The Creeping Kelp
The Creeping Kelp
by William Meikle
The scale of pollution in all our oceans is vast. The majority of the plastic
—80%— comes directly from land. Whales, dolphins, turtles, seals and
countless other marine life have become victims of land litter. Marine
debris is found floating in all the world’s oceans, even near the Polar
Regions. It also contaminates the seabed. It is found everywhere, from the
beaches of industrialized countries to the shores of the remotest,
uninhabited islands. Because it doesn’t break down, such pollution can
linger for years, affecting marine environments far from where it entered
the ocean.
July 21st - It begins
Dave Noble had just pulled up the last but one of his sample bottles when
thin, grey smoke began to waft from the four-stroke engine of the Zodiac.
That’s all I need.
He had to clamber over the bottles to reach the helm, barking his shin on
the raised fibreglass ridge that bisected the dinghy. He cursed, long and
loudly. It didn’t make him feel much better.
The smoke had turned darker now and the engine rattled and whined. He
switched it off and pushed the button that raised the propeller from the
water. The dinghy seemed stable enough in the water, so he risked leaving
the steering wheel and headed to the rear for a closer look. Black, almost
oily goop hung from the blades in ropy strands.
Blasted weed.
At first glance, this particular area of the North Atlantic seemed serene; a
sheet of blue glass laid under an azure sky, the water only intermittently
ruffled by a breeze so faint it could hardly be felt; the water gently lapping
on the side of the dinghy. But after two weeks of study, Noble knew that
the surface hid a multitude of sins.
And all of them caused by the activities of a technological society.
The rotational currents created by the North Atlantic Gyre drew in waste
material, mainly plastic bottles, from the coastal waters off both North
Africa and Western Europe. As this material is captured, wind-driven
currents gradually move the debris toward a certain area of the ocean,
trapping it inside swirling vortices. Once there, they coagulate into ever-
thickening soup of degrading plastic that now pollutes an area the size of
Wales.
And things aren’t getting any better.
This was the study team – and Noble’s third year in the area. It was
already obvious that the amount of plastic suspended in the water had
increased rapidly in the last twelve months. Indeed, in many areas of the
affected region, the overall concentration of plastics was greater than the
concentration of plankton. Plastic was now the main item on the menu
across the whole ecological niche. It was not yet apparent what effect this
would have in the long term, but Noble suspected that no good would come
of it. Fishermen were already reporting strange mutations turning up at
intervals in their catches and even the Herring Gulls, supreme scavengers as
they were, stayed well away from this stretch of water. Noble believed that
it was only a matter of years before the whole place became an aquatic
desert, no less dead than the sands of the Sahara.
He had more to worry about at this moment though. The black goop
proved resistant to all his attempts to scrape it from the propeller blades,
even when he took the edge of a knife to it – all he accomplished was to get
his blade coated in a black tar that stuck hard like super-glue. That brought
on another bout of cursing.
Let’s just get back home. The tech boys can deal with it.
When he turned the engine on it whined with a high whistle. More dark
smoke rose from inside the casing. The engine wasn’t going to last long in
that condition. Noble chose discretion over more sampling and turned the
Zodiac back towards the main research vessel.
Earth Rescue sat in quiet water nearly a mile away. Before he was
halfway there the engine started to screech and belch smoke like an old
banger on its last legs. He tried to keep the dinghy on a straight line, but it
pulled sharply to port, so much so that he was forced to tack as if he was on
a yacht under full sail. He was kept busy for the next five minutes
wondering if at any moment he’d have to suffer the humiliation of being
rescued. As the whine got louder and more urgent, the dinghy wallowed
like a luxuriating hippo in mud.
As he got closer he could see some of the crew standing at the rail
waiting for him. They all seemed to be laughing and enjoying themselves
immensely. Noble cursed some more. This time it did make him feel better.
He tacked to starboard again, having to point the prow almost at ninety
degrees to Earth Rescue.
In the end, he just made it. As he threw a line to the waiting crew, the
engine gave up with one last diminishing whine. Noble leaned over to
check on it and spotted thick clumps of the black tarry substance floating
just beneath the water line. He didn’t have time to investigate. He waited
until they hauled the dinghy up onto the lower deck and then jumped down
to the main vessel.
It was only then that he saw the full extent of the black tar. It coated the
whole bottom of the Zodiac, an oily sludge nearly an inch thick. It was soft
to the touch, but resisted any attempt to pull it away from where it clung.
“Oil spill?” Suzie Jukes asked from beside him.
He shook his head.
“Too thick. It looks more like decomposed weed or whale blubber that’s
gone off. But in that case, wouldn’t it stink to high heaven?”
The woman jumped forward like an excited schoolgirl and tried to scrape
a piece of the tarry substance away. It had already started to harden more in
the heat out on the deck, becoming smooth and moulded to the fibreglass as
if it had always been there. More than that, now it had begun to smell, the
stench biting at Noble’s sinuses.
Suzie managed to cut some of the material away, but only at the cost of
ripping a hole in the side of the dinghy. She lifted it to look closer and then
had to back away, obviously affected by the smell.
Noble laughed, but then had to stop as the smell grew stronger still.
I’ve had enough.
“It’s all yours,” he grunted at the biologist and headed for the galley and
the beer fridge. He was halfway down his second beer before he lost the
sour taste in his throat and was considering a third when Suzie Jukes found
him and almost dragged him out of his chair.
“Unless you’re taking me to bed,” he said. “I’d rather have another beer.”
“You’ve got to see this,” she said. It all came out of her in a rush, as if it
had been bottled, shaken, and released. “The tar is a complex hydrocarbon
all right. But it’s much more than that. It’s alive… or at least it was until
you chewed it up. There’s Golgi apparatus and mitochondrial DNA, but no
real cell wall structure to speak of. It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen before…
like nothing anyone’s ever seen before. I think we’ve found an incipient
species, one that’s evolving to take advantage of this unique ecosystem. In
fact…”
By now she had him out of the chair and heading out of the galley.
“Whoa,” Noble said and managed a smile. “Information overload. Slow
down.”
She stopped talking—but that only allowed her to drag him faster along
the corridor.
“I get it, Suzie,” he said. “This has got you excited. But I was serious
about that beer. It’s been a long day and…”
She almost pushed him into her small cramped lab.
“Look,” she said, guiding him forcibly towards a microscope. “Just
look.”
He looked. She was right. He had never seen anything like it. It seemed
to be mostly undifferentiated protoplasm at first glance, but on closer
inspection, he could see some structure there. No amount of attempting to
focus could bring any greater clarity.
“What’s this?” he asked. “These clearer particles embedded in the
matrix?”
She smiled—a huge grin that made him forget all about that third beer.
“I wondered that, too,” she said. “So I had some tested. You’re not going
to believe it.”
Noble sighed.
“Suzie, I’ve had a long day. I’m shagged out. I burnt out an engine and I
haven’t had nearly enough beer. Enough of the twenty questions shit,
okay?”
The grin never wavered. “You won’t need twenty…it’s obvious, when
you think about it and…”
He just had to look at her. She sighed in mock disappointment before
replying.
“The clear bits are plastic. As are some of the darker bits. You found a
plastic eater—a natural garbage disposal unit. Do you know what this
means?”
Noble smiled back.
“No. But I’m sure you’re about to tell me.”
She punched him playfully on the shoulder.
“This is what I’ve been waiting for. The planet is fighting back,” she
said. “Gaia hasn’t laid down to die just yet.”
Noble sighed.
“Come on, Suzie. Spare me the New-Age babble. You know how much I
hate that stuff.”
She kept smiling.
“Mock all you like. But you’ll see. This…” she said, pointing at the black
tar. “This marks the start of something new. Something wonderful.”
Noble was preparing a put-down when the first shouts came from up on
deck. The vessel came to an abrupt halt, with a jolt so strong that Suzie fell
against him and almost knocked him to the floor. The feel of her body in his
hands would have been a distraction at any other time, but he scarcely
noticed. By the time he got them both steady on their feet, the shouting
from above had grown louder, more frantic. Heavy footsteps rang along the
decks. The shouts soon turned to screams—high and wailing, like an animal
in acute pain.
Suzie looked at Noble, fear suddenly big in her eyes.
“Stay here. I’ll see what’s going on,” he said.
When he made to move, she came along right beside him. He didn’t have
the time to argue. He made sure that he reached the door first and took the
steps up to the outside deck two at a time. The scene that met him stopped
him as if he’d hit a wall.
Tall black tendrils swayed like cobras in the air, reaching high above the
bows on both sides of the vessel, each thicker than a man’s thigh. Noble
was tall enough to see that the sea beyond was a seething mass of black tar,
like a rumpled carpet lying on the surface of the ocean. For a split second it
hypnotised him, his mind straining to encompass the strangeness of the
scene.
A fresh scream from the stern brought him back. He turned towards the
sound. John Oates, one of the crew, hung suspended by his heels, caught by
a tendril. Noble started to run in that direction, but it was already too late
for the boy. Swift as a whiplash, the tentacle dragged him over the side. The
youth’s head hit the gunwale. His skull cracked and, as fast as that, the lad
was gone. Two more crew ran ahead of Noble, heading to the lad’s aid.
They were plucked into the air before Noble got any closer.
I need a weapon.
The case containing the fire-axe split as he tugged at it, driving a splinter
deep into his right palm, causing the axe handle to slide in his hand, slick
with his blood. He turned, just as a new black tendril reached towards the
doorway where Suzie Jukes stood with her mouth hanging open,
dumbstruck at the scene in front of her.
Noble hacked. Once. Twice. A piece of tendril as long as his arm fell,
still twitching, to the deck. He kicked it away and pushed the biologist back
inside, almost throwing her back into the corridor. Her eyes widened,
staring at a point over his shoulder. She tried to scream, but no sound came.
Noble turned and ducked in one movement. The tendril fell on his back,
knocking him to the deck. Fast as a snake, it wound itself around his right
leg and tugged, hard.
Noble hacked with the axe, but although he raised welts along the tarry
surface, they healed almost immediately, the wounds closing moistly like
wet lips. He was inexorably dragged across the deck. His attacks with the
axe became more frenzied, but the grip on his leg tightened and the pain
shot white heat up his side.
“Look away,” he heard Suzie shout. “Cover your eyes.”
Almost instinctively, he obeyed. A white flash lit up the area behind his
eyelids and there was a sudden burst of heat, singeing his eyebrows and
tightening his skin. The grip on his leg loosened. He dragged himself
backwards, suddenly free. When he opened his eyes, he looked down on a
smouldering pool of black tar with a safety flare still burning bright in the
middle.
Suzie tugged at his arm, dragging him back towards the door. Noble
looked around the deck. There was no sign of any crew. Tendrils waved
high all around the hull.
He allowed the woman to lead him inside. He had one last look at the
black tendrils, swaying like trees in a wind, then slammed the storm door
closed, ensuring it was secure before turning to face Suzie.
She threw herself into his arms and hugged him.
“The planet is fighting back,” she said and laughed, then sobbed.
She’s in shock. Best thing is to keep her moving.
He patted her on the back awkwardly, and then gently pushed her away.
He still had the axe in his right hand. The splinter in his palm grated against
the axe handle and brought new pain. He pulled the splinter out with his
teeth, wincing as fresh blood flowed.
Outside, something slammed heavily on the deck and Suzie jumped, as if
she’d been struck.
We can’t stay here.
“Come on. Let’s find the others,” Noble said.
“If there’s anybody left,” she whispered. But she followed, holding his
left hand tight as he headed for the bridge. The ship strained and creaked
around them.
She’s getting squeezed, like a tube of toothpaste.
They found four others still alive on the bridge, including the Skipper,
who was staring out at a scene from a nightmare. Noble went to join him at
the main control deck. He was about to ask what was happening, but the
view told its own story.
Once again, Noble was reminded of a forest. And if he didn’t know
better, he’d think there was a strong wind blowing. Black tendrils rose as far
as the eye could see, waving in unison, like a wheat field at harvest time.
He heard Suzie gasp next to him and her grip on his hand tightened. But the
tendrils didn’t come any closer than the hull—there were none within
twenty feet of the bridge.
The Skipper finally noticed that Noble was there. The older man had
aged visibly since that morning. His eyes were red with new tears.
“Only six left,” he said softly. “Six from fourteen.”
“Nobody else made it?”
The Skipper shook his head.
“We never saw them coming. They came up out of the sea, like whales
coming up for air. One second there was nothing but sky and water, the
next, the sea was full of… full of things.”
He went back to staring out over the scene.
“What have we got into, Dave? What the hell have we got ourselves
into?”
Nobody answered.
“I got out a mayday,” the Skipper said, talking to himself. “Don’t know if
anyone heard us, but I got out a call. And I’ve cut the engines… we were
just burning fuel and going nowhere. All we can do is keep at the radio.
Keep at it and hope someone hears us.”
Suzie replied first.
“Bugger the radio. We still have the satellite connection in the lab. Hell,
we can get anyone we want in seconds online.”
The Skipper shook his head.
“I’m not sending anyone down below. We’ve got no way of knowing if
those things are down there.”
Noble hefted the axe.
“I’ll take that chance. We need to get someone out here to rescue us.”
The Skipper hardly noticed as Noble led Suzie off the bridge. When
Noble turned for a look back the old man had gone back to staring out of
the window, fresh tears running down his cheeks.
As they descended the main stairs to the lab and crew quarters, Noble
realised just how quiet the vessel had become. Normally, even when they
were at anchor, there was a buzz around the boat, the slap of feet on deck or
the sound of three different stereo systems vying for supremacy. Today
there was nothing, not even any whistle of wind from outside. The things,
whatever they were, seemed to have stopped squeezing for the time being.
I suppose we should be thankful for small mercies.
Suzie refused to let go of his hand all the way to the lab. She jumped
once when they passed an exterior door, but it was securely closed, and
there was no noise from the other side. When they reached the lab and
Noble closed the door behind them, she loosened visibly—not enough to let
go of his hand, but enough that it didn’t feel like it had been clamped in a
bear trap.
“Over here,” she said, and led him to the desk where the laptop computer
sat. It was only then that she let go of his hand. He started to move away, to
check on the door, but she grabbed at him like a drowning man after a life
belt and pulled him close.
“Please,” she said. “Don’t go far.”
Noble watched as she called up the coastguard in Weymouth. The man at
the other end wouldn’t believe her at first. Not until Noble dragged over a
Petri dish containing remnants of the tar they’d collected earlier. He held it
up to the web-cam. As if on cue it started to ooze and coalesce.
The web-cam looked at the tar.
And the tar looked back.
A single, lidless eye, pale green and milky, stared out from a new fold in
the protoplasm. An audible gasp came from the coastguard at the other end.
“Is this some kind of trick?” the man asked. “Because if it is, I’m
warning you…”
Suzie had taken enough.
“Listen, arsehole, we’re dying out here. Are you going to help us, or
should I call the fucking Royal Navy?”
The man went white, then red. Noble saw him think about blustering,
then saw his eyes look again at the Petri dish. The tar obliged by slumping
around the confines of the glass, the lidless eye continuing to stare at the
webcam.
“Do you have engine power?” the coastguard asked finally, dragging his
gaze from the eye.
“No,” Suzie said. By now she was close to shouting. “Just get some help
to us. And fast.”
The man left his seat, leaving Suzie and Noble looking at a view of an
empty office at the other end.
“Now we wait,” Noble said.
Suzie turned her gaze to the Petri dish. The eye stared back at her.
“What the hell is this stuff, Dave?” she asked softly. “Did we make it?”
He had no answer for her. They both stood there for long seconds, just
staring down at the tarry material, watching it seethe and flow.
From outside, a sound broke the quiet—high pitched, like a flock of gulls
after a shoal of fish. But it was as if words could be heard in the din—the
same words, repeated over and over.
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
Suzie went pale.
“What is it?” Noble said. “What’s wrong?”
Suzie sobbed.
“You mean, what else?”
She turned back to the laptop, fingers frantically dancing over the
keyboard as she searched for information.
“What is it?” Noble asked again, more urgently this time when she hadn’t
spoken. She was too busy to reply. After several minutes she finally sat
back in her chair.
“It can’t be,” she whispered. “That’s just a story.”
“Suzie,” he said softly. “Just tell me. Please?”
She pointed at the screen.
