Chapter Twenty-Four
Jimbo and Nanny supported Samuel, who was trembling from the
energies he had just merged with. He looked around him, still dazed, still
seeing the vast monster rising from the pit, then realized where he was again.
"You all right, partner?" Jimbo asked, concerned
as always.
"Yeah. I think so. Let's get out of this thing."
They helped him get down to the ground again and he was
careful not to touch the train engine again. He didn't stop until he was well
away from the train and able to sit on a log. He sat there a long time, saying
nothing. They waiting for him to speak, exchanging nervous glances.
Finally, he took a hit from his canteen, then looked up at
them, his eyes clear again of the disaster that had happened here.
"Many men died here."
Nanny nodded. "The Indians have legends of a great
Snowbeast that guards the mountain against those who are greedy and care not
for the earth."
"Well, if what I saw was their Snowbeast, then people
had a right to be scared of it." Samuel said, then took another hit of
water from his canteen. Finally, he stood up.
"Okay, I think I know the way now." He said.
Nanny looked into his eyes. "How could you do that in
that one second?"
"One second?"
Jimbo put a hand on Samuel's shoulder. "Sammie, you
sure of what you saw?"
"Damn sure. One second. It seemed like hours."
Jimbo nodded, then looked at Nanny.
She shrugged. "It's your show, I'm just along for the
ride."
"What about your job?" He asked her.
"I'm doing it." She responded with a smirk.
"Keeping dumb civvies from dropping off cliffs, getting buried under snow
avalanches, and stopping them from burning down the woods."
"In other words a babystitter." Samuel said with a
grin.
"Pretty much. I cleared it with the Head Ranger before
I met with you two this morning. He's as curious as most of us about that
secret entrance. He used to be part of a secret society that claimed to know
the location, but he never rose high enough in it to find out."
"Well that settles it." Jimbo growled. "We're
definitely onto something."
Samuel nodded, then eyed the terrain. "Temperature's
going to drop like crazy pretty soon now."
Nanny agreed. "About forty degrees. And there's a new
storm on the way too."
"Why didn't you tell us about it earlier?" Jimbo
growled.
"What! And ruin
your fun?"
"Point taken." Jimbo agreed, then when Samuel
started walking up a narrow path past the tracks, he followed with Nanny
trailing him.
"Tell me again about my duplicate." Nanny asked.
"Your mother?" Samuel retorted.
"All right, my mother then, though I don't know who the
hell that could be, since I was abandoned as a baby and brought up in an
orphanage until I was sixteen and went to college to get my degrees."
"Sorry." Samuel said. "I didn't know."
"You didn't ask." She snapped back, a bit tartly.
Jimbo laughed. "She's got you there, Sammie."
Nanny smiled. "I have that affect on men. Get them
there. Smack dab in the middle."
Samuel smiled back at her. "And I bet they loved every
minute of it."
"Mostly." She replied. "Unless I shot
them."
Samuel stopped and looked her in the eyes. "That's the
second time now you've said that. Is this something we gotta be worried
about?"
"Not unless you're a dishonorable, no down, furry assed
sonvua bitch." She snapped at him.
They stared at each other a long time, then she burst into
laughter. "Gotcha!"
She looked across at Jimbo, whose mouth was hanging open.
"You two are so easy. My fellow Rangers would gobble you two up for breakfast.
So now where? We need to find shelter in the next thirty minutes or so, or
freeze to death."
Samuel took the point again and they worked further up the
path. It got darker and darker, so they got out maglights to illuminate the
path. "Should be close now." Samuel said.
They finally broke through a barrier of tall, dried shrubs
and a crude home of sorts lay half
broken in their path.
"A warm bed and bath awaits our company." Samuel
said lightly.
Jimbo snorted. "You mean we're gonna freeze our asses
off and stink like hell the next morning."
"Something like that." Samuel acknowledged, then
cut ahead and carefully prodded open the door.
He peered inside with his light, then motioned the others to
follow him inside.
The interior was stark, but solid. The crude nature of the
exterior put a lie to the interior of the place. There was an old wood stove
with stacks of cut wood beside it, an antique stove, and a barrel of water,
which was fed by a pipe coming down from the roof, and another pipe dropping out
of sight through the flooring.
"Nice cistern. Self fills and self empties." Jimbo
said, admiring the cleverness and simplicity of it. "Always fresh, always
there."
"Long as it rains or snows." Nanny said, shutting
the door behind them, then reaching for a hard, rusted bar of wood and iron to
shut it tight.
"Wonder why they had that?" Jimbo asked.
"Indians." Samuel replied. "They pissed off a
lot of them when they built the railroad and burned down their homes to make
their tracks."
Jimbo sighed, dropped his backpack to the floor beside a
bunk with metal springs only on top of it. He unzipped his back pack and threw
a blanket over the springs. "You can have this, Nanny."
She shook her head. "Too soft for me."
She opened her own pack, looked around the room, found an
old broom still usuable, though frayed and swept the floor around the old stove
and fireplace. Through she spread a large, rough Indian blanket with beautiful
moons and stars woven into it. "My Grannie's."
"I thought you were an orphan." Samuel said.
"Hey! Even orphans have Grannies. Used to call my Head
Mother that. She was a cute, lovable and round as a barrel of water type of
lady who always made sure every one of us children had a proper story and snack
before bed."
Jimbo smiled, then looked at the bunk. Samuel patted his
shoulder. "Take it. I don't take well to springs."
"Thanks." Jimbo threw his insulated metallic
blanket over the bunk, then set his backpack at its head for a pillow. Before
he sat on it, he pulled out some packets of Hostess Twinkies.
"Anyone
hungry?"
Nanny opened her hands and he tossed her one, then Samuel,
who immediately opened his to eat, though Nanny set hers down as she settled
beside the old stove. She looked into the old stove. I think it's
serviceable."
She got on her knees and began plying its interior with
wood.
Samuel helped her find some paper from his own bag and
Jimbo's, and she used a Bic lighter to light the paper. In a few minutes, after
much coaxing, a cheery fire burned in its belly. She shut the door to stop the
smoke from coming out. She eyed the roof and a pipe going up from the stove.
"It looks tight."
They all waited breathlessly. No smoke came out.
Samuel threw his own sleeping bag down to the left of Nanny
and she hers to the right of herself.
They put their backpacks between them,
then squatted with folded legs and ate their Twinkies.
"Hard to believe I'm eating a Twinkie for dinner."
Nanny said. "Thanks, guys, for bringing the height of civilization into my
life."
"Oh, it gets better." Jimbo said, finishing up his
fifth Twinkie. "Wait until you have some fried grasshoppers and honey
dipped worms."
Nanny stopped eating. "Suddenly, my hunger has
ceased."
Jimbo and Samuel laughed, then said at the same time.
"Gotcha!"
She grinned at them both. "You two really are
something!"
The heat was beginning to warm up the old cabin as a wind
began to howl outside. Whisks of cold air swept under the door until Samuel
crammed the old Twinkie wrappers into it. A few blew back out, so he crammed
several pieces of wood against them and the wind stopped blowing inside.
The warmth was making them all drowsy.
"Tomorrow?" Nanny yawned.
"Yeah." Samuel replied, already drifting off to
sleep.
Only Jimbo remained awake. He had heard something outside.
Something big. He didn't want to wake up his friends just yet, because there
shouldn't be anything out there dangerous enough to get inside. Shouldn't be
was the catch word. He had learned a long time ago, that should bes, could bes
and want to bes were not all the same thing.
Then something big crashed into the front door. Something
very, very big!