female's  arms  with  rope  and  taped  her  mouth  shut.  Her  hands were  covered  with  duct  tape,  and  she  had  wire  wrapped  around  her  neck  as  a  leash. Her  legs  were  shackled  with  comm-line  cable.  She'd  been  cut  and  was  smeared  with gore.

For all that, she walked like a queen, as naked as blue sky. She was not a hadal, Ali realized.

Below the neck, most Homos  of  the  last  hundred  thousand  years  were  virtually  the same, Ali knew. She focused on  the  cranial  shape.  It  was  modern  and sapiens. Except for that, there  was little else to pronounce the girl's humanness.

Every  eye  watched  the  girl.  She  didn't  care.  They  could  look.  They  could  touch. They  could do anything. Every  glance, every  insult made her more superior to them. Her  tattoos  put  Ike's  to  shame.  They  were  blinding,  literally.  You  could  barely  see her  body  for  the  details.  The  pigment  that  had  been  worked  into  her  skin  all  but obliterated its natural brown color. Her belly was round, and her breasts  were  fat,  and she  shook  them  at  one  soldier,  who  pumped  his  head  in  and  out  with  a  downtown rhythm.  There  was no indication she spoke English or any other human language. From  head  to  toe,  she  had  been  embellished  and  engraved  and  bejeweled   and painted. Every  toe was circled  with  a  thin  iron  ring.  Her  feet  were  flat  from  a  lifetime of walking barefoot. Ali guessed she was no more than fourteen.

'We  have  been  advised  by  our  scout,'  Walker  said,  'that  this  child  may  know  what lies ahead. We leave.  Immediately.'

Excluding the loss of Walker's three  mercenaries, it seemed  they  had  escaped  without consequence  from  Cache  III.  They  had  acquired   another   six   weeks   of  food  and batteries,  and had made a  hasty  uplink  with  the  surface  to  let  Helios  know  they  were still in motion.

There  was no sign of pursuit, despite which Ike  pushed  them  thirty  hours  without  a camp. He scared them on. 'We're being hunted,' he warned.

Several  of the scientists who wanted to resign and return  the way  they'd  come,  chief among them Gitner, accused Ike  of collaborating with Shoat to force them deeper.

Ike  shrugged and told them to do whatever  they  wanted. No one dared cross that line.

On  October  2,  a  pair  of  mercenaries  bringing  up  the  rear  vanished.  Their  absence was  not  noticed  for  twelve  hours.  Convinced  the  men  had  stolen  a  raft  and  were

making  a  renegade  bid  to  return  home,  Walker  ordered  five  soldiers  to  track  and capture them. Ike  argued with him. What  caused  the  colonel  to  reverse  his  order  was not  Ike,  but  a  message  over  the  walkie-talkie.  The  camp  stilled,  thinking  the  missing pair might be reporting in.

'Maybe  they  just got lost,' one of the scientists suggested.

Layers  of  rock  garbled  the  transmission,  but  it  was  a  British  voice  coming  over  the radio. 'Someone made a mistake,' he told them. 'You took my  daughter.' The  wild  child made a noise in her throat.

'Who is this?' Walker demanded.

Ali knew. It  was Molly's midnight lover.

Ike  knew. It  was the one who had led him into darkness  once upon a time.  Isaac  had returned.

The  radio went silent.

They  cast downriver and did not make camp for a week.

Every lion comes from its den, All the serpents bite;

Darkness hovers, earth is silent, As their maker rests in lightland.

– 'The Great Hymn to Aten,' 1350 BC

20

DEAD SOULS

San Francisco, California

Headfirst,  the  hadal  drew  himself  from  the  honeycomb  of  cave  mouths.  He  panted feebly, starved,  dizzy, rejecting his weakness.  Rime coated the  perfect  round  openings of concrete pipes. The  fog was so cold.

He could hear the sick and dying in the  pyramided  tunnels.  The  illness  was  as  lethal as  a  sweep  of  plague  or  a  poisoned  stream  or  the  venting  of  some  rare  gas  through their arterial habitat.

His eyes  streamed  pus. This air. This awful light. And  the  emptiness  of  these  voices. The  sounds  were  too  far  away  and  yet  too  close.  There  was  too  much  space.  Your thoughts  had  no  resonance  here.  You  imagined  something  and  the  idea  vanished  into nothingness.

