McGuire watched the grey cloud rise in the air and begin drifting eastward. The column beneath it sagged and dissipated; debris continued to rain down into the massive crater that had once been the site of the trailer home, while lighter dust rode away with the wind.
Nothing remained of the ramshackle trailer, the helicopter, or the immovable and unyielding soldiers who had stood like granite a minute earlier.
“A car, Mozart?” Sam Littleton asked, turning from the sight. “You have one? Let’s go.”
“Go?” McGuire grasped the man by the shoulder. “What the hell are you talking about? We can’t go. There’ll be people all over here in a couple of minutes asking questions.”
“Precisely!” The black cat swiped at McGuire’s hand with its paw. “Some of them may be confederates of Marlowe and Peppler.”
“Who?”
“Baldy and Goggles. Stephen Marlowe. Gaylon Peppler. Good fascists both. If they see us, they will know we know, Mozart. Knowledge is death, can’t you see that? Knowledge of what began as a lark over twenty years ago qualifies you for liquidation with extreme prejudice. But if we are here no more, like the Avon men from Washington who rang my door chimes just now, they will assume we are nowhere anymore.” He giggled and clutched the struggling cat tighter to his chest. “Like the Avon men from Washington and their clattering delivery truck.” The insane smile vanished. “Take me out of here, Mozart, and I’ll tell all. On my word I’ll tell all. Because you, like me and Lafaro here, have been tainted by . . .” His hand swept in an arc, indicating the devastation beyond them. “. . . by this. By all of it.”
From the east, the mournful cry of sirens drifted across the desert. “We have to stay and tell what we know,” McGuire said. “They’ll figure it out anyway.”
“No!” Littleton cried in panic. “Think, Mozart. They don’t want the world to know. They have never wanted the world to know. My claim of living more than twenty years over an armed tactical nuclear weapon will become the babblings of an insane desert rat, driven to hallucinations by emptiness, by drugs, by whatever they wish to claim. And prove, Mozart. They will gather proof that it never happened. Don’t you see? The lie must become a truth. The lie is that no one ever successfully stole a nuclear weapon. The truth is, someone did. Do you have any idea what the impact of that revelation will be?”
McGuire hesitated. The sirens were wailing their way closer. “I’m a police officer,” he said lamely. Somehow he had trouble believing it.
“You bloody fool!” Littleton cried, pulling away and turning in aimless circles. “Tell what you know and you will be contradicted by every federal authority from the Pentagon to your mailman. Your patriotism will be savaged, every transgression in your past will become fodder for new lies.” He swept a hand over his face before turning back to McGuire and screaming, “They will destroy your credibility for the sake of the lie! Then they will destroy you. As a suicide, as an unfortunate accident, whatever can be sold to a public that needs to believe!” He took a step closer. “Whisper what you know and you are a dead man, McGuire. As dead as Bunker. As dead as Marlowe and Peppler. As dead as I would be.”
McGuire turned in the direction of the sirens. Already, the evidence of the nuclear explosion had drifted north and east, away from the crater. “You’ll tell me everything?” he asked softly.
“Yes! Yes!” Littleton replied. He was already heading for the gate. “Into the valley. West into the valley, where we’ll avoid traffic on the road.” He looked up, scanned the sky and began running unsteadily, his arms still clutching the cat.
With McGuire once again behind the wheel of the Mercedes, they plummeted west into a Death Valley moonscape rendered in endless shades of brown and rust. Seated beside McGuire, Littleton alternated between spasms of giggles and periods of sober reflection, which caused tears to course down his cheeks and his receding chin to tremble. The cat remained gathered in his arms, its golden eyes wide and watching. McGuire realized the animal was crippled, unable to move its hind feet. Littleton fed it with small morsels of food from one of the bulging pockets in his jacket.
On the floor of the valley, the road ended at an intersection. “Left,” Littleton directed when McGuire hesitated.
They drove south for more than an hour through the heart of Death Valley, past Furnace Creek and Zabriskie Point, without speaking. At the Black Mountains the road curved east, up and out of the valley, emerging at Shoshone.
