62
Even before he had opened the hatch, he could hear a
skittering sound from inside, could see through the glass
dim shapes moving below as well.
Here goes nothing, he thought. He threw open the hatch
and went in.
He was only a few steps down the ladder when something
dropped onto him. It struck his shoulder, and he had a
glimpse of it before it wrapped itself around his face. It
consisted of a human head, stretched and rubbery, on a
network of tendrils. It immediately started to smother him.
He couldn’t see. He tried to bat it off with the plasma
cutter, but it simply wrapped its tendrils tighter. He banged
it against the rungs of the ladder, but it still wouldn’t let go.
Shit, he thought, I’m going to die.
Blindly, his hand found the trigger of the cutter and
started it up. He raised it slowly, trying not to cut through his
own face and succeeded in nearly cutting all the way
through the side rail of the ladder. He was beginning to
black out. He tried again, closer to the face this time and
felt the blade go through the creature’s flesh. It loosened its
grip and he shook it off, watching it bounce off the rung just
in front of him and tumble down.
The worst part about it was that as it fell, he recognized
the face. It was stretched and red, severely deformed, but
he was sure it had belonged to Field. As he watched it
strike the rungs below him and then spiral down, it was like
he had killed Field himself.
He caught his breath and then continued descending.
The emergency lighting cast shadows everywhere. He
kept seeing things moving in them. He heard a noise, at a
little distance, then closer. Something was slithering up the
side of the ladder. He looked down and tried to see it, but
saw nothing. He stayed still, listening, but heard nothing.
Maybe I’m just imagining it, he thought.
But when he took another step, he heard it again, and
looking down he caught a brief glimpse of the same sort of
sinewy pulsing thing that had popped Field’s head off. And
then it disappeared, was on the other side of the ladder. He
tried to get around to see it and caught a brief glimpse and
then lost it again. The sound, though, was closer now.
He wrapped one arm around the ladder and hung there,
waiting. Where was it?
And then suddenly he saw it, just a few feet below him
now, its gray body blending in with the ladder. As he
watched, one end of it left the ladder and started wavering
like a charmed snake, looking for flesh to grab on to. And
then suddenly it whipped up and wrapped around his foot.
It wrapped itself tight and hard, almost dislodging him,
leaving him hanging by one arm, legs dangling in the air.
He tried to swing the plasma cutter down to saw it off, but it
was too low—he’d have to let go to get down to it, which
would mean falling. It had started pulsing, tightening, and
then began working itself up his ankle and onto his leg.
Struggling for a foothold with the other leg, he finally
managed to find it. He lifted himself on his toes as far as he
could go, the ankle feeling like it might tear off, and swung
his arm loose, grabbing hold again a few rungs down. That
was enough; he could reach now. He sawed it in half with
the plasma cutter. Ichor jetted from it, and then it fell.
Feeling dizzy, he clung on tight. He might have stayed
like that forever except his head, pressed against the
ladder’s siderail, heard a dull pounding. Something else
was coming. Still dizzy, he looked down. Two others were
already starting up the ladder, these more humanoid, the
kind with scythes sprouting out of their shoulders. They held
on to the ladder with the tiny hands sprouting from their
bellies, their scythes waving madly back and forth as they
climbed.
He climbed frantically up, back the way he had come,
trying to get to the level ground of the platform, knowing all
the time that they were gaining on him. He could almost feel
their scythes slicing up and taking off his legs.
Then suddenly he was at the top, on his knees and
panting. He slung the cutter’s strap over his back and let it
hang, pulling the chain saw around. Precariously balanced,
he tugged on the rip cord. The first time it didn’t catch, nor
the second time. The first one was already there, the tips of
its scythes visible over the edge of the platform, its head
just coming into view. He tore the rip cord back hard, and
this time it caught. He revved it and then leaned down and
pushed it into the creature. The chain blade whipped the
blood in all directions, spattering him from head to toe.
· · ·
He stepped off the ladder, the chain saw sputtering in his
hands. Were there others? It was a big room, poorly lit.
