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The Snow Tiger / Night of Error Page 21


  Jock McLean, the mechanical engineer from the mine, was a Scot from the Clyde. He tapped the toe of his boot on the level area of concrete where the lines for hanging laundry were suspended from steel poles. ‘And how thick is this, Mr Buck?’

  ‘My name is Turi, and the concrete is six inches thick. I laid it myself.’

  ‘Good. We drill four holes for the foundation bolts an’ anchor ’em wi’ masonry plugs. We don’t want this thing shiftin’.’

  ‘How are you going to drill the holes?’ queried Turi. ‘We have no power.’

  McLean jerked his thumb over his shoulder. ‘Air compressor wi’ an air drill.’

  Turi looked down at the concrete and shook his head. ‘Not there. Can your drill make holes in rock?’

  ‘Wi’ a diamond drill I can go through armour plate.’

  Turi pointed. ‘Then put the machine over there. Fasten it to the rock.’

  McLean stared at the old man, and smiled. ‘I think six inches o’ concrete should hold her,’ he said tolerantly.

  ‘Have you been in an avalanche, Mr McLean?’ asked Turi softly.

  ‘People call me Jock.’ McLean shook his head. ‘We didna’ have them in the Gorbals – not when I was a laddie there forty years gone by. Maybe at Aviemore.’

  ‘I have been in an avalanche. I have dug dead bodies from the snow.’ Turi nodded his head towards the north. ‘Just over there – about two hundred yards away. Put your machine on the rock.’

  McLean scratched his head. ‘Are they as bad as that?’

  ‘When the avalanche comes it will be worse than anything you have ever known in your life.’

  ‘I doubt it,’ said McLean. ‘I went ashore at Anzio.’

  ‘I also have been in a war,’ said Turi. ‘Possibly a worse war than yours. I was in Flanders in 1918. When the avalanche comes it will be worse than that.’

  ‘Aye, well.’ McLean looked about. ‘We’ll have to find a flat bit o’ rock an’ that willna’ be easy.’ He strode away, his eyes roving. At last he thumped with his heel. ‘It’s flat enough here. This’ll do.’

  Turi walked over and stood on the place which McLean marked. He looked up at Kamakamaru and shook his head. ‘This is not the place.’

  ‘An’ why not?’ demanded McLean.

  ‘In 1912 my father had a workshop here. It was built very strongly because my father believed in building strongly. When the snow came down that winter the workshop vanished. We never found so much as a brick.’ He pointed. ‘I believe that when the wind comes, followed by the powder, there is an eddy here. This place is not safe.’

  ‘You’re a cheery soul,’ said McLean. ‘What about over there, right under the rock?’

  ‘That would do,’ said Turi gravely. ‘In 1912 I had some rabbits in a hutch there. The hutch wasn’t strongly made because my father didn’t make it – I did. But the rabbits were unharmed.’

  ‘Well I’ll be damned!’ said McLean. ‘Let’s go an’ see what the footin’ is like.’

  It proved to be satisfactory. Turi said, ‘It will be all right here.’ He went away, leaving McLean staring after him.

  A truckload of canned goods had arrived and there were some drums of fuel oil. Turi showed Len Baxter and Dave Scanlon where to put the oil and then supervised the unloading of the food by some of the older children. After he had done this he went to the back of the house where he found Baxter and Scanlon helping McLean with the generator.

  McLean had drilled four holes in the rock and had inserted bolts in the holes, secured by expanding fasteners. Turi marvelled at the speed with which McLean had drilled the holes; evidently McLean had been right to trust his diamond-tipped drill. Now he had erected a tripod and was lowering the generator by means of a block and tackle, while Scanlon and Baxter guided it so that the bolts would enter the holes in the base plate.

  At last it was done and McLean grunted with satisfaction. ‘Right, boys,’ he said, and took four steel nuts from his pocket. ‘I can carry on from here.’

  Dave Scanlon nodded. ‘I’d like to get back. I want a word with Maureen.’ The two men went away and presently Turi heard the truck start up and drive away.

  Turi’s daughter-in-law came out with a laden tray. ‘Will you have some tea, Mr McLean? And there are home-made cakes.’

