CHAPTER FOUR
There were two messages waiting for them at the motel. The first was from Arthur Beach. Jack read it aloud, raising his voice over the drumming rain cascading down on three sides of them from the covered portico where the Suburban was parked outside the motel lobby.
“I finally discovered ownership of the property in question. I can’t imagine how you wouldn’t have known, since, from the name at least, the owner would sound to be a relative. The listed ownership is Horizon Enterprises. Horizon is a corporation wholly owned by Alan Naile. Because of the similarity of names, I checked back on Horizon Enterprises. It was founded just prior to World War I by someone who bore the name David Naile. And get this! His father’s name was Jack Naile, possibly the same Jack Naile who owned the store in Atlas! I’m digging for more information.
“I’ll look forward to hearing from you soon.”
Jack Naile handed the note to his wife through the open window of the Suburban.
“Note number two reads as follows: ‘Call at once. Needed on set for rewrites. Dislocated shoulder is actually broken collarbone and production is stalled.’ The director, the executive producer and one of the vice-presidents of the studio have their names at the bottom.”
“Should we start driving back tonight?” Lizzie asked, leaning over her mother’s left shoulder from the middle seat.
“I can drive,” David volunteered.
“I know you can, son, but the weather would be with us for several hundred miles. It’d be foolhardy, David. But thanks for volunteering.”
“Jack?”
Jack Naile looked at his wife. “What, kid?”
“They’ll send a helicopter that would fly us to Reno or Sacramento, won’t they?”
“Yeah,” he sighed, instantly seeing the implication of his wife’s words. They would have to leave the Suburban behind. It would have been smarter to go to their rooms, get the gear they needed out of the Suburban and sit down as a family and talk it out, where they could be warm and dry. Instead he asked, “What do you guys think? Should we just sit here and wait it out and leave the movie company stuck, or should we go on with our lives, and when this time shift or whatever the hell it is happens it just happens?”
David spoke first. “Well, since I now know the name of my company—Horizon Enterprises—if I can get to a computer, maybe I can find out what it’s worth. Yeah. Let’s do it. If this is going to happen, let’s get on with it. On the plus side, we did get those wall outlets back in time somehow. And we do have a deal with the movie company. If this time shift thing doesn’t take place for a year or so, we can’t go pissing them off.”
“David’s right,” Elizabeth chimed in. Her brown eyes looked sad, as best Jack Naile could make out his daughter’s face in the diffuse light from the portico. “This is going to happen, whether we wait here or go back to California, to Bakersfield. Let’s do the right thing.”
Ellen’s face glowed, Jack thought. He knew why. And, yes, she hadn’t been thrilled about David and the actress, the thought of, along with her daughter, being time-shifted into second-class-citizen status was eating at her, and her whole world was about to change irrevocably. The reason for the look on her face was pride in her children—and, Jack hoped, in him as well.
“Let’s show everybody we’re smart enough to come in out of the rain, huh? David and I’ll get you guys into the rooms and haul in the stuff we’ll need. We can order a couple of pizzas—the guy at the desk said they deliver and the pizzas taste pretty good. Then I’ll call Bakersfield. Agreed?”
No one disagreed.
Peggy Greer leaned back in her folding chair—the same one she used when they went out into the desert for their experiments with electricity—and stretched. The computer had yielded up all that she knew to ask of it.
The new cable was as short as possible, the added insulation enough to protect the wiring within from any conceivable loss.
Every item of equipment had been checked and rechecked, then checked again.
Jane Rogers entered the living room that was their makeshift office. The dining-room table was their indoor equipment-testing station. With every conceivable surface covered with printouts or gear or both, the TV tray Jane carried was practical in the extreme.
There were ham sandwiches on two plates, two small bags of potato chips—Jane liked the sour cream and onion variety, which Peggy could not abide—an open bottle of beer with a schooner beside it and a glass of white wine. Dinner.
Jane always brought a glass, and Peggy never used it, but Jane was from an era when a woman drinking straight from the bottle was on a par with a woman appearing in public with a cigarette hanging from her lips.
Huddled around the tray together, Jane asked, “How’s the weather holding up for tomorrow, Peggy?”
“The rain should be gone by midnight or so. In the morning, meteorological conditions should be as close as possible to those prevalent on the day of our one brush with success, when the light array actually flickered. There’s a second storm front like the one just passing, but it’s stalled on the other side of the mountains, which goes to show that sometimes it really does rain in California.”
Jane caught the musical reference and laughed softly.
