“Did you expect to find that Jerry down here making coffee or something?” Vaccaro asked.
Cole looked at the rug more closely, saw that one corner was flipped up. He reached down and tugged at the rug, revealing the trap door set into the stone floor.
“I’ll be damned.”
The trap door was awfully heavy, and it helped to have two men to swing it all the way open. A shaft led down into a dark tunnel that smelled of dank, musty earth. Over Cole’s shoulder, Vaccaro lit a wooden match and dropped it down the shaft. The sputtering flame revealed the ladder and tunnel below, but no sign of the enemy sniper.
“I’m going after him,” Cole said.
“Huh,” Vaccaro said.
Nobody had a flashlight, so Vaccaro gave Cole his Zippo lighter.
“Hey, I want that back, so don’t get shot.”
“I’ll see what I can do about that.”
Cole went down the ladder and then stood on the floor of the shaft. He could see the others looking down at him, including Jolie—she had not done very well in following the lieutenant’s orders to stay out of harm’s way.
“I will meet you at the other end,” she said.
“Where’s that?” Cole asked.
“It must come out in the marsh,” she said. “The priests would have wanted a way to reach the river without being seen.”
“I wish we had known about this goddamn tunnel before now,” Cole said.
Jolie shrugged. “France is full of secrets.”
“Cole, you are one crazy mountain man,” Vaccaro said, peering down from above.
Lieutenant Mulholland spoke up. “I won’t order you to go after that German,” the lieutenant said. “But I won’t tell you not to.”
“In that case I reckon I’m going to nail that son of a bitch’s hide to a barn door,” Cole replied.
He had to get down on his hands and knees to enter the tunnel. He flicked the Zippo to get his bearings. The roof and sides of the tunnel were shored up with damp bricks and ancient boards that looked punky with rot. It smelled like an old root cellar. He peered into the darkness that pressed up against the dim light from the flame. The tunnel seemed to go on and on. How long was it and where did it lead? The flickering lighter flame did not reveal much beyond a few feet ahead.
It was awkward trying to crawl forward on his hands and knees while juggling the rifle and a burning lighter. He snapped the lighter shut and was immediately enveloped in darkness. He kept one hand wrapped around the rifle, keeping it more or less pointed ahead of him and ready to fire. He pushed on into the tunnel, less worried about where he was going than by the thought that the Ghost Sniper might be somewhere just ahead, waiting to ambush him.
Cole was totally helpless in the tunnel—there was no way that the German could miss if he suddenly opened fire. Briefly, Cole considered firing a few shots into the darkness ahead in case the German was up there, but decided against it. If the German didn’t know he was being followed, Cole would only be tipping his own hand.
He crept deeper into the tunnel. The dim light from the trap door faded until it was like crawling through a blacksnake’s belly.
While the floor of the tunnel felt damp to the touch, the crumbling ceiling was powder dry, so that when his head accidentally brushed the bricks overhead, bits of dirt and mortar rained down. Judging by the debris in his path, someone had recently been this way. He moved ahead blindly, feeling the tunnel seem to press in around him.
Then came a rumbling sound and Cole was enveloped in choking dust. He crawled faster, knowing without seeing it that part of the roof was coming down.
He stopped panting, and half turned in the cramped tunnel to light the Zippo.
“Christ on a cross,” he muttered.
It didn’t look good. The lighter flame was tiny, but in the depths of the tunnel the flickering light was bright as an explosion, revealing the fact that a good portion of the tunnel had collapsed behind him.
No turning back now. There was only one way out, and that was forward. He felt that his chances of running into the German were slim now, so he took his knife and cut a strip of cloth from the tail of his uniform shirt and wrapped it around the Mauser’s muzzle to keep the mud out. Then Cole kept going.
His hand touched water, and soon he was making his way across a wet, slippery floor. The water grew deeper as he moved ahead, rising around his wrists, his knees, his shoulders. He slung his rifle across his back.
For the first time since entering the tunnel, he stopped.
Water. Why did it have to be water?