by Landslide
Howard, on the other hand, had been stirred up about other things -- our argument about Clare, his defeat in the matter of my prospecting on Crown land, another defeat in the matter of the cutting of the lumber on Clare's land. But then I had asked Mac to spread around the story that I was the survivor of the Trinavant auto smash -- and Howard had immediately blown his top and given me twenty-four hours to get out of town.
Now, that was very odd I Bull Matterson had known who I was but hadn't told his son -- why not? Could it be there was something he didn't want Howard to know?
And Howard -- where did he come into all this? Why was he so annoyed when he found who I was? Could he be trying to protect his father?
I heard a twig snap and sat up quickly. A slim shadow was moving through the trees towards me, then Clare said in a warm voice, "Did you think I was going to let you stay out here alone?"
I chuckled. "You'll scandalize Mac."
"He's asleep," she said, and lay down beside me. "Besides, it isn't easy to scandalize a newspaperman of his age. He's grown-up, you know."
Chapter 3
Next morning, at breakfast, I said, "I'll have a crack at Howard -- try to get him to see sense."
Mac grunted. "Do you think you can just walk into the Matterson Building?"
"I'll go up to the escarpment and put a hole in it," I said. "That'll bring Howard running to me. Will you ask Clarry if he'll join the party?"
"That'll bring Howard," Mac agreed.
"You could get into a fight up there," Clare warned.
"I'll chance that," I said, and stabbed at a hot-cake viciously. "It might be just what's needed to bring things into the open. I'm tired of this pussyfooting around. You stay home this time, Mac."
"You try to keep me away," Mac growled, and mimicked, "You can't stop me fossicking on Crown land." He rubbed his eyes. "Trouble is, I'm a mite tired."
"Didn't you sleep?"
He kept his eyes studiously on his plate. "Too much moving around during the night; folks tromping in and out at all hours -- could have been Grand Central Station."
Clare dropped her eyes, and her throat and face flushed deep pink. I smiled amiably. "Maybe you ought to have slept out in the woods -- it was right peaceful out there."
He pushed back his chair. "I'll go get dairy."
I said, 'Tell him there might be trouble, then it's up to him if he comes or not. It's not really his fight."
"Clarry won't mind a crack at Howard."
"It's not Howard I'm thinking of," I said. I had Jimmy Waystrand in mind, and those two bodyguards of his who ran his errands.
But Clarry came and we pushed off up the Kinoxi road. Clare wanted to come too, but I squashed that idea flat. I sai d, "When we come back we'll be hungry -- and maybe a bit banged up. You have a good dinner waiting, and some bandages and the mercuro-chrome."
No one stopped us as we drove past the power-house and up the escarpment road. We drove nearly to the top before stopping because I wanted to sink a test hole just below the dam. It was essential to find out if the quick clay strata actually ran under the dam.
dairy and I manhandled the gasoline engine across the escarpment and got the rig set up. No one paid us any attention although we were in plain sight. Down at the bottom of the hill they were still trying to get that generator armature into the power plant and had made a fair amount of progress, using enough logs on the ground to feed Matterson's sawmill for twenty-four hours. I could hear the shouting and cursing as orders were given, but that was drowned out as Clarry started the engine and the drilling began.
I was very careful with the cores as they came up from the thirty-foot level and held one of them out to Mac. "It's wetter here," I said.
Mac shifted his boots nervously. "Are we safe here? It couldn't go now, could it?"
"It could," I said. "But I don't think it will -- not just yet." I grinned. "I'd hate to slide to the bottom, especially with the dam on top of me."
"You guys talk as though there's going to be an earthquake," said Clarry.
"Don't sprain your brain," said Mac. "I've told you before." He paused. "That's exactly what we are talking about."
"Huh!" Clarry looked about him. "How can you predict an earthquake?"
"There's one coming now," I said, and pointed. "Here comes Howard with storm signals flying."
He was coming across the hillside with Jimmy Waystrand close behind, and when he got closer I saw he was furious with rage. He shouted, "I warned you, Boyd; now you'll take the consequences."