“Maybe tomorrow will really be it, Jane.”
“For a med student—”
“Hey, I have my degree!”
“You know what I mean, young lady. For a med student, you also happen to be one heck of a fine physicist.”
“I’m a very tired physicist. And, with the rain, I’ll take you up on crashing on your couch.”
“Good. Then we can get a really early start in the morning.” Jane nibbled at a potato chip, not yet touching her sandwich.
Peggy yawned, covering her hand with her mouth, then implored, “But not too early? Please?” And she bit into her ham sandwich.
“Where’s the helicopter going to land, Jack?”
“Probably in that open area on the other side of the highway, if the rain has stopped and the ground isn’t too wet. The production company will bring in a guy to drive the Suburban back. He’s bonded. He’s coming in on the helicopter. I’ll have the guns and the attaché case and we’ll be bringing two of the microfiche readers and the video camera. If it happens before we get the Suburban back, at least we’ll have something. And we should have the Suburban back in under a day.”
Jack rolled over onto his left side, and Ellen rolled over behind him, resting her right hand over his abdomen. Almost invariably, they slept naked, tonight no exception. Sometimes, when the weather was very warm, the heat from Jack’s body could be a little much; but, with the rain, the temperatures had cooled enough that they wouldn’t really have needed air-conditioning in the room. But they were both fanatics for fresh air and, failing the option of opening a window while they slept, on would go the air-conditioning. Ambient temperature in their motel room was close to frigid; tonight she was happy for the warmth of her husband’s body, as Ellen knew that Jack was for hers.
“You catch it when Lizzie read the note?” Jack asked her.
“Eight million killed by Hitler and the Nazis? Yes, I caught it. Lizzie would have, too, Jack, if she hadn’t been so caught up in reading it.”
“Yeah, good old Davey. If it doesn’t have to do with business, it isn’t news. And if it’s history, it’s even less interesting, just old news. Catch the other thing?”
“You lost me,” Ellen said honestly.
“He—I—didn’t burn what they wrote. So if it didn’t burn up with the house, somebody has it, and I’ll bet that somebody is David’s great-grandson who owns—what was the name of it?”
“Horizon Enterprises, or something like that. No. That was it. Horizon Enterprises.”
“Which means Horizon has been operating all these years off knowledge of the future. And David—our David —will do the same thing.”
“But consider this,” Ellen suggested. “You know that six million Jews were killed in the Holocaust, not eight. And it can be assumed that the other Jack would have a similar knowledge of history, right?”
Jack rolled over and took her into his arms and she rested her head against his chest, tugged at one of the hairs there in order to get him to say, “Ouch! So, you’re saying that maybe something that the Naile family did since the last time it traveled back in time and now was able to help lower that figure from eight million to six million.”
“Maybe. So maybe David will be at least partially responsible for saving two million lives from extermination.”
“My son the hero. Has a nice ring to it,” Jack whispered.
“Horny hero. Sounds like a character out of a comic book.” She added, “But Davey’s a good guy. Hard working, aggressive, bull-headed.”
“I wonder where he gets the bull-headedness. Certainly not from your side of the family. You and your dad—never bull-headed. We’re blessed with two great kids. And they take after their mother, each in their own way. Great kids.”
“Well, that’s certainly true, but they have your eyes, Jack.”
“I’m more interested in lips and other parts of the anatomy at the moment,” Jack whispered, kissing her.
The trouble with being married to a wordsmith, Ellen was reminded, was that he was always looking for that special way to say things. Sometimes that annoyed her. Sometimes she liked that, liked that quite a bit.
Her fingers drifted across his chest as she kissed him back.
The helicopter had been able to land just on the other side of the highway, approximately two hundred yards from their motel rooms.
Jack made a last check of the Suburban, Ellen still inside their soon-to-be-vacated room, on the telephone with Clarence for what might be the last time. It would be a little before six in the morning in Georgia, Clarence probably not at his best. But if the time transfer were to take place without a last call, Clarence would be stricken. Clarence was a good man, a very good man and Jack realized that despite Clarence’s often dour disposition, he’d miss him.
“David, you take the rifle case and that suitcase and the camera case.”
“I can take the attaché case, too, Dad.”
“Have you started carrying a gun, David? You haven’t, so I hold on to the attaché case. Lizzie?”
“Daddy?”
“Grab what you can carry out of that pile, but remember that’s what your brother and I are around for, so don’t carry too much. Leave that one. It’s very heavy.” Jack Naile called his daughter’s attention to the aircraft aluminum case with the two single actions and the derringer and a basic supply of ammunition for the three handguns.