He moved cautiously toward the passage to the labs that
would lead him down to the airlock. There were spills of
flesh here and there around the walls, near the vents. Living,
it seemed. He prodded one with his boot, but it didn’t seem
to respond, just sat there. He stamped on it, but it didn’t
seem injured by that either.
He was almost to the door of the lab when it came,
rushing at him with an almost unholy cry. In the darkness
and shadows, he had a hard time seeing it at first; it was
just a blur. He revved the chain saw, trying to keep the
blade between him and it, and struck it full in the head.
It was the most terrible of the beasts he had seen so far.
It backed quickly away, hissing. Its jaw was distended, its
teeth having grown long and predatory, the flesh having torn
all the way back to the hinge. Its arms had become
forelegs, its body thickening in the front and narrowing in
the back. It had a single, overly muscled leg in the back, the
other leg stretched and emaciated and lashing like a tail,
the thinned toes fanned out and flexing at the tail’s top.
It took a few steps sideways, then gathered itself and
leaped. He tried to take its head off with the chain saw but
was only partly through when the chain caught on something
chitinous and the weapon was torn from his hands, almost
dislocating his shoulder. The neck pulsed and spat fluids
over his chest, the head leaning to one side and still
snarling. The forelegs scratched and tore at him. He
groped for the chain saw but couldn’t get to it, wasn’t
certain that he’d be able to get it started again anyway. He
kicked the creature back and it circled slowly, its head
hanging like a loose sack, before springing again. Blinded,
it struck just a little to the left of him, smashing into the wall.
He was already scrambling up, trying to get the plasma
cutter into his hands and turned on. It knocked him down
and into the sickly smelling tissue that covered the deck
and then reared back, looming over him. He rolled to one
side but couldn’t avoid its claws tearing through his shirt
and the shoulder beneath, pinning one arm down.
And then suddenly he had the cutter on. He struck once
hard, tearing off the foreleg pinning him. It balanced
awkwardly over him on its remaining two limbs. He
chopped into the other foreleg and it crashed down.
He pushed it back and stumbled away, the shoulder
really starting to ache now. He circled it slowly, waiting for a
moment to dart in and cut the last leg when it did a curious
thing: it got its remaining leg planted but rather than using it
to leap at him as Altman expected, it flipped the whole body
over, landing it on its legtail. It stayed there motionless,
perfectly balanced, the last leg contracted back, like the leg
of a dead arachnid. It must be dead, Altman thought.
He came cautiously forward, but it didn’t move. Carefully,
he reached out and touched it with the edge of the cutter,
and the leg sprang out hard, catching him in the chest and
hurling him back against the wall.
He lay there for a moment, stunned. His chest felt like it’d
been caved in. Slowly he sat up. The creature was still
there, still balanced on its tail, its one remaining leg
contracted again.
Fuck it, he thought. Gathering his weapons, he circled
around it, giving it a wide berth, and made for the door.
· · ·
The laboratory beyond the door was a shambles,
everything turned over and collapsed, pure carnage.
Bodies and pieces of bodies were everywhere. He moved
through it cautiously, careful not to touch anything, and out
the next door.
The next room was almost completely intact, which,
somehow, made him almost more nervous. He moved past
the central table and to the observation booth. From there
he connected to the vid system, still running on emergency
power.
He flicked quickly through the cameras he had access to,
saw more of the creatures in almost every place he looked.
The airlock door between the upper and lower decks, he
saw, was open and shooting sparks. In the space just
before it, just one room beyond where Altman was now,
between him and the airlock, moved a creeper, maybe
even the same creeper that he had seen before—though if
it was, it was bigger now, and growing. It moved slowly
forward, consuming everything, converging everything.
Shit, thought Altman. No going that way.
He asked the system for alternative paths, but there
weren’t any. The facility had been very deliberately
constructed with one connecting point between its upper
and lower halves. As long as the creeper was there, there
was no way forward.
Unless . . .
Unless I go through the water, he realized. He flicked the
vid display to the submarine bay. If he could get there, he
could get in. It was what, twenty meters down? A long swim
by any standard, and pressure would be strong as well. And
once he was there, he’d have to enter the chamber and
close the doors and wait for the water to be pumped out. If
that wasn’t enough to kill him in and of itself, the cold of the
water very well might.
