Behemoth (6 page)

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Authors: Peter Watts

BOOK: Behemoth
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“Your mom trusts him fine. So do I. I've got to go.”

“He kills people, Lenie. And I'm not just talking about my dad. He's killed a
lot
of people.” A soft snort. “Something else Mom never talks about.”

Clarke coasts over to the perspex, lays one silhouetted hand against the light in farewell.

“He's an amateur,” she says, and fins away into the darkness.

*   *   *

The voice cries out from a ragged mouth in the seabed, an ancient chimney of basalt stuffed with machinery. In its youth it spewed constant scalding gouts of water and minerals; now it merely belches occasionally. Soft exhalations stir the mechanisms in its throat, spinning blades and fluting pipes and spliced chunks of rock and metal that bang together. Its voice is compelling but unreliable; after Lubin built these chimes, he had to come up with a way to kick-start them manually. So he scavenged the reservoir from a decommissioned desalinator, added a heat pump from some part of Atlantis that never survived the Corpse Revolt. Open a valve and hot seawater flows through a tracheotomy hole blasted into the smoker's throat: Lubin's machinery screams aloud, tortured by the scalding current.

The summons grinds out, rusty and disharmonious. It washes over rifters swimming and conversing and sleeping in an ocean black as heat death. It resonates through makeshift habs scattered across the slope, dismal bubbles of metal and atmosphere so dimly lit that even eyecaps see only in black-and-gray. It slaps against the shiny bright biosteel of Atlantis and nine hundred prisoners speak a little louder, or turn up the volume, or hum nervously to themselves in denial.

Some of the rifters—those awake, and in range, and still human—gather at the chimes. The scene is almost Shakespearean: a circle of levitating witches on some blasted midnight heath, eyes burning with cold phosphorescence, bodies barely distinguished from shadow. They are not so much lit as
inferred
by the faint blue embers glowing from the machinery in the seabed.

All of them bent, not broken. All of them half-balanced in that gray zone between adaptation and dysfunction, stress thresholds pushed so high by years of abuse that chronic danger is mere ambience now, unworthy of comment. They were chosen to function in such environments; their creators never expected them to
thrive
here. But here they are, here are their badges of office: Jelaine Chen with her pink, nailless fingers, salamandered back in the wake of childhood amputations. Dimitri Alexander, communal priest-bait in those last infamous days before the Pope fled into exile. Kevin Walsh, who freaks inexplicably at the sight of running shoes. Any number of garden-variety skitterers who can't abide physical con-tact; immolation junkies; self-mutilators and glass-eaters. All wounds and deformities safely disguised by the diveskins, all pathology hidden behind a uniformity of shadowy ciphers.

They, too, owe their voices to imperfect machinery.

Clarke calls the meeting to order with a question: “Is Julia here?”

“She's looking on Gene,” Nolan buzzes overhead. “I'll fill her in.”

“How's he doing?”

“Stable. Still unconscious. Been too long, if you ask me.”

“Getting dragged twenty klicks with your guts hanging out, it's pretty much a miracle that he's even alive,” Yeager chimes in.

“Yeah,” Nolan says, “or maybe Seger's deliberately keeping him under. Julia says—”

Clarke breaks in: “Don't we have a tap on the telemetry from that line?”

“Not any more.”

“What's Gene still doing in corpseland anyway?” Chen wonders. “He hates it in there. We've got our own med hab.”

“He's quarantined,” Nolan says. “Seger's thinking
β
ehemoth.”

Shadows shift at this news. Obviously not all the assembled are fully up to speed.

“Shit.” Charley Garcia fades into half-view. “How's that even possible? I thought—”

“Nothing's certain yet,” Clarke buzzes.

“Certain?” A silhouette glides across the circle, briefly eclipsing the sapphire embers on the seabed. Clarke recognizes Dale Creasy. This is first time she's seen him for days; she was starting to think he'd gone native.

“Fuck, there's even a
chance,
” he continues. “I mean,
βehemoth
—”

She decides to nip it in the bud. “So what if it's
β
ehemoth?”