“Remember last year, I went on the survey to Antarctica?” She didn’t
pause for an answer. “We sat up late one night, as you do, drinking rum and
telling stories. Talk got around to the Pabodie Expedition in the early
thirties.”
“Wasn’t there some kind of mass delusion on that one?”
Her eyes were wide. “So everyone thought at the time. But there’s a story
going ‘round that they discovered an ancient city under the ice—a city built
by beings genetically engineered for the purpose. These beings are said to
be able to take any shape required to get the job done… and at least one of
the beings the Expedition found was still alive. They called it a Shoggoth.”
Noble barked out a laugh.
“Cabin fever and too much booze, more like.”
Suzie looked back at the laptop. She looked genuinely worried.
“But what if it was more than that? Does this sound familiar? This is an
extract from a journal of one of the expedition members.”
She read from the screen.
“It was a terrible, indescribable thing, bigger than any
subway train—a shapeless congeries of protoplasmic
bubbles, faintly self-luminous, and with a myriad of
temporary eyes forming as pustules of greenish light all
over the tunnel-filling mass that bore down upon us…
slithering over the glistening floor, that it and its kind,
had swept so evilly free of all litter. Still came that
eldritch, mocking cry—
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
“Don’t you see,” Suzie said. “It’s the same—the eyes… and the chanting.”
Noble leaned over her and read the words for himself.
“That’s just a story to frighten the gullible,” he said, trying to convince
himself, more than anything else. Outside, the noise grew louder, the sound
ringing all around the ship.
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
The protoplasm in the Petri dish suddenly surged against the glass, with
such force that the dish fell off the table. The tarry substance started to
make its way across the floor, scuttling like a manic spider. Before Noble
could stop her, Suzie rushed to the trestle and poured some of the contents
of a glass jar on the creature. Steam rose. A vinegar-like tang caught at the
back of Noble’s throat and forced him to close his eyes, firmly. When he
looked again, there was nothing left of the creature but a smoking pool of
oily goop on the floor.
“What did you use?” Noble asked, aware that he’d just been shown a
weapon a bit more devastating than the fire-axe.
“Hydrochloric acid,” she replied. “We can kill it.”
Noble remembered the scene out of the bridge window, the forest of
swaying tendrils.
“I don’t think we’ve got enough,” he replied quietly. He turned back to
the screen.
“Okay, for the sake of argument, say what we have here is a Shoggoth
from the Antarctic. Why here? Why now?”
Suzie shrugged.
“We may never know… not without more study. But I suspect there are
at least two driving factors. One is global warming. The ice-shelves have
been disintegrating for years now. Maybe one woke from freezing and
hitched a ride?”
He had to admit, it was possible, if not exactly probable.
“What’s the other thing?”
“What every creature needs. A food source. If the stories are true, these
things are bio-engineered, made of complex hydrocarbons. Other complex
hydrocarbons, and lots of them, would be irresistible to such a beast.”
“But why would…”
Noble never got a chance to finish.
The boat lurched. Metal squealed. Even through the door of the lab they
heard screams, wild and full of fear, coming from the direction of the bridge
house. Noble ran for the door.
“Wait!” he heard Suzie shout. But the screams were too insistent. He
could not stand idle in the face of them. Taking a tight grip on the axe he
opened the lab door.
The screams were too loud. Just as he stepped into the corridor, the
Skipper fled down from the bridge. Noble almost didn’t recognise this wild-
eyed, frantic man as the usually stoic Captain. In all the years he’d known
the man he’d never seen him even so much as flustered. Now he was a
screaming, babbling ruin of his former self. Blood poured from his head
where a piece of scalp flapped, showing bone below. He was running so
fast he almost fell at the foot of the stairs, his legs giving way beneath him.
Turning, he gave one look back up the steps and squealed in fear again
before getting to his feet and breaking into a limping run.
Noble saw the reason a second later. A black sphere rolled lazily down
the steps, slumping like a partially deflated beach ball. The Skipper yelped
and fled along the corridor towards Noble.
“Quick. In here,” Noble shouted.
The old man didn’t make it. Behind him, the tar-ball opened and
stretched, bat-like wings touching the wall on either side of the corridor.
The underside of the wings fluttered… and scores of green milky eyes
opened in unison. The thing surged forward. The Skipper had time for one
more scream before it fell on him like a wet carpet, engulfing him totally in
its folds. Noble moved forward to try to save the man, but was held back by
a hand on his shoulder.
“We need to go,” Suzie said. “You can’t help him.”
One quick glance showed him she was right. The black mass seethed and
roiled over the Skipper’s prone body, but the old man made no sound, even
as a lump of bloody meat was dragged forcibly from bone. He was already
gone.
And so will we be if we don’t get out of here.
Back at the staircase, more black spheres rolled lazily down into the
corridor. Noble felt something get put in his free hand.
“Use this,” Suzie said. “Quickly. It might cover our escape.”
He held a flare gun, already loaded. He aimed it in the general direction
of the Skipper and pulled the trigger. He took Suzie’s hand and ran as the
corridor exploded with light and searing heat. They reached the end of the
corridor before Noble realised they were trapped. The only way to go was
up onto the loading deck beside the Zodiac—to the outside where the
tendrils writhed around the hull. He turned back to the corridor, looking for
another means of escape.
Too late.
Black protoplasm, pieces of it smoking, filled the far end of the corridor.
Long tendrils searched the air ahead of a thick mass of the black tar. It
coated the corridor, reached several feet up the walls, and had already
covered half the distance between them.
“Up onto the deck,” Noble said. “It’s all we can do now.”
Suzie didn’t argue. She handed him three flares.
“That’s all we’ve got. Make them count.”
He nodded. He handed her the axe.
“Be careful. Chop first, ask questions later. I’m right behind you. Okay?”
“Got it,” she replied, and started up the small set of steps.
Noble looked back along the corridor. The black tendrils were less than
five feet away and seemed eager to reach for him. He just had time to load
the gun and send another flare into the main mass before heading after
Suzie out onto the deck. Light and heat followed him out. He turned just
beyond the door, loading the flare-gun, but no protoplasm came out of the
corridor.
“Noble,” Suzie cried from nearby. “I need help here.”
She stood by the side of the Zodiac. A long tendril was raised high over
her, and she was barely keeping it at bay with the axe. What she couldn’t
see was a second appendage creeping along the deck behind her.
“Get down,” he called, hoping that her reflex would be as quick as his
had been earlier. He raised the gun and fired just as she threw herself
forward. The flare embedded itself in the side of the dinghy and burned
furiously. Suzie scuttled across the deck to stand with him as they watched
it blaze.
It took most of the two tendrils with it. Noble was about to celebrate
when the Zodiac’s fuel tank exploded, the blast knocking him backwards to
teeter on the steps to the lower deck. He would have fallen back if Suzie
hadn’t steadied him.
He looked around. Tall black tendrils still wafted on high all around the
hull.
But they’re staying well away from the fires. Maybe we have a weapon
after all.
“Help me,” he shouted. “I’ve got an idea.”
A minute later he was using the axe to break into the fuel storage area in
the stern. There were five plastic containers stacked there, each holding
fifty litres of diesel for the Zodiac. Noble stuffed the flare gun into his belt
and started to lug the canisters out on the deck.
The Zodiac had burned itself out and lay in pieces, a smouldering ruin.
All around, the tendrils raised themselves up higher, swaying from side to
side. Pale green eyes stared down from the heights.
“Now or never,” Noble whispered.
He started to pour diesel across the deck. He emptied the first canister
completely, making sure the others were sitting in the pool of liquid.
“Get to the upper deck,” he said. “Quickly. I’ll cover you.”
She left at a run, clambering up the exterior ladder to the raised deck that
sat above the crew quarters. The tendrils continued to sway above the bow,
but for now at least, they encroached no further. Noble said a silent prayer
and ran for the ladder. A tendril struck at him and missed by mere inches,
slapping into the deck at his feet and splashing diesel over his ankles. The
air shimmered as the fuel evaporated in the heat.
Suzie stretched down a hand and helped him haul himself up beside her.
He stood, turned… and gasped. The view from the bridge hadn’t really
imposed itself on him. At the time, he’d been too preoccupied with merely
staying alive for a few minutes longer. But from here on the upper deck, he
couldn’t ignore it.
Black tendrils rose into the sky from horizon to horizon, waving slowly
in unison like an audience at a concert moving in time to a ballad. Nowhere
could the ocean be seen. All that was visible was a thick mat of black
protoplasm anchoring the tendrils.
And the eyes were everywhere—pale, green, and unblinking. As Noble
noticed them, so they noticed him. Tens of thousands of eyes swivelled and
fixed their stare on the boat.
The chant rose, filling the air with noise.
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
Tendrils surged forward, crawling over the bow, dragging the protoplasm
behind in a dense carpet that started to smother the lower deck.
“Do it now,” Suzie shouted. “Before it’s too late.”
Noble waited for several seconds more, until the tendrils had almost
reached the fuel canisters.
“Burn, you bastards,” he shouted and fired the last flare down into the
pool of diesel. They had to stand back as the fire took. Tendrils thrashed in
frenzy, trying to escape the flames that were suddenly everywhere. Noble
threw Suzie to the ground and lay atop her, covering her with his body. The
fuel canisters went up, one after the other, the explosions drumming in his
ears, the heat singeing his hair. Then all was silence.
Noble heard his heart pounding in his ears. He stood, carefully lifting the
axe from where it lay by Suzie’s right hand. Fires burned across the lower
deck. The boat listed sharply to starboard. The Shoggoths backed off,
leaving a twenty-meter moat of sea all the way around the hull. Tendrils still
swayed lazily in the air, but there was no longer any sign of watching eyes.
Noble lifted Suzie up.
“We’re safe. For now.”
“Maybe for a bit longer than that,” she said. She pointed out to the port
side. At the same time, he heard it, the chug-chug of a chopper’s rotor
blades. They stood on the deck, waving and grinning like excited school
kids as the rescue chopper got closer and hovered overhead. Even as they
were lifted upward, the tendrils started to creep back towards the boat,
slowly at first, and then faster as there was no sign of further fire.
When the chopper banked to turn away, Noble got a clear view of the
boat, completely covered now, sinking under the weight of the thick black
carpet. It went under with scarcely a splash.
But that wasn’t quite the end of it.
By now, the sun was setting. Beneath them, the black carpet shone, a
shimmering green that looked almost peaceful. Even above the sound of the
rotors, he thought he could hear them, would always hear them, a chorus,
stronger than any choir, singing in perfect unison.
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
A sea of eyes watched as the chopper headed away over the horizon.
July 22nd - At the Beach
Maggie Welsh was in a foul mood and wasn’t slow in letting everybody
know about it.
“Kimmeridge bloody Bay,” she said in disgust, for maybe the fourth time
since her husband had brought their car onto the car park on the cliffs
above. “It’s not exactly Lanzarote, is it?”
Dave Welsh looked at her over the top of his newspaper. His nose and
cheeks were liberally splattered with thick suntan lotion, only serving to
accentuate the deepening redness of the sunburn on his balding pate.
“What’s not to like?” he said softly. “It’s a beach, it’s the hottest summer
in years, and the kids are loving it.”
Maggie was too deeply entrenched in her annoyance to let logic get in
her way.
“There’s bugger all to do except sit here and fry,” she said. She was
aware that, if they had gone to Lanzarote, they’d just be sitting on a
different beach and frying.
But that’s not the point!
If they’d gone to Lanzarote she’d have been able to spend days telling the
others in the Hair Salon about the trip—about the toned waiters and the
tight butts in swimsuits, about the posh nights out in expensive lounges.
Now what was she going to say?
He took me to Dorset and all I got was this lousy tan?
“Denise Shaw is in Mallorca. Have you any idea how affronted I’m
going to be when she asks where we went? Have you any idea how much of
her crap I’m going to have to put up with?”
He’d stopped listening; his newspaper raised like a bulwark between
them. But she wasn’t ready to stop venting yet—she might not be for quite
some time. She turned her ire towards the sea, looking for their children.
They’ll be doing something I can shout at them for. I need a good shout.
Their youngest, Mary, paddled around in the shallows some twenty yards
away, splashing merrily and singing a song that was almost recognisable as
something she’d recently heard on the radio. Zane was further out,
pretending to swim, hanging around at the fringe of a group of older boys
and trying to get noticed. She sighed as she realised there was nothing to
find fault with.
Well that’s just no fun at all.
She looked along the length of the beach. Although it was a warm,
indeed very warm day, and the beach was golden, there were relatively few
people around; some thirty in total on the beach itself, and the same number
again, mostly children, in the water trying to get away from the heat.
Further out, two small yachts tacked and veered in what little breeze they
could grab, but here on the sand it was almost oppressively calm and balmy.
If she hadn’t been quite so keen on a shouting match, she might even start
enjoying herself. But the thought of Denise Shaw crowing about Mallorca
from now until Christmas was just too much to bear.
Once again, she found her thoughts straying to exotic shores, places
where the beaches were packed and there were many more opportunities to
pick up brownie points back at the salon. She was so lost in reverie that she
didn’t notice when the splashing from nearby took on a frantic tone, and she
only looked up when a young voice rose in a high scream.
Out on the horizon one of the yachts she’d watched earlier upended, the
prow pointing straight up before it vanished without a splash. The other
seemed to be covered in writhing black snakes. Even as she tried to make
sense of what she was seeing, the small vessel imploded, crushed to
kindling and torn canvas within seconds.
Another scream brought her attention closer to shore.
The sea... it’s alive.
The surface frothed and swelled in a patch the size of a football field, as
if something pushed the water upwards from below. She saw Mary standing
just at the water’s edge, pointing at a spot further out. Where there had been
a group of boys a minute before, now there was only a foaming patch of
water. Something dark surged just below the surface.
Shark? Can’t be.
As quickly as it had started, the sea fell calm. A sudden quiet fell all
around them. Maggie realised there were fewer children in the water now—
a lot fewer children. All along the shore, concerned parents started to head
for the waterline.
Zane?
Maggie stood, knocking over her chair, almost falling into Dave’s arms
as he too rose awkwardly from the depths of the chair. His newspaper fell
to the sand unnoticed as they both looked out onto the calm patch of sea.
“Zane!” she shouted. Then the two of them were running headlong down
the beach, kicking sand behind them, shouting at the top of their voices.
“Zane Welsh,” she yelled. “You get out of that water this instant.”
But she already knew something bad had happened. There was no sign of
Zane... of any of the boys. As they got closer she saw that Mary stood,
wide-eyed, thumb in her mouth, looking down at something the waves had
washed in. She gathered the girl in her arms, then looked to see what was
on the sand.
A dismembered foot lay there, with white bone showing at the ankle
where it had been roughly torn from the body. But that wasn’t the worst
thing. The worst thing was the split nail on the big toe... the same split nail
she had stopped Zane from worrying at just fifteen minutes before.
This isn’t happening.
She heard Dave cry out, heard him splash away into the water, but she
couldn’t lift her gaze from the foot.
Just wait until I get you home, Zane Welsh. You are in big trouble this
time.
Mary started to cry and burrowed her head in Maggie’s neck. She pulled
the girl tighter, and that small act of motherhood dragged her back to some
semblance of reality.
Zane? Where are you, lad? Mum’s getting worried.
Around a dozen parents, Dave included, were frantically searching for
the lost boys, splashing around and parting the water with their hands as if
they might be able to open it up and reveal what secrets it kept. A black
hump, like a breaching whale, rose up out of the water mere feet from the
group. The black hump spread and Maggie was reminded of an old horror
movie with Count Dracula opening his cape to enfold his victim. The
darkness fell on the parents like a black sheet. Where it touched their skin,
they started to scream.
Dave?
The sea was now a roiling mass of thrashing limbs and white spray that
suddenly frothed pink. Maggie’s mothering instincts finally kicked in. She
turned and fled, with Mary clasped tight at her breast. The screams of the
dying rose ever higher behind her, but she didn’t look back. Her gaze was
fixed on the family car, perched near the edge at the top of the cliff.
Everything will be okay if I get to the car.
Everything will be okay if I get to the car.
She repeated it to herself like a mantra as the hot sand sucked at her feet
and Mary sobbed uncontrollably at her ear. At some point she became
aware that the screaming had stopped and that the beach had once more
fallen deathly quiet.
Is it over?
She refused to look round to check. The car was closer now. There were
mere yards between her and the foot of the steps that led up to the car park.
She put a foot on the bottom step.
