Читать книгу Arches Enemy - Scott Graham - Страница 12

Оглавление

1

Thump.

Chuck Bender quivered from head to toe as the pulsing vibration passed through his body.

He lay awake beside his wife, Janelle Ortega, in their camp trailer. His stepdaughters, Carmelita and Rosie, slept in narrow bunk beds opposite the galley kitchen halfway down the camper’s center aisle, their breaths soft and steady.

He didn’t need to check his watch to know the time. The O&G Seismic truck had begun its work promptly at 7:30 the previous two mornings. No doubt the crew was on schedule at the start of this day as well.

Chuck pulled back the curtain over the window abutting the double bed at the back of the trailer. Sleet pelted the glass. Dark clouds hung low over the campground. He dropped the curtain back into place. Another thump sounded, followed by another rolling vibration, as the seismic truck pounded the earth outside Arches National Park to the north, trolling for underground deposits of oil and natural gas.

He rolled to face Janelle. Her eyes were closed, but her breathing was uneven, wakeful. He drew a line down her smooth olive cheek, tracing the gentle arc of her skin with his fingertip. Her eyes remained shut, but the corner of her mouth twitched.

“Hey, there, belleza,” he murmured, lifting a lock of her silky black hair away from her face.

She opened her eyes and turned to him, tucking her hands beneath her pointed chin. “Belleza nadie. Nobody’s beautiful this early in the morning.”

“You are. Besides, it’s not that early. We slept in.”

A powerful gust roared through the campground, tearing at the trailer’s aluminum shell.

She raised her eyebrows. “That’s some storm.”

“As predicted.” He gathered her in his arms and pressed his body to hers.

Sheets rustled in the lower bunk. Janelle raised her head to peer down the walkway over Chuck’s shoulder. “Look who’s awake,” she said. “Buen día, m’hija.”

Hola, Mamá,” eleven-year-old Rosie responded from the bottom bunk in her deep, raspy voice. “You two woke me up with all your lovey-dovey talking. Are you having sex?”

Chuck released Janelle, who slid away from him to her side of the bed. A snort of laughter sounded from behind the drawn curtain that hid thirteen-year-old Carmelita in the top bunk.

Janelle grinned at Chuck as they lay facing each other. She said to Rosie, “No, honey, we’re not … we’re not …”

“… having sex? But you said that’s what people do when they love each other.”

“There’s a time and place for everything, m’hija. I can’t say this is exactly the right time and place to be asking about that sort of thing, but I guess it’s good you’re remembering all the stuff we’ve been talking about.”

“The birds and the bees,” Rosie confirmed from her bed. “Sex, sex, sex.”

Janelle pulled her pillow from beneath her head, pressed it over her face, and issued a heavy sigh from beneath it.

Chuck folded his pillow in half beside her. Settling the back of his head on it, he looked down the center aisle of the trailer as Carmelita drew back the upper-bunk curtain and leaned over the side of her bed. Her long hair, dark and silky like her mother’s, hung past her head, hiding her face. Rosie lifted herself on her elbows, looking up at Carmelita. Rosie’s hair, also black, was short and kinky and smashed against the side of her skull from her night’s sleep.

Carmelita scolded her younger sister. “You’re never gonna learn the right time and place for anything.”

Rosie flopped back on her mattress and crossed her arms over her thick torso, hands clenched. “Will, too.”

“I wouldn’t bet on it.”

“I would,” Chuck said to Carmelita from the rear of the trailer. “Your sister’s going to keep on getting smarter and smarter, just like you. I mean, look how wise and all-knowing you’ve gotten, just in the last few weeks.”

Carmelita sat up straight in the bed, her spine rigid. She gathered the top sheet around her waist, slitted her hazel eyes at Chuck, and whipped the curtain back across the bed, closing herself off from view.

Janelle lifted her pillow from her face and whispered to Chuck, “There’s no need for that.”

“I couldn’t help myself,” he whispered back. “I can’t get used to her, to our new Carmelita.”

“We don’t have any choice.”

Chuck worked his jaw back and forth. Carmelita had been a loving big sister to Rosie and a kindhearted daughter and stepdaughter to Janelle and Chuck until a few weeks ago, when she’d woken one morning with a scowl on her face and a smirk playing at the corners of her mouth. Since then, as if inhabited by an alien being, she had subjected her little sister to incessant teasing, and had responded with little more than monosyllables and grunts of exasperation to all attempts at conversation by Chuck and Janelle.

