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Still Life With Crows

Page 35

by Douglas Preston


  She could hardly believe it, but shed escaped.Shed outrun him!

  She kept going, pushing herself as hard as she dared. Now she entered a large cavern, its floor covered in a blizzard of shattered and broken stalactites. She scrambled over and under this cyclopean masonry, following whenever possible the wear marks indicating a trail. And there it continued, almost vertically, at the far end of the cavern.

  She gripped the lantern handle in her teeth and began to climb. The foot- and handholds were slippery and worn. But fear spurred her on, helped her forget the pain in her wrists and ankles. The farther she went, the farther she would get from him. And the trail had to lead somewhere, she was bound to find a way out sooner or later. At last, with a gasp of relief, she reached the top, hoisted herself up

  And there he was. Waiting for her. His monstrous body covered with flecks of blood and flesh, the nightmarish impossible face fixed in a broken smile.

  She screamed and the pallid features broke out into a high-pitched, squeal-like laugh. A laugh of childlike delight.

  Corrie tried to wriggle past, but a great hand swept down and clubbed her to the ground. She fell on her back, stunned. His laughter echoed hysterically. The dark-lantern went rolling across the floor, candle guttering. He stood above her, clapping his hands and laughing, face distorted with merriment.

  Get away from me! she screamed, pedaling herself backwards.

  He reached down, grabbed her shoulders, jerked her to her feet. The breath steamed from his rotten mouth like an abattoir. Corrie screamed and he squealed again. She twisted, trying to break out of his grip, but he held her with steel arms, laughing, squeezing.

  Dont hurt me! she cried. Youre hurting me!

  Hooo! he said, his strange high voice sending out a spray of fetid-smelling spittle. He suddenly dropped her, scurried away, disappeared.

  She tried to get up, picked up the lantern, looking around wildly. She was surrounded by a forest of stalactites. Where was he? Why had he run away? She started down the trailand suddenly with a huge bellow he leapt from behind a stalagmite and swung at her, knocking her down, his laughter filling the cave. And then he was gone again.

  She rose to her knees, panting hard, feeling stupid with terror and incomprehension, waiting for the pain to clear from her head. All was quiet and dark. The light had gone out.

  Heee! came the voice from the darkness, and the sound of clapping.

  She crouched in the black, cringing, desperate, afraid to move. A scratching sound, the flare of a match, and the lantern was relit. And there the monster was, standing over her, leering, drooling, exposing the stumps of his rotten teeth, the lantern casting a dull glow. He cackled, ducked behind a pillar.

  And thats when Corrie finally understood.He was playing hide-and-seek.

  She swallowed, trembling, tried to find her voice. You want to play with me?

  He paused, then squealed a laugh, his wispy beard waggling, his thick lips wet and red, the two-inch nails flashing as his hands alternately opened and clenched. Pway! he cried, advancing toward her.

  No! she screamed. Wait! Not that way!

  Pway! he roared, spittle flying, as he drew back a massive hand.Pway! Corrie shrank back, waiting for the inevitable.

  And then, suddenly, the thing turned his head. His grotesque eyes swiveled wetly in their orbits, long brown lashes blinking. His hand hovered in the air as he looked off into the darkness.

  He seemed to be listening.

  Then he picked her up, slung her over his shoulder, and once again began moving with fearsome speed. Corrie was only dimly aware of the confusing procession of galleries and chambers. She closed her eyes.

  And then she felt him stop. She opened her eyes to a small hole, a mere black tube at the base of a limestone wall. She felt herself sliding off his shoulder, felt him pushing her feet into the hole.

  Please, dont She tried to grab on to the sides, clutching and scratching, nails tearing against the stone. He placed his hands on her shoulders, gave a brutal thrust, and she slid downward, falling the last few feet and landing hard on the stone floor.

  She sat up, dazed and bruised. He leaned in from above, holding the lantern, and for an instant she had a glimpse of the smooth glassy sides of the pit that surrounded her.

  Hooo! he called down, and puckered his lips grotesquely at her.

