Their air-blast enabled the cyanide powder to penetrate the deepest sewers without risking the lives of the operatives, as long as all the openings were tightly sealed. Should they accidentally come in contact with the toxic fumes because of a leakage, each man carried amyl nitrate capsules to counteract the gas.
It was realised that not all outlets could be found in the dense undergrowth of the forest, but it was hoped the channels would be so heavily impregnated with the gas that the rats would have little time to break out. The few that did could be dealt with in the following days. The purge would be relentless, with no thought to other woodland wildlife - the consequences if any of the mutants escaped would be too serious. The Prime Minister himself had promised the country that the whole of Epping Forest would be razed to the ground if necessary. Encouraged by this statement, certain members of the public had been discovered starting their own forest fires, and had been promptly arrested.
The outcry against this second rodent invasion within five years had, of course, been enormous. The government - true, it had been a different government at that time - had promised that a catastrophe such as the London Outbreak would never happen again. So much for the 'official' word. The ruling body shuddered as they anticipated the recriminations to follow, while the Opposition rubbed their hands in vengeful glee, remembering the humiliating beating they had taken from the public years before. The principal department involved, the Ministry of Agriculture, was already busy preparing documents to prove there had been no negligence on its part. The Ratkill board of directors gloated with satisfaction while their exe-cutives revelled in the sudden storm of activity. It had been a Ratkill investigator who had confirmed the infestation and who had recommended instant action, only to be overruled by the private secretary for the Ministry of Agriculture, who had wanted matters to progress more cautiously. Of course, that
'delay' would not be denounced publicly by Ratkill - unless a later inquiry brought it out in the open. No, it would be a matter between themselves and Antony Thoraton; it might prove use-ful to have the gratitude - unspoken, of course - of such an in-fluential man.
Epping Forest itself was now devoid, apart from those involved in the eradication itself, of all human life. It was decided after the massacre that not just a confined area would be cleared of residents, but Epping Forest's entire population. The more nervous considered the whole green belt area to be in danger, but were assured that this was not the case. There were very clear indications as to the extent of the vermin's penetration, and this was well within the forest itself; there would be no danger to those living in the surrounding areas.
The evacuated area was ringed by a human chain - troops spread as wide as possible without breaking visual contact, armoured vehicles constantly patrolling the perimeters. Their numbers were strengthened by the metropolitan and county police forces and even local fire stations stood by in readiness.
Gazelle helicopters swooped low over the treetops and scanned the ground below. Chieftain tanks stood immobile and menacing, facing into the forest, ready to rumble into action at the first command.
The only occupied area within the guarded boundary was the Conservation Centre, its small car park and front lawn crowded with military, police and Ratkill vehicles, the main building itself buzzing with activity. No one was allowed to enter the restricted area without an army escort, and the same applied when leaving the Centre. Eight Green Goddess fire-engines stood along the road cresting High Beach, glaring down into the valley like mechanical predators. Army scout cars, their personnel feeling secure and protected inside the rough metal carriages, raced carelessly along hoggin paths, keeping a sharp lookout for misguided or just plain stupid civilians who had ignored the warnings and slipped through the cordon. Why anyone should do so, knowing full well the dangers, was beyond the soldiers'
comprehension, but they had learned from past experience never to underestimate the imbecility of certain individuals on occasions like these.
More atrocities had been discovered in the two days following the mass attack: the tattered remains of a tent in a remote corner of a field, the inside splattered with dried blood, the floor littered with the remains of twelve missing Barnardo boys and their supervisor; bones of what had obviously been a courting couple in a small clearing not far from the roadside, the couple's fawn-coloured car nearby; an empty rowing boat drifting an one of the few lakes where fishing was allowed, the missing occupant's rod and sandwiches still lying in the bottom of the dinghy; an empty lorry, the driver's door wide open as though he had jumped down to clear the winding forest road of some obstacle or animal - cattle often wandered across the roadways; an abandoned but sparkling new bicycle; a saddled, riderless horse; a house, close to several others, but empty and bloodstained.
