Read Spiral Page 33


  And Will had to admit that this time he himself had felt differently about leaving her.

  Perhaps they had both changed because of all they’d been through. Or, he asked himself, was it because he was growing up and didn’t need his mother in the same way that he’d used to? He was still mulling this over when the rocking motion of the train began to make his eyelids feel heavier and heavier, and he drifted into sleep.

  And, as the temperature gradient gradually rose the deeper they penetrated into the Earth’s crust, none of them did much more than sleep and eat for the next twenty-four hours. Their journey was broken several times for the horses to be fed and watered, and for the huge sets of storm gates across the track to be cranked open to allow the train through.

  They finally drew into the Miners’ Station, and it was much as Will remembered it — a ramshackle row of rather unimpressive huts. He jumped from the guard’s car, his boots crunching in the layer of iron ore, coke, and clinkers covering the ground. Drawing in a long breath through his nose, the arid air evoked the time when he, Chester, and Cal had stolen through this very cavern. And Bartleby. They’d all been killed or touched by death, and that’s why not one of them was with him at that moment.

  He was still mulling this over as he began to walk toward the station huts but then came to an abrupt stop. The old Will would have taken the opportunity to explore the huts, but he found that he had no desire whatsoever to investigate them. It just didn’t seem important to him anymore. Instead he helped Sweeney and the Colonel unload the equipment while Drake went off with the Colonist engine driver and his assistant in search of a cart. They quickly located one, and once the stallions were harnessed and the equipment in place, Elliott and Drake led the way from the cavern on foot, as the Colonel drove the cart.

  Will had shown the Colonel how to wear one of Drake’s headsets, adjusting the drop-down lens over his eye so he could see the way clearly without the need for any light. Then Will had found himself a place to sit at the very rear of the cart behind the equipment, and put on his own headset. Now back in the familiar world of shifting orange light, he was quite content to watch the sides of the tunnel slipping by as Sweeney jogged along behind the cart.

  Drawing on his enhanced senses, Sweeney was scanning the tunnel behind and checking the side passages for any lurking Limiters, when his gaze fell on Will.

  “Hey, lazy boy,” the huge man ribbed him. “Don’t strain yourself too much.” Will was framing a suitably indignant response when Sweeney continued, “You know, I just love this place.”

  “What do you mean?” Will asked, shifting uncomfortably as sweat trickled down the small of his back. “It’s hot and dusty . . . and just foul.”

  “Sure,” Sweeney answered. “But for the first time in a long time, I’m not getting any radio interference.” He touched one of his temples. “You have no idea what it’s like to have some tosspot of a DJ burbling away in your head all day and all night. Some weeks it’s not too bad, but then it suddenly kicks in big-time, and I have to listen to bleedin’ Ryan Seacrest prattling on whether I want to or not.” He curled his lip in disgust. “But in this place, there’s not a whisper . . . there’s nothing. Just glorious peace and quiet.”

  Will nodded to show he understood.

  “Yes, sirree, I can really see myself settling down here one day,” Sweeney said.

  They hadn’t encountered a single living soul — human, Styx, or Coprolite — as they emerged into a vast cavern where the ground was peppered with large, teardrop-shaped boulders.

  Will had taken advantage of the incline to stretch his legs and was jogging behind the cart alongside Sweeney.

  “Oh God!” the boy suddenly burst out.

  “Whassamatter?” Sweeney asked, peering around them. “Got something?”

  “No, it’s not that,” Will assured him. “I know where we are . . . and I hoped I’d never see it again. My brother died not far from here. And my real mum, too.”

  Sweeney was silent for several of his lumbering strides. “That’s tough, Will. I’m sorry.”

  They crossed a path of well-worn paving slabs, and an hour later the huge opening in the ground came into sight.

  “There it is . . . the Pore,” Will told Sweeney gloomily.

  Drake and Elliott had come to a stop and were waiting for everyone to catch up.