I stood my ground as he came up, keeping a careful eye on Waystrand. I said, "Howard, you're a damn' fool -- you didn't read my report. Look at all that mud down there."
I don't think he heard a word I said. He stabbed a finger at me. "You're leaving right now -- we don't want you around."
"We! I suppose you mean you and your father." This was no good. There was no point in getting into a hassle with him when there were more important things to be discussed. I said, "Listen, Howard; and, for God's sake, simmer down. You remember I warned you about quick clay?"
He glared at me. "What's quick clay?"
"Then you didn't read the report -- it was all set out in there."
'To hell with your report -- all you keep yammering about is that goddam report. I paid for the damn' thing and whether I read it or not is my affair."
I said, "No, it isn't -- not by a long chalk. There may be men ki----"
"Will you, for Christ's sake, shut up about it," he yelled.
Mac said sharply, "You'd better listen to him, Howard."
"You keep out of this, you old fool," commanded Howard. "And you too, Summerskill. You're both going to regret being mixed up with this man. I'll see you regret it -- personally."
"Howard, lay off McDougall," I said. "Or I'll break your back."
Clarry Summerskill spat expertly and befouled Howard's boot. "You don't scare me none, Matterson."
Howard took a step forward and raised his fist. I said quickly, "Hold it! Your reinforcements are coming, Howard." I nodded across the hillside to where two men were coming across the rough ground -- one a chauffeur in trim uniform supporting the other by the arm.
Bull Matterson had come out of his castle at last.
Clarry's jaw dropped as he stared at the old man and at the big black Bentley parked on the road. "Well, I'm damned!" he said softly. "I haven't seen old Bull in years."
"Maybe he's come out to defend his bull-calf," said Mac sardonically.
Howard went to help the old man, the very picture of filial devotion, but Bull angrily shook away the offered hand. From the look of him, he was quite spry and able to get on by himself. Mac chuckled. "Why, the old guy is in better shape than I am."
I said, "I have a feeling that this is going to be the moment of truth."
Mac glanced at me slyly. "Don't they say that about bullfighting when the matador poises his sword to kill the bull? You'll have to have a sharp sword to kill this one."
The old man finally reached us and looked around with a hard eye. To his chauffeur he said curtly, "Get back to the car." He cast an eye on the drilling-rig, then swung on Jimmy Waystrand. "Who are you?"
"Waystrand. I work down on the power plant."
Matterson lifted his eyebrows. "Do you? Then get back on your job."
Waystrand looked uncertainly at Howard, who gave a short nod.
Matterson stared at Clarry. "I don't think we need you, either," he said harshly. "Or you, McDougall."
I said quietly, "Go and wait by the jeep, Clarry," and then stared down the old man. "McDougall stays."
"That's up to him," said Matterson. "Well, McDougall?"
"I'd like to see a fair fight," said Mac cheerfully. "Two against two." He laughed. "Bob can take Howard and I reckon you and me are fairly matched for the Old Age Championship." He felt the top of the gasoline engine to see if it was still hot, then nonchalantly leaned his rump against it.
Matterson swivelled his head. "Very we
ll. I don't mind a witness for what I'm going to say." He fixed me with a cold blue eye and I must have been nuts ever to think he had the faded eyes of age. "I gave you a warning, Grant, and you have chosen to ignore it."
Howard said, "Do you really think this guy is Grant -- that he was in the crash?"
"Shut up," said Matter son icily and without turning his head. "I'll handle this. You've made enough mistakes already -- you and your fool sister." He hadn't taken his eye off me. "Have you anything to say, Grant?"
"I've got a lot to say -- but not about anything that might have happened to John Trinavant and his family. What I want to say is of more immediate impor----"
"I'm not interested in anything else," Matterson cut in flatly. "Now put up or shut up. Do you have anything to say? If not, you can get to hell out of here, and I'll see that you do it."
"Yes," I said deliberately. "I might have one or two things to say. But you won't like it."
"There have been a lot of things in my life I haven't liked," said Matterson stonily. "A few more won't make any difference." He bent forward a little and his chin jutted out. "But be very careful about any accusations you may make -- they may backfire on you."