It had been impossible for the warnings to reach everyone despite the frequent radio broadcasts, the patrols with loud-speakers, the knocking on doors there was always someone whom the news did not reach. Most of the residents had fled without further prompting, but there were several surly old farmers who had to be forcibly 'persuaded', and a few of the wealthier residents who considered themselves above the attention of mere rats, who had to be ordered out. But finally, the woodland had been cleared and the mass execution of the vermin was underway.
The forest was quieter than it had ever been, the wildlife nervous. The sun shone bright but impotently on the verdant acres, the autumn chill dissipating its warmth. The country held its breath.
Pender spoon-fed the powder into the hole, ensuring there was no breeze to blow the substance back into his face. The fumes could easily enter the grille in the strong, plastic visor, part of the protective suit he wore against rodent attack. The group around him were also dressed in the silver-grey suits, the material a combination of tough fabric and fine strands of close-knitted, flexible steel. The helmets, with their plastic face coverings, gave the men a sinister, alien appearance, but each was confident that no sharp teeth could penetrate their armour.
Pender cursed the clumsiness of the heavy gloves, but felt no inclination to remove them. For all he knew there could be a mutant rat lurking only feet away in the passage he was preparing to block, ready to snap off his fingers. The hole looked hardly big enough to contain a giant rat, but he knew from the map Whittaker was holding that there was a sewer below, so he was taking no chances. There was a definite run leading from the tunnel which showed it was in constant use. He shook the long-handled spoon free of the deadly powder and withdrew it, wiping the surface against the soil as he did so, then pulled up a clod of earth from the ground nearby and plugged the hole, turning the grass roots so they faced outwards. That way the powder would not be covered with loose earth.
Pender stood. ‘Okay, Joe, block it,’ he said.
Joe Apercello, another Ratkill operative, stepped forward, bringing a large tin of ready-mixed, quick drying cement with him. He struggled with the tightly sealed lid for a few seconds, then began to remove a glove for better purchase.
‘Leave it on, Joe!’ Pender snapped, and the man shrugged, pulling the glove back.
‘It's bloody awkward,’ he complained.
‘It's more bloody awkward without fingers,’ Pender told him.
The lid came away with a sucking sound and Apercello dug in with a trowel, thickly spreading the compound over the hole.
Sealing every opening with concrete was an added precaution: generally, earth would have been sufficient, the powder itself acting as a death-dealing sentry, but it had been agreed that extreme measures would be taken the mutant rats would never be underestimated again.
Vic Whittaker had the network map spread out on the ground before him and was marking the position of the now-plugged exit with a felt-tipped pen.
‘That's the fifth this morning,’ he said with some satisfaction
‘The channel runs dead ahead . . .’ he extended his arm in the direction he meant '. . . north-east.’ He looked up and added,
‘The
undergrowth has certainly covered the area since the sewer was dug. Well have a hard job locating any openings.’
‘We're bound to miss more than a few,’ Pender said, 'but that's not the point. Once the machines start pumping the gas into the main exits, the rats will have little chance of escape.
They'll be finished before they know what's hit them. The object of this exercise is to stack all the cards in our favour.’
Whittaker nodded, the movement barely noticeable inside the helmet. He stood, folding the map so only the next relevant section showed.
‘Do you think we'll be ready by tomorrow?’ he asked.
‘We've got to be. We can't . . .’ Pender frowned. ‘Captain, tell your man to get his bloody helmet back on.’ He pointed towards a soldier who was wiping his forehead with his sleeve.
The captain flushed behind his plastic screen. ‘You, get it back on immediately!’
The startled soldier hastily began to don his hood. ‘Sorry, sir, it's so bleedin' hot in here,’ he said lamely.
Captain Mather glared at the small squad which formed a protective semicircle around Pender, Whittaker and Apercello.