Chuck knew Carmelita was simply expressing her growing sense of independence as she entered her teen years. But knowing the why of her behavior didn’t make dealing with the reality of it any easier.

“You can’t be the one going on the attack,” Janelle insisted. “You have to control yourself—which is to say, you have to stop channeling your mother.”

Chuck recoiled. “Sheila has nothing to do with this.”

Janelle rested her hand on his forearm. “She has everything to do with this. Especially now, for the next two weeks.”

“Between the two of them, it’s like we’re surrounded.”

“The only way you and I will survive is if we stick together. Juntos. And we have to keep on being nice to Carm. Just like we’ll be nice to your mother.” She tapped his nose with her finger. “Remember, this was all your idea—Sheila, your contract, the four of us crammed together into this teeny tiny trailer for two whole weeks in the middle of winter.”

“It’s not winter yet. Not quite. Yesterday and the day before were great—sunny, warm. Plus, we’ve managed to avoid Sheila so far.”

“The first two days were the calm before the storm.” Janelle lifted the curtain on her side of the bed and peeked out. “Literally.”

Chuck stared at the trailer ceiling, close overhead. At eight feet by twenty-eight feet, the camper had seemed palatial when he’d bought it off a used lot in Durango a month ago for their planned stay in Arches. But by the end of their first day in Devil’s Garden Campground, in the heart of southern Utah’s spectacular red rock country, palatial had become cozy. This morning, with the gale raging outside, the trailer felt hopelessly cramped.

The four of them couldn’t possibly stay inside all day, trapped by the storm. They would drive each other nuts. Nor could Chuck avoid Sheila forever. Maybe today was the day—finally, after four years—to introduce Janelle and the girls to his mother.

He tensed, anticipating the next pulsing beat from the O&G Seismic truck. Instead, a sharp crack sounded from somewhere just north of the campground, much closer than the truck’s location outside the park boundary. A thunderous rumble shook the camper, accompanied by a shock wave that rocked the trailer on its wheels.

Chuck clambered out of bed, smacking his forehead on the cabinetry lining the walkway. Janelle threw off the sheets and grabbed the fitted jeans and black T-shirt she’d worn yesterday from hooks in the center aisle.

Carmelita pulled back her upper-bunk curtain. She and Rosie looked on, their eyes large and round, as Chuck and Janelle tugged on their clothes.

“Wait here,” Chuck told them from the trailer doorway. “We’ll be right back.”

He caught his reflection in the small window set in the door as he bent to tie his boots. His short hair, brown going gray, rose straight up, thatched and unkempt, from his grooved forehead. The wan morning light streaming through the window reflected off his high temples, bared by his receding hairline. Crow’s feet cut away from his blue eyes, seared into his leathery skin by the harsh desert sun over the course of his two decades of shovel and trowel work on archaeological digs across the Southwest, tough physical labor that kept him lean and fit.

He pulled on his insulated rain jacket and ducked outside with Janelle. They strode through the campground together. Motor homes the size of city buses loomed out of the mist, backed into numbered sites along the paved driveway. Moisture puddled on the roofs of tow cars parked in front of the massive recreational vehicles. Electric generators hummed at the back of the RVs. Blurry faces peered out from behind the motor homes’ tall fogged windshields. No one besides Chuck and Janelle was outside.

“Everybody must think the sound was part of the seismic operations,” Chuck said.

“That’s what it sounded like to me,” Janelle replied.

“It wasn’t, though. It was different. Sharper. And closer.”

“It came from the direction of your work site, didn’t it?”

“That’s one of the things I’m worried about.”

Janelle glanced back at the trailer. “Will the girls be okay?”

Chuck swept a hand at the watching motor home owners. “We couldn’t ask for nosier neighbors. Besides, Carmelita’s in charge. She knows everything at this point.”

Janelle whirled to face Chuck, the sharp movement sending droplets of melted sleet cascading off the hood of her jacket. “Don’t go there.” She ticked a finger back and forth at him in warning. “One smart aleck in the family is enough. You can’t try to fight her, not in this case. You’ll never win.” She slipped her hand back in her jacket pocket.

Sí, señora mía,” Chuck said. “I promise.” Though he wasn’t at all sure he had it in him to do as she directed.

The paved parking lot fronting Devil’s Garden Trailhead—at the end of the road into Arches from the park entrance town of Moab—was devoid of cars. Like the RV owners in their massive homes on wheels, would-be park visitors clearly were holed up in town this morning, waiting out the storm.

