Chapter 48
The largest gold nugget found in Oregon weighed
seventeen pounds.
“WHAT WAS THAT ABOUT YOU having
demon blood in you?” Gollum asked quietly as he helped me negotiate
a pile of cave debris that nearly blocked the passage.
I didn’t really need the help, but it felt good to
let his strength and height aid me.
I took comfort that I wasn’t alone in these
tunnels. There was a malevolent presence here. Resentment. Fear.
Greed.
“Um . . .”
“We didn’t tell anyone,” Phonetia said. “The
Nörglein figured that out on his own.”
So I told my Gollum how Pete had bound the girls
and how Lucia and I had broken the spell. Then I slowly and
carefully told him about Lucia and my Noncoiré ancestor; sounding
out my own emotions as I spoke. He had a right to know.
“In a weird way that makes sense,” Gollum said.
Then he grew silent.
“What? No lecture? No dissertation?”
I sensed his shrug more than saw it. I had to watch
where I put my feet on the uneven ground in the limited
light.
“I can see the safety lights in the main tunnel,”
E.T. announced.
“Thank God,” I muttered.
Help me! A faint cry in the distance froze
me to the bone.
“Did you hear that?” I started shaking. My feet
refused to take the next three steps, even though the way was
clear.
“Hear what?” Phonetia asked. She stopped too,
turning her head right and left.
Get out! a different voice said; closer this
time.
“I don’t hear anything,” Gollum said. He pushed his
glasses higher on his nose, as if that enhanced his hearing.
Despair threatened to overwhelm me. Tears burned in
my eyes. No hope. No way out. Nothing but this endless darkness,
pain, thirst, hunger. Fear. Alone.
I was going to die alone in this god-awful
place.
My legs turned to jelly. I sank to my knees
weeping. My shoulders felt too heavy to remain upright. I curled in
on myself, resting my forehead on the cold earth, not caring that a
sharp rock pressed against sensitive flesh.
Gollum knelt beside me, cradling my body against
his.
No help. No use.
“Maybe it’s the ghosts,” E.T. whispered.
“They don’t bother with us much,” Phonetia
added.
“Father never cleared them out,” Oak added. “He
said they kept mundanes from penetrating the tunnels far enough to
know just how deep they go.”
“Greed from the gold rush eras intensifies all the
emotion of the spirits that refuse to leave,” Doug added. He spun
in place, arms extended, palms up, absorbing the psychic
emotions.
“Is it true that Doreen is the mother of one of
us?” Cedar spoke for the first time.
“Yes,” I said, clinging to the ordinary world of
words, questions, and answers.
The heavy ache of despair lifted a little. I was
able to pull myself up a bit.
“You’re more sensitive than most to otherworldly
creatures,” Gollum said. “We already know you’re a projecting
empath. Probably a receiver too. You’ve got to blank your mind to
the echoes of the past. They are long dead. They cannot hurt you.
There is nothing you can do to help them.”
“I can get a priest down here tomorrow morning and
exorcise them,” I replied firmly. Determination returned. I
stumbled to my feet. Gollum rose up with me, taking my hand in
his.
That little bit of connection to a living human
helped banish the weight of the dead. I wasn’t alone.
We moved on, clambering over the last obstacles to
the clear passage that rose gradually. Brick archways led to side
tunnels; each one the subbasement of a different building. Wooden
walls closed off holding cells for the Shanghai shipmasters, and
the white slavers.
I guessed we turned west, uphill and away from the
river.
I heard footsteps, loud and clear from the
northeast. I started shaking again.
Gollum thumbed off his light.
“They’re real this time,” Phonetia whispered. She
and her sister melted against a smoothly carved dirt wall, blending
with the earth. Becoming invisible. I followed their example,
finding worn bricks and crumbling mortar behind me. At times I can
become a chameleon. A shift of posture, rearrangement of hair and
costume and I blend in, sending questing eyes everywhere but at
me.
All three boys did their own disappearing act in a
shadowed alcove fitted out with stacks of bunk bed frames, four up
on each of three walls with barely three feet walking space in the
center. An opium den.
“Probably just a caretaker,” Gollum whispered,
drawing me closer with an arm around my shoulders.
“Tess? I know you’re down here somewhere,” Donovan
called.
Gollum turned on his light again, aiming it
directly into the newcomer’s eyes.
