Lilly let go of my hand and put her hands up to cover her ears.
'What is that?' she said loudly to compete with the sound that was rising up around us.
The crowd still didn’t move.
They just stood there.
'My god.' Kate’s voice was quiet and full of fear. 'Look.'
She was still on her knees, and she was staring at Doctor Campbell in front of her. I looked over but couldn’t see what she meant.
'His
I thought she had lost her mind.
And then I looked at Doctor Campbell’s hands.
And then I thought maybe I had lost mine.
NOTE
Kyle pauses here and creates a silence that lasts almost a whole minute. Sounds of breathing can be discerned, but nothing else.
Bernadette Luce has written much about this pause. In 'The Importance of What Isn’t There: Finding Truth in the Gaps' she hypothesises about the reason for this pause, deciding, after a particularly long discourse, that '(T)his is the moment where the power of silence overtakes the weakness of language. Kyle Straker, with his silence, tells us all we need to know about this part of the greater narrative. That it is beyond words, it transcends language, and the gap he leaves as he attempts to find a way to describe what happens next is a silent scream that we hear echoing through the rest of the tape. Gaps always provide a good environment for the manufacture of echoes.'
The fact that Kyle then manages to describe what he saw when he looked at Doctor Campbell’s hands seems to be ignored by Luce.
Chapter 26
At first I thought it was a trick of the light.
With the sun starting its climb down from its high point in the sky towards a resting place on the horizon, it
But it was nothing to do with the light, and all to do with the physical appearance of the doctor’s hands. The skin of his hands was shifting, as if moved by ripples across its surface, or currents below. It was like the skin itself had suddenly become
As I watched in horrified fascination, a sudden rush of tiny bumps spread across his skin like a rash. It looked a little like gooseflesh, and before long there were thousands of the bumps, covering his skin.
Each bump was crowned with a tiny black dot.
The doctor didn’t seem to notice, he just stood there, utterly still while the rash seemed to harden upon the surface of his skin and then, suddenly, began to disgorge thin, whip-like threads from each of the bumps. Skin- colored and minutely thin, these threads sprayed out of the dot at the center of each bump, like water under pressure, or pink silly string from a can. Each thread, or filament, was ten to fifteen centimeters long, and seemed able to support itself, standing out from his flesh like thin, hard fibers.
The filaments began to stretch, pulling themselves further from the bumps that housed them, adding twenty centimeters to their length with every second that passed.
The bass vibration deepened again in the air around us.
The filaments on the doctor’s left hand were reaching out towards the person next to him.
My dad.
The fibers were moving towards my dad’s hand and I had an urge to swat at them, to keep them away from him, to stop them touching him.
Except I didn’t want them touching me.
And then it was too late.
The filaments seemed to sense their proximity to Dad’s hand and homed straight in on it, flailing at the back of his hand and then sticking to it. Where each filament touched, a bump appeared; identical to the bumps that had spread across the doctor’s own skin.
The pores of the bumps opened to accept the filaments, before sucking them inside and sealing themselves closed.
The doctor’s hand was now linked to my dad’s hand by hundreds of flesh-colored threads.
The bass sound ceased abruptly.
'What are they
'They’re mutating,' Kate O’Donnell said.
I shook my head.
Things started coming together in my head.
Digital code. Data. Computer code as a means of invasion. Thin flesh-colored threads. Fiber-optic cables.
'Not mutating,' I said. 'Connecting.'
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
When things start moving, they can
We were still reacting to the bizarre sight of the doctor and my dad connecting when suddenly everyone in the crowd was at it.
Filaments began spreading from person to person, to the right, to the left, behind and in front, connecting the crowd into a vast network, bound together by those unnatural fibers.
As a group we stepped back, edging away from the sight before us.
Doctor Campbell was blinking in a definite pattern of blinks—two quick, one slow, three very quick indeed, two slow, then a lot of fluttering blinks, then the whole pattern repeated again—