Adams, Robert - Castaways in Time 01 - Castaways in Time

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2024-12-08 0 0 849.02KB 171 页 5.9玖币
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Scanned by Highroller. Proofed more or less by Highroller.
PROLOGUE
Raibert Armstrong sat his fine, tall, long-legged horse -- spoils of
this extended reaving -- atop a low-browed ridge, just above the
sleeping camp of his largish band. Every so often, he would take the
slowmatch from out the clamp and whirl it around several times in the
air before once more securing it back into the serpentine of his clumsy
arquebus, for if that scurvy, ill-natured pig of a Seosaidh Scot who
had robbed him of his well-earned sleep and set him to this useless,
thankless task should come by and find his match unlit, he surely would
set about thrashing Raibert. And Raibert would then have to kill the
bully and then, even if he were fortunate enough to escape north to
Armstrong lands, he would be forever marked as the man who brought back
into being the long, costly, bloody feud betwixt the two clans, and it
ended but less than a score of years.
Of a sudden, the horse raised its well-formed head and snorted, dancing
in place, its small ears twitching forward. Then, faintly, Raibert
heard it too -- a deep, but blaring, buglelike sound, seemingly coming
from somewhere beyond the slightly higher ridge on the other side of
the camp of nearly two thousand sleeping Lowlander Scots.
Raibert gave the beast just enough knee to set it to a distance-eating
trot, loath to gallop so marvelous a prize when he could see but dimly
the way ahead. He took time to blow upon that slowmatch, but then, as
he harbored scant faith in the ability of the ancient, ill-balanced and
woefully inaccurate firelock to accomplish anything more of value than
a loud noise to alert the camp, he reined up long enough to check by a
vagrant beam of moonlight that the priming had not shaken from out the
pan of his new wheellock pistol. He also made certain that the falchion
was loose in the sheath -- e broad, thick, heavy blade was centuries
older than the elderly arquebus, but cold steel was at least always
dependable, if well-honed and hard-swung.
At the foot of the higher ridge, the Armstrong clansman blew one last
time upon the smoldering match, then snapped the metal ring of the
shoulder strap to the similar ring in the weapon's wooden stock so that
when its single charge had been fired he could drop it to dangle,
leaving both hands free for horse-handling and bladework.
All preparations for alarm and battle complete, he set his prize horse
to the heather-thick ridge, a sudden gust of night wind, blowing down
cold from off the distant highlands and the icy seas beyond, whipping
his breacan-feile about his shoulders and tugging at the flat bonnet he
wore over his rusty mail coif.
But at the ridge crest, Raibert Armstrong reined up with such
suddenness and force that the horse almost reared. Up the opposite
slope, headed directly for him, was a monster, an eldritch demon surely
loosed by none other than Auld Clootie, Himself, and straight from a
deeper pit of Hell!
No less than six eyes had the demon -- four glaring a blinding,
soulless white, the lowest-set pair a feral, beastly yellow-amber. Of
the rest of the demon, Raibert could descry but little, save a dense,
dark mass, low to the ground, wheezing and whining, snorting and
bellowing its bloodlust as it eas-sayed the steep slope. The hornlike
bellowing was constant, as if the creature had no need to pause and
take fresh breath.
Perhaps it did not need to breathe air at all? What man, priest or lay,
truly knew aught of the bodily working of a Fiend from Hell? Certainly
not Calum Armstrong's son, Raibert. Nor did he intend to learn more,
not at any close proximity.
Moaning with his terror of the Unearthly, he had reined the skittish
horse half about when the monster changed its course, bearing off to
Raibert's left Seeking the gentler slope of the ridge, was it? Or was
the diabolical Thing seeking rather to flank him, to place its
awesomeness twixt him and the camp?
At the new angle, whereat the glaring eyes did not so blind him,
Raibert could discern more of this foul Thing -- long as a good-sized
wain, it was, but far lower. He could see no part of the legs for the
high-grown heather, but he suspected it to possess at least a score, to
move it so fast across the rising, uneven ground.
