Part 26 (2/2)
”What is it, Investigator?” Silence whispered.
”I'm not sure, Captain. I heard something, something close.”
She broke off sharply, and held the lamp down to light her feet. A yard-long insect with a broad carapaced back and hundreds of legs was curling itself unhurriedly round her left ankle. Dozens more of the things curled and twisted on the steps below. More were climbing the walls, clinging easily to the dull metal. Frost put away her gun and drew her sword, moving slowly and carefully. The creature had no eyes or mouth, but she set the edge of her blade against what seemed to be the front of the insect, and sliced sideways. The body convulsed, and clamped painfully tight around her ankle. Frost handed the lamp back to Carrion, reached down, and calmly unwound the insect from around her leg. It fought back with surprising strength, even without its head, and she had to use all her strength to unwrap it. It finally came free, and immediately tried to wrap itself around her arm. She threw the thing away, and it disappeared into the darkness. Hundreds more seethed on the steps below her, scuttling and sliding over each other in their eagerness to get to their prey.
Carrion tossed the lamp lightly into the air and held it there with his esp, spreading light over the scene and keeping his hands free. Silence aimed his disrupter where the ma.s.s of insects seemed the thickest.
”I wouldn't, Captain,” said the outlaw quietly. ”You'd do more damage to the stairs than to the creatures.”
Silence nodded stiffly, and put away his gun. He shouldn't have needed to be told something that obvious. He drew his sword and stepped carefully down beside the Investigator. Together they hacked and cut at the insects, clearing an open s.p.a.ce before them. Segments flew on the air, legs still kicking, but the creatures wouldn't die. They pressed blindly forward up the stairs, seeking to wrap themselves round an arm or a leg, reaching always for the throat, as though somehow they knew that to be the most vulnerable spot. They climbed the walls and dropped onto the humans from above, but Carrion deflected them with his esp, cracking them like whips to break their backs, or crus.h.i.+ng them against the walls with the pressure of his mind. But still the insects pressed forward, and there seemed no end to them.
Carrion stepped back, and held his staff horizontally above his head. Psi energy spat and crackled at each end of the power lance, and stabbed out to strike out at the seething creatures. Where the psi-bolts struck, the insects burst into flames, curling and twisting as the fire consumed them. Energy danced back and forth in the stairwell, too bright to look at, scorching and crisping the scuttling creatures, but not touching Silence or the Investigator. The insects fell back, spilling down the stairs in desperate haste, and plunged into the solid steel walls, where they were swallowed up without trace as though the gleaming steel were no more substantial than mist. Within seconds the stairwell was empty, the sound of the insects' scuttling appendages no more than a swiftly fading echo. Only the dead remained to show that they had ever been there. Frost reached out and tapped the nearest wall, but it was stubbornly solid to the touch.
”Interesting,” said Carrion, and the Investigator nodded.
”Is that all you've got to say?” demanded Silence.
”For the moment,” said Carrion. ”The situation appears to be more complicated than we allowed for.
And before you ask, Captain; no, I can't explain it. I can only suggest that the walls have in some way become as infested with alien material as the Guardians. Which means the aliens have quite literally taken over the entire Base.”
”Those . . . creatures,” said Silence. ”Could they have been the aliens from the crashed s.h.i.+p? Some sort of hive mentality, perhaps? A group mind?”
Frost shrugged. ”It's possible, but unlikely. Given the size of the s.h.i.+p, I'd have to say the scale was all wrong. More likely the insects are tools used by the alien for some purpose. We have yet to encounter the real enemy.”
”Now there's a comforting thought,” said Carrion.
”Keep moving,” said Silence. ”We haven't even reached Level Two yet. Carrion, nice work with the lance. Stand ready. We might need you again.”
”Of course, Captain. It's nice to feel needed.”
”I could toss a grenade down ahead of us,” said Frost. ”If the aliens have any more surprises waiting for us down below, a shrapnel grenade should spoil their day quite thoroughly.”
”Nice thought, but no. The esper and the marines are still down there somewhere. Lead the way, Investigator.”
Their feet echoed hollowly on the metal steps as they continued down the stairway, the lamp hovering benignly over their heads. Silence kept a careful watch on the stairs and the walls, but there was no trace anywhere of the vanished insects. Instead, a thick, viscous slime began to appear on the walls, oozing down to coat the metal steps so that they became treacherous underfoot. They slowed their pace, taking it one step at a time. Thick drops fell from somewhere high above, landing with sudden force on heads and shoulders. The drops fell more thickly as they neared the bottom of the stairs, until it was a slow, unpleasant rain. Frost stopped to wipe the stuff from her face, and found she couldn't. The slime clung tenaciously to her forehead, then suddenly flowed down over her eyes and on towards her nose and mouth.