Should have gone to Lanzarote.
That was her last thought. By some instinct she turned, knowing
something was coming. A shadow sped up the beach, a black wave several
feet high. She grabbed Mary tight and threw herself backward towards the
steps, towards safety.
She had time for just one scream.
July 22nd - A Dawning Realization
Noble had spent a futile night explaining, and explaining again, the events
of the previous day, first to the coastguard, then the police. He could tell by
their eyes that they didn’t believe him. They thought both he and Suzie
were in shock at the loss of their crewmates in an accident that had sunk the
ship. The idea of some kind of creature lurking offshore, one big enough to
take down the Earth Rescue, was just too large for them to comprehend.
Shit. I feel like the sheriff in Jaws.
When the questioning was finally over they were let out into a
glimmering dawn. Pale sunlight shimmered in Weymouth harbour and the
terrors were already beginning to fade, taking on the semblance of a
nightmare.
“What can we do now?” Suzie said. “We’ve got to warn somebody.”
That’s all we ever do, Noble thought. Warn people. People who don’t
want to listen.
He didn’t say anything. He knew it wasn’t what she wanted to hear. Over
the past four years he’d come to know when to speak and when not to.
He’d signed up with Earth Rescue, initially, not from any great planet-
saving idealism but for a need for adventure—a life at sea far from any
constraints of office or train timetable. Suzie had taught him, slowly, the
importance of their work and he’d seen for himself the damage that was
being blithely done to the seas. Western civilization liked to bury its rubbish
in shame, and the sea had, until recently, been a watery grave for all of
society’s ills. Now it was disinterring itself. Suzie and Noble spent much of
their time trying to convince politicians, reporters,...anybody, to listen that
there was an imminent problem. And like the past night, they only heard
what they wanted to hear, afraid to shatter their cosy idea of a world where
garbage just went away with no consequences.
“We’ve got to warn somebody,” Suzie said again.
Noble almost laughed.
“Warn them about what? You heard them—they’ve had choppers out
looking for wreckage. All they found was sea.”
Suzie started striding away.
“Well, that’s not enough.”
He walked after her, having to lengthen his stride to catch up.
“Where are you going?” he asked as he reached her side.
“To the lab. We need to prove them wrong.”
What Noble really wanted was breakfast, then a drink—a big drink. But
Suzie Jukes was not a woman to be ignored lightly—not if you still wanted
her talking to you afterwards. He followed her down the path, having to
hurry again to keep up.
“So, what’s the plan?” he asked when he got beside her for a second
time.
She hooked an arm in his and gave him a smile, his reward for paying
attention.
“There will be something in the documentation... somewhere,” she said
“And if there is, I’ll find it, before this morning is out.”
In the end, it took longer than she’d imagined. Noble was kept busy
making endless cups of coffee and sandwiches for them both in the small
cupboard in the Earth Rescue office that passed for their lab’s kitchen, and
by the time early afternoon came around he felt like he was running on
fumes. Suzie’s yelp of triumph jerked him from the beginnings of slumber.
“I knew it. I bloody well knew it.”
He almost fell as he stood, his legs initially refusing his commands,
having gone to sleep while he sat in the chair. He groaned theatrically and
sat back down in a slump.
“Wake me again when it’s over,” he said.
“Stay there,” she said laughing. “I’ll read it to you. The bastards have
known about it all along.”
He did as he was told and stayed in the chair. Suzie brought them both a
fresh coffee and sat opposite him.
“I found this on an MOD server,” she said. “It came up on a search for
Pabodie.”
Noble raised an eyebrow, but said nothing. MOD servers were most
definitely off-limits to Earth Rescue personnel, but he knew already that no
computer system was safe when she was around. He sipped the coffee and
let her talk. She started to read and he was soon completely engrossed in
Scotland, during a dark period in the country’s history.
I did not know what to expect. They called me out of a lecture on the
ecology of the Firth of Clyde shoreline just as I was getting warmed up and
told me I was needed for the war effort. I tried to enquire as to the nature of
the need, but they refused to be drawn. All they had said was that it was a
matter of National Security. Just what the RNAD wanted with a fifty-year-
old doctor of Botany with a gammy leg and a drink problem, I was not told.
I was given a train ticket and a contact name and was immediately sent off
to Helensburgh, having been barely given enough time to pack a bag.
Once there, I was met outside the station by a Sergeant and a truck—both
of who seemed well past their best. He took a succession of cigarettes from
me and talked freely enough, but he knew as little about why I had been
summoned as I did, myself.
“We don’t ask and they don’t tell,” was all he said, leaving me to wonder
who he was talking about. We rattled along an unlit road for what seemed
like hours, coming to a sudden halt at a manned checkpoint alongside a
long, moonlit loch. An attendant waved a torch and a gun in my face, I
showed him my paperwork and we were allowed through. The Sergeant
drove up to a Nissen Hut and I was informed this was the end of the line.
“Remember,” he said to me as we parted and he took two cigarettes from
my packet. “We don’t ask and they don’t tell.”
A Corporal met me at the door to the hut. I was shown inside to a bed
and given an order to see the Colonel in the morning. I sat on the edge of
the bed for several minutes, unsure of my next move. It felt too cold, too
quiet, and I was already missing the comfortable clutter and noise of my
University apartments back in Glasgow. I went outside and studied the lay
of the land. There was a loch and a lot of huts. Beyond that, there was little
to see but the moon on the water. It was very pretty, if a bit chilly. I watched
it for a while as I tried to get used to my new situation. It took three slow
cigarettes before I even felt like settling. When I finally went back inside
and lay down, I soon found that my allocated bed was little more than a few
sheets thrown over a stiff board.
I slept badly.
Things did not get much better when the morning started on a wrong
note. I am afraid the Colonel, a stiff little man with a stiffer little
moustache, did not take to me. From what I understood of my short
briefing, I was to be seconded to this unit for the duration, to “do my bit
against the Jerries”. But by the time he led me via a warren of corridors
through and between a maze of Nissen Huts and showed me into the lab, I
was still none the wiser. It was only when I was introduced to the head of
the team that I began to have some inkling as to why I had been brought to
this place.
I knew Professor Rankin by his reputation of being an iconoclast, a
visionary, and as mad as a bag of badgers. The last thing I had heard was
that he had gone over to the Yanks for a huge stipend at one of the West
Coast think tanks. I never expected to meet him in a Nissen Hut on a
Scottish loch-side.
His unruly mop of white hair shook as he grasped my hand. He was as
thin as a rake, but his grip was as hard as cold steel.
“Ballantine. And not a minute too soon. Come over here, man. You need
to see this.”
He dragged me over to a microscope.
“Look at it,” he said. “Just look.”
I looked. I had no idea what it was. It looked almost like the internal
structure of an amoeba.
“What is this?” I asked.
Rankin looked down at the desk. He’d obviously prepared the microscope
slide from something in a Petri dish at the side. It looked like nothing more
than a pool of thick oil.
“It cost an arm and a leg to get it, but we finally managed to persuade
the Yanks to give us some of the material from the Pabodie Expedition. We
need it for experimentation.”
He lifted the Petri dish, studying the contents.
“It is something new,” he whispered. “Something no one has ever seen
before.”
At least that was something I could agree with.
“Okay,” I said softly. “You have certainly got something here. But what
has it to do with me?”
He smiled.
“This material was obviously manufactured. It bonds with other living
tissue and builds.”
“Builds what?”
He laughed loudly.
“Anything we want it to. Do you not see, Ballantine? You and I are going
to change war forever. We are going to make the ultimate defensive
weapon.”
The protoplasm in the Petri dish suddenly surged against the glass, with
such force that the dish jumped out of Rankin’s hand and shattered as it hit
the ground. The tarry substance started to make its way across the floor,
scuttling like a manic spider.
Rankin nonchalantly stepped forward and poured some of the contents of
a glass jar on it. Steam rose. A vinegar-like tang caught at the back of my
throat and forced me to close my eyes. When I looked again, there was
nothing left but a smoking pool of oily goop on the floor.
“Molar Hydrochloric Acid,” Rankin said, holding up a half-empty jar
and almost smiling. “It seems to do the trick.”
Suzie looked over at Noble.
“Sound familiar?”
A cold chill had crept up Dave Noble’s spine.
“It sounds all too familiar. Is there more?”
She nodded.
“I haven’t read it all myself yet... but there’re pages and pages of stuff.
I...”
The phone rang, interrupting her. He knew from her face as she listened
that the news wasn’t good. She had gone white by the time she put the
phone down.
“They believe us now,” she said quietly. “We’re wanted at the Nothe
Fort. They’re setting up a Command Post there to monitor the situation.”
“What situation?”
But she refused to be drawn further as she hurried him out of the lab and
through the streets to Weymouth Harbour. He noticed that she had stuffed
the rest of the document she’d been reading into a briefcase and carried it
with her.
The outside of the fort looked like it would on any other day, with groups
of tourists in small huddles, taking pictures and laughing loudly. Inside, the
mood was much more sombre. They were shown to a conference room deep
inside the fort. Noble knew several of the people already there by sight. He
counted a local councillor, the police chief, and the Captain of the
coastguard. All three looked grim and two women sitting around a long
table had clearly been crying. Noble didn’t want to think what might have
happened.
But if they’ve called for Suzie and me, then there’s only one thing it can
be.
Suzie took his hand and they sat down silently when motioned forward
by the coastguard Captain. The man wasted no time getting down to
business.
“Some of you have already heard,” he said. “But I’ll recap, for the
newcomers.”
He used a remote control to dim the lights. A screen lit up behind him.
“We got a confused call from a member of the public at one o’clock this
afternoon. He had just arrived in the car park at Kimmeridge Bay. There
were many other cars in the slots... but no people on the shore—no one
alive, at any rate.
“I sent a team. Two of the men I sent are now doped to the eyeballs,
trying to handle the shock. One of the others had enough presence of mind
to search the beach for evidence.
“He found a video camera. This is what we found on playing it back.”
The screen behind him came into focus. The picture showed a group of
men standing out in the sea. They seemed to be searching for something
and there was a general air of frantic panic.
“Can you see him?” someone shouted. “Can you see any of them?”
A black bulge seemed to raise the water into a dome. Suzie squeezed
Noble’s hand tight as the black sheet fell on the men, then kept coming
straight at the camera, like a mini-tsunami. The viewpoint changed as the
camera fell to the sand. People ran past, visible only from the knees down,
trying to get away from the sea. A black shadow crept along the sand.
The screen went dark.
The coastguard Captain turned up the lights.
“Is that what you warned us about?”
Noble realized the question was directed at him and Suzie. He nodded.
“It looks like it. Do you believe us now?”
Nobody spoke. There was a long silence. It was the councillor that finally
spoke.
“There were twenty cars in that car park Mr. Noble. We estimate that at
least fifty people are missing, presumed dead. It’s too late now for any
recriminations. We’ve brought you here because you’re the closest thing we
have to experts. I’ve informed the MOD and they’re sending a team down.”
The coastguard Captain interrupted him.
“But in the meantime... I’d like to get ahead of the game. I’d like to get a
sample of.... whatever this stuff is.”
Noble was about to say just how stupid an idea that would be when Suzie
squeezed his hand again.
“My thoughts exactly, Captain,” she said. “When can we leave?”
July 22nd - In the Air
Ten minutes later they were in a chopper. Suzie sat beside him, still holding
his hand, a fact that seemed to amuse the coastguard Captain.
“Just hold on tight,” he shouted. “We’re heading back out to where we
picked you up yesterday to see what we can see. It’ll take the best part of an
hour, so get as comfortable as you can.”
They were left to their own devices. At first, Noble tried to make
conversation with Suzie, but the noise inside the chopper was deafening,
like being inside a tumble-dryer full of ball bearings. After five minutes of
shouting at each other, yet still failing to understand more than half of what
was said, they gave up. Suzie started reading more of the papers from her
briefcase, while Noble closed his eyes and tried to rest.
His mind raced. It felt like he’d taken a lurch into the Twilight Zone, ever
since his first encounter with the black tar on the blades of the Zodiac
propeller. Now he was at the centre of an emergency that had something to
do with an Antarctic Expedition long before he was born. And how that was
connected to a polluted stretch of ocean was still a mystery to him. But
Suzie was on the case. He know from long experience that once she got her
teeth into something she would never let go until she was good and ready.
He tried to trick his mind, thinking about beer, and the latest Test match
cricket. But sleep wasn’t going to come. He kept seeing the same image in
his mind, of the thing swallowing the Skipper, and the old man’s meat being
stripped from the bone. He was almost grateful when Suzie nudged him
hard in the ribs.
“You need to read this,” she shouted.
She still had more of the papers in her hand. She handed him a sheaf of
maybe ten sheets. As he read, he was once more dragged back to wartime
Scotland.
Over the next few weeks I came to understand the detail and scope of
what Rankin hoped to achieve… and my part in it. The tarry material did
indeed prove adept at recombining existing biological materials into things
rich and strange. And it did so at a prodigious rate. Rankin had me trying
to force it into combination with various forms of plant-life. We had a
spectacular disaster when we introduced the tarry material to pond algae,
which left a thick green scum covering the whole interior of the lab that had
to be removed with bleach and blowtorches. Still, Rankin refused to be
depressed.
“We are getting there,” he said, even though I had no real idea of the
required destination—not yet.
I began to get an idea what he was looking for when we set the substance
to work on some seaweed. It took a particular liking to Ascophylum
Nodosum, one of the bladderworts common along this coastline. It seemed
like a marriage made in heaven. Although contained in a tall sealed jar, the
weed-tar combination filled all the available space within minutes and was
soon a seething mass of crawling vegetation, frantically trying to escape.
Rankin clapped me heartily on the back, phoned the MOD and returned to
break open the whisky. We sat on the harbour wall smoking and drinking
and after a few drams, his tongue finally loosened.
“They approached me last year,” he said. “They are frightened of the
power of the German fleet and wanted some way of locking them in port
and making them vulnerable to attack.” He took a long drag of smoke
before continuing. “By coincidence, I had been talking that very day about
the Shoggoth material. I put two and two together, the Brass came up with
the cash, and here we are. We have done it, Ballantine. All we have to do is
introduce a scrap of the new stuff to the waters around the Hun’s
anchorages and they will be clogged up in no time. The perfect defensive
weapon.”
I could see several flaws in this plan, but kept my mouth shut… I did not
want to cut off the only supply of whisky I’d had in weeks. So far, he had not
noticed that I was managing to get twice as much of it inside me as he
was… I wanted to keep it that way.
I regretted it the next morning, of course… I always do. And, I regretted
it twice as much when I walked into the lab to be confronted by two
Admirals of the Fleet and a Secretary of State. Luckily, Rankin wanted to
showboat, so I hung at the back and let him get on with it.
He gave them the spiel about the Antarctic Expedition and the Shoggoth
material, but even in my hung-over state I could see that they were seriously
under-whelmed. They perked up slightly when he started the experiment
proper. He used an even larger jar this time, one near six feet tall. The tar
combined with the weed and surged, filling the space in seconds, fronds
flapping and slapping against the glass in frenzy.
The Brass sat in stony silence.
“That’s it?” the Secretary finally said. “All this time and effort and you
give us some bloody, energetic seaweed?”
Rankin gave them the same line he’d given me the night before, about
clogging up harbours and stifling the Jerry fleet. The Secretary sighed
theatrically.
“Look Rankin, the reason we got you for this job was because we
expected something flamboyant, something that would show our people that
we are ahead of the game compared to Hitler’s scientists. But this just won’t
do. They throw the Doodlebug at us and what do we do in reply? Send them
some fucking, lively seaweed? No. This just won’t do at all.”
Rankin was a driven man after that. He would be found in the lab,
alternately shouting at the Shoggoth material, and muttering under his
breath.
“Flamboyant? I’ll show them flamboyant.”
I first guessed his intent when he had me procure some material from the
Botanical Gardens in Glasgow. Venus fly trap, mostly, but also three
different types of pitcher plant and a particularly sticky sundew that was
both rare and expensive. I also heard from a colleague that he had
requested several jellyfish be tracked down… the more poisonous the better.
I tried to get a look at what he was working on, but by that time he had
locked the lab down to all but himself. The rest of us were reduced to bit-
players and spent most of our time in the mess hall drinking beer and
playing cribbage… although in my case, I did not join in the card games.
It was nearly two weeks before we were summonsed for a demonstration.
