The heat was roaring from the dashboard vents and the wipers flip-flopped loudly. Hannah's jeans and sweatshirt were flecked with mud and darkened here and there with rain, and her head was wetter than it had been forty minutes before. But the cold and discomfort didn't bother her. She only hoped that the water dripping from her hair onto her laptop didn't cause it to short. Not until she finished her copy and had E-mailed it from the car phone to production chief Weezie Hanson.
Though Hannah had only been on the mountain for fifteen minutes, she'd already framed the story. Just before she arrived the sinkhole had collapsed again. It now occupied most of the road from the mountainside to the ravine. The section where the blood had been found was gone. The area was ringed with five work lights on stainless-steel tripods. Hannah had watched as the three crew members dug dirt with their hands; they couldn't use shovels lest they accidentally spade one of the buried engineers. She'd offered to help but the short, muscular foreman Victor Singer told her that wouldn't be necessary. A second crew was due momentarily. Apart from sharing that information, Singer had no time to talk-he said-because he was busy using a portable radio they'd found in the road to try to raise Stan Greene or Bill Roche.
However, Hannah had managed to snare an interview with Dr. Elma Thorpe, the UCSB geologist. Dressed in gray sweatpants, a red windbreaker, and an Australian Outback hat, the tall, robust, silver-haired professor seemed very much at home here. Hannah had profiled the London-born scientist two years before, when she'd been campaigning for a U.S. Geological Survey grant to research blind thrust faults in the region. Instead, the money went to charting the caves in the Santa Ynez Mountains.
The two women stood in the rain for several minutes, talking about fissures and the rural road infrastructure.
The journalist's long fingers moved across the laptop keyboard like spiders on a hot plate, as the Oklahoma-born Weezie once described them. But even that wasn't fast enough for Hannah. She didn't want to miss today's edition. She
wouldn't
miss today's edition. The
Los Angeles Times
hadn't sent anyone up to cover the story. Either they hadn't heard about it or they didn't care because there wasn't a body. The local TV stations would wait a few hours before dispatching a team because the sinkhole was getting larger and the bigger the pit the better the image for dinnertime news. So for a few hours the story would be hers, and it could be a big one. Not just the two missing engineers but the potential danger to all the mountain roads of Southern California. According to Dr. Thorpe-Hannah loved this quote-"Fissures like this one could thread through the entire Santa Ynez range and pass under the roadway in innumerable places. Caltrans should look into it before there are other disasters."
Hannah was nearly finished with the draft when there was a back-of-the-knuckles rap on the window. It was the Wall, his bald head and face made ruddy by one of the dying flares on the road.
Hannah cranked down the window. "What's up?"
"He just arrived," said the photographer.
"Thanks," Hannah said.
The Wall didn't have to say who "he" was. It was the man who was unofficially dedicated to overthrowing the free press and overprotecting the rights and lives of the rich who had financed and helped to elect him. The chief Santa Barbarian himself, Sheriff Malcolm Gearhart.
"You cool, Chief?" the Wall asked protectively.
"Completely."
"You sure?"
"Yes!" Hannah snapped.
The Wall scowled at her. "Uh-huh."
"Go away," Hannah said. "You made your point."
The Wall returned to the sinkhole and Hannah took several deep breaths to calm herself. Saving the draft of her story, she set the laptop on the passenger's seat-amidst the crumbs of countless Wheat Thins, a box of which was always kept in the glove compartment-and grabbed her audiotape recorder. Then she touched her lucky dog tags and stepped out into the cold rain. She didn't take an umbrella on assignments like these because she didn't like to be encumbered. She also believed that if you were thinking about staying dry or warm you weren't thinking about the story.
Hannah slogged toward the sinkhole as Malcolm Gearhart approached from the west. The sheriff and Singer acknowledged one another with nods. Gearhart tipped his hat to Dr. Thorpe. He acknowledged Hannah and the Wall by ignoring them. He couldn't order them away because there was no clear and present danger and this wasn't a restricted crime scene.
