Chapter 57
The Crypto
bathrooms had no windows,
and the darkness
surrounding Susan Fletcher
was absolute. She stood dead still for a moment trying to get her bearings, acutely aware of the growing sense of panic gripping
her body. The horrible
cry from the ventilation shaft seemed to hang all around her. Despite
her effort to fight off a rising
sense of dread, fear swept across her flesh and took control.
In a flurry of involuntary motion, Susan found herself
groping wildly
across stall doors and sinks.
Disoriented, she spun through the blackness with her hands out in front of her and tried to
picture the room. She knocked over a garbage can and found herself against
a tiled wall. Following
the wall with her
hand, she scrambled toward the exit and fumbled for the door handle.
She pulled it open and
stumbled out onto the Crypto floor.
There she
froze for a second
time.
The Crypto floor looked
nothing like it had just moments ago. TRANSLTR was a gray silhouette against the faint twilight
coming in through
the dome. All of the overhead lighting was dead. Not
even the electronic keypads on the doors were glowing.
As Susan’s
eyes became accustomed to the dark, she saw that the only light in Crypto was coming through the open trapdoor–a faint
red glow from the utility
lighting below. She moved toward
it. There was the faint
smell of ozone in the air.
When she made it
to the trapdoor, she peered into the
hole. The freon vents were still belching swirling mist through the redness, and from the higher-pitched drone of the generators, Susan knew Crypto was running on
backup power. Through the mist she could make out Strathmore standing
on the platform below. He was leaning over the railing
and staring into the depths of TRANSLTR’s rumbling shaft.
“Commander!”
There was no response.
Susan eased onto the ladder. The hot air from below rushed in under her skirt. The rungs were slippery
with condensation. She set herself
down on the grated landing.
“Commander?”
Strathmore did not turn. He continued staring down with a blank look of shock, as if in a trance. Susan followed
his gaze over the banister. For a moment she could see nothing except wisps of steam. Then suddenly she saw it. A figure. Six stories below. It appeared
briefly in the billows of steam. There it was again.
A tangled mass of twisted limbs.
Lying ninety feet below them, Phil Chartrukian was sprawled across the sharp iron fins of the main generator. His body was darkened and
burned. His fall had shorted
out Crypto’s main power supply.
But the most chilling
image of all was not of Chartrukian but of someone else, another body, halfway down the long staircase, crouched, hiding in the shadows.
The muscular frame was unmistakable. It was
Greg Hale.
No comments:
Post a Comment