I waved. Waited. Called out. Waved again.
No challenging voice or bark. Nor any sound of welcome.
I shouted again, hoping a Deliverance redneck did not have me in his crosshairs.
Silence.
Banjos dueling in my head, I started across the meadow. Though it was blindingly bright away from the trees, I left my sunglasses in my pocket. In addition to your run-of-the-mill holler rustics, these mountains sheltered white-supremacist, paramilitary types. Strangers were not encouraged to visit.
I could see that the grounds largely had been taken back by nature. What had once been lawn or garden was now overgrown with stunted white alder, sourwood, Carolina silverbell, and numerous shrubs I didn't recognize. Beyond the bushes, big-tooth aspen, Fraser magnolia, poplar, maple, oak, beech, and Eastern white pine mixed with unfamiliar trees. Kudzu draped everything in tangled webs of green.
As I walked to the front steps, goose bumps spread along my arms and a sense of uneasiness wrapped around me like a cold, wet shawl. A feeling of menace hung over the place. Was it born of the dark, weathered wood, the blind, boarded windows, or the jungle of vegetation that kept the dwelling in perpetual gloom?
“Hello?” My heartbeat quickened.
Still no dogs or mountain men.
One look told me the house had not been thrown up quickly. Or recently. The construction was as solid as London's Newgate prison. Though I doubted George Dance drew the plans, this designer shared the prison architect's distrust of portals on to the world. There were no expanses of glass to maximize the mountain view. No skylights. No widow's walks. Constructed of rock and thick, unstained planking, the place had clearly been built for function. I couldn't tell if it had last been visited at the end of the summer or at the end of the Great Depression.
Or if someone was inside now, watching my movements through a crack or gun hole.
“Is anyone home?”
Nothing.
I climbed to the porch and knocked.
“Hello?”
No sounds of movement.
Sidestepping to a window, I brought my eyes close to the shutters. Heavy, dark material hid the interior. I twisted and turned my head, angling for a view, until the feathery brush of a spider sent me jumping backward.
I descended the steps, circled the house on an overgrown flagstone path, and stepped through an arch into a gloomy little courtyard. The enclosure was surrounded by eight-foot stone walls overhung by lilac bushes, their leaves dark against the greens and yellows of the forest beyond. Except for moss, nothing grew on the hard-packed, moist ground. The dank little quadrangle seemed completely incapable of sustaining life.
I turned my gaze back to the house. A crow circled and settled on a nearby branch, a small black silhouette against brilliant blue. The bird cawed twice, clicked its beak, then lowered its head in my direction.
“Tell the mistress I stopped by,” I said with more self-assurance than I felt.
The crow regarded me briefly, then flapped into the air.
Turning, I caught a flicker, like sunlight glinting off broken glass. I froze. Had I seen movement in an upstairs window? I waited a full minute. Nothing stirred.
The yard had only one entrance, so I retraced my steps and surveyed the far side of the property. Brush filled the space between forest and house, ending in a jungle of dead hollyhocks crowding the foundation. I walked the area, but saw no evidence of burials, disturbed or intact. My only discovery was a broken metal bar.
Frustrated, I returned to the front porch, inserted the bar between the shutters, and pried gently. There was no give. I applied more pressure, curious, but not wanting to cause damage. The wood was solid and would not budge.
I looked at my watch. Two forty-five. This was useless. And stupid, if the property wasn't abandoned. If proprietors existed, they were away, or wanted it to seem so. I was tired, sweaty, and itchy from thousands of tiny scratches.
And I had to admit, the place creeped me out. Though I knew my reaction was irrational, I felt a sense of evil pervading the grounds. Deciding to make inquiries in town, I dropped the bar and headed back to the crash site.
Driving toward the morgue, I pondered the mysterious lodge. Who had built it? Why? What was it about the place that made me so uneasy?
RYAN WAS LYING IN WAIT WHEN I ARRIVED AT HIGH RIDGE House shortly after nine. I didn't see him until he spoke.
“Looks like we've got an explosion.”
I paused, one hand on the screen door handle.
“Not now, Ryan.”
“Jackson's going to make a statement tomorrow.”
I turned in the direction of the porch swing. Ryan had one heel on the banister and was pushing himself slowly back and forth. When he drew on his cigarette, a tiny red glow lighted his face.
“It's certain?”
“As Madonna's lost virginity.”
I hesitated, wanting news of the investigation, but wary of the bearer.
“It's been a sincerely fucked-up day, Brennan. I apologize for any misbehavior.”
Though I'd had little time to dwell on it, the noontime confrontation had led me to a decision. I was ending the circle of disaster that had been my relationship with Ryan. From now on our interactions would be strictly professional.
“Tell me.”
Ryan patted the swing.
I crossed to him but remained standing.
“Why an explosion?”
“Sit.”
“If this is a come-on, you can—”
“There's cratering and fiber penetration.”
In the half-light of the overhead bulb Ryan's face looked drained of life. He inhaled deeply, then flicked his butt into Ruby's ferns. I watched sparks comet through the dark, imagining the plunge of Air TransSouth 228.
“Do you want to hear this?”
Placing my pack between us, I dropped onto the swing.
“What's cratering?”
“Cratering is caused when a solid or liquid is suddenly converted to a gas.”
“As in a detonation.”
“Yes. An explosion rockets the temperature thousands of degrees and sends out shock waves that create a gas wash effect on metal surfaces. That's how the explosives group experts described it. They showed slides at today's briefing. It looks kind of like an orange peel.”
“They're finding cratering?”
“They've spotted it on fragments. Rolled edges, too, which is another indicator.”
He gave the swing a gentle push.
“What's fiber penetration?”
“They're seeing the fibers of some materials driven through other, undamaged materials. All under high-powered microscopes, of course. They're also finding heat fractures and flash melting at the ends of some fibers.”
Another oscillation, and I tasted the Greek salad I'd wolfed down after leaving the morgue.
“Don't rock the swing.”
“Some of the blow-up photos are amazing.”
I zipped my jacket and tucked my hands into the pockets. Though the days were still warm, the nights were growing crisp.
“So cratering and rolled edges on metal, and flash melting and penetration of fibers mean an explosion. Our lower leg injuries fit with that.”
“So does the fact that a large part of the fuselage landed intact.”
I planted a foot to stop our forward motion.
“It all adds up to an explosion.”
“Caused by?”
“Bomb. Missile. Mechanical failure. The FAA's Aviation Explosives Security Unit will conduct chromatographic analysis to determine what chemicals might be present, and radiophotography and X-ray diffraction to identify molecular species. And one other. Oh, yeah. Infrared spectrophotometry. Not sure what that one's for, but it has a nice ring. That is, if they can arm-wrestle the job away from the FBI crime lab.”
“Missile?” It was the first I'd heard of that possibility.
“Not likely, but it's been suggested. Remember all the hoopla about a missile bringing down TWA 800? Pierre Salinger bet his nuts the navy was to blame.”