Jake made a large, solid fist, and looked at it. There was no fat on him, and every muscle in his body was hard, from four months of building trails. "Doesn't seem like I'm gettin' anywhere without fighting him. And you tell me that whatever's happened, it's up to Edgar to straighten it out if he wants to."
"Don't just jump in and fight with him, honey." Camilla leaned very close to Jake. "Honey? You hear me? And that shotgun, leave it alone. I tell you, that doesn't mean anything to Edgar. Just make him mad, if he thinks you're ready to kill him."
"What do you mean, a shotgun doesn't mean anything?"
She leaned back and spoke confidently. "All right then, go ahead, try using it on Edgar and see. Don't blame me if it makes him mad."
Jake didn't say anything. He could imagine himself using a shotgun on someone, but only as a last resort, if his life depended on it.
Camilla moved toward him smiling, and they kissed. But even this woman's lips, even her body, could now distract Jake only briefly.
"You haven't seen anyone besides Edgar in all that time?"
She hesitated. "I've seen a couple of people."
"Who?"
No answer.
"Like the person who shot at him with the shotgun."
A nod.
"A man."
"Yes."
"You mean these other people were here and then got out? Where'd they go?"
"Nobody got out." Then Camilla added: "The man who shot at him is dead."
Try as he might, Jake couldn't get any more details out of her about the supposed shooting.
"All right, all right. So, Edgar sleeps in there, does he? That means at sunset he's gonna come out of that cave where you say he sleeps? Come out through that little crack?"
Camilla nodded.
At sunset Jake was across the creek, over on the other side of the amphitheater, watching the little cave from no more than twenty feet away. It happened after the sun was completely down. One moment there was no one else in sight, and the next, Jake couldn't see how it was done, Tyrrell was standing there in front of him.
"Camilla's been talking about me, I see," said the old man, looking at Jake with no particular surprise or anger.
Jake was too stupefied to answer right away.
The old man nodded slowly. "All right, maybe it's just as well. Let her talk. Now maybe you'll believe her. I hope you're ready to learn your job?"
Jake ignored that. "I want out of here."
"I have no interest in what you want. I asked you a question about your work."
"To hell with your work. I'm telling you what—"
The open-handed slap came at the side of Jake's head so fast that he had no chance to block it or dodge it. It hit him so hard that both of his ears rang, and he staggered away, almost falling.
In a moment he had got his legs under him again and was coming back. He launched a hard swing with his right fist, aiming for the old man's jaw.
—and in the next instant Jake's arm was caught. Camilla was yelling, screaming something in the background. Jake tried to jerk free, but there was no chance. His right arm felt like some heavyweight wrestler had his wrist in both hands, twisting, but he could see plainly enough that it was only little old Tyrrell, gripping him casually with one.
"I'm not really going to hurt you," the old man told Jake patiently, when Jake had given up struggling. "Because I want you to work, and I still have hopes that you'll be bright enough to learn what you need to learn, with only a little pain."
One-handed, Tyrrell twisted the arm a little farther, not very far, and Jake cried out helplessly and went down on his knees.
"Enough?"
"Enough!"
"Are you working for me? Taking orders?"
"I'll take orders!"
Tyrrell let him go. Then the old man turned half away and started walking, then paused, turned, and motioned for Jake to follow him. "Come along, I'll show you what I expect you to do. By this time tomorrow you'd better have something accomplished."
Jake struggled back to his feet, nursing a wrenched but not disabled arm. The old man's strength just wasn't human.
Tyrrell was waiting to see what Jake was going to do next. Jake wasn't going to do anything.
Tyrrell said: "If you want to live here, you're going to have to work. You've had a day to get used to the idea. Now come along."
Jake was aware of Camilla, watching fearfully from a little distance. But he didn't even look at her. He followed the old man.
Chapter 9
Startled by the sound Bill had made, the girl who sat by the fire turned her head. Slowly she got to her feet, staring warily at Bill. Just beyond the other side of her compact encampment there yawned a chasm; if she were frightened of him, she had no place to run.
Actually she seemed more surprised than afraid. She said to Bilclass="underline" "Who are my friends? Who sent you after me?"
Doing his best to appear non-threatening, he spoke in soothing tones. "Your father sent me. And your great-aunt Sarah. They both wanted me—us—to try to find you."
"Us?"
"I work for a firm of private investigators."
"My father," said Cathy Brainard. The two words came burdened with an unhappy commentary that Bill could not begin to decipher.
He said mildly: "Well, maybe you don't get along with him, but I can assure you he's been worried."
Cathy took a few seconds to think that statement over. "How do I know you're telling me the truth?" she asked finally.
Bill stood back a step, continuing to try to look relaxed, but ready to make a grab if the reluctant object of his search, so serendipitously located, should make an effort to run past him. He said: "True, you don't know me. I'm just a hired hand, but I'm your friend. My name's Bill Burdon. I can show you some ID if you like."
Cathy considered that, and gave a nervous little laugh. "I'm not sure that a piece of paper or plastic would tell me a whole lot."
"Okay, I thought I'd offer. Tell me, are you about to cook something on that fire?"
She considered again, and laughed again, this time with some real amusement. "I don't know if I am or not. Are you hungry?"
"Yes ma'am, rather. I've been out all night, with one candy bar to eat."
"Out looking for me in the dark?"
"I know it sounds foolish. It didn't start out that way." Bill looked around at the spectacular scenery.
In a moment he realized that Cathy was almost smiling at him. She said, with something like amusement: "Don't tell me you're lost."
"All right, I won't admit it. That would be bad for the image. But I'm really damned if I can see how the whole South Rim and everything on it can disappear like this." He gestured at the surrounding spires and buttes.
To his surprise, Cathy didn't smile. Nor did she answer directly. "I'm getting hungry myself. All right, I can cook up some freeze-dried glop," she said. "There's a spring handy, just over here."
Walking with her when she went to get the water in a little aluminum pot with a folding handle, Bill looked around at her camping arrangements with approval. It was obvious to him, though he said nothing on the point, that she hadn't been here a month, or anywhere near that long. "Nice camp. I can see you know how to do this."
"Thank you."
"How long were you planning to stay?"
"I haven't decided that as yet. You can tell that to anyone who's interested."
"Your father's very worried about you. So's your aunt Sarah."
"Really?" The tone was sarcastic. Then she asked, as if the question really puzzled her: "How did you manage to get in here and find me?"
"Well, there was some kind of—disturbance—at the Tyrrell House last night. I ran downhill in the dark, chasing someone I thought might have been involved."
That had Cathy's interest, all right. "Who?"