"Oh?" Dennis felt that his teeth were slightly numb. "Got to get up there above the road before I do? Got some dynamite handy?"
Cone glared at him. "Not funny, Conway."
"Let's go," Hapgood said quietly to his companion, taking his arm.
Cone shook him off. "You want what we've got," he said to Dennis, "but you'll never get it. Not if I have any say."
"I want what you've got? And what is that?" Dennis asked.
"Come on, Oliver," Hapgood said, with greater urgency this time, pulling Cone away.
Dennis did not object or interfere. An entirely new purpose had taken hold of him. He turned his back on Oliver Cone and Mark Hapgood and walked with the same slow, deliberate strides to the bar stool he had previously occupied. "You have a cordless phone?" he asked the barman.
When the instrument had been placed before him, Dennis punched out the number of his home.
"Yes?" Sophie said.
"It's me. I'm still in Aspen, but I'm coming home. And when I get there, I want you to tell me everything. I think I know part of it now, but I want to know it all."
"You don't know," Sophie said, "but I'll tell you now, Dennis. I swear to you. I'll tell you everything."
Chapter 23.
Sophie's Tale
SOPHIE THREW HER arms around him as she had not done in months. "Thank you," she said. He felt that all her heart went into those two simple words. But he was a little drunk, unable to stop his tongue from voicing what was on his mind.
"You're welcome. All in a day's work. I may have lost a friend or two and I had to pillory a deputy district attorney, but the son of a bitch probably deserved it. Never mind that he was in the right and I was in the wrong. I just keep wondering why I have this sour taste in my mouth. Is it the bourbon? Must be."
"Don't act like this, Dennis, please. Whatever you had to do, you did the right thing."
"Did I?" Dennis said. "Convince me. Tell me all."
The telephone rang. Sophie answered, and Dennis bounded up the stairs two at a time to hug his children. "Ouch, Daddy," Lucy said. "Too hard."
He flung off his suit, shirt, and tie, all his clothes, then plunged into the shower. In the frosted glass stall he shut his eyes and stood under the drumming beat of the hot water for ten minutes, as if soap and steam could wipe off the grime of the trial. When he finally came out to towel down, Sophie was waiting for him.
"That was my father who called. They wanted us to come over for dinner, to celebrate." It sounded so domestic, as if he had won a promotion or it was someone's birthday. "But I said no." Sophie wasn't smiling; she looked oddly flushed. "I need to talk to you, Dennis. I'm sorry about how you feel but I think after I've talked to you, you may feel differently. I want to explain Springhill. It can't wait. It has to be tonight. I have so much to tell you-all that I couldn't tell you before."
He was bewildered by her urgency, but not unhappy at the thought that he wouldn't have to spend the evening feasting with Scott and Bibsy. He had seen more than enough of them in the last week. He'd done what had to be done, but he wondered if he would ever feel the same warmth toward his in-laws as he had before he came to the conclusion they were guilty as charged. He had defended them with full vigor: that was his obligation as a lawyer, and he had won. It wasn't his obligation to forgive and forget.
The buzz of the alcohol began to wear off. "I want to spend some time now with the kids," he said.
"I understand. Do it, of course. I meant after dinner."
Sophie had barbecued two chickens and baked a peach pie. Later, at the computer, Dennis worked with Brian and Lucy on a new astronomy program. He showed them the planetal orbits. The moon whizzed around the earth; the earth flew around the sun. It was all orderly and yet it made no sense. Just like life, he thought. By the time the children were bored and ready for bed Dennis felt that life was beginning to move back to normalcy. The old fundamental truth struck home: whatever happens, life goes on. The planets move on their tracks and so do we.
Dennis kissed the children good night. Downstairs, Sophie ran toward him. "Oh, God, I'm happy," she cried. "Come out on the porch with me. Put on a coat." She couldn't sit still. She needed space, she said, to tell her tale. He wrapped himself in his ski parka. They stepped outside. "I need to tell you some of the history of this place," she said.
"History? Now? Sophie, what are you talking about?"
"We'll get where you want to go. You'll know what happened at Pearl Pass, and you'll know why it happened, and you'll see how good a thing you did."
That put a new spin on things. Dennis frowned.
A chill wind began to blow. He had to strain to catch her words. It was only because her face gleamed against the black background of the forest that he knew where she was, who she was.