  Then his head vanished with the light, and Corrie was left at the bottom of the pit, in utter darkness, alone in the wet, cold silence of the cave.

  Sixty

  Pendergast slipped silently through the dark galleries of stone, moving as quickly as possible, following the faint worn marks of a trail.

  The cave system was enormous and his map showed only a sketchy outline of its true complexity. The map was wrong in many particulars, and there were entire levels of the cave not shown on it at all. The cave system was folded in over itself in exceedingly complex ways, making it possible for someone familiar with its secretsthe killerto move in mere minutes between locations that on the map appeared to be a thousand linear yards apart. Still, despite its drawbacks, the map was a remarkable piece of work, proving what even the U.S. Geological Survey maps didnt show: that Krauss Kaverns was the mere tip of a subterranean iceberg, a vast cave system that honeycombed the depths beneath Medicine Creek and the surrounding countrysideof which one node connected with the Ghost Mounds.

  Ahead, Pendergast could hear the sound of water. Another minute brought him to the spot. Here, a phreatic passage, formed ages before by water under great pressure, cut laterally through the limestone cavern he was following. Along its floor ran a swift-moving underground stream, the lone remaining vestige of the forces that had originally sculpted these strange, deep corridors.

  Pendergast paused at the water, knelt, scooped up a handful, and tasted it.

  It was the same water hed drunk at the Kraus mansionthe water the town tapped into. He tasted again. It was, as hed expected, the very water Lu YusCha Ching, the Book of Tea, considered perfect for brewing green tea: oxygenated, mineral-laden water from a free-flowing underground limestone stream. It was that tea, and the water, that had triggered the revelation that Krauss Kaverns must be more extensive than the small portion open to the public. The trip to Topeka had proven him right, had armed him with the map he now held. But the knowledge had come at a cost. He had not anticipated Corrie acting on her own, and coming so far in her own deductionsalthough, in hindsight, it was all too clear that he should have.

  He rose from the stream, then paused again. Something lay on the far side at the faintest perimeter of his flashlight beam, a canvas knapsack, torn apart roughly at the seams. He crossed the stream and knelt, taking a gold pen from his pocket and using it to pull apart the edges of the cloth. Inside was a road map, a couple of trowels, and several spare D batteries, the kind used in heavy flashlights and metal detectors.

  Pendergast let his light play around the bag. Arrowheads and potsherds were scattered on the ground beside it. An old parfleche was decorated in the same Southern Cheyenne style hed seen in the burial chamber beneath the mound . . .

  . . . And then, a few feet away, his light stopped at a ragged clump of hair, bleached-blonde with black roots.

  Sheila Swegg. Digging in the Mounds, she had accidentally come across the rear entrance to the cave. It was well hidden, but easy enough to access if one knew which rocks to move. She must have been astounded at the burial chamber where the Ghost Warriors were entombed, and shed then gone deeper into the cave, looking for even more treasures.

  She found something else instead. She foundhim . . .

  There was no time for additional examination. Taking one final look at the pathetic remnants, Pendergast turned and followed the small river along the smooth curves of the phreatic passage.

  Within a few hundred yards, the river dropped away into a deep hole, filling the cave with a wash of mist. Here, Pendergast went upward, through narrower tubes and pipes. Now the faint marks made by the long-term passage of
feet were becoming stronger: he was approaching the inhabited region of the cave.

  Pendergast had believed from the beginning that the killer was local. His mistake had been in assuming the killer was acitizen. But no, he was not somebody to be found on Margery Tealanders tax rolls: he livedwith them yet notamong them.

  From this realization, it was a relatively simple matter to determine the identity of the killer. But along with that determination came an understandingor the beginnings of an understandingof just how malformed and amoral a creature they were dealing with. He was a killer of extraordinary dangerousness, whose actions even Pendergast, with his long study of the criminal mind, could not predict.

  He arrived at another narrow corridor. Along the floor, the calcite flow had recrystallized, forming a shimmering, glowing, frozen river. In the center, the soft flow had been worn down several inches by the passage of feet over a great many years.

