She leans back against the wall, only now being hit by the facts of what just happened to her.
“I was dancing with him …” she starts and trails off.
She looks up to see him staring and fishing in a back pocket. “You’re safe,” he heaves. “And the bastard isn’t going to be doing any dancing for some time.”
And suddenly Sylvia’s terrified. She’s alone in a deserted alleyway with only one exit, with another strange man who’s holding a baseball bat over his right shoulder.
“I’m not going to hurt you,” he says and takes a step backwards, pulls from his pocket a keychain weighted with dozens of keys and moves to a tiny doorway near the dead-end wall.
Sylvia starts to edge backwards toward the opening of the alley. The man looks sideways at her, expressionless as he fiddles with a door lock. He says, “You can go if you want,” and she nods and keeps stepping backwards until he says, “but I’d like to know why you’ve been asking so many questions about me.”
And she stops.
“About you?”
He finds the right key and opens the door, stands up straight, runs a hand through his hair and nods at her. They stare at each other for a few seconds. It’s the first chance she’s had to get a look at him and right away there’s something familiar. He’s small and wiry, with a broad forehead and salt-and-pepper hair that’s grown too long. But the feature she locks on is the cool, pale blue of his eyes.
“C’mon, Sylvia,” he says. “I don’t have all night.”
He knows her name. And she’s hit with this awful surety that she knows his. And she makes herself open her mouth and say, “You’re Terrence Propp.”
20
They move through basements that connect to secondary basements, cellars that lead to subcellars. They follow the yellow beam of Propp’s penlight, though Sylvia gets the feeling he could find his way in complete darkness. They’re silent except for the short yell that slipped out when the first cobweb blanketed her face.
They climb through small portholes that have been sledgehammered out of brick walls. At some point the ground turns from concrete to loose earth and Propp slows to a halt. She hears him take a long breath through his nose, then he shines the light on her, lets it play on her face for what seems like a long time, finally asks, “You okay?”
“Where are we going?”
He swings the light up to his own face and says, “Home.”
He shines the beam in front of them and Sylvia looks ahead to see the tunnel they’ve been walking through has started to narrow down, the floorway rising and the ceiling lowering until they intersect at two heavy wooden cross-beams, these fat, dry, dense-looking timbers, like logs used in building a cabin. The beams are fitted into an X and they create an inept barrier.
“We’ve got to squeeze through here,” he says. “The beams are thorny, be careful you don’t tear your gown.”
She looks in the direction of his back and thinks he must be kidding. Her gown turned into an expensive cleaning rag when they entered the first basement. She follows him and ducks and twists until she manages to slide past the posts and ends up huddling down in a crawl space, pushed up against Propp’s shoulder. She hears him fiddling with rusty metal, then he seems to lean back against the cross-beams and kick his feet out. A half-door, like a metal hatchway, swings outward and a dim red glow of light reveals a much larger tunnel beyond.
“You’ll have to go first,” he says, “so I can resecure the door. Just edge over the side here until your foot touches the rung. It’s a short climb down. Less than ten feet.”
She does what he says. She comes forward on her behind until she can dangle her legs out and her heels hit a metal ladder rang. She reaches down and takes hold, lifts herself out into the air, pivots around until she’s facing the ladder and climbs down.
He follows, shuts the hatchway, comes next to her, takes her arm and says, “Not far now.”
They start to walk down a small incline that empties into a railroad bed. They’re in what looks like a kind of primitive subway tunnel. There’s an old bulb-eyed red railroad light mounted on the wall on the other side of the tracks. Propp motions to it and says, “It’s always on. No idea what powers it.”
They head down the middle of the tracks and Sylvia says, “What is this? What were these tracks for?”
For a second she doesn’t think he’s going to answer, then he says, “You know, the Canal Zone wasn’t always just a nightclub for dilettantes.”
He picks up the pace a little. “Quinsigamond used to be one of the biggest manufacturing centers in the Northeast.”
“So I’ve heard.”
“You’ve heard the truth. The city’s first industry was a paper mill. Early 1800s.”
She can’t believe she’s getting a history lesson here. She’s in a storybook nightgown, walking with a myth-figure through an underground railroad bed. And he wants to lecture about the industrial revolution.
“Everything from wooden wheels to hoopskirts got shipped out of here at one time. Bail wire, industrial wrenches, furnace chambers, drill presses …”
His voice drifts off and he stops walking, turns and points to a break in the opposite wall. A huge shaft is visible, like a loading platform, a shadow box whose floor is a flat apron of cement that juts out slightly from the facing wall and is covered with a kind of metal grid, a big mat of iron slats. It looks like an empty prison cell with the front wall of bars removed, a square room of three facing walls and a floor, but no visible ceiling.
“Old story,” he continues. “We all know some part of it. The city thrives. Goes into a kind of hyper-life. The need for cheap labor is filled by European peasantry. The population explodes and Quinsigamond grows into a kind of gritty, redbrick metropolis. You can picture it. Teeming streets. Tenements popping up. More factories. Bigger mills. For a time, everything congregated here.”
He turns and kind of dramatically points down the tracks in the direction they’ve just come from.
“The raw materials came in this way by handcarts,” he turns again and faces the loading platform up the embankment. “Got off-loaded to the appropriate building and then,” he makes his hand into a thumbs-up sign, “hauled up into whatever factory where it was transformed into ball valves or skiving knives or gearboxes or grinding wheels—”
“I get the picture,” Sylvia says.
He nods and continues, “—then it was lowered back down below the street, loaded onto an outgoing freight cart and sent on down the commerce highway.”
“Till the need for skiving knives started to wane—”
“And the climate in the South started to look better and better—”
“And the railroads started to groan and die.”
He says, “You know where this track leads, don’t you Sylvia?”
She looks past him into the darkness and tries, “Gompers Station?”
He nods and starts to walk again. She moves up next to him and says, “You really are Terrence Propp, aren’t you?”
“Why’ve you been looking for me, Sylvia?”
“How do you know my name? And how do you know I’ve been looking for you?”
“I guess,” he says, “we both have a lot of questions.”
“You said we were going home. You live down here?”
His voice goes lower. “Here in the tunnels? Of course not.”
“Doesn’t anybody know these tracks still exist?”
The track bed begins to curve to the left and a new red bulb lights their way.
“If you mean the DPW, probably. It’s still on their maps, though it doesn’t tie into any currently relevant sewer or power lines. If you mean the little leather bohemians writhing around above us, they don’t know their affected asses from their affected elbows.”