"Where did you find the blood?" Gearhart asked Singer.
Singer pointed a gloved ringer to the northeastern side of the pit. "It
was
right there."
"What do you mean 'was'?"
"We were setting up a little shelter there when the section of road where we found the blood just crumpled. It happened about two minutes after we got here. There was nothing we could do. The sinkhole just expanded outward and that was that."
Sheriff Gearhart didn't look happy. "What about the rest of the road? Is it safe?"
"I ran an ultrasound check. There's solid rock under the rest of the road for about two hundred yards in each direction. It's not going anywhere."
"Why didn't we know about the weakened condition of this section?" Gearhart asked.
"Because we just don't do routine surveys like that," Singer said. "Why don't you know about killers before they kill?"
"I do," Gearhart said. "The law just doesn't allow me to do anything about them."
Singer made a face then excused himself. He raised the radio to his mouth and pressed a button on the side. A small green light glowed above the mouthpiece grid. When there was an incoming call, a red light came on. During a two-way conversation, both were lit.
"This is Caltrans emergency crew calling Stan Greene and William Roche," Singer said. "Greene and Roche, if you're receiving, come in. If you're receiving, come in. Over."
The silence was disturbing.
The sheriff turned and walked slowly along the pit. He studied the ground, ignoring the Wall as he followed taking pictures. Then he stopped at the ravine and looked down. He used the toe of his boot to move the foliage around before walking back along the western rim of the pit.
"You found no footprints at all?" Gearhart asked Singer.
"Nothing," Singer said. "The rain washed away everything, even the footprints by Roche's van."
"Where did they park?"
Singer pointed the radio toward the van. The sheriff looked back at it. Rain was beaded on the sides and windows.
"Where did you find the radio?" Gearhart asked.
"About ten feet from the van, closer to us," Singer said.
"Then Mr. Roche left the van after his last communication with Caltrans," Gearhart said. "Perhaps because his partner called him."
"It's possible," Singer agreed.
"Was the van running?"
"Yes."
"So he obviously expected to come back," Gearhart said. "Then something happened. Something that made him drop the radio."
"Apparently," Singer said.
Sheriff Gearhart looked up along the side of the mountain. The face was smooth gray stone streaked here and mere with a thin layer of green moss. Chalk-white rocks were piled around the base, having fallen from above or been deposited here by an ancient flood. Fat, lopsided oaks and spindly alders grew along the base and on top.
"Dr. Thorpe, could a rockslide have done this?" Gearhart asked.
"Certainly," she said. "The same forces that undermine subterranean rock can undermine surface rock."
"Would a rockslide have registered on any of the regional seismographs?" Gearhart asked.
"A small impact like that-probably not," she said.
Gearhart was silent Hannah took the opportunity to step toward him. She held out the tape recorder.
"Sheriff, there have been several recent reports of bobcats being forced from their upper mountain habitats by the rain," Hannah said. "Is it possible that the men were-"
"Ms. Hughes, I just got here. Right now I haven't ruled out anything," Gearhart said. He turned to Singer. "I looked along the ravine for signs of blood and didn't find any. I've got two deputies on the way up. When they arrive we'll start looking along the creek bed. If there were a rockslide, that could be where we'll find them."
"Sheriff Gearhart," Hannah pressed, "over the past few weeks the bobcats in this region have become increasingly aggressive. Those engineers were out here in the dark, which is when these animals hunt. Is it possible that the men were attacked?"
Gearhart looked at the young woman. "Have you ever tried pulling a man? Dead weight?"
"No, Sheriff."
"I have. A bobcat can attack a man but not drag him off. These men are missing."
Gearhart stepped around her and headed for the van.
Singer went back to the radio while Hannah stewed. She could deal with the sheriff being taciturn or even cooperative. But when he was dismissive and condescending-that was when she wanted to kick him.
"This is Caltrans emergency crew calling Stan Greene and William Roche," Singer said, "Greene and Roche, if you're receiving, come-"
He fell silent, but only for a moment.
