Chapter Three
Ryan recovered first. He rolled onto his side
and retched violently, bringing up threads of yellow bile and
clotted lumps of food, congealed from his last meal.
His head hurt, with a band of steel clamped around his temples.
Slowly and with infinite caution, Ryan lifted his right hand toward
his closed eye, his good right eye, touching it with fingers that
trembled.
He blinked it open and saw armaglass walls of a dull, dark brown,
showing that they had successfully jumped somewhere else. The disks
in floor and ceiling had ceased to glow, and the mist near the top
of the gateway had almost vanished.
He felt terrible, his brain still being chewed around inside his
head. The slightest movement produced murderous vertigo that led in
turn to violent sickness.
Ryan decided to lie still for a while, until his body recovered
from the shock of the jump.
He could still taste the burning gasoline that had given them the
flaming send-off. He remembered the relief that the natives had
failed to get at them, though his last sentient memory was of dark
figures, silhouetted against the flames, struggling to wrench open
the gateway door.
Ryan blinked again, lifting a hand to rub at his eye with his
sleeve.
He was right. There was something lying just inside the door of the
chamber. Some kind of small animal.
Whatever it was, Ryan decided that it was no threat to him. It had
the unmistakable stillness of death. Perhaps some little creature
had been sheltering in the gateway and had been caught by the speed
of the second jump.
He crawled a few inches closer, peering at it, then heard J.B.'s
voice, sounding frail and weak, from behind him. "It's a
hand."
"A hand?"
"Yeah. Hand."
Ryan squinted, realizing that the Armorer was correct.
It was a human hand, dark skinned, with the end joint of the middle
finger missing from an old wound. Three thin bracelets of woven
hair encircled the wrist.
Ryan took a single deep, slow breath and risked sitting up,
steadying himself against the cold armaglass wall. He got a new
perspective on the severed hand, seeing that it had been cut off a
few inches above the wrist, halfway toward the elbow. It was a
startlingly clean wound, with very little blood, the two ends of
bone showing as white and clean as if a massive guillotine had been
used on them.
"Looks like the poor bastard got the door open just as the jump was
taking place," J.B. said, sniffing, removing his glasses to polish
them. "We brought his hand with us. Rest of him must've stayed and
bled back in the jungle."
"Fireblast!" Ryan looked across at his old friend. "You look worse
than I fed."
J.B. tried a fragile smile but didn't even get close to it. "I feel
about twice as bad as you look, and you look three times as bad as
me."
"Not the best jump. You have bad dreams?"
The Armorer replaced his spectacles, looking around for his fedora
and tugging it on at a jaunty angle. "Seemed like I was drowning in
a small, sealed room under the sea. Too realistic for
me."
"I was being fucked and murdered at the same time by" He hesitated,
holding back a part of the nightmare. "By this evil old
slut."
"Dark night!" J.B. had tried to stand, using the shotgun as a
crutch, but his strength failed him and he dropped back to hands
and knees.
"Think the others have had such a bastardly bad jump?" Ryan
asked.
"Hope not. For their sake. Might've been something to do with the
mat-trans being used twice so close together. Or the equipment
might have malfunctioned."
Ryan looked around, feeling the nausea retreating. "Think we've
reached the same place?"
J.B. wiped sweat from his forehead. "Find out soon enough. I'd have
thought they might have been letting us know they were here by
now."
"Yeah."
There could be any of a hundred reasons why Krysty and the others
weren't already opening up the heavy door and greeting their safe
arrival.
But the most likely and the most menacing was that they'd somehow
jumped to a different destination. The LD button might have failed
to work.
But as the Trader used to say, there was plenty of time to worry
about things you could control and understand without bothering
about anything else.
"Feel up to moving?" Ryan asked.
J.B. cleared his throat. "Pretty up and walking good. Ready when
you are."
"Sure?"
"Yeah. Long as I don't have to run or fight or do anything more
than a gentle stroll, then I'm your man, Ryan." He pushed a hand
against the walls and stood, rocking from side to side, eyes
pinwheeling behind the lenses of his glasses.
"Sure?" Ryan repeated.
"Let's do it."
Ryan drew the SIG-Sauer, checked that the Steyr was snug over his
shoulder, then opened the door a few inches and kicked the severed
hand out of the way.
He saw the usual small side room that stood between the actual
mat-trans chamber and the main control area. It was about ten feet
square, bare of furniture, with a couple of empty shelves on the
wall to the right.
