Authors: Hammond; Innes
He didn't answer, lighting his cigarette one-handed, and I didn't press him. I was too tired, only vaguely conscious that we had come off the canal bank and were angling down across a steep slope of stony ground to the rice-green flatness of the valley floor.
Finally we climbed a bank and were on the road again, the smoothness of it lulling me into such a deep sleep that I never saw the barrier at the railway crossing, did not even hear them telling Ward the Jequetepeque had broken its banks a little further on. It was the violent jolting of our wheels on the sleepers that finally woke me to the realisation that Ward had switched from the road to the railway line itself and was bumping his way along the track towards the gaping mouth of a tunnel.
I sat up then, suddenly wide awake. âWhat the hell?'
âRiver's cut the road again. They say we'll see the break when we cross the bridge.'
âThe bridge?'
âAye. It's just beyond the tunnel. A girder bridge.'
âAnybody else taken this route today?'
âNo.'
I was staring at him, at the set, aquiline face, the great beak of a nose and the hard line of the jaw, his features in silhouette. âYou're mad,' I said.
He nodded, smiling. âMaybe, but right now Ah think the wind is southerly.'
âWhat's that supposed to mean?' The tunnel entrance had grown big, the stone arch of it rearing up ahead of us like the open jaws of some petrified monster.
â
Hamlet
, Ah think â
Ah am mad north-north-west, but when the wind is southerly â¦
Most times with me ye'll find the wind is southerly.'
A curtain of dripping water spat at the bonnet as the darkness of the tunnel engulfed us, the sound of the engine louder now and a sense of finality as the rock walls closed about us. It was like being in the adit of a mine, and I was driving into the bowels of the earth with a man who seemed hell bent on risking our lives for no apparent reason. I thought of the Weddell Sea, the ice and the ghost of that
Flying Dutchman
, visualising the friction that could develop in the close confines of a yacht. My God! I thought, the chances of coming out of that alive with this madman as the owner and driving force ⦠It was crazy. Absolutely crazy.
The dark of the tunnel hammered the engine noise back at us, water drumming on the roof above my head. Ward switched on the headlights, glancing at me quickly, a tight little smile. âYe got to take a positive attitude. Ah enjoy this sort of thin'. Ah like excitement, the unexpected, shovin' against the closed door of the unknown.' He nodded ahead of us to where the tunnel showed an arched embrasure of light. âDarkness is only fur ever when ye're dead.' He dipped the headlights and the far end of the tunnel seemed to leap towards us, bouncing up and down to the thump of our tyres on the sleepers.
Suddenly we were into daylight and right ahead of us the waters of the Jequetepeque ran brown and white, the river's level close under the rails of the girder bridge as it flowed, deep and very fast, through the gorge. The sound of our wheels changed to a hollow banging of wooden boards as we drove across. But then the stupid bastard stopped right in the middle of the bridge. âWhat's the matter?'
âNothing.' He switched the engine off. âJust admirin' the view.' He was pulling the sun roof open and thrusting himself to his feet. The sound of the river increased to a roar. There was wind, too, funnelling through the gorge, whining through the girders and causing the whole structure to tremble. The sun came and went, thunder clouds growling and swirling up the valley.
I didn't like it. Twice the road had been cut and we hadn't even started the climb up to the pass. I could hear boulders grinding on the river bed and the grumble of thunder was like the sound of distant gunfire.
Ward slipped down into the driving seat again and slammed the roof shut. âYou're turning back, are you?'
âOf course not.' And then, as he started the engine again, he turned to me and said, âIf the sight of a storm in the Andes scares ye, what's yer reaction goin' to be when we're headed into the pack with a Southern Ocean gale up our backsides?' He stared at me very hard for a moment. âThink about it, laddie.' This with a grin on a lighter note. âThere's no room fur cold feet on the sort of expedition we're embarkin' on.' He reached for the gear lever and we began to move slowly off the bridge.
I sat back, wide awake now and cursing the man for goading me so unpleasantly. But at least I had the sense to keep my mouth shut, and shortly afterwards we were able to leave the railway and get back on to the road. The surface was dirt, but despite all the water the going was good. It looked as though a grader had been over it just before the Amazonian rains had spilled over the Andes.
