When fear
The AUV had closed to within five meters of the hardsuit pilot and leveled in a stationary position. Cedric noticed a small lenticular window on its underside, a nubby black projection at its front end, and did not like the looks of either.
Then an opening appeared on the starboard side of the vehicle’s flat hull. Cedric would never know whether the hatch, lid, panel, or whatever it was had recessed into the hull or sprung inward like a trap door — it happened too quickly for him to tell. The opening appeared. And before he could react, a compartment
The twenty or so dispersing spheres looked to him like metal ball bearings, although they were somewhat larger than racquetballs in size. Each of them had four tiny screw propellers — one on the upper axis, one on the lower, another two on opposite points across its diameter.
His eyes wide with amazement, Cedric thought crazily of a toy called a Pokeball he’d once gotten his youngest nephew for his birthday, something that opened up like an egg to release a little cartoon imp.
He was still thinking of it when the spheres assembled into tight cluster formation and came swarming toward the spot where he stood with his dive partner.
“Cedric… what’s going on?” Tension brimmed in Marius’s voice. “What are those things?”
Cedric couldn’t waste an instant with guesswork. He switched to the diver-to-surface freq.
“
He got an earful of silence in response.
“This is a mayday,
More dead silence from topside.
Still nothing. And the rapidly moving spheres were almost on them.
Cedric abandoned the radio, looked at Marius. He had no shred of a plan in his head, and the knowledge that their thrusters weren’t designed for speed hardly inspired confidence one would come to him. But Cedric had been a navy man for a very long time, and he did not like it at all that the lens-shaped aperture and black projection on the minisub were reminiscent of the guidance and homing packets of seeker torpedoes.
The robotic swarm meant danger.
“We have to get away,” he said. The declaration sounded blandly, hatefully obvious. “Try to—”
They were the last words he managed to get out of his mouth before the spheres came swooping down on them.
He felt three quick, clapping thumps on the back of his thruster unit, a fourth against the POD encasing his right hand, followed by a fifth and sixth on his left. There were some hard claps to his chest and the side of his neck, and the next instant a staggering
“My God!” Marius shouted over the comlink. “They’re sticking to us.
More of the obvious. The globes were clinging wherever they struck. Cedric could see them becoming affixed to the same areas of Marius’s hardsuit as his own, fastening themselves to its thruster pack and dome collar joint, bunching onto the prehensors of both extremities like crops of giant metal berries. He simultaneously realized they
Again Cedric had no chance to wonder what this implied. He was far too cognizant that if either of their hulls suffered a breach, its internal environment would be displaced by sixty atmospheres of pressure — a compression so vastly beyond human tolerance that it would pulp its occupant’s internal organs and burst the very walls of his blood cells.
He felt another of the spheres hit his back. How many were on him now? Ten, twelve?
Beside him, Marius was close to panic. His arms rose and fell against heavy water resistance, rose and fell, flapping in what looked like slow motion as he tried to shake the spheres from his gripper claws.
Cedric knew he was scarcely further away from losing his composure.
“Marius, hold still, I’ll try to pull them off you,” he said. “We need to stay calm, try and get them off
Marius met his gaze through their rounded dome ports, gathered his wits enough to stop the furious paddling of his arms.
Cedric reached out to Marius with his lefthand prehensor, testing its mobility with his individuated finger control rings. He was somewhat amazed to find that he could still open and close it despite the weight of the spheres attached to two of its four stainless-steel claws.
He clamped the gripper around a sphere lodged at the base of Marius’s neck, gave it a strong tug. It didn’t budge even a little. He tugged harder, microelectromechanical sensors inside the control rings transferring his exertion to the claw as increased output. The sphere would not yield, and now Marius was screaming again, unnecessarily reminding him that it was sticking, it was
The sphere finally detached from the collar joint — but by just the slightest bit. A few centimeters at most before clamping right back
All in a moment’s span his relief had budded, bloomed, and turned to ash gray wilt as fear blew through his heart in a killing frost. He could neither separate the sphere from Marius, nor himself from the sphere, which now joined them as if…
Cedric blinked with the last meaningful realization of his life. Another that seemed so glaringly evident, he could only wonder how it had not dawned on him much sooner.
“They’re magnetized,” he heard himself tell Marius in an almost matter-of-fact tone.
Marius’s eyes were full of terror and confusion behind his view port. In fact, it almost seemed to Cedric that his features had drawn together into a bold, hanging question mark.
Cedric was wondering just what sort of answers were expected of him when the spheres fastened to the hardsuits exploded, and the rushing sea took his thoughts.
“Well, Casimir? My curiosity pesters.”
“We have total success. The neodymium hunter swarm has acquired and neutralized its targets.”
The yacht owner’s eyes were brilliant ice. “Would damage imagery be too tall a request?”
Casimir’s attention held on the monitor and control boards.
“It could be done,” he said. “The killfish has been recalled beyond the outer edge of the blast zone, and its backscatter sensors show a high density of suspended particulate matter within the zone. But we could task it —”
“No need, bring it back in,” the yacht owner said. “Laziness of imagination is a common failing in this day and age, Casimir. We mustn’t allow ourselves to submit.”
“As you wish.”
The yacht owner reclined on his pale orange sofa, his bone-thin form barely impressing weight into its cushions.
“And his spirit moved upon the face of the waters,” he said in a near undertone.
Casimir’s head turned briefly to regard him over a white uniform epaulet.
“What was that, sir?”
The yacht owner passed his fingertips through the air.
“Old words from an old and very fascinating story,” he said.
TWO