  McLean dropped the nuts back into his pocket. ‘I’ll be glad o’ that. Thanks, Mrs … Miss…er …’

  ‘This is Ruihi, my daughter-in-law,’ said Turi.

  McLean’s eyes lit up as he bit into a cake. ‘Good,’ he said rather indistinctly. ‘An old widower like me doesn’t often get the chance o’ real home cookin’.’

  Ruihi smiled at him and went away, leaving the tray, and Turi and McLean spent a few minutes chatting over the tea and cakes. Presently McLean helped himself to a second cup of tea, then waved his arm towards the valley. ‘Those dead bodies you were speakin’ of a while back – how many were there?’

  ‘Seven,’ said Turi. ‘A whole family – the Baileys. There was a house there. It was completely destroyed.’ He told McLean of how he had helped his father dig.

  McLean shook his head. ‘Now that’s a terrible thing. Not somethin’ for a laddie of twelve to be doin’.’ He finished the tea and looked at his watch. ‘Well, this isna’ tyin’ down yon generator.’ He took the nuts from his pocket and picked up a spanner. ‘I’ll secure it.’

  Turi cocked his head on one side. He had heard a noise and, for a moment, thought it was the aeroplane that had been flying overhead. Then he heard and recognized the eerie bass hum and a higher whistling sound, something he had not heard since 1912.

  He grabbed McLean’s arm. ‘Too late. Into the house – quick.’

  McLean resisted. ‘What the hell! I’ve got to – ’

  Turi hauled at him. ‘The snow is coming,’ he yelled.

  McLean looked at the old man’s contorted face and believed him instantly. They both ran to the back door, which Turi immediately slammed closed and locked as soon as they were inside. He took a step forward. ‘The children …’

  McLean saw Turi’s mouth opening and closing but he did not hear the end of that sentence because the noise reached a deafening pitch.

  Then the avalanche hit.

  McLean had heard the barrage which opened the battle of El Alamein and that, in his opinion, had been the ultimate in noise, even exceeding that of the boiler shop where he had been apprenticed on the Clyde. He now knew with a depressing certainty that he had a new measure of the ultimate.

  The fundamental note was low cycle, deep in the bass – a sound which grabbed his stomach as though he was being squeezed by a giant hand. He opened his mouth and air was expelled forcibly from his lungs as his diaphragm kicked sickeningly. Superimposed on the bass was a whole series of high-pitched whistles of ear-piercing intensity, tones which collided with each other to produce strange and eerie harmonics. He had the impression that the sound entering his ears was compressing his brain.

  The old house quivered on its foundations. The light had suddenly gone as though by an eclipse of the sun, and all he saw through the window in front of him was a dirty grey blur. The house lurched as it received two swift buffets and the windows smashed inwards. He heard no sound of breaking glass.

  Fine snow dust jetted into the room through the broken panes as though squirted from a great hose pipe. The dust hit the wall to one side of McLean and sprayed outwards, and then it stopped coming in as suddenly as it had begun. Instead there was an opposite reaction, although not as strong. Air was sucked from the room, taking some of the snow with it.

  It seemed to McLean that he had been standing there for an eternity. He was wrong, of course, because, from first to last, the avalanche swept by the rock of Kamakamaru in under twenty seconds. When it was over he stood as still as a statue. He was covered from head to foot with fine snow powder which gave him the appearance of a ghost. There was a ringing sound in his ears and he heard distant cries which seemed to be coming from as far away as the town.<
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  Turi Buck stirred. Slowly he lifted his hands and put them to his ears, and he shook his head as though to assure himself that it would not fall off his trunk. He said, ‘It is over.’ His voice crashed out unnaturally loudly as it reverberated in the cavities of his skull. He turned his head and looked to McLean, saying again, ‘It is over.’

  McLean did not move so Turi put out his hand and touched him gently on the arm. A shudder went through McLean and he looked at Turi. His eyes were glazed and staring. Turi said, ‘It’s finished, Jock.’

  McLean saw Turi’s lips moving and heard his voice coming as though from a long way off, almost drowned out by the persistent buzzing in his ears. He frowned stiffly and deep cracks appeared in the powdering of snow that covered his lean face, accentuating the grooves that ran from the base of his nose to the corners of his mouth. He swallowed convulsively and his hearing improved. The distant cries he had heard before became louder, shrilling in his ears almost like the noise of the avalanche.

