Authors: Stan Jones
When the wings were level again, Active peered up the slowly rising terrain into the white reaches ahead. Shaman Pass, it appeared, was a broad, low saddle, white and rumpled in winter’s grip. From this distance, there was no sign of the gorge below the summit that Jim Silver had mentioned.
To their right, low hills stretched away to the east. To the left, high mountains marched off to the west. If he remembered Cowboy’s map properly, Robert Kelly’s camp lay at the foot of those mountains on the left side of the pass.
“Looks like you’re going to get your money’s worth,” Cowboy said through the intercom.
Active, studying the route ahead, didn’t try to figure out Cowboy’s point. “What?”
“We’re going to get into the pass.”
“Yeah, I guess we are,” Active said.
WITH THE WIND STILL on their tail and the terrain rising in front, the Super Cub jolted toward the pass at what seemed an ever-increasing speed. Under the wings, wind-whipped willows in the bed of the Angatquq blurred, sharpened, and blurred again as clouds of snow swirled over them. Away from the creek, the occasional stunted black spruce on the tundra bowed before the gale. Active thought of Jim Silver’s yarn of the winds in Shaman Pass killing caribou.
“How much wind you think we’re getting here?” he asked.
“I don’t know,” Cowboy growled back through the intercom. “Forty, fifty, maybe.”
“Can you land in this?”
“If we can find a sheltered spot,” Cowboy said.
Active waited for more, but the headphones were silent. He concluded that was all Cowboy wanted to say about it.
They continued their leaflike rush upriver until they passed a big creek coming in from the left. Cowboy held up the map, looked from it to the terrain below and back again, then heeled the plane over and followed the creek upstream. Cowboy’s voice crackled over the intercom. “This is Moose Creek. Somewhere between here and the next big one, Ptarmigan Creek, is where the camp supposedly is. Right up against the foot of the mountains on some little creek too small to get on the map.”
Cowboy flew upstream until Moose Creek climbed into the mountains through a narrow gate in the rocks. There, the pilot turned the plane right and skirted the base of the mountains. Four or five miles ahead, Active could see the trace of what must be Ptarmigan Creek threading down into the Angatquq.
They were over rising terrain now, crossing a low ridge that separated the watersheds of Moose and Ptarmigan creeks, a churning blanket of snow sweeping over it. The wind was on their tail again, hurrying them across the folded tundra at what seemed twice the normal speed of a Super Cub.
They crested the ridge and immediately spotted a tiny creek running along its base towards the Angatquq. It was, they could see now, the only stream in the chunk of country between Moose and Ptarmigan creeks.
“This has gotta be it, huh?” Cowboy sounded a little nervous through the headset.
“Seems like,” Active said. “You see anything?”
“Not between here and the Angatquq,” Cowboy said. “If this is it, Robert Kelly’s camp must be back up the canyon a ways.”
By now, the wind had swept them past the creek and they couldn’t see into the canyon that ushered the creek out of the mountains. Cowboy made a wide, looping turn over the low ground toward the Angatquq, then swung back in to the base of the mountains perhaps a mile downwind from the mouth of the canyon.
Now they were headed almost straight into the gale, moving over the ground so slowly that Active thought he could get out and walk. Here, close to the hills, the turbulence was a continuous, relentless jolting, the Super Cub banging and clanging as if it would come apart.
Cowboy skirted the base of the mountains, and throttled back as they approached the mouth of the canyon where Robert Kelly’s camp should be. Cowboy lowered his wing flaps and their ground speed dropped near zero as the plane jolted past the canyon mouth. Then they stopped entirely, the Super Cub hovering raggedly in the gale sweeping over the tundra. Active marveled at this, that Cowboy should be able to suspend a plane in midair. Not for the first time, he puzzled over the two Cowboys: on the ground, a hollow blowhard in a baseball cap, in the air, a wizard in a headset and mirror sunglasses.
Cowboy saw it first. “Look at that!” he shouted through the headset. “That second bend up there, right bank, back in the brush.”
Active peered through the snow haze, saw the outline of a cabin in wind-whipped willows, a snowmachine, and dogsled—he felt the plane rolling, for an instant saw the left wing pointing straight down at the creek bed, sensed Cowboy fighting for control, heard the pilot shout, “Aw, fuck me Jesus!” and suddenly they were several hundred yards down the creek from the mouth of the canyon, the camp now out of sight.
“My God,” Active said into his headset after Cowboy restored some stability to the plane. “What was that?”
