by Nick Thacker
She nodded, not wanting to try to explain what she’d felt over the din.
The entire station had moved.
Erik was smiling, no doubt entranced by this bizarre turn of events. Jen thought he was insane. Didn’t he realize what this meant?
She touched his arm. “This place is falling apart!” she shouted.
He immediately shook his head. “No!” he yelled back. “We are okay.”
She waited for him to explain further, but as he opened his mouth, she felt herself being tackled from the side.
“Hey!” she shouted.
Nelson’s linebacker body crushed hers to the ground. She felt the sharp stubble of his 5 o’clock shadow scratching her face, and the weight of his entire frame on hers. “What the hell!” she shouted, gasping for breath.
He shifted off of her but pulled her to her feet. Without waiting for her to ask why, he pushed her forward and yelled to run.
Erik, Saunders, and Carter were already running. Stumbling over the shaky concrete, they finally made it to one of the buildings and ran inside.
Closing the door behind them, Nelson and Jen entered. She punched his chest, still shaken up from his startling tackle. “You want to tell me what that was about?”
The noise from the machine was still deafening, but the sound had subsided substantially now that they were inside a building.
“Sorry. Just making sure you were awake.”
Carter yelled. “Alright, we’ve got bogies coming in from the stairwell; I counted four.”
“They must have split up,” Saunders said.
“Wait. What?” Erik and Jen were still trying to piece together what had just happened.
“The Russians,” Carter explained. “Saunders caught sight of them at the stairs. I don’t think they saw us, but it’s a good thing Nelson got your attention.”
“Yeah,” Nelson said. “Good thing. What were you doing, anyway? Meditating?”
She didn’t answer.
“Okay, let’s figure this out,” Carter said. “I don’t want to deal with them right now, but we might need to. Saunders, Nelson, what do you have left?”
Both the Royal Marines checked their ammunition supply. “I should be good, boss,” Nelson said. Saunders just nodded.
“Right. We need to get back to the stairs. Most likely they’re sweeping each level, starting at the top. That means we’ve got about an hour, maybe two, before they get to fourteen and head back up.”
“What’s the plan?” Nelson asked. He crossed his arms and leaned against a table, expectantly.
“Well, I thought we could see where they are through this window here, wait until they’re far enough away, then run like hell.”
“You know boss, I’m starting to like you more and more,” Nelson said, smiling.
Carter peered through the small window. “Nothing yet, but they should be getting close. My guess is they’re doing a sweep in concentric circles.”
Just as he said that, the door to the small building burst open. Jen shrieked, and Erik fell back against the wall. A Russian soldier entered, saw the group, and raised his gun to fire. He barked into a mouthpiece clamped over his ear, a quick string of clipped Russian words. Before he finished, and before he fired the assault rifle, Saunders smashed his face with the butt of her gun. He fell to his knees, howling in pain, and blood spilled out from his nose.
Nelson strode over and kicked the gun from his hands. He bent down and stripped the man of his sidearm, knife, and communication device. “What’d you do that for?” he asked. He shut the door to the building and looked up at Saunders.
“Really? What would you have done, genius?” she asked.
“It’s way too loud out there. There’s no way they would hear a gunshot.” He winked at her.
She thought for a moment, then fired two shots downward. “Bastard was eyeing me wrong anyway,” she said.
“Eyes up,” Carter said, looking back out the window. “Looks like we’ll need to get back to that first plan.”
Jen looked over his shoulder and saw two soldiers approaching the building from the other side of the circular level. “There’s another one somewhere, right?” she said.
“Should be. And I’d rather go head-to-head with one, not two, so let’s get to those stairs and start heading up.”
“On you, boss,” Saunders said, cracking the door open. He gave a quick nod, and Saunders and Nelson ran out of the building.
Erik and Jen exited next, and Nelson directed them to head to the right, back toward the stairs.
As soon as Jen left the building, her ears were once again bombarded by the noise of the giant rotating machine. She strained to even think straight, but followed Erik and Nelson as they ran toward the stairs.
There was a short wall running behind the row of buildings, situated between them and the stairs to the upper and lower levels. It was about five feet tall and made out of brick. It appeared to have been part of a foundation for another, larger building, as the wall outlined three sides of a large rectangle.
Jen noticed the wall at about the same time as she noticed the woman who stepped out from behind it. She knew the others in front of her wouldn’t hear, but she yelled anyway. “Nelson! Saunders! Look out!”
The woman, dressed in the same black military fatigues as the man who’d entered their building, stood just as Nelson was passing. Saunders was already a few paces ahead, and she kept running, almost at the stairs. Jen could only watch as the woman turned her assault rifle toward the man and fired.
“No!”
The woman’s first shot missed the mark, and Nelson reacted quickly. He dove forward into a roll, and twisted his body around at the last moment. Reaching out with his left arm, he grabbed a loose brick that lay next to the unfinished building. He threw it at the woman’s face. It flew wildly out of control and harmlessly over her shoulder.
He rose to his knees, simultaneously lifting his gun. As he tried to aim, an explosion rocked the left side of Jen’s body. She stumbled sideways, trying to understand what had happened. The vibrations of the machine rose to a tremor, and she almost lost her balance completely.