Like  a  leper,  he  draped  hides  over  his  head.  Hunched  inside  the  tattered   skin curtains, he felt better,  more able to see. The  tribe needed him. The  other  adult  males had  been  killed  off.  It  was  up  to  him.  Weapons.  Food.  Water.  Their  search  for  the messiah would have  to wait.

Even  given  the  strength  to  escape,  he  would  not  have  tried,  not  while  children  and women  still  remained  here  alive.  All  together  they  would  live.  Or  all  together  they would  die.  That  was  the  way.  It  was  up  to  him.  Eighteen  years  old,  and  he  was  now their elder.

Who  was  left?  Only  one  of  his  wives  was  still  breathing.  Three  of  his  children.  An image  of  his  infant  son  rose  up  –  as  cold  as  a  pebble.  Aiya.  He  made  the  heartbreak into rage.

The  bodies  of  his  people  lay  where  they  had  pitched  or  reeled  or  staggered.  Their corruption  was  strange  to  see.  It  had  to  be  something  in  this  thin,  strangling  air.  Or the light itself, like an  acid.  He  had  seen  many  corpses  in  his  day,  but  none  so  quickly gone to rot this  way.  A  single  day  had  passed  here,  and  not  one  could  be  salvaged  for meat.

Every  few  steps,  he  rested  his  hands  on  his  knees  to  gasp  for  breath.  He  was  a warrior and hunter. The  ground was as flat as a  pond  top.  Yet  he  could  scarcely  stand on his feet! What a terrible  place this was. He moved on, stepping over  a set  of bones. He  came  to  a  ghostly  white  line  and  lifted  his  drape  of  rags,  squinting  into  the  fog. The  line was too straight to be a game trail. The  suggestion of a  path  raised  his  spirits. Maybe  it led to water.

He followed the line, pausing  to  rest,  not  daring  to  sit  down.  Sit  and  he  would  lie,  lie and  he  would  sleep  and  never  wake  again.  He  tried  sniffing  the  currents  of  air,  but  it was  too  fouled  with  stench  and  odors  to  detect  animals  or  water.  And  you  couldn't trust  your  ears  for  all  the  voices.  It  seemed  like  a  legion  of  voices  pouring  down  upon him. Not one word made sense. Dead souls, he decided.

At its end, the line hit another line that ran right and left into  the  fog.  Left,  he  chose, the  sacred  way.  It  had  to  lead  somewhere.  He  came  to  more  lines.  He  made  more turns, some right, some left... in violation of the Way.

At each turn he  pissed  his  musk  onto  the  ground.  Just  the  same,  he  grew  lost.  How could this be?  A  labyrinth  without  walls?  He  berated  himself.  If  only  he  had  gone  left at every  turn as he had been taught, he would have  inevitably  circled to the  source,  or at  least  been  able  to  retrace  his  path  by  backtracking  right  at  every  nexus.  But  now he  had  jumbled  his  directions.  And  in  his  weakened  condition.  And  with  the  tribe's welfare  dependent  on  him  alone.  It  was  precisely  times  like  these  that  the  teachings were  for.

Still hopeful of finding water  or  meat  or  his  own  scents  in  the  bizarre  vegetation,  he went  on.  His  head  throbbed.  Nausea  racked  him.  He  tried  licking  the  frost  from  the spiky  vegetation,  but  the  taste  of  salts  and  nitrogen  overruled  his  thirst.  The  ground vibrated  with constant movement.

He  did  everything  in  his  power  to  focus  on  the  moment,  to  pace  his  advance  and curtail distracting thoughts. But the luminous white line repeated  itself  so  relentlessly, and  the  altitude  was  so  severe,  that  his  attention  naturally  meandered.  In  that  way, he  failed  to  see  the  broken  bottle  until  it  was  halfway  through  the  meat  of  his  bare foot.

He  cut  his  shriek  before  it  began.  Not  a  sound  came  out.  They'd  schooled  him  well. He  took  the  pain  in.  He  accepted  its  presence  like  a  gracious  host.  Pain  could  be  his friend or it could be his enemy,  depending on his self-control.

Glass!  He  had  prayed  for  a  weapon,  and  here  it  was.  Lowering  his  foot,  he  held  the slippery bottle in his palms and examined it.

It  was  an  inferior  grade,  intended  for  commerce,  not  warfare.  It  didn't  have  the sharpness  of  black

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