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Copyright ©2007 by Jonathan Lowe
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A HELPING HAND
(originally published in Easyrider magazine)
It happened fast. Josh Alford's new Heritage Softtail had just topped 60 MPH on the Old Sonoita
Highway south of Tucson when a stray cow decided to cross the road fifty yards ahead. Hearing the
intermittent slide of wheels on dirt, the huge spotted heifer stopped in the middle of the narrow span and
turned toward the approaching motorcycle. With a look of terror it tried to bolt forward, but not fast
enough to prevent the left crash bar of the Harley from swiping its rear flank. Braying in pain, its muscle
pulled and gashed, the animal hobbled headlong into the low thickets of creosote which had been its
destination.
For the motorcycle's part, the encounter had destroyed any final attempt at tracking, causing a total loss
of stability. So at the end of a forty yard stretch of tire tracks—and after two distinct slidings and
corrections—the tracks became a swath of dirt, as if a plow had gone through. A furrow dug by the
protruding chrome along the center of the disturbance pointed like an arrow toward the wreck at the
base of a palo verde tree beyond. There, beside the twisted front end of the bike, lay Josh, face down,
unmoving. The Harley's engine grunted twice more and died as silence returned to the desert.
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After a moment there was a twitch in Josh's left hand. Fingers fingered the air. Finally his head turned
and his eyes opened to stare back at the place where the cow had vanished.
Not a sign of movement, or even a solitary moo of protest or pain. The only clue to the incident was that
fishtailing track he'd made in braking down to thirty, and the sick wobble and slide as he went down after
contact. The damned beast had appeared suddenly, and just as suddenly disappeared, probably to lick
its leg wound or chew its cud. Maybe Josh was already forgotten.
He sat up, and felt himself. Nothing seemed broken. Yet if he'd gone forward another five feet, and
hadn't braked, the story might have been different. The palo verde might have ended him. As it was, he
was lucky. A sandy side wash balanced a ledger that his foolhardy recklessness weighted on the other
side.
He cursed and stood to his feet, surveying his downed bike at last. Only four hours ago it had been in
the showroom as pretty as a magazine layout. Now, with just under a hundred miles on the odometer,
and heaps of dirt glutting its once shiny engine fins, it had a twisted fender, a collapsed crash bar, and a
bent clutch lever. What would Alison say? he wondered. Probably the same things she already had,
except this time she'd have her mother join in the chorus ... a dirge or ditty of I-told-you-sos. What a fool
to ride it down a dirt road at such speed.
He knelt beside the bike and tried to lift it, but couldn't. He strained, this time succeeding in lifting it two
inches off the ground. Suddenly he remembered something the salesman had muttered about its weight
versus his own: “One thing, partner,” the man had almost whispered after the deal was done. “You ain't
big, and this bike, it's, well, heavy. So if God forbid you drop it out in the yard or somethin', you may
need some help gettin’ it up."
Heavy? He had sensed that, especially at low speed. It was, after all, a big bike for a little guy. But it
was a beauty, and could hit a hundred twenty on the highway with a ride that bellowed freedom like an
iron stallion. Enough power to stay ahead of those tailgaters who'd ridden the bumper of his smoking
Honda all the way to his retail job selling evaporative coolers while his wife pecked and his
mother-in-law plain old henpecked. Enough power to weave around those Zeros, as he called them ...
those impatient fools with zero tolerance on their way to some single's bar or ball game.
The enemy.
He looked both ways along Old Sonoita highway, and frowned. This old dirt road was good for nothing
since they'd paved Highway 83 somewhere to the west. No reason for traffic to use it anymore. People
in a hurry to get to Sonoita, and the cooler temps there, would use 83. It was a straighter shot. No
curves and dips, and no gravel to chip your windshield. What made this a great motorcycling road for,
say, a BMW GS, also made it damn foolish for his dream machine, just as it was for retirees in their
lumbering Winneabagos.
A rancher, that was his best bet. He spotted a side road ahead, like a driveway beside a sign which read
OPEN RANGE. After setting the gas pet cock to Off, he took his Harley's keys and set off at a brisk
pace.