But most sinister of all, he could now see that a dozen or more
warlocks -- or were they manshaped fiends? -- were borne upon the
thrice-damned Beast's back, all bearing blue-black Rods of Power.
Whimpering, Raibert Armstrong still set himself to do his sworn duty,
despite his quite-justifiable horror. He presented the heavy shoulder
gun and, taking dead aim downward into the thick of the knot of manlike
creatures, he drew back the pan cover, his fingers so tremulous that
they almost spilled out the priming powder. Once again, he checked his
aim at the Beast lumbering below his position, shut his eyes tight,
then drew back the lower arm of the serpentine, thrusting the match end
clamped to the tip of the upper arm into the powder-filled priming pan.
He braced himself for the powerful kick of the piece.
But that kick never came; the match had smoldered out And still the
glaring, blaring Thing lumbered across the low saddle, leaving smoking
heather wherever its demon feet had trod, excreting fire and roils of
noxious gases from somewhere beneath its awful bulk.
Dropping the useless arquebus, Raibert sensed that his only chance now
lay in escape -- for who ever heard of a lone, common man trying to
fight a Monster out of Hell with only a pistol and an old chlaidhimhl -
- and while he could go back the way he had come, the Monster seemed
headed that way too...and Raibert felt that that was just what the
hellish Thing wanted him to do.
There seemed but one thing for it, in Raibert Armstrong's mind; he must
try -- with Christ's help -- to outfox the eldritch Beast. Reining
about, he trotted the frightened, but still obedient, horse a few yards
back along the ridge crest, as if he were blindly falling into the
Monster's coils. Then, suddenly, he drew his antique chlaidhimh -- for,
if die he must, far better to do so with a yard of steel in his
freckled fist; and besides, touch of iron or steel was held by some to
be inimical to the Auld Evil -- wheeled that hot-bred hunter about and
spurraked a full gallop, leaning low on the animal's neck to lessen
wind resistance.
Where the hill abruptly dropped away, the horse hesitated but the
briefest instant, then launched itself in a long jump which sent ridden
and rider soaring overtop the still-soaring six-eyed monster.
The horse alit on the slope below and to the right flank of the
unheeding Hellspawn, then Raibert Armstrong was spurring northward,
toward the ill-defined border, toward Scotland and his ancestral home.
Forgot were the near two thousand reavers, forgot was the raid upon the
interdicted Sassenachs, forgot was Sir David Scott and all. But Raibert
Armstrong knew that never, until the very hour of his death, would he,
could he forget the sight and the sound and the hot, oily, evil stench
of the Devilspawn Horror he had faced on the Northumbrian Moors on that
dark and windswept night.
CHAPTER 1
Bass Foster sat directly under the ceiling vent, bathed in the cool
flow from the air conditioner, watching the Collier woman swill
straight vodka and trying to think of a tactful way to cut her off --
his modest supply of potables would not last long under her inroads;
she had guzzled the last of the gin hours ago.
The professor, her husband, seemed to have barely touched his own weak
highball, but he had used the last of the tobacco in his own pouch and
now was stuffing his pipe out of one of Bass's cans of Borkum Riff.
Mid-fiftyish -- which made him some ten years Bass's senior -- he
seemed as quiet and courteous as his wife was loud and snotty. His
liver-spotted hands moving slowly, he frowned in concentration over the
pipe, his bushy salt-and-pepper eyebrows bunched into a single line.
Across the width of the oversized cocktail table from the couple,
Krystal Kent sat with one long leg tucked beneath her, doing yeoman
work on a half-gallon jug of Gallo burgundy, and taking hesitant drags
at one of her last three cigarettes. Bass shifted his eyes to her; she
was far nicer to look at, with the slunlight delineating bluish
highlights in her long, lustrous black hair.
