Authors: Jennifer Bradbury
When they were close enough to the huts to smell the smoke from the fires, Pennyrile took up his slate.
Can find my way from here.
“I'll see you back,” Stephen offered.
Pennyrile waved him off, wrote
Night is young for a spry pair like you. Expect you have another adventure waiting?
Elias and Stephen exchanged a look. “Well . . .” Stephen began. It was past midnight, Elias figured, but he was too keyed up to sleep anyway. Plus, if they hurried they could get down to Haven and tell Hughes and everyone that Pennyrile had taken the bait.
“â'Member that spot you meant to show me?” Elias asked.
Stephen took a beat, then nodded. “Mummy Ledge, right. I suppose we have time.” He turned to Pennyrile. “You sure you'll be all right?”
Pennyrile saluted with the hand still holding his chalk, and gave what Elias guessed must pass for a smile. Then he tromped up the path and back into the camp. He already seemed to be moving better, a little quicker. The thought of the healing water was already doing its work.
When he was good and gone, Stephen said in a low voice, “I don't know about this, Elias.”
“Why? He seems pleased as punch. Notice how much quicker we got back up here? Like he thinks the water is already working or something!”
“A fellow like Pennyrile is most dangerous when he seems pleased about something,” Stephen said carefully. “C'mon. Let's go tell Hughes it's done.”
They were nearly to Haven, already past Smiley and quickening their steps. Elias was too busy watching his feet as they hurried when he should have been looking up. His head glanced against a sharp edge of rock jutting down from the ceiling of the maze.
“Bells and bibles!” Elias said, hand flying to his temple, actual stars dancing across his eyes. He felt the blood seeping at his fingers.
“Watch yourself, Elias!” Stephen slowed and reached into his pocket for a kerchief. “We don't have time forâ”
Then he stopped.
He thrust his hand into his other pocket. His eyes went round as marbles. Then he ripped off his coat and turned it inside out.
“Stephen?” Elias asked, no longer worrying about the scrape, mopping up the blood with the tail of his green scarf.
“It's gone.” Stephen voice was a whisper.
“What's gone?” Elias asked, touching his forehead and then looking at his fingers. The bleeding had already stopped.
“My book!”
His book? “Your notebook? The one withâ”
“The maps.”
Elias's heart started thudding. “Maybe you dropped it on the path?”
“I keep the pocket buttoned. Always. It's never fallen out.”
Suddenly it felt like the rock was giving way under their feet. “Pennyrile.” Elias gasped. He recalled the way he'd stared at Stephen's pocket as he poled the boat. And he'd admired the knots Pennyrile had conjured up in his scarves, knew those fingers were nimble. Nimble enough to undo a button and lift the notebook when . . .
“When he helped me up,” Stephen said at the same moment Elias was thinking it. He jammed his arms into his coat sleeves. “He filched it. C'mon!”
Neither of them spoke as they raced back up to the ward. Neither of them said what they knew now to be true. They'd been wrong about what Pennyrile was after. Marking the tunnel had been his own bit of skullduggery, pretending they were giving him what he was after, when all the while he'd taken it for himself. They'd bet on him being after either the water or Haven. They hadn't dreamed he was after both.
They made it to the ward faster than Elias thought possible, but it was still too late. Lillian was slumped on the floor. Stephen ran to her side and helped her up. “Lillian?”
She stirred, rubbing the back of her neck. “Something hit me.”
“Where's Pennyrile?” Stephen demanded, holding her head in his hands.
She winced. “He came back a good while ago. Went in his room and then a little laterâ”
Stephen looked at Elias, fear in his eyes. “Check his hut!”
Elias bolted across the courtyard and threw back the curtain.
“Gone!” Elias yelled. His eyes fell on the pigeon loft.
There was only one bird left inside.
He stepped closer.
The big one, the one with the message tied on, was missing.
Missing along with the one last message Pennyrile had ready, Elias supposed. Elias imagined the message tied to that pigeon's leg must have been a simple one. One telling someone to come and fetch him. And he'd probably carried it aboveground himself.