The narrow driveway rose up and over a hill as he walked quickly along it. Near the summit he glanced
back, already half-expecting someone to be hoisting his Hog into a pickup truck with a block and tackle.
Would it be stolen before he could make the first payment? He'd already had his first wreck, and Alison
and her mother hadn't even figured out his can't-afford-a-baby-now excuse yet. They were still busy
 
learning the old Honda's quirks ... like that sudden pull to the left when the brakes were applied sharply.
Or how the odometer made a foreboding clicking sound now that it had turned over the big numbers ...
with all those zeros staring like eyes.
He noticed the dirt drive was cleared in places at the top of the hill to reveal a paved surface beneath.
Odd, he thought, a paved driveway leading from a dirt main road. He stopped and looked down at a
strange round building half hidden beside a sloping hill of sand. Not a ranch house, certainly, but what?
He couldn't see any doors or windows in the edifice, which was like a circular ball rising from a mound of
dirt. The top half of a rectangular building was just visible beyond it. So here were two house-sized
structures, covered in some kind of dull metal, half buried in the middle of nowhere. Spaceships?
He moved closed. Metal, yes. But with holes in a few places, with concrete showing in the holes. Marks
like scrapes indented the metal too, in places. So only the surface was metal. Beneath was concrete, as
whoever had tried to get inside had discovered. And beneath the concrete, what?
He climbed up on top of the round building from the back, where the sloping earth gave access. It was a
perfect ball, half buried, and still no indication of any door or hatch. What could it—
He laughed at himself as it came to him. He even remembered reading about these sites in the paper a
few years back. Sure! It was an old Titan missile base, abandoned by the military back in the mid 70's
when it became obsolete. There were a dozen sites like this out in the desert surrounding Tucson, and
they'd been sealed in concrete for years, their warheads long removed and dismembered at
Davis-Monthan Air Force base just south of town.
He climbed down and paused, thinking he heard something. Like a click. He cocked his head, listening.
Now what?
There it was again. Distinct but distant. Was it coming from the silo?
He put his ear against the rough metallic surface.
Nothing. His imagination, most likely. He looked up and saw the frayed end of a broken cable
protruding from a hole in the metal hide above him.
Then suddenly another click.
He tried to imagine what might cause such a sound. Heat expanding the metal? A fissure in the concrete?
Or a ratchet pulley lifting a Heritage onto a flatbed truck?
He ran up the hill. At the summit, breathless, he looked down at the lifeless stretch of dirt road beyond.
In the ditch along it he could see his beloved Hog stretched out on its side as if in pain, a still life of candy
red against the gray dirt. “Like one'a them damned Hell's Angels ride,” Alison's mother had said at seeing
the photo layout in Cycle World. He'd laughed at that, and not just because she didn't know her Harleys.
Also because she didn't see the nursery which wouldn't be built until well after his payments were
completed.
He walked back down for his jacket he's dropped, feeling easier now, and for good measure he put his
ear once more to the metal hide of the unearthed control room. The clicking was louder this time, and
followed by a humming sound as deep and resonant as a radial arm saw.
* * * *
 
From the top of the hill he did a slow 360 degrees, looking for ranch houses. Only sagebrush, barrel
cacti, more low hills, and the distant peaks of the Santa Rita range stretched in front of him, no doubt
crawling with tarantulas, Gila monsters, and Western diamondbacks. He guesstimated thirteen miles back
to the nearest service station on the other side of I-10. A two or three hour hike in the approaching heat
of noon, unless he could get over to 83 and hitch. Or maybe a driver would help him? Hey buddy, can
you help me lift my bike—it's out by an old Titan missile site where I just heard what sounds like a
missile fueling itself.
No. Better not to mention the sound in the silos. Just the cow. If he stuck with the cow, maybe the driver
of that third or fourth car who saw him waving his arms like a maniac would stop, roll down the window
a crack, and take pity. Otherwise, fat chance.
He thought he could see it, too ... 83 like a thin ribbon of asphalt two miles beyond the dull gray
behemoth rising from the sand.