Bass and the other three carefully avoided looking out the big window
at the impossiblity that commenced beyond the manicured lawn. Each time
Bass's thoughts even wandered in that direction he felt his mind reel,
start to slip, and he as-
siimed the others suffered the same, for all the five people who now
shared his house had seemed in one degree or another of shock when
first they had arrived at his doors -- the Colliers at the front, the
other three at the back, first Krystal Kent, then Dave Atkins and the
grubby little teenager who went by the name of Susan Sunshine.
Eschewing chairs, the two were lying side by side on the wall-to-wall
carpet before Bass's stereo. One of his very few tapes of acid rock was
in place and both Dave and Susan had fitted padded earphones on their
heads. They, at least, were not slopping up their host's booze; Dave
had rolled a double-thick joint -- of the diameter of an ordinary
cigarette and almost as long -- and, smilingly, they were passing it
back and forth. Despite the efforts of the air conditioner, the room
already contained an acrid reek of burning rope.
According to the story given by Collier when first he and his wife had
arrived, yesterday noon -- both of them soaking wet and he slimed all
over with reddish-brown mud, his hands and shirtfront smudged as well
with greasy black grime -- they had been driving from Chapel Hill,
North Carolina, to Washington, D.C., had gone off at the incorrect
beltway exit, become lost and spent seeming hours driving the backroads
and byways of rural Maryland. Finally, a blowout of their right rear
tire had forced a stop on a muddy shoulder under the driving rain of
the approaching storm.
While Arbor Collier sat and fumed in the car, nipping at one of the
several pints of gin she had hidden in various locations for the long
trip, Collier had jacked up the aging Ford and gotten the wheel off
with much effort and was kneeling in the slippery mud, putting the
spare in place, when he felt the shoulder under him seem to become
fluid . . . and Arbor had chosen that moment to open the passenger-side
door and make to step out Collier had tried to shout a warning, then he
was falling....
Seconds later, or eons, Collier had found himself lying -- l muddy,
still gripping his lug wrench -- near the base of a stone wall. Arbor
was sitting, dazed, a few feet away, in her sensible traveling suit and
with her huge purse still slung from her shoulder. The grass directly
under Collier was wet, but that surrounding him was dry as a bone under
the bright, hot sun.
"William!" Arbor had shrieked. "Where are we? How . . . how did we get
here and . . . Where's our . . . car? All my clothes are in the car,
William, my medicine and my vitamins, everything. You've got to find
the car!"
She had continued the same selfish, shrewish litany all the way to
Bass's trilevel -- maybe a hundred feet. But when she discovered that
Bass stocked a fair amount of the "medicine" she required, in varying
proof and flavors, she had set about dosing herself, even taking a
bottle of gin up to bed with her.
This morning, she had mechanically eaten the breakfast Bass and Krystal
had together cooked, then had sought out the liquor cabinet. She had
nagged her husband for a short while about Bass's lack of any more gin,
but had soon settled on one of the couches with a water glass and a
bottle of 100-proof vodka.
With his eyes on Krystal Kent's slender loveliness, Bass had allowed
his mind to slip back to pleasurable thoughts of last night with her --
two frightened people, taking solace and comfort in each other.
". . . ster Foster, I'm speaking to you!" The nasal, strident,
supercilious voice was Arbor Collier's.
Bass turned his head to face her. "Uh, sorry, I was . . . was thinking,
Mrs. Collier. What is it?"
Arbor smiled a nasty, knowing smirk. "Yes, I know the way you dirty men
all think when you're looking at women the way you were looking at Miss
Kent," she sniggered.
Bass felt his face going hot. Forcing calm, he inquired coldly, "If
that was all you had on your pickled brain, Mrs. Collier, it could have
been left unsaid. I don't like you any better than you apparently like
me. If we continue to ignore each other, maybe we can make it through
the day without coming to blows."
"Afr. Foster," hissed Arbor, clenching her half-glassful of vodka until
her bony knuckles shone white, "you are a rude, crude lout, ill-bred
and uneducated; I knew that the minute I met you. You are the type one
thinks of whenever one speaks of 'dirty old men' -- a lewd, low,
lascivious, middle-aged Lothario. I think -- n
"I don't know how you can think, Mrs. Collier, with all the booze
you've been slopping down since breakfast," said Bass in frigid tones,
adding, "And I warn you, ma'am, if you don't just shut up, I'm going to
heave you out that door on your damned ear!"