  “We’ve spotted something new,” Drake informed them. “There appear to be some huts by the side of the Pore.”

  Elliott had her eye glued to her rifle nightscope. “Three . . . three huts,” she confirmed.

  “We know this area well, and they weren’t there before,” Drake said. He’d spent years in this land of eternal night, latterly with Elliott, and as Will watched them both now, he realized they were back in their element. “We’re going in to investigate,” Drake said, then he and Elliott moved ahead again. Colonel Bismarck followed at a distance, keeping the stallions to a steady trot, as Will and Sweeney remained on the lookout for any Limiters.

  When they finally reached the Pore, the continual deluge of water from above splattered their heads and shoulders, helping to cool them. The ground by the basic huts was strewn with deflated hot air balloons, and beside them a wooden platform extended almost forty feet over the huge void. Will, the Colonel, and Sweeney stepped around the sagging forms of the balloons as they moved to the end of it.

  Sweeney whistled as he tried to see across to the other side of the titanic void and, not finding it, peered down. “That’s one . . . big . . . mother. You threw yourself down it, didn’t you, Will?” he asked.

  “Didn’t have much choice at the time,” Will mumbled. It dawned on him that they were here to do precisely the same again. Unless Drake had a better idea, such as using one of the balloons to carry them down to the fungal ledge far below.

  Will began to retrace his steps along the platform, repeating to himself, “I really don’t want to do this.” And he really didn’t — the prospect of taking a step off the edge and pitching headlong into that black nothingness again filled him with unremitting dread. He sought out Drake where he and Elliott were deep in conversation. They fell silent as he arrived.

  “What’s the plan now?” Will demanded. “Are we really going to jump down the Pore? And how the heck are we going to know when we’re deep enough to find the passageway?” He was furious that the two of them seemed to be leaving him in the dark, just as it had been all that time ago when they’d first rescued him, Chester, and Cal on the Great Plain. After all he’d gone through, hadn’t he earned the right to know what they were intending to do?

  Drake caught the edge in the boy’s voice. “For lack of any other alternative, that was my original idea,” he answered. “I agree that our chances of hitting the right fungal ledge at exactly the right depth are slim at best. Particularly as there isn’t a radio beacon to guide us.”

  Drake slipped a tracker from a pouch on his belt. It resembled a strange-looking handgun with a dial on top of it and a small dish where the muzzle should have been. The tracker was able to detect the VLF, or Very Low Frequency, signals that the radio beacons broadcast. Will had planted these beacons at various points along the route he’d taken with Dr. Burrows and Elliott when they’d somehow found their way through to the inner world the first time.

  “Haven’t seen one of those in a while,” Will said as Drake aimed it at the Pore and depressed the trigger. It emitted a single click, then remained silent. Will frowned. “That’s weird,” he said. “Is it working properly?”

  “It should be. Don’t forget the beacon you left at the jump-off point on the second Pore is quite some distance from us,” Drake reminded him.

  “Yes, by Smoking Jean,” Will said, recalling his name for it.

  Drake nodded. “And I also agree with you that it’s going to be a bit hit-and-miss if we do a swan dive with the nuclear weapons tied to our ankles.”

  Will was frowning. “You don’t have a plan at all, do you?” he accused Drake. ?
??You’re just making this up as you go along!”

  “That’s the way it works,” Drake replied.

  Will was shaking his head angrily. “Wow, that’s just great. So you don’t actually have a clue what we’re going to do next.”

  “Will,” Elliott intervened, reaching out as if to touch his shoulder but then lowering her hand to point at the ground. “Look at the tracks you’re on.” It was clear that something heavy had passed that way, because the rocks had been pulverized. “Lots of Coprolite machines went by here.” She raised her rifle to peer through the scope. “And I can see one of them way over there . . . around the side of the Pore. Drake and I think we should recce it.”

