“Maybe.” Aimee reached out to grasp Casey’s shoulder, and pulled her a little closer. “Just remember, as we get nearer to the water, we may encounter the predator mimic.”
“The what?” Jennifer tilted her head. “The predator what?”
“Great,” Franks said. She half turned to Jennifer, but kept her eyes on Aimee. “It’s nothing.”
“No, it’s not, Lieutenant.” Aimee straightened. “And if we’re going lower, then I think everyone has a right to know what we might have to deal with down here.”
“It’s not gonna help,” Casey said, folding her arms and looking away.
“What isn’t?” Dawkins said, coming closer, trailed by Big Ben Jackson.
Aimee could feel their eyes boring into her. Even the other HAWCs were watching. What she had told them at McMurdo could never prepare them for what may still be down here, lurking in the darkness. She didn’t want to frighten them, but maybe if that fear led to caution, then maybe, just maybe, it was a good thing. She drew in a breath.
“Back up at the base, I told you that I had been down here before. Of the several dozen people that went into the caves, only three of us made it out alive. What I never told you was what tracked us, and killed nearly all of us.” She folded her arms tight on her body, her eyes rooted to the cave floor as she spoke.
“The thing was an apex predator of extraordinary size and intelligence. It doesn’t exist anywhere on the surface, and hasn’t for millions of years. It was similar to the orthocone cephalopods…”
“Cephala-what? Hey, I missed my last science class, Doc. What the hell is that?” Dawkins glanced from Aimee to Ben Jackson, and then back.
Aimee faced Dawkins, her gaze level. “A cephalopod is from the Mollusca family — octopuses, squid, cuttlefish, and Nautiloids. They’re old, been here for nearly half a billion years, give or take. This thing is like that, an orthocone, one of the oldest from our fossil record, but they were nothing like this thing. Down here it’d grown big… very big.”
“How big can it be, if it can fit in here?” Jackson glanced sideways.
Aimee tried to remain dispassionate, and let the scientist in her take over. “Ben, we can’t fit into anywhere smaller than our skulls. But this thing is boneless and made up of pure striated muscle mass. It’s enormously powerful, and can also flatten its cell structure down to be able to fit its tentacle tips in just about anywhere.” She grimaced, but quickly corrected herself. “And size? Maybe blue whale, maybe bigger.”
“Oh fucking great,” Dawkins said. His mouth stayed hung open and his chipped tooth was now showing. “And it’s down here, now?”
Aimee looked at him, her eyes unblinking. “We thought we killed it, but all I really know is that we buried it. So I just don’t know for sure.”
“Oh god.” Jennifer turned to glare at Casey. “What did you get us into?”
Casey’s expression was flat. “Hey, I’m here.” She held up her gun. “And we’re also damn dangerous predators.”
“Dr. Weir.” Big Ben Jackson cleared his throat. “You said it was a mimic; what did you mean by that?”
“Yes, I did.” Aimee nodded. “Perhaps another evolutionary adaption to allow it to get close to its prey. It has the ability to mold parts of itself into shapes; even human shapes. It tricked some of our team, got close to them, and then attacked. So don’t trust everything you see in the dark.”
Casey scoffed. “Hey lady, down here, it’s all dark.”
Aimee stared hard, and Casey held up a hand. “Okay, okay, we got it.” She went to turn away, but Aimee grabbed her elbow.
“One more thing; stay out of the water.”
“The water? I thought you said it hunted in the caves.” Casey frowned.
“No, this is something else,” Aimee said softly.
“Something… hey.” Casey spun to Soong who had appeared silently behind her and touched her shoulder. “What is it?”
“Excuse me.” The woman bit her lip. “But my colleagues, Lee Pinying and Bo Xingmin… they are not here anymore.”
“Not here?” Casey then tilted her head back. “Oh for fuck’s sake. Is it too much to ask that we at least try and stay together?” She looked over Soong’s head. “Rhino, Hagel, Parcellis, find our Chinese friends; they’ve gone for a walk.”
“That PLA soldier, he was one of us, but didn’t care if we were killed in the blast or not.” Bo Pinyin slowed as he spoke, fiddling with his pants. His shirt was already open, his tattooed chest wet from perspiration.
“No, not one of us.” Lee shook his head. “To them we are nothing. But remember, if the Americans are successfully ambushed by the PLA, we tell them that we were taken hostage by them.” He half turned. “And hurry, they are getting too far in front. I do not like this place.” Lee held up his lantern light. “And I can barely hear them anymore.” He turned back to the darkness, his brow creased. “Hurry up!”
Bo Pinyin was standing over a small opening in the cave floor and wall, his fly open and a solid stream of urine disappearing into the crack. He grinned in the light.
“Maybe it will drip down on Captain Yang’s head?”
Lee turned away. “Just hurry.” He wished he’d never come. The job was a lucrative contract, but now it seemed there wasn’t enough money in all of China to make it worthwhile. Behind him his colleague grunted, and Lee turned back to rouse on him again. “Hey…”
Lee was at first disgusted by the man thrusting his hips into a crack in the cave wall. He looked like he was trying to violently fuck the wall, but his face was warped with agony and horror.
“What are you doing?” Lee approached — one, two steps, and then three. He held up his lantern light. Bo was grunting and pounding himself right into the wall. Lee reached out for him, but just as his hand alighted on his shoulder, there came a weird sensation of suction against his calf. He looked down and saw his foot spanned the crack that Bo had urinated into, but now something was rising from it to encircle his boot and leg. At its very tip there was a small dark orb, and Lee knew immediately that it saw him as clearly as he saw it.
“Yi, look!” Lee quickly turned to his friend, but strangely Bo wasn’t there anymore. He yelped and tugged, but the thing suckered on tighter, and then something dug into his flesh.
He screamed now, the pain becoming infinitely worse as the thing wormed its way further up his leg, and dug in deeper to the meat of his thigh. Then it started to drag him down. Lee’s scream quickly turned to a long howl of agony.
Rhino and Parcellis checked their weapons, as Hagel leaned against a wall, chuckling. “Hey, Franks, seriously? After hearing the doc’s Halloween stories, you want to split us up?”
“Get moving, or I’ll make you go alone, wise guy.” Casey went to turn away, just as the hideous scream ripped through the darkness, making even the toughened HAWCs cringe.
“What the fuck was that?” Dawkins looked about to panic and Aimee grabbed him by the sleeve, hanging on tight. She looked to Casey.
The female HAWC swung back to Rhino, Hagel, and Parcellis, and motioned with her head to the cave mouth. “Double time.”
The three HAWCs didn’t blink, but instead spun and sprinted into the darkness. Jennifer babbled, and Dawkins’s eyes were wide and shining. Only Ben Jackson stood like a colossus in the mouth of the cave, legs braced.
Casey paced, her gun cradled in her arms. It was only a few more minutes before the three HAWCs came back to the huddled group. Rhino lifted one of the missing men’s lantern lights, still glowing.