"Will you listen? Will you believe what I tell you? Will you make an effort to understand? Do you promise?"
"Yes, I promise." A promise as to a child. But he sensed she was not about to speak of childish things.
Sophie said: "The first settlers came here after the Civil War. They were only three families and a few single men. When the people arrived they found abandoned miners' equipment over by the shores of Indian Lake. They also found a couple of mountain men who claimed they'd been trapping beaver here since 1860. The mountain men didn't like the settlers moving into what they considered their private territory, even though they'd never bothered to file any claims. I think there was some arguing ... a man was killed, so the story goes ... but it's an old story, gotten fuzzy over the years. The point is, the mountain men packed up and left Springhill.
"One of those first families was the Hendersons. Charles Henderson was my great-grandfather, from near Pittsburgh. James Brophy, our friend Edward's great-grandfather, was a muleskinner from Worcester, Massachusetts. And there was a William Lovell, a miner, and later a Frazee, who was a hunter, and a Cone, another hunter who opened a saloon some years later. Cone was supposed to have been the one who'd shot the trapper-bushwhacked him, they said, from behind a pine tree-and driven the mountain men off. A few Ute Indians lived here too, on the other side of the lake. But they were forced out of western Colorado after the Meeker massacre in 1881.
"Marble was the biggest of the settlements up here and later it became a good-sized town. Springhill was never more than a mining camp and no one paid much attention to it. The settlers were looking for gold. They found it in small quantities-small enough, fortunately, not to start a stampede. They also found silver and lead and zinc and copper, but again the holdings were barely worth working at. It wasn't called Springhill then. Charles Henderson and the first settlers called it Fortune City-you might call that the triumph of hope over reality. Naturally the name didn't stick, and then people remembered that the Ute name for the place was Wacha-na-hanka, which they'd been told meant 'the hill where the warm spring is.' That was a mouthful for white men, so it became Springhill. Prosaic, but appropriate. More than anyone knew.
"People hung on, scratched a living from the mines. Winters were hard but no one froze-there was plenty of wood to burn. No one went hungry-there was plenty of game. No one was ever thirsty- the drinking water was pure and virtually unlimited, depending on the accumulation of snow and the summer runoffs. People either took their water from the nearest stream or from Indian Lake.
"Up near the El Rico mine-a little copper deposit on a north-facing slope-there was a warm spring and a tiny waterfall. You remember the place I took you and the children to that day? Where the water gushes out of the hillside? That was the El Rico claim. They say that in the 1860s the creek ran more forcefully, and the bed was a foot or two wider. William Lovell owned the claim. That was his old mining cabin we went into, where the gravity seemed out of whack and where I told you no birds fly over.
"Bathing was not an everyday event in the nineteenth century, but miners get pretty dirty. William Lovell used to bathe in the warm spring the whole year round, just to get clean after a day's work. So did a couple of men who worked the mine with him.
"When you bathe in water, your body absorbs some of it. You may try not to take it in, like when you're swimming in a chlorinated pool, or in the ocean and you haven't got a particular taste for salt water, but the water gets on your lips and goes up your nose. So you imbibe minuscule amounts of it whether you realize it or not.
"It was around 1868 that the miners first started washing in the spring near the copper mine. There were three men. William Lovell was thirty-three years old. Francis Hubbard, who worked for him, was a widower of about forty, a laborer. Otis McKee, the third, was close to fifty-he was Mr. Lovell's junior partner. All three imbibed the water from the spring.
"William Lovell's wife, Rebecca, didn't bathe in the spring. She bathed at home two or three evenings a week in a big iron tub with creek water she heated on the wood stove. That was also true at the time for the Lovells' three children-Caleb, Naomi, and John.
"Pay attention. Otis McKee's first wife died from influenza back in Ohio. He had recently remarried, to a young Ohio girl named Larissa Orlov, born in this country but Russian in origin. They say that Otis McKee was crazy about her. She was over thirty years younger than he was-a clever, bold, imaginative girl. Larissa was a cripple. She'd been thrown from a buggy as a child and smashed her foot on a boulder, so that one leg was shorter than the other. She limped badly, but otherwise she was very well formed in her body, with dark eyes and long reddish brown hair. Not a beauty, but pretty. She'd learned to play the violin-taught by her Russian grandfather. Her father was a railroad switchman but he'd bought her a quality Italian-made violin, probably as some sort of compensation for the fact that he couldn't repair her broken body.