I saw Howard moving nervously. "Christ!" he said, looking at Mac. "Don't push things."
"I told you to shut up," said the old man. "I won't tell you again. All right, Grant: say your piece, but bear this in mind. My name is Matterson and I own this piece of country. I own it and everyone who lives in it. Those I don't own I can lean on -- and they know it." A grim smile touched his lips. "I don't usually go about talking this way because it's not good politics -- people don't like hearing that kind of truth. But it is the truth and you know it."
He squared his shoulders. "Now, do you think anyone is going to take your word against mine? Especially when I bring your record out. The word of a drug-pusher and a drug-addict against mine? Now, say your piece and be damned to you, Grant."
I looked at him thoughtfully. He evidently believed I had uncovered something and was openly challenging me to reveal it, depending upon Grant's police record to discredit me. It was a hell of a good manoeuvre if I did know something, which I didn't -- and if I were Grant.
I said, "You keep calling me Grant. I wonder why."
The planes of his iron face altered fractionally. "What do you mean by that?" he said harshly.
"You ought to know," I said. "You identified the bodies." I smiled grimly. "What if I'm Frank Trinavant?"
He didn't move but his face went a dirty grey. Then he swayed a little and tried to speak, and an indescribable choking sound burst from his lips. Before anyone could catch him he crashed to the ground like one of his own felled trees.
Howard rushed forward and stooped over him and I looked over his shoulder. The old man was still alive and breathing stertorously. Mac pulled at my sleeve and drew me away. "Heart-attack," he said. "I've seen it before. That's why he never moved from home much."
In the moment of truth my sword had been sharp enough -- perhaps too sharp. But was it the moment of truth? I still didn't know. I still didn't know if I were Grant or Frank Trinavant. I was still a lost soul groping blindly in the past.
Part IX
Chapter 1
It was touch and go.
Howard and I had a yelling match over Matterson's prostrate body. Howard did most of the yelling -- I was trying to cool him off. The chauffeur came across from the Bentley at a dead run, and Mac pulled me away. He jerked his thumb at Howard. "He'll be too busy with his father to attend to you -- but Jimmy Waystrand won't, if he comes up here. Howard will sick his boys on to you like dogs on to a rabbit. We'd better get out of here."
I hesitated. The old man looked bad and I wanted to stay to see that he was all right; but I saw the force of Mac's argument -- this was no place to linger any more. "Come on," I said. "Let's move."
dairy Summerskill met us and said, "What happened -- did you hit the old guy?"
"For God's sake!" said Mac disgustedly. "He had a heart-attack. Get into the jeep."
"What about the rig?" asked Clarry.
"We leave it," I said. "We've done all we can here." I stared across the hillside at the small group below the dam. "Maybe we've done too much."
I drove the jeep down the hill prepared for trouble, but nothing happened as we passed the power-house and when we were on the road out I relaxed. Mac said speculatively, "It knocked the old bastard for six, didn't it? I wonder why?"
"I'm beginning to wonder about Bull Matterson," I s aid. "He doesn't seem too bad to me."
"After what he said to you?" Mac was outraged.
"Oh, sure; he's tough, and he's not too particular about his methods as long as they work -- but I think he's essentially an honest man. If he had deliberately confused the identification in the auto crash he'd have known who I was. It wouldn't have come as such a surprise as to give him a heart-attack. He's just had a hell of a shock, Mac."
"That's true." He shook his head. "I don't get it."
"Neither do I," said Clarry. "Will someone tell me what's going on?"
I said, "You can do something for me, Clarry. Take a trip to the licensing office and check if Bull Matterson registered a new Buick round about the middle of September, 1956. I heard he did."
"So what?" said Mac.
"So what happened to the old one? Matthew Waystrand told me it was only three months old. You are in the used auto business, Clarry. Is it possible to find out what happened to that car?"
His voice rose. "After twelve years? I should say it was impossible." He scratched his head. "But I'll try."