“Hell of a blast coming out of that canyon,” Cowboy said. “Some kind of venturi effect, I expect.”
Active had no idea what a venturi effect was, but this didn’t seem the time for a lesson. “Can we go back for another look?”
“You kidding?”
“Well, we came all this way.”
“Fuck,” Cowboy said. “Well, maybe if we come in higher.”
The pilot made a wide, climbing turn over the white lowlands, and brought the plane up to the canyon mouth again, but five hundred feet higher than before. They still caught a blast from the canyon, but it was less now, and Cowboy was more prepared.
From the higher angle, they could see better into the camp in the willows. “You see anything that looks like a sod hut?” Active asked.
“Nope,” Cowboy said.
“Well, Whyborn said it was a sod hut. Could this be the wrong camp?”
Just then, a man emerged from the cabin, looked up at the Super Cub, hurried to a mound in the snow a few yards away, and vanished into it.
“There’s your sod hut,” Cowboy said.
Active grunted assent and kept his eyes on the entrance. As they drifted past the mouth of the canyon and started to lose the view, Active saw the man come out of the hut with a bright blue man-size bundle in his arms and drop it into the dogsled.
“Look at that!” Active felt the heat rising in his stomach, even his groin, that meant he somehow had crossed that line past which there were no ifs or whys, only hows. “He’s taking off! Get me down there!”
Cowboy started another of his wide turns over the lowlands. “No way,” he said. “We were hovering back there.”
“And?”
“And that means the wind speed is higher than the takeoff speed of this airplane. There’s no way to land. We’ll just get blown over backward.”
Active studied the tundra whirling past beneath them as Cowboy brought the plane around and lined up for another pass by the canyon mouth. Up ahead, the gusts swept a cascade of snow over the rounded ridge that had at first hidden Robert Kelly’s creek from them. Between gusts, the surface of the ridge looked sculpted and smooth, except for a few tufts of dwarf willow sticking through. “Can you hover over that ridge?” Active asked.
Active saw Cowboy’s head turn as he studied the surface.
“Yeah,” the pilot said. “Probably, for a few seconds at least. So what?”
“So go hover. I’ll just step out onto the snow.”
“No fucking way. I’m not explaining to Carnaby how you, how I . . .” Cowboy stopped talking and cleared his throat and Active thought the pilot was feeling that heat in his stomach, too.
“Fuck, it might work,” Cowboy said. “I’ve heard of people skydiving out of a Super Cub. But what are you going to do till I can get back in here?”
“I’ll just take Mr. Kelly into custody and we’ll wait in his cabin.”
“That easy, huh?”
“One bad guy, one trooper. That’s how we do it.”
“You’re the fucking cowboy here,” Cowboy said. “You know that?”
Active didn’t say anything, but he smiled to himself a little.
Cowboy turned the Super Cub slightly, aiming at a little saddle on the crest of the ridge. “Just remember,” he said through the headset. “You’re going to be stepping out into fifty, sixty miles an hour of wind. First thing you do, drop down flat till you get your bearings and figure out if you can walk in it or not.”
The pilot popped open the clamshell doors. A hurricane roared into the cockpit. Active slipped off his headset, unbuckled his seat belt and shoulder harness, and zipped up his parka, then braced himself against the ceiling as the Super Cub jolted toward the drop zone.
Cowboy descended slowly. Finally they were over the saddle, the skis maybe three feet off the striated, wind-packed snow. Cowboy gave a thumbs-up. Active grasped the door frame and pulled himself into the opening. He put one foot in the metal stirrup below the door, gathered himself, and jumped.
As he jumped, a gust caught the plane and heaved it upward. By the time his foot left the step, the skis were a dozen feet off the snow, not three, but it was too late. As he fell, he felt the wind take him and then he was cartwheeling over the lip of the ridge and down the cliff.
He fetched up in a clump of willows in the bed of Robert Kelly’s creek, snow in his mouth and eyes, snow down his neck where the parka hood had flipped back in the fall. His left shoulder, still sore from the snowmachine crash on the ice, now was angry to have been banged again and complaining that someone was trying to pry it apart with a hot, jagged, rusty crowbar.
As Active’s breathing slowed, he became aware of the sound of a snowmachine engine, just discernible under the moan of the wind sweeping over the cliff above him. He struggled to his feet in the willows, drawing fresh protests from the left shoulder as he flipped off his mittens and groped for the Smith & Wesson on his belt. His fingers found the holster, unsnapped and empty. Frantically, he pawed through the snow around him until his wool undergloves contacted the cold, hard steel of the grip.