“You’re ready. You’re really ready, aren’t you, Dad?” David asked.
“What do you mean, son?”
“You’re wearing your cowboy hat and your boots. I’ll bet the gun belt Sam Andrews made for you is in one of the suitcases we’re carrying.”
Jack Naile grinned. “You win the bet, chief. Gotta be prepared.”
Ellen’s voice came from behind them. “If we were going back to prehistoric times, your father would have had Ron Mahovsky Metalife a custom club for him, and Sam Andrews would have made your dad a holster for it.” Ellen reached for two suitcases and said, “Clarence was tired, upset, said he loves us and he won’t like it without us being around. I told him pretty much the same, except for the parts about being tired and upset. I’m only upset.”
It was a gorgeous day for flying, the sky clear, with only a few wisps of cloud to the south and east, the air cool without being cold. Of the four of them, only Jack had ever before flown in a helicopter. Although he didn’t care at all for most amusement park rides and was a nervous commercial-airline passenger, the idea of being up in a helicopter once again excited him. The thought of leaving the Suburban and its precious contents behind mildly terrified him. “Hey, guys?”
His wife, his son and his daughter, all turned to look at him.
“I just wanted you guys to know, I love you all. And remember, we’ll be together, whenever it happens.” Jack looked away before any of them could respond and caught up Ellen’s camera bag, the gun case and whatever else he could carry. There would be another trip back to the Suburban for him and David at least. Then they would be airborne.
As Jane Rogers did each time she conducted a field trial, she made final adjustments to the primary cable’s strain insulator and triple-checked the anode plate for precise alignment with the control grid.
The generators hummed from the bed of the pickup truck parked a few feet from her Suburban, one generator to produce the electricity which the laser beam, powered by the second generator, would hopefully carry to target.
This had to be it, had to be the solution.
“Jane?”
“What is it, Peggy?”
“Listen carefully, to the west. There’s a storm coming up over the mountains. I can hear thunder.”
“Damn,” Jane murmured. The front that Peggy had said was stalled on the other side of the mountains had moved. “Can we make it, Peggy?”
“We might not have conditions so close again for weeks or months, Jane. What do you want to do?”
Was she being a bad scientist? Jane Rogers shook her head, took off her battered old flat-crowned hat. She stared toward the mountains. So far, no sign of lightning, just low rumblings of thunder. The storm could be taking its sweet time just beyond the highest peaks, enough time for the experiment. “Let’s do it, girl!” Jane Rogers plunked her hat onto her head and approached the tripod-mounted refracting telescope. “I’m ready when you are!”
“On my mark,” Peggy called out. “Five . . . four . . . three . . . two . . . one . . . Mark!” The humming of the generators seemed to increase almost exponentially.
Crackling sounds, so loud that they thrummed in her brain, then a different hum—the hum, with its unmistakable frequency. More crackling, the hum louder and louder.
As Jane Rogers peered through the telescope toward the distant light array that she prayed would fire, there was the anticipated thundering as the electrical charge was released along its carrier wave. But a microsecond—not even—after that, the array lit, and the most enormous lightning bolt Jane Rogers had ever witnessed in a life spanning nearly three quarters of a century flashed laterally across the sky. The array stayed lit, and a second, thunderous boom rent the air around her, the ground beneath her feet shaking.
“Shut down! Peggy! Shut down!”
As the lightning streaked across the sky, she had distinctly seen a helicopter, with ball lightning crackling across the sky around it like electrons circling an atom. And then the aircraft just vanished, as if it had never been there, into a patch of inexplicable blackness. Then the blackness vanished, too.
The helicopter was out of control, and the pilot was almost certainly dead; Jack Naile was uncertain of the order in which the two events occurred. The single flash of lightning striking horizontally across the sky out of the mountains was as bright as the corona surrounding an eclipse, gone in an instant. In the same instant, the electrical systems within the helicopter’s cockpit and all along the fuselage began to smolder, all lights and power gone. The pilot’s body had stiffened. It lurched backward, hammered into the cockpit seat, the man’s head falling at an unnatural angle to his right shoulder.
In the seconds that it took Jack Naile to shout, “Everybody hold on! We’ll get out of this!” he realized that the pilot’s body had snapped back with such force that the man’s neck had broken.
The main rotor still rotated above them, but without power. The aircraft revolved more slowly beneath it, the sound of rushing air around the machine heightening by the instant.