"Larissa loved Otis too, first for saving her from the fate of a spinster, and then because he was kind to her. By all reports he was a fun- loving, warmhearted man."
Dennis nodded. The snow had stopped falling and the sky began to clear. Starlight glowed on Sophie's face.
"That brings me back to El Rico," she said, "and the miners who washed off the copper dust every evening in the warm water of the creek that flowed out of the hillside. In 1900, William Lovell celebrated his sixty-fifth birthday. I want to show you something."
She drew Dennis back into the warmth of the house and then upstairs to the bedroom, where she removed Harry Parrot's big oil painting from the wall and twirled the dials on the safe. Dennis saw that her fingers were trembling. The safe didn't spring open.
Sophie murmured, "Damn." She worked through the numbers more slowly a second time, trying to calm herself. The safe clicked open.
"Look." She plucked out and held in her hand a worn sepia-tinted photograph. It showed a gathering of people. They stood and sat erect, straightspined, facing the camera. The picture had the solemnity and stiffness of all old photographs; no one dared smile. A date had been written in ink on the bottom white border: April 16,1900.
"This is a photograph taken at William Lovell's birthday party," Sophie said. "Look at that man"-her fingernail tapped the face of a handsome man just to the left of center in the middle row. "How old does he look to you?"
"Hard to say exactly." Dennis bent closer. "In his forties?"
"That's William Lovell. He was sixty-five. He still worked the El Rico mine nine or ten hours a day. You've seen pictures of miners from Appalachia-how hollow-eyed and worn they are. I'm sure you can imagine what their lungs are like. Look at Lovell. .
Dennis looked again. There was not a strand of gray in William Lovell's hair. He was not smiling but there was a glint of humor in his eyes.
"He looks vital, doesn't he?" Sophie said. "A remarkable specimen. His wife, Rebecca Lovell, was a year younger-sixty-four years old. That's her, next to him." Sophie tapped; Dennis saw an old woman-wrinkled, white-haired, starting to stoop. She looked more like William's mother than his wife.
"The Lovell children are in that photograph too," Sophie said. "Caleb was forty-two-at sixteen he'd gone off to work with his father as a miner at El Rico. Naomi was a married woman of forty. John, the youngest, was thirty-seven-he'd become a wagon driver on the route to Carbondale. See? That's John. He looks his age. That's thin-lipped Naomi. Ground down by life, a typical middle-aged working housewife of her era."
True, Dennis thought. If you didn't know who everyone was, you'd believe that Naomi and John, William's children, were actually his sickly brother and sister.
"And there's Caleb," Sophie said. "The forty-two-year-old oldest son, the one who went to work in the copper mine at the age of sixteen." She pointed to a good-looking young man who looked to be about twenty-five.
"I don't understand this," Dennis said.
"You're not alone. Few people did. Let's go down." Sophie took the photograph and a brown manila envelope from the safe, twirled the dial, and slammed shut the gray metal door. Eagerly she led Dennis downstairs into the living room.
He stirred the fire, added two logs, and blew on the coals until they crackled, glowing cherry red.
"No doubt," Sophie said, "if all this stuff had happened a thousand years ago in Europe, or in Massachusetts in the seventeenth century, William and Caleb would have been burned at the stake. But this was a more scientific era. You could twist a few suppositions around, work out a thesis to account for the phenomenon-in the end no one would be able to challenge the logic of it. Except for one thing. Francis Hubbard and Otis McKee and Larissa McKee had to be factored into the equation. Francis Hubbard was about forty when he went to work at El Rico for William Lovell. He quit working in the mine when he was eighty."
Dennis raised an eyebrow. "Eighty?"
"Eighty, still swinging a pickax. They say he had the physical strength of a forty-year-old lumberjack."
"Sophie, what's this all about? What's the point of it? You're confusing me."
"Wait," Sophie said. "Let me tell you about Larissa. Then you'll see. You'll start to understand."
Her cheeks were glowing; he had rarely seen her so excited, except in bed. "Go on," he said.
"Larissa and Otis McKee are a legend in Springhill. In 1868, when the settlers arrived over the pass, Otis was forty-nine. When he went to work at El Rico for William Lovell, Larissa, his wife with the crippled foot, was nineteen. Every evening, when the men quit work at El Rico, they bathed and went home to hearth and family. But not Otis McKee. He'd make some excuse and wait around while the others packed their gear. Why did he do that? Because after the other men headed back, Larissa, his young and sexy wife, would show up through the forest. Their cabin wasn't far from the mine.