There were no Brass present this time… Rankin wanted to be sure of his
flamboyance first.
He had made some drastic changes in the lab. A large glass tank took up
full fifty per cent of the area. In the centre of the tank sat a metal box. A
chain was attached to its lid and led, via a winch, to a pulley next to
Rankin. On the far side of the glass tank, a small pony munched contentedly
on a pile of hay. Suddenly, I wanted to be back in the mess, cradling a pint
of lukewarm beer, or back in the postgraduate club at the university getting
beat at chess.
Anywhere but here.
Several others shuffled nervously. Indeed, there might even have been a
revolt… if Rankin had given us time to think about it. But before we could
stop him, he yanked on his end of the chain.
The metal box opened.
The pony pricked its ears. That was all it had time for. Thrashing
tentacles came out of the box. They waved in the air, as if tasting it, and
sought out the pony, like snakes zeroing in on prey. They struck as one,
wrapping themselves in long strands around the pony’s flanks. The beast
started to whinny and tried to pull away. One of the tentacles tore off from
the animal, taking a long strip of flesh with it. The other tentacles merely
tightened and pulled harder.
Something climbed out of the metal box; an amorphous mass of thrashing
fronds that might once have been seaweed. It opened in two halves,
spreading wide like bat-wings. The tentacles pulled the pony across the
tank. Foam bubbled at the pony’s mouth, its tongue lolling, red and
steaming. But it was still alive as the thing took it into its folds, still alive as
the carpet of vegetation wrapped itself around the body and squeezed. We
all heard the bones crack. As if from a far distance, there was a piteous
whinny.
Someone behind me threw up and I smelled beer and cigarettes.
“For pity’s sake, Rankin. Do something,” I shouted.
He turned and smiled.
He yanked on another chain and a rain of what looked like water came
from a series of pipes above the tank. The vegetation started to smoke and
curl and once more I smelled the tang of vinegar as the hydrochloric acid
turned everything to oily sludge.
“How was that?” Rankin asked. “Flamboyant enough, do you think?”
I spent that night getting roaring drunk in the mess. I wasn’t the only one.
In the morning we started preparing for the field test.
Noble looked up to see Suzie staring back at him.
“It gets worse,” she shouted, waving the remaining papers at him. He
moved to take them, but at that same moment, the Captain came through
from the cockpit.
“Five minutes,” he shouted above the din. “Saddle up.”
They’d agreed as they were getting suited up that Noble would be the one
to go down if there were any samples to be taken. Now he was starting to
regret the burst of machismo that had led him to volunteer so readily. Suzie
and the Captain strapped him into the harness.
“Are you sure you don’t want to go down instead?” he asked Suzie with a
smile. “I’m sure you would find something fascinating.”
She tightened the strap around his groin, making him wince, and bringing
a laugh from her.
“Up in London, you’d have to pay for this service. Now stop whining and
be a good boy.”
The Captain opened the chopper door. A blast of warm air came in at a
rush. Noble sidled over to the door and hung out, looking down at the
churning sea. At first, all he could see was water being thrown up by the
downward blast from the rotors.
Maybe it has gone.
The first tendril that rose lazily out of the water put paid to that idea.
Noble was glad he’d arranged to have a long knife secured in a sheath at his
thigh—he had a feeling he might need it. Suzie attached a glass sample jar
to a hook on his belt. She accompanied it with a kiss on the cheek.
“Be careful,” she shouted.
He didn’t have to be told twice. He swung out into space, blowing a kiss
back at Suzie in the doorway even as the winch started taking him down.
He swung slightly, buffeted by the downdraft, but this wasn’t his first time
on the end of the tether. He maintained his body position and held it still
until he was four feet above the water. He looked back at the chopper and
gave an okay sign with thumb and forefinger, then opened the glass jar in
readiness for a sample.
He had just got the jar open when the first dark tendril came up out of the
choppy water and made a reach for his ankle. It wasn’t a serious attempt—
not like those he’d seen back on the research vessel.
It’s almost as if it doesn’t know I’m here... as if it doesn’t expect me to be
here.
He kept a close eye on the water, waiting for a sign of movement. He
didn’t have to wait long. A lazy, black tendril came slowly out of the water;
thin as a pencil at the end that rose up towards him and flaring to almost the
thickness of Noble’s thigh at the point where it broke the surface. He swung
himself around in the harness so that he was nearly hanging upside down
and tried to calm his rising panic as the snake-like appendage reached ever
closer.
Slowly, with no sudden movements, he released the knife from its sheath
and just the weight of it in his hand eased his fright.
He waited until it was inches from his nose then, with one smooth cut,
lopped nearly a foot off the end of the tentacle and let it fall in a curl into
the glass jar. He flipped the lid and closed the jar securely before turning in
the harness, jerking his thumb upwards.
Suzie was at the door, staring down at him. She had a smile on her face...
one that quickly turned to horror as her gaze shifted to a point to his left.
The winch started up, but he had taken too long... a tentacle, thicker and
broader at the base than the last, came out of the water like a cobra on the
attack, latching itself onto his ankle. The water surged and roiled.
Something black and huge started to rise under the surface.
Pull me up. For pity’s sake—pull me up!
The winch squealed as the tentacle pulled and tugged, tightening every
second. Noble once again turned and twisted, slashing out with the knife,
raising wet welts across the surface of the tendril. That only made it grip all
the tighter to his ankle.
Pull me up! What’s the problem here? But he knew exactly what the
problem was. The thing is too strong. It’ll take down the chopper.
Above him, he heard the noise of the chopper get louder as the pilot
pushed it to its limit. Slowly, but gaining speed, he started to rise up. The
tentacle didn’t let go. The sea parted below and a dark mass rose up,
coming along with the tendril to which it was attached. It looked like
nothing more than a vast hairy carpet, a mass of snake-like tentacles
thrashing and waving in frenzy as an area the size of a small house tried to
drag itself up towards him.
The pain in his leg was excruciating. He kept slashing with the knife, as
frantic as the tentacles that reached for him. Finally, when the tendril was
little more than a torn mess of tissue, it fell away from him, back into the
foaming sea where the whole thing sank with barely a splash.
The winch started to pull him back into the chopper, but he scarcely
noticed. The pain was throwing him into shock and he was no longer sure if
what he saw was real or a dream induced by the searing heat of pain.
Right at the far point of the chopper’s turn he caught a glimpse of
something glinting in the sun. Far away, almost on the horizon and
shimmering in the heat, stood what looked like a city of glass… or plastic?
Massive towers and turrets rose high above the sea, and gargantuan black
shapes slumped through cavernous streets. He remembered something that
Suzie had said earlier.
The Shoggoths were made. Made as builders.
He blinked and the image had gone, taken out of view by the completion
of the chopper’s turn. The winch pulled him up to the chopper doorway.
The last thing he saw before darkness took him away for a long time was
Suzie, staring at his leg, tears pouring down her face.
July 21st - Lyme Regis
Jim Black enjoyed these evening trips more than the afternoon ones. The
sun was lower, the heat level was usually less severe, and the tourists tended
to be older and more controllable than the post-lunchtime crowd. And
tonight, there was just the right number, about a dozen elderly tourists. Any
more than that and they became harder to manage, any fewer, and what
little tips he made were hardly worth the effort.
It was still very warm after a scorcher of a day on the beach, but he was
hopeful of a nice tally of tips from this crowd. He’d already showed them
the steps where Louisa Musgrove jumped off the Cobb to Captain
Wentworth’s dismay, and the spot where the Duke of Monmouth landed at
the start of his Rebellion. Now it was time for the highlight. The desired
effect worked best when the wind howled and threw spume up over the
Cobb, but then again, weather like that cut down on the number of tourists...
and the tips. This was much more preferable. He led the small party out to
the end of the stone pier.
He hoped they had all seen the movie. Time was—a few years back, you
could count on it, but the very same time was not kind to once-popular
culture. The fact that the group was older helped; when they were younger,
they tended to reply to his next question with blank, uncomprehending
stares.
“Okay,” he said. “Who wants to be Meryl Streep?”
The sudden smiles told him all he needed to know. It turned out they all
not only knew what he meant, but they all intended to get the appropriate
pictures taken. Jim had to organise them into an orderly queue so that they
could step up, right out on the edge of the Cobb, pretending to be pale and
interesting.
A pair of American pensioners went first. The lady took her place on the
edge. She started out giggling skittishly, but as soon as she reached the edge
of the Cobb she went quiet and pale, looking apprehensively down at the
water below.
“Don’t worry, dear,” Jim said, stepping up beside her and steadying her
with a hand on her arm. “I’ve been doing this for years and haven’t lost
anybody yet.”
Even as he said it, something came over the Cobb and snaked around the
old woman’s ankle. Jim got an impression of a long snake, but far quicker
than anything he’d ever seen. It tightened around her leg with an audible
sucking and tugged, once.
The elderly tourist squealed and made a grab for Jim. Instinctively, he
backed away. Then, disgusted at his cowardice, he stepped forward again,
reaching for her outstretched hand.
He was too late. She fell forward, her chin cracking on the edge of the
Cobb. Blood flew. Jim tasted copper as it splashed against his face. The
fallen woman stretched out a hand towards him again. He bent to take it.
Their fingers touched... but that was as close as he got. The tentacle tugged
again and with a final, despairing wail, she was gone.
Her husband rushed forward, shouting her name.
“Ellen!”
Jim didn’t have time to hold him back. The old man leaned over the edge.
“Ellen!” he called again. There was no reply. He turned to Jim.
“What have you done with her? Get her back, right now, or I’ll have you
arrested.”
Jim had no idea how to reply to that. His own mind was still full of the
image of the black snake and he could still taste the woman’s blood in his
mouth.
I need to get them out of here right now.
He reached over to the old man.
“Come on sir. I need to call the authorities.”
The old man turned, snarling. Once again, Jim stepped back, fearful of
an impending punch. The blow never came. The old man’s look changed
from anger to surprise as an inch-thick black tendril wrapped tight around
his neck and pulled. The sound of the man’s neck breaking echoed along
the pier. He still had the surprised look in his eyes as he was dragged away
out of sight.
That was the signal for Jim’s well-organised party to turn into a running
rout along the Cobb.
“Form an orderly line,” Jim shouted before realising just how stupid that
sounded. He was at the end of the group as they started to run, but was soon
overtaking the oldest without stopping to check on them. The group fled
down an avenue of terror. High tentacles rose above them, swaying on
either side like grass in the wind. One slapped on the Cobb and Jim was
dismayed to see the old stone crumble beneath it. It didn’t stop there. The
tentacle seemed to writhe and curl and as it moved, it dug a deep groove in
the Cobb.
It’s as if it’s eating the stone.
Jim saw that he’d have to jump over the prone tentacle. He didn’t think
twice and leapt, feeling his left-foot touch something soft and yielding. He
heard a cry. An elderly lady had stopped on the other side of the tentacle,
unwilling, or unable, to jump over.
“Come on,” Jim shouted, barely slowing in his flight.
She just stood, shaking her head from side to side. The tentacle started to
slide across the Cobb towards her.
Come on!
He stopped in his run, but before he could even start to make his way to
her rescue, the old lady was engulfed in black coils. Something squirted
redly and Jim turned away, once again tasting blood in his mouth.
As he turned, he saw that his group was now twenty yards ahead. One
was faster than the rest. He sped yards ahead, but lost his footing on the
uneven rock of the upper Cobb and fell to one side. Even before he hit the
ground, two tentacles had him, one at the leg and the other at the arm. A tug
of war ensued over the screaming man, until, almost mercifully, one of the
tendrils proved stronger and tore the body from the other. It left an arm
behind, which dangled above the tourists, dripping blood on them as they
fled under it.
The avenue was narrowing all the time as more tentacles rose to join the
forest.
We’re not going to make it.
From the corner of his eye he saw that the whole expanse of the bay to
his left seethed, a black carpet of fronds and tendrils, creeping up the beach
and approaching the promenade.
An elderly tourist stumbled just ahead of Jim, but he never even slowed.
Somewhere behind him he heard a pitiful scream, but he steeled himself
against it, keeping his gaze on the end of the pier and the open streets of the
town beyond.
More screams rent the air. A woman was plucked from the path just
ahead of him and he had to swerve, like a football player avoiding a tackle,
as she was lifted away out of sight. As he neared the end of the pier, the
knot of people packed tighter together and started to dance and pick their
way past the swaying fronds. More screams could be heard all along the
promenade. A police siren started up a nee-naw wail that echoed around
them. Jim pushed himself through the other people. One stockily built man
refused to budge. Without a moment’s hesitation, Jim kicked him behind
the right knee. As the man buckled, Jim pushed him away... straight into a
nest of writhing tentacles that took him away with a crack like a whip.
Finally, Jim reached the end of the pier and ran out onto the promenade,
screaming with joy.
His relief turned to despair as soon as he looked round.
The whole seafront was a crawling carpet of greenish black weed, with
tentacles, some as thick as tree trunks, rising up out of it. At the leading
edge of the mass, round pustules developed and rolled away like self-
propelled beach balls, heading deeper into the streets. All along the
promenade, the kelp attached itself to cars, lampposts, and bus stops, and
crawled over and through anything in its path. One bus-stop, the long, large
shelter nearest the shore, was pulled apart with no apparent effort and the
sheets of Perspex were carried aloft on the tendrils, taken rapidly away out
to sea and out of sight. A thick black plastic bumper was similarly torn from
a car and carried off.
More screams came from the Main Street, from the direction where some
of the beach balls had travelled.
Jim turned and ran, heading for the main car park where he had left his
car.
He nearly made it. He reached the car, shoved a hand frantically in his
pocket to look for his keys... and heard a squelch from behind him. The air
was suddenly full of the taste of iodine. He turned to see one of the dark
balls open out, like a cape opening.
There are eyes inside.
He turned back to the car, scrambling for the keyhole. He got as far as
starting to open the door when it was torn from his hands and thrown aside
like a Frisbee. Something grabbed him round the waist and squeezed.
Blood filled his throat and pain flared like a lightning strike.
He was dead a second later.
July 22nd - Weymouth
Noble woke to a grey haze that took long seconds to clear. He soon wished
it hadn’t, as a dull throb from his leg reminded him of what had happened.
He looked around, realising that he was in some kind of medical
facility.... not a hospital, it was too basic for that, but the fact that he was
hooked up to several monitors and machines that went ping gave the game
away, somewhat.
He called out, but no one came. He made to swing a leg out of bed and
realised he was tied up tight. His left leg was bandaged from foot to knee
and suspended from the ceiling by what, at first glance, looked like a
medieval torture rack. He leaned forward, intent on freeing himself, but a
wave of nausea washed through him. He was forced to sit back and keep
still until his body returned to an even keel and no longer felt like floating
towards the ceiling.
He called out again.
“Anybody there?”
His voice echoed, as if there was a larger, empty area outside the room
where he was lying. He waited. Still, no one responded. He looked around,
hoping to find a bell or buzzer he could use to attract attention. Instead, he
found a pile of papers on the bedside table. He recognised them straight
away—it was the material Suzie had been reading on the chopper. There
was a note on the top.
“There’s a bit of a flap on. I’ll be back when I can. In the meantime, you
need to read the rest of this. I think we’re in trouble.”
Noble laughed, but with little humour.
Tell me something I don’t know.
But it seemed he had nothing better to be getting on with. He picked up
the papers and once more lost himself in the words of Ballantine, in a
Nissen Hut, on the shores of Loch Long.
On the night before his big demonstration, Rankin sought me out in the
mess. At first, I did not even know he had entered. I was intent on getting as
much ale inside me as possible, in a search for oblivion – but I wasn’t to be
allowed that small comfort. The mess fell quiet as he entered.
“Come with me, Ballantine,” he said. “You are the only one who will
understand the import.”
I put my beer down, reluctantly. I was on my fifth and already looking
forward to the sixth. But I could not refuse him. Technically, he was my
Commanding Officer. And, despite my civilian status, I had, in effect, been
drafted and as such, I was not exempt from military justice. With a heavy
heart I followed him down to the lab.
The place had changed since my last visit. The heavy glass tank had been
removed. But the network of piping was still in place overhead and the
metal box still sat in the middle of the floor, its walls etched and pitted by
the acid.
He saw me looking.
“I have another small demonstration for you, Ballantine,” he said. “And
I hope this one will finally convince you of the import of our experiments.”