Donovan shaded his brow with one hand as he walked
hesitantly out of a side corridor.
“Where’d you come from?” I asked, pushing Gollum’s
hand down so Donovan wasn’t blinded by the flashlight.
“I own the building that used to house a saloon
with a Shanghai trapdoor. The trapdoor is still there if you know
how to find it. But it’s easier to come down the cellar stairs into
the basement.” He flashed a grin.
“Shanghai trapdoor?” I mused. “That explains the
ghosts.”
Donovan blanched, then recovered his normal
aplomb.
“You hear them too, don’t you,” I commented,
stepping out from behind the light so Donovan could find me.
“The passage is clear and easy going for about a
half mile, then it gets rough, narrow and steep. You up to it?”
Donovan avoided the subject of ghosts. He’d probably lived with
them every day during the eight hundred years he inhabited a
gargoyle statue.
“Did you complete . . . your . . . errand?” Gollum
asked. He kept a wary eye on all five of the children.
Donovan nodded mutely. “The old bastard won’t rape
any more women, or bind any more men. Lady Lucia made sure of that
before we weighted the body with plastic bottles filled with stones
and dumped it into the river.” He turned his head away and
swallowed heavily.
“I bet that Lucia’s handling of the body wasn’t
pretty.”
We all nodded in mute agreement. I swallowed my gag
reflex. Motherhood had mellowed Lady Lucia, but only when it suited
her. I briefly worried about Sophia’s upbringing with a
bloodthirsty demon mother. Lucia was right to give her to me.
Suddenly, I didn’t want that sweet and innocent
child growing up like her mother. I’d made my decision and wouldn’t
postpone our discussion any longer. We’d figure out the details
tomorrow. My feet really wanted to retreat and protect the
child.
But I owed Sean a rescue first.
Determinedly, I set a brisk pace through the
tunnel. I didn’t look right or left. I didn’t want to know the
horrors that had taken place down here when Portland was an
ungoverned seaport. Gold in California, gold in eastern Oregon,
gold in the Black Hills. All that greed had prompted men and women
to behave as badly as any demon.
“Is it true, Mr. Donovan?” Oak asked quietly as we
trudged along.
“Is what true?”
“That the Cooper woman is mother to one of us.”
Like the boys didn’t believe me.
“Yes.”
“Which one?”
“We don’t know. But when I marry Doreen in two
weeks, I will adopt both of you.”
Good for him.
“Unless Tess agrees to marry me first. Then I’ll
adopt all five of you.” Donovan flashed me a bright grin. His teeth
nearly glowed in the beam of the flashlight. “I’ll give you the
saloon as a wedding present and you can turn the tunnels into an
amusement park.”
I groaned. “Not a chance, Donovan. I’m spoken for.”
I slipped my hand into Gollum’s.
“Isn’t he taken?” Donovan protested.
“Not any more,” Gollum replied. Then he stopped
abruptly, playing the light over a seemingly blank brick wall with
a pile of dirt and building debris at its base. “End of the road.
We’ll have to turn back. Maybe one of the side tunnels,” he
said.
The ones filled with ghosts.
“No, it’s not the end of the road,” E.T. said. She
surged from behind and grabbed the light from Gollum. “See this
crack between dirt and brick?”
Before we could reply she twisted sideways and
slithered through. She shone the light backward, illuminating the
impassible path.
“It’s easy,” Phonetia echoed. She too slid
inward.
“Maybe for you two. You’re vine skinny,” I
complained.
“So are you, love.” Gollum pushed me forward. Sure
enough the crack was wider than it looked. Rough rock and dirt
scraped my sweater, reopening the mostly forgotten sword wound as I
inched my way through. Then I popped out into a wider room. I could
just barely see steps cut into the rocky slope that formed the back
wall.
“Not far now,” Oak said as he too came through the
barrier.
“I don’t want to be adopted. Not by you. Not by
anyone even if the Cooper woman gave birth to me,” Cedar said
defiantly. He blocked Donovan and Gollum from entering the
crack.
“Cedar, we talked about this,” Oak said. He sounded
worried.
“Who will guard the forest if we give in to these
people? Who will tend it with the love and care it needs to protect
it from casual bits of harm and major influxes of danger?”
We all stopped and thought about that.