âLast night two Indians in a pick-up came down from Chilete.'
I didn't say anything, though the way he had said it made it clear he expected some comment.
âThey went as far as the railway crossin' on the other side of the tunnel, talked to the man on duty at the halt there, then turned back. That was before the road was cut. They said things were bad up at Chilete with several houses already fallen into the river.' He looked at me, obviously annoyed by my silence. âWell, say somethin', can't ye? Don't just sit there, sulkin'.'
âI'm tired,' I said. âAnd I just don't see the point of pressing on through that muck.' I nodded towards the black murk of cloud that blocked off the valley and all but the lower slopes of the mountains. âApart from the storm, we don't know what the road is like, how bad it will be when we reach the pass.'
âIt's not the road that worries me. It's those two men.' We were climbing now, the lower slopes of the mountains patched with the terraced green of small rice fields. We passed through Tembladera, a scattering of houses clinging to the mountain side. âThey knew about us, the type of vehicle we were drivin', and they instructed the keeper of that crossin' to tell us the road over the pass was open, that it was okay.'
âWhy?' The question was wrung out of me by the absurdity of it. âWhy should they do that? How did they know about us?'
âTelephone. From our friend in Lima. They were both of them from Chimbote.'
That was the filthy coastal town smelling of fish oil where I'd taken over the driving. âAll the more reason why we should turn back.'
He snorted. âAll the more reason why we should go on.' And he added, âAh'd like to have a wee chat with those two, find out a bit more about them. Reach into the back, will ye, and open up that parcel of books. There's a knife in the pocket of my anorak.'
It was one of those all-purpose knives with a flick blade sharp as a razor. I slit along the seam of the cardboard wrapper where it had been taped over. Inside were three fat volumes of Mark Twain tied together with gold tape and a card with
Complemento de LibrerÃo Universal
on which had been written in green ink
primera editión
. âHow ever did these get to Peru?'
He glanced at me sideways, smiling. âAh told ye it was useful when travelling to enter antiquarian as one's occupation.'
âFirst editions of Mark Twain! They must be worth quite a bit â in America.' But what was he going to do with them in this economically bankrupt country?
âCut the gold tape and pull them apart. They're not quite what they seem.'
I didn't need to pull them apart. As soon as I had cut the tape the bottom volume dropped into my lap. The centre of it was a plastic mould in which the metal of an automatic gleamed snugly. The upper volume I had to prise loose from the middle one. It contained ammunition in three spare magazines, also a very light plastic armpit holster. Ward glanced in the rear-view mirror, then all round, finally pulling up in the middle of the road. âYe'll have to give me a hand.' He opened his door and got out, leaving the engine running.
I didn't move. I just sat there, my brain numb.
He was taking off his anorak. âWell, come on, man. It's damp out here.' He was in his shirt sleeves staring through the side window at me. âCome on, damn ye. Move it!'
I looked at him, feeling I had reached the end of the road. âIf you want to play cops and robbers,' I said, choosing my words carefully, âyou'll have to do it without me.'
He reached in and wrenched the little bundle of plastic bands out of my hands, and I sat there, silent, watching as he fumbled the bands into position with the little cup to hold the weapon under his right armpit. It took him a little while, but he got it fixed in the end, then held out his dummy hand for the gun.
I should have told him to go to hell. I should have flung the damned thing out of his open door so that it would bounce down the mountainside up which the road was climbing. Instead, I handed it over to him. I don't know why. Thunder rumbled high above us, the clouds reaching down towards us, wisps of mist sweeping down the valley.
He had put his anorak on again, no sign of the gun, no bulge as he climbed in and we started on up the mountain road, windscreen wipers slashing back and forth. âGetting quite chill out there.'
I didn't say anything.
âHow far up d'ye reckon we are, a thousand feet?'
He was trying to ease my mind, to make me feel it was all right and quite normal for a man to have a gun in an armpit holster in Peru. â
Just in case
.' I could have said it for him. In case of what? âAre you going to use it?' The words seemed dragged out of me, my voice subdued.
A pause, then very gently, âOnly if Ah have to.'