“If you’re going to be slaughtering some poor animal, I want nothing to
do with it,” I said.
He smiled grimly.
“Not this time. Come. You need to see this.”
He led me to the long trestle. A thick forest of kelp and tentacles
completely filled a glass jar some three feet high and over a foot in
diameter. The whole column vibrated as the thing inside thrashed angrily.
“For pity’s sake, Rankin… how much of this thing did you make?” I
asked.
“Enough,” he whispered. “But that is not why I brought you here.
Watch.”
He walked away to our left. The kelp seemed to follow him, the thrashing
fronds and tentacles now concentrated on that side of the glass. Rankin
turned and came back towards me. The kelp tracked his movement, the
thrashing becoming ever more insistent as Rankin got ever closer to the
glass jar.
“For pity’s sake, Rankin—what kind of thing is this?”
“It knows me,” Rankin whispered in reply. “And I think I’ve made it
angry.”
“That’s not possible,” I started.
“Neither is this,” he said and walked forward until his nose was almost
pressed against the glass. The kelp thrashed, slapping moist tentacles
against the surface, leaving streaks of yellow viscous fluid behind.
“Be careful, man,” I said. I had seen what those tentacles had done to a
pony—I had no wish to see what they could do to a man.
Rankin waved at me to be quiet. He stared at the kelp and spoke in a loud
voice, as if ordering a disobedient dog to heel.
“Quiet!”
The kelp stilled and the big jar stopped vibrating. Now it just looked like
a glass filled with regular seaweed. Rankin motioned me forward. He had to
do it twice before my legs would obey my order to move and even then, I
sidled up to the trestle cautiously, ready to flee at any sign of trouble.
“Come closer,” Rankin said. “This is what I brought you to see.”
“I can see all I need to from here,” I replied, maintaining a distance of
three feet between me and the thin sheet of glass that separated me from the
kelp.
“Just look,” he said. There was wonder and awe in his voice. I saw why,
seconds later.
I looked at the kelp.
And the kelp looked back. A single, lidless eye, pale green and milky,
stared out from the fronds. Even as I watched, it changed, being sucked
back into a new fold. A wet gash opened, like a thin-lipped mouth. It
stretched wide and a high ululation filled the Nissen Hut, like a seagull on a
storm wind.
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
“What the hell is this shite?” I said softly.
Rankin laughed. The kelp squirmed, almost as if it was enjoying the
experience.
“It knows me,” he said again. “It is as if our minds have become
attuned.”
“Our minds? You are crediting this…thing, with intelligence? With
rational thought?”
“Why not?” Rankin said. “After all, if it looks like a duck…”
It was my turn to laugh. When I did so, the kelp stayed still.
“Okay,” I said. “So, now that you’ve made it, would you care to tell me
exactly what it is we have done here?”
Rankin dragged me away. Three new-formed eyes watched us intently.
“In all truth, I have no idea,” he said. “But I have sent a sample back to
the Yanks. They’ve got more sophisticated equipment than we have. Maybe
they can make something of it, where I cannot. But I do know something… I
know that the top Brass will not be able to ignore me. Not this time.”
From inside the glass, the noise grew louder.
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
The field test was scheduled for noon the next day. I spent most of the
morning trying to convince the Colonel to postpone it, but a combination of
the smell of beer on my breath and a fear of disappointing his superiors, led
him to dismiss me out of hand. I watched the preparations in the harbour
with a terrible, sinking feeling in my gut that had nothing to do with the
booze from the night before.
Rankin was back into his full-blown show-off strut, with no sign of the
confusion he had shown earlier in the laboratory. He marched around the
harbour barking orders, a conductor marshalling his orchestra. By the time
the Brass arrived at quarter to the hour, everything was in place. A fine
drizzle started to fall and a chill settled in my spine. Suddenly, I wanted to
be somewhere else—for I knew one thing for sure. This was not going to
end well.
But it was too late. Everything was ready, and Rankin’s demonstration
was imminent.
We stood in a rough semi-circle just above the shoreline. Several yards
beneath us sat the now-familiar metal box. From where I stood, I could
hear the thing thrash against the inside walls, like a manic drummer in
some free-form jazz band.
A chain led from the top of the box along the shingle to lie at Rankin’s
feet. The harbour wall stretched away to our left and ahead of us in the
water, a small flotilla of boats made another rough semi-circle encasing a
drift-net full of mackerel bought just that morning from some very grateful
fishermen down in Helensburgh.
The fish was our bait. Rankin had wanted to use a couple of convicted
murderers from Barlinnie, but even the Colonel had drawn the line at that.
Rankin had also suggested using sheep, but those of us who had seen the
test on the pony balked at that. I wasn’t the only one who did not need to see
that depravity again.
The men on the boats were equipped with flame units and each boat
contained several bottles filled with acid. I hoped it would be enough.
Rankin stood, centre-stage, and waited for the Brass to move into their
place along the harbour wall looking down on the metal box. When he
finally spoke, it was in a voice honed by many years of addressing large
lecture theatres. His words carried, loud and strong, in the still air.
“I have called you here to witness the future of naval warfare. With this
new weapon, German harbours will be rendered unusable for years, maybe
even decades, and all at minimal cost. You previously complained that
energetic seaweed wasn’t good enough, wasn’t flamboyant enough.” He
paused for effect before continuing. “You wanted flamboyance? Here it is.”
He dragged on the chain. The lid of the metal box started to open, slowly
at first.
Then things went bad very quickly.
A handful of tentacles found the edges of the box and tore at it, ripping it
like so much tissue paper. A chunk of metal flew like a discus, passing less
than three feet over the head of the Secretary of State on the harbour wall.
The kelp came out of the box like a greyhound from a trap, expanding as it
came in a roiling mass eight feet wide and near again as thick. It
completely ignored the net full of fish. Instead, it threw out a writhing forest
of tentacles… straight towards Rankin.
He had to step back sharply and even then the leading tentacle caught
him around the left foot and tugged, hard. He fell, slightly off balance, and
a second tendril reached for him. He just had time to kick off his shoe and
scuttle, crab-like back up the shingle beach. The tentacle dragged the shoe
back to a maw in the kelp where it disappeared with a moist suck. The
moving carpet of fronds came up out of the water, still focussed on Rankin,
who was still trying to get to his feet on the loose shingle.
The air was full of the high ululation.
Tekeli Li.
A gull flew down, attracted by the noise. Two tentacles plucked it out of
the air. A new maw opened and took it as fast as a blink. The body of kelp
did not slow. It came up the beach, shingle rattling like gunfire beneath it.
It was then that I saw the fatal flaw in Rankin’s planning. All of the men
with the flame units and acid had been placed out on the boats in
expectation that the fish would be the target. They were now frantically
trying to reach shore, to get at the creeping creature, but they were still too
far out to be of any help.
Up on the harbour wall, security guards ushered the Brass to safety, but
down on the shore, we were in disarray. A fresh-faced young squaddie
stepped between Rankin and the creature. He raised a rifle and took aim,
pumping three quick shots into the main body. The bullets had no effect. The
tendrils wrapped themselves around the lad and dragged him off his feet.
He scrambled, screaming amid the shingle, as he was pulled backwards.
Three more soldiers started to fire shots into the thrashing fronds, but to no
effect. The young squaddie’s screams turned frantic. The carpet of kelp
surged and fell on him like a wet blanket. His screams cut off mercifully
quickly, but the kelp continued to buck and thrash around his body, giving it
a grotesque semblance of life long after it was obvious that he was gone.
All along the back of the kelp, moist mouths opened and squealed, the
sound keening and echoing around the rapidly emptying harbour.
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
Those of us who had not yet fled turned and ran.
The kelp followed us up the jetty, gaining with every second. We ran, a
ragged, disorganised mob, into the warren of Nissen Huts. Several men
tried to set up a rear-guard action, blocking one of the alleys between the
huts with volleys of gunfire. The kelp swarmed over them without a pause.
Man-shaped forms squirmed and writhed within the kelp, then went still.
I ran faster.
When I turned to look again, the kelp had more than doubled in size.
I saw Rankin’s white mop of hair among the people just ahead of me. The
kelp saw him too. Tentacles raised in the air, thrashing wildly and the
keening squeal rose to a frenzied howl.
“Rankin,” I called. “It’s only angry at you. Nobody else has to get hurt
here.”
I wasn’t sure that he’d heard me until I saw him duck inside the lab.
Soldiers ran past the open door, heading for the road out of the Base and I
was sorely tempted to go with them. But despite his faults, Rankin had
believed in me, and I owed him for that. I threw myself towards the lab, just
ahead of a nest of tentacles. Behind it, I could see that the soldiers with the
acid tanks and flame-throwers were only now making their way onto the
jetty—too far behind to be of any help.
Rankin stood near the door, staring at a point over my shoulder.
“Get into the corner,” he shouted at me. “Pull the left hand chain.”
That was all he had time for. The kelp flowed through the doorway,
blocking all escape. I pushed myself as far into the corner as I could and
grabbed at the chain.
“Not yet!” Rankin shouted. He danced aside, avoiding thrashing
tentacles, until he stood on the spot where the metal cage had sat during the
earlier experiment. “Wait until it is all inside.”
He swerved again, just avoiding a long tentacle. But that only served to
put him inside the reach of several more.
“Rankin!” I called out. “Look out!”
But I was too late with my warning. The first tentacle took him around
the waist. He screamed as it started to tug at him, but he held his ground,
forcing the main body of the kelp to come to him. More tentacles struck at
his chest and his ankles. He struggled to stay upright. By now, most of the
kelp was inside the room.
Once more, I reached for the chain.
“Not yet!” Rankin screamed. “None of it can escape.”
The kelp rolled over the lab floor. It opened out like a huge umbrella
towering over Rankin, then fell on him, his white hair being the last thing to
disappear from view.
“None of it can escape,” he called at the end.“Do you understand?”
I understood, all too well.
“Goodbye, Rankin,” I whispered and pulled the chain. I turned away,
unable to watch as the screams, both from the kelp and the dying man, filled
the lab. But the acid rain did its job. In five minutes, all that was left of
Rankin and his creation was a pool of oily goop on the lab floor.
It was only later, as I downed the first of many drinks I have had since
that day, that I remembered his words.
“I have sent a sample back to the Yanks."
I spent weeks after that checking. I found the shipping order and the
name of the boat, the Haven Home. Records show it was sunk by a U-Boat
somewhere off the Scilly Isles. In my dreams I see a glass container, lying in
a flooded cargo hold. Inside, the creeping kelp sits, dormant, waiting.
And I worry.
I worry about breakages.
I think we’re in trouble.
That’s what Suzie had said. After reading the papers, Noble had to agree.
He’d been lost in the story, but now that he was finished, he became all too
aware of the aches and pains that racked his body.
But it could have been worse. It could have been a lot worse.
He put the papers down on the small table beside the bed and lay back,
staring at the ceiling. He was aware that, as yet, no one had come to check
on him, despite the fact that he had been awake for at least an hour now. He
considered calling out, but there was something about the deep silence that
made it seem like sacrilege to break it.
Besides, I shouldn’t complain about getting some rest.
His thoughts kept returning to the last phrase in Ballantine’s journal.
Suzie had it underlined in thick black pencil strokes. I worry about
breakages. There was no doubt in Noble’s mind that the things that had
overrun the Earth Rescue were indeed the self-same creatures that
Ballantine described so vividly.
It seems he was right to worry.
He lay there for a while trying to sleep but his brain refused to slow.
Eventually he gave into the inevitable and picked up Ballantine’s journal
again. He was half way through his second read when someone finally
came to check on him.
The male nurse who entered looked just as tired as Noble felt.
“So what’s the story?” Noble asked. “What’s such a big deal that I get
left here to rot for hours?”
The nurse smiled.
“I looked in less than two hours ago and you were fast asleep.”
“That’s not the point,” Noble replied. “Come on, spill it. I know there’s
something going on and I need to know what it is.”
“What you need to do is rest,” the nurse replied.
He refused to be drawn into conversation as he slowly and methodically
freed Noble’s leg from the tackle that constrained it.
“Okay. If you won’t tell me what’s going on, can you at least tell me
where I am?” Noble asked.
“That’s classified, sir,” the man said and kept at his task.
Noble laughed.
“Who am I going to tell?”
But the nurse wouldn’t be drawn. He only spoke again as he left.
“Stay off your feet for a while,” he said. “There’s nothing broken and you
didn’t need stitches, but the surface abrasions are pretty bad and you’ll be
stiff for a while.”
“Thanks,” Noble said. “But I knew that already.” He was talking to an
empty room. The nurse had already gone.
Stay off your feet? My arse.
This time when he swung his feet out of bed he didn’t feel like throwing
up. He took that as a good sign and was about to head from the door when
he realised he was only wearing a hospital gown, with nothing underneath.
Another quick look around showed him his clothes in a small pile on a chair
at the other side of the room. He headed that way, but soon realised the
futility of the attempt—the floor bucked and swayed like a boat in a heavy
sea and his wounded leg felt like a lump of cold wood grafted at his knee.
He fell back in the bed, a cold sweat at his brow and a pounding heart in his
chest. The room started to spin and once more, in his mind he was back,
dangling at the end of a tether, the black tendrils reaching for him. He
screamed, loud and long until his throat was raw and sore.
No one came.
Finally, he lay back exhausted and fell into a feverish sleep.
Once again he came to his senses slowly. He was sitting up in the bed
and a warm body was pressed up against his good side. He turned and
looked into Suzie’s concerned face.
“How are you feeling?” she asked. She had been crying again, but he
knew better than to draw attention to it.
“I’ve been better,” he said. “How long have I been out?”
“Just a few hours,” she said.
He saw in her eyes there was more to be said.
“But?” he asked.
It came out of her in a rush, as if she’d been keeping it bottled up. He sat
in stunned silence as she told him of the attack on Lyme Regis. He hadn’t
seen the video footage that she had sat through, but her voice carried the
whole horror of it and his own experiences filled in the blanks.
“How many dead?” he whispered during a pause.
“Over a hundred. But it’s hard to be sure yet, as the town is being
evacuated and many fled by car and by foot during the attack itself. The
army has cordoned off the whole seafront—I’ve told them it’s near
impossible to police the coastline, but you know how these guys think.”
Noble nodded.
“They’ll find that this enemy doesn’t follow any rules of engagement. It’s
working on some primal instinct. I doubt it has a plan.”
Suzie suddenly had a far away look in her eyes.
“I’m not too sure of that... I’ve been running some tests on the sample. I
believe there’s something more than just instinct at work.”
He remembered something from the journal.
“Didn’t Rankin think the same thing? He postulated some rudimentary
intelligence, didn’t he?”
He saw fear in Suzie’s eyes.
“I think it’s more than rudimentary,” she said. “I think it has problem
solving and cognitive skills. I’m been running some tests and…”
Noble started to sit up.
“Don’t tell me. Show me,” he said.
She tried to push him back.
“You need to rest.”
“No,” he said. “I need to work. Fetch my clothes, would you?”
While Suzie got the clothes Noble gingerly swung his legs out of bed and
put some weight on the bad ankle. It felt better than before, the pain having
deadened to a dull ache.
And the floor isn’t moving, so that’s a result right there.
He wasn’t going to be running anytime soon, but he felt he could at least
manage a slow walk, as long as he didn’t have to go too far.
He made Suzie turn her back as he dressed, which amused her greatly.
“Who do you think undressed you in the first place?” she asked, smiling
as she turned away.
“I like to be awake when I’m getting molested,” Noble replied.
She was still laughing at that as she led him out of the room.
Once he got out into the corridor and looked around, he knew
immediately that he was somewhere in the depths of the fort—nowhere else
he’d ever been had that distinctive paint job on the walls.
“This place has become the centre of operations for the outbreak. That’s
what they’re calling it, for want of a better term. The whole upstairs is
crawling with soldiers, but they gave me a quiet room down here to set up a
temporary lab and I had some stuff brought over.”
She looked Noble in the eye and obviously saw something she didn’t
like.
“You shouldn’t be on your feet.”
She made to turn him back to the room and the bed, but he stood his
ground.
“No. I’ve been lying down long enough. And it sounds like you think
you’re on to something. Show me.”
They walked through empty corridors, the only sound, Noble’s
increasingly heavy breathing. By the time they reached the office where
Suzie had her makeshift lab set up, he was leaning heavily on her shoulder
and the cold sweat was back.
