Fred and Charlie sat at the bar in The Roadside, on their second beer, working on making it a third before too long, when news came in that The Hollow had grown again. The news was brought by Tom Perkins, as red as a berry and excited fit to bust.
“The Hopman place has gone; most of the house, stables, horses and paddock, the whole lot, all ’et up. And the highway’s out; ain’t nothing coming in from that direction for a long time. You gotta come see.”
The bar fell quiet as many of the clientele left to check it out, but Fred and Charlie stayed in their seats.
“Ain’t you boys going to see what all the fuss is about?” Tony, the barkeep, asked.
“It’s a big hole, I’ve seen more than enough of it already,” Fred said, finishing off his beer. Charlie merely grunted, and chugged his own glass down. His scalp wound was red raw, black stitches showing under butterfly clip bandages that already looked grimy. The wound hadn’t slowed down his beer drinking any though, and Fred was happy to go along with a third for each of them. When he reached for his wallet, Charlie waved him away.
“The beers are on me tonight, son. I owe you, for getting me out of that hole.”
Fred wasn’t about to argue. There didn’t look like any way they’d get paid by John Hopman anytime soon, and he was going to need most of whatever cash he had in his pocket for food for the next week. But although they were only on the third beer, Fred could already hear the JD calling. He suspected eating would just have to wait. But before then, he needed to slow down a tad; it was too early in the day to start tying one on.
Who am I kidding?
“What do you think is causing it?” he asked Charlie, hoping to get a conversation going that might take his mind off the booze, for a few seconds at least.
Charlie accepted his fresh beer and chugged down a third of it before replying.
“If I was betting on it, my money would be on the old mine workings. It was only a matter of time before a collapse happened. Looks like that time has come.”
Fred knew of the mines; every kid in town knew. Back in junior high, one of the top dares of a summer was to go inside the main entrance at the foot of Hangman’s Bluff and stay there after sundown. Fred remembered his own experience only too well. A cold evening in a damp place; the only scares being ones he gave to himself and a slap from the old man on his late return home. Not much reward for surviving a successful dare. But he hadn’t gone much farther than a couple of yards inside. He might have been stupid enough to accept the dare—but he wasn’t that stupid.
All he remembered of it now was the dark and the damp. Even back then in the early years of the new century, the place had looked to be long neglected.
“I never knew that the mine had ever amounted to much,” he said. “Didn’t old man Hopman give up on it back in the sixties?”
Charlie took a while to answer, and when he did, he had a look around first to make sure no one else was listening.
“That was the story he had put around. But some of us know better.”
Fred lit up a smoke and sipped at his beer. He knew Charlie of old. A story was coming, and one that might be a while in the telling.
“You’ve got to remember,” Charlie started. “Things was different back in them days. There weren’t none of these Health and Safety restrictions… at least none that old man Hopman needed to pay much attention to in any case. I weren’t much older than you are now, fresh back from ‘Nam with a busted knee and not enough dollars to keep me in booze and smokes. When word came down that the old man was hiring miners, cash in hand, no questions asked, I jumped at the chance.
“Mayhap I should’ve been more careful, but the money was too good to turn down. Hopman even provided us with free meals and as much coffee as we could drink after our shift was done. But the working conditions in the shaft itself were a bad dream come true. He had six of us down there, three at a time in twelve-hour shifts, hacking away in the near dark with scarcely a pit prop or lintel to stop the rock from falling in on us.
“I don’t mind telling you, there were a couple of times when things got right hairy. We nearly lost Tom Lipton when a stone fell on him. Banged his leg up good, and he was off work for a spell. But a couple of weeks later he was back at it with the rest of us. As I said already, the money was just too good to turn down.
“We never did find out what we were looking for. We shifted the rock and it was taken away in carts for the old man to inspect before it got dumped in the old quarry off the Getting’s farm road. All we knew was that we had to keep digging. Old Hopman was on a quest for whatever it was he thought was down there. Silver was my thought, for there’s stories from the old days of a vein running through the rock in these parts. But some of the men said it must be Spanish gold and others spoke of some long-forgotten stash of Indian treasure. There were even mutterings of it being a taboo place. Several local kids managed to scare themselves silly one night while partying a bit too hard. But this was at the ass end of the hippie era. There was more than just booze involved, if you catch my drift, and that waccy-baccy can make you see anything you want to see.
“In truth, nobody but old Hopman really knew, or cared what we were digging for. We hacked at rock, coughed up dust, and took his money. We worked hard, and partied harder on the one day off we got in every ten. This was the early seventies, back when a party was a real party. This bar here was jumping most nights, and a man with a roll of green in his pocket was the most popular man in town. Happy days.”
Charlie tailed off, staring into space, lost in memory. Fred thought the story was finished. But there was more to come.
“The good times lasted for six months,” Charlie continued after a while. “Then one night the other shift disappeared. Nobody knows what happened, or when it happened. We turned up for our shift as usual in the morning to be faced, not with three tired men on the way out to meet us, but with a fresh cave-in. There was no blood, no sign at all the men had even been there except for a pickaxe and a shovel that had been bent out of shape, as if it had hit something, hard.
“We did what we could; we dug for three days straight, deep and far, only stopping for water and rest when we were too exhausted to keep going. We cleared the whole cave-in, and even dug a bit farther. But we never found nobody; no bodies, not a trace that they had ever been there.”
Charlie stopped again and chugged what was left of his beer, motioning to Tony for another.