âAnd what constitutes
have to
?'
âAh'll know when the time comes. Let's leave it at that, shall we?'
He drove in silence then and I closed my eyes, pretending I was asleep, my head nodding, and all the time my mind reaching forward to the future, trying to visualise what it would be like on the boat. That he'd use the gun if he had to I was quite certain. But why did he feel the need of a gun? What gave him the right to have it? And the way it was delivered to him, so neat, so innocent-seeming a package. Somebody had acquired it. On his instructions? Somebody had gone to considerable trouble and expense to acquire the books and have them hollowed out, then delivered to the car hire people just before our plane arrived. It all added up to an organisation, but what organisation? Who did they represent â a government, the Mafia, some drug ring? Cocaine? Was he mixed up in cocaine smuggling?
We never saw Chilete until suddenly we were in among the grey ghosts of houses, the road rutted now and full of mud. The sound of water, when Ward rolled down his window, was a solid roar that overlaid everything.
He pulled up and we could look down through the grey cloud-mist to the centre of the village where an old stone bridge and several houses were crumbling into the river. There was a little group of men gathered outside what looked like a café, Indians some of them, their faces dark and sombre as they stood arguing over the ruins of their village. âMaybe they'll know if there's been any traffic over the road.' Ward got out and strode down the mud-sodden road to join them. I stayed by the vehicle, wondering what to do. But I knew the answer to that. There wasn't anything I could do and, knowing that, I was conscious of my own inadquacy, weighed down by a sense of helplessness.
Perhaps it was the village. There was something about Chilete and the cloud-mist drizzle of that dreadful morning that was utterly depressing. The last point of habitation before the pass and every dwelling a-gleam with water as though the whole place was deluge-cursed and waiting to fall into the river. I felt not only miserable, but strangely scared, as though the pass above me was in itself a terrifying manifestation of dark imaginings, like the entrance gate to the place where the dead wait in limbo.
âTwo of them came in yesterday evenin'.' Ward was back, climbing into the driving seat. âThe word is that five or six miles further on we'll find the new road washed out. Apparently it's entirely blocked with mud and rocks.' He started the engine. âBut the old road is still passable. They've put stone markers at the intersection.'
âWho were they? The same two Indians who talked to the railway crossing keeper?'
âI guess so. The laddies back there had never seen them before. They thought they were probably road maintenance men from the Cajamarca region.'
The tumbled ruin that was Chilete disappeared almost immediately, swallowed up by the mist, as we drove out along the broad, freshly graded road, the walls of a valley gorge closing in. âHow far to the pass?' I asked him, but he didn't answer, peering into the grey void as the road doubled back on itself, climbing steeply. There were hairpin bends and soon we were lipping the edge of a two-thousand-foot drop, the river below occasionally glimpsed through ragged wind-torn holes in the cloud.
It was like that all the way to the intersection where the new road swung away to the right, the way blocked by stones placed in a line across it. They were not large stones, merely a warning. The old road ran straight on along the gorge edge. As far as surface was concerned, and even width, there was little to choose between them. Ward checked, a momentary lift of his foot on the accelerator, then he was powering straight on. âShorter this way,' he said. âThat's what they told me, anyway.'
âBut less convenient,' I muttered. âHow long before we get back to the proper road?' More frequent glimpses now, through swirling cloud, of the river far below. Half a dozen parrots cut a brilliant green streak across our bonnet before disappearing into the looming darkness ahead. Lightning flashed, followed almost instantaneously by the sharp crack of thunder. âWhat do we do if this road is blocked?'
He didn't answer and shortly afterwards he slowed for a right-hand bend, his body bent forward, the dummy hand clamped tight on the steering wheel. He took it slowly in four-wheel drive, the road much narrower here, the outer edge of it crumbling away. Round the bend it broadened out again with just room for two vehicles to pass, but ahead was the deep V of a side gorge with water pouring down it, spilling a flood across the road. He braked then, bringing the vehicle to a stop and sitting there, the engine ticking over. He wiped his face with one end of the brightly coloured sweat rag he wore round his neck, staring at the problem ahead. âKnow what Ah'd like right now? Ah'd like a nice cool pint of that Southwold brew.'