"In deep winter it wasn't easy to work your way along the trail or through the forest, especially if you were crippled like Larissa. But from May onward, until the snow began to pile up in October, she came. Larissa was a young woman of purpose, and her purpose was to bathe with her husband in the spring. She liked to roll around there, winter and summer, in that warm water, and sit under the waterfall. Like a hot tub today, only this was totally natural, out in the forest in a little pool. Under the winter stars with the snow all around-or in summer with the scent of pine in the air and the breeze in the aspen trees-or in fall with those golden leaves rustling all around. The place was beautiful. Mysterious. They made love there-wonderful, passionate love-most every evening that she showed up. They splashed around and thrashed around. Oh! they were naughty. Married-I told you they were married-but still you can see there was something naughty about it...
"And there's something else in their sex life that wasn't quite comme il faut, not in the late nineteenth century. Back in Youngstown, Ohio, after Otis asked her to marry him and she said yes, Larissa did what I believe was a remarkable thing, considering the time and place. She found a copy of a sixteenth-century Arab sex manual called The Perfumed Garden. She bought it from a peddler. It's an extraordinary book. Not only a hundred and one positions for lovemaking, but all kinds of instructions as to the use of fingernails, biting and proper kissing, creams and unguents, alleged aphrodisiacs, the use of the voice in the act of love. She pored over the manual night and day, because it seemed to promise such delight. When she and Otis came West to the Rocky Mountains, she brought it with her in her trunk. Grew her fingernails even before they reached what became Springhill-bought the ingredients for the unguents on a summer trip down to Carbondale. And then, with time, in that bubbling spring by the mine, she achieved that promised delight. She was crippled only in the foot-the rest of her was perfectly fine. Often she would play the violin to Otis to get him in the mood. Then they practiced just about all the positions The Perfumed Garden described except the ones where the woman has to be suspended by cords and pulleys. She wasn't kinky, she was simply crazy about sex. She knew the eleven basic positions and plenty of the other more esoteric ones like the Ostrich's Tail and Drawing the Bow and the Blacksmith's Posture. And there are wonderful stories in the book which she read to him, like 'Concerning Praiseworthy Women' and 'The Story of Bahloul.' "
Here Sophie blushed, and she squeezed Dennis's hand. He understood why: he had heard those stories. He had asked once where they came from, and in the shadows of the bedroom she had whispered in his ear, "Past lives."
"At first Larissa didn't tell her middle-aged husband she was getting a good part of her inspiration from a book. She thought he'd be shocked. But later she admitted it-and by then he didn't care. This went on regularly for as long as Otis McKee worked the mine. But in 1897 he retired, although he still had a small share in El Rico's profits. He was seventy-seven years old.
"I don't mean that he and Larissa quit bathing in the spring. That was their secret pleasure, which, considering the moral strictures of the time, I suspect they thought of as their secret sin. They came once or twice a week at night, and on sunny Sunday afternoons in winter when they knew that Lovell and Hubbard and other workers wouldn't be there. They did that until the day that Otis McKee died, in 1915, in perfect health except for mild rheumatism. If you'd bumped into him in the street you'd have thought he was a vigorous man in his early sixties. He might have gone on like that forever, or close to forever, but that wasn't to be. He went down in Glenwood Springs to see the dentist about a bad toothache. He was crossing Grand Avenue when a car's brakes failed. He was run over-his skull got crushed. He was ninety-five.
"Larissa was born in 1851 and lived to be one hundred years old- she died in 1951. She was in good health, and her passing was a cheerful, festive occasion. A big party was given for her a few days before the event. She played her violin, and she made a speech about how lucky she'd been in life, especially through meeting Otis. She thought she'd had a wonderful life and even a favored life. She made mention of the fact that when she was born there wasn't yet electric light and radio, and when she died there was already television and jet airplanes. But those things, she pointed out, were only fluff-the superficial trappings of life that we inaccurately label progress. What really blessed your life was a community you were part of, friends who were loving and loyal, and family you could count on.