“The cave,” McGuire said, pulling onto the dusty shoulder of the highway just beyond the town. “What was in the cave here?”
“Cave?” Littleton had been in a reverie. He looked at McGuire with red-rimmed eyes. “I know nothing of a cave. Not in this dead little hole in the ground.” He giggled with a light, high-pitched laugh. “A hole in the ground with a hole in the ground. That’s where we are, Mozart.”
“Don’t call me that anymore,” McGuire ordered.
“Certainly.” Littleton sank deeper into the passenger seat. “Certainly, McGuire.”
McGuire reached across Littleton and popped open the glove compartment. He pushed aside a road map, the owner’s manual and a pair of elegant sunglasses to find a small flashlight. “Let’s see for ourselves,” he said, swinging the car into town.
The narrow road into Tecopa Canyon wound past several ramshackle houses. It ended at the ruins of a weathered wooden barn and a crumbling stone foundation, both set against a steeply sloped rocky hill. McGuire saw no evidence of life.
“How did those guys get around?” he asked Littleton, his eyes scanning the hillside.
“Marlowe and Peppler? They flew. On the wings of Sikorsky. Their own small army in tow.”
“So they would have flown here?” McGuire asked. “In the same helicopter they used to reach your place?”
“I expect.”
The grassy area alongside the old barn had a flattened look, as though it had been pressed to the ground with a soft, circular weight. McGuire’s eyes followed the line of the hillside above the spot where the helicopter had landed, and found a cluster of bushes clinging to a small, flat precipice. “Let’s go,” he said opening the car door. “Leave the cat here.”
He scrambled up the shallow slope of the hill, pausing several times to catch his breath and note boot tracks, disturbed rocks and other evidence of recent visitors.
Littleton matched his pace, the smaller man’s wiry body climbing easily with practised skill.
McGuire paused halfway to the cave, leaned against the side of the hill and breathed deeply. Littleton stopped just below him, his hands constantly fluttering at his face, stroking eyebrows, adjusting glasses, scratching cheeks.
“Why were you watching Glynnis Vargas from behind her house?” McGuire asked.
Littleton’s body became even more animated; his shoulders shrugged and his head swivelled to survey the scene around them. “Oh my, oh my,” he giggled. “Not voyeurism, Moz . . . McGuire. Indeed not. No, no. Nor mere curiosity. To escape the jackals watching over me, back . . .” His arm waved toward Death Valley. “. . . back there. And to learn.”
“Learn what?”
Littleton giggled again and stared down at the Mercedes parked a hundred feet below. “Later. Everything later.” His eyes darted back to the slope above them, where the mouth of the cave yawned from behind the clump of bushes. “Let’s be done with this first.”
When they reached the cave, McGuire shone the flashlight into its dark interior and saw the marks of heavy boots imprinted on the dusty floor.
McGuire herded the giggling Littleton ahead of him, sweeping their way with the weak beam of the flashlight.
The cave soon narrowed at a large outcropping of sandstone. Beyond the jutting rock it opened again into a small cavern where no daylight penetrated. McGuire moved the light across the floor of the cave, still following the fresh boot tracks, then up the shale-terraced walls to a rock ledge protruding from the wall at eye-level.
McGuire swore and felt his heartbeat quicken. Beside him, Littleton giggled nervously.
From the centre of the cone of light, a human skull stared back at McGuire.
He approached the ledge, keeping the light moving along the length of the skeleton, its bones inhumanly white in the gloom of the cave, across the rotted print fabric of a dress that the body had once worn, and back again to the skull. He fingered the light cotton material, feeling it begin to crumble. Recently attached to one of the skeleton’s ribs was a small yellow tag that McGuire lifted to see the symbol of an eagle, a code number and a scribbled initial. He moved the flashlight back to the skull and into the hollow of the mouth, which he carefully pried open and inspected.
“Enough, McGuire,” Littleton said nervously from behind him. “It’s enough. Let’s be gone from here.”
“Who was she?” McGuire asked, stepping back from the skeleton.
