There was a complex pattern to the struts. That morning, Neidelman's crew had been hard at work replacing the missing members of Macallan's original bracing with additional titanium members, following St. John's specifications. Other struts had been added, based on the results of a computer model run on the
As he stared into the brilliant depths, still struggling with the reality of Claire's letter, Hatch noticed movement: it was Neidelman, ascending in the mechanical lift. Bonterre stood beside him, hugging herself as if chilled. The sodium-vapor lights of the Pit turned the Captains sandy hair to gold.
Hatch wondered why the Captain wanted to meet him there.
The Captain swung up to the staging platform, then climbed the ladder into Orthanc, his muddy boots marking the metal floor. He faced Hatch wordlessly. Bonterre stepped up onto the deck, then entered the chamber behind the Captain. Hatch glanced at her, then tensed suddenly, alarmed by the expression on her face. Both were strangely silent.
Neidelman turned to Magnusen. 'Sandra, may we have some privacy for a moment?'
The engineer stood up, walked out onto the observation deck, and shut the door behind her. Neidelman drew a deep breath, his tired gray eyes on Hatch.
'You'd better steady yourself,' he said quietly.
Bonterre said nothing, looking at Hatch.
'Malin, we found your brother.'
Hatch felt a sudden sense of dislocation, almost as if he was pulling away from the world around him, into a remote and shrouded distance.
'Where?' he managed.
'In a deep cavity, below the vaulted tunnel. Under the grate.'
'You're sure?' Hatch whispered. 'No chance of mistake?'
'It is the skeleton of a child,' Bonterre said. 'Twelve years old, perhaps thirteen, blue dungaree shorts, baseball cap—'
'Yes,' Hatch whispered, sitting down suddenly as a wave of dizziness passed over him, leaving his knees weak and his head light. 'Yes.'
The tower was silent for the space of a minute.
'I need to see for myself,' Hatch said at last.
'We know you do,' Bonterre said, gently helping him to his feet. 'Come.'
'There's a tight drop down a vertical passage,' said Neidelman. 'The final cavity's not fully braced. There's a certain danger.'
Hatch waved his hand.
Shrugging into a slicker, stepping onto the small electric lift, descending the ladder array—the next minutes passed in a gray blur. His limbs ached, and as he gripped the lift railing his own hands looked gray and lifeless in the stark light of the Pit. Neidelman and Bonterre crowded in at either side, while members of the bracing crews looked on from a distance as they went past.
Reaching the hundred-foot level, Neidelman stopped the lift. Stepping off the metal plate, they crossed a walkway to the mouth of the tunnel. Hatch hesitated.
'It's the only way,' said Neidelman.
Hatch stepped into the tunnel, past a large air-filtration unit. Within, the ceiling was now braced by a series of metal plates, held up by a row of titanium screw jacks. A few more nightmare steps and Hatch found himself back in the octagonal stone chamber where Wopner had died. The great rock lay against the wall, seemingly undisturbed, a chilling memorial to the programmer and the engine of death that destroyed him. A twin set of jacks still braced the rock at the place where the body had been removed. A large stain coated the inside of the rock and the wall, rust-colored in the bright lights. Hatch looked away.
'It's what you wanted, isn't it?' Neidelman said in a curious tone.
With a tremendous effort, Hatch willed his feet forward, past the stone, past the rust-colored stain, to the well in the center of the room. The iron grating had been removed and a rope ladder led down into darkness.
'Our remote mapping teams only started working the secondary tunnels yesterday,' Neidelman said. 'When they returned to this vault, they examined the grating and calculated the shaft beneath it intersected the shore tunnel. The one you discovered as a boy. So they sent someone down to investigate. He broke through what seems to have once been some kind of watertight seal.' He stepped forward. 'I'll go first.'
The Captain disappeared down the ladder. Hatch waited, his mind empty of everything but the chill breath from the well before him. Silently, Bonterre took his hand in hers.
A few minutes later, Neidelman called up. Hatch stepped forward, bent down, and gripped the rails of the narrow ladder.
The well was only four feet in diameter. Hatch climbed down, following the smooth-walled shaft as it curved around a large rock. He stepped off the bottom rung, sank his foot into foul-smelling ooze, and looked around, almost drowning in dread.
He was in a small chamber, cut into the hard glacial till. It had the look of a cramped dungeon, massive rock walls on all sides. But then he noticed that one of the walls did not reach the floor. In fact, what he thought was a wall was a massive piece of dressed stone, hewn square.
Neidelman angled his light beneath the stone. There was a dim flash of white.