There was a cheap-looking velour jogging suit on the table, the garish kind of pink somebody like Velma Hardesty would go for. There wasn't any underwear with it. Then she heard someone move, and turned her head to see a young man behind her.

'Please take that look off your face, Olivia Villareal. I am not an adulterer or a rapist.' He finished wiping his hands on a large napkin, and tossed it aside. 'The clothes are what I could find; I regret that they are no better. Bennet ruined your own in his frenzy. This is a disgrace, and beneath my dignity that any of this should have happened.'

She hurriedly pulled on the jumpsuit. It wasn't much of a fit, but it covered most of her body, and the zipper closed all the way. 'Your dignity? What are you talking about? How long have I been-'

His shoulders slumped for a moment. 'Since yesterday afternoon. Bennet took you when you approached Oughtred's house. He drugged you with opium. I brought you this; it is chloramphenicol.'

She thought hard; nothing was clear in her mind. But then she realized what he meant. 'Oh, God! There's never been anyone but Carlos.'

'Faithful as Penelope. I thought as much. I give you the chloramphenicol, for your sake, for your husband's and for your children. I would apologize on behalf of Bennet, if an apology could mean anything now. He is taking it, much good may it do him.'

He gestured to the napkin on the cave floor.

'The wound to your arm, which you must have suffered in being lifted up to this place, is properly dressed now. You look to be fit enough now for the descent, as soon as the lingering effects of the opium have worn off. I have brought more food and water, as well. Fare well, and God be with you. I cannot stay, unfortunately.'

She tried to speak. She couldn't find the words.

He was gone. The line whipped around a little as he went up it to the clifftop, and then there was silence.

Damn. Go up after him? No, she was weak and dizzy, no idea how much blood she'd lost, and with the injured arm, in no shape for that kind of climbing. It would have to be down, like that miserable rat had said, and a rappel that far was nothing to try in the dark. Eat. Rest.

When Olivia woke again, it was already late afternoon. The cave mouth was in shadow. So much for looking for something shiny to try signaling with.

****

By the end of the day, the count's hounds had followed the unknown scent as far as they could, but lost it in the busy sidewalks downtown. The organized teams had done a thorough line search through the area around Olivia's pickup, then done it again crosswise. Nothing. The Boy Scouts were working outward up the ridges. The two perky old ladies at the map in police headquarters kept marking off backyards and sheds that had been checked by the householders, as the phone calls came in.

Juergen Neubert stood back, thinking. The truck's placement had looked to him like deliberate concealment. Suppose it had been dumped there, to delay the alarm and divert attention from the real scene? Where else should they look? Even with all the help they had, searching the whole town, let alone the surrounding territory, would take far too long for someone who might be hurt and lying out in the open. What did they have for clues, though? Well, the stranger Rothrock had appeared at Oughtred's house, almost at the far end of Murphy's Run, immediately before the destruction happened in the Villareal house. That might mean something. He'd send search parties out that way in the morning, the dogs first.

****

Olivia sized up the situation. If that crazy bastard Bennet came back and she was still here, there wasn't much chance of getting away alive. One thing was for sure, she was in no shape to put up much of a fight this time around. Got to go. No sense waiting any longer.

All right, what was there for gear? The second guy had left a harness that fit after some adjustments. By some miracle it was a full-body harness. That would make rappelling a whole lot more manageable, with the injured arm. Not much else that would be of any use. No pitons or tools. Damn. That nutcase Bennet had even chopped her shoelaces to bits. She tore a few strips of cloth off her shredded shirt and twisted them so she could lace up her sneakers. Then she ate and drank as much as she could, and filled up the wooden canteen that lay beside the table.

The next shock was seeing the line hanging down past the cave entrance-it was her best blue rope, one she never rented out. How had they gotten hold of that? She looked out carefully-it reached the ground, all right, but instead of being passed freely through a ring up above and doubled, it was just one line hung down from the top. Single line technique. Not a method she liked.

Nothing to do but hook up and start the descent, though. The harness was just a harness, the jerk hadn't left any kind of ascenders, if he even knew what they were. If she hadn't been injured and doped-up, she could have managed that much of a climb anyway.

Nothing about this was any fun. It was a long way down, and with the curvature of the cliff, she was a good way out before she was halfway to the ground.

All of a sudden the feel of the rope screamed for attention. It hadn't just been carelessly abused by ignorant beginners, it had been torn up, practically wrecked. It had been dragged through mud and not cleaned, it had been scraped over sharp rock edges . . . a terrible certainty seized her. She reached down and felt it. Right below her knee it was torn nearly through. For a moment she was paralyzed with fear. She didn't dare go any further down and put her weight on it. Throw a knot in it and re-rig the harness? How, with no handholds or footholds to unload the line, and no spare gear? She hauled up a hundred feet or so and looked at it; it wasn't in much better condition; there were scrapes and broken strands everywhere.

What the hell am I going to do? She was getting dizzy again-whether that was the lingering dope or the blood loss, there was no way to tell. Well, one of the first things that was drilled into every new climber was: if you're in trouble and you've got a little time, use some of it to think. Olivia looked around.

From up there she had a pretty good view all around the coal mine's pithead, but there wasn't anybody outside. Probably wouldn't be until the shift change, and then no telling whether anybody would look up, or if they did, realize a climber just hanging out in space needed help. Some loud piece of machinery was going; she tried shouting anyway, on the chance it might do some good.

Well, there was one thing. Not too far off to the left was one of those cramped little down-time mine tunnels the Ring cut through. If she could get herself swinging the right way, and get about ten feet higher up the rope, it didn't look too far to reach. That was going to be no fun. I can manage ten feet. Sure I can.

Getting the swinging right was the hardest part, but finally she got a hand on the edge of the tunnel and held off the dizziness long enough to work her way around the corner and inside. By then she needed to sit down. She started letting out a little slack so she could get further inside and sit. After that, pull up the rest of the rope and check it all, and see if there was any way to rig it to reach the bottom safely. Once her head stopped spinning.

Somehow she fumbled it. The rope got away and slithered out of the tunnel, hanging straight down from above the cave, and a long way out of reach. Oh, God.

For the first five minutes she slumped against the rough interior wall and caught her breath. Then she figured she'd better find out whether there was anything there she could use. It didn't take long. The place turned out to be an irregular drift where they'd been digging into an ore seam for thirty feet or so, before the mine it belonged to flew away up-time. Some places were wider than others, but there wasn't anywhere high enough to stand up straight. Near the outside where there was some daylight, there was a little soot on the wall and ceiling, where their candles or lanterns must have rested, but that was all. Whoever ran that mine must have been the kind of neat freak who picked everything up at the end of the day; there wasn't so much as a candle stub lying around. About the only good thing was that it was shelter from the wind.

She drank a little water and closed her eyes for what seemed like a minute-twilight had crept up once more. For sure she'd been missed by now, but in this light it would be pretty hard to see anything in here even if they looked. Maybe in the morning . . . For now, she moved a little further in. Even in July the nights could get cool.

July 12, the third day

Deborah drew a pot of water to boil for porridge. There was no more labor to it than turning a handle right there in her kitchen. If she and Timothy had to work for the rest of their lives to pay off the mortgage on this house

Вы читаете Grantville Gazette 37
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