An army truck stood waiting in a clearing nearby, its engine idling, ready to move at the slightest hint of trouble.
‘You all know the danger,’ the captain said, 'so let's not have any more silliness. Clear?’ He neither expected nor received an answer as he turned back to the ratcatcher ‘Sorry, Mr. Pender, it won't happen again.’
‘That should do it, Luke,’ came Apercello's muffled voice as he patted down the fast drying cement. ‘No bugger'll get out of there.’
‘Right,’ Pender said, picking up the container of cyanide powder. ‘Let's move on.’
The senior tutor fell in beside him as they trampled down foliage with heavy boots, helmets bent in constant examination of the ground before them, searching for signs. The soldiers fanned out on either side, also searching the ground but keeping a wider alert for any impending danger.
‘You were saying we have to be ready by tomorrow . . . ?’
Whittaker prompted.
‘We can't risk holding them inside any longer,’ Pender continued. ‘We drilled probes with microphones attached, so we know they're there. I listened in myself it was bedlam. They seem to know they're trapped and they're panicking.’
‘But we know these mutants can burrow why don't they dig their way out?’
‘Oh, they will. That's why we have to move fast. At the moment hysteria is preventing them from using whatever sense they possess. Pretty soon, though, they're going to get the notion to tunnel their way out. Fortunately, these sewers have been firmly constructed they'll hold the rats for a while.’
‘And these holes we're sealing? Why haven't they come pouring through?’
‘Don't tempt providence: they could do just that. My guess is that the rats are afraid. Remember, their ancestors were virtually wiped out in London. Call it race-memory, or sheer instinct, but they know they're under attack from their worst enemy: man. They're just plain terrified at the moment, too scared to come out and show themselves. How long they'll remain in that state is anybody's guess.’
They trudged on, both men lost in their own thoughts. It was Whittaker who finally broke the silence.
‘I don't understand why the other animals haven't been slaughtered by the vermin. I mean, if they're so ferocious and there are so many of them, why haven't they overrun the forest?’
‘Firstly, we don't know exactly how many there are. My guess is that there are a thousand or so they haven't reproduced like the normal rodent. It would still be enough to make them aggressive.’
‘A thousand? My God, that's terrible.’
‘Not really, not in an area this size.’
‘What makes you so sure? There could be several thousand.’
Pender shook his head. ‘I'm not sure, but I don't think so. If there were, they'd have been seen sooner. They would almost certainly have begun slaughtering the other wildlife. I'm sure their build-up has been gradual. Remember, compared to the normal rodent they're giants, and Mother Nature isn't keen on allowing her bigger creatures to have large litters.’
‘They're no bigger than dogs. Even pigs ...’
‘In the vermin kingdom, the mutants are as big as elephants.
Anyway there's the other side of the argument: these are freaks, mutants their genes have been altered in some way.
Maybe the ultrasonics used on their ancestors did it, maybe not, but their difference could easily have changed their reproductive cycle.’
‘But there were many thousands in London!’
‘They were mating with the normal species of Black rat. It's all theory on my part, but here, I think, we have the pure strain.
I'll bet they're even stronger and more cunning than the first.
They've been clever enough to keep out of sight - until now.’
‘It makes you wonder if we really are going to beat them.’
‘We will.’ Whittaker could not see the grim determination on the ratcatcher face.
‘All right, if there really are as you say just a thousand or so, it still doesn't explain why they haven't attacked the local wildlife before now.’
‘Rats can survive on practically anything. You can be sure they've killed other animals, but on an unnoticeable scale. Their main supply of food has obviously been scavenged from other sources: houses, farms, allotments, the countryside itself. I bet if we were to check now, we'd have reports of all sorts of vermin trouble that in the past has just been put down to rare and isolated cases. It's frightening to consider, but I wouldn't be surprised if these mutants have deliberately been keeping a low profile regarding their raids.’
‘It's a little hard to believe.’