Littleton was already retreating toward the dim light near the cave entrance. “Merely another lost soul on its way to dust. Let’s be gone.”
“How did they know where to find me so quickly?” McGuire demanded.
They were driving south out of Shoshone toward Baker, returning through the same empty landscape McGuire had travelled earlier.
Littleton was stroking the cat, which purred contentedly in his lap. “Find you?” he asked. “Oh, finding you was easy for them. Finding almost anyone was easy for them.” Then he cackled: “But finding nuclear device six-eight-dash-one-three-nine, ah, that was difficult.”
“It was under your trailer home all the time?”
“Armed and ready. In the deepest, darkest blackness of the desert night, it would waken and speak to me.”
McGuire glanced across at the man, watching him slip back and forth between sober reality and giggling insanity.
“Yes, speak to me, McGuire. For I slept with death all those years. Not mild and gentle death, who carries you tenderly through the web of delirium with age. Or the random death of accident and misfortune. No, McGuire. I was closeted with purposeful death. A seventy-five-pound stainless-steel sphere, McGuire. Your everyday death-dealing basketball.”
“And you set it up to destroy Marlowe and Peppler.”
“We are all here for a purpose, McGuire. They were here to locate it.” He laughed. “Locate it they did. The proof, McGuire, is floating over Colorado about now. Particles of molecules which were once Marlowe and Peppler and their robotic confreres. I trust they are enjoying the view.”
“Why did they show up at your place today just as I got there?”
“Because I invited them there. By inviting you.”
“You knew they would follow me.”
Littleton scratched the cat’s chin, watching the animal stretch its front legs and yawn. “And bring as many of their team as possible. Their strike force. Their fascist band. One short, sarcastic note from me pinned to the door and they were inside.”
“Why now? Why invite them now, if you’d had that thing for over twenty years?”
“Ripe time, McGuire. Over-ripe even.” He fed the cat and stroked its fur lovingly. “And the game was up. Tear down the goalposts. Exit the dugouts. Kill the fucking referees.” His laugh was high-pitched and uncontrolled. “Kill the fucking referees. Or as many of them as I could gather in one place. But not directly, you see. A direct invitation would have been recorded. Flight plans and all. It is records and files that breed fascists, McGuire. Peppler and Marlowe, they kept files too. But of facts only. Opinions, intuition, hunches, they were acted upon before they could be recorded, you see. No files of hunches and such, McGuire.” He tapped the side of his head. “They kept them all up here in their ass.” He laughed again.
“Where were you when they arrived?”
“I became my alter ego. The subterranean Little Sam. Defeating my larger uncle with lessons from the Congo Tunnels,” Littleton said in reply to McGuire’s puzzled expression. “Ten years of tunnels beneath the desert. Emerging at the gully. You saw my sickly garden? Nurtured with rich soil withdrawn from beneath the surface? Spread on rocky ground to disguise my life as a mole. And they never understood how my garden grew. Never learned it was the detritus of my escape paths. Fools they are, McGuire. Confident they had contained me with electronic babysitters. They thought ground movements beyond my sorry abode were the wanderings of lovesick coyotes. But it was me, their supposed prey, coming and going. They pictured me coiled with my books and my paranoia, staring at my Sony from the comfort of my reclining chair like patriotic middle-aged Americans everywhere. And there I was, picture it McGuire, there I was, a hundred, two hundred, three hundred miles away, moving crablike over Palm Springs hills or touring the fleshpots of Las Vegas in my tired Volvo.”
Electronic babysitters. McGuire cursed, slammed the steering wheel with his fist and cursed again.
Littleton lurched against the dashboard as McGuire swung the car to the side of the road and applied the brakes, the Mercedes shuddering and drifting sideways to a stop. Even before the car ceased moving, McGuire was out the door and scurrying around the vehicle, running his hands under the body, inside the bumpers, high in the wheel wells, frantically searching for what he knew he would find.
