Lucas held the cylinder in his right hand, keeping his thumb near the trigger mechanism. In his left hand he held his SVD, keeping it at a ready position to distract the beast once it appeared. Lucas could feel his muscles ache more with each passing moment in the chamber and the nauseous feelings in his stomach continued to build. At the level of radiation in the chamber, Lucas knew that he would soon succumb to more symptoms of radiation poisoning. Nausea and vomiting would simply be the start of a quick process that would result in his death within a few hours or less.
“Of course, I’m not going to make it that long, am I?” Lucas spoke loudly in the chamber, trying to draw the creature in towards him. His voice sounded odd in his ears without his mask on, though he was thankful that he would be able to hear his natural voice before he died. Sitting down on a pile of rubble, Lucas swept his SVD around the room, trying to find the beast he was sure was nearby.
The high amounts of radiation in the chamber wreaked havoc with his scopes, though, rendering them useless in the dark room. Lucas shook his head and laughed as he raised the SVD and fired a shot in a random direction. It impacted off a wall, causing the room to shudder from the vibration. A snarl followed the vibration and Lucas immediately stopped laughing. He dropped the SVD by his side and pulled out his flashlight, directing it to the location where the snarl originated.
A large black shadow crawled along the wall of the chamber twenty feet off of the ground. The single red eye of the beast watched Lucas as it moved across the wall, keeping its distance from its foe. Never before had the creature faced an opponent that had successfully wounded it to such a large degree, and it kept a respectful distance from the soldier. Lucas stepped away from his SVD and held his hands high in the air, hovering his thumb over the trigger mechanism for the cylinder. He smiled coldly at the beast as he spoke, his voice dripping with hatred and anger.
“Well come on! What are you waiting for? Come and kill me!”
The shadow continued to move across the wall, watching Lucas as he wandering around, tracking the movement of the creature with his flashlight. Lucas felt a spasm in his stomach and nearly doubled over in pain. He began to cough as vomit rose unbidden in his throat, bubbling to the surface and overflowing onto the piles of metal and concrete in the chamber. He felt flushed as well, and a headache that started in the back of his head was traveling to the front, settling behind his eyes. Lucas struggled to stay upright as he wiped the vomit from the corner of his mouth.
Desperate to provoke a reaction from the creature, Lucas picked up a small piece of rubble and lobbed it at the beast. It impacted on the wall of the chamber just above the creature’s head and bounced to the ground. The shadow’s body shook as it snarled at Lucas, then it came to a halt on the wall. Lucas threw another piece of rubble, this time hitting the creature directly in the head. Though the rubble didn’t do any actual damage, the beast snarled louder and began to quickly descend from the wall. It approached Lucas slowly as it closed the gap toward him. Though it had been provoked by Lucas’s actions, it was still wary of his intentions, particularly since it was not used to having its prey stand up to it in such a manner.
The beast stepped down off of the wall of the chamber and stood staring at Lucas, sniffing the air. Unable to know the exact range of the device he held, Lucas resolved to hold out on using it until the last possible second. His body continued to shudder and he felt his temperature rise as his fever worsened. His vision began to blur from the headache and he had to struggle to remain upright against the onslaught.
The beast slowly began to circle around Lucas, drawing closer, but still acting warily. Lucas saw its single eye swivel to look him over from foot to head, then it appeared to be staring directly at the device in his hand. Upon seeing the device, the beast stopped dead in its tracks and smelled the air again, then it began to back slowly away toward the wall. Shocked by this, Lucas looked at the device himself as he realized that the creature must have figured out what it was.
But how? The only possible reason for the creature knowing what the cylinder was is if this was the very same creature that Iosif and his team had encountered in China. They didn’t kill it. That’s why the explosives were added. The field just weakened it so that it appeared to die.
“How the hell did you get from China to Ukraine?” Lucas spoke again, distracting the creature from looking at the cylinder. As it trained its eye on Lucas, he lowered his arm and slipped the cylinder into his back vest pocket. He reached into another and pulled out a grenade and held it aloft. Lucas screamed at the shadow as he pulled the pin on the grenade with his thumb and then lobbed it in the general direction of the creature. The beast leapt onto the wall, scurrying high out of range of the grenade as it bounced along and exploded, showering the chamber with dust and metal fragments.
In the confusion, Lucas reached back into his vest and pulled the cylinder back out and held it behind his back out of view of the creature. Seconds ticked past as the creature divided its attention between Lucas and the remnants of the grenade. “Come on you sorry bastard, take the bait…” Lucas muttered to himself under his breath. His request was granted just a moment later when the beast began to descend the wall again with its mouth open as it bared its teeth at Lucas in a manner eerily reminiscent of a demented smile.
That’s it, keep on coming. The creature’s claws tapped on the rubble as it moved toward Lucas at a steady pace. Even in the glow of the flashlight, the creature appeared completely black in color, with no patterning or texture to be seen beyond the faint outline of fur across its body. For all intents and purposes, it appeared to be a shadow, albeit a shadow with substance, form and deadly intentions.
A wave of pain hit Lucas in his gut and he fell to his knees, coughing and choking as vomit once again came forth from his mouth. He looked up at the creature, now only twenty feet from him, and struggled to his feet again. Lucas’s hand slipped as he pushed himself up and his flashlight tumbled away, rolling away down a slope in the chamber. Lucas tried to ignore the pain in his chest and stomach as he stood again, facing the creature who now appeared only as a red eye moving steadily closer toward him.
When the eye finally stopped moving, Lucas could swear that he heard the creature’s breath just inches away from his face. A deep rumble came from directly in front of Lucas, and he knew then that the beast was no more than an arm’s length away. Lucas brought his arm around from his back, revealing the small glowing lights on the surface of the cylinder. The beast’s eye widened as it noticed the cylinder in Lucas’s hand, then it snarled and began its leap forward to attack. Before the creature could move more than a few inches, though, Lucas shoved his thumb into the indent on the top of the cylinder as he closed his eyes and whispered.
“This is for Iosif.”
Chapter Twenty-Six
A mile away, running through the woods as the faintest rays of sunlight began to break over the horizon, Yuri stumbled and fell to the ground as the thunderous explosion echoed across Prip’Yat and the surrounding area. Yuri closed his eyes tightly, trying not to imagine what Lucas’s final moments must have been like.
Now safely away from any radiation hotspots, Yuri pulled off the mask that Lucas had given him. He threw the rubber boot liners to the side and turned the mask over. On the inside of the mask, near the left ear speaker, he found the small indentation again. He pushed the indentation and twisted his finger, rotating the mechanism and freeing a small slot to open. Inside the slot sat a memory chip no larger than a thumbnail, painted black with gold connectors at one end.