Devil’s Garden Trail led north from the parking area. Chuck’s foot slipped when he stepped from the pavement onto the dirt trail. He shot out his arms, struggling for balance, his boots sliding like skis in the saturated soil. Janelle giggled behind him as he caught himself and continued on the path, his feet squelching in the untracked mud.

Soon after leaving the parking lot, the trail entered a low-walled sandstone corridor choked with sagebrush. The short corridor opened onto a mile-wide flat, where the trail came to a junction marking the start of the seven-mile Devil’s Garden hiking loop. The roughly circular path led to five of the more than one hundred sandstone spans within the park boundaries that gave Arches National Park its name. From the junction, the trail’s right-hand branch passed Private Arch on the way to Double O Arch. The left-hand branch led northwest to Landscape Arch, just over half a mile from the parking lot, then to Navajo and Partition arches.

“We should go left,” Chuck said as they approached the junction.

A gust of sleet-laden wind whipped across the flat, carrying with it the piney scent of wet sage.

“But your contract site is to the right.”

“The more I think about it, the more it seems to me the sound came from one of the arches—and of all the arches in Devil’s Garden, Landscape makes the most sense.”

Janelle moaned. “Please, no,” she said.

“Something made that noise. Besides, the timing’s right.”

“But it’s been there for thousands of years.”

“It’s by far the longest and skinniest arch in the park—and it’s never had a seismic truck pounding away at the ground so close to it before.” Chuck hunched his shoulders against the lashing sleet. A gust of wind slapped a wet sage branch against his thigh, soaking his pant leg. “The freeze-thaw cycle is what causes most arches to collapse. The most recent one to fall in the park was Wall Arch, in 2008. It fell in late October, the time of year when temperatures drop below freezing at night and climb back above thirty-two degrees in the daytime.” He raised his hand, allowing the icy needles plunging from the sky to wet his palm. “This is the first real cold snap to hit the park this fall. The temperature dropped into the twenties last night, before the clouds came in. That was the freeze part of the cycle. Then came sunrise and the thaw part, with temperatures rising to freezing or a little above—just as the truck started thumping.”

“You really think … ?”

“Lots of people have been worried about it. That’s why they fought the seismic work so close to the park for so long. But the courts finally okayed it. O&G Seismic started pounding the ground outside the park a week ago, just in time for the storm to come along.”

Chuck led Janelle down the left branch of the trail. The path angled across the flat and entered a gap between tall cliffs. The sandstone walls fell back after a hundred yards, giving way to a second opening, this one less than a quarter-mile across and dotted with sage, rabbitbrush, and Indian ricegrass. Sandstone bluffs surrounded the desert flat. Wind whistled off the bluffs and across the opening, making the sage and rabbitbrush branches shiver. Ice crystals clung to the bushes’ miniature gray-green leaves.

Chuck peered ahead from the edge of the flat. His back muscles drew up tight at what he saw. He stepped aside and pointed. “There.”

On the far side of the opening, a pair of sandstone stumps extended outward from rock bluffs a hundred yards apart. The stumps marked the two ends of the place where, until this morning, Landscape Arch had soared through space.

Bile rose in Chuck’s stomach, fiery and burning. He’d hiked here from the campground with Janelle, Carmelita, and Rosie just two days ago, their first day in the park. When Carmelita had spied the span, she’d become a little kid again for a few welcome moments, oohing and aahing with Rosie at the spindly rock bridge arcing across the sky. But now the sky was empty, the arch reduced to a line of jagged rocks lying jumbled on the ground between the two sheared shoulders of stone.

Janelle passed Chuck, leading him across the flat, her movements stiff and stilted, to a split-rail fence that kept onlookers from venturing closer. The sandstone stumps protruded from the opposing bluffs fifty feet above their heads. On the ground below, pieces of the shattered span lay amid smashed clumps of sage and ricegrass.

Thump.

The rolling vibration from the seismic truck caused a broken chunk of sandstone the size of a softball to break free from a waist-high block of the broken arch. The small piece of stone fell to the ground, coming to rest in the mud beside something blue extending upward from beneath the larger hunk of rock.

Chuck gripped the top rail of the fence, his fingers cold and white. “See that?” he said to Janelle.

He vaulted the fence and sprinted toward the fallen block of stone. The pungent smell of pulverized sagebrush filled the cold morning air. He drew close to the line of shattered rocks. Another scent mixed with the smell of crushed sage, something metallic.

The scent of blood.

Arches Enemy

Подняться наверх