A school of pale eyes turn in her direction.

“We're immune, remember?” she reminds them. “Anybody down here
not
get the treatments?”

Lubin's windchimes groan softly. Nobody else speaks.

“So why should we care?” Clarke asks.

It's supposed to be rhetorical. Garcia answers anyway: “Because the treatments only stop
β
ehemoth from turning our guts to mush. They don't stop it from turning little harmless fish into big nasty motherfucking fish that tear into anything that moves.”

“Gene was attacked twenty klicks away.”

“Lenie, we're
moving
there. It's gonna be right in our backyard.”

“Forget
there
. Who's to say it hasn't reached
here
already?” Alexander wonders.

“Nobody's been nailed around here,” Creasy says.

“We've lost some natives.”

Creasy waves an arm in a barely-visible gesture of dismissal. “Natives. Don't mean shit.”

“Maybe we should stop sleeping outside, for a while at least…”

“Crap to that. I can't sleep in a stinking
hab
.”

“Fine. Get yourself eaten.”

“Lenie?” Chen again. “You've messed with sea monsters before.”

“I never saw what got Gene,” Clarke says, “but the fish back at Channer, they were—flimsy. Big and mean, but sometimes their teeth would break on you when they bit. Missing some kind of trace nutrient, I think. You could tear them apart with your bare hands.”

“This thing pretty much tore
Gene
apart,” says a voice Clarke can't pin down.

“I said
sometimes,
” she emphasizes. “But yeah—they could be dangerous.”


Dangerous,
felch.” Creasy growls in metal. “Could they have pulled that number on Gene?”

“Yes,” says Ken Lubin.

He's been here all along, of course. Now he takes center stage. A cone of light flares from his forehead to his forearm. He holds his hand out like a beggar's, its fingers curled slightly around something laying across the palm.

“Holy shit,” buzzes Creasy, suddenly subdued.

“Where'd that come from?” Chen asks.

“Seger pulled it out of Erickson before she glued him up,” Lubin says.

“Doesn't look especially
flimsy
to me.”

“It is, rather,” Lubin remarks. “This is the part that broke off, in fact. Between the ribs.”

“What, you mean that's just the
tip
?” Garcia says.

“Looks like a fucking stiletto,” Nolan buzzes softly.

Chen's mask swings between Clarke and Lubin. “When you were at Channer. You slept outside with these mothers?”

“Sometimes.” Clarke shrugs. “Assuming this is the same thing, which I—”

“And they didn't try to eat you?”

“They keyed on the light. As long as you kept your lamps off, they pretty much left you alone.”

“Well, shit,” Creasy says. “No problem, then.”

Lubin's headlamp sweeps across the assembled rifters and settles on Chen. “You were on a telemetry run when Erickson was attacked?”

Chen nods. “We never got the download, though.”

“So someone needs to make another trip out there anyway. And since Lenie and I have experience with this kind of thing…”

His beam hits Clarke full in the face. The world collapses down to a small bright sun floating in a black void.

Clarke raises her hand against the brilliance. “Turn that somewhere else, will you?”

Darkness returns. The rest of the world comes back into dim, dark focus.
Maybe I could just swim away,
she muses as her eyecaps readjust.
Maybe no one would notice.
But that's bullshit and she knows it. Ken Lubin has just picked her out of the crowd; there's no easy way to get out of this. And besides, he's right. They're the only two that have been down this road before. The only two still alive, at least.

Thanks a lot, Ken.

“Fine,” she says at last.

ZOMBIE

T
WENTY
kilometers separate Atlantis and Impossible Lake. Not far enough for those who still think in dryback terms. A mere twenty klicks from the bull's-eye? What kind of safety margin is that? Back on shore the most simpleminded drone wouldn't be fooled by such a trifling displacement. Finding the target missing, it would rise up and partition the world into a concentric gridwork, relentlessly checking off one quadrate after another until some inevitable telltale gave the game away. Shit, most machinery could just sit at the center of the search zone and
see
twenty kilometers in any direction.

