Chapter 20 The Latch and the Lie
"The Indigo Bell was never meant to kill,” M. Cole said softly. “It was meant to make the Light go dark.”
The terrifying, high-pitched shriek of the overloaded main generator hammered against Evan’s eardrums, vibrating the very stone of the Lighthouse. The air on the final landing was thick, electric, and sickly sweet with the smell of burning copper. Above him, the Lantern Room was awash in the unnatural, horrifying indigo glow, a color that signaled not guidance, but a death sentence.
“The debt must be paid, Evan!” M. Cole’s voice, calm and resolute, was instantly followed by the distinct clack of the brass latch tightening and the coarse, grinding sound of the Indigo Bell Rope being pulled taut.
Evan hammered his fists against the thick, steel door, his own terror a sudden, absolute force. “Mother, listen to me! Lila’s note! The promise is the lie! He, Jonas, didn’t know the curse would choose the keeper! He was protecting you!”
Silence. Only the desperate, metallic scream of the light above.
Evan grabbed the handle and twisted, shaking the door with all his remaining strength. The brass latch held firm. He knew the master latch; it was designed to withstand a siege, to protect the fragile Fresnel lens from the worst winter storms. There was no way to force it.
He staggered back, breathing hard, his mind racing, scanning the small landing area for a tool, an entry point, anything. The main Lantern Room was a perfect, impenetrable sphere.
Wait. The main Lantern Room was impenetrable, but it had one necessary point of vulnerability: the access panels for the oil lines and ventilation ports.
Evan remembered a crucial piece of Lighthouse lore Jonas had taught him years ago: every Keeper’s room had a secondary, small, reinforced window, the Ventilation Port, designed to be opened only by the Lantern Master's specialized tool. It was too small for a person, but maybe not too small for a wire, or a key.
He looked around. The port was usually built into the outside wall, but the interior access point was behind a removable metal panel on the landing wall. It was meant to be checked only during the most severe winter storms to ensure the flame wasn't starved of oxygen.
Evan located the heavy, rusted metal panel set into the stone wall. He frantically pulled the cloverleaf master key from his pocket and jammed it into the panel’s simple, hidden lock. The lock turned instantly, this was the power maintenance key, after all.
He ripped the panel away. Behind it, a dark, narrow opening led straight through the thick stone wall to the outside. It was a ventilation shaft, maybe eight inches wide, too small to crawl through.
But at the end of the shaft, Evan could see the dark, shifting shadow of the Lantern Room’s interior wall, and near the bottom, a heavy brass housing, the Port Latch for the emergency window.
“The Bell Rope!” Evan gasped, the idea a flash of painful, desperate inspiration. “She has the cursed rope inside the Lantern Room. But she had to run it through something to secure it. The tension of the rope is holding the latch.”
He had to get the Bell Rope out of the latch, he had to disrupt the connection. But the ventilation port was too high, too narrow, and the latch was too deep inside the Lantern Room.
He needed a way to reach through the narrow shaft, snag the rope, and pull it free.
Evan looked down at his own resources. He was injured, tool-less, and terrified. Then, he looked at the small, narrow space between the stone wall and the rusted iron staircase. Wedged deep into the gap, covered in decades of dust and rust, was the Lighthouse’s emergency Hand-Crank Cable. It was a flexible, multi-jointed steel cable, used to manually rotate the giant Fresnel lens if the main motor failed.
Evan pulled the cable free. It was over ten feet long, flexible, and terminated with a sturdy, hooked handle. It was his only tool.
“Here we go, Mother,” Evan whispered, his hands trembling as he fed the cable into the dark ventilation shaft.
He worked slowly, painstakingly, pushing the flexible cable through the stone and metal. Inside the Lantern Room, the indigo light pulsed brighter, now accompanied by a terrible, tearing sound—the sound of the ancient generator beginning to seize.
“Ten seconds, Evan,” M. Cole’s voice called from inside the room, her voice now strained, but still unnervingly peaceful. “It’s time to say goodbye. The Light must be true.”
“The truth is that you’re sacrificing yourself for a broken promise!” Evan yelled back, jamming the cable forward. He could feel the cable tip scraping against the interior wall of the Lantern Room.
He focused entirely on the image of the latch. He visualized the cursed indigo rope running through the heavy brass ring of the emergency port latch, holding the Lantern Room door secure against the surge.
The growling of the generator became a high-pitched, terrifying scream. The stone landing began to shake violently.
Evan forced the cable around the side of the brass port and maneuvered the hook. He had to snag the coarse, thick fiber of the Indigo Rope, pull it out of the latch, and break the circuit of the curse.
Snag!
Evan felt a sudden, immediate resistance. He had the rope!
