Coming from somebody with a little dried blood on his face, and a clot in one nostril, it sounded worse than it was.
“Probably not,” I said. I shrugged at the trooper. “He hit me first.” Lame. I knew that when I said it. The trooper didn't say a word.
I helped Toby out of the backseat, and stood him up. “Two things. Was Peale in the house when you came out, or had he been there and gone? And I gotta know where that damned elevator shaft is, and I gotta know now.”
“What elev-”
I really got in his face. Well, to within three or four inches, I think. It probably looked like I was going to bite him.
“Dan Peale wants to kill you,” I said, “as soon as he's done with Huck. Got that?”
He blinked, but didn't say anything.
“I think the only way he ain't gonna kill you is if we find him first. Think I'm right?”
“Yeah. Yeah, I do.”
“Wonderful. Now, was he in the house, or did you hide and just get up the guts to run when you knew he was gone?”
He kind of hung his head.
“That's what I thought. Do you know how long it was that you hid, before you knew he had left?”
“Maybe ten minutes.”
“Don't fuck with me, Toby!”
“Half an hour!” he said instantly. “Half an hour. For sure.”
“Did he have Huck with him?”
“It sounded like it,” he said softly.
“What do you mean?”
“Something bumped on the stairs. He was dragging something, I think.”
I took a deep breath. Hell, he probably couldn't have stopped Peale anyway. But Huck had tried to help Melissa. He should have tried. I was sick of him, but I needed him. “Let's go to the elevator shaft. Now.”
We did. A whole bunch of us, in fact. Toby, Sally, Lamar, Byng, two troopers, and me. We walked right past the tree that Sally and I had gone to when we tried to close in on Chester, and a little way into the woods, ending up less than a hundred feet from the head of the ravine we'd negotiated only a couple of hours ago. We stopped, and Toby pointed to an old foundation that was cluttered with dead leaves and some decaying branches.
“There. That's it.”
“That?”
“Yeah. The door's in the wall on this side.”
I moved around the foundation. Sure enough, standing on the bluff side of the rock-lined excavation, I could make out an old, wooden door frame, with a half dozen vertical slats and an angled crosspiece forming a door. The wood had faded to gray, and the edges were rotting, but it was a functional door, nonetheless.
I looked at Sally. She and I had just missed it last night.
“How do you get in?” I asked, as I gingerly lowered myself into the wet leaves on the floor.
“Move the rock at the bottom of the door,” he said, from above me.
I looked. There was a scraped path discernible in the leaves. There was a large, limestone block that looked as if it made that track, but it was several feet from the door.
“You mean this one?” I asked, as I bent over and pointed to it.
Toby took two or three steps forward, toward the edge of the foundation, so he could see me and where I was pointing. He stared for a moment. “Oooh, man… ” he said, drawing it out. “Oh boy. It's been opened… He's down in the crypt, sure as hell.” He spun around and would have left then and there, but one of the troopers just reached out one arm and stopped him in his tracks.
I pulled my gun, and with my other hand gingerly reached out and opened the door.
What it revealed was pretty damned unimpressive, at least at first glance. A dark recess, about seven or eight feet into the hillside, one that would be high enough for me to stand in, if I bent a bit. Maybe six feet, or just a bit less. Just an old, wooden floor, with a hole in the middle that was about six feet square. That was it, as far as I could see, and it was quite a disappointment.
“There's nothing here,” I said.
“It's at the bottom,” said Toby.
“What's at the bottom of what?”
“The car. The car's at the bottom of the shaft, just look down the shaft… ”
I looked up at the assembled faces. “Anybody happen to have a flashlight?”
The second trooper handed one down. I stooped a bit, leaned over the black square, and shined the light downward.
Instant vertigo. The shaft descended what had to be at least eighty or ninety feet. As I lurched back I caught a glimpse of two things. A vertical, rusty track with shiny edges; and a big, rusty wheel with what looked to be a very large bicycle chain running in a channel.
“What you got?” croaked Lamar.
“Just a second,” I said. “I hate heights.”
“In a hole?” asked Sally.
“It's a high damned hole,” I replied, irritated. “Just give me a minute.” I took a deep breath, and got down on my stomach, and crawled forward, toward the edge of the shaft. As I did, I heard Sally wondering aloud how you could have a high hole.
Being so solidly supported, I could look down. Sure enough. The wheel, chain, and rails were part of the elevating mechanism. As I looked all the way down, I thought I could see something at the bottom. Probably the car Toby referred to. I also noted that the chain seemed to be oiled. I backed out.
“It goes way down, there's rails and a chain, and I think I can see some sort of car or box thing at the bottom.”
“That's it,” said Toby.
“Can we climb down there?” asked Lamar.
“No,” I said emphatically. “No way.” I simply wasn't about to try a climbing descent to the bottom of that shaft. Not at any price.
“Use the box,” suggested Toby.
“What box?”
“Inside the door, to the left.”
I looked in again. Sure enough, in the corner was a dark gray electrical box, labeled “Square D,” with a lever on its right.
“How does it work?”
“Just pull the lever up or down… whatever way it ain't now,” advised Toby. “It'll bring the car up for you.”
The problem with simple solutions is that they sometimes hide complex problems just under the surface. That was the case here. First, I wasn't sure that I wanted to alert Dan Peale that we were coming after him. If he heard the elevator, and if Huck was still alive, that could easily cause him to kill her. Second, I had no idea what we would find at the bottom, so I didn't know how many of us should be going.
We stationed Borman and Byng at the top of the shaft, as the rest of us backed off and questioned Toby.
We were in a hurry, but we really needed the basic layout of what Toby called “the crypt.”
He said the elevator shaft went to a section of the sand mine that had been closed off for years. There were five big chambers, and Dan had appropriated two of them.
“They're both on your right as you get off,” said Toby.
“Dan got any guns down there?” asked Lamar.
“Guns? No way. He doesn't need guns. You'll see.”
“Knives, though?” I asked.
“Yeah. He's got knives.”
I wanted to ask why the knives if he didn't need guns, but didn't. Time was short.
“How do you see down there?” I asked.
“Turn on the lights,” he said.
“What?”
“Yeah. I mean, nobody uses the mine, but it still has power. For inspections, I guess. We just tapped into the wires in the main part of the mine. That's all.”
Well, sure. “And that's what powers the elevator?”
“Yeah.”
“How loud is it?” asked Lamar.
Toby looked bewildered. “I don't know… compared to what?”
“Can Dan hear it coming down, Toby?” I asked, as patiently as I could.
“Oh! Oh, I think so. Yeah, unless he's in the far chamber, and then if he has the music on, probably not… ”
“Music?”
“Yeah. Dan plays the music really loud when he gets into a mood. Hey,” he said. “He's got all the comforts of home. You're gonna be surprised at what's all down there. It's beautiful!”
“I expect I will,” I said. Then I tossed him a tough one. “Is that where Edie was killed? Is it the crypt?”