  Every child in the house was screaming.

  ‘The children,’ said Turi. ‘We must see to the children.’

  ‘Yes,’ said McLean. His voice came out creakily. He looked down at his hands and saw that he was still holding four steel nuts in his left hand and a spanner in his right hand. He took a deep breath and looked at Turi again. ‘You’re bleeding,’ he said.

  The cut on Turi Buck’s face, caused by a fragment of flying glass, was the only physical wound suffered by anyone in the house. Psychic wounds were something else again.

  Other houses in the valley were not as lucky.

  IV

  Matt Houghton was confident he had nothing to fear from any snow falling down the west slope. His house was built on the other side of the river and a considerable way up the east slope so that it had a commanding view of the valley. The view from his front porch was a source of considerable satisfaction to Matt Houghton and it was his habit, on fine summer days, to sit there and drink beer in the evenings. He had a streak of vanity and, since his election as mayor of Hukahoronui, he liked to think he was overlooking his kingdom. To his mind, the view from the house added two thousand dollars to the value of the property.

  Not that he was sitting on his front porch this Sunday morning. For one thing, it was too cold, and for another, the porch was cluttered with hastily packed suitcases brought by his unexpected visitors. His wife, Mamie, was in the kitchen making gallons of tea and cutting piles of sandwiches, and he was playing the genial host.

  ‘It’s so very good of you to have us here,’ said Mrs Jarvis tremulously. Mrs Jarvis was the oldest person in Hukahoronui. She was eighty-two.

  ‘No need to thank me.’ Houghton laughed jovially. ‘I’m only doing it to get your vote in the next election.’

  She looked at him uncertainly, then said, ‘Do you think we’re safe here?’

  ‘Of course we’re safe,’ he assured her. ‘This house has been here a long time – second oldest in the valley. It’s not been knocked down by an avalanche yet, so I can’t see it happening now.’

  Sam Critchell, sitting in a big over-stuffed armchair, said, ‘You never know. Avalanches can do funny things.’

  ‘What do you know about avalanches, Sam?’ Houghton’s voice was scornful.

  Critchell placidly continued to fill his pipe with liver-spotted hands. ‘I’ve seen a few.’

  ‘Where?’

  ‘At the end of the war I was in the mountains back of Trieste. There were a lot of avalanches that winter. They used the army for rescue work.’ He struck a match. ‘I saw enough to know that avalanches can be damned unexpected.’

  ‘Well, if I thought this house wasn’t safe I wouldn’t be here, would I?’ demanded Houghton rhetorically.

  A long plume of smoke jetted from Critchell’s lips. ‘Neither would I. All I said is that avalanches can do funny things.’

  A tall, stringy woman walked over to Houghton and he took the opportunity to escape this pointless conversation. ‘Well, how are things, Mrs Fawcett?’ he asked heartily.

  Mrs Fawcett carried a clipboard. She was one of the live-wires of the community. She ran the dramatic society with a rod of iron and was the mainspring of the debating society. Her son, Bobby, ran the scout troop. She was bossy and a born organizer and Houghton always had the uneasy feeling that she regarded him with contempt. She consulted the list on the clipboard, and said, ‘All here except for Jack Baxter.’

  ‘How many in all?’

  ‘Jack will make twenty-five. With your family there will be twenty-nine of us here.’

  Houghton grunted. ‘Let’s hope the food holds out.’

  She gave him the peculiar look she reserved for fools. ‘Old people have small appetites,’ she said tartly. ‘I wonder what’s keeping Jack?’

  ‘Who is bringing him?’

  ‘Jim Hatherley.’ She held her head on one side and looked up at the ceiling. ‘That aeroplane is here again.’

  ‘Doesn’t that fool of a pilot know that any sound can start an avalanche?’ said Houghton irritably. He left the room, went through the hall and out on to the porch where he stared at the sky. There was nothing to be seen.

  He was about to go back inside when Jim Hatherley ran up, somewhat out of breath. ‘I’ve got trouble, Mr Houghton. Jack Baxter slipped on the snow when he was getting out of the car. I’m pretty sure he’s bust his leg.’