Arbor raised her plucked brows, then nodded. The final argument of
barbarians, force. But let me warn you, Mr. Foster, my husband served
with the OSS, during the war. They were taught how to kill with their
bare hands."
"Now Arbor," Professor Collier began. "You know that I never left Wash
-- "
"Shut up, William!" she snarled 'Tm talking to this male chauvinist
pig!"
Then she returned her attention to Bass. "I insist, Mr. Foster, that
you make those two, filthy, disgusting hippies stop using narcotics in
this house."
Before Bass could frame an answer not obscene and physically
impossible, Krystal Kent spoke up.
"Mrs. Collier, they're smoking pot...marijuana. It's not a narcotic,
it's a hallucinogen, and -- "
"Miss Kent," Arbor snapped coldly, "I was addressing Mr. Foster, if you
please. I, for one, do not care to have my friends hear that my husband
and I were arrested at a house where a dope orgy was going on."
Krystal threw back her head and laughed throatfly. "Orgy? Two kids
smoking a joint? You call that an orgy? I've heard of prudes, in my
time, but you -- "
Arbor pursed thin lips. "Prudence, Miss Kent, is not prudery. Though I
suppose a woman of your kind would call anyone less licentious than
herself a prude."
"And just what," snapped Krystal brittlely, "is that remark supposed to
mean, Mrs. Collier? What kind of woman do you type me as? Or, need I
really ask?"
The older woman picked up the half-full glass, drained it effortlessly,
and smirked. "Oh, Miss Kent, do you really think my husband and I
didn't hear you sneaking up the hall and into Mr. Foster's room, last
night? Think we didn't have to endure the sounds of the unhallowed
filth you two committed together?"
"What the hell business of yours is it," Krystal grated from between
clenched teeth, "whether or not Bass and I sexed last night...or any
other time, for that matter?"
Arbor's death's-head face assumed the look of a martyr. "Af r. Foster
would not allow my husband -- and my husband is a full professor, with
tenure, and he holds no less than six doctorates! -- and me the use of
his big, airy room and a private bath, no, he showed us into that
squalid little guest room, with that old, musty bed." Abruptly, the
martyred look disappeared, to be replaced with a cold anger.
Professor Collier had again snapped out of his study. "Now Arbor,
dear," he said slowly and tiredly, "this is Mr. Foster's house, and who
but he has better right to the master bedroom? He wasn't in any degree
obligated to afford us accommodations, you know. I feel -- "
"You feel?" snarled his wife. "You feel? Why, you bumbling,
overeducated jackass! You, William WilHngham Collier, never had a
feeling, an emotion, in your life! You're so weak, so passive-natured
that anyone can manipulate you . . . and generally they do, too. That's
why you weren't even really considered for department head when that
old queer Dr. Ellison died.
"If I played dutiful little wife and left it to you, I'd be nothing but
a doormat for all the world to walk on. God knows, in the twenty-two
years Fve been married to you, I've tried to make something of you,
make you something I could be proud of, but..."
Stonefaced, Krystal picked up her glass and the winejug and padded into
the kitchen. Foster, too, felt embarrassment at being unavoidably privy
to what should have been a private matter.
Muttering, "My ice is all melted," to no one in particular, he followed
the young woman.
But even with the door to the dining room firmly shut, still the pudgy
woman's strident tones penetrated.
"...in one ear and out the other. You've never heeded any advice I've
ever given you, never stood up to people the way you should, the way a
real man would. You're always off in a fog somewhere, like you just
were; allowing your own wife -- a good, decent, Christian woman -- to
be compelled to be around degenerate dope addicts and fornicators and,
for all we know, adulterers and perverts, and you didn't open your
mouth once. No, as usual, / had to be the one to protest these outrages
against decency and God's Law. You always, you have always..."
