Authors: Geoff Nelder
“Brian, hang on. Don’t enter the mine,” shouted Ryder at his phone.
“I’m not bloody stupid, Ryder. I know there could be more collapses.”
“It’s not just that, Brian. The case. We won’t know if it is damaged or what it might release. If you can access the mine entrance, there are bio and space suits in large plastic bags. Let the ISS people have their own custom-made suits and we’ll have our bio suits and—”
“Like I said, I’m not stupid—what?”
Bronwyn’s voice came across. “He hadn’t thought of that, Ryder. Thanks. See you there.”
“Good, but I need to know that at least two people are monitoring cameras and comms at the centre—don’t all of you go.”
Saturday 19 September 2015:
Anafon Field Centre.
L
ARGE
BOULDERS
OF
GREY
FINE
ROCK
NOW
PILED
AROUND
THE
MINE
’
S
ENTRANCE
. Ryder’s heart sank when from a distance, he saw people coming out of the entrance after he’d demanded no one went in. Wisps of smoky dust escaped from the gaping mouth and puffed upwards.
Ryder and Dan ran the last hundred metres. Antonio and Adbul were being helped out of their suits by Vlad and Gustav.
“Taking them off?” Ryder was ready to assert himself.
“
Si
, sorry to disobey orders,
capitano
,” Antonio said.
“I should expect more resp—” Ryder continued, but Dan touched his elbow to alert him to what lay in the grass by the side of the mine. Megan’s bike.
“Did you locate Jena in there?” said Dan to his men.
They shook their heads. Abdul said, “That’s why we went in as soon as we were suited up.” He looked at both leaders for approval. “But the roof has collapsed about a hundred metres in. Impassable.”
“Jena was in there when the roof collapsed, then,” said Ryder. “Damn.”
“She might be trapped and not crushed,” Gustav said. “We should prepare to clear a crawl-space through the rubble.”
“I’m glad you said ‘prepare,’” Ryder said, “because not only do we need to bring up roof support materials, we need to ensure we are not contaminated by the case.”
“I like this man,” said Dan, to his crewmen.
“I thought you might. He’s as methodical and as slow as you,” said Antonio, ducking as Dan threw a handful of gravel at him.
“You can fuss and make plans,” said Abdul, refastening the Velcro on his suit. “I will be making a start. No matter what you say.” He disappeared into the mine entrance.
“Okay, there are preparations we can do quickly,” said Ryder, flipping open his phone. “Brian, get the trolley ready and hitched to our smallest vehicle. Load up some materials suitable for shoring, crowbars, ropes and winch cable, and extra torches. Thanks.
“Antonio, I suppose the overhead lights are out?”
“Blown by the vibration.”
“Right, Brian, are you still there? A box of light bulbs too. Okay, Antonio, you might as well get re-suited and follow Abdul. I want people working on a buddy principle. Understand?”
“
Si,
Ryder,
il Duce
,” said Antonio.
“That’s enough, Antonio,” said Dan, going over to help him suit up and shut up.
After Brian arrived, they made short work of unloading the equipment and cleared enough rubble to get the trolley in with a winch cable.
Ryder took Brian to one side. “I don’t suppose anyone was looking at any of the mine cams when the roof collapsed?”
“Afraid not, and we don’t record. Waste of time and resources. I’m concerned about how it happened.”
“I’m no expert in mine stability, Brian, but I would’ve thought that if the mine stayed intact for two hundred years, it wouldn’t have collapsed just because we turned it into a furnished let.”
“Well, the way I see it, Ryder, all mines collapse sooner or later. You can’t just dig a mine and not expect millions of tons of annoyed stone to press down. And why not, when some idiots start drilling and knocking bolts in the walls and ceiling?”
“Dan and I heard two loud noises. I suppose the roof collapse would be noisy, sudden, and create an echo around the valley. Or did you—”
“Ryder, as you know, I was at the centre, only a mile away from the mine. I worked in the quarries years ago. I’d swear I heard an explosion followed by the roof collapse.”
“It gives us two possibilities.”
Brian’s soft Welsh accent belied his words. “Only one from where I’m standing. That cow, Jena Kochi—Chinese isn’t she?—blew the case because—”
“Go on, Brian. I’ll overlook the racist bigotry for the moment but give me a reason why she’d destroy the case?”
“Everybody knows the Chinese would want the case for themselves. She’s probably been in touch with them and followed orders.”
“Good grief, you’re unbelievable, Brian. Scary.”
Brian folded his arms and set his face to withstand criticism with no grace.
“Brian, Jena Kochi has a Canadian mother and lives in the US...with a Japanese father.”
“S-sorry, Ryder. She must be under there and I’m blaming her. Excuse me. I’ll get on with fixing the lights and power cable.”
Ryder watched him go but with mixed feelings. Brian might be a racist, but he could be right about Jena blowing up the mine. Explosives were kept in the stores at the centre, where Jena was seen before the mine blew. She wanted the case destroyed. The loss of contact with her family had unhinged her. He sat on a rock, sending a beetle scurrying into the heather. Jena had too much intelligence to open the case or to attach explosives to it since the virus might survive. She tried to seal it in by blowing the roof down. He stood and walked over to Dan, who was emptying the first trolley load.
“Dan, would Jena know how to use explosives?”
Dan’s face showed no surprise. “Her astro-engineering qualifications involved plenty of explosives. She was a brilliant engineer.”
“Then, Dan, she
is
a good engineer,” Ryder said. Both men looked for her around the valley and up the mountainside.
Dan took out his cell phone. “You can come down now, Jena. You’ll miss dinner.”
“Don’t you think she should be sent to bed without her dinner?” said Ryder.
“No, she’s ten times more irritable when hungry. There she is.”