His heart sank as he tore out of the hut, racing for the entrance to the cave, Stephen at his heels.
E
lias grew winded as they hiked to the entrance. Neither he nor Stephen said out loud how hopeless it was to chase Pennyrileâhe had nearly an hour on them, what with how long they'd taken to realize he'd swiped the book. Once he got himself out of the cave, there was no telling where he'd go.
They burst into the open air, the gray light of dawn pouring softly over the edge of the ridge above them. Elias ran ahead to the steps but found the rope piled in a heap, five or six yards down slope from where its end usually hung.
“Sliced the rope.” Stephen cursed as they began to climb. It slowed them down, not having the rope to steady themselves, but they made it to the top faster than Elias would have thought possible.
Still, Pennyrile was nowhere in sight.
“They must have had it planned from the beginning!” Elias reasoned. “And then he let the pigeon go when he got up here.”
“Sending word ahead to his crew,” Stephen added. He threw his hat against the ground and half growled, half bellowed. “We should have known! We should have figured on him knowing about all of us.”
“Can he use the maps to get around?” Elias asked, stooping to pick up the hat, dusting it off.
The birds were starting to wake up, chits and calls from all corners of the wood.
“You saw it yourself,” Stephen said. “That night when you asked me why all the routes seemed to bend around that hollow place on the main map. You didn't know what you were looking at then, but that was Haven.”
“Just an empty space on the map?”
“Only way I knew to make sure that if anybody ever found my notes they wouldn't see itâ”
“But if a fella knew to look for it in the first place, and then figured on you maybe hiding it, even in your own mapsâ”
“It'd be proof enough,” Stephen admitted.
Elias watched the crimson of the sun creep up over the ridge. He couldn't remember the last time he'd seen a sunrise. But it didn't feel hopeful, not at all.
“Maybe . . . maybe he
won't
know what to make of it,” Elias ventured.
Stephen grabbed up a twig, broke it in half, and then into halves again.
“We've been fools,” he said bitterly. “He knew what to make of it as soon as he came down here.”
“But how could he?”
Stephen let all the broken pieces of the twig fall from his fingers. “Bounty hunters been looking for a while. Trackers have tried for years to connect the railroad with the cave. Everybody figured since slaves have been hiding all over the countryside, why wouldn't a place as big as Mammoth be better than a barn or under the floorboards of a house?”
“Seems like a lot of trouble,” Elias said. “Getting himself sick, holing up in a cave, training all those pigeons . . . for what? How much could all of 'em be worth?”
Stephen's glare was dark. For the first time since he'd been there, Elias felt as young as he truly was. Stephen and the others had been treating him as a friend, an equal. But he wasn't, and not because of his color only. But because in truth, he was just a kid. A pretty dumb one at the moment. One who let himself ask dumb questions. He stared at the ground, too ashamed to meet Stephen's eyes.
Stephen threw his head back. “Hard question.”
“I meantâ”
“I know what you meant,” Stephen said, his tone a little kinder. “Hard to answer, though. Some of them know what they were worth on their masters' inventories. Others don't. But usually the bounty for bringing back a runaway is more than the price of a slave.”
“Why?”
“âA master can't have slaves running off. Can't have a tracker catch one just to find the nearest convenient market or farm to sell him off to. If the owner pays above price, the slave is likelier to end up back where he started. Back where the master can make an example of him for anyone else who might get notions about taking off.”
Elias didn't know what to say.
“I expect if Pennyrile even got half the people in that cave out for himself, he and his crew profit somewhere north of five thousand dollars,” Stephen said.
Elias's jaw fell open. It was a powerful sum of money. He knew for a fact that the house in Virginia cost less than five hundred dollars and it was built brand-new.
“We got to do something!” Elias clambered to his feet, pounding his fist against his thigh.
“We got to do something, indeed.” Stephen stood. “We have to tell Hughes.”