It was hidden in the inner curve of the rear bumper on the passenger’s side. He grasped it with his fingers, pulled against its powerful magnet and drew it into the fading afternoon sunlight: a small plastic box with one thin wire extending a few inches into the air. Inside, McGuire knew, would be a long-life battery and an FM pulse generator transmitting signals on a precise frequency to receivers . . . where? In Las Vegas? Somewhere in space aboard an army satellite?
The man in the museum parking lot.
“Air-conditioner, my ass!” McGuire muttered. He flung the tracking transmitter in the air, watched it careen off the rocky ground and stood with his eyes closed, willing himself to be more careful, more alert, goddamn it.
McGuire chose a nondescript motel in Baker. After registering, he bought takeout food at a restaurant across the road: burgers and coffee for him and Littleton, a tuna-salad sandwich for Lafaro.
“It’s happening,” Littleton said when McGuire returned to the motel room, locking the door behind him. Littleton’s small, bony body was stretched prone on the floor, and he was staring up at the face of a network newscaster on the television screen. “Listen!”
“. . . which onlookers said appeared to be an atomic explosion,” the television news anchorman was saying with appropriate seriousness. “Our correspondent Fred Cherington reports from Nevada.”
McGuire settled himself on the edge of a bed and watched the story unfold on the network evening news.
The television picture cut to a slow, sweeping view of the landscape beyond the blood-red gate at the end of Littleton’s laneway, now guarded by several armed men. “This ranch, near Beatty, Nevada, was owned by a mysterious and reclusive resident named Sam Littleton,” a new voice said. The camera zoomed in, beyond the gully where McGuire and Littleton had crouched, until it found the massive crater blasted out of the desert. “And this was where the home was located. The home of the man local residents knew only as Little Sam.”
The view cut to a close-up of a rancher in cowboy hat and open shirt, his face lit by the afternoon sun, pointing off in the distance. “I was drivin’ outta the mine back there maybe three miles,” the man said. “First, I thought it was an earthquake, then I saw the most godawful explosion from over there. There was a big flash and fire and smoke and stuff and it all went up in a mushroom cloud. I’m tellin’ you, if that weren’t an atomic explosion, that’s as damn close as I wanta get to one.”
Another man’s face appeared, this one Hollywood handsome with perfectly coiffed hair. The news correspondent was wearing a lightweight suit, striped tie and button-down collar. “Many residents of the area had the same reaction,” the television news reporter said into the camera. “Representatives of the federal government, speaking for both the military and the Atomic Energy Commission, were on the scene quickly to quell fears and rumours.”
Another new face on the screen: older, not nearly as handsome, wearing an open-necked shirt and a casual smile. “We are working on the theory that the gentleman in question had either an illegal cache of dynamite in his possession,” the man said in a vaguely southern accent, “or perhaps an over-sized propane tank with a faulty valve. Certainly, either one could have created the kind of devastation we see behind us here.” The camera cut to a new view of the crater as a group of men circled its rim. “But we can state emphatically that what the residents of the area saw was most certainly not the result of a nuclear device.”
Another scene: the news correspondent was back at the gate again, his chin tucked low and his voice carefully modulated. “Local people say they hardly knew the man known as Little Sam Littleton, who resided here on this homestead for more than twenty years. He was considered eccentric and perhaps mildly deranged, but harmless.” The camera zoomed beyond the news correspondent to find the crater again. “Whatever he used to create such widespread destruction, extensive enough to launch rumours of a nuclear explosion here on the edge of Death Valley, may never be known. No trace of Little Sam Littleton or his homestead has been found.” He paused significantly. Someone at the edge of the crater retrieved a scrap of material from the ground and placed it in a yellow plastic bag. “This is Fred Cherington near Beatty, Nevada.”
The screen faded to black before coming alive again with a commercial for a denture adhesive. McGuire walked to the television set and turned it off.
Littleton stared at the carpet. “It’s happening,” he mumbled. “Just as I knew it would. The lies. They’re spreading lies they know must be believed.”
“So tell me the truth,” McGuire said, handing Littleton a burger and the tuna sandwich. “What the hell did you and Bunkie Crawford do back then?”