As he came out of the willows, he saw a black Arctic Cat headed his way, dogsled in tow, the driver’s attention focused downslope, where Cowboy was making another circle in the Super Cub and heading back toward the mouth of the canyon.
Active realized the driver hadn’t seen him yet. He waved his right arm until finally the man on the snowmachine looked his way. The driver spotted the Smith & Wesson still in Active’s hand and hit the throttle.
The snowmachine roared ahead and Active lined the sights up on the engine compartment. Maybe a couple of lucky shots would disable the machine. Then he realized the driver was not just accelerating, but also swerving—toward him.
Active shifted his aim to the driver and fired twice before the snowmachine hit him. He went down on his back, lost the pistol again, felt a front ski pass over the left half of his body, then the cleated rubber drive track, then the dogsled. He felt a jerk on his left arm, felt more pain from his left shoulder than he could have imagined, and realized his hand was caught in the frame of the sled. He plowed through the snow and rocks and willows a few yards before he could work his hand out of the rope webbing that held the sled’s wooden stanchions to the runner.
As he lay facedown in the snow, waiting for the agony in his left shoulder to subside so that he could stand up, he was dimly aware that the snowmachine was slowing, perhaps turning— was the driver coming back to finish him off?
The blaze in his shoulder wasn’t subsiding at all. It was getting hotter and hotter. Waves of fire radiated from the joint, sweeping through his stomach—the nausea!—through his head, so warm and relaxed in his head now, the shoulder barely even noticeable, what had been the problem with it anyway?
SOMEONE WAS COMING THROUGH the door of the cabin as Active swam back up to consciousness. He didn’t know how he knew where he was, but he did, so being in the cabin was all right.
But the figure in the doorway wasn’t all right, because he was the driver of the snowmachine and he had something in his hand—a rifle or a harpoon, it was difficult to tell. Active remembered clearly that he should be afraid of the driver, though not why.
So Active went for his gun, which, if he remembered right, was on his belt. Then he discovered he couldn’t get his right hand up to the gun. He jerked and jerked but his arm wouldn’t move and pain shot through his left shoulder like a fire snake was crawling into the joint. He heard himself grunting, “Unhh, unhh, unhh,” and that was when he realized this was another version of the bullet dream.
The driver must have stabbed him in the shoulder, the latest innovation in the bullet dream. Usually, Active would wake up just before the bad guy got him. He would pull his gun and try to fire, but the bullet would dribble out the end of the barrel with a little “pop” and fall to the floor. He would try again, squeezing the trigger as hard as he could, jerking it convulsively like someone being electrocuted or having an orgasm, but still the bullets would just pop out of the muzzle and fall to the floor. The bad guy would laugh and raise his gun and—and then Active would wake up and the bullet dream would be over.
But not this time. This time the bullet dream kept going. The bad guy had stabbed him in the shoulder with his rifle, which made no sense unless the rifle had a bayonet on it. Did it? He tried to see through the gloom of the cabin—was there a blood-smeared bayonet on the snowmachine driver’s rifle? Could the driver have shot him? He hadn’t heard a shot but maybe the rifle had a silencer on it? He raised his head again to peer—
And then the bullet dream was over and he was awake.
He was in a cabin and it was the cabin from the dream. He was on the floor, and he was bound—that part of it had been real. He couldn’t move his arms or his feet.
Another thing that was real was the blaze in his left shoulder. It was like someone had poured a cup of avgas into the joint, then tossed in a match. It seemed familiar, somehow.
Hockey, that was it. A hockey game at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Two skaters from the other team had forced him into the sideboard. Somehow in the melee, his arm was caught, twisted. He had clutched the arm, fainted, and been carried off the ice.
When he woke up, a doctor told him he had dislocated his shoulder and passed out from the shock. “No problem, as long as we fix it right away,” the doctor said as he gave Active a shot of Demerol. Then he had laid Active on the floor, put his foot in Active’s armpit, and yanked. Even through the Demerol fog, Active thought he felt the pop as the ball slipped back into the socket, and that was that.
What had the doctor called it? Relocated? No, reduced, that was it, reduced. He had reduced the dislocated shoulder.
The shoulder was sore as hell for a while and Active wore a sling that was strapped to his chest to immobilize the arm. He had skipped several weeks of the season, gotten well, and forgotten about it. Until now. Now it was all coming back to him.
