<h2 title="Chapter Five"><SPAN name="p51" id="p51"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"><span class="ns">[p</span>51<span class="ns">]<br/></span></span>CHAPTER FIVE</h2>
<p>Detective Lieutenant Nolan Brice stood in the
brush near the wrecked aircraft, watching the
men move about in the light of several spotlights
that had been set up by the National Guardsmen
who had roped off the area. The thick blackness
of the surrounding forest, plus a glance at his
watch, told him that dawn wasn’t too far away.
FAA investigator Dickson, a thin, stringy ex-pilot
stepped around the scrambled bits of wreckage
and offered a light to the dead cigarette in
Nolan’s mouth.</p>
<p>“Thanks,” Brice said and blew the smoke
to the night. “What d’you make of it, Mister
Dickson?”</p>
<p>Dickson shrugged and pushed his snap-brim
hat back with a blunt forefinger. “Dunno. It’s
pretty dark to see much, but it’s no private
plane.”</p>
<p>“Why do you say that?”</p>
<p>“No wings, no tail assembly. Of course, it’s
hard to tell in the dark. When it gets light enough,
we’ll know the story; but I don’t know of any
private plane that looks like that one. Then too,
the Army is holding the news boys at bay. I
think those two government fellows are playing
this one close to their chests.”</p>
<p>Brice nodded and dragged on the cigarette,
but he said nothing about the speed of the thing.
“Any bodies?”</p>
<p>Dickson shook his head. “The thing is pretty
well burned, and the bodies, if there are any to
be found, could be all over the area. We did
find a kind of flying suit, though, badly burned
<SPAN name="p52" id="p52"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"><span class="ns">[p</span>52<span class="ns">]
</span></span>and torn.”</p>
<p>“Just the suit? No one in it?”</p>
<p>Dickson looked perplexed. “Bothers you huh?
Me too. I can’t figure out why a pilot would carry
something like that as an extra. Oh, well, it’ll
all come out when we really start investigating.”</p>
<p>“How long does a thing like that take?”</p>
<p>Dickson shrugged. “A couple of days, a week.
Even a few months. It’s hard to say.”</p>
<p>Brice nodded, took a final drag on the cigarette
and tossed it toward the wreck, watching the red
ash burst near the wreck. Dickson had wandered
off to the far side of the crash-made clearing.
Hell, Brice thought, I’d better get that butt. Leaving
a thing like that around here could get me
in trouble. They’d think it was part of the crash.</p>
<p>When he walked over to retrieve the butt, he
saw the light from the flood glinting on a small
gold object. He picked it up and found that he
had someone’s watch. The crystal had been
smashed, likely in the crash, and the hands
were stopped at 4:15. The expansion band watch
dispelled his hunch that the pilot of the plane
had been a Russian, or something; it was a
Bulova, and he didn’t think Russians had them.
But what cinched the whole thing was on the
under side of the face, in the light of the spots,
he could read: “To Nick, Love, Beth.”</p>
<p>And suddenly, it was there! He knew the watch.
He knew it as well as he knew his own. Hell, he
had picked it up at the jeweler’s shop in Everett,
two years before, when Beth hadn’t been able to
get into town and wanted to surprise Nick with it!
Stunned and puzzled, Brice dropped the watch
into his pocket and decided not to say anything
to Cartwell and Morgan. Maybe it would cost him,
<SPAN name="p53" id="p53"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"><span class="ns">[p</span>53<span class="ns">]
</span></span>later, but he couldn’t tell them - not until he had
a better picture of what the hell was going on.</p>
<p>He lit another cigarette and stood there thinking
about the watch. How had it gotten here? Nick
didn’t know how to fly a plane, and even if he
had studied the art, could he fly an aircraft
that cleared a speed of two thousand miles per
hour? Hell no! Nor had the watch been there, in
the weather, all this time.</p>
<p>Of course, Nick could have hocked the damned
thing in some town when he needed money, and
by some quirk of fate it had been brought back
to the same area it had left over a year before.
That was possible, but Brice didn’t believe it.
It just didn’t fit.</p>
<p>“Seen enough?”</p>
<p>Brice turned and saw Cartwell standing behind
him. How long has he been there, he wondered,
and forced a grin. The stocky built blond grinned
back at him.</p>
<p>“Thought you might want a cup of coffee,”
he said.</p>
<p>“Where the hell will you get coffee out here?”</p>
<p>Cartwell waved an arm toward the foot of the
hills. “A farm down there. They wake up early
around here. Sam conned the farmer’s wife into
making coffee for the boys. Want some?”</p>
<p>“Might as well. We have a few minutes - in
fact, we have a lot of time, before daylight.”</p>
<p>“Getting tired?” Cartwell asked, as they started
down the hill past the ring of soldiers.</p>
<p>“A little. More like anxious to find out what the
tale is on that wreck.”</p>
<p>“You’ve been talking to Dickson, I see.”</p>
<p>Brice nodded. “Yeah. Well, one thing we know.
