew and raced off. The statue? Back on the ship, last I can recall. We forgot in the rush and James was in no state of mind to remember."

  Krumer frowned again. "We searched the wreck. There was no sign of a statue."

  Behind them, Thorias stood up and stretched his back. He turned around towards the trio on the far side of the small room. "Most perplexing."

  The orc looked over at the doctor. "But is it curable?"

  "If I were a mystic, then perhaps." Thorias said wryly. "Aside from some cuts and scrapes, the man isn't gravely injured, at least physically. But what little I know from working with the shamans in Southern Africa, I suspect he's been cursed, or at the least, possessed."

  Just then, almost as proof, Dr. Von Patterson writhed on the cot, his face contorted in pain. He opened his eyes and looked out at nothing, speaking rapidly in another language.

  Thorias watched Dr. Von Patterson carefully until he calmed down into a quiet, fitful rest. "And that was Latin. Though not what we use today with religious or medical text. This is
more ... conversational if I dared to hazard a guess, although I'm no linguist. More as not, we'd need someone like young William to listen and decipher it to be certain."

  Metal suddenly slammed against metal with a loud crash. The abrupt sound echoed off the pipes and reverberated around the steam pistons that powered the station. In the small side room, not a soul stood still. All around, save for Dr. Von Patterson, hands grabbed for weapons, from pistols to a handy pipe wrench that sat close by.

  "Alarm!" A young man yelled from out in the hallway. "They're comin'! They're comin'!"

  "Andrew!" Adonia shoved past Krumer and O'Fallon, scurrying around the pipes as quickly as she physically could. O'Fallon and Krumer exchanged a glance and rushed after her.

  In the hallway, they skidded to a stop behind Adonia. There, at the door to the ante-chamber of the building itself, a young man with tousled brown hair, worn black leather boots and bloodied, torn clothes struggled with a rope he had hastily fastened to the door's latch. This rope he desperately tried to pull around a nearby pipe to help secure the door. The door itself fought against him, while a shadowy figure tugged at it from the other side with raw and bloodied hands.

  "Ya gotta lock it!" Andrew yelled between gasps as he struggled through his tug of war with the shadowy figure. "We can't let 'em get in!"

  As if in response, one of the bloody hands grasped the side of the door where the lock was, and squeezed. Immediately the metal protested at the abuse. The hand twisted mercilessly as the metal screamed in agony and finally succumbed. Slowly the lock and that small part of the door compressed until they were useless.

  Krumer scowled. "So much for the lock. We need something else." He dropped his pistol into its holster and looked around him at the pipes. A foot ahead of Andrew was a narrow pipe on which was written, 'high pressure steam'. Next to that was a gauge and an emergency valve. The orc smiled. "Ask and the spirits provide. I've an idea! Be ready to run!"

  Chapter 10

  Andrew struggled furiously with the rope. Sweat from his hands coated the braided hemp, turning it slick in his grasp. He squeezed it desperately to improve his grip until his knuckles turned white and the strain of the effort to shut the door showed on his face.

  "If ya gonna do somethin', now'd be the time!" Andrew said through clenched teeth. "Bugger's strong as an ox!"

  Krumer rushed to the emergency valve and checked the gauge. The needle hovered near eighty pounds per square inch. Next to the gauge was an iron turn wheel, six inches across and dotted with rust and flakes of red paint. The orc grasped the heavy iron wheel with both hands.

  "Down!" Krumer yelled just before he yanked the wheel to the left.

  Andrew ducked immediately, which let the rope go slack. The door flew open and for just an instant a shadowy figure filled the doorway. A second later, the white-hot cloud of steam slammed into the figure, knocking it back into the darkness amid eerie silence, save for the high pressure hiss of steam from the valve. Immediately, Andrew yanked back on the rope which slammed the door shut. The ruined lock banged against the door frame and blocked it from closing securely. Regardless, Andrew managed to tie the rope around a large six inch diameter steel pipe.

  "Best we got." Andrew said wearily. "Dunno how long that pipe's gonna hold."

  Krumer nodded. "Understood." The orc turned the wheel and shut off the steam deluge. He then turned around to look behind him. Carlos had already hastily gathered what few supplies had been in the room, as well as Dr. Von Patterson, and had just slowly moved out from their small hidden room.

  "Adonia, I trust you've someplace else we can go?" Krumer asked.

  Before she could answer, the door behind them moved and the rope jerked taut. The pipe, designed to withstand intense pressure, was no match for the sudden pull to one side. Without a moment's hesitation, Andrew threw himself against Krumer. The Brass Griffin's first mate went sprawling onto the metal flooring just as the pipe snapped in two. The broken piece of metal and steam-soaked rope lashed out, striking Andrew in the chest. Andrew, who was where Krumer had stood a second ago, flew up and back onto the ground. The young man rolled over in a half-daze, then slowly pushed himself up unsteadily onto one knee. Behind him the door slammed open as if it had been punched with an invisible fist.