Then the display he was looking at was interrupted, cut
into by another feed. A face appeared, a grainy black and
white feed. “Who’s there?” the man said. “Who’s in the
system?”
The man was vaguely familiar. It was, he realized, the
man who had taken him to see the Marker in its chamber
for the first time. What was his name? Harm something.
Yes, that was it, Henry Harmon.
He switched on his vid feed so the man could see him.
“Harmon,” he said. “It’s Altman. You’re alive?”
“I thought I was the last one,” said Harmon. “It’s great to
see you.”
“Where are you?”
Harmon looked around distractedly, as if for a moment
he couldn’t remember where he was. “I’m in the Marker
chamber,” he said. “I thought I was trapped, but for
whatever reason, those things won’t come near the Marker.
I’m glad I’m not the only one left alive.”
“I’ll come get you,” said Altman.
“That’s not possible,” said Harmon. “Before you even go
a few steps, they’ll tear you to bits.”
“Can you do me a favor?” asked Altman. “Is there a way
you can open the submarine bay doors from there? Do you
have authorization?”
“Sure,” said Harmon. “Why?”
“Open them and leave them open,” Altman said. “That’s
how I’ll get to you. Oh, and one other thing.”
“Name it,” said Harmon.
“Gather everything you can from the system about the
Marker. Signal, composition, dimensions, makeup,
anything at all.”
“All right,” said Harmon. “It’ll give me something to do.”
“I may have figured out what the Marker wants,” said
Altman. “I’ll know when I get there. If I get there.”
Harmon started to say something, but Altman had
already switched off. He made his way out of the lab and
back in the direction from which he’d come. He searched
through lockers and cabinets, looking for either oxygen or a
wet suit, but found nothing. He’d just have to risk it. He
looked at the chain saw. It was hardly the ideal weapon;
when the chain had caught, it almost got him killed. In any
case, he couldn’t take it. The water would ruin it. The
plasma cutter, though, was another matter. It would
probably work even after having been through the water.
He found two fifteen-meter coils of rope and hooked
them over his shoulder. Then he started climbing the ladder
again, back to the hatch.
63
He climbed down the dome to the boat platform, bucking
now with the swells. The submarine bay was below and a
little to the left. He went to the far edge of the platform and
looked down for it.
There, there it was. He could just make out the glow
coming out through the open bottom of the hangar.
He tied the two coils of rope together, tugging on either
side of the knot until he was satisfied, and then carefully
measured its length. He tied the plasma cutter’s strap onto
one end of the rope, double-knotting it just to be safe. The
other end, he hitched fast around a mooring.
Carefully, he lowered the plasma cutter and the rope into
the water until they were gone, little more to see than the
first few meters of rope. He stripped to the waist and
carefully limbered up, thinking.
He’d have one chance, he knew. Once he’d gone a
certain way down, he’d be committed. Either he’d make it
into the submarine bay or he’d drown.
He breathed rapidly in and out and then dived, letting the
air out through his nose as he went. He swam as quickly as
he could straight down, following the rope. The pressure
built quickly, his head feeling like it was being squeezed. It
felt incredibly slow, like he was making no progress, like he
was still just a few meters below the platform.
He kept swimming, trying to keep his strokes even and
steady and his heart rate constant, trying not to panic. He
could hear the blood beating in his ears now, a steady
thudding growing slower and slower. Were his limbs
slowing down, or did they just feel like they were?
He saw lights. He was close to the submarine bay. No,
he thought, don’t look, stay focused, just keep swimming
down.
He felt his lungs struggle, wanting to breathe in air that
wasn’t there. He made a gurgling sound, had to force
himself not to breathe in water. Things all around him
seemed slower, much slower.
And then he saw it, floating near the end of the rope, the
plasma cutter, like a shadow in the darkness. His heart
leapt with exhilaration and things started going dark around
the edges and he thought for a moment he was going to
pass out.
But when he reached it and grabbed hold of it, he
realized he’d never be able to struggle it into the bay with
him. He didn’t have enough air left, didn’t have the strength.