As he passed the thing he threw a rock which clanged off the top and skidded into the sand on the other
side. Then he cursed when he came to the edge of the clearing, meeting a low barbed wire fence. It was
almost low enough to step over and seemed long rusted, but it had enough jagged curlicues to tear into
his new leather chaps. He found another rock and was in the middle of trying to separate a strand of wire
from one of the posts when he heard another kind of click behind him. And he jerked round to see the
muzzle of a .45 automatic staring him in the face.
"Can't read signs?” the old geezer behind the gun said.
"Signs?” he replied, his voice cracking.
The old man was in his mid-seventies, had a pained look about his permanently wrinkled forehead. He
wore baggy jeans, patched in places, and a Wrangler shirt rolled up above the elbow. A stain of sweat
smiled at the armpit of the arm that held the automatic.
"You heard me. Signs, like the one back there at—” The old man had turned to point back at the hill,
and stopped. “Well, I'll be damned, they did it again."
"Did what?” Josh asked, casually dropping his rock.
"Or maybe it was you did it.” The .45 lifted up from the vicinity of his crotch to his face again. “You take
down the chain with my sign on it?"
"What sign? Didn't see no damn sign."
The old man's crow's feet became folds of prickly skin. “Keep out sign,” he said. “Means—"
"Yeah, I know what it means,” Josh told him, feeling some anger amid his frustration. “But there was no
sign, and I wrecked my bike over there, and I need help lifting it. Damn it."
The old man looked him over for five long seconds, then lowered his pistol. “Nice jacket,” he said. He
stuck out his other hand, and held it out. “Name's Kyle Sommers. This is my place, now."
They shook hands. “Your place?"
 
"Bought it for a retirement home three years ago. Went on vacation to see my son in Florida a month
ago an’ when I got back somebody had stolen my sand.” He pointed with the barrel of the .45. “Used a
dump truck, the bastards, and uncovered the top of the control room. It's high grade stuff, that sand. Air
Force trucked it in here back in the late sixties when they built this place. Kept the place cool as a
rabbit's burrow, see."
Or a rattlesnake's, thought Josh.
"What about water and electricity?"
"Got a storage tank underground, fed by a well. And a generator too. I burn candles mostly, though.
Make my own. Actually I bought two sites, and use the other one for spare parts. One's a museum, you
know, and a fourth was bought by some guy from New Jersey plans to turn it into a cafe. ‘The Lame
Duck,’ he's gonna call it."
"So where do you get in? There's no windows or doors."
Kyle Sommers laughed. “There's a reinforced tunnel on the other side of that hillock. My pickup's over
there too."
Josh cleared his throat. “Doesn't it get ... I mean ... boring?"
"No, not really. It's a kick fixing things up. Got me a TV, books. Plenty of peace and quiet ... and
security, a’ course. No chance of some punk comin’ in and holdin’ a knife to my throat. No chance at all.
And if somebody like Osama drops the Big One, I guess I'll live through it, won't I? Will you?"
The old man's laugh was big and booming, and it meant he knew he'd be dying a peaceful death in his
bed below tons of concrete and steel while those in Tucson and around the Air Base worried about
crime and nuclear terror.
"So you're alone here, then."
It was more of a statement than a question, but Kyle nodded anyway. “Wife's in Florida with the kid.
‘Cept he's no kid anymore."
"They ever been here?"
The old man looked up from his boot. “We're not on speaking terms anymore,” he said evenly.
Josh shifted stance. “You reckon you could give me a hand with my bike? I ran off the road to miss a
cow, and I can't lift it ‘cause it's pretty heavy."
Old man Sommers flexed a muscle. “Sure, I reckon I could do that. I keep fit. You wanna have a
look-see at my setup first? I don't get many visitors."
The tunnel from the iron outer doorway fifty yards behind the sand hill was darker than roof tar.
“Nothing to bump your head on,” Kyle reassured him. “I removed the rusted ends of the reinforcement
bars, and the unnecessary fixtures."
"What did you do?” Josh asked.
 
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