*Â Â *Â Â *
“You mean he'll be coming here?” Hughes loomed over Stephen, furious.
“We all wanted him to be after the water. How could Iâ”
Hughes's grip tightened on the shaft of his cane. “How could you make a map to this place?”
Elias stared, stunned. Even Hughes hadn't known about the notebook!
But Stephen wasn't fazed. “I didn't! I left the area where Haven is on the map marked unexplored. Nick and Mat and me even marked all the paths leading in as dead ends in case anybody ever wandered this far. But to someone who knows to lookâ”
“We have guards,” Hughes interrupted, thinking ahead. “Sentries. And we can draw back farther from the riverâ”
“Too dangerous,” Stephen said. “If he means to catch runaways, the exits will be unsafe. And if he finds this place . . . If they somehow slip past the sentriesâ”
“Don't suppose you were kind enough to write up all about our security in your little map book, were you?” Hughes snapped.
Stephen fought to keep his voice steady. “â'Course not. But if he comes here with weapons, with enough menâ”
Hughes waved a hand. “We can't slip but one or two people in here at a time. He can't get a whole gang down here at once.”
“Either way,” Stephen said, “we must get folk ready to leave.”
“I decide when we leave!” Hughes roared. Silence fell heavy around them.
When Elias and Stephen had come in, life in Haven had been just stirring, breakfast over cook fires, folks still huddling under blankets. But now Elias saw that a small crowd had gathered round, eyes wide with fear, mouths set tight as they listened to Hughes and Stephen argue.
Hughes collected himself. “We start leaving. Tonight.”
“But they could still be up on the riverâ”
“We'll send scouts to find a good route. Three or four will go out and then double back to say if it's safe. If they don't come back, we'll know it ain'tâ”
“But . . . the scouts might get caught!” Elias protested.
“That's all we can do!” Hughes said. “If it's clear, we'll keep going every night until we're all out. But in the meantime we'll shift to a better hiding place.”
“There's no other place big enough and hidden enough for everyone,” Stephen said. “I don't know how we'll get supplies inâ”
“You'll have to,” Hughes said, daring Stephen to say more. Stephen started to, then bit back his words.
“I'll go tonight,” Davie offered, stepping into the ring.
Elias looked at Davie in awe.
“Thank you, Davie,” Stephen said.
Elias couldn't stay quiet any longer. This was all partly his fault. Pennyrile hadn't gotten close until he'd crooked Elias into carrying letters for him. And now this. It made him want to bury himself in some hole deeper than where they stood now, the shame he felt at the danger he'd put them in. Elias swallowed hard. “How long do you think you'll have before he comes?”
Stephen and Hughes exchanged looks. “There's no way to know,” Stephen said. “But I can't imagine he'd wait long. Not having left me behind to warn everyone.”
He was right. They had to be ready. Soon.
“Get some extra bodies on the river watches,” Hughes ordered.
Men began to stir into action. But something troubled Elias.
“Who says he'll only try the river?”
Stephen frowned. “He's a river pirate, Elias. And that's the clearest way through the middle of the ball of nothing on my map. It's what I'd do.”
Elias saw the reason, but Pennyrile and Stephen couldn't be more different. How did any of them know what he would do?
N
ews of Pennyrile's disappearance set the whole cave on its head. There were search parties above and belowground. Croghan suspended his rounds to direct and participate in the searches. He called all the slaves off the tours and had them join the hunt. And though Elias was confined to his hut and spoke precious little to Stephen or Nick, he expected Haven was just as panicked.
But after two days with no signs of Pennyrile, and with no news of his appearance at any of the towns nearby, the uproar finally began to ebb. Croghan could neglect his patients no longer, so he resumed his examinations.
The doctor, of course, continued to worry, as did Elias, though for different reasons. Two days Pennyrile had been gone. Two days to prepare. But for what?
And Davie had not returned from his scouting mission.
“You gonna send out another search party later?” Elias asked, cautious, as the doctor examined him.