“Old man Hopman made a token effort to keep the work going, but ain’t no way any of us was going back down there for a while, money or no money. And the old man himself seemed to have lost any enthusiasm he had for the project. I took up the handyman business, and tried to forget about the three men and what might have happened to them. I also took up the booze, even more than I had been doing. Some of them years are mighty cloudy looking back at them now. If you ain’t careful, lad, you could be in for some of the same yourself.”
Fred was in no mood for a lecture on abstinence.
Not after the morning I had.
“We’re not talking about me,” Fred interrupted. “Remember? There’s more about the mines, isn’t there?”
Charlie nodded.
“Just a bit. But give me time. I’m getting to it.”
The older man lit a cigarette, taking his time about it, drawing out Fred’s anticipation before finally continuing.
“I thought I was finished with the mine. But it weren’t quite finished with me.
“It was nineteen eighty or thereabouts, eight years later, before I was back down there. Old man Hopman had got filthy rich at some point a few years before. I reckoned he’d finally found what he was looking for down there in the mine, but I’d scarcely given him any thought at all apart from in my nightmares—until the old man contracted me to get rid of some chemical waste from his factory over in Loughbourne. Why he wanted it hidden, I never found out, but I’d learned years before that asking questions only gets you answers you didn’t really want to know.
“‘Fetch it from the factory, and stow it down below,’ he said. ‘What the county ain’t able to see, it ain’t able to bitch about.’
“I knew exactly what he meant by down below. I wasn’t happy about it, but eight years is a long time, and the memory had faded. Or so I thought. That same night I loaded up my truck with twenty oil drums of something I didn’t want to think about, and took it to Hopman’s mine.
“Now I ain’t ashamed to tell you, I didn’t want to go back down there into the dark. As I stood at the entrance to the shaft, the years seemed to fly away, as if they’d never happened, and suddenly I couldn’t get the thought of the three missing men out of my mind. I wanted to just dump the waste at the entrance and head down here for a beer. But the business, such as it was, weren’t doing too well, and I needed the old man’s cash badly. So I loaded the drums on a cart, hitched it to the forklift, and headed down into the dark.
“That was when I found out just how busy old man Hopman had been in the intervening years. There’s a proper warren down there, or at least there was back then, a nest of caverns, all crumbling, some with fresh cave-in material building up, others looking ready to drop at any minute… and this was thirty-odd years ago. God knows what it’ll be like now. And that ain’t the worst of it.
“I took them drums down as deep as I dared. And it were there that I found old man Hopman’s secrets.
“He had some kind of operation going on down at the deepest level. There were generators, water barrels and refrigeration units… all kinds of shit. I reckoned he was building a bunker; remember that the Cold War was still going on, and some folks were just plain scared shitless. I had a look-see while I was there. There was a big iron door, obviously there to protect something, but it was locked tight. And I had started to get the heebie-jeebies by then anyway. I kept hearing somebody whispering to me, but when I looked around, there was never nobody there. After ten minutes of that crap, all I wanted to do was get back up top and have a drink… a lot of drinks.
“I did what the old man had told me to do. I followed the tracks to the deepest part, and found where I was supposed to leave the waste drums.”
He paused again, took a deep drag of smoke and let it out very slowly. Fred saw something in the old man’s eyes he hadn’t seen before: pain. That, and a hint of fear.
“And here we get to the point of the story,” Charlie finally said.
“Old man Hopman hadn’t just been tunneling… he’d been dumping his industrial waste down there too; scores of barrels of the crap, some open and leaking, stacked willy-nilly in rough-hewed, crumbling caves. And the smell… I’ll never forget it. It stung in the nose and throat like a rancid shit, and it took a whole bunch of beers later that night to get the taste of it out of my mouth.
“I’m telling you, son, it don’t bear thinking about what might be down there by now, but I know one thing… we don’t want it getting back up here.”
Fred was quiet for a while, thinking about the thing he’d barely caught a glimpse of back in the hole; a white, slithering thing he’d only seen at the edge of his vision but suspected might be haunting his dreams that very night. Charlie, after his bout of being talkative, went back to a more normal period of silent drinking, which was fine by Fred. He was getting settled in for a long evening, and in truth was looking forward to the eventual oblivion the booze would bring.
Scraps of information came back from Hopman’s Hollow over the next few hours, the gist of which was mostly more of the same. Big hole, getting bigger. There were other stories too; there would always be other stories where the Hopmans were concerned. Folks told of bodies that were there then were gone, of weird voices calling up out of the hole, and of strange diagrams seen on the walls and floor of the Hopman house just before it fell into the chasm. Fred and Charlie listened, then went back to drinking, both of them hoping to start to forget their own tribulations earlier that day.
But it was not to be.
The bar began to fill up, the crowd again full of excited chat about the hole which was the biggest thing to happen to the town in many a year. Once people heard that they’d been first on the scene, Fred and Charlie became the focus of some attention. Charlie got exasperated at first with the incessant questioning, but the pair of them quickly cottoned on to the fact that, as minor celebrities, they could squeeze a fair bit of free beer out of their story if they padded it out long enough.
Fred even started to enjoy himself, embellishing his story with new detail on each subsequent telling so that after an hour or so he had made himself out to be quite the hero. The one thing he didn’t mention was the memory of the pale thing that had moved in the pit. He kept that locked away, and after a few more beers even started to forget about it completely.