Read Sink: Old Man's Tale Online
Authors: Perrin Briar
“Three hundred meters,” Jeremiah said. “Maximum.”
“Still a long way though, isn’t it?” Graham said.
“It’s not a short distance, but it could be worse,” Jeremiah said. “A lot worse. Who knows where we could have ended up. I say we’re pretty lucky.”
“But if we’re so close to the surface, why haven’t they found a way up there yet?” Graham said.
“That’s the very question I’ve been asking myself,” Jeremiah said. “Come on, let’s get to work.”
They worked
all day without taking a break, entering the zone where nothing came between them but the task in hand. Leader’s servants came periodically to bring food and drink. The two men didn’t chat to them or take their eyes from the machinery they were working on. Their only concern was putting the machine together so they could return home.
The digger’s engine was in pieces on the floor, organized in a way Graham didn’t understand, but made perfect sense to Jeremiah. The old man ignored Graham every time he tried to initiate conversation, grumbling under his breath and concentrating on the parts on the floor.
Graham had smudges of oil and dirt on his face, hands and clothes.
“Why am I always the one getting dumped on?” Graham said.
“Because you’re unskilled,” Jeremiah said. “Expendable.”
“Gee, thanks,” Graham said. “It’s always nice to feel an intrinsic part of the project.”
The main doors opened and Leader came in, walking in his slow gait. A guard was in his wake.
“These are all the magnets we found,” Leader said.
The guard held a small pile in his hands.
“This is it?” Jeremiah said.
“It’s all we could find,” Leader said.
“This isn’t enough,” Jeremiah said. “We need a lot more than this.”
“We don’t have more,” Leader said. “I have people combing the town, but this is all we’ve found so far.”
Jeremiah’s shoulders sagged and he fell into a dining room chair.
“Then we’re stuck here,” he said. “We can’t get out of here without magnets.”
Graham kicked at the machine’s large wheels, venting his anger. A large bolt fell off and hit him on the head. He rubbed his head and scowled. He gritted his teeth and unleashed another wave of anger at the machine.
Graham laid
his forehead on the table and let out a groan. His brain hurt from all the pressure he was putting on it.
“What if we put a current through the magnets we do have?” Graham said. “That’ll make them stronger, right?”
“Yes,” Jeremiah said. “But that’s what we need the magnets for in the first place – to make power.”
Graham let out a groan.
“I can’t believe we’re stuck down here because of fridge magnets,” he said. “I’ve got a ton at home.”
He stood up.
“No!” he said. “I refuse to be beaten by this.”
He paced up and down the room. He stopped, looked at the machine, and then turned to face Jeremiah.
“What if…” he said, before trailing off and shaking his head. “I’ve got nothing.”
“If I don’t get back soon they’re going to demolish my house,” Jeremiah said.
“You don’t know that,” Graham said.
“But I do know it,” Jeremiah said. “They’ll find I’m not there, see the hole and assume the worst. They won’t spend much time looking for me. They’ll fill the hole in and demolish the house. And that’ll be it. If you don’t get back, what happens? Nothing.”
“I don’t want to spend the rest of my life down here,” Graham said.
“You think I do?” Jeremiah said.
“At least you don’t have much time left to wait,” Graham said.
They were silent a moment.
“My boss said he heard rumors about you back in town,” Graham said.
“Oh?” Jeremiah said.
“A rumor about what happened to your wife,” Graham said. “One day she just up and vanished.”
Jeremiah didn’t respond.
“So there’s no truth to it?” Graham said.
“There’s always some truth,” Jeremiah said. “Even to rumors.”
“Then what did happen to your wife?” Graham said.
“I murdered her,” Jeremiah said. “And then I diced her up and buried her in the Outback. Depending on which version you hear.”
Graham couldn’t tell if Jeremiah was joking or not.
“The cops would have arrested you if it were true,” Graham said.
“Not if there wasn’t enough evidence,” Jeremiah said.
“They would have searched your house top to bottom,” Graham said. “They would have found something.”
“They didn’t,” Jeremiah said.
Graham gulped.
“They searched your home?” he said.
“Top to bottom, as you said,” Jeremiah said. “Even the police have to act on rumors.”
“I used to come to your house, you know,” Graham said.
“I know,” Jeremiah said. “Snooping around. I still don’t know what you were looking for.”
“I meant when I was a kid,” Graham said. “Don’t you recognize me?”
Jeremiah looked at Graham close, but there was no recognition there.
“No,” he said.
“I was Stuart’s friend,” Graham said. “There are pictures of me in your photo albums. I used to come over at the weekends and play. You would cook big breakfasts for us.”
Jeremiah’s eyes moved to the side. He remembered something.
“Stuart had a lot of friends,” he said.
“You really don’t remember me?” Graham said.
“I said I didn’t, didn’t I?” Jeremiah said.
“I remember you,” Graham said. “You weren’t always this grumpy. You were fun and carefree, once upon a time.”
“That was a long time ago,” Jeremiah said.
“What happened to you?” Graham said.
“Life happened,” Jeremiah said.
“Your wife was alive then,” Graham said. “You were different.”
“We all were,” Jeremiah said.
“But you especially,” Graham said. “Maybe if you were more social people wouldn’t make up stories about you so much.”
“You think I care what they think?” Jeremiah said. “I don’t care. People will say and do what they want. I’m not a part of their lives any more than they’re a part of mine. I just want to get back home.”
