The Ravagers mh-8
Page 16
Naomi made an impatient sound. "Just what's that for, anyway?" she demanded.
Muir looked surprised at the question. "Why, we have to tie them up, girl. We have to give ourselves time. I sent the preliminary signal this morning right after you called, but our friends will not come in all the way until they receive confirmation. They do not like being close to land. We must give ourselves time to make the final transmission and then reach the rendezvous point off shore, without interference."
Naomi was frowning. "You mean," she said, "you mean you're not going to kill them?"
There was a little silence. Muir looked at her, and started to speak, and changed his mind. He seemed actually embarrassed. He looped the rope carefully over his arm, and gestured toward the mine opening, and cleared his throat.
"You go ahead with the lantern," he said. He cleared his throat again, and went on, "Killing is not my business, girl. I just transmit signals and run a boat. For some years I have run one here. Soon I will be running one somewhere else, wherever they send me. I try to run it without unnecessary bloodshed. Killing is not necessary here, so we will not kill."
"But it is necessary!" Naomi said hotly. "You know perfectly well, if they get loose too soon, they can spoil everything. We don't have to take that risk! Besides… besides, they know too much about me. I'll never be able to come back to this continent if they're left alive to talk."
Muir was studying her thoughtfully. "Why," he said, "why, you want to kill, don't you? Do you know what Hans Ruyter said about you over the telephone? He said you were vicious, ambitious, and unreliable. Just what did happen to Hans, girl? How did he come to die? There will be questions asked about that, you may be sure." His voice did not change as he continued: "Be careful with that weapon. I am a very good shot, and one can deliver the documents as well as two."
Naomi's pretty baby face showed a moment of ugly, adult fury, quickly controlled. She shrugged her small shoulders and turned away. Muir gestured to me to follow. I guess it was a compliment: it showed he considered me the more dangerous of his two prisoners. He didn't want me too close.
"No tricks, Mr. Clevenger," he said. "As you have heard, no one will be hurt if you both behave."
"Not hurt!" cried Jenny. "Tied up way underground? Why, we'll die there before anybody finds us."
Muir said, "I doubt that, Mrs. Drilling. Your tall friend looks like a resourceful man. I'm sure that in time he'll manage to get you both free. Now follow him, if you please."
She hung back. "But you can't-"
"Go on!" he snapped, losing patience, and she was silent. I heard her enter the tunnel behind me.
It wasn't a nice place. I mean, I have no spelunking ambitions whatever. I don't like being underground, even in the best-run tourist caverns, and this was just an old, neglected, downward-sloping hole in the side of the hill. It was plenty wide enough, but a bump on the head quickly taught me it had not been cut for men six feet and above. There were rusty rails underfoot, laid on rotting wooden ties. From time to time we passed a corroded pulley or a twisted hunk of cable or a snarl of broken wire.
I didn't like it, but in a way it was a relief to know that the job was practically done. All we had to do now was let ourselves be tied up like docile children, and hope that Muir's slow sanity would continue to control Naomi's homicidal impulses. After the two of them had departed to take the papers on the final stage of the long journey that had started on the other side of the continent, we could worry about getting free. As Muir had suggested, I had some resources, including a trick belt buckle constructed specifically for taking care of ropes with which I might be tied.
The tunnel got lower, in one place so low that Naomi, ahead, had to crouch well down to pass under the downhanging rock. Her black pants were dusty now, I noticed, and her shirt tail was out. Coming to the same place, I had to get down to all fours to make it through. On the other side, the tunnel widened and there was plenty of headroom again.
Behind me, I heard Jenny complaining bitterly about her impractical, hampering clothes and the damage she couldn't keep them from sustaining in these rough and dusty surroundings. I had time to think that her griping had a contrived sound, as if she was talking to make reassuring noises, on the theory that any lady whose mind was on her nylons couldn't possibly be considered dangerous…
As the thought hit me, I turned, but I was too late. The fool woman had already gone into action. Maybe she really thought she was taking a last long chance for her life. Muir must have got careless, listening to her whining complaints. When he hunched down to make it under the low place, his gun was out ahead of him, and she was ready. There was a quick scuffle and a cry:
"I've got his gun, Dave! Here, you know how to use it!"
