“I know that. I’ve spent my entire life studying this type of environment.” Cate noticed Alex’s expression. “Okay, okay, it was fossilized, but still, I’m not a complete dummy.”
“If I thought that, I’d leave you behind.” He went to turn away.
“Hey, I saved your life, buster.” Her raised voice carried through the silent forest. “And by the way; I can look after myself, and I’m far from being a quivering female.” She snorted, her hands on her hips. “I made a choice, and I’m glad I did.” She looked up and then out over the forest. “I can hear something.” Turning her head, she concentrated. “Sounds like… movement.” She pointed to the cliff wall. “From over there.”
“I know… and that’s where we’re going.” Alex motioned towards the interior and away from the cliff wall. “We’ve got a lot of ground to cover, and though we need to travel fast, we need to be cautious every single step of the way. Do not touch anything, do not make unnecessary sounds, and do not, under any circumstances, wander off.”
Cate snorted.
“Do you understand?” Alex held her gaze.
She looked away. “Sure, sure, no problem.”
Casey Franks was first through the broken tunnel wall, standing atop the tumbled boulders and using her gun-light to scan the darkness beyond. After a few more seconds she lowered her weapon.
“Clear.”
Dempsey led the rest of the team in. Immediately, the hulking form of Hank Rinofsky walked a few paces forward and held out a small black box, and concentrated on its small screen. He waved it around and then pointed it downwards into the dark void.
“Speak to me, Rhino.” Dempsey looked impatient.
Rinofsky whistled. “This mother is deep. Got a drop of nearly a mile, before it opens back up.” He shook his head. “It’s a goddamn labyrinth down there.”
Franks yelled from out to the side. “Got steps here, boss.”
Aimee saw that just along from them the ledge they all stood on ended at a set of steps cut into the rock face. They were steep, but passable.
Dempsey crossed over and crouched, holding up a flashlight. “Been used recently. But only used one way.” He lifted his light higher, looking up into the darkness above him.
Aimee joined him, and saw that the steps went in both directions. “Do you think it could be another way out?” she asked, feeling little confidence.
“Unlikely,” Dempsey said. “There was nothing on the surface to indicate an open vent or anything passable.” He waved his flashlight around a little more. “Might be worth a look though. If we end up needing someone to dig us out, then closer to the surface, is closer to sunlight.” He turned to yell over his shoulder. “Hagel, get up there and do a rec. You got twenty.”
“Got it, boss.” The young HAWC went up the steps like a mountain goat, and quickly vanished in the darkness above their heads.
Dempsey straightened. “Take five, people, going to be a long climb down.” He sat with his back to a rock and unscrewed his canteen lid.
“All downhill, boss. Walk in the park,” Rinofsky said with a grin.
“Maybe you should carry us then, ya big moose,” Franks said, looking over the edge.
Aimee sipped water, and she offered the canteen to Soong, who shook her head.
“We might need that later. Best to conserve it.”
“I don’t think finding water will be our problem.” She sipped. “But what’s in it, might be.” Soong looked perplexed, but Aimee didn’t feel like explaining herself.
“Yo, boss, got some cave graffiti here.” Parcellis aimed his light onto a huge flat wall.
“Does it say: they went this way?” Dempsey remained sitting on the ground. “Forget about it.”
Aimee and Soong walked along the shelf of rock by themselves, and together they stood before the huge flat wall carved with the ancient glyphs.
“These are very old,” Soong said. “Thousands of years. Shenjung would have been interested.”
“Many thousands.” Aimee felt her stomach knot. There were symbols, whorls, and strokes, some carved in, and some raised in relief. The pattern of writing style hinted at Mayan, Incan, Sumerian, and other ancient languages, and she knew it was perhaps the root of all of them. There were images of birds, snakes, something that could have been a big cat, and a bison type animal. Also, carved in great detail were the faces, with tongues lolling, some gritted teeth. Some had eyes wide and were staring, with looks of anger, and then some portrayed the unmistakable rictus of fear.
Soong turned to her. “You have seen them before?” she asked, and then pointed at one place on the wall. “This one.”
The carving was of what looked like a nest of snakes with a giant eye at its center. “It is like one of the ancient demons from ancient Chinese mythology. We call it Zhàyǔ. It devours entire souls.” Her expression grew dark. “And it lives in the dark of the underworld.”
Aimee stared at the carving for a moment longer. “Not any more.” Aimee looked away, not wanting to dwell on the thing in the carving, and hoping with every fiber of her being that the creature she had encountered in the past was long dead. She’d seen it die. She went to turn away, but Soong continued to stare.
The Chinese woman stepped even closer, and placed a hand on the carved coiling limbs. She turned to Aimee. “Did you know that our people were missing; the first team at the base? Long before you came, something had entered our camp, we think, from below.”
Aimee stared at her for several moments, not wanting to hear the words.
Soong stepped back, but continued to stare at the glyph. “Something also destroyed our rock drill. Something that was already down here.” She lowered her light. “And now we go looking for it.”
“We’ll be fine.” Aimee felt a dark depression settling over her. “Let’s get back to the group.”
Redman Hagel felt his thighs burning — he liked the sensation — he liked pushing himself, and after jogging up nearly a thousand steps, sweat streamed and his legs screamed for a break. Now and then he’d send a pulse up ahead, similar to what Rhino had done on the shelf, and then read it as he continued to move. There was a cavern coming up. It appeared to have a ceiling — about to hit the top, he thought. According to his reader, there was still a shitload of rock, ice and snow still above them.
He came abreast of the floor. He paused, just letting his beam of light move over the geology for a few moments. Then he slowly lifted himself into the cavern. There was a wall built of stones, not mortared, but dry stacked. He pulled a few out, and leaned in, holding his flashlight up. It was a natural room, of sorts. Old rock carvings on the walls that meant nothing to him, but everywhere he looked there were bones… hundreds of them.
“What the fuck happened here?” He moved his light over the age-browned remnants of humanity, staring down at dark, brittle leg bones, ribs, and small skulls. They were intact, and by the look of the positioning of the bodies, they hadn’t died violently. Some had arms wrapped around others, and many were lying out flat as if they had simply gone to sleep. “Ran out of room, so you just walled yourself in and stayed here until you died, huh? Good plan.”
Hagel could see among the bodies that there were mineral outlines in the shape of large chisels, hammers, and picks. “You were digging, but you stopped.” He frowned. It didn’t make sense. “Why would you stay?” Hagel did a quick survey of the room; there were no other openings. These people had climbed up here from somewhere down below. This wasn’t their home, but it became their final resting place.