Even in the midwaters of the open ocean, twenty kilometers is no safe distance. No substrate exists there but water itself, no topography but gyres and seiches and Langmuir cells, thermoclines and haloclines that reflect and amplify as well as mask. The cavitation of submarines might propagate down vast distances, the miniscule turbulence of their passing detectable long after the vessels themselves are gone. Not even stealthed subs can avoid heating the water some infinitesimal amount; dolphins and machinery, hot on the trail, can tell the difference.

But on the Mid Atlantic Ridge, twenty kilometers might as well be twenty parsecs. Light has no chance: the sun itself barely penetrates a few hundred meters from the surface. Hydrothermal vents throw up their corrosive vomit along oozing seams of fresh rock. Seafloor spreading sets the very floor of the world to grumbling, mountains pushing against each other in their millennial game of kick-the-continents. Topography that shames the Himalayas cascades along a jagged fracture splitting the crust from pole to pole. The ambience of the Ridge drowns out anything Atlantis might let slip, along any spectrum you'd care to name.

You could still find a target with the right coordinates, but you'd miss a whole screaming city if those numbers were off by even a hair. A displacement of twenty kilometers should be more than enough to get out from under any attack centered on Atlantis's present location, short of full-scale depth-saturation nukes perhaps.

Which wouldn't be entirely without precedent, now that Clarke thinks about it …

She and Lubin cruise smoothly along a crack in a fan of ancient lava. Atlantis is far behind, Impossible Lake still klicks ahead. Headlamps and squidlamps are dark. They travel by the dim dashboard light of their sonar displays. Tiny iconized boulders and pillars pass by on the screens, mapped in emerald; the slightest sensations of pressure and looming mass press in from the scrolling darkness to either side.

“Rowan thinks things could get nasty,” Clarke buzzes.

Lubin doesn't comment.

“She figures, if this really is
β
ehemoth, Atlantis is gonna turn into Cognitive Dissonance Central. Get everybody all worked up.”

Still nothing.

“I reminded her who was in charge.”

“And who is that, exactly?” Lubin buzzes at last.

“Come on, Ken. We can shut them down any time we feel like it.”

“They've had five years to work on that.”

“And what's it got them?”

“They've also had five years to realize that they outnumber us twenty to one, that we don't have nearly their technical expertise on a wide range of relevant subjects, and that a group of glorified pipe-fitters with antisocial personalities is unlikely to pose much threat in terms of organized opposition.”

“That was just as true when we wiped the floor with them the first time.”

“No.”

She doesn't understand why he's doing this. It was Lubin more than anyone who put the corpses in their place after their first—and last—uprising. “Come
on,
Ken—”

His squid is suddenly very close, almost touching.

“You're not an idiot,” he buzzes at her side. “It's never a good time to act like one.”

Stung, she falls silent.

His vocoder growls on in the darkness. “Back then they saw the whole world backing us up. They knew we'd had help tracking them down. They inferred some kind of ground-based infrastructure. At the very least, they knew we could blow the whistle and turn them into a great pulsing bull's-eye for anyone with lats and longs and a smart torp.”

A great luminous shark-fin swells on her screen, a massive stone blade thrusting up from the seabed. Lubin disappears briefly as it passes between them.

“But now we're on our own,” he says, reappearing. “Our groundside connections have dried up. Maybe they're dead, maybe they've turned. Nobody knows. Can you even remember the last time we had a changing of the guard?”

She can, just barely. Anyone qualified for the diveskin is bound to be more comfortable down here than in dryback company at the best of times, but a few rifters went topside at the very beginning anyway. Back when there might have been some hope of turning the tide.

Not since. Risking your life to watch the world end isn't anyone's idea of shore leave.

“By now we're just as scared as the corpses,” Lubin buzzes. “We're just as cut off, and there are almost a thousand of them. We're down to fifty-eight at last count.”

“We're seventy at least.”

“The natives don't count. Fifty-eight of us would be any use in a fight, and only fifty could last a week in full gravity if they had to. And a number of those have … authority issues that make them unwilling to organize.”

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