The woman inside the building foundation staggered backwards, turning toward Jen. She had a contorted look of pain on her face as she tried to raise her weapon once again. Another explosion hit Jen’s ears, and she screamed. No sound came out.
A red circle appeared on the woman’s chest, and she fell down. Jen realized that she, too, was on the ground, kneeling. She tried to shake the ear-splitting pain away as she looked up at Erik. The young man had a nervous grin on his face, but he reached down to offer Jen a hand.
“Wh—what happened?” she said. She couldn’t hear anything, and she wasn’t sure if Erik could either.
She felt Carter’s hand under her other arm, helping her to her feet. He leaned down and spoke into her ear.
“Erik just gave us all a free pass to the stairs, and I suggest we take it.”
She looked down at Erik’s other hand. He was holding a Russian-made assault weapon.
“Grabbed it from that other guy,” he said. “Figured he wouldn’t need it anymore.”
Nelson rose to his feet as well and nodded in Erik’s direction. He mouthed something that looked like “thanks” but the words were lost to the commotion of the rumbling engine behind them.
Together, Jen, Erik, and Carter ran to the stairs behind Nelson. They reached the metal doors just as Saunders burst out. “About time,” she said. “Those other two are on your six.”
Jen chanced a glance behind her as the team fled through the open doors. The remaining two Russian soldiers were sprinting toward the doors, and they didn’t look happy.
“Move out. Let’s get up to Level Nine for now. If we need to keep going up, we can,” Carter explained, “but we’ll also have the option of heading back into the cave system.”
Jen was still watching the Russian men run toward her as she felt the earth below come to a standstill.
She looked at the machine in the center of the level and watched as it came to a slow stop. The roar reduced to a dull noise again, and the gentle shake they’d encountered upon first entering the lower levels once again returned. She didn’t realize that her teeth had been chattering until the wild vibrations ceased and were replaced by the much more docile shake of the power plant.
All over the machine, steam geysers erupted, then fell silent. Clear tubes, previously full of liquid, surged a final time and then depressurized. It was like a giant had been awoken, gone on a rampage, then fell asleep. The gentle rhythm of the humming and shaking replaced the insane earthquake-level grinding.
Chapter 39
THEY REACHED LEVEL NINE IN less than a minute, but the Russian soldiers were on their tail.
And most likely they’d called their counterparts—wherever they were—to help out.
Jen, Erik, Nelson, Carter, and Saunders spilled out onto the floor of Level Nine, tired, beaten, and emotional.
They ran to the first building they found—again a large, white, unmarked building.
Saunders checked the door and found it unlocked. She swung it open and quickly checked inside.
“Looks clear. Let’s go,” she said. The others followed her in. Flashlight beams lit up the walls, and Jen could see they were in some sort of workout facility.
Around the room, elliptical machines, treadmills, and stair machines lined the long walls in two rows. In the center of the giant room, an olympic-sized swimming pool stretched farther than their beams could carry.
They were in a gymnasium.
Jen found a map hanging on a wall, below a sign that read “Information,” and she approached it and examined.
“We’re in the station’s gym,” she said, “and it looks like this entire level is dedicated to recreation. There’s a hiking path around the perimeter and a climbing wall in the center.”
“Hey look!” Nelson said, pointing to another large building adjacent to theirs. “A movie theater and bowling alley!”
Jen thought he was joking, but he stared at the location on the map in silence, a look of regret on his face.
“The Russians are right behind us,” Carter said, “but they’ll have to start from scratch on each level—that should buy us a couple hours, max. We need to get Mark, but we really need to figure out what that machine down there is.”
Jen agreed, though she had a feeling their escapade here was a little shortsighted. She had the sneaking suspicion they’d bitten off a little more than they could chew. “That machine clearly isn’t a power plant,” she said.
Erik disagreed. “It is, actually, though it is not just a power plant.”
They all looked his direction.
“I had a feeling this would be case when I first came across the plans up on the main level,” he said. “The plant has the usual features—intake, injection pumps, and it is cooled by the surrounding seawater. Further, I believe it alone has been the sole source of power throughout this entire facility.”
“But I have also gotten the impression that the power plant serves another purpose, as well.”
“And what purpose is that?” Carter asked.
“Well, that is why Ms. Adams is here,” Erik responded.
“Who, me?” Jen said. “I have no idea why they wanted me here.”
“Great,” Nelson said. “Sounds like we’re getting somewhere.”
Carter gave the tall man a look that could only have one meaning. Nelson didn’t speak again.
“Jen,” Carter said, “I understand you’ve got a lot more at stake than the rest of us. But we need your help here, okay?”
She nodded.
“What can you tell us about the work you were doing with Dr. Storm?”
“That’s just it. I don’t know of anything we were working on that would be useful here. It was mainly research and class preparation. Even when I went to his office, there wasn’t anything there that seemed odd or out of place.”
She thought for a moment. “This machine. Whatever it is, it’s not just a geothermal power plant.” She looked toward Erik for confirmation. “But part of it is.”