  At the end of the corridor the tunnel began to branch repeatedly, each branch showing signs of having been traversed many times. Narrow crawlspaces and vertical cracks also showed signs of passage: a delicate crystal crushed here, a smear on an otherwise snowy white dripstone therethe variety of ways a human could betray his movements through a cave were almost infinite. In the labyrinth of passages Pendergast lost his wayonce, twiceeach time managing to guide himself back with the aid of the map. As he rejoined the central trail the second time, his flashlight caught a glimpse of color: there, on a high shelf of dripstone, was a collection of Indian fetishes, left hundreds of years before.

  Added to the fetishes were others of more recent vintage, made of bits of string and bark, gum, and Band-Aids.

  Pendergast paused just a moment to examine them. They were strange, crude, and yet made with loving care.

  Pendergast forced himself to hurry on, trying always to follow the most traveled route. Infrequently he would stop to jot something on the map or simply to fix in his mind the growing three-dimensional layout of the cave system. It was a stupendous maze of stone, with passageways twisting in every imaginable direction: splitting, joining, splitting again. There were shortcuts here, secret passageways, tunnels, stopes, and drifts that would take many years to explore and learn. Many years indeed.

  The fetishes began to grow in number, supplemented by bizarre, complicated designs and images scratched into the rock walls. Ahead, how near or far he did not yet know, was the killers living space. There, he felt sure, was where he would find Corrie. Dead or alive.

  In all previous investigations, Pendergast had taken pains to understand, anticipate, the thoughts and actions of his adversary. In this case, the killers psychology was so far outside the bell curvefor even serial killers had a bell curvethat such anticipation would be impossible. Here, in this cave, he would confront the most profound forensic mystery of his career.

  It was a disagreeable feeling indeed.

  Sixty-One

  Hazen jogged down the broadening slope of the tunnel, trying to catch up to Lefty and the dogs. He could hear Raskovich huffing behind him and, farther back, the thudding footsteps and jangling equipment of the others. And up ahead, the awful bellowing of the dogs. Any pretense to stealth was long since shot: that barking could probably be heard miles away. The cave was a hell of a lot bigger than anyone had imagined. Theyd left the still at least a quarter mile behindit was hard to believe the dogs had dragged Lefty this far.

  A moment later, as if in response to the thought, Lefty came into sight up ahead at last, leashes taut in his glove, speaking angrily. He had finally gotten the animals to heel.

  Hazen slowed up, grateful for the chance to catch his breath, and Raskovich came puffing up beside him. Lefty, hold up for a moment, Hazen said. Let the others catch up.

  It was too late. There was a sudden explosion of hysterical barking from the passage ahead.

  Whats going on? Hazen yelled.

  Theres something here! Lefty shrilled back.

  The dogs were growing frantic now, lunging and howling, once again dragging the protesting Lefty down the tunnel.

  Damn you, Lefty, slow em down! Hazen bellowed as he trotted forward.

  You want to swear at me? Take me back to the surface and swear at me. I dont like it down here. And I dont like these dogs. Sturm! Drang!Heel!

  The dogs were baying and growling horribly, echoes distorting to the sound of hell itself. Lefty gave the chain a brutal jerk and one of the dogs whirled around with a savage snarl. The handler shrank back, almost dropping the leash. Hazen could see Lefty was frightened. The lure of the trail was too strong now: if these dogs caught up with McFelty, they might kill him.

  That would be a disaster.

  He pushed himself harder to catch up, Raskovich at his side. Lefty, he called out, if you dont get those dogs under control, so help me Ill shoot them.

  These dogs are state property

  As Hazen watched, the pale red shapes that were Lefty and the dogs dipped around a bend up ahead, suddenly vanishing from sight. A moment passed, then there was a shout. The frenzied baying of the dogs went up a notch: huge, meaty barks that rose at the end to a high-pitched shriek.

  Sheriff, just ahead! came Leftys breathless voice. Christ, theres something moving!

  Something?What was Lefty talking about? Hazen turned the bend, drawing in the wet air of the cave through his nose and mouth, trying to find his wind. And then he stopped abruptly.