"Sheriff!" he cried.
Gearhart stopped and ran back. Hannah and the others looked down at the radio.
The light above the mouthpiece was flashing red.
Chapter Nine
Jim Grand bent carefully and carefully picked up the radio. He listened for a moment to the crackling voice coming from it. There was a great deal of interference because of the mountain walls, but he was able to make out most of what was being said.
Grand looked for a volume dial. He found it on the side of the radio, then turned it up and pressed the transmit button.
"Caltrans emergency, this is James Grand. Can you hear me? This is James Grand."
There was a momentary delay. Then the voice on the other end said, "We hear you, Mr. Grand." The sounds reverberated loudly through the upper reaches of the cave. "Where are you? Are our two engineers with you?"
"There's no one here," Grand said. "At least, not that I can see."
"Exactly where are you?" the caller asked.
The scientist described where he was in the mountain and how he'd gotten here. The man on the radio asked him to hold.
Grand used the time to take a slow look around the cavern. The illumination from the penlight spread across the center of the lake. The distant cave wall was a thick shadow and the water was dark and clean. There were no leaves, no flecks of wood, no detritus of any kind on the surface. Save for the gentle swells caused by the slow-running stream, the lake was unnaturally still. There were no fish moving underwater, no lizards crawling along the walls or ledge, no bats on the ceiling. Just the gnats, which was surprising; they usually weren't found in caves.
Grand began to feel uneasy again. Most caves had a personality he could feel when he entered. The geology-personality types tended to be craggy-and-hostile, tall-and-proud, sinuous-and-aloof, deep-and-dangerous. But this cave felt empty, like a corpse.
And the tunnel had reminded him of a tomb.
The cave had apparently unsettled the Chumash as well. Grand couldn't imagine that the shaman who worked in the outer cavern would not have come here. The cave couldn't have been submerged then. Stalactites can only form in a dry gallery, as water containing minute mineral particles drips to create stone "icicles." That process takes millennia. The Chumash would have had access to the cave. They obviously didn't want it.
"I assume this is Professor Grand?"
The voice coming from the radio was deeper, sharper than before. But familiar.
"This is Professor Grand," he said. "Who is this?"
"It's Sheriff Gearhart."
Grand felt as if he'd been drop-kicked a year into the past. He went from zero to angry before the echo of the radio had faded.
"How long have you been at that site?" Gearhart asked.
"About two hours." Just hearing the man's voice brought back the sheriff's stony face, his flat eyes, his intractable stand-
"And you saw and heard no one," Gearhart said.
"That's right."
"Do you see blood anywhere?"
"No," Grand told him. "Was there an accident somewhere?"
"Professor, is there another way into the cave?"
"Possibly," Grand said. So the sheriff was going to play alpha dog and not answer his questions.
Fine
, Grand thought. He could mark that territory if he wanted it so badly. "That's one of the things I'm doing up here," Grand said, "mapping the caverns and tunnels."
"Which means we've still got two missing persons."
Gearhart said. "We're going to have to send a search team in there. Can you meet me at Painted Cave in fifteen minutes?"
"I've got some climbing to do to get out," Grand said. "I can meet you in half an hour."
"All right," Gearhart said. "Park down the road, we've got a major sinkhole here. Are you wearing gloves?"
Grand said that he was.
"Please put the radio down carefully so you don't rub off fingerprints or other markings."
"Sure," Grand said.
Grand clicked off the radio, put it down, then turned and walked back to the tunnel entrance. He'd signed off quickly, not only to end the conversation but to keep from taking his long-festering anger at Gearhart out on the radio. He would put what he was feeling into his ascent. Channel it from the heart to the arms and out the fingers, the same way he had always climbed or thrown spears he'd reconstructed or made love to Rebecca.
Grand hauled himself into the tunnel opening and began crawling back up to the main cavern. There was something back at the sinkhole he wanted to check, something that might help answer some questions. And at least there was one positive result of the conversation. He didn't feel uneasy anymore.