In unvoiced concord, both Foster and Krystal descended the three steps
to the laundryroom-workshop and thence to the spacious den. The
addition of two more closed doors finally made the noise emanating from
the living room almost inaudible.
Krystal sank into the fake-fur double lounge, shaking her head. "Oh,
that dear, sweet, gentle man. Bass, just think of it! Twenty-two years
in hell! Christ, I'm ready to kill the bitch after only twenty-odd
hours"
Foster shrugged. "Human beings have a bad habit of manufacturing their
own hells, Krys, I'm sure Collier didn't marry her at gunpoint." He
grinned. "He doesn't strike me as the type.
"I just hope," he went on as he seated himself beside her and placed a
hand on her bare knee, "that your father doesn't have a shotgun."
She almost smiled. "Poor Poppa doesn't know one end of any gun from the
other."
"Big, mean, nasty brothers, then?" he probed.
"I only have one brother, Bass, and he ran off to Canada to keep from
getting drafted. He's still there . . . living on the money Momma
sneaks out of what Poppa gives her."
"Oh, your brother was an anti-war activist?"
She barked a short, humorless laugh. "Baby Brother Seymour said that he
opposed 'the unjust, illegal war,' of course, but that's not really the
reason he cut out. He was just afraid somebody might force an honest
day's work out of hinf, for the first time in his pampered, sheltered
life, that's all. The snotty little leech! If he wasn't so goddamned
lazy, he wouldn't have flunked out of dental school and been liable to
the draft to start out."
"Not much love lost on your little brother, is there?" Foster chuckled.
"Don't you ever feel guilty about hating your own flesh and blood,
Krys?"
Her short, softly waving dark-brown hair rippled to the shake of her
head. "Brother Seymour's not worth a hate, or a shit, for that matter.
I don't hate him, Bass, I despise him. He's never ever tried to do one
damned thing to please Poppa and Momma, while I've always broken my ass
to make them happy» t° make myself into a person they could take pride
in . . . that's why I thought it so unjust, so unfair, that he should
be fat and spoiled and utterly useless and alive up in Canada, while
I..." She trailed off into silence, a sudden fear darkening her eyes,
"While you what, Krys?" There was all at once an almost-desperate
intensity in Foster's voice. "While your brother was alive in Canada
and you what? What were you about to say?"
But Krystal maintained her silence. Arising, she took glass and jug
with her when she strode over to the sliding glass door, opened it and
took a step onto the concrete patio, then she half turned. Her voice
low but as intense as his own, she said, "Please, Bass, let it go...let
it go, for now. If things keep going as good for you and me as they
promise to, I'll tell you...I promise. But, please, just let me alone
for a while; I have to think."
Alone for almost the first time in the last full day, Foster faced the
fact that he, himself, had some thinking to do.
Just what in hell had happened?
He remembered the big, beefy state trooper, soaking wet in the driving
rain and shouting to make himself heard above the storm, the rushing of
the near-floodstage river and the roaring of the 'copter.
"A'right, Foster, I ain' got no right to force you to abandon yore
prop'ty, but I done tol' you the way she's stacked. The river's goinf
to crest ten, fifteen foot higher'n it is right now, and way yore
house's sitchated, it'll be at leas' two foot of water in the top
level, even if you don' get undermined an. come all apart.
"And thishere's the las' roun' the choppuh's gonna make, an' yore
friggin' lil boat won' las' two hoots in hell in thet river, iffen you
change your min' later. So, you sure you ain' comin' with us?"
Foster shook his head forcefully. "No. No thank you, officer, I
appreciate it, but no."
The trooper blew at the water cascading off his nose. "A'right,
citizen, it's yore funeral . . . iffen we evuh fin' yore body, thet
is."
And he remembered sitting in that same living room now filled with the
bitchy sounds of Arbor Collier. He remembered watching the rampant
river tear away his small runabout, then his dock, sweeping both
downstream along with its other booty -- animal, vegetable and mineral.
