I wondered if dog or man or woman had killed them. I wondered if
they'd fought and lost and died as Steven had. I felt very, very
vulnerable.
The corridor was as hort one. Casey was right- from here you could
smell the sea. You could hear it too, the faint easy brush strokes of
dead low tide. To me it sounded like freedom.
You couldn't help but reconsider going back the way we came, Ben or no.
Not after those corpses. But in the passageway we'd be much more open
to attack. Besides, I wasn't wholly sure of the way. I could see us
missing a turn, the panic, the fear that they could be in front of us
or behind, the impossibility of covering ourselves with only one light
between us. They knew these tunnels. We didn't.
No, the way out was a head of us. Past them. Through them.
Close by.
We moved toward the hiss of the sea. Its sound was seductive,
dangerous. It could excite you, give you hope. And it could mask
other sounds.
Fight the sound, I thought.
I saw a thin stream of moonlight filter through the passage. We were
close now. It gave me an idea. A way to increase our odds a little. I
pulled her near me and whispered.
"Douse the light."
She understood immediately. We stood silent in the darkness waiting
for our eyes to adjust to the dim light. The dog and Mary Crouch would
be ahead of us. In moonlight. When we faced them there would be a
moment when we'd see them better than they'd see us. And that was our
moment.
"Take her," I said.
She turned her head and nodded. We rounded the corner.
The room was small, maybe fifteen feet in diameter, with low ceilings.
Once the tides had come through here. The floor was covered with round
stones polished smooth. Directly ahead of us was an opening four feet
wide by six feet high. There were three browse-beds arranged
perpendicular to the opening. I could picture