Then the Luger came sliding down the tunnel toward me. I'd as soon have been presented with a live rattlesnake. I didn't want to shoot anybody. Jenny was on top of Muir, hammering at him with her fists in a vigorous and unladylike manner-I remembered her telling me about all the trucks and tractors she'd driven as a girl. I wondered where the hell all the nice little movie heroines had got to, the ones that cower against the wall, whimpering, while the men fight it out. In this spot, wanting nothing but peace and quiet and some ropes around my wrists and ankles, I had to have a redheaded Irish wildcat on my side.
But there was no time for heavy thinking. I came out of my temporary daze. The gun was there and I snatched it up and threw myself aside, figuring there was bound to be acid in the air in a moment. I rolled over once and hit the side of the tunnel and came up with the gun ready, and saw that I was more or less right.
Naomi had set the lantern down. Ignoring me, she was starting to draw a bead with her vitriol gun on the violent, thrashing struggle taking place on the old mine tracks above her. Apparently she didn't care which combatant she sprayed, just so she got a piece of the action.
It couldn't be permitted, of course. I mean, to put it bluntly, Jenny was expendable, but Muir wasn't. He had to, by God, run a boat, and he was going to need good eyesight to do it. I wasn't about to have him doused with acid, no matter what happened to anybody else. He'd given me the cue. He'd indicated that one could deliver the papers as well as two-if that one was Gaston Muir.
I tried to do it the easy way, however. I honestly tried. I aimed the Luger to disarm, not to kill. I just kind of forgot what it was Naomi was holding. She'd swung her weapon high and now she was bringing it down, cowboy-fashion. They all think they have to chop holes in the air to aim a gun, forgetting that this up-and-down business only made sense back in the old cap-and-ball days when you had a fired percussion cap to toss clear, between shots, so it wouldn't jam the action.
As once before on this job, I had a snap shot to make with a strange pistol, but Muir's gun was a nicely balanced piece that shot where it was pointed, and I made it. The little high-velocity 7.65 mm. bullet intercepted the kid's swinging hand in midair, and the acid-gun blew up six inches in front of her face. I mean, when a glass container full of liquid is hit by a bullet traveling that fast, things don't just shatter, they explode.
There was a moment of complete silence, broken only by a kind of trickling sound as dirt dribbled from the tunnel roof here and there, dislodged by the concussion of the Luger. Jenny stopped trying to tear Muir to pieces and he stopped trying to fight her off. Everybody seemed to be waiting for something. Then Naomi screamed.
XXII
IT WAS a fairly horrible sound in that underground tunnel; it seemed to fill the place with madly chattering and whimpering echoes. Naomi screamed again, and turned toward me blindly. One sleeve and shoulder of her dark cotton shirt was splashed with lighter stains where the acid was already taking out the color. She had both hands to her face. She didn't seem to know that one was bleeding, drilled through by the same bullet that had destroyed her weapon. She stumbled over the lantern and fell, and the light went out.
She was screaming steadily now, but that wasn't the sound that interested me. I mean, in t
he absence of water to wash the stuff off with, or morphine to kill the pain, there was really nothing to be done for her. She was just another carrier pigeon out of the running-maybe I should say flying-and l concentrated on the little undercurrent of noise that told me that Muir, like a sensible man who'd lost his gun, was getting the hell out of there. I prayed that nothing would get in his way, and that he'd be real careful and not break a leg, or something, getting down the slope to the Volkswagen, and that the car would start for him.
Naomi had got turned around somehow and was moving away, stumbling, falling, and screaming in a mechanical, keening way like a badly wounded animal. I heard her begin to crawl. She seemed to be heading downhill, farther underground. After a while I could no longer hear the scuffling sounds of her progress. After a while, the screaming, too, stopped. The silence that followed lasted several minutes. I was in no hurry to break it by moving. I wanted Muir to have all the time he needed to get away.
"Dave."
I had almost forgotten about Battling Jenny, my unwelcome savior. "Right here, Irish," I said.
"Do you… do you think she's dead?"
"That stuff doesn't kill," I said. "You just wish it would. Hold everything while I make a light."
I struck a match and found the overturned lantern, unbroken. Some kerosene had leaked out, but there was still plenty in the cistern. When I got it lit again, the yellow light seemed very bright compared with the utter darkness that had preceded it. There were dark splashes of liquid, and shards of broken glass, on the floor of the tunnel. Avoiding these, I made my way up to Jenny, who was sitting where the roof came down low. Her heroic battle for our lives and liberties had left her rather picturesquely disheveled, but at the moment her damage seemed relatively insignificant.
"Come on," I said, getting down to negotiate the low bridge.
"But… but you can't just leave her down here!" Jenny's voice was shocked.
I drew a long breath. It wasn't her fault, I told myself. She'd done what she thought best. Maybe I should have taken her into my confidence earlier, orders or no orders.
I said, "For reasons I'm not at liberty to divulge, Irish, I am more interested in our boy Muir right now. I hope he knows how to drive a Volks. If not, I suppose I'll have to show him."
The hell of it was, he didn't. When we emerged from the tunnel, the car was still down there and he was in it trying to figure out where the Black Forest elves had hidden reverse gear. Then he looked up and saw us and slammed the lever into low, ran the car up the steep slope a little way, and let gravity roll it back while he spun the steering wheel frantically. Another uphill charge and rollback, and he had the bug turned around far enough that he could make a jolting circle back into the forest road. I took out the Luger, aimed carefully well clear of him, and fired twice for effect. I wouldn't have wanted him to get the idea I wasn't real mad at him for stealing my car.
When I looked around, after setting the safety again and putting the gun away, Jenny was watching me with a curious, speculative expression on her dirty face.
"You… you wanted him to get away," she said uncertainly. "Didn't you?"
I regarded her for a moment. She was really pretty spectacular. "Turn around," I said.
She looked a little surprised, but turned. I went through the zipper-and-button routine for the third or fourth time-I guess by actual count the third-and she stripped off the trailing, grimy remnants of her blouse. She bent over to rip away some rags and loops of lingerie stuff hanging down below her dress while I fastened her up again. The linen jumper wasn't clean and it was kind of bare of top, but at least it was reasonably intact.
Straightening up, she said as if there had been no pause, "You did. And you let him capture you on purpose, didn't you? I wondered, when I woke up and saw you sitting there pretending not to hear him behind you… Who are you really, Dave? What are you trying to do?"
I said, "If you'd peel that nylon fuzz off your legs, you'd look almost respectable."
She said, "If it hadn't been for that government man you killed in Montreal, I'd still think you were one of them." She stopped. Her face turned a little pale under the dust and freckles. She said, "That's it, isn't it? You are one of them. I was right about you all along. I just didn't understand what you wanted. I thought you were all just setting an elaborate trap for Hans. But that's it! My God! You'd go that far to make it look… you wanted those papers to go out of the country. That's been your job all along. To get them out without anybody's knowing that… that they were supposed to go out. Oh, my God!"
I wasn't supposed to admit anything, but she sounded distressed and the stuff was on its way at last and I couldn't help saying, "What's the matter?"
She looked at me without speaking for a second or two. Then she said, "There's nothing in that envelope."
I stared at her. I remembered a warning she'd given me, and later more or less retracted. I wanted to grab her and shake her, but I managed to keep my hands to myself.
I heard myself say, "Come again, Irish?"
"There's nothing in it, I tell you! Nothing of any importance to anyone."
"But I saw-"
"You saw a top sheet with a big red stamp. That's all you saw. If you'd looked underneath, you'd have found nothing but some dull correspondence of my husband's. I warned you twice, Dave. Way back there in Montreal I told you I was a perfectly ordinary person. Not clever. Not sinister. Not the kind of person who'd betray her country. But you insisted on believing I was subtle and wicked. The only one I've ever betrayed, if you want to use the word, is Howard; and I wouldn't have done that if he'd just… well, never mind that!"
I said, "But you did take his briefcase."
"Certainly I took his damn briefcase! The way he waved it under my nose, how could I help taking it?" She drew a long breath. "The way they all acted, you'd think treason was like syphilis and you caught it in bed. Just because because I'd got myself a bit involved with a man who turned out to be a spy, did that mean I'd necessarily taken leave of my senses? When I learned what Hans was and what he really wanted, I called the F.B.I. Of course I called anonymously. I didn't want it all over the Project. I just wanted to get rid of him. He was getting that way, too. I mean, he seemed to think that just because I was willing to sleep with him, I'd steal for him-as if the two things had anything to do with each other!"
Well, it was a new slant on the situation. I said, "So it was you who called time on Ruyter. I guess I was told something about that."
"What else could I do? I suppose I should have rent my garments and poured ashes on my head and gone in to the security people to make confession, or something, but it didn't seem necessary." She'd sat down to roll wrecked stockings to the ankles; she didn't look at me. "But my God, the way they watched me after Hans was gone! And then I got his phone call. It was too ridiculous even to get angry at. As if I'd rifle my husband's desk and go chasing off into Canada for him-I mean, the man had delusions of grandeur!"
I said, "But on the record, that's just about what you did do, Irish."
She grimaced. "Damn them, they drove rue to it! They made me so mad! They couldn't ask me! Do you understand? They never came up and said, please, Mrs. Drilling, will you cooperate? Will you help us set a trap for this man-that's all I thought they were after. But no, I'd breathed some subversive air, I was contaminated, I couldn't be trusted. So they tried to be clever. And Howard, my own husband, helped them. Can you imagine how that made me feel? There he was with his damn briefcase, telling me how important it was, practically shoving it into my hands. I realized that he really expected me to steal it. They all did. They were counting on it." She looked up at last. "So I stole it, Dave. I stole it, and took it out to the garage, and took out everything marked secret or confidential, and shoved it all down into a big bag of garden fertilizer, except the top sheet. I knew Howard would never look there. He can't stand the smell of it. It's mostly dry sheep manure."
"And then you made up an envelope and stuffed i
t with the single cover sheet clipped to some correspondence you'd found in the briefcase, and mailed it to yourself here, like Hans had told you on the phone."
She said, "Of course. If they were going to play games, I'd play games. I'd lead them around by their long snooping noses, and then at the right moment I'd laugh at them and tell them where their priceless phony documents really were-they were phony, weren't they? I mean, they surely wouldn't have let me near any real ones. And then I'd go off with Penny and find a place to live where nobody's ever heard the word security. Only… only, when I got to Hans, up in Canada, it turned out it wasn't a game after all. I was stuck with it. All I could do was stall and hope something would happen before my little trick came to light." She drew a long, shaky breath. "I'm sorry, Dave. I guess it was an irresponsible, childish thing to do, but I just got so mad I had to do something. I mean, using my own husband to entrap me, for God's sake! I hope I haven't ruined everything for you."
I thought of three dead men and a dead girl, not to mention another girl who wasn't quite dead-at least I didn't think she was. Then I thought about a continent three thousand miles wide and jet planes flying at so and so many miles per hour, and telephones, and radios, and all the other marvels of modern science. And suppose we got the right stuff out here-by rocket, perhaps-how would we go about getting it into the right hands now? It was too late for a new deal. We'd just have to play the cards we had, or let them play themselves.
I said, "Let's just see how the stick floats, as the old mountain men used to say. Why don't you see if you can find a brook to wash your face in, while I pay a visit to a sick friend?"
Jenny looked startled. "Oh! I'd almost forgotten-" She glanced at the black mouth of the mine with distaste. "Is there really anything we can do for her now? Wouldn't it be better just to get help here fast?"