Chapter 4
Below them was a narrow ,swing bridge. It hung from steel ropes.
ONE PERSON ONLY AT A TIME said the notice. Underneath, the water bubbled. Further up, they could hear the waterfall. A heavily loaded backpacker was just putting her foot on the bridge. It started to swing. She clung to the hand ropes and then took another step forward.
âWho's she?' shouted Christopher above the water noise. From the back, she looked a little familiar.
âNever seen her in my life before,' said Stan firmly.
âShe's carrying a bedroll,' observed Amy. âWe don't have to do that.'
âShe's a Freedom Walker,' Zoe caught up to them and explained that Freedom
Walkers carried full packs with all their food and bedding.
âNo tents, because they stay in the sleeping huts ,' said Zoe.
From the back, this woman had legs like tree trunks. They couldn't see her face. The mug attached to her pack rattled as she trod solidly across the swing bridge. The swing was getting bigger. The steel ropes took the strain.
What if something broke? There were rocks underneath, poking through the fast flowing water. Amy looked down. She could swim well, but swimming wasn't enough down there. You'd need to be on stilts to miss the rocks.
âLook down, Amy . We want a background, establishing shot,' called Mum.
Dad usually handled the camera, but Mum chose the locations, set up the shots and often acted as audio-technician. Dr Al ,'doing his thirteenth Milford Track' was their subject. Showing âbits' of the walk as well as interviewing him on camera was necessary.
âThanks. Go on, We'll catch up later,' called Mum.
The golden brown track wound through ferny forest. Christopher sniffed.
An earthy damp smell. But something was troubling him. He'd seen that Freedom Walker before. He remembered body shapes as well as faces. Those balloon arms.
She was the one who tore out the map. So she was on the plane during the bomb scare! And it was her rucksack which leaked. Christopher looked around at the goblin fern which was like a fairyland. Thick ferns coiled around trees.
Occasionally a wooden marker showed in miles and kilometres how far they had come.
That marker reminded Amy of the torn photo. Perhaps she would be able to match the marker to the real place. Of course, it might not be on the Milford Track.
âChristopher. I just thought of something. Remember that half photo?'
Christopher frowned. He pushed back his glasses. âYes but I recognise that Freedom Walker.
Amy just nodded, more interested in the photo. Why leave half a photo? Was it torn by accident or deliberately?
Zoe was just ahead now. Amy caught up with her.' Could I have another look at that photo, please? The one left in my backpack?'
âWhat's the big interest? Hairy legs? â Zoe pulled the torn photo from her pocket and Amy examined it as she walked.
The edges looked torn, rather than cut. Did someone need to match it with another half? Had it been accidentally ripped? If so, by whom?
âDoes the photo look like a place you know?' Amy asked Zoe.
âCould be. The vegetation's familiar. Just a short way to the lodge now,'' called Zoe. â Drinks on the veranda then.'
Was Zoe avoiding the question? She was a good observer. She noticed birds and had already told them about wekas, kiwis and keas. Surely she'd know a local setting?
Was there some reason why she wasn't telling? Or was she just too busy with her job of getting people to the first hut? Mostly people walked in twos. Carrying packs made everybody wider, so only skinny people could fit three across. Mum and Dad and the camera made three.
In front of them, Gertrude's knee length, baggy shorts didn't quite reach the long, red socks with black writing printed on them.
Amy squirmed sideways to read the socks. âA HOLE IN ONE' was printed in black
âDid you get a hole in one?' Amy asked, walking alongside.
âHow did you know darling?' Gertrude looked pleased. “Of course, I'm famous at home, but I didn't think New Zealanders would have heard of Golfer Gertrude.'
âI'm Australian,' said Amy quickly.
âAustralian know about golf too. Wonderful.'
An I LOVE GOLF badge was pinned on her floppy hat. âHate leaving my clubs behind,' she told Amy as they strode along. âBrought them all this way from L.A. to play the New Zealand courses. Six in seven days. And another four in the North Island after this.'
âAre you a professional golfer?'
âNo darling. Just an amateur. For fun. Golf is the love of my life.'
âDo Customs check what's inside golf bags?' asked Christopher catching up.
âYes. Sometimes I buy a seat for my clubs,' said Gertrude. âDon't want them to get knocked around.'
Why were those clubs on the carousel if the bag had had a seat in the plane?
âLike musicians,' suggested Amy. Once, the twins had flown with the pop singer called The Mouth. He bought a seat for his guitar. The air ticket said Mr Gee.
âDid you have Mr Club on your air ticket?' asked Christopher.
Gertrude nodded. âHow clever of you to work that out. Ms G. Club. My clubs are female. Yes, that's what I often do. â She let out a loud laugh. âBut this flight, they travelled underneath with the baggage.
âThat's why I saw them on the carousel,' said Christopher quietly. âThe ones with the cartoon stickers on the head covers.'
