The Motorola was set on channel one, car-to-car. I hefted the mike. “Finn, do you hear me?” Pat Tate had walked around to the other side of the Blazer, and he leaned against the door. I repeated the call. A short burst of static crackled over the speaker, sounding faint. A try on the other channels produced nothing.
“He either don’t have the radio on or it don’t work underground,” Tate said.
“I’ve never been down in a mine. I don’t know.” I hung up the microphone and switched off the ignition. “Finn doesn’t know me from a hole in the head,” I said. “He met me that first time Estelle and I walked up to the camp.” That seemed years before. “If he drove your deputy’s car to the Guzman’s house and took my truck, then he was planning ahead. How the hell did he know about the Blazer?”
A deputy started to walk toward us and Tate waved him off. “Maybe he didn’t. He knew who Estelle was and without a doubt knew who Francis was…especially if the Burgess girl had occasion to visit the clinic. Hell, if you live in a dinky town like San Estevan, you know everybody sooner or later. Maybe he knew about Dr. Guzman’s Isuzu four by four and was after that. Guzman wasn’t home so he settles for yours. And you got to figure, the way things went down, yours was about the only one he’d be able to take without worrying about the owner showing up.”
“Maybe.”
“Another possibility is that the night Osuna was shot Arajanian followed him to the Guzmans’, hoping for another try. He sees you and spooks.” He shrugged. “So he tells Finn about it when he gets back. He had the time. If Arajanian watched you load Osuna into the Blazer, it makes sense he’d tell Finn about that, too.”
I didn’t much like the notion that while Estelle and I had been helping the wounded Osuna the creep with the silenced Beretta had been lounging around outside the adobe house, watching our every move-with his finger itching on the trigger.
If that had been the case, he could have taken us all out, then and there. Whatever he’d been, maybe he hadn’t been a creative little bastard. He’d needed instructions from his boss.
As we walked back toward the shaft, I saw that the crowd was growing. I gestured at Sterns, and he broke away from a powwow he was having with a couple of men in business suits.
“You have a bullhorn? A hailer?” I asked.
“Sure. I mean, I’m sure somebody does.” Sterns turned and shouted at one of his deputies. The kid produced one of those little battery-powered amplifiers that track coaches love. I took it and walked to the shaft. Another helicopter roared overhead, and I glanced up. It was one of the television stations.
“Sheriff, you need to rope this place off before the crowd gets so thick someone knocks me into the mine shaft,” I told Sterns, and the sheriff assigned that project to three of the deputies who were underfoot.
They charged off, one of them with his M-16 at high port like he’d been ordered to take a hill.
I took my time. I dug the bell of the bullhorn into the sand and lowered myself to my knees. I could smell the stale air of the mine as I leaned over the mesh. I knew my head and shoulders were silhouetted against the sky if Finn should be down in the shaft looking up.
I switched on the horn and pressed the trigger.
“Finn…are you listening?”
“I have to talk with Daisy,” Parris said, again at my elbow. I ignored him, trying to hear some response from down under.
“Finn!” I yelled. My words bounced around the guts of the mine shaft. He was going to have to shout to be heard over the cars, helicopters, and yakking that was going on behind me, but I was sure there’d been no response.
I was lifting the bullhorn for a third try when I heard his voice, distant but clear as crystal.
“Send Gastner.”
I glanced at Tate then triggered the hailer. “This is Gastner. I’m listening.”
“I want to talk to you.”
“So talk.”
I didn’t understand what he said next and I turned to Sterns and snapped, “If those sons a bitches can’t keep quiet, arrest ’em, goddamn it. We’re trying to conduct some business here.”
“Finn, I didn’t understand you.”
He exaggerated each word with a pause between each. “Face…to…face.”
“Come on up and we’ll do that.”
“Down…here.”
“Oh, sure,” I said without turning on the bullhorn. I triggered it and added, “That’s not possible.”
“Make…it…possible.”
Parris was fidgeting and I said, “Do you have the little girl with you?”
“And…she…will…remain…with…me.”
“He can’t do that,” Parris said and his voice shook.
“Be quiet,” I said and then keyed the hailer. “Is she safe?”
“Yes.”
“Then let us bring her up. You won’t be harmed.”
A sound that could have been a laugh floated up. “There… is…only…one…choice. You…meet…me…face…to…face… down…here.”
“Don’t be a fool. I can’t climb down the ladder.”
Tate leaned over a little, looking down. He said quietly, “If he gets on that ladder with the kid, there’s no way he can defend himself.”
I had visions of Daisy pinwheeling like a broken doll down into the depths of the old mine. “He’ll use the girl as a shield.”
“Sure,” Sterns said. “And when he gets up here and steps away from the edge, one rifle bullet through the head, he’s dead, and the girl’s safe.”
I didn’t like the sound of that either. I hefted the hailer again. “Finn-you have to let the girl go. Let us send an unarmed deputy down to bring her up.”
“No. Ruth…is…the…answer. She…remains…with…me.”
“What the hell is he talking about?”
“I don’t know. He calls her Ruth. Who the hell knows why.” I hefted the bullhorn. “Finn, nobody is going to hurt either you or the girl if you give yourself up.”
“Tell…Robert…that.”
“He means Arajanian,” I said to Tate. “That’s over, Finn. Come on up.”
“No. Face…to…face…with…you.” There was a pause. “And… you…know…why.”
I looked at Tate and said, “I do?”
The sheriff shrugged. “This guy’s a fruitcake.”
Apparently we hadn’t responded promptly enough, because Finn’s voice floated up.
“Don’t…play…games…Mister…Sheriff.”
“Finn, if you don’t send the girl up, we’re going to have to come down and get her. You know what that means.”
He knew I was bluffing. There wasn’t a drop of concern in his tone when he said, “Don’t…be…a…fool.” That calm, detached voice floating up out of the ground was enough to raise goosebumps. I sat back on my haunches. My shoulder hurt. My right ankle throbbed. I eyed the ladder. There was no way I could climb down that with only one good arm. Hell, if nothing else, my belly would throw me off balance and there I’d go.
“Any ideas?” I asked Tate.
“You want to go down?”
“Don’t be ridiculous. There’s no way I can climb down there.”
Sterns was eager. “We can lower you somehow. Use one of those ass slings like the search and rescue uses. One of my deputies is up on that stuff.”
“Um,” I said. I glanced at the hole. One of the deputies trotted toward us, his boots raising dust. Everyone else had been herded well away, behind the yellow plastic banner that ran from car bumper to bumper.
“Sir,” he said, “they found Mr. Begay. They’ll be here in just a few minutes.”
“All right,” I said. “Let’s find out what this hole looks like before we jump in it. See if we have any options.” I raised the bullhorn and said, “Finn, we’re going to find a way to get me down there. Give us some time.”
“Nothing…but…time,” he replied.
“That goddamned cocky son of a bitch,” I said. “Find me an elevator,” I said to Sterns, “and you’re probably going to need about a mile of 2,000-pound test rope. By the time you find that, we’ll have Begay…and one more thing. I want a small automatic with a good silencer.” Sterns looked puzzled.
“Bill’s right,” Tate said. “If you had to fire a gun down in that mine, the whole thing’s apt to collapse.”