“Listen,” Ellis said, a frown coming to his face, “you men have done a good job tonight, a rough job, but one that needed to be done. Now let’s get you back on that chopper and back to base.”
The men nodded and were soon filing into the Puma a short distance away, a different one than had been drenched in Frank’s blood.
“Well, what’dya think?” Carl said to Ellis when the men had gone and they were alone in small army of military personnel, scientific geniuses and quite a few crack — and crack-shot — researchers.
Ellis took in a deep breath. “I think we need these men storming Dulce, and as soon as possible.”
“You’re not worried they’re not ready, especially the ones that didn’t go tonight?”
“They’re ready,” Ellis said, turning to look at the helicopter as it rose up into the air and then started over the tree line to be swallowed from sight, “the question is, how ready for them are the Grays?”
“Not to mention the Reptilians as well.”
“Don’t remind me,” Ellis groaned, “if they’ve managed to multiply as much as we—“
“Commander!”
Both Ellis and Carl spun around to face the cave once again, and saw Stu rushing up to them, his usual white lab coat fluttering behind him as he ran.
“We’ve found something,” he said when he’d reached them, “we’ve found something big.”
“Big as in size or big as—”
“Both,” Stu said, “and in a few different ways — why don’t you both come back inside the cave… although we really should stop thinking of it that way.”
“Oh?” Carl said. “How should we be thinking about it?”
“Perhaps as a shipping port.”
15 — Discoveries
Ellis and Carl followed Stu down the last of the tunnel, past the area where the men had dodged out of the way of the UFO, and then around the next bend and to the hangar, for that’s all you could really describe it as.
“Damn it’s big,” Ellis said when they got to the entrance, “how the hell’d they build this right under our noses?”
“They seem to be doing a lot of things right under our noses,” Stu said, “come on — let me show you.”
The two men had little choice as the astronaut and scientist started forward, into the hangar. It was a good forty feet to the ceiling and nearly a hundred yards from one wall to the next as they walked through the center of the thing.
“It only goes fifty yards further into the mountain,” Stu said as they walked past what looked to be marked-off ‘parking spots, was all Ellis could think of them as, each totally made up of strips of lights embedded into the metal floor.
“What’s that door up ahead lead to?” Carl asked, pointing at the only real features on the far wall, now just a couple dozen yards ahead of them.
“It’s not a door, not like any kind we know or saw at Dulce,” Stu replied, “but it does lead somewhere.”
“Where?” Ellis said.
Stu walked on the last few yards without saying anything, and then they were at the door, and he turned to them and smiled.
“The real hangar, that’s what it leads to.”
“Holy…”
“Yeah, that’s what I thought when I first saw it,” Stu smiled, looking from the craft to Ellis and back again, “we figure it’s more than 100,000 square feet.”
Ellis didn’t doubt it, not for one second. The huge UFO mothership — what else could it be? — was at least the size of three football fields in length and probably three-quarters of one in width. It was a serious ship, meant to travel between galaxies, but also meant to hold a lot. Beside him, Carl seemed to have read his mind.
“What are they transporting in it — have you been inside?”
Stu nodded. “My team just got it open, I went in, and that’s when I came running out to you.”
“What is—”
Stu raised his hand, cutting-off Ellis’s words.
“Just come.”
Stu hit the button beside the door and the two double-doors slid open. Ellis and Carl’s eyes went wide. There before them were row upon row of vats, all aligned orderly, and each holding…something.
“What’s in there?” Ellis said. “Please Stu, don’t tell me that’s what I think it is.”
“It is,” the astronaut replied, “they’ve broken all aspects of the treaty.”
Ellis agreed and would have nodded had he not been in so much shock. There before him were the large glass vats he’d first seen deep down on Levels 5 and 6 of Dulce the last time he’d been there, in ’75, the dreaded Hall of Horrors and Nightmare Hall. Inside they held human body parts, organs and fluids. There were also cow parts, from the many farm mutilations that happened each year, most of which went unreported. The Grays needed the stuff, needed the human and animal essences to live, to continue their race.
The Grays didn’t eat, but instead ‘fed’ off of human and animal vital fluids by rubbing a kind of ‘liquid protein’ formula or slurry onto their bodies, which was then absorbed through the skin. This biological slurry mixture was mixed with hydrogen peroxide, something that oxygenated the slurry and eliminated bacteria. Like reptiles which shed their skins, this ‘waste’ was typically excreted back through the skin. It was those skin excretions which were responsible for the different color hues the Grays sometimes took on, which ranged from gray-white to grey-brown to gray-green to grey-blue. Aside from feeding off human and animal proteins and fluids, they also allegedly fed off the ‘life energy,’ the ‘vital essence’ or ‘soul energy’ of humans, as did other Reptilian species… like it was some kind of recreational drug, almost. And when a human has had that energy and essence taken from them — like many of the humans no doubt imprisoned in Dulce at that very moment had — then they appeared as programmed ‘drones,’ ‘lifeless’ and ‘emotionless’ to those that observed them.
It was those subsistence methods that really rubbed humans the wrong way, however. They required human blood and other biological substances to survive, although every indication suggested that they originally didn’t ‘require’ human blood, but once having used it they since acquired a taste for it, if you will, and considered it a ‘vital’ substance. This went far beyond just mere physical hunger, since the Grays tended to feed off the human life-energies resident within human blood plasma, in what may be considered a vampire-like type of hunger for human vital fluids. In extreme circumstances they could subsist on other, animal fluids… namely cattle.
The Grays were the ones involved in the cattle mutilations, absorbing certain substances from parts of the animals, parts that stabilized them during the cloning process. These substances could then be placed under the tongue to give sustenance and stability for some time. It’s a substance that came from certain mucus membranes, such as the lips, nose, genitals, rectum and other organs, so there’s always more.
The Grays were beginning to stockpile canisters and vats in which animal and human organs floated, along with a greenish-liquid to hold the parts in suspension. The Grays swam in the mixture, absorbing the nutrients through their skin. But those tanks were few in number, and all in Dulce. Now the three men were standing and staring at row upon row of them, each filled with human and animal parts, yet not a single one holding a living creature.
“How many do you think there are?” Carl asked after they’d stood there in silence for a few moments, just staring out at the ungodly sight and thinking upon the Grays and their insidious ways.
“Hundreds, maybe thousands,” Stu said. “This is obviously some kind of transport ship or ferry, one I’ve no doubt is intended to supply the larger mothership stationed around Mercury.”