by Darrell Pitt
Ebony laughed, but it was flavored with hysteria.
Old Axel consulted the map as we crossed the swamp. Glancing back at the dead creature, I shivered as I remembered its eyes, tentacles, lips...
‘Oh no,’ I said. ‘That creature...don’t tell me it’s...’
‘Human? It was—once.’
Ebony’s mouth dropped open. ‘It was a person? What the—’
‘Just be glad he’s dead,’ Old Axel advised. ‘For all our sakes.’
Reaching a slime covered wall, he told me to make a hole. Seconds later we climbed into a pristine corridor, sucking in lungfuls of fresh air.
‘Ebony,’ Old Axel said. ‘Turn the floor of the biological chamber to oxygen.’
That would cause the entire swamp, including the Hydra to drop to the floor below.
‘Won’t that crush—’
‘—anyone beneath it. Yes,’ Old Axel said, ‘that’s the idea.’
Ebony looked like she wanted to argue, but Old Axel’s instructions had helped us to survive this long. Ebony knelt and reached for the floor.
She stood. ‘No,’ she said. ‘I’m not doing it.’
Old Axel looked furious. ‘This is—’
‘Let’s go,’ she said. ‘Let’s just get these temporal...thingies...and get out of here.’
We continued down the corridor. The door at the end slid open and we entered a workshop with computer parts cramming the benches. Old Axel’s eyes scanned the room until he focused on a door set into the wall. I opened it by expanding the molecules of air in the lock. It swung free.
‘Bingo,’ Old Axel said. Pieces of equipment filled the shelves. He shook his head sadly. ‘Some of these weapons would give the resistance such an advantage...’ Checking two cases, he found the same devices we had seen on the time machine. ‘Still, if this works we’ll never have to worry about the Agency again.’
He handed a bag to me before snatching a beehive-shaped device off the shelf.
‘This’ll come in handy,’ he said. ‘Let’s go.’
I glanced at a computer terminal and saw it was still filled with static. The communications systems were still scrambled. Rounding a bend, we entered a room with a metal pad in the center of the floor. Three men worked at consoles. Old Axel started firing at them.
‘No!’ I yelled.
But I was too late. Within seconds they were dead. I felt like grabbing my older self and shaking him, but there was no time. He read one of the consoles.
‘Good.’ He tapped a few keys. ‘This is going to work.’
‘What is?’ Ebony asked, looking sick.
‘These are transportation mats. They can be used for short range teleportation.’
‘Teleportation?’ I said. ‘You’ve got to be kidding.’
‘I told you James Price was brilliant. Get on the mat.’
We climbed onto the metal platform while Old Axel manipulated the controls. He pushed a button and the platform began to hum. Taking a running jump, he landed next to me—
—just as everything started to shimmer. The world divided into cubes. Then they divided into smaller cubes. And again. They continued to sub-divide. I couldn’t move. White light surrounded me. Then I saw tiny cubes reassembling into small cubes. Larger cubes. Blocks.
Except now we were standing on a metal mat in a completely different place, a maintenance area surrounded by vessels. A man worked on a landing strut. I knocked him out with a bolt of air before Old Axel could kill him.
Adjusting the beehive shaped device he had stolen from the vault, Old Axel set it on the matter transporter. He activated the transporter and the device disappeared.
‘That should keep them busy.’ We raced up the stairs of a fighter craft. Five times the size of an Earth fighter, I was seriously impressed, but we had no time to appreciate it. We scrambled onto the flight deck where Old Axel slid behind the controls.
‘How can you operate all this technology?’ I asked.
‘Correspondence course,’ he said, starting the engines. ‘You remember I said we’ve had information leaking from the Agency for years. I’ve studied every schematic I could lay my hands on. Besides,’ the vessel lifted off the ground, ‘this ship isn’t so different to the old flex craft. It’s just larger.’
The entire station shuddered as we heard the distant rumble of an explosion. Old Axel gave a satisfied grunt. ‘Right on time.’ He aimed us at the nearest bulkhead. ‘Let’s hope the weapons are operational.’ He flipped a switch, a missile roared away from us and the wall exploded into shrapnel.