  Drake indicated the balloons by the huts. “The Styx must have been using those to get up and down, but from the state of them, they obviously switched to another method some time back. And I ask myself what that could be — did they find or even make themselves an alternative route? I think we owe it to ourselves to find out, don’t you?” He punched Will gently on the arm. “Happier now?” he asked, smiling at the boy.

  “Much,” Will replied, smiling back.

  With Will beside him in the cart, Colonel Bismarck drove the stallions along the tracks by the edge of the Pore. Will was soon able to make out the Coprolite digging machine. The cylindrical body of battered steel shone like quicksilver as he squinted through his lens.

  They came nearer and the Colonel slowed the horses, but there was no sign of either Elliott or Drake by the machine.

  “Where are they?” Will asked as Sweeney caught up with the cart. “And why aren’t they keeping in touch over the radio?”

  “Wait here,” Sweeney replied, and went to find out.

  As Will saw him reach the digger, he, too, disappeared from sight. It was a good twenty minutes before the horses began to stamp the ground and become agitated. Then Will heard what he thought was the distant rumbling of a vehicle. And it sounded heavy.

  “What’s that?” he asked, angling his head and looking around. “And where’s it coming from?”

  “There!” said the Colonel, pointing.

  Where Will had last seen Sweeney, a Coprolite digger rose into view. As it came at full pelt toward them, the Colonel struggled to control the horses. It stopped, spinning a hundred and eighty degrees on the spot, boulders popping beneath the massive rollers that bore it along.

  The rear hatch swung open, and Elliott and Sweeney dismounted into the cloud of smoke issuing from the machine’s exhausts. “Got ourselves a ride!” Sweeney called over to Will.

  It turned out that Drake had found the Coprolite digger fueled up and ready for use. Will didn’t question it — he was just relieved that there was an alternative to jumping down the Pore.

  Once all the equipment was on board and lashed down, the Colonel freed the stallions and watched them gallop off. “I do hope they make it back to the station,” he said with some regret.

  Then everyone boarded the digger. The interior of the vehicle was fabricated from beaten metal — most of it was grimy except for several areas that shone brightly from their regular use. Will took in the display at the navigator’s station, and the red glow coming from an inspection port in the boiler.

  Drake, sitting at the front of the vehicle, pushed in and twisted a rod to engage the engine, then depressed a pedal. The digger lurched forward, and he steered it around to face the opposite direction. Will joined Elliott and Sweeney to watch from the open hatch at the rear of the vehicle as the digger’s nose dipped down an incline.

  “Some tunnel!” Will shouted over the thunderous din of the vehicle.

  It was approximately forty feet to the roof, and easily as wide.

  “The Styx rounded up some Coprolites and forced them to bore this out with one of their megamachines!” Elliott shouted back. “But get a load of what’s coming up!”

  They roared past scores of the diggers parked at the side of the massive tunnel. Then there were what had to be spoil movers, judging from the scoops mounted on their fronts, and the long trains of trailers behind them. Will had never seen this second type of vehicle before, but he remembered Drake had told him that as the race of master miners dug into the rock, they were careful to infill crevices and open faults with the spoil as they went. They regarded the Earth as a living entity, treating it with respect and not wanting to cause it excessive damage with their excavations.

  Sweeney pointed. “There!” he said.

  Coprolites — a group of around thirty of them — were milling around. Although their mushroom-colored and bulbous suits were almost indistinguishable from the surrounding rock, light poured from the luminescent orbs mounted in the eye openings of their suits.

  “And some ex-Stickies,” Sweeney added.

  Will saw the bodies of Limiters sprawled on the ground and looked at Elliott, who nodded. It was clear a four-man team had been supervising the Coprolites. Will was wondering if Drake or Elliott, or both of them, had dispatched the Styx soldiers, when Drake yelled from the front.

  “OK! Batten down the hatch and buckle up!” Then when everyone was seated and strapped in, he floored the accelerator.

