‘Daylight bulbs,’ Jenny explained. ‘They’re used in places where people stay indoors for months at a time.’
We ran down the steps after Pitt. Even so, I felt cold. As if instinct warned me danger lay ahead.
‘Don’t leave me alone!’ Adam shouted. He realised that once the door swung shut he’d be alone in that dark corridor with its hooky chains.
A second later we pushed through big double doors into… well… I couldn’t believe my eyes. I just stared.
Pitt whistled. ‘Look at this. It’s all twenty feet underground. And it doesn’t smell like poop. There’s air- conditioning.’
I struggled to take it all in. ‘There’s a kitchen. A lounge. Sofas. And is that a TV?’
‘The screen’s six feet wide,’ breathed Jenny in awe. ‘Look at all those DVDs.’
Adam walked in, gob-smacked. ‘A house underground? How weird is this?’
Jenny said, ‘Last year we went on a school trip to an old military bunker. It had stuff like this. Bedrooms, kitchens, offices. If there’s a nuclear attack that’s where all the generals would stay so they could run things. This one must be kept unmanned until there’s an emergency.’
I checked out the DVDs. A lot were new movies. ‘Maybe the government will stay down here if there’s a war. When they aren’t working they’d come here to relax.’
‘We shouldn’t be in here,’ Adam said. ‘We’re trespassing.’
I shrugged, ‘The door’s open.’
‘We could get into trouble.’
‘Scared?’ Pitt grinned. ‘Let me take your mind off going to jail. Da-dah!’ He swung open a fridge door. Packed with chocolate! Every shelf had neat stacks of chocolate in bright blue wrappers. Right at the front of the confectionary was a single bottle of tomato ketchup, with a dried dribble of sauce stuck to the label. He opened another door to reveal frozen chickens. ‘People could live for months down here.’
Adam followed us in a daze. ‘But that door upstairs? Something clawed at it. Then bust it open. What happens if it comes back?’
Only we were too excited exploring to listen to his warning. But we should have done. We really should. Because what happened next was the most terrifying thing I’ve ever experienced.
Five
We’d discovered that the big TV had a games feature. Jenny and Pitt were figuring out how to get the two silver androids onscreen to shoot down the helicopter gunship when…
‘Hey guys.’ Adam’s eyes bulged in fear. ‘Did anyone hear that?’
Pitt studied the onscreen
‘Bad news, guys. Someone’s coming down the stairs!’
This time we froze.
‘What if we’re caught down here?’ I whispered. ‘It might be the police.’
‘Or soldiers?’
Adam shuddered. ‘Or the thing that smashed open the door.’
That complex of subterranean rooms had been brightly lit. But somehow the light seemed to fade. The bright greens and oranges of the furniture became dull. That big glassy TV screen seemed to resemble a huge alien eye. One that stared with hatred. Or so it seemed to me. A cold, cold sensation crept through my veins. For some reason a pain flared above my right eye. It must be THAT SOUND. I’d heard nothing like it before.
Jenny whispered, ‘It doesn’t sound like ordinary footsteps.’
A soft clump, clump. Shivers ran along my arms.
Pitt turned to face the stairway door. It was closed. Even so, he heard all too clearly. ‘A voice… but can anyone hear what it’s saying?’
‘That’s no human voice.’ I heard a low snarling. Also, I made out words but not in a language I understood.
‘It’s getting closer.’
The door began to creak open.
‘Run!’
‘But where,’ cried Adam.
Six
Panic! We searched for somewhere to hide. Jenny pointed to another door. ‘Through there!’
A sign on it read
Seven
The four of us dashed downstairs. Upstairs, whatever had entered the bunker must be in the lounge.
‘Sheesh,’ Pitt gasped. ‘What is this place?’
Jenny raced into a maze of tunnels. ‘Keep moving. We don’t know if that thing’s going to come after us.’
‘What we gotta do,’ panted Adam, ‘is find a way out. Fast!’
These tunnels were gloomy places. Shadows lurked at every corner. I guessed the tunnels were broad enough to accommodate three buses side-by-side, they were certainly high enough, too, but the length? They stretched faraway into the distance. And did I mention the cold? Breath misted out all white. In the tunnels were huge, hulking forms covered with plastic sheets. Adam was so frightened he hurried forward without pausing to look. Pitt hauled up the sheets.
‘Hey, a Jeep. And check this out… wow! A tank. Look at the size of that gun.’
Jenny whistled. ‘This is where the army must keep spare equipment, just in case the other stuff gets wiped out in an attack.’
Pitt’s eyes shone. ‘I wonder if there are any rockets.’
Jenny started to say, ‘You can forget taking — ’
BANG!
Adam shouted, ‘That’s the door to the stairs — something just bashed it open.’
By now the entrance we’d come through was way off in the distance. Just a speck. But we could make out