‘Well. On our way home,’ he said. He held out a cup. ‘You’re probably not in a mood to celebrate. It’s good champagne, though.’
‘Where’s your radio?’
‘Why would I need to carry it? We’re out of here.’
‘Jane is heading back to the island. She’s gone to find Punch.’
Sian and Ghost ran down the corridor. Ghost struggled to zip his coat.
‘Why the fuck didn’t you come and get me?’
‘We couldn’t find you. There wasn’t time to wait.’
‘How long has she been gone?’
‘About ten minutes. She made it to the island. I lost sight of her once she reached the coast.’
‘I’m going after her.’
‘She said no. She said you would want to follow her, and she said no. She reckoned it would be easier on her own.’
‘Fuck it. I’m going anyway.’
They ran across the deck. Ghost pulled on gauntlets. Sian handed him an axe.
‘I’m not staying here alone.’
‘We need someone to stay behind and operate the crane. You want to help? You want to be crucial? Stay in that cab. Watch for our flare, and be ready to lift us off the ice.’
Sian rotated the crane jib towards a gantry. Ghost stood on the walkway. He embraced the half-tonne hook as it swung towards him. He stepped on to the hook and wrapped an arm around the chain. He gave a thumbs up. Sian swung him over the railing. He looked down. Two-hundred-metre drop on to the ice. He gripped the chain hard.
Sian lowered the hook.
Rampart was ripping a gouge in the polar crust half a kilometre wide. The pristine snow field already scarred by a long wake of bubbling seawater and bobbing ice plates. The forward legs of the rig shunted a continual avalanche of ice-rubble ahead of them. Ghost would be lowered in front of churning snow and ice-boulders. He estimated he would have less than ten seconds to run clear or be pulverised and submerged.
The moment the hook touched down and dragged on the ice Ghost stepped clear and started to run. He fell. He had forgotten to buckle crampon teeth to his boots. He slipped and skidded as he tried to run clear of the advancing refinery. It was a waking nightmare. Trying to sprint, trying to cover ground, sliding on glass. He was eclipsed by shadow as the rig bore down on him. The roar of shattering ice was deafening. You’ve made a simple, stupid mistake, he thought, and it’s going to kill you.
Moment of decision. Should he turn back and try to reach the hook? Or keep running and try to reach Jane?
He ran towards the island.
The ice beneath him began to crack and buckle. He hopscotched across tilting, bobbing plates. He threw himself clear of the approaching avalanche. He rolled and watched the massive gantries and girders of the refinery pass by high above him. A dream image. Towers and crenellations. A floating sky city.
He got to his feet and faced the island. He picked up his axe. He took two paces then the ice beneath him cracked and broke. He slid waist-deep into Arctic water. Sudden, heart-stopping cold. He scrabbled at the snow. Gauntiets grasped and raked, clawed for some kind of purchase.
Instinct saved him. The axe lay beside him. He reached, stretched until his fingertips snagged the shaft. He slammed the axe into the ice and hauled himself out of the sea. He lay shivering like an epileptic seizure.
He got to his feet. He still faced a choice. He could run to the island and try to help Jane. Hope vigorous movement would warm him up. Or he could radio Sian and get her to haul him back to the warmth and safety of Rampart.
‘Get the job done,’ he murmured.
He decided to head for the island. He couldn’t pull the axe free so he left it behind.
Despite his predicament, despite his viciously tight bonds, Punch fell asleep. One moment he was leaning with his back to the cell wall, trying to stay awake, stay alert. Next moment he was sunk in dark dreams in which he screamed and squirmed as he was slowly crushed by strange machines.
He was jolted awake. Footsteps. Key turn. Nikki opened the door, grabbed him by the ankle and dragged him into the corridor. She hauled him down a tiled passageway.
Green walls. Flickering strip-lights.
‘What the fuck are you doing?’
No reply. She didn’t even look him in the eye.
The passage met a wide, ribbed tunnel, big enough for a subway train.
She tied him to a wall girder. She left a lamp burning on the tunnel floor. She left.
A man lay tied to the opposite wall of the tunnel. He was dressed in polar survival gear and bound hand and foot. Nail. Bruised face. Split lip. His right sleeve was ripped and bloody. White nylon stuffing spilled from the quilted fabric. A wound caused, Punch guessed, when he and Nail fought for possession of a shotgun.
Nail was lashed to the girder by rope tied round his chest. Punch couldn’t tell if he was dead or alive.
Punch looked around. Raw rock buttressed by girders. At a guess, some kind of excavation tunnel. The bunker was half- built. Plenty of wide access passageways throughout the complex to get mine machinery below ground.
‘Hey. Hey, Nail.’
No reply.
Punch squinted into darkness. Something round in the shadows, like a giant cannonball. An open hatch. The capsule. Soviet space debris. Fell to earth miles away. How did it get here? Did Hyperion passengers retrieve the object? Drag it across the ice? Could the mindless mutants be guided and controlled?
He whistled.
‘Hey. Nail.’
Nothing.
Why leave them by the capsule? Did Nikki expect something to crawl out and feed? Ghost said he tossed a thermite grenade into the capsule interior. Nothing could have survived.
‘Hey,’ shouted Punch. ‘Nail. Nail, you fuck.’
Nail slowly looked up. Exhausted, frightened eyes.
‘What’s going on?’ asked Punch. ‘What does she want?’
Nail looked him over, but didn’t reply. His hands were bound in front of him, rather than behind his back.
He spat a fifty kopeck coin into his palm and started to sharpen it against the tunnel floor. There was a deep scratch in the concrete. He had been sharpening the coin for a while. Maybe he hid it in his mouth each time Nikki passed by.
‘So what’s the deal?’ asked Punch. ‘Is she going to eat us or what?’
Nail didn’t reply. He continued to sharpen the coin.
‘Guess it didn’t work out. You and her.’
Nail tested the edge of the sharpened coin. He put the coin between his teeth and tried to tear open his wrist, quickly drew his arm back and forth across the crude blade.
‘Dude, what the fuck are you doing?’ demanded Punch.
Nail drew blood but couldn’t reach an artery. Either the coin was too blunt or he didn’t have the courage to kill himself. He let the coin drop to the ground. He leaned his forehead against the wall and sobbed.
‘Talk to me,’ said Punch. ‘Say something, you dumb fuck. What the hell is going on? Has she got us lined up for dinner? Is that it?’
‘Worse. Way worse.’
‘Like what? What’s on her mind?’
‘I knew she was nuts. Talking to herself. But I had no idea. She’s pure darkness. She’s sicker, way sicker than those infected fucks. She’s a black hole. Total anti-matter.’
‘Is she infected? Does she have this disease?’
‘No.’