He shifted on the floor, trying and failing to find a position that hurt less. He did find out what his hands were bound with: duct tape. So were his feet, and they seemed to be tied to the wall with a piece of green nylon camp cord. Another piece of it lashed his hands to his belt, which probably explained why he hadn’t been able to move his arm in the bullet dream.
There was a groan from across the cabin and he became aware of a metal cot against the opposite wall, with someone on it, facing the wall, his back to Active.
That realization and the pain in his shoulder cleared away more of the fog. Now he remembered jumping—no, falling— out of Cowboy Decker’s Super Cub, falling because of the gust that tossed the plane upward just as he was stepping off. He remembered being blown over the bluff and tumbling down the side, landing in the willows, the snowmachine coming at him, firing at the driver, being hit. . . .
So that had to be the driver, presumably Robert Kelly, up there on the cot, groaning. Robert Kelly must have dragged him back into the cabin, trussed him on the floor like this, then lain down for a nap. But that made no sense. Robert Kelly was trying to get away with Natchiq’s remains in the blue tarp. Why would he take time to do all that? Was this still the bullet dream after all?
Active peered around the cabin. It was a standard Bush camp. Plywood and two-by-four construction; windows on the front and sides; white foam-block insulation on the walls and ceiling; snowshoes, animal traps, and other gear hanging from nails pounded into the studs. An oil heater muttering in a corner, a Coleman cookstove on a plywood counter, two Coleman lanterns, unlit, hanging from the beams overhead, just the one cot for sleeping, a battery-powered radio on a wall shelf beside the cot. Apparently Robert Kelly didn’t have company very often.
A beat-up wooden table stood in the middle of the cabin, between him and Robert Kelly’s cot. In fact, he had to look under the table, between its legs, to see Robert Kelly’s back. Now he tried to look up and over the edge of the table to see what was on top. A roll of duct tape, a can of Prince Albert pipe tobacco, a bottle of something that looked medicinal, a wad of white rags with red-brown stains.
Of course. He must have hit Kelly when he fired the Smith &Wesson out there in the willows. The bottle was probably iodine and those stains on the rags were blood. Kelly hadn’t laid down for a nap before taking off. He was wounded. Maybe dying.
But evidently he had dragged Nathan Active into the cabin and tied him up on the floor before collapsing. Why? Why not leave him out in the willows to freeze to death? In fact, if you’re the killer of Victor Solomon and you’re trying to get away, why not finish off the trooper who had just dropped out of the sky and shot you?
Active shook his head. It was too much to think about, with his shoulder hurting like it did. The question was, what now? He was tied up, but given some time he could do something about that. Bend at the waist, draw up his knees, and he could get his hands on the tape at his feet. A few minutes, and he could have them undone. His hands would still be taped, but at least he would be mobile, maybe find something to cut his hands loose. His left arm was useless, but his right one still worked and of course Kelly was wounded and weak, if Active had this figured out right.
Active rolled onto his right side, curled his legs and waist to push his hands toward the tape at his feet. The fire snake writhed in his shoulder and he had to stop, relax, and close his eyes until the pain subsided a little.
When his pulse was close to normal again, he took a deep breath and lunged at his feet, like a fat man trying to prove he can still touch his toes. The fire snake took over his entire being, his body was one big dislocated shoulder. A scream tried to boil up from somewhere. Active clamped his jaws down on it and held it to a grunt. But that big happy bubble of warmth blossomed in his brain, and he felt himself sliding off into shock again.
THIS TIME there was no bullet dream. Active just woke up and opened his eyes, prodded back to consciousness by the pain in his shoulder, completely clearheaded at last. The snowmachine driver sat on the edge of the cot, an old .30-30 carbine across his knees, a pipe between his teeth. He wore insulated pants with suspenders, a plaid wool shirt, unbuttoned, and caribou mukluks. A heavy parka with a green corduroy cover lay on the cot beside him. Active thought he glimpsed a gleam of silver inside the wool shirt, but couldn’t place it.
“Don’t try to get away,” the driver said. He jacked a shell into the firing chamber of the carbine. “I should shoot you.”
“I won’t,” Active said. He relaxed, eased his body straight again. The blaze in his shoulder died down a little.
He studied the driver. Narrow face, somewhat egg-shaped, with leathery, supple-looking mahogany skin, same quality of vigorous but unguessable age as Whyborn Sivula. A slightly beaked nose; silver hair, eyebrows, and mustache; silver bristles on his cheeks and chin. A half-healed cut over his brow.
And calm, resigned eyes.
“You’re Robert Kelly,” Active said.
The driver lifted his eyebrows. “
Ee
.” The calm eyes were still on Active. “What your name?”