Through the open doorway beyond it Ryan could see the rows of
desks, computers and monitor screens that typified that section of
the military redoubts.
He stepped out of the chamber, J.B. right at his heels, and sniffed
the air, finding it had the arid and flat taste typical of most
gateways.
The redoubts had mostly been built during the last years of the
twentieth century, mainly in out-of-the-way places in the
wilderness regions of the country. Despite the bitter and fruitless
objections of the powerful conservation lobby, these often happened
to be in national parks.
The redoubts had been powered by the most sophisticated nuke
plants, designed to run on carefully planned comp programs without
any human interference. This meant that after the megakilling of
sky-dark, many of the surviving redoubts carried on running
themselves, ignorant of the fact that their human masters were
already dead or dying of rad sickness.
So the stabilization procedures involving cleaning, security and
air-conditioning were still working in most of the
redoubts.
A faded piece of pink paper on the wall was tacked to the off-white
plaster.
Ryan checked it out before going on to examine the rest of the
gateway complex. It was already obvious that Krysty and the others
weren't in the immediate vicinity.
"What is it?" J.B. asked.
Ryan read it aloud. "Says 'Redoubt 47's own theater group invites
you to their January production, Whip It Out and Wipe It , a revue
written by Officer Jim Laurens. Take your mind off the troubles.
Monday thru Friday, 1900 hours.' That's all."
The Armorer screwed up his eyes, peering at it. "Must've been just
before sky dark. The intensity of the military situation would've
been the troubles it mentions."
"Wonder if the show ever took place?" Ryan looked at the notice.
"Guess it doesn't matter much either way. Let's go check out the
rest of the place."
THE MAIN CONTROL AREA WAS in excellent shape, with no sign of any
structural damage or electrical failure. The banks of controls
showed flickering lights and whirling dials, giving off the faint
distant hum of the operating machinery.
"No clue anyone's been here for a hundred years," J.B. said,
running a finger along the top of the nearest desk, showing it to
Ryan, completely clean.
"Main sec doors are closed."
"Yeah."
Ryan stood still, sniffing at the air. "I reckon I can just about
smell sweat."
"Sure you're not imagining it?"
"Mebbe."
"They have to have come this way." J.B. shook his bead, pushing
back the fedora.
"Why didn't they wait?"
The Armorer looked around, considering the question. "Too many
possible answers to that, friend." He hesitated. "I reckon I can
smell sweat, as well."
"Better get the sec doors open. See what lies behind them. If
Krysty and Dean and the others aren't there, then we can start
doing some serious worrying."
The green lever at the side of the vanadium-steel door was in the
down "locked" position.
"Usual," J.B. said, taking hold of the lever. "Stop it after a few
inches."
"Right. Soon as I give you the word."
Ryan gripped the P-226 blaster in his right hand and crouched on
the floor, slightly to one side of the door.
"Ready?"
"Go," Ryan said.
Nothing happened.
He glanced sideways, seeing that the Armorer was wrestling with the
green lever, trying to move it upward.
"Nothing," J.B. panted. "Like the mechanism's totally
jammed."
"Means that they're somewhere on the other side of it and it jammed
after they left this area." He paused, thinking aloud. "Or it could
also mean that it's been jammed for countless years and they never
jumped here. Fireblast! Why can't things take an easy turn for
once?"
"Manual override?"
"Is there one? Not always one."
"Sure. Small panel at the side here."
The handle that could be used to wind up the sec door was only six
inches long, folded back out of sight. To lift the enormously heavy
weight of the massive bombproof door, it had to be linked into an
intricate system of gears and counterweights.
J.B. flicked open the lid of the panel, unfolding the brass handle
and setting it carefully in place. He gave it an experimental
couple of turns, and the door trembled and moved upward a fraction
of an inch.
"Looking good," Ryan commented. "Take it away."
"Brilliant machinery," J.B. said as he started to turn the handle.
"Makes you wonder at the wonder of it. Some things they knew how to
build in those days."
Ryan flattened himself on the floor, ready to squint out beneath
the slowly ascending door. If this redoubt was like the majority of
others that they'd visited, there would likely be a passage outside
that would ultimately lead into the rest of the redoubt and then on
into the open air.
Raising the sec door by hand was immensely slow and laborious.
After thirty seconds it wasn't much more than an inch off the
concrete floor.
Ryan held the SIG-Sauer ready, laying his face flat, squinting
under the door with his one ice-blue eye-staring straight into a
pair of dark brown eyes, less than a foot away.