"I didn't mention it yet, but she and Otis had children. There they were not so lucky. A son Malcolm died of polio when he was twelve. A daughter Clara died in childbirth. But a second daughter, named Sophie, was born in 1874. That Sophie married a man named Samuel Whittaker. She died on the same day as he did-both in good health, both aged one hundred, although the tombstone, as you noticed that day you went poking around while those deputies were digging up the Lovells' empty graves, claims she was only seventy-six. Sophie was my maternal grandmother. I was named after her.
"Beatrice Whittaker Henderson, my mother-whom you just saved from a terrible injustice, although you don't yet understand why-is that Sophie's daughter. Bibsy was born in 1903. She's ninety- two years old. Larissa McKee-who is almost like the patron saint of this town, for reasons that I'll get to soon-was my great-grandmother. It was she who taught me to play the violin. She'd tried first to teach her daughter, and then my mother, but Grandma Sophie wasn't interested and Bibsy wasn't gifted. I was both, and before Larissa died she gave her old violin to me. Yes, I still have it-that's the one I've been neglecting lately because I've been so upset about what was going on with you and the trial of my mother. And Larissa gave me her tattered old copy of The Perfumed Garden, which I've just about committed to memory.
"I loved Larissa enormously. She was a remarkable woman, a passionate woman, a woman whose sensitivity and powers of logic grew steadily over a long lifetime, and everyone who knew her says I resemble her in more ways than one. Nothing on earth flatters me more than that statement. I was twenty-one when she died. I was born in 1930. Are you starting to understand now? Do you see what happened, and why?"
Dennis rose angrily from his chair. He faced his wife, clasping her shoulders. "Sophie, you're insulting my intelligence. You're trying to tell me you're sixty-five years old. I know your body. I'm looking into your face right now. You are not sixty-five!"
Sophie laughed; her white teeth gleamed in the firelight. "You're right. I was born on November 5,1930. I'm only sixty-four! Here, right in this envelope, I have my birth certificate. Look at it! Do you think I had it falsified? Your father almost caught me out. Do you remember he wondered how I'd managed to take English courses under Professor Daiches at Cornell? I felt so foolish then, I had to slither out of it."
Dennis was shaking his head, dumbfounded.
Sophie touched his face gently with her hand. "Do you think I have any reason to make up even a part of this story? Dennis, if you love me, believe me. Belief is the only way, the only path to where we need to go. Proof will come later."
Chapter 24.
Departure
NOT POSSIBLE, HE thought. He knew this woman intimately: the resilience of her skin, every curve, every bone, even every faint line around her eyes. They were the curves and lines of a young woman. He knew her in bed. She was not sixty-four years old. She held the paper in her hand that would be the proof. He hadn't looked at it. Would not look at it.
"I'll fill in some historical holes for you," Sophie said. "That will help. Then we'll get to what you're looking for."
"Go ahead."
"Not ahead. Back. To understand what was happening to these people. In 1893 Grover Cleveland demonetized silver, which caused the ruin of Aspen for fifty years. But it didn't seriously affect Springhill, because the country still needed coal. And they wanted marble too. Marble is crystalline limestone that can take a polish. The coal miners were aware that the marble was there, but in early times it was difficult to cut it in the big blocks that were required for most building purposes, and then transport them, so for a long time no one much cared about marble.
"The Colorado-Yule Marble Company was founded in 1906 over in Marble by an Iowa colonel whose claim to fame was that he'd bought the horse-drawn streetcar lines in Mexico City, electrified them, then sold them at a pretty profit. The colonel was the entrepreneurial adventurer-Springhill merely followed in his tracks. The Springhill Marble Company didn't get going until 1911. It was a public company, with shares of stock, and bonds, and debentures, but it was entirely financed by the people in town. The consortium of miners and businessmen had to borrow money from Denver banks, but that was all paid off by 1927. The marble company's been a hundred-percent- town-owned enterprise ever since then.
"Around 1904 two families of miners, the Crenshaws and the Rices, arrived from Boonville, California, where their teenaged kids had created a new kind of slang so their parents wouldn't know what they were saying. But the parents caught on, and they began to speak it too. They brought the lingo here to Springhill, and we developed it our own odd way. You know: Pat shied ottoing and Macree sized while the tweeds charled the hroady. They chiggreled, then piked in the horker to Ute for a regal. That means, 'Dad quit working and Mother cooked while the children milked the cow. They ate, then drove to Aspen for a treat.' A secret language was a natural thing to be adopted, and then adapted, by the people up here. Already they had secrets to keep-and others to come.