Silence and Carrion came to a halt with her as a thick wave of slime rushed up the stairs and trapped their feet and ankles in an unyielding grip. More rained down from above, plastering their heads and faces. Frost clawed at the slime with her hands, but it just oozed between her fingers, leaving nothing for her to hold onto. She kept her mouth firmly closed, and pinched her nose shut. She didn't want the stuff invading her body. There was already a growing pressure on her closed eyes and in her ears. Silence tried to sc.r.a.pe the slime from his legs with the edge of his sword, but the stuff just broke and re-formed around the blade without releasing its hold for a moment. The slime was climbing his legs like a slow rising tide.
And then the slime was torn from his legs and sprang away from his face and body, pulled away by an almost physical presence on the air. The ooze also left Frost's face, leaving her gasping for breath, while the slime that continued to fall from above was diverted, pushed away and to one side by the presence.
Silence looked at Carrion, who was frowning slightly, as though considering an interesting problem.
”Nicely done again, Carrion. You've improved your control since we last met.”
”I've had lots of time to practise,” said Carrion. A clear pathway opened up before them, forcing the slime off to the sides. ”We'd better make haste, Captain. I can't hold this stuff back for long; it's too diffuse. And the pressure's growing all the time.”
Frost and Silence clattered down the steps as quickly as they could, with Carrion crowding their heels.
The slime rained down thickly, but couldn't get near them. And when a sudden wave of the ooze rose up and threw itself at them from below, it too broke and fell away to the sides as it met the pressure of Carrion's will. Then they reached the bottom of the stairs and moved quickly forward, leaving the slime behind them. Frost pulled a grenade from her bandolier and primed it.
”Incendiary,” she said briskly to Carrion. ”See how far you can get it up the stairway before it explodes.”
Carrion nodded, and the grenade jumped out of her hand and flew up into the gloom of the stairwell.
There was a sudden, vivid explosion, and crimson flames boiled down and out of the stairwell. The flames burned fiercely, but neither they nor their heat could get past Carrion's mental s.h.i.+eld. The fire leapt and blossomed in the stairwell, lighting the scene bright as day, consuming the slime hungrily. The flames died away bit by bit as the slime disappeared, until finally they were gone and the quiet and the gloom returned. A harsh, bitter smell filled the air, but nothing scuttled down the steps or oozed from the walls.
They looked about them, taking in the strange alien growths that sprouted from the metal walls and ceiling. Thick streamers of webbing hung down, twisting slowly back and forth, as though someone had just pa.s.sed through them. Silvery traces glowed on the walls like living circuit patterns. And thick and heavy on the air, growing stronger by the moment, was the stench of rotting meat.
”First insects that wouldn't die, and vanish into solid walls, then living slime with homicidal tendencies, and now this,” said Frost. ”Whatever's hiding down here really doesn't want to be found.”
”Esper!” Silence's voice rang on the quiet, echoing faintly, but there was no reply. ”Stasiak, Ripper, where are you? Can you hear me? Diana?”
They waited, but the echoes died away with nothing to replace them. The shadows were still, and very dark, and deep enough to hide all kinds of secrets.
”Spread out and search this floor,” Silence ordered. ”I want them found. Maintain contact at all times.
And watch yourselves. Something down here doesn't like us at all.”
They moved apart and started the slow process of searching through the rubble and the deserted rooms and corridors. The continuing quiet was eerie and almost threatening, after the lengthy battles that had preceded it. There was a feeling of imminence in the air, of something about to happen, that grated on everyone's nerves. They found a huge hole in one wall, presumably made by a grenade or a Guardian, and several glowing holes that could only have been made by disrupters, but there was no sign of the esper or the marines, or of what they might have been fighting.
They finally returned to the foot of the stairs, and took turns looking at each other, shrugging and shaking their heads.
”The Guardians must have taken them deeper into the Base,” said Frost at last. ”They could have been programmed to capture rather than kill.”
”But Carrion told Diana how to handle them,” said Silence. ”They should have been easy targets for someone with her skills.”
”Something must have gone wrong,” said Carrion.
Silence nodded reluctantly. ”Find them, Carrion. Use your esp.”
The outlaw frowned, concentrating. Frost looked at Silence. ”I thought he was a polter,” she said quietly.
”Polters aren't normally telepaths as well.”
”There's nothing normal about Carrion,” said Silence, not bothering to lower his voice. ”The Ashrai saw to that.”
Carrion opened his eyes and breathed deeply, shaking his head as though to clear it. ”I can't find the marines anywhere. The esper is hiding in a clothes locker, just down that corridor. She's s.h.i.+elding herself, but I can feel her presence now that I'm looking for it.”
”Why is she hiding?” asked Silence.
”I don't know, Captain. But it feels like something bad has happened to her. Something really bad.”
He led the way down a side corridor, with Frost and Silence close behind, disrupters at the ready.
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