He slumped into a chair beside her laptop.
“I told you to stay in bed,” she said. The concerned look was back, but he
waved her away.
“I’ll be fine after a coffee... you do have coffee, don’t you?”
She moved to a trestle and showed him a glass jar perched on a Bunsen
burner.
“It’ll be a lab special... and instant.”
“It’ll do,” he said, but his gaze had already been caught by a taller jar on
the edge of the trestle. It was nearly a foot tall, solidly sealed at the top...
and completely full of thrashing, wriggling kelp.
“Did you get a new sample?” he asked.
She saw where he was looking.
“Nope. This is the one that you collected.”
I only collected a fraction of this thing.
“What have you been feeding it... rats?”
She came over and handed him a steaming mug of coffee. He took to it
like a drowning man to a life belt.
“Not rats... plastic.”
As he drank and let the warmth creep through him, she told him about
what else had been found in Lyme Regis, about the total lack of plastic
anywhere the kelp had passed and of eye-witness accounts of Perspex
sheets being carried away over the horizon. Something stirred in the back of
Noble’s mind, something he should be remembering, but it wouldn’t come
—the memory was too raw, too tender to yet be touched. And he was too
tired to attempt to bring it forward. Instead, he reminded Suzie why they
had come to the lab.
“You said it showed something more than instinct?”
She nodded.
“I was re-reading Ballantine’s journal, about when they were shouting at
the lab specimen.”
Noble laughed softly.
“You’ve been shouting at it?”
Suzie blushed.
“Just a little,” she said. She went over to the specimen jar to cover her
embarrassment. As she walked, the kelp seemed to track her movement,
sidling across inside the jar.
“It knows you,” Noble whispered.
Suzie nodded.
“And watch this.”
She walked up to the jar, so close her nose touched the glass.
“Be careful,” Noble shouted.
She took no heed. She shouted at the kelp.
“Down, boy.”
It retreated across the jar, pressing against the far side from her and didn’t
move until she stood away.
“That’s all we need,” Noble said sarcastically. “A new household pet.”
“I haven’t tried being nice to it yet,” Suzie said. She was still blushing.
“It didn’t feel right.”
The thought was so incongruous, Noble couldn’t help but laugh again.
Suzie looked at him as if he were mad.
I might well be.
He went back to the coffee. He finished the cup and put it down on the
desk beside him. At the same moment, the kelp inside the jar went into a
frenzy of thrashing, so violent that the jar started to walk across the table.
Suzie stood back, a hand at her mouth.
“It wasn’t me,” she said. “I think something’s happening.”
A second later, an alarm went off and an accompanying blast of gunfire
echoed around Nothe Fort.
July 22nd/23rd - Weymouth
Derek Gelwyn revved his souped-up Escort, pumping the pedal for all he
was worth. Not that he could hear the effect much—that was drowned out
by the stereo system. It was turned up to ten and if there had been an
eleven, it would be turned up to that. Parallel parked beside him, Jake
Brown put the pedal to the metal in his Nova. They smiled like sharks at
each other through the open windows.
You’re going down, Brown.
It was near midnight and the drag contest on Weymouth promenade was
reaching its climax. Both lads knew that they’d made enough noise in the
past ten minutes to wake up half the town and that the police would be here
any minute now. But there was time for one last race—the one that would
assign bragging rights, for this week at least.
He kept his eye on Jake, waiting for the slightest twitch, like a gunslinger
waiting to draw. Jake winked... and popped the clutch, gaining a vital few
yards before Derek reacted. Derek pushed the pedal to the floor and the
Escort leapt after its quarry.
No way he beats me…no way in hell.
Derek lived for these nights. Long working days spent loading and
unloading crates for the County Council were ameliorated by nights spent
in his Dad’s garage, tinkering with the innards of the Escort, buffing up the
paint work and ensuring that the stereo was the loudest it could possibly be.
Later in those evenings, he would sit behind the wheel and dream, about the
last race of the night, flying straight in the dark towards glory at full
volume.
He put his foot down full and felt the engine kick under him.
By the time they were half way along the run, Derek knew he was going
to win.
Nobody beats this car on the run in from here. Nobody.
He looked over as he drew level with Jake and gave him the finger. Jake
screamed something at him that couldn’t be heard above the pounding bass
from the stereo, but Derek didn’t need to hear it. He knew he had Jake beat
and Jake knew it too. He tried to push the accelerator all the way down to
the floor and they hit a hundred and thirty on the long straight.
They were bearing fast down on the end of the promenade when Derek
saw that there was something wrong. Normally, there was a row of lights
where the other cars waited at the line to hail the victorious driver with a
cacophony of horns and squeals. But tonight, that end of the track looked
dark and quiet. Even the light from the lampposts overhead seemed to be
dim, as if a heavy fog was, even now, advancing in from the bay.
Derek didn’t slow. The race was the thing and Jenna Smythe—with a y—
was waiting at the finish line, promising kisses and other exciting tokens of
love to the victor.
But worry started to gnaw at him. The darkness ahead was starting to
look like a cave.
Blackout? Have the cops got there already?
Jake Brown pulled up first with a screech of brakes. Derek gave his best
victory yell and floored it hard, barrelling straight into the blackness. He
peered through the windscreen, trying to see the finish line. If it was the
cops, they were being sneaky and that wasn’t like them. Usually they just
turned up, shouted a lot, and left again. This quiet dark wasn’t their style.
If it’s the rest of them playing a trick, I’ll give them something to think
about.
He kept his foot down and turned into the slight curve that marked the
end of the promenade. If they were waiting for him in the dark, he would
scatter them like ninepins as they would be expecting him to slow.
What do you think about that?
He hit a wall of kelp at nearly ninety miles an hour, ploughing inside a
squirming mass of fronds and tendrils that smacked and slithered again the
windshield. He just had the presence of mind to push the button for the side
windows as the first tendril tried to snake inside.
What the hell?
The sound of the winding motor seemed to confuse the attackers and the
window closed with a satisfying thunk, leaving the tendril on the other side
to slither wetly against the glass. Only then, did he have time to look
forward.
His headlights showed a scene from a nightmare. Dark fronds thrashed
in frenzy. There was another car, not too far ahead of him, but it was hardly
recognisable as such. Tentacles and tendrils writhed in and around a
mangled mess of metal, fabric... and flesh. Nothing remained that might be
called a person, but Derek saw with disgust that several body parts were
even now in the process of being digested.
Fuck this for a game of soldiers.
He slammed the Escort into reverse. Wheels squealed and tugged on
unyielding kelp. He slammed a foot on the accelerator and inch by inch, the
car started to ease backward.
Come on you bastard! No fucking seaweed is going to eat MY car.
His tyres screeched and finally gripped, hard, on the soft surface below.
He screamed in triumph as the Escort pulled free and reversed at speed
back along the promenade. The kelp came after him in a surging wave, a
black wall that seemed to cover this whole end of the road. Every so often
he’d see something almost recognisable moving in the fronds; a piece of
tyre, a scrap of metal that might have been a bumper and, worst of all, more
body parts, still red and dripping.
What the hell happened here?
He spun the Escort into a handbrake turn to get the vehicle pointing in
the right direction, floored the accelerator again, and sped back towards
town, screaming his joy above the still-pounding dance beat that filled the
car.
His joy at escape was short lived. Where mere minutes ago there had
been a throng of cars and youths all cheering and shouting back at the start-
line, now there was only more of the deep blackness, a cave mouth that
seemed to swell and grow around Derek’s Escort.
No way out that way.
His rear-view mirror was also full of the rushing dark, washing towards
him from behind. He spun the steering wheel, his only chance seeming to
be to get off the road completely.
If I can just get away from the shore…
But it was too late. A tentacle nearly three feet thick plucked the car
from the road and started to squeeze. The Escort squealed as metal was
crushed and glass cracked.
No… not the car.
Derek tore at his seat belt but there was to be no escape. The black maw
surrounded and engulfed him. Tendrils started to push through the
windows. The windscreen collapsed and was torn away, out of sight in an
instant. His view was filled with thrashing fronds.
He opened his mouth.
The kelp filled it.
July 23rd - Weymouth
He tried to talk to Suzie in the chopper, but the noise, even through ear-
mufflers was almost deafening. That, plus the fact that his leg started to
throb in time with the chug of the rotors meant that this was not going to be
a pleasant journey. But she needed him, and he was coming to a growing
realisation that he also needed her.
And once this situation is over, I mean to tell her so.
He might even have tried to tell her there and then, but even as the
chopper took to the air and banked over the smoking carnage in Weymouth
Harbour, she already had the papers she’d brought opened in her lap.
She saw him looking.
“Try to get some rest,” she shouted. “I’ve got a feeling it’s going to be a
while before we get another chance.”
For the first half an hour he tried, but every time he closed his eyes his
mind filled with pictures of flame and burning flesh and his head still
echoed with the sound of screams and gunfire. After a time he came to
believe he could taste burning flesh at the back of his throat. That, and the
nausea building in his gut from the rocking and the vibration, made him
wish he’d stayed back in the warm bed at the fort.
Then Suzie looked over at him and smiled, and all other thoughts slipped
away.
I’ve fallen for her.
It came as a surprise. They’d been working together for a while now and
always treated each other more as brother and sister than potential lovers.
He’d always had a feeling of distance from her, as if she liked to keep not
just him, but everybody at arm’s length. There had been more touching and
hugging in the past few hours than there had been in the last few years.
Not that I’m complaining.
For a while he lost himself in fantasies of dinner and drinks and what
might happen later. But even there the kelp intruded, forcing the screeching
Tekeli Li wail into his skull in an ear-worm that couldn’t be stilled, couldn’t
be turned down. Finally he gave up and sat up straight, reading along with
Suzie as she perused some of her research notes. Once again he was quickly
lost in the past, but this time, some way further back than World War Two.
From the journal of Juan Santoro, Captain of the Santa Angelo, on the
3rd day of April in this year of our Lord 1535
If there is a hell on this Earth then surely it is in this place here. No god-
fearing man should have to face the horrors I have led my crew through on
this day. I give thanks that I have brought us all back safely to the ship and I
am much afeared with the thought of the return voyage, for the cargo is
most foul and ungodly. But I would be remiss in my duty to the Church if I
did not report on the things that plague this new land. If the Crown wishes,
as I have been told, to colonise this place, then we must know what manner
of things lay claim on it at present.
In truth, I know not what we have found. It began when we started to
hear rumour of something being hidden from us in the forest to the west of
the collection of huts that passes as civilisation here. The fact that
something was being hidden proved most interesting, for until that moment,
the people had been the most open and friendly of any I have met anywhere
on my numerous travels and journeys in service of the King and Queen.
At first I did not wish to pry, but the rumours persisted, and the men
began to clamour for action, having the scent of gold in their nostrils and
the thought of glory in their hearts.
I took a party to the forest and we did indeed find resistance there, so
much so that it became obvious there was indeed something hidden there
from us, something of great value.
The natives died bravely defending it, and for most of the day we fought
our way ever closer, thinking that we had stumbled on a great treasure. We
fought through their defences, hacking and slashing our way to the centre of
a dark temple that rose up high, even rising above the tall forest canopy.
The temple itself was ringed with four concentric circles of burning oil, and
several of our party took severe burns in their crossing, but all the men
braved the fire, the thought of fortune spurring them on.
As I have said, we expected treasure. What we found was beyond our ken.
The temple was fashioned from a material unlike any we had ever before
encountered; a green soapstone with jet black marbling that on close
inspection looked like it might once have been alive. The stone itself was
moist, almost oily to the touch and to a man we found ourselves trying to
scrub the taint of it from our skin even as we climbed, still felling defenders
all the way to the top.
We lost five good men on the quest for that treasure, and the men were
dismayed when all we found at the top was a deep pool of what at first
glance looked to be a thick tar. Fernando Vasquo stepped down into it,
intent on exploring the depths, unwilling to give up the quest for fortune
and glory. It was to be the end of him, and I will hear his screams from now
until eternity.
I do not have the words to describe the carnage that was wrought on
Vasquo’s poor body, but when the thing was done, there remained only
several pieces of bone, white and shining as if picked clean.
Even then the men refused to leave, tearing at the stones, sure that there
was gold to be had. But in the end, all we received for our vicissitudes was
that bubbling pit of blackness.
I have had it sealed in a lead casket and will take it back to Seville.
But the journey will be long, for already it whispers in my mind, and I
fear my dreams will be dark indeed during the long months at sea ahead.
From the journal of Juan Santoro, Captain of the Santa Angelo, on the
29th day of May in this year of our Lord 1535
Calamity has overtaken us, as I have feared it might ever since I brought
that damned casket aboard. The thing has plagued our dreams since the
start, and the crew has been without sleep for many days. There have been
mutterings of mutiny since the beginning of the month, and last night
matters came to a head. Three crewmen took it upon themselves to rid us of
our tormentor.
At least, they tried. And for their presumption, they were mightily
punished.
Their screams in the dark alerted me to their plight and I was first to
enter the hold. It is hard to describe the fear that gripped me as I saw the
hell the thing had wrought on my men. It was obvious that they had lifted
the casket, probably intending to throw it overboard. But someone had
dropped an end of the casket to the deck—that much is also obvious from
the dent in the leftmost edge. I can only surmise that the accompanying jolt
caused the casket to break open—and let the beast out.
What did not need conjecture was the fate of the men after that.
The black ooze lay over the bodies like a wet blanket—one that seethed
and roiled as if boiling all across the surface. Pustules burst with obscene
wet pops and flesh melted from bone even as the men screamed and writhed
in agony.
Mercifully, their pain did not last long. All too soon the blackness seeped
in and through them until even their very innards were liquefied and, with
the most hideous moist sucking, drank up by the beast, which was now three
times larger than previously, grown plump on its feeding. It opened itself
out, like a black crow spreading its wings, the tips touching each side of the
hold walls.
All along the inside surface of the wings wet mouths opened and the air
echoed with a plaintive high whistling in which words might be heard if you
had the imagination to listen.
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
The very sound made the blood run cold in my veins such that, although
we sailed in the Tropics, I felt a chill such as one might in the sea far to the
north where the floes fill the horizon.
The thing swelled and ebbed, as if breathing in deep, rhythmic spasms, a
wet, gurgling noise accompanying each breath. The whole room stank of
corruption and if there is indeed a Hell, it can be no worse than that hold
on that night.
My every instinct told me to turn and flee. But there was nowhere to
escape to except the sea itself, and that was a choice no sailor would make.
Instead I stood my ground while Massa, stout coxswain that he is, brought
forth some firebrands. Only then did the thing seem to cower and retreat,
and only then did I remember the circles of burning oil we had crossed on
entering the black temple in the jungle.
I called for a barrel of pitch and tried to hold the beast at bay with a
brand until aid might arrive. It seemed my adversary had other ideas. And
now that it was free of the casket its powers had increased. It probed at my
mind, searching for my weaknesses, taunting me with my dreams. I saw
things no man should have to see as I was shown the atrocities that had
been committed in this thing’s name by the savages in the temple.
Blasphemies beyond the wildest imaginings filled my thoughts, dark red
fury where bodies boiled, bubbled and seethed in a soup that might once
have been men.
The grip on my mind grew stronger.
I saw vast plains of snow and ice where black things slumped amid
tumbled ruins of long dead cities. And yet, although dead, something
slumbered there, something so ancient as to be unaware of the doings of
man, something vile.
And while our slumbering god dreamed, we danced for him, there in the
twilight, danced to the rhythm.
We were at peace.
I know not how long I danced there, and I might be there yet had a
flaring pain not jolted me back to sanity. I smelled burning, but took several
seconds to note that it was my own hand that had seared. The coxswain,
stout man that he is, had broken the hold on me by touching his firebrand to
my skin.
I had no time to thank him, for the beast had shuffled ever closer to me
while I dreamed, and even now it threatened to engulf me in its folds.
Once again I held the firebrand ahead of me, and with the aid of the
coxswain I held the beast at bay, struggling to keep its grip from settling on
my mind. Indeed, if the barrel of pitch had not been brought, both the
coxswain and I might have succumbed.
When the pitch arrived I ordered it poured on the deck between the beast
and us. It seemed to take an age to pour and all the time that black tar
probed at our minds. Several of the men took on blank stares but, mindful of
the coxswain’s earlier success, we were able to jolt them back with a burn
to their flesh. Finally the pitch lay on the deck and I was able to step
forward and set it alight. It took slowly at first, but soon a good fire burned
in the hold.