  The digger was capable of impressive speed. Sweeney, Will, and the Colonel kept the boiler well fed and well stoked as they went, always heading downward in this new tunnel.

  They passed what must have been a Limiter checkpoint along the way. They only knew this because they could hear the bullets striking the thick crystal windshield as the Styx soldiers tried to stop the digger. But their efforts were completely ineffectual, and everyone in the vehicle laughed and gave each other the thumbs-up.

  Elliott was in the co-driver’s seat beside Drake, continually checking the tracker. When Drake eased off the accelerator to allow Sweeney to tend to the boiler, Will took the opportunity to undo his seat harness and come forward.

  “We’re dead on the signal,” Elliott shouted, showing Will the twitching needle on top of the detector.

  Drake leaned over from the driver’s seat. “If this tunnel has been completed all the way down, we’re going to reach Smoking Jean in record time!” he said. “Maybe a few hours!”

  Will frowned. “But the journey from Martha’s shack to the submarine in Smoking Jean took us a week!” he pointed out.

  “You were following natural fault lines then, and wandering all over the shop. This is as the mole burrows,” Drake said. “It’s direct.”

  Despite the fact he was being jostled around by the vehicle, Will dozed off in his seat. He had no idea how long it had been until he was rudely awoken by shouting. He at once realized that they were no longer traveling down an incline but were on the flat. Then he caught sight of a well-lit area through the windshield.

  “Yee-ha!” Drake yelled as he drove right at several Limiters in front of some sort of shack. They leaped from the path of the vehicle, and the digger exploded through the structure.

  “Straight ahead!” Elliott yelled, checking the tracker.

  Multiple shots struck the digger all over its hull, then an explosion lifted it clean into the air.

  As it landed, Drake was shouting and laughing. He kept his foot pressed firmly to the floor. There were rock outcrops in the way, but he simply smashed through them.

  Will caught sight of something familiar. Although he couldn’t hear what she was saying to Drake, Elliott was pointing at it. It was the tall boulder with the carving where Will had hidden one of the radio beacons, and where his father had leaped into Smoking Jean.

  But for the life of him, Will couldn’t think what Drake was intending to do next. The shots continued to rain on them from behind, so there was no way they could stop or go back.

  They were almost at the void, and still Drake kept the vehicle moving at full throttle.

  “Drake . . . what are you —? . . . DRAKE!” Will screamed at the top of his lungs as they careered past the tall boulder where the beacon was hidden. Will knew he was right about this because he could just make out the rash of cli
cks from the detector in Elliott’s hand.

  There was a crash as the roof of the digger caught the top of the opening on the side of Smoking Jean. But the digger simply crushed the rock.

  Then they weren’t on firm ground any longer.

  They were tipping into the void.

  Falling.

  Drake killed the engine, leaving just the sound of rushing air as they gently turned over.

  “Stay strapped in — in case we hit anything,” Drake advised.

  A few loose stones floated around the cabin — even now the gravity was becoming less powerful.

  And through the front windshield Will caught glimpses of the red glow of lava veins on the sides of the void.

  “You bloody hooligan!” Will said. “I can’t believe you just did that!” But he was laughing.

  AS THE COPROLITE digger plunged downward, it caught the tip of a fungal ledge protruding from the side of Smoking Jean, slamming straight through it. The obstruction caused the vehicle to flip end over end. Everyone was holding on tight, the motion making them feel more than a little disoriented, and increasingly ill.

  Worse seemed to be in store for them.

  The digger was rotating inexorably toward the side of the Pore. They watched the intermittent view through the windshield with bated breath, but the collision with the rock wall they were all dreading never came. Instead the temperature inside the cabin rocketed due to the proximity of the molten rock. Will was seriously asking himself if they’d all be barbecued where they sat, when, luckily, the digger drifted away from the lava veins and back toward the center of the Pore. And as they continued, coming ever closer to the bottom of Smoking Jean, the digger settled down and was hardly spinning at all.