There  was nothing but water  overhead,  and it was leaking through the ocean floor. '

'They've  got to be here,' said Shoat.

'You've  been  carrying  your  own  rangefinder  around,'  Walker  said.  'Let's  see  if  that works any better.'

Shoat backed away  and grasped at the flat leather  pouch  strung  around  his  neck.  'It won't work for this kind of thing,' he said.  'It's  a  homing  device,  specially  made  for  the transistor beacons I'm planting along the way.  For an emergency  only.'

'Maybe  the cylinders hung up on a shelf,' someone suggested.

'We're  looking,'  said  Walker.  'But  these  rangefinders  are  calibrated  precisely.  The cylinders  should  be  within  two  hundred  feet.  We  haven't  seen  a  sign  of  them.  No cables. No drill scars. Nothing.'

'One  thing's  certain,'  said  Spurrier.  'We're  not  going  anywhere  until  those  supplies are found.'

Ike  took his kayak  downriver to investigate  smaller strands. 'If you  find  them,  leave them.  Don't  touch  them.  Come  back  and  tell  us,'  Walker  instructed  him.  'Somebody's got you in their crosshairs, and I don't want  you  close  to  our  cargo  when  they  pull  the trigger.'

The  expedition broke into search parties, but found nothing. Frustrated,  Walker  put some of his mercenaries to work shoveling at the coarse sand in case the cylinders  had burrowed under. Nothing. Tempers  began to fray,  and few wanted to hear one fellow's calculations about how to ration what  little  food  remained  until  they  reached  the  next cache, five weeks  farther  on.

They  suspended the search to have  their  meal  and  rejuvenate  their  perspective.  Ali sat  with  a  line  of  people,  their  backs  against  the  rafts,  facing  the  waterfall.  Suddenly Troy  said, 'What about there?'  He was pointing at the waterfall.

'Inside the water?'  asked Ali.

'It's the one place we haven't looked.'

They  left their food and walked across  to  the  edge  of  the  tributary  feeding  from  the waterfall's  base,  trying  to  see  through  the  mist  and  plunging  water.  Troy's  hunch spread, and others joined them.

'Someone has to go in,' Spurrier  said.

'I'll do it,' said Troy.

By now Walker had come over.  'We'll take  it from here,' he said.

It   took   another   quarter-hour   to   prepare   Walker's   'volunteer,'   a   huge,   sullen teenager  from  San  Antonio's  West  Side  who'd  lately  started  branding  himself  with hadal  glyphs.  Ali  had  heard  the  colonel  tongue-lashing  him  for  godlessness,  and  this scout  duty  was  obviously  a  punishment.  The  kid  was  scared  as  they  tied  him  to  the end of a rope. 'I don't do waterfalls,' he kept  saying. 'Let El Cap do it.'

'Crockett's gone,' Walker shouted into the noise. 'Just keep  to the wall.'

Hooded  in  his  survival  suit,  wearing  his  night-vision  glasses  more  as  diving  goggles than for the low lux boost, the boy  started  in,  slowly  atomizing  in  the  mist.  They  kept feeding rope into the waterfall, but after  a  few  minutes  there  was  no  more  tow  on  the line. It  went slack.

They  tugged at  the  rope  and  ended  pulling  the  whole  fifty  meters  back  out.  Walker held  the  end  up.  'He  untied  himself,'  Walker  shouted  to  a  second  'volunteer.'  'That means there's  a hollow  inside.  This  time,  don't  untie.  Give  three  tugs  when  you  reach the chamber, then attach it to a rock or something. The  idea is to make a  handline,  got it?'

The  second  soldier  set  off  more  confidently.  The  rope  wormed  in,  deeper  than  the first time. 'Where's he going in there?'  Walker said.

The  line  came  taut,  then  seized  harder.  The  belayer  started  to  complain,  but  the rope suddenly yanked  from his hands and its tail whipped off into the mist.

'This isn't tug-of-war,'  Walker lectured his  third  scout.  'Just  anchor  your  end.  A  few

moderate  pulls  will  signal  us.'  In  the  background,  several  mercenaries  were  amused. Their  comrades  in  the  mist  were  having  some  fun  at  the  colonel's  expense.  The tension relaxed.

Walker's  third  man  stepped  through  the  curtain  of  spray  and  they  started  to  lose sight  of  him.  Abruptly  he  returned.  Still  on  his  feet,  he  came  hurtling  from  the  mist, backpedaling in a frenzy.