He pulled up at Mac's cabin and Clarry went into Fort Farrell in his own car. Mac and I told Clare what had happened and she became gloomy. "I used to call him Uncle Bull," she said. Her head came up. "He wasn't a bad man, you know. It was only when that man Dormer came into the business that the Matterson Corporation became really tight-fisted."
Mac was sceptical. "Donner isn't the man at the top; he's only a paid hand. It's Bull Matterson who is reaping the profits from the finagling that was done with the Trinavant Trust."
She smiled wanly. "I don't think he considered it to be cheating. I think Bull just thought of it as a smart business deal -- nothing dishonest."
"But goddam immoral," observed Mac.
"I don't think considerations like that ever enter his head," she said. "He's just become a machine for making money. Is he really ill, Bob?"
"He didn't look too bright when I saw him last," I said. "Mac, what do we do now?"
"What about -- the Trinavant business or the dam?" He shrugged. "I don't think it's up to you this time. Bob. The ball's in Howard's court and he might come after you."
"We must do something about the dam. Perhaps I can talk to Donner."
"You'd never get in to see him -- Howard will prime him with a suitable story. All you can do is to sit tight and wait for the breaks -- or you can leave town."
I said, "I wish to God I'd never heard of Fort Farrell." I looked up. "Sorry, Clare."
"Don't be a fool," said Mac. "Are you turning soft just because an old man has a heart-attack? Hell, I didn't think he had a heart in the first place. Keep fighting, Bob. Try to give them another slug while they're off balance."
I said slowly, "I could get out of town. I could go to Fort St. John and try to stir up some interest there. Someone, somewhere, might be intrigued at the idea of a dam collapsing."
"Might as well go there as anywhere else," said Mac. "Because on« thing is certain -- the Mattersons are mad as hornets right now, and no one in Fort Farrell is going to lift a finger to help you with Howard breathing down his neck. Old Bull was right -- the Mattersons own this country and everyone knows it. Nobody will listen to you now, Bob. As for going into Fort St. John, you'll have to go through Fort Farrell to do it. My advice to you is to wait until after dark."
I stared at him. "Are you crazy? I'm no fugitive."
His face was serious. "I've been thinking abo
ut that. Now that Bull is out of the way there'll be no one to hold Howard down. Donner can't do it, that's for certain. And Jimmy Waystrand and some of Howard's goons could make an awful mess of you. Remember what happened a couple of years ago to Charley Burns, Clare? A broken leg, a broken arm, four busted ribs and his face kicked in. Those boys play rough -- and I'll bet they're looking for you now, so don't go into Fort Farrell just yet."
Clare stood up. "There's nothing to stop me going into Fort Farrell."
Mac cocked an eye at her. "For what?"
"To see Gibbons," she said. "It's about time the police were brought into this."
He shrugged. "What can Gibbons do? One sergeant of the RCMP can't do a hell of a lot -- not in this set-up."
"I don't care," she said. "I'm going to see him." She marched from the cabin and I heard her car start up. I said to Mac sardonically, "What was that you were saying a little earlier about giving them another slug while they're off balance? "
"Don't be nippy," said Mac. "I spoke a little too fast, that's all. I just hadn't got everything digested."
"Who was this guy, Burns?"
"Someone who got on the wrong side of Howard. He was beaten up -- everyone knows why, but no one could pin anything on Howard. Burns left town and never came back. I'd forgotten about him -- and he hadn't got in Howard's hair half as much as you have. I've never seen him so mad as I did this morning." He got up and looked into the stove. "I want some tea. I'm just going out to the woodpile."
He walked out and I just sat there thinking about what to do next. The trouble was that I had still got no further on the Trinavant mystery, and the man who could tell me about it was probably in hospital at that moment. I felt inclined to go into Fort Farrell, walk into the Matterson Building and bust Howard one in the snoot, which might not solve anything but it would do me a lot of good.
The door slammed open and I knew I wouldn't have to go into Fort Farrell. Howard stood on the threshold with a rifle in his hands, and the round hole in the muzzle looked as big as the bottomless pit. "Now, you sonofabitch," he said, breathing hard. "What's this about Frank Trinavant?"