Atmosphere erupting through the gap, we entered the void of space, the Earth beneath us. As Old Axel poured on the acceleration, I looked back at the space station. The space dock at one end was ruined. Another segment was open to space. It looked like the station was about to break apart. Bodies and pieces of metal were being blasted into the vacuum of space.
I felt sick. Slumping into my seat, I tried not to think of the multitude of people we had just killed.
‘We did it,’ Ebony said, collapsing next to me. ‘We’re alive.’
Old Axel shot me a rare smile. ‘We’re a resourceful person,’ he said. ‘Those who have wronged us will live to regret it.’
Whatever that meant.
Chapter Nineteen
Brodie peered up at the old sewer hatch. She, Chad and Sharla stood at the base of a rusty ladder dressed in protective suits; brown plastic outfits with helmets that looked disturbingly like goldfish bowls. The helmets contained miniature transmitters so they could communicate with each other.
‘Every remaining habitable area on the planet is surrounded by walls hundreds of feet high,’ Sharla explained. ‘The gas in the badlands won’t kill you immediately, but prolonged exposure will.’
‘How were the badlands made?’ Brodie asked.
‘An experiment of James Prices that went horribly wrong. Now we’re locked inside the walls like rats in a cage.’
Sharla handed them handguns that fitted neatly into holsters sewn into the suits. ‘Try not to waste bullets,’ she said. ‘They’re a precious commodity around here.’
‘Why do we need guns?’ Brodie asked.
‘There are things living in the fog. They used to be people. Somehow they’ve survived the gas...but what they’ve become isn’t pretty.’ She grimaced. ‘And James Price dumps his biological experiments in the badlands.’
‘Wonderful.’
‘But the biggest issue is still the fog.’
‘So if our suit rips..?’
‘Don’t breathe in. The fog contains an acidic compound. It will irritate human flesh, but breathing it in will burn your lungs. You could probably survive a few days without a suit. Not much more.’
‘There isn’t a way around?’ Chad asked. ‘Or under. Or over?’
‘The subway tunnels have all been severed from here to Manhattan. If we had a vessel, you could try flying over the fog, but you’d show up on the Agency’s tracking systems.’ She paused. ‘They’d shoot you out of the sky. It’s this way or no way.’
Sharla climbed up the ladder first. She struggled with the hatch for a moment before it groaned open. Toxic gas started to pour into the tunnel. They quickly left, shutting the hatch behind them.
The mist was nicotine colored, and floated around them in tight, swirling formations. Sometimes, Brodie could see several feet ahead, but otherwise it was an impenetrable barrier. They were standing in a suburban street populated with closely set houses topped with pitched roofs. Brodie saw the distant sun. It dotted the sky like a brown rock in a murky river. She turned to Chad. Even he looked shocked.
‘How often have you done this journey?’ Brodie asked Sharla.
‘About half a dozen times.’
‘And you’ve always gotten through?’
‘I’ve gotten through, but the people I’ve chaperoned haven’t always been so lucky.’
‘Why?’
‘Because they didn’t listen to me,’ she said firmly, her
eyes turning away as she remembered some distant tragedy. ‘Follow my instructions and we’ll be fine.’
She started down the street. Brodie was pretty certain she could survive anything that came at them. She still had her abilities, suit or no suit. Chad, however, was locked inside his outfit; his powers wouldn’t work outside it. Sharla, of course, had her powers, but they were probably ineffective as well. She seemed to have an instinctive ability to move quietly through the shifting haze, darting across the uneven ground with ease. Brodie felt like a blundering idiot by comparison. The suit was cumbersome, and the gun at her side made her feel unbalanced. Chad was close behind. He was quieter than usual. Possibly it was the seriousness of the situation. He was almost likable when he wasn’t so full of himself.