It  happened  quickly.  His  arms  flailed,  beating  at  some  unseen  weight  on  his  front, suggesting  a  seizure.  Backward  momentum  drove  him  into  the  crowd.  People  spilled to the sand. He landed deep in their midst, among their legs, and he spun spine up  and arched, heaving away  from the ground. Ali couldn't see what happened next.

The  soldier  let  loose  a  deep  bellow.  It  came  from  his  core,  a  visceral  discharge.

'Move away,  move away,' Walker yelled, pistol in hand, wading through the crowd. The  soldier sagged, facedown, but kept  twitching. 'Tommy?'  called a troop.

Brutally,  Tommy  came  erect,  what  was  left  of  him,  and  they  saw  that  his  face  and torso had been ripped to scraps. The  body keeled over  backward.

That  was when they  caught sight of the hadal.

She was squatting in the sand where  Tommy  had carried her,  mouth  and  hands  and dugs brilliant with blood and their lights, blinded, as white as the abyssal  fish  they  had seen. Ali's view  lasted just  a  fraction  of  a  second.  A  thousand  years  old,  that  creature. How could such a withered thing accomplish the butchery  they  had just seen?

With a  cry,  the  crowd  fell  away  from  the  apparition.  Ali  was  knocked  to  the  ground and  pummeled  by  the  stampede.  Above  her,  soldiers  fumbled  at  their  weapons.  A boot glanced off  her  head.  Overhead,  Walker  came  crashing  through  the  frantic  herd, more shadow than man among the wheeling lights, his handgun blazing.

The  hadal  leaped  –  impossibly  –  twenty  feet  onto  the  shield  of  olive  stone.  In  the strobing patchwork  of  lights,  she  was  ghastly  white  and  rimed,  it  seemed,  with  scales or  filth.  This  was  the  repository  for  the  mother  tongue?  Ali  was  confused.  Over  the past  months  they  had  humanized  the  hadals  in  their  discussions,  but  the  reality  was more  like  a  wild  animal.  Her  skin  was  practically  reptilian.  Then  Ali  realized  it  was skin cancer, and the hadal's flesh was ulcerated and checkered  with scabs.

Walker  was  fearless,  running  alongside  the  wall  and  firing  at  the  scampering  hadal. She  was  making  for  the  waterfall,  and  Ali  guessed  it  was  the  sound  that  was  her compass.  But  the  stone  grew  slick  with  spray  or  the   holds  were   polished  off  or Walker's bullets were  striking the mark. She fell. Walker and his men closed  in  around her, and all Ali could see were  eruptions of light from muzzle flash.

Dazed  from  the  kick,  Ali  crawled  to  her  feet  and  started  over  to  the  cluster  of excited  soldiers. She understood from their  jubilation  that  this  was  the  first  live  hadal any  of  them  had  ever  seen,  much  less  fought.  Walker's  crack  team  of  mercenaries were  no more familiar with the enemy  than she was.

'Back to the boats,' Walker told her.

'What are you going to do?'

'They've  taken  our cylinders,' he said.

'You're going in there?'

'Not until we've  pacified the waterfall.'

She  saw  soldiers  prepping  the  bigger  miniguns  mounted  to  their  rafts.  They  were eager  and  grim,  and  she   dreaded   their   enthusiasm.   From   her   passages   through African  civil  wars,  Ali  knew  firsthand  that  once  the   juggernaut   got  loose,  it  was irrevocable.  This  was  happening  too  quickly.  She  wanted  Ike  here,  someone  who knew the  territory  and  could  measure  the  colonel's  hot  backlash.  'But  those  two  boys are still inside.'

'Madam,'  Walker  answered,  'this  is  a  military  affair.'  He  motioned,  and  one  of  the mercenaries escorted her by  the arm to where  the  last  of  the  scientists  were  entering their  boats.  Ali  clambered  aboard  and  they  pushed  off  from  shore  and  watched  the

show at a distance.

Walker  trained  all  their  spotlights  on  the  waterfall,  illuminating  the  tall  column  so that  it  looked  like  a  vast  glass  dragon  clinging  to  the  rock,  respirating.  He  directed them to open fire into the water  itself.

Ali  was  reminded  of  the  king  who  tried  to  order  the  ocean's  waves  to  stop.  The water  swallowed  their  bullets.  The  white  noise  devoured  their  gunfire,  turning  it  into strings  of  snapping  firecrackers.  They  laid  on  with  their  gunfire,  and  the  water  tore open in liquid gouts, only to heal instantly. Some of the special

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