“Jack! What’ll we do?” Ellen’s voice was even, under control, the look in her eyes one of determination more than terror.
“Just keep in your seats, brace yourselves, heads between your knees and fingers locked behind your necks!” Jack was already half out of his seat, David starting to do the same. “No, David! Stay with the girls! Do it! I’m counting on you, son!”
The blue that had been the sky was gone. Blackness surrounded them. The aircraft’s only illumination was a pair of battery-operated emergency lights; they cast a yellow and flickering light, as if they, too, were about to fail.
The helicopter’s sharply downward-angled nose coupled with the relentless twisting motion of the fuselage beneath the powerlessly spinning main rotor caused Jack’s body to be slapped hard against the fuselage the moment he launched himself out of his seat. There were plenty of times that he had written about fictional characters flying helicopters. As he hauled himself to his knees, he recalled ruefully that there were even more times when the good guy would bring down an enemy helicopter with a disabling shot to the tail rotor, forcing the chopper to angle downward into the ground, to destruction.
There was no tail-rotor power.
The smoke from the burning insulation was thick, making the emergency lights seem even dimmer, stranger. Jack’s eyes began to tear, and his throat began to close.
Jack half threw himself toward the cockpit. He landed hard on his knees, his head slamming against the head of the dead man with bone-jarring impact. Jack’s vision blurred for an instant and the left side of his forehead began to ache. He shook his head to clear it. The only chance without power was to let the helicopter bring itself down, but in horizontal flight. Helicopter-pilot training included powerless landings, but somewhere at the back of his mind, from something he’d read or some expert with whom he’d spoken, he recalled that the key was to keep the machine horizontal and hope for a smooth, flat spot to land.
A helicopter’s horizontal stabilizer was invariably located below the tail rotor. But finding the location of the control for the stabilizer was another matter—because his head ached so badly that he couldn’t think clearly. The pounding in Jack’s head, the roaring of the aircraft’s slipstream in his ears, the realization that he had only seconds before the machine crashed—all of this was blocking him from thinking.
“Jack! Remember? Helicopters require hand and foot coordination, don’t they?”
A smile crossed Jack Naile’s lips.
There was no time to push the dead pilot from his seat, no time for anything but to wedge himself onto the console beside the pilot and get a hand on the joystick. The hydraulics might still work just enough to level the main rotor.
Ball lightning was everywhere around them, the sky still unremittingly black, everything above and below them black, except for what seemed like something viewed drunkenly in the very center of a kaleidoscope. And that was neither above nor below them, merely present, there.
He felt a slight change in the aircraft’s attitude to the ground, but not enough. The nose was still dangerously low, and the helicopter’s fuselage was pitched to starboard. The earth—treetops, boulders—was rocketing toward them, pouring out of the spot within the kaleidoscope lens, about to engulf them. There were pedals. Jack hit the seat harness’ quick release and shoved the dead man from the pilot’s seat and into the space between the seat and fuselage, hoping against hope that his brain was working and that the pedals were, indeed, linked to the horizontal stabilizer.
Jack worked one of the pedals by feel, eyes on the nose, not knowing which pedal he’d depressed. Simultaneously, he pulled back and left on the joystick.
“The nose is coming up! Hang on!”
The dead pilot’s body was slipping forward, half covering Jack’s left side.
Seat belt. Jack need to strap himself in. If he released the joystick, changed the orientation of his foot to whichever pedal it was, he might lose what little control he had.
No time.
“This is it! I love you guys—”
The aircraft touched the ground, bounced hard, and lurched violently, the dead body of the pilot hurtling forward, smashing out the windshield glass. A rock or tree stump punched through the fuselage undercarriage—something, Jack didn’t know what—and started can opening the aircraft from the bottom.
The helicopter stopped as suddenly as if it had slammed into a wall of granite. Jack felt himself flung forward, flying, saw a blur of green and gray and blood red, then blackness.
Clarence Jones dropped the container of orange juice, spilling the yellow liquid all across his kitchen counter. A paroxysm raced across his spine, and he closed his eyes, a sadness unlike anything he had known since the death of his mother seizing his heart and mind.
“Jesus,” he whispered. Somehow, it had happened and they were gone.
He left the orange juice and called the emergency number at the movie-production site. “This is the Nailes’ nephew, Clarence Jones. Have you heard from them?”
The woman who’d answered the telephone said nothing for a long moment, and then asked if she could put him on hold. After several excruciating minutes, she finally came back to the line. When she did speak, her voice was choked with emotion.