Grubby but with a raised head, she strolled down the mountain to the waiting group. Brian rushed into the mine to tell the rescuers to forget Jena, but to keep going for the case.
Ryder turned his back on her. “Dan, put her under arrest.”
“Miss Kochi,” said Dan, “consider yourself under arrest.”
Megan had already rescued her mountain bike, so Jena walked past the men and carried on down towards the centre.
“Aren’t you going to sort her out?” Brian said.
Dan and Ryder looked at each other. How do you admonish a woman as crazy as a hornet-stung bear? In their favour was that she couldn’t get at the case now.
Ryder said, “You don’t suppose she...”
“Took the case out first? You thought the same thing?” They jumped in the Volvo and drove after her.
“You talk to her, Ryder, she has a soft spot for you.”
“You’re kidding.” It was too late to argue. They’d caught up with her.
“I don’t want a lift.”
Dan drove off leaving Ryder walking with her.
“You’ve caused us a lot of difficulty, you know, and worry.”
She stopped walking. “You were worried about me? Oh, Ryder.”
“We assumed the case had reached a critical phase. When we saw Megan’s bike, we thought the case had exploded with you in there.”
“What makes you think the case might explode? The first one didn’t.”
“The first was opened within three days of you finding it. This one was found a week ago. Maybe there’s a time limit. Did it look all right to you?”
“I didn’t see it. I only blew the roof supports a hundred metres in. You know the case is evil. Satan’s blight. I wouldn’t want to get near it.”
Ryder considered she was telling the truth, so she hadn’t moved the case. But there had to be an element of doubt. It was worth continuing the tunnelling to reach the case but also to search the mountainside where she’d been.
“You are coming in with me, aren’t you?” Jena said to him. “I might have a concussion and I want you with me, Ryder. I don’t think the others like me anymore. You’ll help me shower all this rock-dust off me, won’t you?”
A
WKWARD
SILENCES
PREVAILED
OVER
DINNER
. If Jena had the sensibilities of a normal person, she would have withered under the evil-eye stares, and haemorrhaged from stabs in the back. However, she remained aloof, secure in her belief that she had saved them from a fate worse than ARIA.
Teresa cornered Ryder in the stores where he was conducting his own inventory of their remaining communications and electronic equipment.
“She’s a complete crackpot, Ryder. What are you going to do about her?” She frowned at him with all the body language of a poised mountain cat.
“What do you think we should do with her?”
“Hey, you’re the centre leader. That bitch has jeopardised our future. She’s a liability. You’ve always said that to survive, we have to be tough.”
“That’s true, but I’m not going to put a bullet in a healthy person just because she’s temporarily freaked out.”
“You mean because she’s a child-bearing-age woman and you fancy the pants off her. Why, Ryder, you could put her into solitary with you holding the only visitor’s ticket.”
“And what about you and the Italian doctor? I don’t see you batting his wandering hands away.”
“You wouldn’t understand. Romantically, he’s a million miles ahead of you.”
“Teresa, be careful of him. He’s sly and a creep. At least with me, what you saw is what you got.”
“Listen to you, Ryder. All pompous and above us all.”
“If you say so.” He was hurt by her barbed comments, but he held back. This community was too small to let bickering get the better of them. Survival was in the balance, and all Teresa wanted to do was score points.
“So what are you going to do with the mad bitch?”
“She can’t damage the case anymore, so chill out. I’m in here looking to see if we have an electronic tag we can put on her. Come to think about it, you might have one in your biology equipment?”
Teresa went to a blue plastic container, checked the list of contents printed on the top and waved at it. “Help yourself, but are you sure she wouldn’t prefer fluffy handcuffs and for you to whip her ass?”
Again, he held back from retaliating; he had memories of such an S&M scenario with Teresa less than a year ago. She looked at him, letting him know with a wistful look that she remembered that night too. Gone and lost forever.
“Oh, there you are,” called Brian from the entrance of the storeroom. “Megan reminded me about something on Llwtymor that might interest you, Ryder.”
Glad of the distraction, Ryder followed Brian into the refectory where a hot, black coffee helped him focus on the large-scale map. Brian’s grubby finger jabbed at a point halfway from the valley floor to the summit.
“There’s an air shaft for the mine that comes out at this spot.”
“Really? How does Megan know that? There are no paths around there.”
“Fishing,” Megan said, who stood behind Ryder.
“What?”
“My dad used to fish the lake, and he brought me. I hated fishing so I wandered all over. Found a propeller blade once. There’s an iron grating in the ground up there. Dad said it allowed fresh air into the end of the mine.”
“Why couldn’t we see the light from it when we were in the mine?”
“Brambles.”
“It might not be straight all the way down,” said Brian. “But we can find out.”
R
YDER
CARRIED
A
RUCKSACK
AND
CLIMBING
ROPE
, following Megan and Brian up the rough mountainside. Brian had brought a pneumatic bolt cutter that cut through a rusted padlock. Dan and Ryder pulled up the screeching grate until it dropped on its back, crushing thorns. Brian dropped down a lead with a powerful battery lamp while Ryder readied a fish-eye webcam to follow it down on a cable attached to a laptop on the surface. His heartbeat decelerated with relief when the cage with the case showed up on the screen. The group applauded Megan.
“Can we stop working on the tunnel, now?” asked Brian.
Ryder scratched his head. “I suppose so. For all we know, there is a mile of excavating.”
“We wouldn’t have enough shoring materials anyway,” said Brian, relieved to forego more rock clearing.
“So what happens with our time-bomb down there?” said Dan.
“I could get it,” Megan said.
“No,” Ryder said. “It’s safer down there.”
“Suit yourself.” She stomped off. Brian walked after her.
Antonio said, “Any of us could be lowered and either fetch the case or...”
Ryder pondered and said, “We could be lowered through this aperture and get stuck halfway down.”