He’d have to leave it behind.
He let go. He looked to the side and there it was, just a
few meters away: the open submarine bay. He left the rope
and swam for it. He would never make it, he realized. He
might make it into the submarine bay, but he didn’t have
enough strength left to close the floor and then wait for the
time it took to pump the water out. It was pointless.
But something in him kept him swimming anyway. He
crossed through the opening and into the bay. He was just
heading for the door lock when he caught a flash above him
and suddenly had an idea. He shot up as quickly as he
could, striking his head hard against the roof, almost
knocking himself unconscious. But there, in the corner, was
a thin layer of trapped air. He put his face up against the
roof and took a gasping breath, water lapping against the
sides of his mouth.
He hung there, floating, breathing in more, until he
stopped wheezing, until his heart stopped pounding. It was
okay. He was going to be okay.
When he felt calm, he dived back into the water and
swam down. But instead of swimming to the floor controls,
he swam through them and outside. For a moment he was
lost, disoriented in the open ocean, and thought he’d gone
in the wrong direction. And then he caught sight of the
shadow of the rope, realized he was looking too high. He
looked down a little and there it was.
He swam to the plasma cutter and grabbed it,
immediately striking back for the submarine bay, dragging
the rope along with him. With the rope, it was too heavy, the
progress very slow. For a moment he considered
abandoning the cutter, and then an idea struck him. He
turned and switched the cutter on and cut through the rope
with it.
The cutter was heavy, making it so he could use only one
arm to swim. It threatened to drag him down. He made it to
just beneath the bay floor and then swam desperately up,
kicking hard with his legs, a little panicked. By the time he
got his fingers around the edge and pulled himself in, he
was nearly as exhausted as he’d been from the initial swim
down. He thrust it into a corner and then swam quickly for
the controls for the floor.
He pressed the button and held it down. The emergency
lights in the room began to flash. Slowly, he saw, the floor
was sliding out of its channel and coming across, coming
closed. He swam up for the pocket of air and for a moment
couldn’t find it. Where was it? He swam back along the
ceiling and found a pocket about the size of his fist, just
enough to get his face into. He sucked it in, then breathed
quickly out, the pocket growing larger. Below him, he heard
the water-dulled clang of the submarine bay floor closing
and then the gentle throb of the pumps.
The water level began to drop and he got his head
completely out, took a deep gasping breath, and
immediately blacked out.
Michael, the voice said. Michael. Wake up.
He opened his eyes. It was his father. I asked you to get
up, his father said. How many times do I have to ask?
In a minute, Dad, he said. His voice sounded strange,
hollow, as if coming from a distance.
I said now, said his father. Get up or I’ll drag you out of
bed myself.
He didn’t move. His dad shook him. He moaned, shook
his head. Dad—
Get up! His father was screaming now, so close to his
face that he could smell the liquor on his breath. Get up!
He came conscious facedown, half-on and half-off the
catwalk running the edge of the chamber. He had been
lucky. He was alive and coughing up water rather than
floating facedown in the center of the room, dead.
He struggled and leaned back against the wall, gathering
himself. Then he inched to the edge of the catwalk and
jumped off and into the water.
He couldn’t find the plasma cutter. Maybe something had
gone wrong. Maybe it had shaken loose when the doors
were closing and had slid out into the water. Maybe it was
gone.
He resurfaced, holding on to the edge of the catwalk, and
then went down again, searching more carefully this time.
He found it wedged behind a float, all but impossible to see
until he was almost touching it.
He worked it free and surfaced again, pulling himself out
and onto the catwalk. Then he lay there on the grille a
moment, breathing, trying to recover.
When he got up, he was still shaky, his nerves jittery. He
wiped the droplets off the wall com unit with his palm and
connected to the Marker chamber.
“Hello?” said Harmon, his voice a little panicked now.
“Hello?”
“It’s me, Altman,” he said.
Harmon squinted at the screen. “Altman,” he said. “I
wondered if you were still alive. You still are, aren’t you?
This isn’t a vision, is it? You look different.”
“I’m still alive,” said Altman. “Just a little wet.”
