you’ll be out of here by the end of the week.”
“Sir?” A low-lev exec, probably accounts payable in some square-state branch, raised his hand. “What kind of core was it? I mean—Are we walking into a hot pop? I want to have kids someday, and—”
Balfour shook his head, chuckling. “No, no, I assure you all, you’re in no danger. The engine was a simple— Hope? Help me out?”
“It was a pebble bed reactor. Just a big splash of pyrolytic graphite and helium. The hot pocket’s halved down to almost nothing.” She circled an area of the projected schematic. “We waited six months to bring you in, to make sure it was safe. Diablo just needs the human touch before they can get back in and start digging again.”
West followed Maggie’s gaze. She stared at Richter. West could have sworn that Richter was acting. Some people can’t contain lies.
“The initial blast rocked the mine, so watch your step on entry. The walls and floors are a little tilted. You’ll be issued protective gear, so don’t worry about making babies.” Hope looked over and smiled at the low-lev, and a nervous laugh sputtered to life around the room. “And so—” she motioned to two guards at the chamber door, who cycled it open. A line of gofers carrying crates of rubberized protective suits came in. “Everybody suit up, so you can begin. Good luck, Assault K. Stay safe down there.”
West noted a glare behind Richter’s eyes as he looked at the woman.
The display blinked off, and Benton caught the marble. The three left the chamber to the sound of squeaking rubber being pulled over street clothes.
“Michael? We’ll catch up to you.”
Balfour winked at Richter as he continued down the shaft.
“James?”
“I can’t believe we’re fucking going through with this.”
Benton exhaled slowly. “There’s no other—”
“There’s plenty of other ways.”
“The probes didn’t tell us anything. We need human—”
“Rats. You need rats for the maze. We don’t know what that thing is, but we’re still sending people in to get slaughtered.”
She bristled at the word. “The last two groups—I wouldn’t call it a slaughter.”
“Still ended up dead.”
“No.” Her eyebrows narrowed defensively. “Two lived.”
“And then fucking died.”
She started walking again. “Why did you even bring me here? If you don’t believe in what we’re doing?”
He grabbed her hand and anchored her in place. “Because you’re brilliant. I thought you’d figure it out. I didn’t think anyone else’d have to die.”
“I’m sorry to disappoint you.”
He let go of her hand in frustration, raising his own helplessly. “You haven’t disappointed me.”
“Will you still say that when the K group comes out dead?”
“I don’t know.”
She walked away.
Jennings had gone home. Apparently his wife was sick. Cervera sat in his chair. None of the engineers seemed to mind.
“It can’t be easy for you, I know.” She said, half-watching the eyelines begin to light up. “Being here.”
“Hmm?” Michael Balfour turned away from watching a disembodied conversation between two of the fodders.
“It can’t be easy, seeing those two all over each other.” The unspoken implication.
“James needed help. You, too. It was the least I could do.”
“Who would have thought, all of us back together again?”
“Not all of us.”
The room was suddenly a torrent of chair squeaks and throat clears.
“You could have said no.”
“No. I couldn’t turn this down.”
“Couldn’t turn her down?”
“Speak of the devil,” Cervera offered seats to the returning Richter and Benton. “Judas cow ready?”
“The herd’s getting suited. The lead’s been briefed. He thinks we’re after gold. Enthusiastic sort. They’ll follow him.” Benton sat between Cervera and Balfour. Richter noticed. He took a chair as far away as the room allowed.
“Eyelines?” Cervera performed a quick survey.
“Allll—up.” An engineer activated the last of the fifty.
“Good.” Cervera leaned forward. She was starting to like this dance. “Send in K group.”
“No good,” Maggie grumbled. “They’re lying to us.” She adjusted the tiny camera mount banded to her head. “And I don’t fuckin’ care if you’re listenin’.” She let the microphone boing back into place.
West grinned as he locked his bubble in place, the cool wash of canned air displacing his internal warmth. He grinned, but he felt it, too.
“All right, everyone. Ready?” The low-lev was a little too eager. West thought he knew something. “Assault K, move out.” Authority fills a void, especially at the prospect of gold.
Walking down canted corridors.
The groan of a metallish bulkhead.
“What the—”
The world became light, and Maggie fell to the ground.
Screaming, life in gaps, brilliant white light, brilliant white light. West knew he was screaming, knew it, but couldn’t hear himself, the room was so light. A ball at the center, a light, and fingers, reaching, grasping. He didn’t exactly have to throw himself to the ground; he fell beside Maggie. The last thing he saw was the light, that light, reaching out and through the fifty, K group, eyes open, lances of white erupting from the ball, the ball at the center, reaching, and
“I’m going down there.” Richter’s chair tipped as he stood up. “This has to stop.”
“James—”
“Don’t fucking
“What do we—”
“I’m going, too.” And Hope Benton did.
The eyelines were dying, one by one by ten.
“Mike, get on the—”
“Sorry, Tony. I have to stop them.” Balfour ran.
Cervera wasn’t going anywhere.
It was a heartbeat.
West thought he was still alive.
Blood. Gushing from his nose, thin, hesitant trails from his eyes. The worst headache. He rolled to his side and vomited across the composite floor. There were bodies around him, and something had changed. There were bodies around him, and one was alive.
Maggie coughed beside him, a wracking, horrible affair. He crawled the feet to her, the distance seeming miles.