“I have it, Mother!” Evan screamed, hauling back on the cable with all his strength. “The promise is broken! The debt is cancelled!”
But the rope was stronger, the cursed fibers holding tight against the tension of the latch. Evan pulled harder, bracing his good leg against the stone wall, the pain in his ankle forgotten in the immediate, desperate battle.
Then, he heard a new voice, a familiar, frantic whisper from the bottom of the staircase.
“Evan! I’m here! I’m coming!”
Cass. She had seen the smoke and made the agonizing decision to come after him, leaving Ben alone but stabilized at the station.
“Stay back, Cass!” Evan yelled, pulling harder on the cable. “It’s going to blow! The Lantern Room is going to seize!”
“Evan, the generator! It’s going to fail!” Cass cried, rushing up the last few steps. She saw the cable, the indigo light, and the agony on Evan’s face. She didn't hesitate. She grabbed the metal cable just behind Evan’s hands and hauled back with him, adding her small, fierce strength to his.
The combination of their desperate pull was enough. There was a sudden, sharp, tearing snap!, not of the cable, but of the indigo rope itself, finally pulled free from the brass latch.
The massive brass latch on the Lantern Room door instantly retracted with a loud, metallic CLANG. The door was unlocked.
But the surge wasn't over. The indigo light above them flared with a blinding, terrifying finality. The sound of the generator dying was an explosive crackle and a final, deafening WHUMP.
The Lantern Room plunged into immediate darkness, followed by the slow, painful squeal of metal grinding against metal, the giant Fresnel lens, now permanently stalled.
Evan and Cass stumbled forward, shoving the door open and rushing into the Lantern Room.
The room was silent, save for the howling wind now rushing in through the ventilation gaps. The massive Fresnel lens was stationary, dark, and still. The air was thick with the smell of burnt wiring.
And there, standing beside the massive, dead lens, was M. Cole.
She was unharmed.
The Indigo Bell Rope, now snapped clean, lay discarded at her feet. She looked perfectly calm, utterly composed, even as her body shook with the final, draining tremors of the massive power failure. She held nothing but a small, empty, old-fashioned Fuse Box, the Lantern Master's personal circuit box, designed to protect the lens from simple lightning strikes.
“You’re too late, Evan,” M. Cole said, her voice quiet, a tone of absolute, final peace. She didn't look angry; she looked relieved.
Evan stared at the rope, then at the stalled, dark lens. “The surge! The curse! It didn’t take you! The light is dark!”
“The light is dark, yes,” she confirmed, holding up the empty fuse box. “But the curse never had a chance. The surge didn't burn the lens; it blew the main protection fuse for the Lighthouse. That’s what I was here for.”
Cass stared, confused. “The fuse? But the indigo light… the Bell Rope…”
M. Cole smiled, a rare, weary expression. “The rope never touched the generator, child. I had to make your father believe I was sacrificing myself to break his decade of silence. Jonas would never have given up the coil if he thought the Light would survive. I used the Bell Rope as a psychological conductor, to activate his promise, not the curse.”
She pointed to the dark Fresnel lens. “The Indigo Light was never meant to kill. It was Lila’s final warning. The Bell Rope was a trigger. It simply created an unmanageable demand on the system. When I pulled it, it forced the Lantern Master’s protective fuse to blow, plunging the Light into immediate, absolute darkness. I paid the debt with silence, Evan. My silence. But I saved the Light, and I saved your father.”
Evan felt a dizzying mix of despair and relief. His mother was not a murderer; she was the ultimate Keeper, willing to perform the ultimate betrayal of truth (a false sacrifice) to uphold the ultimate duty (protecting the Light).
“Jonas is secured downstairs,” Evan said, his voice raw. “He’s safe. But Ben is dying at the station. He needs help now. We need the radio.”
M. Cole looked down at the dark, snapped Bell Rope, then back at her son. Her expression hardened with a sudden, cold determination.
“The radio is down, Evan. The entire network is out from the storm damage,” she stated. “But I know someone who knows the truth about the Bell. Someone who knows the old ways. Someone who can help Ben, who can talk the curse out of his mind and bring him back to safety.”
She walked to the final, tiny, secured metal locker in the center of the Lantern Room, the keeper’s personal safe. She pulled a large, antique key from her pocket, the true master key. She opened the safe and reached inside, pulling out an object Evan had never seen before: a worn, leather-bound volume, covered in strange, silver sigils.
“We need the Mather woman, the old Doctor’s mother, to see the smoke from your station fire,” M. Cole said, her eyes intense. “But she won’t come for a fire. She will only come for the final, correct word.”
She held up the leather-bound book, the silver sigils gleaming faintly in the residual indigo darkness.
Did M. Cole’s secret book contain…