âI collect stickers, stickers and retro-phone cards. D'you have any American stamps?' asked Amy. âI could swap if you like.'
Gertrude fumbled in her side pocket. âUsually he emails me. But I have a letter here from my son somewhere.
That should have a stamp on it. Here's the empty envelope dear. Keep it.'
âThanks.' The stamp was bright blue and one Amy didn't have.
The track wound around and Amy could hear the roar of the water. Voices carried from the path below on the other side of the river.
Stan was talking to the Freedom Walker. He must have crossed the river. She nodded a lot, and her pack wobbled. They stood, their bodies close, as if they knew each other. Then Stan turned . The woman said something. He shook his head as if he were strongly disagreeing and then strode away, back in their direction
The Freedom Walker watched him go, sighed and turned to walk away down the track. If they knew each other, why were they talking out here? Was Stan trying to hide something?
âCome on. There's the lodge.' Gertrude was panting.
Glade House had a big veranda. Nearby was a river with a swing bridge. Tomorrow morning ,they would cross that bridge, Zoe told them, smiling. She wasn't even puffing and she smiled a lot.
Being ânice' for four days to people like Stan must be a hard job.
âZoe, after the season finishes here, what do you do?' Mum switched off the camera.
âI work in âThe Goldfields.' replied Zoe.
âThe Goldfields?' Christopher imagined going down mine shafts.
âA restaurant in Johannesburg.' smiled Zoe. âSame city where Big Jon played rugby.
My step-dad's South African. He owns the restaurant.'
âD'you get paid in gold?' joked Christopher.
âJohannesburg's got diamonds.' Amy did a diamond project last term.
âMiners have to be searched so they don't smuggle any out of the mines.'
âGold nuggets come from there too,' said Zoe.'Miners have to shower after their shifts. Gold dust is collected from their clothes and bodies when they shower. It adds up over the month.'
Christopher thought about drawing a gold- recycling shower in his sketch pad.
âProbably nuggets here too, in the rivers,' Dad looked through his view finder.
âThere's gold colour in that water.'
Zoe nodded. âPerhaps. The odd nugget has been found. Because it's a national park, any gold nuggets found, belong to the Government.'
âAn American guy was arrested for smuggling gold nuggets out of New Zealand, just recently.' Mum read every newspaper. âHad them made into nails and put in a box. Looked just like brass nails.'
âHammered?' asked Christopher wondering if they'd break.
âNo. Holes were drilled first.'
âWas Big Jon playing rugby in Johannesburg when you were there?' asked Amy.
She knew South Africa was a big place, like Australia, but ...
âWrong season' replied Zoe, âBut he hit the headlines. Fans stole clothing from his hotel room. A belt or watch or something.'
Amy remembered that later. Solving a mystery was like doing a jigsaw. At first you just had coloured bits that didn't fit. Later, piece by piece, you started to see the picture.
While they rested their packs on the veranda, hut- numbers and bunks were given out. Unluckily, Christopher was in with Stan and four others. Amy was in a female dormitory.
âDinner at 6, sharp!' said Zoe. They wandered off to find their bunks, unpack, shower or just relax in the Rec. Room.
With a flourish, Stan signed the Visitors' Book on the front table. After Amy signed her name, she flicked through. Each page had the date and the tour guide's name.
Would the Loser's name be in here somewhere? How many groups ago? How would she find Ex -108 with the not-very hairy legs? Would a diabetic have a special diet?
Maybe she could chat to the cook?
Stan was in the shower. Christopher could hear the water running. Stan's backpack was open on the lower bunk. His bum-bag was unzipped. His passportwas half way out of the bum-bag. Stan was a very careless traveller.
Christopher glanced around. The others had gone. Quickly he opened the passport.
Stan hadn't visited many countries, at least on this passport. The twins had far more stamps. That photo did NOT look like Stan. Could he be someone else?
Was he just pretending to be Stan the Dork?
Minutes later, in the hut bathroom , Amy carefully soaked off the American stamp.
The envelope floated. It seemed a bit thick. There was a piece of paper inside. A letter. But now it was all soggy. The ink was smudged and unreadable. How could she dry it quickly?
Mum disapproved of reading others' mail. But how could you be a sleuth without sleuthing?
Minutes later, Amy pushed open the Drying Room door. Inside were racks with boots, tops, and rows of socks. A damp heat wrapped around her. Two hot air blowers were working in the corner. Carefully Amy hung the damp envelope across one of the racks. The sheet was still stuck inside. After dinner, it should be dry enough to read!
In the Rec Hut , Amy poured herself a juice. On the wall , a local map had a cross with black lettering YOU ARE HER An E was missing.
âYou are here,' muttered Amy. Fumbling in her pocket, she matched the folded, creased map she'd found in the backpack pocket. She stared at the crosses. There was one on the bridge just out the front of this hut. Or was it the river?