Burning the pitch enabled the recapture of the beast to proceed more
rapidly. The heat from the flames threatened to set fire to the deck of the
hold itself, but I refused to allow the men to put it out until we had driven
the beast back into the casket.
Even then it had one last surprise in store for us, for as we forced it ever
backwards an array of white lidless eyes opened along its flanks. As we
ensured the last of it drew back into the lead box the eyes blinked, like the
wink of a coquette, before drawing down into the shadows.
I have ensured that the box is sealed completely, and it is now stored at
the furthermost end of the hold. All I can do is keep the crew as far away
from it as is possible on this small vessel,
That, and hope that in our dreams we do not fall again under its spell.
But it is hard. For every time I close my eyes I dream, of vast empty
spaces, of giant clouds of gas that engulf the stars, of blackness where there
is nothing but endless dark, endless quiet. And while my slumbering god
dreams, I dance for him, there in the twilight, dance to the rhythm.
In dreams I am at peace.
Noble saw more pages on Suzie’s lap left to be read, but they would have
to wait. The chopper was descending, and through the window he saw the
open spaces of Horse Guard Parade rise up to meet them.
July 24rd - London
Once out of the chopper they were led into a warren of offices and
corridors, frog-marched at some haste while flanked by four soldiers armed
with automatic weapons and smile-free faces. Noble expected such urgency
to lead to an immediate meeting with whoever had summoned them, but he
had forgotten about the fickle nature of the political classes.
They were told to sit in an admittedly very comfortable pair of chairs in a
draughty corridor and informed that the Minister would see them soon.
He’d also forgotten that a politician’s definition of the word might be very
different from his own. For a while he watched as people scurried back and
forward in and out of the office in front of him. He started to notice the
strain on the faces of everyone around, a strain that was turning to fear as
the time passed.
It started to get light outside and Noble found his head nodding as sleep
tried to take him, but he was nudged awake when Suzie poked him in the
ribs. She had continued reading the notes she had brought and she passed
several pages to him.
“You need to read these,” she said, going straight back to her own
reading. He took the papers and started at the top, soon finding his thoughts
back with the Inquisitor in 1535.
From the journal of Juan Santoro, Captain of the Santa Angelo, 14th
August 1535
We will make port on the morrow. It matters little, for the dream is with us
now in every waking hour and no distance from the beast will make any
difference. It has passed on to us so completely that we will never be free
from it. Nor would we wish anything other. Indeed, I am not the only one
who has found himself standing over the lead casket just to be closer to the
blessed, drifting peace it offers.
There is no pain in the dream, no fear, no hunger, just the sweet forever of
the dead god beneath.
I have talked to the crew. We will do our duty and take our captive to the
castle. But we will no longer work for the church after this task is done. I
intend to set sail again as soon as night falls. There is a spot in the South
Seas where a dead god lies dreaming.
We will find him and join him there.
John Spalding pulled his cab over at the South Side of the bridge and let the
three Japanese out. He left the meter running. There was already nearly two
hundred pounds clocked up there and he expected at least two hundred
more before this jaunt was over. He sat and made plans for the evening—
his wife deserved a night out. A few beers, a nice Italian meal, and maybe
he’d even get lucky later. All thanks to the Japanese tourists’ unquenchable
thirst for pictures of London landmarks.
They were at it again, taking turns posing with the bridge in the
background and grinning from ear to ear. John tuned them out and turned
on the radio. He’d kept it off during the trip so far—tourists, especially big
spending ones, didn’t need scaring off by reports of death and destruction.
Things hadn’t gotten any better since the earlier reports. They were now
calling it a “National Emergency” but if it was truly national, there was no
sign of it having any effect here in the capital city. The bridge was as busy
with traffic as ever and tourists from many countries were out in force. Just
from where John sat he could see three coaches waiting for their loads to
take pictures and a small fleet of taxi cabs continued to dart to and fro
across the famous bridge, depositing more camera-laden groups along the
footpaths on either side.
He’d missed a bit on the radio and turned it up to hear properly.
“As yet, unconfirmed reports are coming in of sporadic attacks in the
Medway towns and along the North Kent coast. A child has gone missing in
Ramsgate and a family reported seeing a seething mass just offshore in
Greenwich. If these reports are indeed true, it is feared that London itself
may be next. Troops are being called in and...”
He’d heard enough. He leaned out of the window and shouted.
“Time to go,” he called out. His fare paid no attention and kept snapping
pictures. He leaned on his horn until they got the message. They got into the
back, glaring at him all the way. He’d probably lost all chance of a tip, but
the news report had him spooked and all he wanted to do now was get away
from the river.
Maybe they’d like to see Regent’s Park Zoo?
That was his last coherent thought, for just as he put the cab in gear to
pull away, he felt the wheels lurch beneath him. He pushed hard on the
accelerator, but the wheels just spun uselessly underneath.
“What the fu...”
He opened the cab door and slammed it shut straight away. The road
below the cab had become a seething mass of green and brown fronds. The
tourists had already turned in their seats and were excitedly photographing
the phenomenon, but John’s attention was taken by the view to the front. A
line of tourists had been making their way towards a coach. They were
never going to make it. The creeping kelp poured over the passenger rails
like water and seethed among ankles and heels. At first, the tourists seemed
to think it was something put on for their benefit; part of the tour. They
giggled nervously, danced gingerly among the weed and started to take
pictures. It was only when first one, then two more, found that they were
unable to walk due to the kelp taking hold of them, that panic started to
spread. By then, it was too late.
John watched, open mouthed, as the kelp smothered the screaming,
writhing bodies. It was only when the mass of weed rose and started to
advance down the bridge that he thought to try to escape.
He hit the accelerator, but the wheels just squealed and spun. Reverse
was no better, bringing only a sudden lurch and a stop that threw his
passengers around in the back.
I’ve definitely blown that tip.
The tourists started shouting at him, but even if he could have understood
a word of it, there was nothing he could do. The cab was stuck firm and
there was no way he was opening the door to have a look, not after seeing
what had happened –was still happening—outside. The kelp was spreading
all across the bridge and crawling, with increasing speed, up the twin
towers that defined the landmark.
John turned and spoke softly, hoping to calm his passengers. He had no
idea whether they understood him, but just the act of it was something
familiar, something to hold on to while things went to shit and worse
outside.
“We’re okay in here,” he said. “This cab is built to handle anything.
Good British engineering, none of that Japanese rubb...” He stopped short
as the kelp crept over the bonnet. The passengers started to scream—John
felt like joining them as the windshield view filled with green fronds. The
kelp looked moist, slightly oily. It slapped wetly against the glass. When a
slit appeared and a white eye looked in on them, John’s screams joined
those of the tourists.
He was only vaguely aware that the cab seemed to be floating among the
kelp, carried in a flow that was taking vehicles up and over the guard way
to the river below. The last thing he saw as they tumbled over the edge was
a mass of kelp that spread across the whole of the river Thames and was
even now spreading westwards towards the city centre.
July 23rd - The Thames
There was no warning. A wave of green vegetation flowed up river with the
tide and engulfed everything in its path. Several curious people stood on
London Bridge looking down at the river. Tendrils whipped and lashed and
the people were taken, only a faint scream from far below to tell they had
even been there.
All along the lower lying streets on either side of the river the kelp
flowed and fed. People tried to flee, piling up into panicked groups at dead
ends and getting trapped by cars in rapidly forming jams. All this achieved
was to give the kelp a purpose-built feeding ground, one it fell on in a
frenzy of fronds and stingers.
Some people, thinking themselves safe once they had ran a good distance
away from the river, turned to watch the carnage. But the kelp wasn’t about
to let a potential meal go to waste. Dark buds formed all along the surface
of the carpet of vegetation and with an audible, almost explosive pop, were
fired in small parabolic arcs to land on the roads, bounce, and roll like soft,
almost squidgy, cannonballs. Whenever they rolled up against something,
be it lamppost, vehicle, or leg, they opened out, bat-wings clinging like a
limpet and small tendrils lashing like whips.
Even above the sound of screaming and wailing, the predominant noise
was cracking and ripping as everything made of plastic, Perspex or rubber
was torn away and transported—first to the river, then, like a rock-star
crowd surfing, away across the top of the fronds to be carried out towards
the open sea.
July 23rd - Vauxhall Bridge Road.
He was woken sometime later by the sound of voices. Someone a few seats
away had a radio and had turned it up for everyone to hear.
“We repeat, people are advised to stay as far away from waterways as
possible, especially where these are tidal in nature. The menace is spreading
fast and has reached as far as The Wash to the north and the Jersey Islands
to the South and reports are coming in of possible activity in the Severn
Estuary. All seagoing traffic in these areas is suspended indefinitely and the
armed forces are at full stretch trying to contain the situation.
“The Cabinet is meeting in emergency session at an undisclosed location
in outer London and no one knows when, if ever, the Houses of Parliament
will be reopened. A team of scientists from the MOD is on the North
Embankment right now assessing the damage to the buildings but it seems
part of our cultural heritage and a symbol of democracy across the world
may be damaged beyond repair.
“Although the menace now seems to be receding downstream from the
capital, there is no guarantee that it will not return. There is a massive
military presence being readied in an attempt to stop the vegetation’s
advance at the Thames Barrier on the next tide, but their success is far from
assured. This vegetation, if that is what it is, has proven resilient against
everything we have thrown at it and fire only seems to serve to spread it
over an ever-widening area. It is feared that a nuclear option may be the
only recourse, but how do you nuke something as big as this danger has
become?
“That is the question currently being asked in Cabinet. Meanwhile, we
can only watch and wait with trepidation for the thing’s next move.”
The man with the radio swore, loudly and often, until asked to quieten
down by a woman with two clearly frightened children. He took the radio
away with him and left the carriage in a sulk, still muttering under his
breath.
“What else did I miss?” Noble asked, looking over at Suzie. She tried a
smile, but it didn’t reach her eyes.
“London is in uproar,” she said. “But at least everyone has woken up to
the threat now, even if it did take the destruction of Westminster to do it.
They say the kelp got nearly to the doors of Buckingham Palace before
going back with the tide.”
She had dark shadows under her eyes and the skin looked red and puffy
from where she’d been crying. He leaned over and took her hand as she
continued.
“They say they might never know the final death toll,” she whispered.
“But it’s in the tens of thousands.”
She stared out the window, fresh tears rolling down her cheeks.
“And they don’t know how to fight it—I don’t know how to fight it. Not
yet.”
She turned back to look Noble in the eye.
“You will help me, won’t you? I know that if I can get back to the lab and
that sample then I...”
Noble stopped her with a squeeze of her hand.
“I’ll be with you all the way,” he said. “But I’m not the only one who
needs rest.”
She nodded, then surprised him by coming round the table to snuggle up
next to him, laying a head on his shoulder.
Neither of them spoke.
They stayed that way for a while.
July 23rd - Weymouth
It was getting dark again by the time they arrived back in Weymouth after a
long, detour-ridden trip in an extortionate taxi from Exeter. Suzie had been
buzzing with nervous energy all the way, full of talk of the experiments she
wanted to attempt on her sample. She only went quiet when the taxi came to
a halt at the edge of town. Just ahead of them, military vehicles blocked the
road.
“Looks like it’s the end of the line, folks," the driver said.
Noble paid him, vowing to claim every penny back in expenses. By the
time he got to the makeshift barricade, Suzie was already arguing with a
stressed out soldier who looked like he’d rather be anywhere else but there.
“I told you, miss,” he said. “No civilians allowed in. The town has been
evacuated for the public safety.”
He said the words as if he’d learned them by rote and had been reciting
them far too often.
Noble could see Suzie’s ire rising.
“We’re on official business here,” Noble said. “We’ve just returned from
a meeting with the Minister and have information that the Colonel will need
right away. Or would you rather tell him yourself that you kept us waiting at
the gate like beggars?”
Suddenly, the youth was all apologetic. He waved them through. Noble
might have berated him for slackness if he’d had the energy, but the long
trip from London had taken its toll on him, despite his nap on the train, and
he felt like he needed to sleep for a week.
Suzie wasn’t about to allow any of that. She force-marched him to Nothe
Fort and down into the lab. On the way, they saw several soldiers, none of
whom paid them the slightest attention, and they also saw much evidence of
a kelp attack that had stretched far from the shoreline and reached deep into
the town. Several houses had been either caved in or burned to the ground
in an obvious attempt to contain the vegetation. Noble was glad to get
inside the solidity of the castle and only started to feel safe as they
descended to the lab in the bowels of the building.
Suzie went straight to the bench. The jar containing the sample was still
sitting exactly where they’d left it. Noble had a look in passing. The
material inside the jar looked burned and charred, little more than ash.
“Are you going to be able to do anything?”
“I hope so. See if you can rustle us up something to eat and I’ll see what I
can do.”
Noble found a makeshift canteen open two levels up. He got four
sandwiches, two coffees, and an update on the situation from a weary
squaddie behind the counter.
“Damn near got us, so it did,” the man said, his Scottish accent showing
strong. “It took half the town before we got it pegged back and the bastard
thing even crawled half way up the wall of the castle. I was shitting myself,
I’ll tell you that, for nothing. And I’ll tell you something else—if it comes
back, I don’t think we’ll be able to stop it.”
The castle felt somehow more oppressive and less safe as he made his
way back to the lab. He found Suzie bending over the blackened mass of
tissue, prodding it with a scalpel. He had to ask her twice before she would
break off and take time to eat. Even then, her gaze kept drifting back to the
charred thing on the table.
“Remember what the priest said in his journal?” she said between
mouthfuls of bread and ham. “... after I have burned away more than nine-
tenths of its matter, it has weakened. If I concentrate hard, I can catch
glimpses of what the beast is thinking and feel its fear.”
“Please don’t tell me you’re planning what I think you’re planning,”
Noble said.
She nodded.
“I’m going to put it to the Inquisition.”
For a time, Noble tried to pay attention to what Suzie was doing over at the
table, but he slouched ever further into the chair, his head nodding to his
chest. Again, he gave in and fell into a deep sleep.
He dreamed.
The winch starts to pull him back into the chopper, but he scarcely
notices. The pain is throwing him into shock and he is no longer sure if
what he sees is real or a dream induced by the searing heat of pain.
Right at the far point of the chopper’s turn he catches a glimpse of
something glinting in the sun. Far away, almost on the horizon and
shimmering in the heat, stands what looks like a city of glass… or plastic?
Massive towers and turrets rise high above the sea and gargantuan black
shapes slump through cavernous streets.
He hears Suzie’s voice.
The Shoggoths were made. Made as builders.
He came awake with a start. Something had him in a hold, something soft
that pressed tight against him.
It’s got me.
He struggled, tearing away at his attacker... only to fully wake and
realise he was trying to tear a sleeping bag. Suzie must have put it over him
while he slept. He looked around, suddenly embarrassed, hoping that no
one was watching.
He wasn’t alone, but Suzie hadn’t seen him. She was slumped in another
chair, head drooped and breathing softly. Behind her sat the tall glass jar.
The sample inside no longer looked quite so burnt. In fact, it seemed to
have grown.
She’s been feeding it.
As if in response, the material surged inside the jar. Noble wasn’t in any
mood for play.
Don’t you fucking dare.
He thought it rather than saying it, for fear of waking Suzie. But the kelp
reacted as if struck, cowering to the far side of the glass. He remembered
Suzie’s words.
“I’m going to put it to the Inquisition.”
It seemed she had done so, and with some success, for if he was not
mistaken, what he was seeing now was fear. He bent forward.
“You don’t frighten me,” he whispered. “I’m wearing clean underwear.”
Something gripped his mind. He went away for a while.
He saw vast plains of snow and ice where black things slumped amid
tumbled ruins of long dead cities.
Massive towers and turrets rose high above the sea and gargantuan black
shapes rolled through cavernous streets.
And while his slumbering god dreamed, Noble danced in the twilight,
danced to the rhythm.
He was at peace.
He might have been lost forever if Suzie had not slapped him, hard,
across the cheek. Even then, he had to look away from the sample jar and
blink vigorously before the miasma lifted from his mind.
“Are you okay?” Suzie asked, concerned. “I was going to tell you when
you woke to be careful.”
He laughed softly.