  Lefty and the dogs had disappeared into a virtual forest of limestone pillars. Along the walls, strange curtainlike deposits hung down in heavy folds. Everywhere he looked there were openings to tunnels, cracks, yawning holes. He could hear the frantic barking, echoing back through the strange stony woods, but the sounds were so distorted that he had no idea where they were coming from.

  Lefty! His own voice reverberated around the cavern, taking forever to die away. He leaned against a broken pillar, heaving, wondering where to go next.

  Raskovich pulled up beside him, winded. Hazen could see an incipient panic in his eyes. Whered they go?

  Hazen shook his head. The acoustics were diabolical.

  Once again, the sheriff started forward through the labyrinthine pillars, his feet splashing in shallow water, making for the spot where the echoes seemed loudest. Raskovich stayed close behind. The barking of the dogs was farther away now, as if they had moved down a distant tunnel; and yet the sound had ratcheted up to yet another notch of hysteria.

  And then it changed abruptly. The barking of one of the animals morphed into a sound like the squealing of brakes. The distant screaming mingled with another sound: low, throaty, angry.

  Even in the red wash of the night-vision goggles, Raskovichs face looked ashen. Now the terrible chorus was joined by the unmistakable screaming of a human being. Lefty.

  Mother of God, said Raskovich, darting looks to the left and right.

  He was going to bolt.

  Hey, take it easy, Hazen said quickly. The dogs have probably cornered McFelty. I think theyve left this cavern and gone down some side tunnel. Come on, weve got to find them. Larssen! he bawled out in a louder voice. Cole! Brast! Were over here!

  The distorted screeching and gibbering continued. It was hard for Hazen to think straight. He wasnt worried for the dogs anymore: he was worried for McFelty.

  Raskovich, its okay.

  The man stumbled backward, face slack, clutching his shotgun. Hazen recognized the danger of the situation now: Raskovich was about to lose it, and he had a loaded weapon in his hand.

  The terrible screams became mixed with a guttural choking, punctuated by gasps and coughs.

  Raskovich, its all right, just take it easy, just lay the gun down

  The gun went off with a deafening blast, and a shower of pebbles came down, tinkling and bouncing among the pillars of stone before landing in the shallow water.

  The distant shrieking of the dogs . . . the slack, panicked face of Raskovich . . . Hazen realized that the operation was rapidly spinning out of control. Larss
en! he bawled out. On the double!

  Now Raskovich turned and ran, the gun lying where hed dropped it, still smoking from the shot.

  Raskovich!Hazen took off after him, yelling at the top of his lungs: Hey! Wrong fucking way!

  And as he ran, the terrible threnody of both dog and man went on and on behind himand then, silence: sudden, unnerving silence.

  Sixty-Two

  Pendergast paused, listening. He heard the sounds echoing through the galleries of stone, distorted beyond recognition. He waited, straining to hear, but it was impossible to make out anything beside a whisper of sound, so altered by the acoustical properties of the caverns that it seemed almost like distant surf, or wind among trees.

  He redoubled his pace in what seemed the right direction, dodging over and between enormous toppled stalactites. At the end of the cavern, where the trails divided, he stopped again, listening.

  The sounds continued.

  Now he consulted his map, found his approximate location. He was in the middle of a particularly labyrinthine section of the cave system, riddled with multilevel cracks, passageways, and blind holes. Locating the sound within such a fiendish maze would be difficult. And yet he knew that in caves such as this, sound usually followed the flow of air. Pulling a slim gold lighter from his pocket, Pendergast lit it and held it at arms length, carefully scrutinizing the direction in which the flame bent. Then he pocketed the lighter again and continued on, upwind, toward the sound.

  But now, the sounds had ceased. The cave had returned to dripping silence.

  Pendergast went on, through galleries and tunnels. With the absence of sound, he went back to following the map toward what appeared to be the central part of the cave system. At the end of a particularly narrow gallery he stopped, shining his light upon a far wall. There was one narrow vertical crack here, not on the map, that looked like it might give way onto another cavern on the far side. If so, it would cut off a considerable distance. He went to the crack and listened.

 

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