“Nathan Active. I’m an Alaska State Trooper from Chukchi.”
“I guess I know who you are,” Kelly said. “I hear you on Kay-Chuck sometimes, talk about catch people. How did you get here?”
“In the Super Cub. You looked at us when we flew over.”
Kelly lifted his eyebrows. “But that airplane never land.”
“I jumped out.”
“Ah?”
Active nodded. “
Ee
.”
“You never use a parachute?”
Active shook his head. “I, well, I didn’t have one.”
Kelly was silent, digesting this. Then, “Pretty bum weather today. I never see a plane up here when it’s this bad.”
“Cowboy Decker was flying. Do you know him?”
Kelly squinted no, then his face tightened. He closed his eyes, laid the rifle on the cot and put his hand inside the wool shirt, feeling along his right side. Now Active could see that the silver gleam was a band of duct tape wrapped around Kelly’s middle. He pulled his hand out, studied it, and seemed satisfied with the result. He looked up and caught Active’s eyes on him.
“No more blood now, so I guess you never hit me too bad.” He raised his right arm and rotated it gingerly at the shoulder, testing the side, wincing a little. “Why you do that anyway?”
“I thought you were going to run over me with your snowgo.”
“Well, I think you’re about to shoot me.”
There was a long silence. Active gathered that Kelly, like himself, couldn’t think of what to say next.
Finally Active spoke. “Why did you bring me in here? Why not just take off?”
“I’m shot, so I have to go back to my cabin, see how bad it is, fix myself up first,” Kelly said. “But if I leave you out there, then maybe you’ll wake up, find your gun in the snow, try shoot me again.”
He stopped and smiled a little. “I’m shot, hurts too much to put you in my sled. I tie you on behind with rope, drag you to my cabin.” The grin got bigger. “But I go real slow.”
“My shoulder doesn’t feel like you went slow.”
Kelly shrugged, then grimaced like it had hurt his injured side. “I think your shoulder’s already hurt before I tie you on. You scream when I pull on your arms, scream all the way to my cabin.”
There was a silence. Active waited.
Finally Kelly spoke. “Anyway, I guess I wonder, why does a state trooper come all the way up here to my camp, jump out of airplane, try shoot me?”
Active studied Kelly’s eyes and thought how to do this. Kelly seemed to want to talk. Ordinary people usually did after doing something terrible, like a killing. The stress was too much for them.
“Do you remember a man named Whyborn Sivula?” Active asked at last. “You brought him here a long time ago.”
At first the calm eyes were blank. Then they widened in recollection. “Ah. Whyborn Sivula. He tell you, he tell you . . . what he tell you?”
“Will you tell me about Natchiq?”
“I don’t know about that.”
“You told Whyborn Sivula about him.”
Kelly took a deep breath and gazed out the cabin’s front window. It looked like milk out there, milk and flying snow. Active realized now how loudly the wind keened around the cabin. It sounded stronger, more violent, than when he had rolled off the ridge and into the willows and fired at Robert Kelly. Perhaps the storm was building again, as Cowboy had said it might. He wondered if the pilot would make it back to Chukchi in what would be a fierce head wind on the return trip.
Kelly swung his eyes back to Active’s. “Whyborn told you about Natchiq?”
“A little. I know he was your grandfather. And I know he fought the
angatquqs
and made prophesies and then he started out for Barrow and he was never seen again.”
“That goddamn Saganiq see him again, all right!” Kelly slammed his hand down on the bed, then winced from the pain. “He kill him up here!”
Active just lifted his eyebrows.
“I guess it won’t hurt to tell you the rest of the story. Then you’ll know how that Saganiq was.” Kelly sighed and inspected his wound again. “By the time Natchiq start for Barrow, his first wife is dead so he—”
“What happened to her?”
“My dad never say, just that she die somehow. Her and Natchiq never have any kids of their own but they adopt these two little orphans, a girl name Enyana and a boy name Kiana. By the time Natchiq decide to go north, Kiana is already grown up and married to Point Hope girl and living up there with her family, trying to tell those people about Natchiq and his source of intelligence. This Enyana, she’s really pretty, sew and cook real good, like to laugh, so Natchiq take her for his second wife. Him and Enyana, they leave for the north when springtime is starting, like now. They take maybe three-four dogs, but I don’t know if the dogs are pulling sled, or if they’re carrying packs. Natchiq tell everybody he’ll go to Barrow, then Canada. You know the Eskimo name for Barrow?”