He nodded.
“So,” she continued, “we can assume that it’s sitting on top of an active geothermal site, correct? I mean, they wouldn’t bother building one unless there’s some activity in the area.”
“Right,” Erik added. “The vents provide the power, and provide some of the initial pressure needed to run the plant. Without the steam, there is no heat, and therefore no power.”
“Exactly,” Jen said. “So we can assume that we’re sitting on top of a thermal vent in the ocean…” Jen’s head snapped up.
“What is it?” Erik asked.
“Erik, I just realized. We’re at the bottom of the ocean.”
“Wait,” Nelson said, “you forgot there was five miles of ocean sitting on us?”
“No, I mean, I remembered, but I didn’t associate that with—”
“The power plant!” Erik shouted. “We are resting on what could be the thinnest section of Earth’s crust!” He looked around the others. “Most of the crust layer beneath continental locations is around twenty miles thick, and beneath ocean, around three to five miles thick. Obviously, that depends on the location, and it’s an educated guess at best.”
“Sounds great,” Nelson said. “Five miles of ocean pressing down on us, and five miles below us protecting us from the fiery hell of Earth’s core.”
“Actually, the crust sits on the mantle, which is made of superheated rock and magma.”
Carter raised his eyebrows, silently begging Jen to get to the point.
“I didn’t put it together at first,” she continued. “This station, the power plant, the geothermal activity that must be present in the area, and finally…”
“The machine,” Erik said.
“The machine. It’s some kind of gigantic drill.”
Carter nodded slowly, trying to make sense of it all.
“A drill?” Saunders asked.
“It has to be,” Jen said. “It makes so much sense now, really. Think about it: the spinning, the conical shape, the location.”
“And it’s drilling into the mantle,” Erik said.
“Jen, you said the crust here is likely still around three miles thick,” Carter said. “That means there’s no way that drill can reach the mantle.”
“It doesn’t need to,” Erik said. “This station is on a rock shelf protruding from one of the walls on the side of a massive trench, as you will recall from the briefing on the submarine. But we are probably at the bottom of the trench, and therefore close to the location where the trench itself grows upward from the sea floor.”
He made a “V” with his hands, with his fingertips pressed together and pointing straight down. “This drill was not designed to actually tap into the mantle, but merely push the two trench walls far enough apart that a schism is formed.”
Jen nodded along as he explained. “It’s a drill that isn’t meant to dig a hole, but one that’s basically operating like a giant, slow wedge—pushing two plates apart enough to crack the crust that’s underneath.”
She suddenly realized something else.
“It’s working, too. Remember that wild shaking just before the drill finished spinning? I think the research station itself sunk into the shelf. The drill is spinning, but it’s pulling the base down with it.”
Carter moved over the wall opposite the information desk in the entrance of the gymnasium, and sat down on a bench. He wiped his forehead with a hand, then looked up. If Jen thought Carter’s demeanor and expression was usually serious, the look he wore now was ten times more intense.
“Jen, Erik, thank you,” he said. Then he looked at all of them individually for a brief moment before starting again. “We need to get back down to that machine. Whatever it’s there for, it’s obviously fully operational and currently doing its job. And that means it’s only a matter of time before it fini
shes its job.”
Jen knew where he was going. “It’s going to break a hole in the Earth’s crust,” she said, her voice almost a whisper.
Carter just nodded silently.
From somewhere outside, they heard the squawk of a walkie-talkie and then shouts.
“They’re here,” Saunders said. “Back door. Now!”
They stood and ran through the gym, careful to stay between the lines of machines, away from the pool’s edge. About a quarter of the way to the back of the building, Saunders veered right and examined an emergency exit.
“The sign’s off, and I don’t think there’s an alarm activated,” she said.
Carter spoke. “We don’t have time anyway. Let’s take our chances.”
She pushed it open and ran out, checking both directions before sprinting toward another building—the combined movie theater and bowling alley they’d seen on the map—and the rest followed.
Saunders pulled on the door handle at the back of the building and was surprised to find it unlocked as well. She opened it and started climbing the stairs inside the theater. Jen stayed behind Erik and Nelson, and they followed Saunders to the top of the theater and out to the lobby.
They found an abandoned snack bar, overflowing trash cans, and some empty movie poster frames hanging on the walls. Other than the silence and lack of lighting, the theater seemed like it would be fully functional—out of date, but in working order.
Jen stopped and caught her breath from the exertion of sprinting to another building and up a flight of stairs. She looked up and saw Nelson resting with his hands on his knees and Erik breathing gulps of air. Saunders was completely unfazed, and was checking her gun and sidearm. She looked back at Jen and gave her a nod of approval.
Then she frowned.
Jen’s blood froze. “What?” she said.
Saunders clicked a round into the chamber. “Where’s Carter?”
Chapter 40
MARK AWOKE TO A SPLITTING headache.
How long have I been out?
He kept his eyes closed and listened to his surroundings. A voice mumbled a question somewhere in the room on his left side, but Mark couldn’t hear a response. The gas must have knocked him out, but thankfully he hadn’t inhaled enough of it for it to have lasted long enough.