Energy artefacts. That’s all they are. You repeat that to yourself, you repeat it so often it loses any pretense of rationality and devolves into rote incantation, a spell to ward off evil spirits. They’re not real, these whispering voices just outside your helmet, those half-seen creatures flickering at the edge of vision. They’re tricks of the mind, the same neurological smoke-and-mirrors that convinced people throughout the ages that they were being haunted by ghosts, abducted by aliens, hunted by—
—vampires—
—and you wonder whether Sarasti really stayed behind or if he was here all along, waiting for you…
“Another spike,” Bates warned as
I was installing the Faraday bell. Trying to. It should have been simple enough; I’d already run the main anchor line down from the vestibule to the flaccid sack floating in the middle of the passageway. I was — that’s right, something about a spring line. To, to keep the bell centered. The wall glistened in my headlamp like wet clay. Satanic runes sparkled in my imagination.
I jammed the spring line’s pad against the wall. I could have sworn the substrate
“They’re here,” James whispered.
“They’re
“What? Where?” Bates never stopped turning, kept trying to keep the whole three-sixty in sight at once. The drones under her command wobbled restlessly to either side, armored parentheses pointing down the passageway in opposite directions. “What do you see?”
“Not out
“I can’t see anything,” Szpindel said, his voice shaking.
“It’s in the EM fields,” James said. “
“I can’t see
“
“I d-don’t think that’s it…”
Nine Tesla, and the ghosts were everywhere. I smelled asphalt and honeysuckle.
“Keeton!” Bates called. “You with us?”
“Y-yeah.” Barely. I was back at the bell, my hand on the ripcord. Trying to ignore whatever kept tapping me on the shoulder.
“Leave that! Get him outside!”
“No!” Szpindel floated helplessly in the passage, his pistol bouncing against its wrist tether. “No, throw me something.”
“What?”
“Throw something! Anything!”
Bates hesitated. “You said you were bli—”
“
Bates pulled a spare suit battery off her belt and lobbed it. Szpindel reached, fumbled. The battery slipped from his grasp and bounced off the wall.
“I’ll be okay,” he gasped. “Just get me into the tent.”
I yanked the cord. The bell inflated like a great gunmetal marshmallow.
“Everyone inside!” Bates ran her pistol with one hand, grabbed Szpindel with the other. She handed him off to me and slapped a sensor pod onto the skin of the tent. I pulled back the shielded entrance flap as though pulling a scab from a wound. The single molecule beneath, infinitely long, endlessly folded against itself, swirled and glistened like a soap bubble.
“Get him in. James! Get down here!”
I pushed Szpindel through the membrane. It split around him with airtight intimacy, hugged each tiny crack and contour as he passed through.
“
“
I looked back. Susan James’ body tumbled slowly in the tunnel, grasping its right leg with both hands.
“
“
Something laughed hysterically, right inside my helmet.
“Take his arm,” Bates told me, taking his right one, trying to pry the fingers from their death grip on the Gang’s leg. “Cruncher,
“
“It’s your leg, Cruncher.” We wrestled our way towards the diving bell.
“It’s
Almost there. “Cruncher,
“