“Cedar, you don’t have to do it all alone. It’s
time to let humans help you,” I reassured him. That was a lesson
I’d found hard to learn.
“Father says . . . said that humans are
incompetent, and more dangerous than fire during a drought.” He
stood solid and strong in the wind of my argument.
“The Nörglein never grew with the times. He knew
humans with the medieval belief that the forest was a dark and
dangerous place to be destroyed or avoided. Because he kept it that
way.”
I let that sink in a moment before continuing.
“Because of the Nörglein and creatures who didn’t really belong
there, the forest was a place to be exploited and eliminated
for the protection of people and their families. Humanity has
learned a lot about the value of the forest. We’re working hard to
preserve what we have and restore some of what we’ve lost.”
“You’ve lost too much! The forest we have is barely
enough!” Cedar cried. Moisture gathered in his eyes. He truly loved
his patch of wilderness.
“I know someone who has trained volunteers to help
a forest grow and thrive,” I said quietly. “My aunt, MoonFeather,
is a special person. She has an affinity with the natural world.
She’ll know how to keep you involved with the volunteers while you
lead a more human life in a family. In case you haven’t noticed,
Portland . . . the entire state has spearheaded conservation. With
your help we can do even more.”
Cedar bit the insides of his cheeks. “I’ll help you
tonight because I do not like the minions with tattoos growing
marijuana in my forest.” He pushed himself through the crack
with some difficulty, his barrel chest scraping the dirt hard. “But
I will not leave with any of you when you remove the Sean person
from my home.”
Donovan reached an arm through and grabbed the
boy’s shirt.
“Easy. Don’t force the issue,” Gollum said.
“He only knows threats and violence. He won’t
respond to anything else,” Donovan protested.
“All the more reason to break the cycle of threats
and violence. Give him a chance to get used to the idea of regular
meals, a comfortable home, and family to keep loneliness at bay.
There will also be friends, books, TV and movies, more cons and
gaming for him to adjust to. Let him think.”
My Gollum knew what he was doing. He planted the
seeds of ideas. Only time would tell if they fell on fertile
ground.
“We’ll talk later,” Donovan promised.
We pushed upward in silence.
My calves burned from the steep climb. Too often I
felt Gollum push my back upward and welcomed the boost.
E.T. and her sister bounced up the steps as if they
danced on the flat. I thought I was fit. They put me to
shame.
A whiny tenor voice drifted downward:
We wuz made to pump all night an’ day.
Leave her, Johnny, leave her!
An’ we half-dead and bugger-all to say
An it’s time for us to leave her!
Leave her, Johnny, leave her!
An’ we half-dead and bugger-all to say
An it’s time for us to leave her!
I recognized the old Irish drinking song about a
ship. Taken out of context, as it usually was, it could mean a
whole lot of bawdy things.
The girls rolled their eyes and pressed on.
“What?” I mouthed more than whispered.
“Shush. We’re close. They’ll hear us,” Phonetia
admonished. “Sound carries strangely here.”
We’ll leave her tight an’ we’ll leave her
trim,
Leave her, Johnny, Leave her!
We’ll heave the hungry bastard in.
An’ it’s time for us to leave her!
Leave her, Johnny, Leave her!
We’ll heave the hungry bastard in.
An’ it’s time for us to leave her!
I finally recognized Sean as the off-key vocalist.
He wandered around several high notes before finding one he could
settle on. Not the one meant for the song.
I can sing better than that, Scrap said on a
yawn as he popped out of nothing and onto my shoulder with
precision I hadn’t seen in him before.
Oh, sing that we boys will never be
Leave her, Johnny, leave her!
In a hungry bitch the like o’ she.
An’ it’s time for us to leave her!
Leave her, Johnny, leave her!
In a hungry bitch the like o’ she.
An’ it’s time for us to leave her!
“Pinpoint landing, Scrap. Good one.” I relaxed a
bit knowing my friend and ally had come back.
Tight quarters, babe. Tight time line.
Uh, oh. Scrap had lingered in his recovery too long
and had to use a bit of time travel to get back to me before
disaster struck.
He wouldn’t have risked slipping up on the tricky
maneuver if disaster weren’t about to close in on us.
A dozen demon tats armed with Uzis and ropes of
ammo. Straight out of a Mexican Bandito movie.