They crossed a park. Amazingly, the grass and the trees were still alive, but matted with brown tar. Some of the trees seemed to be mutating to deal with the unnatural environment; their branches were anchored into the ground, as if seeking nourishment from the earth.
The fog cleared briefly, revealing a line of posters pasted across a wall, showing James Price with the message, Report Terrorists to the Agency, written across the bottom. An enterprising young rebel had responded by spray-painting swear words over them.
Sharla led them into a street where a pitched battle had been fought decades before; a school bus lay on its side with cars parked at each end to close the street off to traffic. Bullet holes riddled the makeshift barrier from one end to the other with skeletal remains scattered around the ground.
Brodie picked up a gun. It appeared intact.
‘Leave it,’ Sharla said quietly.
Without asking why, she put it down.
Reaching a corner, Sharla held up her hand. Stop. Brodie peered into the mist. She couldn’t see anything. It continued to shift and flow around them like ghosts.
Then she saw Chad ready his weapon as a slithering sound echoed down the street. What’s causing it? She saw a car creeping along the middle of the road.
No, not a car, but something as big.
It resembled an enormous armadillo. Its head was short and stumpy with two horns at the front. One eye was shut; it had either been destroyed by the fog or in a battle with something else. The other eye was fixed on the road ahead.
The creature moved on a row of tiny feet like an enormous caterpillar, its rear ending in a long snake-like tail. It opened its mouth as if yawning and Brodie saw a jagged row of bottom teeth.
Sharla didn’t seem in a hurry to escape, so Brodie guessed she intended to keep them here, still and silent. There could be dozens—or hundreds—of these things in the fog. Maybe it was best to avoid them completely. The creature slithered close to them.
Only a few more feet, Brodie thought. It’ll be past us and everything will be fine.
Which would have been the case, but Chad chose that moment to fire his weapon into the ground.
Chapter Twenty
Chad let out a cry. ‘I didn’t mean to do that!’ he cried. ‘It went off—’
The creature roared, whirling about in the mist, its single good eye narrowing on them. The creature’s tail whipped about like a lasso and flew towards Sharla. Brodie leapt forward, shoving the girl to the ground as the tail slammed into the wall, sending bricks and mortar flying.
Chad ducked and fired the gun again, this time aiming for the creature’s body. He hit it, but bullet simply bounced off.
Sharla rolled and fired at the creature’s eye, but missed and now the monster started towards them like a tank.
Brodie climbed to her feet, ran at the creature and jumped, her entire body weight hitting the center of the creature’s eye. It screeched in pain, making a sound like torn metal as its tail whipped around catching her in the center of her back. She went flying.
‘Run!’ Sharla screamed.
Brodie was dazed, couldn’t tell up from down. Then she felt Sharla grab her arm and drag her along the ground. Chad grabbed her other arm. They stumbled up the street, the monster screeching behind. They ran two more blocks, the pain in her back slowly subsiding.
It sounded like the monster was still following. They turned a corner—and Brodie’s mouth fell open in amazement.
‘How the hell —’ she started.
‘Keep moving!’ Sharla commanded.
Somehow, at some time in the past, an ocean liner had ended up in the middle of the street. Brodie could not guess at how it happened. It appeared the ship had been picked up and dropped from a height. It had toppled over, reducing the buildings on one side to rubble.
They were at the bow. Sharla led them up a pile of rubble to a lower deck. Brodie could still hear the creature in pursuit, but it was far behind. It gave a final plaintive roar as Sharla dragged open a rusty door, pushed them inside and slammed it shut.
Sharla pulled out a flashlight, barely penetrating the murky gloom. She turned it on Chad. ‘You idiot!’ she hissed. ‘Why did you fire the gun?’
‘I’m sorry.’ He looked genuinely apologetic. ‘I fired it by accident.’
‘Guns don’t go off by themselves!’
‘This one did!’
Sharla looked like she wanted to punch him in the face.
Brodie stepped between them. ‘What’s done is done,’ she said. ‘Now we need to keep moving.’