“Where are you?” he asked.
“Submarine bay,” said Altman. “Not far.”
Harmon nodded. He pulled a holofile up and spun it so
that Altman could see it.
“Here you are,” Harmon said, and a red blotch appeared
on the map. “It’s simple,” he said. “Down this hallway, the
one with the slight slope. Then into a new hall, past these
two labs. A final hall and there you are.”
“What’s between you and me?” asked Altman.
“Close to the Marker, nothing,” said Harmon. “They won’t
get close to the Marker. If you can get into the final hallway,
you should be all right. Before that, it might be a little
trickier.”
He flashed Altman a view of the hall just outside the
submarine bay lock. The camera made a slow sweep,
showing a pile of corpses, a pallid batlike creature fluttering
above them, and then dissolved into a wall of static. “This
was just before the camera was destroyed,” he said. “Who
knows what’s there now.”
The view changed, two separate cameras, two labs. In
one, a spiderlike creature like the one he’d killed before,
only this one had a third head and a ridge of spines along
its back. In the other, two of the creatures with the scythelike
blades. They lay on the ground motionless, perhaps dead.
“These are current,” Harmon said. “I’d suggest being quiet
going past the labs. The hall itself, and the hall after it, seem
to be empty.”
Altman took a deep breath. “All right,” he said. “Here
goes nothing.”
He stopped the airlock mechanism when it was only slightly
open and looked through. The hall outside was dim, some
of the emergency lights fluttering, others burnt out
completely. But he could see from the dim shapes and tell
from the sounds being made that they were there.
And then an arm reached through the opening and
grabbed him, wrapped itself around his own arm and pulled
hard, dragging him against the airlock.
Or at least at first he thought it was an arm. As he tried
desperately to pry it off, he realized it wasn’t an arm at all,
but something more like a bundle of sinew stretched long
and hardened somehow. He tried to get the plasma cutter
up, but his arm was flush against the hole, no space to cut.
It tugged again and almost tore his arm off. He pulled back
hard but couldn’t get any purchase. Not knowing what else
to do, he kicked the lever to continue opening the door.
As soon as the opening was large enough, the sinew
pulled him through. The hall had been remade, was
covered in an organic layer, smeared with an
approximation of flesh. It was like he was being tugged
down an intestine. He cut at the sinew with the plasma
cutter, but the blade didn’t go all the way through. The sinew
jerked, just dragged him farther down the hall. He cried out
in pain, cut again, and this time cut through.
There was a roaring sound. The rest of it slid rapidly
down the hall and disappeared into an air duct. The piece
that he had cut off was still digging tightly into his arm,
cutting off the circulation. To get it off, he had to carefully
section it.
It was like walking through a nightmare. Blood and flesh
everywhere, no idea where they were going to strike at you
next. He was becoming jumpy, he knew. He needed to
relax, needed to calm his nerves, or they’d get him. But how
could you relax in a hell like this?
Aching all over, he stumbled down the hall, wading
through a kind of putrid slurry, trying not to touch the fleshcoated
walls or ceiling. There was a corpse blocking the
way. He tried to kick it out of the way, but as soon as he
touched it, it hissed and lashed out at him. He stumbled
back and slipped and then it was on him, trying to slash his
head off with its scythes, scythes that had been hidden
beneath the water. He raised his knees and turned to see it
up and over him, its drooling mouth just centimeters from
his throat. He somehow got his hands between it and him,
held it away. It hissed and shrieked in frustration, leaning
hard on its scythes and trying to get closer, its breath
enough to make him want to retch.
With a groan, he gave a mighty push and threw it to one
side, then spun over and pulled the cutter out from under
him. It was already looming over him again, but he had the
cutter now and lopped off one of its scythes. It kept coming
at him with the other scythe and the stump. He brought the
casing of the plasma cutter down hard, pulping its head. It
kept coming. He scrambled back and away from it,
stopped only to swipe at it. He took the rest of the stump
off, then most of the other scythe. It thrashed for a while, half
buried in the muck, and then stopped.