He remembered thinking that that trooper had been right, he had been a
fool to remain, but then he had sunk everything he owned into this, his
home, the only real property he had ever been able to call his. And he
was damned if he would leave it to the ravages of wind and water or to
the unwelcome attentions of the packs of looters sure to follow.
Besides, he trusted less the dire pronouncements of "authorities" and
"experts" than he did his own unexplainable dead certainty that both he
and his house would, somehow, survive the oncoming disaster.
Not that that certainty had not been shaken a bit when, hearing odd
noises from above, during a brief lull in the storm, he had discovered
all three of his cats in the low attic, clinging tightly to the rafters
and mewling feline moans of terror. All three -- the huge, rangy black
torn, the older, spayed queen, and the younger, silver Persian torn,
which had been Carol's last gift to him -- were good hunters, merciless
killers, yet they shared the rafters with several flying squirrels plus
a couple of small brown house mice . . . peaceably. That had been when
he started getting worried and started calling himself a fool, aloud.
That was when he had decided to phone Herb Highgate, who lived a half
mile upriver and who had, like Foster, vowed to stay with his house and
property; but the phone proved dead. Then the lights went out, so he
had dragged a chair over to the picture window, fetched a bottle, and
sat, watching the inexorable rise of the angry gray water, reflecting
upon the joys and sorrows, the victories and defeats, the wins and
losses, which had marked his forty-five years of living. And, as the
water level got higher and the bottle level got lower, he thought of
Carol, grieved again, briefly, then began to feel that she was very
near to him.
The hot, bright sun on his face had awakened him, had blinded him when
first he opened his bleary eyes.
"Well, what the hell I was right after all. Christ, my mouth tastes
like^used kitty litter. Ughr
Stumbling into the kitchen, he had flicked the wall switch from force
of habit. And the light came on!
"Well, good God, those utilities boys are on the ball, for a change . .
. either that or I slept a hell of a lot longer than usual. Well, since
it's miracle time, let's have a go at the phone."
But the telephone had remained dead. With the coffee merrily perking,
Foster had decided to walk out and see just how much damage his
property had sustained.
He took two steps outside, looked about him in wondering disbelief,
then reeled back inside. Slammed the door, locked it, threw the massive
barrel bolt, sank down into the familiar chair, and cradled his head in
his shaking hands. Drawing upon his last reserves of courage, he had,
at some length, found the guts to look out the window, to see...to
see...
It could not be called a castle, not in the accepted sense, although
one corner of the U-shaped house incorporated a sixty-foot-tall stone
tower, and the entire complex of buildings and grounds was girded by a
high and thick wall of dressed stones, pierced with one large and two
smaller iron-bound gates.
A creepy-crawliness still gnawed at Foster whenever he looked across
his well-tended lawn to behold, where the river used to be, the windows
of that huge, archaic house, staring back at him like the empty eye
sockets of a grinning death's-head.
House and tower and two stretches of wall were clearly visible, now,
through the front window of the paneled den, and Foster forced down his
repugnance in order to really study the view, this time. Compared to
the wall, the house looked new, the stones of the house walls not only
dressed, but polished and carved, as well. A wide stairway mounted up
to a broad stoop -- actually, rather more a terrace -- on a level with
the second story of the house, where was what was apparently the
entrance door, recessed within a stone archway.
Shifting his gave to the walls, Foster could see that they were
crenellated and wide enough for a couple of men to walk their tops
abreast. But, in several places, the merlons were askew and at last one
of the huge, square stones had fallen completely off hs setting, back
onto the top of the wall.
摘要:

ScannedbyHighroller.ProofedmoreorlessbyHighroller.PROLOGUERaibertArmstrongsathisfine,tall,long-leggedhorse--spoilsofthisextendedreaving--atopalow-browedridge,justabovethesleepingcampofhislargishband.Everysooften,hewouldtaketheslowmatchfromouttheclampandwhirlitaroundseveraltimesintheairbeforeoncemore...

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