“Thanks for the warning. But some good has come of it, I think. I’ve
remembered something I saw just after collecting the sample—something
the pain must have driven off at the time.”
He told her about the city of plastic and the slumping Shoggoths in the
streets.
“Builders,” she whispered.
He nodded.
“But building for what? You said before that you thought there might be
a controlling intelligence at work? What if the city is its home? Sitting there
and sending out an army to drag the plastics back, to build ever bigger?”
Suzie was getting increasingly excited as he spoke.
“If that’s the case—we know where its brain is. We can strike at it.”
Noble laughed bitterly.
“Yes. All we have to do now is convince the powers that be that we’ve
got telepathic, intelligent, killer seaweed on our hands. One that’s building a
city out of recycled plastic for its god or gods and that we know where this
city is, because a bit of burnt weed told us so.”
Suzie returned the laughter.
“I won’t make the same mistake I made with the Minister. I have a
cunning plan.”
July 24th - Weymouth
Noble was surprised to see thin sunlight through the windows as they made
their way up through the fort.
I’ve slept all night.
Now that he considered it, he did in fact feel somewhat rested and his leg
wound no longer pounded pain in time with his heartbeat. He stomped on a
step. There was no answering jar of complaint, just a dull throb.
It seems I’m better.
Suzie was in a hurry and he had to up his pace to keep up, but his leg was
up to the job and he wasn’t even breathing heavily when they arrived in the
conference room.
Suzie strode ahead, determination showing on her face, but stopped dead
in the doorway. There was a meeting in progress and the lights were
dimmed, a video being shown on the big screen. From their place in the
doorway, they could just about hear the commentary, but the pictures told
their own story.
The first scene was an overhead tracking shot along the Thames. On
either side, buildings lay in smoking ruin. Bodies, and parts of bodies, were
piled high on the Embankment and military vehicles were the only traffic
on roads strewn with abandoned cars, cabs and buses.
The Colonel stood at the front addressing a seated crowd of about twenty,
all of whom looked military. There was no sign of any of the local
politicians they’d met the last time.
“A mass evacuation of Central London is under way,” he said. “Last
night our boys managed to hold this blasted weed back at the Thames
Barrier, but it was a hard fight and we lost a lot of good men before the tide
turned again and the threat receded. Plans are underway to nuke the Thames
Estuary if it comes back. But it seems the kelp itself is not even the worst
menace we face, for although it seems to stay near the water courses, the
contagion it brings with it has been spreading far and wide.”
The scene on the screen changed to a street in the City of London,
outside the Bank of England. The place was usually full of people in
business suits going about their business industriously, oiling the wheels of
the country. Not today. Today the whole street was packed from side to side
with shuffling, wailing victims of what looked like a plague. Black flesh
sloughed away from bone and fell steaming to the ground. Others scratched
and tore at wet lesions, drawing blood, but unable to remove the traces of
blackness from their skin.
Suzie whispered at his side and it took him a second or two to recognise
the quote from the Inquisitor General.
“No man is to touch any part of it, under pain of himself being subjected
to ordeal by fire.”
She’d been right about the fire. On screen, he saw that teams of people
dressed in full HAZMAT suits were at the far end of the street, all armed
with flame-throwers, all burning what looked like piles of bodies that had
been hastily tossed on pyres. Smoke and small pieces of ash rose in the air
and were dispersed by the wind.
Suzie whispered again.
“They’re just making it worse.”
The Colonel echoed her words.
“We discovered, too late, that these tactics were only making matters
worse. It seems the best defence against this thing is concentrated
Hydrochloric Acid. All stocks from all over the country are being shipped
to the coast and a call has gone out world-wide for aid, but it will be some
time in coming. In the meantime, we are at the whim of fate, with no way of
telling where or when the next strike may come, nor indeed where it came
from in the first place.”
Suzie chose that moment to speak up.
“I may be able to help with that.”
The Colonel saw her and gave her a thin smile.
“Our expert, Ms Jukes, is just lately returned from London where she
was briefing the Minister. Maybe she can give us a report on her meeting.”
And maybe she can’t. Noble thought, but kept his mouth shut as Suzie
moved to the front beside the Colonel.
What followed was as clever a piece of misdirection as Noble had ever
seen. She didn’t lie to them. Not quite. Neither did she quite tell the truth.
But by the end of half an hour she had them convinced that she had a
possible answer at hand, and that, if she could be given a chopper and a
backup team of marines, she might be able to find and halt the source of the
menace. When she finished, the room was quiet, but Noble felt like giving
her a round of applause.
The Colonel looked like a man with a renewed mission.
“It’ll take a couple of hours to get a crew prepped and supplied,” he said.
“Will you be in the lab?”
She nodded.
“I have one last experiment I want to perform on the sample, then we’ll
be ready to go.”
One last experiment?
Noble’s heart sank.
That can’t be good news.
When they returned to the lab and she told him what she intended to do, he
was even more concerned.
“But I have to,” she said. “I believe there’s some kind of psychic link
between this sample and the main—brain, if that’s what we call it. If I can
put it under enough stress, I may be able to piggyback on that link, to dream
its dreams and trace the source back. Don’t you see? We can find out
exactly where to hit it.”
Noble nodded.
“Yes. I see. What’s that?” he asked and pointed into the corner of the
room. As she moved to look, he turned and focussed on the sample jar.
“You idiot,” Suzie shouted, but her voice was pulled away, as if by a
strong wind. The grip in his mind took hold again. A tide took him, a swell
that lifted and transported him, faster than thought.
Massive towers and turrets rose high above the sea and gargantuan black
shapes rolled through cavernous streets.
The grip on his mind tightened.
He pushed back, hard, and strained to see inside the buildings. His gaze
seemed to be drawn to a spot where the dark Shoggoths were at their most
numerous, slithering and rolling over sheets of plastic, melting and forming
it into new strange and wondrous shapes that towered high above the ocean.
And there was something else, just visible beneath many layers of material,
something long and red... the rusted keel of an old cargo ship.
He probed, seeking to look deeper.
Deep in the rusted keep, something stirred and Noble suddenly felt fear, a
loosening of the bowels and weakening of the knees.
He pushed one last time and thought of the warmth of the lab, of Suzie’s
smile.
When he opened his eyes he was looking into her concerned face. The
sample in the jar smoked and bubbled and Suzie had a jug in her hand,
emptying acid over the material.
“I had to destroy it,” she said softly. “It was taking you.”
At first, her voice sounded soft, as if coming from a great distance.
Someone started pounding a hammer inside his skull. But slowly, the lab
started to fill in around him. There was an acrid tickling at his nostrils
caused by the acid eating away at the sample in the jar.
“Was it worth it?” Suzie asked.
He nodded.
“I know what we’re looking for.”
July 24th - In the Air Again
The city could almost have passed for any on the mainland on a quiet
Sunday morning.
Almost.
It was only when Dave looked closer that he could see the mosaic of
recycled material, or a piece of plastic from something he nearly
recognised. At some points, he was able to make out a roiling, seething sea
beneath, but the ground, such as it was, felt firm enough underfoot. No
matter how normal it all seemed, this was far from a Sunday stroll. The men
around were tense and sullen, ready to avenge their dead. A piece of plastic
crackled on their left-hand side and before Mitchell could stop him, one of
the marines hosed the whole area with acid.
Everything went quiet for the space of several seconds. A thin column of
acrid smoke wafted above them before being dispersed in a light breeze.
And on the same breeze, came a response, a high keening sound that Noble
was coming to know—fear.
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
“Run,” he shouted to Mitchell. “We need to get out of here. Right now.”
To his credit, the Lieutenant did not hesitate.
“Move out. And heads up. We’ve got incoming.”
The small squad broke into a run. Noble and Suzie kept pace in the
middle of the team, hard pressed to maintain their positions as they ran
through streets that suddenly seemed even less inviting than previously.
“Where are we going?” Suzie shouted, but Noble had no answers. Nor, it
seemed, did the Lieutenant. It all became moot seconds later. Noble looked
up and saw two hulking black shapes block the road ahead. The squad
turned back. Three more Shoggoths blocked their retreat.
“Looks like they’ve woken up. We’re a threat now, right enough,” Noble
said.
The Lieutenant wasn’t listening. He was making a visual sweep of the
area.
“Over here,” he shouted. “Follow me.”
He led them to a squat structure to their left, one that had a small
opening, big enough for the squad to pass through, and too small for any of
the beasts to enter. The Lieutenant herded them all inside and put a man
with an acid tank at the door. The Shoggoths slumped forward, but stopped
in front of the structure’s entrance, showing no sign of any attack, no will to
come any closer.
But it doesn’t look like they’re going to let us go anywhere soon.
The Lieutenant was in no mood to be caught in a trap. “Enough of this,”
he said. “Let’s hit them and see what they’ve got. I won’t die hiding in a
hole.”
Noble felt a tickle in his mind and immediately knew what it was and
where it was coming from.
“I’ve got a better idea,” he said. He pointed at the far wall. “Can we go
through there?”
It turned out they could. It took a wash of acid and it sent out fumes that
nearly choked them. But minutes later, they had made a hole in the wall. It
opened out into a larger open area beyond, a long cavernous space that
stretched away from them into the darkness. Noble, Suzie, and the
Lieutenant hung back as the eight marines went through, but Noble already
knew that it was safe.
It wants us to come. It’s waiting for us.
He didn’t know how he knew, he just knew. Just as he knew exactly
which direction to head for.
The city seemed to have been built purely to accommodate this high
vaulting space. They walked through it in silence, each of them unwilling to
break the almost church-like silence. Dim light, multi-coloured and always
shifting, came through from high above, as if filtered through stained glass.
It only further reinforced the almost religious nature of the space.
Noble’s eyes adjusted to the light, enough that he started to see that the
space was not empty. The Shoggoths had built more than just buildings. Tall
shapes littered the floor nearby, shapes that looked like sculpture, but not of
anything of this world. One shape above all dominated the space, a stocky
barrel with a five-pointed appendage on top. There were hundreds of them,
all in various stages of development. Some had what looked like wings
attached, long wide expanses of gossamer thin plastic that seemed to move
in the shifting light.
But somehow the statues didn’t seem worthy of too much attention. All
Noble wanted to do was keep walking, heading in a straight line for some
unknown destination. He felt dissociated from reality; strangely calm, while
at the same time, screaming silently inside.
We’re walking into a trap.
He knew it and he suspected his companions knew it, but they all walked,
eyes staring flatly ahead, heading for a point in the darkness at the far end
of the space they had entered.
He was brought back to reality by a pain in his hand. Suzie had him in a
grip so tight that he thought his fingers might break.
“Fight it,” she whispered through clenched teeth. “We must fight it.”
He found he was able to look around. They had walked further than he
had thought.
Much further.
The entrance by which they’d come in to this chamber was lost in a dim
distance. Light still filtered in from high overhead, but it was dimmer now
than before.
The sun is going down.
The young Lieutenant walked just beyond Suzie. His jaw was set in a
grimace and sweat ran down his forehead, but he did not seem able to stop
walking.
Help me!
Noble tried to deviate from his path, to move towards the officer, but he
found that, although he was able to move his head from side to side, that
was all he was able to do. The compulsion that held sway in his mind had
control and led him, and the others, onwards into the growing darkness.
It soon became apparent where they were going. At first, it looked like just
another darker shadow, but as they approached, the rusted hull of a cargo
ship loomed over them. It sat half-embedded in a thick sheet of rough
plastic, looking as if it were afloat on a quiet, dark sea. But it was obvious
that this vessel had not been seaworthy for a while—a hole in the keel wide
enough to allow a truck to pass through attested to that. The hole was darker
still than the surrounding chamber and Noble felt a chill seep into him as
they were led inside.
He expected it to be fully dark as they made the transition to an interior
space, but if anything, it was slightly lighter inside.
They walked into what had obviously been a cargo hold and suddenly,
Noble remembered the words from more than half a century before.
I worry about breakages.
It was immediately apparent that the Shoggoths had built more than just
the city around them. The hold was a cavern of ever-moving light, a
luminescence that seemed to come from a spot in the centre of the space.
As they got closer, Noble started to make out details. It looked like
nothing less than a blob of protoplasm, an amoeba grown to monstrous size.
But as they approached, they could see that this was no natural construct. Its
skin, if you could call it such, was a thin translucent sheet of polythene,
ever shifting as the fluid contents inside flowed and swam. Deep inside,
almost invisible in the viscous fluid, there was a darker spot the size of a
football.
And that’s what has hold of us.
They were brought to a halt only six feet from the thing’s perimeter—all
but one of them. One of the marines kept walking, straight at the thing. It
surged and enveloped him in folds of plastic. He immediately started to
melt. His face took on a contorted, pained expression, but no more than it
would if he’d had a toothache. Even as his flesh sloughed off he kept
walking forward. It all took place in complete silence and none of the
marine’s companions moved to help him. Suzie’s grip on Noble’s hand
tightened, but that was the only sign of anything amiss.
They all stood watching as the young marine was assimilated, broken
down into first meat and bone, then further digested, until all that remained
to show he’d been there was a scrap of khaki cloth and a pink stain in the
fluid matrix. His weapon seemed to hang for a while in the fluid before
sinking slowly towards the ground.
The last hint of pink slowly faded. In the far distance, the now-familiar
chant went up again.
Tekeli Li. Tekeli Li.
Noble felt Suzie’s grip loosen on his hand.
She started to walk forward.
They arrived on the top deck of the boat just as it took a violent lurch. The
keel listed suddenly. Water lapped across the gunwales and there was a
screech of tearing metal. There was just enough light to see that this whole
area of the plastic city was being dragged down into the sea and the old boat
was going to go along with it.
At first sight, there was no sign of any life rafts along the whole length of
the boat, but a cry from Suzie alerted him to a solitary craft hanging by one
chain on the starboard side. It took a matter of seconds to release it from its
moorings, but by that time, the water around them was seething with a
white churn and the old ship rocked and rolled.
Now or never.
He bundled Suzie into the life raft and was about to lower it into the
water when he felt the tug in his mind.
Pain brought him back as Suzie raked her fingernails across the back of
his hand.
“We don’t have time for this shit,” she said. “You know what we need to
do.”
Indeed, he did. He lowered the life raft and Suzie started sculling
frantically with an oar to maintain the small craft’s balance in the water.
Noble jumped down into the water. The current tried to suck him away and
he had a bad moment when he made a grab for the oar and missed, but
seconds later, Suzie helped drag him into the life raft. They started to drift,
slowly at first, then faster, the current taking them away from the badly
listing ship. Pieces of plastic started to fall from above as the city came
apart around them. Dark shapes surged and sped in the water, Shoggoths
trying to repair the damage. But the sea was too strong, even for them.
Suzie touched his hand.
“Do you think Mitchell is still alive?”
Noble reached with his mind, searching for contact. It came immediately.
This time he was ready for it. He sent an image, of the three of them in the
corridor at Mitchell’s position, three figures standing, waiting. He sensed
the creature’s eagerness, felt it speed through the hull.
Suzie took his hand.
Everything went white as the ship blew.
The aftermath was strangely anticlimactic. Their rubber life raft was tossed
violently through surging waves and a large piece of thick plastic falling
from above missed them by less than a foot ,where it could easily have
driven straight through the dinghy.
But within seconds, it was all over. They bobbed amid a sea of plastic
and burnt vegetation. Interspersed with the rubble were patches of black tar.
Suzie prodded one with the oar. It sank.
While Suzie checked the on-board survival box, Noble probed with his
mind, but nothing replied.
It was three hours before a chopper appeared overhead and they were
lifted to safety. As they banked away, Noble took one last look.
As far as the eye could see, there was nothing but a sea of plastic and a
thought came to him that would never fully leave him, even years later.
William Meikle is a Scottish writer with fourteen novels published in the genre
press and over 250 short story credits in thirteen countries. His work appears in
many professional anthologies and his ebook THE INVASION has been as high
as #2 in the Kindle SF charts. He lives in a remote corner of Newfoundland with
icebergs, whales and bald eagles for company. In the winters he gets warm
vicariously through the lives of others in cyberspace, so please check him out at
www.williammeikle.com.
The print verion of this book is available in trade paperback, signed limited
hardcover and collectable leather-bound Deluxe Thirteen editions from
Dark Regions Press.
The print verion of this book is available in trade paperback, signed limited
hardcover and collectable leather-bound Deluxe Thirteen editions from
Dark Regions Press.