  "Andrew!" Adonia's scream of warning cut the air just as a figure leaped onto the young man from behind. A pair of bloody, strong hands grabbed his shoulders. He looked up from where he crouched just before he was yanked into the darkness. A scream of terror echoed for a moment, then abruptly silenced.

  Adonia raised her pistol in reflex, but only too late. When she realized she could not see a target, she raced headlong toward the door, only to be caught by Krumer who quickly blocked her path.

  "He's gone!" The orc said firmly as he desperately reached for the hot, damp rope with a free hand and jerked the door shut. The door slammed closed with a heavy bang that echoed hollowly through the hallway. Meanwhile, the Charybdian woman struggled like a wild animal. "He's gone, Adonia! There's nothing you can do! Let it go!"

  O'Fallon raced forward and took over the rope giving Krumer the chance to slowly guide Adonia away from the door. All the while, Adonia struggled in a panic-driven fury to get free and rush the door, despite any sense of caution.

  The quartermaster quickly tied off the rope to the steam valve wheel. He tugged at the knot to test its strength, then after an uneasy look at the warped door, hurried over to the shaken group. "It'll be holdin'."

  Moira looked at the rope then at the misshapen lock in the door itself. "Ya certain' about that?"

  "About the rope? Och, be as certain as Ah can be. Na promises mind ye." O'Fallon replied with a faint smirk.

  "How long?" Krumer asked while Adonia, having given up on getting past the orc, turned away from him in a shaking rage.

  "Canna say, given what we just be seein'." O'Fallon replied with a helpless shrug. "We'd best be gone just on the safe side. An quick."

  Thorias moved alongside Dr. Von Patterson to help Carlos steady the weak archeologist. "I'm quite eager to hear what qualifies as 'safe'."

  Krumer sighed and gave the door behind them a quick glance. Fortunately, it remained where it was. He turned back to the small group. "Adonia, do you know of a place? If you do, now would be a time to mention it."

  Adonia squeezed her eyes shut a moment, then rubbed them with her free hand. The other clutched a pistol tightly until her scaled knuckles were a light green. Finally, she took a deep ragged breath, opened her eyes and looked around, her tendrils of hair writhed slowly while she considered their options.

  "Down the hall would be the main fans and steam pistons. If we cross the catwalks to the other side, there is a another room to conceal ourselves in until ... they ... lose our scent." She said in a hoarse voice.

  Krumer and O'Fallon exchanged a look at her mention of their pursuers losing their 'scent'. Both men shared the same thought that, for some unexplained reason, she had not meant that as a metaphor. The orc broke the small silence first. "How far is it from here?"

  Adonia took a shaky, deep breath. "Twenty, maybe thirty yards."

  Behind them the door jerked again, but this time the rope held. The door rattled angrily in the frame. O'Fallon looked back, his eyes drawn to his handiwork with the knot. The rope was a stout hemp and hardly weathered. It would hold for awhile. Of that he was certain. However the strength it took to bend the lock in the door a moment ago cast doubts as to how long the valve wheel, or the pipe the rope was tied to, would really hold out.

  The quartermaster turned back to the others. "If'n we be goin', now be the time. Ah canna say what Ah did will hold more'n a few moments."

  With Dr. Von Patterson supported between Carlos and Thorias, the group raced down the hallway towards a lone door. There Adonia came to a quick stop and pulled it open. Late afternoon light, heavily filtered by boiling gray clouds overhead, struggled to force its way inside the door. "This way. Step up and cross the catwalk to the o
ther side. Past a door like this on the other side there'll be a door five feet down on the right. That's the one we'll want."

  Carlos adjusted his hold on Dr. Von Patterson. "I know the way, senőra. I can show them."

  "Thank you, Carlos." Adonia replied. "Please be careful."

  "Si, Senőra." Carlos and Thorias then stepped through the door. The rest of the group followed close behind. Krumer paused, the last to go through, and looked behind them.

  In the crypt-like darkness of the hallway, the metal door shook violently. The rope snapped taut then strained against the iron turn-wheel of the pressure valve. Krumer watched with a mix of fascination and horror as the rope stretched thinner, which in turn pulled at the iron wheel. The iron stood firm, but the pipe did not. In seconds, the pipe distorted until both it and the thick rope snapped in two.

  Steam ushered forth, filling the hallway like a thick, white cloud. Then a figure emerged. It was a broad-shouldered man in a tight grease-stained shirt. His trousers were torn and his dead face bruised and swollen, as if he had been severely beaten. Krumer recognized the face. It was the face of the dead man that had fallen on O'Fallon earlier. Only then, he had been dead and immobile. Thorias had confirmed it. Now, he still looked dead, but was far more active than any dead man had a right to be. The orc whispered a shaky prayer to his ancestors and the nature spirits of his people.

  He called over his shoulder. "We're out of time! They've broken through!"

  Chapter 11

  Krumer blinked as he stepped from the dark gloom into the gray light. Through the circular opening above him, clouds drifted slowly by, tossed by a light wind. Once outside, he slammed the door shut behind him and searched for a lock. There was none. Frantically he looked around for anything that could serve as a way to secure the door.

 

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