“I keep in touch with him, you know,” Graham said.
“With who?” Jeremiah said.
“With Stuart,” Graham said.
Jeremiah blinked, casting an eye over Graham.
“Only by social media,” Graham said. “We’re not close. But I see his newsfeed from time to time. He’s doing all right.”
“That’s nice,” Jeremiah said.
“He changed companies,” Graham said. “He has a kid. A little boy.”
“That’s nice,” Jeremiah said.
He repeated the words with the same studied tone of voice.
“You didn’t know that before I told you, did you?” Graham said. “That your son has a son.”
Jeremiah said nothing.
“Why don’t you talk anymore?” Graham said.
“That’s none of your business,” Jeremiah said.
“There’s no reason to be so uptight, Jerry,” Graham said.
“Don’t call me Jerry,” Jeremiah said.
“Jerry, Jerry, Jerry,” Graham said.
Jeremiah turned with deliberate slowness toward Graham, his eyebrow cocked.
“Now I know what pushes your buttons I’ll just keep pushing them, unless you talk to me,” Graham said.
“You’re really annoying,” Jeremiah said.
“You only just noticed that?” Graham said.
“No wonder you don’t have any friends,” Jeremiah said.
“Look who’s talking,” Graham said.
“As we’re becoming new best buddies, be honest with me,” Jeremiah said.
“I’ve been nothing but honest with you since we came down here,” Graham said.
“Then maybe you’d be kind enough to tell me what you were doing in my house the night we sank,” Jeremiah said. “You weren’t housekeeping, I know that much.”
Graham turned his head to one side.
“I was… investigating a few things,” he said.
“What things?” Jeremiah said.
“I know what my company was trying to do to you and your land,” Graham said. “I couldn’t just sit by and watch them take everything from you.”
“Oh, so you were on my side, ay?” Jeremiah said. “That’s a turn up for the books.”
“Sometimes in my line of work it helps to have one face for some people, another for others,” Graham said.
“How am I supposed to know this face you’re showing me now is the real one?” Jeremiah said.
“What reason do I have to lie to you?” Graham said.
“Oh, I’d say you have plenty of reasons,” Jeremiah said. “About half a million, in fact.”
“Your property’s not worth anywhere near that,” Graham said.
“Financially, maybe not,” Jeremiah said. “But it means a lot more to me than just money.”
“Don’t you want to retire in a nice old folks’ home?” Graham said. “I know if I were you, that’s where I’d want to be. You can socialize, meet new people, make new friends. Maybe even get yourself a girlfriend.”
“Do I look like I want a girlfriend?” Jeremiah said.
Graham sighed. He looked out the window, down on the town below.
“Looks like they’re preparing something out there,” he said.
“Probably the cooking pot for when we fail to come up with something,” Jeremiah said.
“Listen to Mister Upbeat over here,” Graham said. “You don’t always have to think everything is against you, you know.”
“Why not?” Jeremiah said. “It’s how it usually goes.”
Jeremiah pressed his nose to the glass. Big drums with oil in them had been lit, all over the town. People were emerging out onto the street and heading toward the castle.
“It’s no good us being cooped up in here,” Graham said. “We should go for a walk, take some time out. Maybe the solution will come to us.”
“That’s not a bad idea,” Jeremiah said. “At least it’ll make us tender for the cook pot. I’d hate to be gamey.”
The local
little men and women glanced at these two Surfacers but were quick to look away. The guards eyed the locals with stern glares, and followed Graham and Jeremiah every step they took.
“Tell me,” Jeremiah said to Graham. “Do you feel like a VIP or a VDP?”
“What’s the D for?” Graham said.
“Dangerous,” Jeremiah said.
“They’re just doing their job,” Graham said.
But he had to admit, it was strange. It was like they were celebrities. Unfortunately it was for committing a mass murder rather than something progressive. As they headed into town the guards formed a tight circle around them and buffeted aside anyone who didn’t get out of the way fast enough.
“This is certainly going to make us popular with the locals,” Jeremiah said.
The town folk were gathered in the center of town, around a large platform. Leader took to the stage.
“As I’m sure you’ve all heard, we have been sent two Surfacers and they are working on completing a digger for us,” Leader said. “Soon we will emerge from this earthy darkness and take our place once more on the surface alongside our brothers and sisters.”
“No pressure,” Graham mumbled.
“We must prepare to be welcomed by them with open arms,” Leader said. “They have long been awaiting our return, just as we have been awaiting theirs. Today, we celebrate an end to darkness and fear and welcome the light.”
The big drums kicked off the party. Some of the entertainers were dressed in costumes, others on stilts with masks and long robes. Even with this height advantage they were no taller than Graham and Jeremiah.
“We should head this way,” Jeremiah said. “Away from the crowd.”
“But the party’s kicking off,” Graham said. “And it’s in our honor. We should at least show our faces.”
Jeremiah sidled up close to Graham.
“There’s something I need to tell you,” he said.
“What?” Graham said.
Jeremiah nodded toward an empty stretch of road. Graham sighed and looked back at the party one more time before following the old man. The guards maintained their circle around them at all times.
“All right, so what is it?” Graham said.
“Not here,” Jeremiah said. “Someone in the houses might be listening.”
They headed toward one of the tunnel entrances.
“Now is it safe?” Graham said. “Or shall we seal ourselves in one of these tunnels first?”
Jeremiah checked over his shoulder that the coast was clear.