It was only then, in the brief quiet, that he realized there
was something coming up behind him. He leapt to his feet
and turned, and a scythe cut through his forearm, making
him drop the plasma cutter. He screamed and struck the
thing open-palmed in the chest, hard, feeling the sickening
smack of its dead flesh. It staggered back a little and he
managed to get the cutter up again, wincing with pain. It
rushed again and he dropped to avoid its scythes, which
whistled over his head, and kicked its legs out from under
it.
It fell on top of him and for a moment, trapped in the muck
and beneath its stinking, rotting flesh, he had the
impression that he was already dead, that he was
wandering the afterlife, living out a peculiar hell for all he
had done wrong in this life. The cutter was trapped between
his body and the creature above him. The creature was
gnawing at his shoulder, working its way over to his neck,
and was trying to prop itself on one bone scythe so as to
swing the other through him.
He pressed the trigger for the cutter, hoping it wasn’t too
low and pointing down rather than up. The blade sprang
between his knees and he angled it up hard and through
the creature’s pelvis, forcing it up bit by bit, sawing it slowly
in half. It fell to either side of him, but he still had to get up
and stomp each of the halves before it stopped moving.
He stumbled up. Blood was still spilling out of the cut in his
arm. He tore off the bottom of his shirt and awkwardly
bandaged himself. It wouldn’t stop the bleeding, but it would
slow it, and that would have to be enough for now.
Two more hallways, he thought. That’s all.
He went to the end of the hall. He had to cut away the
growth around the door to find the controls, but once he’d
done that and scanned his card, it opened fine.
He looked in. Harmon was right—the hall looked fine,
nothing there. There, to the side, were the two lab doors.
He would just move forward as quietly as possible, past
them, and then he would be safe.
He eased into the new hall, moving slowly, squishing
sounds coming from his shoes from the muck in the other
room. He could hear movement behind the first door. He
held his breath. And then he was past it, almost to the
second door. He could hear a sound from behind that as
well, a crackling sound and then a low, long whine. He
hurried his step a little, was soon past that as well.
He’d already reached the door at the end when one of
the doors opened. He didn’t look back to see which one it
was, just pressed his card against the scanner and prayed
the door would open soon enough.
The low whine came again, louder this time, closer. The
door began to slide open and he rushed through it and into
the final hall, casting a glance back to see the three-headed
spiderlike creature, just standing there near the end of the
hall, watching him. It was different from the other one. Its
back, he saw, was covered with spikes, which as he
watched began to stiffen and stand up. One spat off its
back and shot toward him, embedding itself in the wall next
to his face. All three of the creature’s upside-down heads
hissed in unison, but it didn’t move forward. And then the
door between him and it slid shut.
He reached the door at the end of the hall and engaged the
comlink.
“Who is it?” came Harmon’s voice.
“Who the hell do you think it is?” said Altman.
“Altman?” he said. “How can I be sure it’s you?”
“Come on, Harmon. Open up.”
“No,” he said. “You have to tell me something that nobody
but you, nobody but the real you, would know about me.”
What, was he crazy? “I don’t know you that well, Harmon.
I don’t have anything to tell.”
“I’m sorry,” he said, “I can’t open it,” and cut the feed.
Altman reengaged the link. When Harmon picked it up,
he said, “Don’t disconnect. Turn on the vid feed and you’ll
see it’s me.”
Harmon did. Altman saw his worried face squinting,
peering at him. One hand was clutching something at the
end of a necklace.
“I don’t know,” he said slowly. “A vid can be faked.”
“You’re paranoid,” said Altman, and then realized that
yes, that was exactly what he was. The Marker was making
him that way. But, he remembered, Harmon was also a
believer.
“Look,” Altman said quickly, “you were the one who told
me that the creatures can’t come close to the Marker, right?
If that’s true, I must not be one of them. If I was one of them, I
wouldn’t be able to get this close. The Marker will protect
you if you believe in it. In the name of the Marker, open the
door.”
Harmon gave him a long, solemn look that Altman
couldn’t interpret; then he reached out and pressed a button
ending the vid transmission. A moment later the door
opened. Altman walked in slowly, his hands up.
“Ah, it is you,” Harmon said. “Marker be praised.”
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