  ‘Oh, hell!’ said Houghton. ‘Where is he?’

  ‘Lying by the car just around the corner.’

  ‘Better telephone the doctor; the phone’s in the hall. I’ll go down and see to Jack.’ Houghton paused, biting his lip. He did not like Mrs Fawcett, but she’d know what to do about a broken leg. ‘And ask Mrs Fawcett to come out.’

  ‘Okay.’ Hatherley went into the house and looked about for Mrs Fawcett. He did not see her but he did see the telephone so he decided to make the call first. He picked up the handset and got Maureen Scanlon at the exchange.

  ‘What number do you want?’

  Hatherley said, ‘Maureen, this is Jim Hatherley at Matt Houghton’s house. Old Jack Baxter took a bad fall and we think he’s broken his leg. Do you think you can find Dr Scott?’

  There was a pause before she said, ‘I’ll try.’ The line clicked as she broke the connection.

  Hatherley tapped on the telephone table as he waited to be put through. He looked about him and saw Mrs Fawcett just entering the hall. He waved her over and rapidly explained what had happened to Baxter. ‘Oh, the poor man,’ she said. ‘I’ll go at once.’

  She turned, took two steps in the direction of the front door, and died.

  When the avalanche hit the valley bottom the dense cloud of snow powder and air ceased to pick up speed but it did not come to a halt at once. The energy it contained had to be dissipated by friction against the ground and the surrounding air and it continued to cross the valley quite rapidly.

  It was only when it got to the other side that it really began to slow down. Now it was climbing the east slope gravity was working against it and eventually it came to a halt a hundred yards from the Houghton house and perhaps a hundred feet of vertical distance below it. There was no danger of Matt Houghton’s house being overwhelmed with snow.

  But the air blast did not stop. It came up the hill from underneath the house moving at about one hundred and fifty miles an hour. It caught under the eaves and ripped off the roof. Because of this the walls were no longer tied together so when the blast slammed at them the house exploded as though hit by a bomb. All who were in the house at that time – twenty-eight people – died. Some were struck by masonry, some were trapped in the wreckage and died of exposure. Two died of heart attacks. Some died immediately while others died in hospital a few days later.

  But all in the house died.

  Matt Houghton was not in the house, and neither was Jack Baxter. When the house was hit Houghton was bending over Baxter and asking, in what he conceived to be the cool, professional tones of a doctor, where the
pain was. He was protected by the car, and the car was protected more by a small hillock hardly more than three feet high which stood between it and the descending hillside. When the air blast roared up the hill and hit the house the car did nothing more than rock heavily on its springs.

  Houghton looked up, mystified, but not alarmed. He looked under the car and, finding nothing, he stood up and walked around it. Wind beat at him, the aftermath of the air blast, but it was not so abnormal as to tickle his curiosity. Standing on the other side of the car, he could see into the valley. The curtain of mist had been torn aside and his gaze shifted as he tried to fit what he saw with what he expected.

  He shook his head bemusedly and climbed up on to the hillock to get a better view. At first he thought he could not be looking in the right direction so he changed his stance, but that made no difference. His problem was that he could not find the town of which he was mayor.

  He rubbed the back of his neck perplexedly and then solved the problem to his own satisfaction. Of course, that was it! There had been a heavy fall of snow during the night and the town was covered in snow. It must have been a heavy snowfall, indeed, to cover the buildings so they could not be seen, but what with that and the mist it was not entirely unexpected.

  Baxter moaned behind the car, and Houghton thought it was time to get Mrs Fawcett. He turned, still standing on the hillock, to go up to the house, and then stopped dead. There was no house! There was no front porch, no tall stone chimney – nothing! If he had been a little farther up the hill he would have seen the wrecked foundations and the scattered bodies, but from where he stood it was as though the house with the two-thousand dollar view had never existed.

  A strangled noise came from him and froth came from his lips. Stiffly he toppled forward and never knew when he hit the ground.

  Presently a querulous voice said, ‘Matt! Matt? Where is everybody?’

  Jack Baxter, his leg broken but untouched by the avalanche, was still very much alive. He did not understand then, or ever after, how lucky he was to have broken his leg at the exact moment he did.