The other girl shot a final angry glance at Chad. ‘One more mistake like that and you can both go it alone,’ she said. ‘You understand?’
Chad nodded. Sharla shone the flashlight down the tilted corridor. ‘We’ll go this way. It looks like it’ll take us most of the way down the ship.’
They followed her. The ship appeared to have been in good condition when it was deposited here.
‘How did this ship end up here?’ Chad asked.
‘How does anything happen?’ Sharla responded. ‘James Price.’
‘But why—’
‘Who knows why that lunatic does anything? The sooner you kill him, the better.’ She regarded them shrewdly. ‘I don’t suppose there’s any spare room in that time machine. Is there?’
‘You’re looking for a ride?’
‘Maybe.’
‘I’m not sure taking you to the past would be such a good idea.’
‘Why not?’
Chad thought. ‘I’m no expert on this—’
‘Obviously.’
‘—but there’s this whole thing about contaminating the time line.’
‘Sounds like fun.’
‘It’s probably not. Suppose we took you to our time and something happened that stopped you from being born.’ He paused. ‘What would happen? Would you just disappear? Or would you continue to exist? But how could you because you had never been born?’
They were complicated questions and no-one had any answers to them. Taking someone to the past is obviously a bad idea, Brodie thought. Who knows what you might break?
Sharla might never be born. Most of the people they had encountered may never exist because their parents never met in the first place. Making changes in the past could cause irreparable harm.
Except, she reflected, it would seem the world would be a better place.
After all, it could hardly be any worse.
Could it?
‘What’s that sound?’ Chad asked.
They stopped. At first Brodie could hear nothing, but then she heard squeaking. They turned, but there was only an empty corridor. Then Sharla angled the flashlight to the floor.
‘A rat,’ she said. ‘And a big one too.’
It was large. Almost as big as a fully grown cat. Chad wondered if the yellow fog had affected it. Then he peered more closely.
‘What’s on its back?’ he asked.
‘They look like...’ Brodie started. ‘I don’t know what they look like.’
In the next instant they had their answer as the rat ran towards them and launched itself into the air. Spreading a pair of leathery wings, it flew onto the wall, landed on the edge of a Van Gogh print
and gave a high-pitched cry. Brodie snatched up a cup from the floor. She took careful aim and hit it. The creature swooped towards the ground and raced away.
‘A rat with wings,’ Brodie said. ‘Now I’ve seen everything.’
‘Not everything,’ Sharla said. ‘There are stranger things in the badlands.’
Brodie didn’t want to think about them. Increasing their pace until they reached a set of swinging doors, they pushed through into the next section. After another minute, Chad heard a sound from behind. He glanced back and saw the double doors were wedged open.
That’s strange, he thought. We closed them. How—.
‘Sharla,’ he said. ‘Point your torch back down the hall.’
She did. Dozens of rats were pushing into the hallway. The nearest was only a few feet away.
It launched into the air and flew directly at them.
Chapter Twenty-One
The creature flew at Chad. He stood frozen in shock as it headed directly towards his face. It was only at the last instant that Brodie’s gloved fist struck out, swatting it away in mid-flight.
‘Don’t shoot at them!’ Sharla shouted. ‘It will just bring more.’
‘Run!’ Brodie yelled.
They ran, followed by a stampede of clawed feet. Chad wanted to use his powers against them. He could incinerate them in an instant, but he needed his suit intact. The next doors were still thirty feet away. He doubted they would reach them in time.
‘To the left!’ Brodie yelled. ‘Go left!’
She disappeared through an open door with Sharla following. Chad was last. He leapt through the door just as a rat slammed into his back. He threw himself to the ground and rolled about, trying to dislodge it, screaming in panic. Normally he was in complete control, but that was when he had his powers. Now they amounted to nothing. He was helpless.
He saw Brodie aim a savage kick at the rat. It spun across the room, slammed into the far wall and lay still. Sharla had already bolted the door shut. One rat had been half-way through; its splattered remains stained the floor. A thumping sound came from the other side as its companions threw themselves against the door in desperation.