‘What's happening now is a little hard to believe. One thing we do know for sure: their restraint has gone. They're out to kill anyone or anything.’
Apercello, who was some distance ahead, turned and waved at them. His words through the plastic grille were hard to catch, but he began pointing towards the ground quite near his feet.
‘Looks like Joe's found another opening,’ said Pender, hurrying forward.
The hole the ratcatcher colleague was standing over was much larger than the one they had just plugged. Its sides were smooth, as though used by many bodies.
‘Christ, that's one all right,’ Pender muttered, bending low and examining the hole. ‘It's the right size. Captain, let me have the torch, will you?’
Captain Mather passed the square-shaped torch over to the ratcatcher who shone its powerful beam into the tunnel.
‘Nothing there,’ Pender said, straightening. ‘Let's get some powder down fast. The sooner it's plugged, the happier I'll be.’
They went through the process of laying the cyanide and sealing the exit again, Pender helping Apercello pack the cement.
‘Okay. Number six done. Mark it . . .’ He didn't know what had made him look up into the trees at that moment, but Pender suddenly felt even more uneasy than before. Had he seen something move? The other men regarded him curiously.
‘What is it, Mr. Pender?’ Captain Mather enquired.
Pender studied the nearby trees for a few seconds longer before replying. ‘Nothing. I thought I saw . . . heard something, that's all.’
The officer looked around nervously. ‘Perhaps we should be moving . . .’
‘There's something up there!’ It was Apercello's voice. ‘I saw it move. It was darting along a branch.’
The soldiers who were nearer to the trees began to back away apprehensively, their firearms pointing into the foliage overhead.
‘There's another!’ shouted Vic Whittaker pointing to a different tree.
All eyes swivelled. They saw a swaying branch, but nothing else.
A sudden rustle to their right had everybody spinning in that direction. A flurry of dead leaves fluttered to the ground, but the tree's branches were still too full of brown foliage for the me
n to see what had caused the downfall.
‘Keep still, everyone,’ Pender ordered. Now scan the trees around us. If you see any movement, don't shout, just point.’
Their heads turned slowly as they studied the treetops, each man scarcely daring to breathe. Pender kept an eye on the men, occasionally, irresistibly, glancing upwards. His eyes riveted on a soldier who suddenly began gesticulating towards an overhead branch.
‘Captain,’ Pender said quietly. ‘One of your men has spotted something.’ He nodded towards the pointing man. The others became aware of their companion's excitement.
‘There it is!’ someone shouted. ‘Creeping along that branch!
It's one of 'em, one of the rats! Jesus, there's another!’
It became too much for the soldier. He raised his rifle and aimed into the tree, his gloved finger pushing its way awkwardly though the trigger guard.
The explosion and consequent high-pitched squeal seemed to act as the signal for the rats to attack. They fell from the trees almost as one, dropping through the air on to the men below, the forest suddenly alive with their screeching squeals and flying black bodies.
Fourteen
Pender rushed forward, crashing through the brittle undergrowth, making towards a fallen soldier who was desperately trying to push away a rat clawing at his chest. All around, the soldiers were struggling with vermin that had landed on their shoulders and heads, several of the men on their knees, others running wildly in circles, completely unnerved by the attack.
The ratcatcher pulled at the creature on the fallen man's chest, grasping its twisting neck and tugging and squeezing at the same time. A sudden weight on his back sent him tumbling forward over the soldier. He kept rolling, hoping to crush the creature, but it clung tenaciously. The pain was excruciating as the rat bit into the tough material of the protective suit, the teeth not piercing but pinching the skin together. As he tried to roll his body free, Pender realised there was not just one, but two rats attacking him. He lay on his back, endeavouring to still their movements with his own weight, reaching behind to grab at their scrabbling legs. He was conscious of the screams around him, the sharp reports of gunfire, the thrashing of bodies both human and animal. More black shapes were dropping from the trees, leaping from the branches, running down the rough bark, filling the forest glade with their numbers.
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