‘Captain. Hang on, you hear me? Don’t you dare. Don’t you dare fucking code on me.’
Nariko was back in the womb, enveloped in warmth, surrounded by the reassuring diastole/systole tidal surge.
Drooping eyelids. Drowsy smile.
‘…danger… danger… nitrogen level critical…’
She unplugged her wrist gauge.
She closed her eyes. She took a deep breath. And another. Her body relaxed.
‘You’re wasting time,’ she murmured. ‘Been in the water too long already. Get going. Go on. Get out of here.’
‘We’ll patch you up, get you back to Ridgeway. It’ll be all right.’
‘Good luck guys.’
‘Nariko, for God’s…’
She reached down to her belt and pulled the jack cable from her radio.
She coughed. A deep, guttural bark. She convulsed, arched her back. A last involuntary struggle. Her gloved hands pawed the walls of her concrete tomb then fell still.
Her breathing settled. Shallow respirations merged with the hiss of the regulator valve. Nitrogen flooded her body. It filled her lungs, infusing arterial blood, saturating every muscle.
Creeping euphoria. A chance to put herself on a tropical beach, or some other endorphin-induced paradise, but she fought it, determined to be present at the moment of her own death.
‘Never enough…’
Her consciousness contracted to a point of light that glimmered like a star. Then the light was gone, and there was nothing but the whisper of tanks bleeding lethal gas, smothering Nariko in cold bliss.
31
‘…Mayday, Mayday. Can anyone hear me, over? Hello? Is anyone out there? This is Bellevue Research Team broadcasting on emergency frequency one-two-one point five megahertz. If anyone can hear me, please respond…’
Ivanek trapped in the dark. No sense of time.
‘…Please, if anyone can hear me, answer this call…’
A voice, right by his ear. Deep, mellow, pure Tennessee:
‘How you doing, son?’
‘Doctor?’
‘Are you feeling okay?’
‘I’m cold.’
‘Yeah. Me too.’
‘I can’t see you. Why can’t I see you?’
‘Don’t worry. I’m right here.’
‘It’s so dark. I can’t see anything. I can’t see my own hands.’
‘It’ll be all right. You’ve just got to hold on.’
‘Where are we? I don’t understand where we are.’
‘It’s hard to explain.’
‘I’m scared.’
‘No reason to be frightened. Think back. What do you remember?’
‘I remember the train, the bomb. Are we still in the tunnel? Did the roof collapse?’
‘We are in a strange place, you and I. Nothing like it has existed before. Nothing on earth, anyway.’
‘Are we dead?’
‘No. No, we’re not dead.’
‘Is this hell?’
‘It’s too cold for hell.’
‘I want to leave. I want to get out of here. How do we get out?’
‘We have to be patient.’
‘I want to go home.’
‘Where is home?’
‘Bushwick.’
‘It’s not there any more.’
‘Please.’
‘There are men on the way.’
‘How do you know?’
‘I just know. A rescue party has entered the tunnels. They are coming for us. They will be here soon.’
‘How soon?’
‘Soon. Hold on, son. They are almost here. It won’t be long. All we have to do is wait.’
32
The tunnel followed a gentle upward gradient. Cloke and Tombes swam, then waded, as the water level diminished. Chest high. Waist high. Knee high. They dragged the backboard behind them like a sled.
They trudged clear of the flood water. They were robbed of buoyancy, suddenly burdened by the full weight of their diving gear.
They unbolted lock-rings and removed their helmets. They released their back-tanks, shut off gas valves and lowered them to the dead track.
‘We can’t abandon the mission,’ said Cloke.
Tombes didn’t reply. He looked back at the dark waters from which they had emerged. Deep shock.
‘We’ve no choice but to proceed. What would she say if she were here right now? Focus. Keep your shit together. People depend on us. Finish the damned job.’
‘Yeah, yeah.’
Cloke switched on his flashlight and surveyed the tunnel walls. Ancient brickwork. Gang tags.
Water splashed his face. He looked up. Seeping groundwater. Calcite hung from the ceiling in petrified drips.
Tombes unclipped his radio. He checked for signal bars.
‘Donahue, do you copy, over?’
‘Go ahead.’
‘Nariko is dead.’
‘Say again.’
‘She’s dead. The Captain. The Captain is code one.’
‘How?’
‘A rockfall. The rubble shifted. She got trapped.’
‘Oh Jesus.’
‘We did our damnedest to reach her. There was nothing we could do.’
‘You actually saw her die?’
‘She’s dead, Donnie.’
‘Are you guys okay?’
‘We’re fine.’
‘Where are you?’
‘Other side of the rockfall. We’re out of the water, north near Canal.’
‘Any sign of the Bellevue team?’
‘Not yet. Listen. We’re trapped in this section of tunnel. Our route back is sealed. Check the charts. Check the schematics. There must be a way out of here. Some kind of utility pipe, sewer tunnel, whatever.’
‘Okay.’
‘Our flashlights are good for a few hours. After that, we’ll be stumbling in the dark. We’re depending on you. Check every map, every survey you’ve got. Get us out of here.’
The ticket hall.
‘Nariko’s dead,’ announced Donahue. She listened to the harsh echo of her voice. Wade lay on the bench. He instinctively reached for the cyanide cylinder in his pocket, gripped it like a talisman. His ride. His ticket out of this world. A guarantee he would not be marooned sightless and starving in the tunnels.
Galloway sat on the entrance steps. He stared down at his hands, overwhelmed by the horror of infection and his own imminent death.
Sicknote ignored her. He remained crouched on the floor, coaxing the last ink from the Sharpie, obsessively mapping the cosmic void, the horrors in his head more real to him than anything taking place at Fenwick Street.
‘Guess I’m the only one that gives a shit,’ murmured Donahue.
She turned her back on the ticket hall and re-entered the office.
Donahue hurriedly unravelled nicotine-yellow charts and spread them on the table.
Lupe joined her.
‘What happened? How did she die?’
‘There was a rockfall,’ said Donahue. She didn’t look up from the charts. ‘Some kind of landslide. Cloke and Tombes got clear. The Captain didn’t.’