“What the hell?” Tori asked.
“My grandson,” Alena replied, heartbreaking love doing combat with fury and frustration inside her. “Goddamn fool.”
“He’s brought a whole team down here?” Sykes asked.
Alena turned to him, irony twisting in her. “He loves me.”
But she could see that Sykes understood that the stakes had changed. The gunfire and the unnerving, hideous song of those monsters meant David and his team were either retreating by now or rushing this way. It also meant there must be no exit ahead, unless they wanted to fight their way past the sirens to get there.
Alena hurried to the entrance of the tunnel Ridge had entered. Someone would have to run the other way and try to lead David back here with whoever he’d brought with him, and then, if this truly offered a way out … but it had to. There was no other way.
“How are you doing up there, Paul?” she called.
“Good! Maybe great!” Ridge shouted back down to her. “It keeps going up, and there’s light! It won’t be an easy—”
Alena had just started into the tunnel, light picking out the easiest footholds on the rough slope, thinking that the climb would be rough on Josh, when Ridge cried out. Charlie Deaver swore loudly, and then she heard what sounded like a splash.
Panic seized her. “Paul? Damn it, Paul!”
Behind her, questions and curses merged into one stunned reaction — sailors’ voices merging with Tori’s frantic query. Alena did not stop to think; she steadied herself with her free hand and scrambled up the slope.
Ahead, someone began to scream.
“Paul!” she shouted, and far ahead and above her she saw the glimmer of daylight that had so excited Ridge. Silhouetted in that light, Charlie Deaver knelt on the ground, and only now did she hear the sailor’s shouts.
“Dr. Ridge!” Charlie called. “Take my hand. Grab my fucking hand!”
Alena shone her Maglite on the scene and saw what had happened. The tunnel floor vanished a few feet from her, some past tremor having split the stone there. Focused on the daylight ahead, Ridge had gone one step too far before he had seen the drop, and slid into the crevice, and into bubbling, foaming seawater ten feet below.
“Jesus, Alena, help me!” Ridge cried.
Her flashlight beam struck his face and he closed his eyes but did not stop scrabbling for purchase, trying to climb back up. Charlie dropped flat on his stomach, arms thrust into the crevice. He had Ridge by the wrists and strained, cursing madly, trying to haul him back up.
Paul Ridge had tears in his eyes. No matter how hard Charlie pulled, he seemed to keep slipping. Alena couldn’t breathe. She knew — knew — even before she flashed her beam lower and the light picked out the sickly pearl-white hand wrapped around Ridge’s ankle, suckers tugging at flesh as Charlie attempted to haul Ridge out of the hole.
Something broke the surface of the water below Ridge, and she expected to see those black eyes, the glistening white scar-tissue face. Instead what coiled out from the dark water was the thing’s tail. It wrapped around Ridge’s leg, curling up as far as his groin.
“Charlie, let go,” Alena whispered.
“Fuck that!” the sailor said. “Take my gun. Shoot the damn thing!”
Her flashlight picked out his weapon, there on the black rock. He’d set it aside so he could use both hands to grab for Ridge — a brave and foolish thing to do. But maybe he was right, maybe she could do it. She picked up the assault rifle, stepped to the edge, aimed just over Ridge’s back at the thing in the water.
Sykes came up behind her, then put a strong hand on her hip and moved her aside. He took aim and pulled the trigger, squeezing off two careful shots. One of them hit the siren’s tail and its head surfaced, mouth opening to reveal rows of needle teeth, screaming.
It burst from the water, reached up with both hands and sank talons into Ridge’s back, and peeled him off the rock wall with sheer strength and its own weight. Screaming, Ridge did not let go of Charlie’s wrists, instead dragging him over the lip and down into the crevice with him. Both men plunged into the water.
In the glow of Alena’s flashlight beam, they struggled and died, blood foaming up in the roiling water.
“Deaver!” Sykes shouted, and Alena heard his voice crack, just once, before it became a roar. “Goddammit, Deaver!”
Sykes clicked over to automatic and pulled the trigger, bullets punching into the water and into flesh as well. Alena knew some of the shots would hit Ridge and Deaver, but she didn’t try to stop Sykes. To her, it was a mercy if the bullets killed them.
One of the sirens bobbed to the surface, dead.
Sykes lowered his weapon.
But then, one by one, three pale faces pushed up from the dark water, one of them painted with human blood. They opened their mouths, teeth gleaming, and screeched that inhuman melody.
Sykes fired again but they submerged the moment his gun barrel twitched, and there would be no telling if he hit them.
Alena grabbed his arm. “Stop. We’ve got to run.”
“Screw that, they’ll only come after us,” he said, shaking her off.
“Let them. At least you’ll get a clear shot. But the tide’s rising. If water floods through here, we’re in their element.”
Sykes fired again into the pit. “This is their element! It’s their home!”
“And right now only a handful of them know we’re here, or we’d be dead already,” Alena snapped. “We don’t know how they communicate, but the others will find out. We’ve got to go!” She grabbed the barrel of the gun, so that he twisted to meet her gaze. “Now!” she snapped.
With one last look into the water, Sykes nodded and together they scrambled down the slope and back to the fork. Tori and Josh had already started along the right-hand tunnel. Mays and Garbarino waited for orders.
“Move!” Sykes barked.
Alena could see the questions in the sailors’ eyes. They’d heard the siren song and gunfire from up ahead as well. Weren’t they running toward the same thing they were running away from? And maybe they were, but Alena told herself there might still be a way out up ahead, a branching tunnel or a cave mouth. If not, at least they would all be together — she and David would be together, one last time — and they would have all the guns in one place. As long as they were still breathing and moving, there was hope.
From the tunnel she and Sykes had just vacated, the song rose again. The sirens were coming after them.
“Watch our flank!” Lieutenant Commander Sykes told his men. “Kill anything that moves in behind you!”
“Yes, sir!” Garbarino and Mays snapped.
Then Sykes nodded to Alena and they were running along that right-hand tunnel, wider but sloping downward three or four feet. The water level couldn’t have been more than six feet beneath them. By now it had already flooded into the tunnel they’d originally entered, hours ago in the grotto. Soon it would rush through these damp, dripping channels, and then it would be over. But until then …
“Run!” she shouted to Tori and Josh, who were ahead of them.
Her own heartbeat pounded loud in her ears and her breath came in ragged gasps, and it didn’t seem to matter anymore what shape she was in. Fear aged her, made her feel slow and vulnerable. As she gained on Tori and Josh, she saw that the FBI agent had quickened his pace but only to a staggering jog, and she knew he would never get out of there alive.
For the first time, Alena Boudreau knew that they were going to die down there.
86
Voss saw daylight.
“Lieutenant!” Crowley called from up ahead.
“I see it!” Stone shouted. “Go!”
The tunnel had widened but the ceiling had dropped by several feet, so even Voss — the shortest of them — had to crouch to run. Crowley hustled, moving ahead so fast that Voss could barely keep up.