It’s apparently some kind of experimental
<SPAN name="p54" id="p54"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"><span class="ns">[p</span>54<span class="ns">]
</span></span>aircraft ... like a rocket, or something. And, if it
isn’t one of ours...” Brice left it hang and
Cartwell didn’t pick it up.</p>
<p>For a few minutes they walked in silence
through the dew<!-- TN: no hyphen in original --> splattered forests, homing in on
the glow of yellow lights that winked at them
through the branches. Finally they reached the
rutted, dirt road that twisted along the stream
bed toward the framed shape of the farm house.
Cartwell broke the silence as they neared the
place.</p>
<p>“Don’t talk much about the wreck around these
people, Nolan. They’re nice folks, but simple
natured. They plant by the phases of the moon
and the biggest event in their lives is going to the
state fair. They’re Lancaster Dutch, recently
imported, and they believe in the hex signs they
painted on the barn.”</p>
<p>Brice nodded. “Okay, John.”</p>
<p>The farm couple were strangers to Brice,
but their type was familiar. Pennsylvania was
full of them. They were, as Cartwell had said,
good people. They were farmers, about three
jumps above the witchcraft<!-- TN: no hyphen in original --> believing stock that
had given them birth and were hard to understand.
They were the stay-at-home type, to whom
Pittsburgh was the Far West, and if they were
forced to move farther than fifty miles away
from home, their relations screamed that they
would never see them again.</p>
<p>The woman, whose name Nolan hadn’t caught,
was plain<!-- TN: no hyphen in original --> appearing, with no makeup and her
hair pulled back into a severe knot at the base
of her skull. From the moment, she asked them
in and poured their coffee, he liked her. In her
own, slow way she was a fine person, but her
<SPAN name="p55" id="p55"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"><span class="ns">[p</span>55<span class="ns">]
</span></span>world was the farm, her life was the soil.</p>
<p>“Have you found that poor pilot, yet?” She
asked, setting the coffee before them.</p>
<p>“No, ma’am,” Cartwell told her.</p>
<p>The heavy<!-- TN: no hyphen in original --> set woman made a clucking sound
with her mouth. “Honest to true,” she mused.
“You’d wonder why a thing like that had to come
to be.” She sighed heavily. “There’ll be some
poor woman in tears tonight. D’you think he was
married?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know, ma’am,” Cartwell said.</p>
<p>“It’s the children that suffer...” she said
softly and allowed the rest of what she was about
to say trail off as Dickson came in. He smiled
at the farmwife and she poured him a cup of
coffee.</p>
<p>Dickson pulled off his hat. “I’d like to thank
you,” he told her, “for being so kind...”</p>
<p>The woman looked pleased and flustered at the
same time; there was a tinge of flush about her
face. “Bosh,” she said, smiling. “It’s the least
a body can do. I know I’d feel real glad to have
someone helping, were it my boy up there.”</p>
<p>“Your boy flies?”</p>
<p>“He did.” The woman looked a bit pained.
“He was killed during the war.”</p>
<p>“I’m sorry,” Dickson said, and reached for a
doughnut from the plate on the table.</p>
<p>A silence fell over them as they waited for
the coming of dawn and a chance to really look
the wreck over. Nolan was somehow glad to be
spared of conversation with the others. He felt
like a criminal, with the small gold watch in his
coat pocket and he wanted to tell Dickson and
Cartwell about the thing. But he couldn’t. For
the first time in his life he was delaying an
<SPAN name="p56" id="p56"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"><span class="ns">[p</span>56<span class="ns">]
</span></span>investigation, hiding evidence. He was well aware
of the whole thing, but he was also aware of what
the presence of that watch meant. It was a personal
thing now, and until he knew which way to go, he
had to keep the watch a secret.</p>
<p>If Nick Danson had somehow come back in that
wreck and, if they found no bodies, he would
have gone to Beth ... the whole thing would be
complicated beyond belief. What would such a
thing do? What would happen to the woman he
loved, if Nick Danson was back?</p>
<p>He stared moodily into the dark liquid in his
coffee cup and wondered where it would all end.</p>
</div>
<div class="chapter">
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />