“Let’s move on,” Tarasov orders. “And let’s hope we haven’t called up even more mutants by this racket!”
One by one, they enter the room on the other side. It is definitely man-made, looking like a cellar with rusty pipes and wires running along the concrete walls.
Suddenly, they hear a yelp.
“Jackals!” Squirrel shouts.
But only one mutant appears in the light of his headlamp. It seems to be frightened and hides under a pipe.
“It’s a pup,” Tarasov confirms without lowering his weapon. “I wonder where the rest of the pack is?”
“They seem to be one big loving family,” Ilchenko says, pointing his torchlight at some textile rags arranged in a nest-like structure and a metal plate on the ground. A bulky rucksack lies next to the pet’s place. “And quite sophisticated for jackals, too.”
“I hate jackals. Especially sophisticated ones.” Squirrel raises his submachine gun to shoot the helpless yelping mutant. But before he could even aim, a voice comes from the darkness. It is accompanied by the auspicious noise of a rifle being cocked.
“If you even think about hurting my dog — I’ll fry you!”
“That’s not a dog,” Squirrel shouts back, “that’s a bloody jackal!”
“It’s a dog and his name is Billy. Lower your goddamned weapons!”
A beam of strong light flashes from the headlights of a human figure standing in a corner, maintaining a perfect firing position over all four of them.
“It’s okay,” Tarasov says. “We won’t hurt your… pet. Everybody, relax!”
Slowly, with his hands up, he cautiously steps closer to their opponent. The jackal pup darts out from its cover and hides behind its master. By now Tarasov sees that he is wearing an exoskeleton and keeps his FN-2000 automatic rifle squarely at aim. The Stalker’s face is hidden behind the helmet’s dark, protective visor and integrated gas mask.
The major frowns. It is not looking into the barrel of one of the best weapons of the world that gives him an odd feeling about this encounter, nor the relatively small size of their opponent, but how perfectly the exoskeleton fits its wearer. It suits him perfectly, as if tailor-made.
Strange. Yar works wonders with rifles but armor has never been his strong side.
“Mac the Apprentice, I presume?”
“That’s correct. Who are you?”
“My name is Tarasov. Ilchenko and I are from the military…”
“Friends call me Ilch,” Ilchenko adds with a grin.
“… and that Stalker with the MP5 is our guide. Name’s Squirrel.”
“And who’s that? Did one of you bring his grandfather on this joyride?”
“The grandfather holding that red light is… well… he’s with the good guys too, he only stepped into a time vortex. Call him Captain. Can we all relax now?”
Mac laughs. “The Captain looks like a lich king from some stupid RPG!”
“You have something against RPGs? Best loot I ever had!” Squirrel asks, stepping forward.
Tarasov grins and waves him to halt. “That’s not the kind of RPG the kid means. Mac, you are right about the Captain, but he is a chaotic good lich. We’re all with the good guys, believe me.”
“Ooo-kay… I won’t shoot you. But if you ever look at Billy the wrong way…”
“I love that puppy,” Squirrel says. “Hey puppy, you want some sausage?”
In reply, the jackal pup snarls at him and emits an angry yelp that was probably intended to be a frightening bark.
The tension eases as Mac cradles his rifle. Ilchenko and Squirrel do the same.
“So, let’s get down to business,” Tarasov says. “Uncle Yar has sent us to get you back.”
“How is he doing?”
“He’ll be doing better once you get back to him.”
“Forget it. Tell him I’m off to the Panjir Valley.”
“What?”
The Captain’s frightened cry surprises them all. “Operation Magistral is still going on? We went there five times… always beaten back! That place is hell! The column! The column was heading there…”
“What’s wrong with this dude?” Mac asks. “The valley is like heaven for Free Stalkers. There’s fewer mutants, and no arrogant Dutiers poking their dirty noses into Stalker business.”
“Never mind the Captain,” Tarasov replies. “He’s not really up to date.”
Suddenly, the jackal named Billy starts to growl even without Squirrel bothering him.
“Uh-oh… here come the bloodsuckers,” Mac says, readying his rifle.
“How do you know?” Tarasov asks in surprise. Then he looks at the jackal pup called Billy. “Don’t tell me that…”
The pup’s low growl is suddenly subdued by an aggressive howl coming from the tunnels.
“You must have pissed them off, Stalker… you see, all animals seem to hate you.”
“It’s mutants, man, not animals! And actually, it was this trigger-happy boyevoychik who woke them up, not me!”
“We should leave,” the Captain anxiously says.
“Yes, man! Let’s go or we become bloodsucker food!”
“Let’s,” Mac shouts, grabbing his pet and putting him into a bag hanging over his chest. He opens a metal door leading to a corridor to their left. “Get in there. Move!”
“You first, kid,” Tarasov says, readying his rifle.
“Billy, cover your ears!”
Mac steps to the opening in the wall and fires a projectile from his rifle’s built-in grenade launcher. The low thump is followed by a huge explosion inside the tunnel, strengthened into a thunder by the narrow space, followed after a second by two more detonations. Rocks and earth fall in and block the tunnel, while Mac gets his rucksack and even finds time to comfortingly caress his jackal.
“Did you booby-trap the tunnel? All the better. At least I could save some grenades!”
“Why did you bother building that stone wall?” Tarasov asks when they step into the corridor and Mac closes the metal door tight. “You could have blocked it with a few 40 millimeter grenades from your rifle’s launcher!”
“I have only a few grenades left, but there’s more than enough bricks lying around here. Pity to leave it, though… it was a good place to hide. Hey, fat boy, let me through!”
Ilchenko lets Mac pass him by and take point in the corridor. “I am not fat, you little dwarf,” he grumbles.
“Nobody calls me a dwarf,” Mac says, looking back at the machine gunner towering behind him.
“I suggest you two settle this later,” Tarasov snaps. “Mac, where to now?”
“You’ve probably guessed that this is the cellar of the textile factory. Normally, the way up should be clear. If not, Billy will warn us.”
“How so?”
“He has a good nose even for a dog. Smells out any mutant, no matter how far away. Anomalies as well.”
“Maybe that’s because it’s a jackal!” Squirrel says.
“Gospodin Tarasov, where did you find such an imbecile guide who can’t tell a dog from a jackal?”
“First, you will address me as Major or komandir. Second, Squirrel is cool. He eats bears for breakfast.”
“Yeah, I guessed that. His breath smells like that.”
“And you—”
Tarasov cuts into Squirrel’s words “Shut the fuck up, both of you! Let’s move!”
The corridor is narrow and dark, but at least man-made — a relief in itself after the maze of caverns they have left behind. At regular intervals, Tarasov sees metal doors with little hatches at eye height — unusual for a cellar of a factory, making him wonder what this place might have really been. One door stands ajar. He peeks inside, and what he observes looks like a prison cell.
“This place is creepy,” he says.