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Tarasov decides to take the descending corridor to the south. Zlenko follows him without question.

Pain burns his chest. Touching his wound, his fingers tell him that another stitch has torn.

That stone is moving out of my flesh… what is happening to me?

In one place, where the tunnel curves and continues downward in a steeper descent, the walls bear the marks of heavy tools.

“They used enough effort to dig a metro,” Zlenko whispers. “Someone must have been really keen to clear these catacombs.”

“Halt,” Tarasov whispers back to the sergeant, “I see a light ahead. Switch to night vision.”

He kneels down. The faint hum of his night vision is the only sound he can hear. The low, greenish contrast strengthens enough for him to make out a brawny figure standing in the darkness.

“Steady,” he whispers, and aims his weapon. The reticule slides towards the mutant’s face. It seems to be just an arm’s length away. Whatever happened to it, Tarasov can still see human features, wishing recoil would be the only thing he felt when he pulls the trigger. Despite the silencer, the rifle shots sound like thunder in the narrow tunnel. For a second, the mutant’s head jolts with impact as the bullets hit it, then it turns in the direction of the shots. Tarasov fires again. The mutant roars, its heavy steps pounding on the ground towards him. Zlenko fires the machine gun.

What the hell does it take to kill this beast?

Gritting his teeth, Tarasov fires burst after burst. The mutant collapses but still manages to crawl towards them.

“Can’t you understand you’re fucking dead?” Zlenko screams, firing the M27 directly into the mutant’s head. “Die at last! Die!

The mutant lies sprawled on the ground, motionless but for its fingers, which are still twitching. Its nails have grown into inch-long claws. Zlenko draws his combat knife, kneels down and cuts the mutant’s throat. The claws dig into the ground and move no longer.

“At least I can use my bayonet again,” he says, coldly. “Now it’s dead enough.”

For a minute, Tarasov suspiciously studies his last remaining companion’s face. “Good job, Viktor,” he says.

“I know.”

Turning his back to Zlenko, Tarasov is dogged by a persistent feeling of uneasiness. Reaching a wide cavern with a campfire in the middle, he puts the fire between himself and Zlenko so that he can watch his movements.

“Looks like we interrupted its dinner,” he says, looking at the half dozen corpses lying on the ground, some of them revealing bite marks. Even so, the still-human face of the mutant makes him feel uneasy.

Zlenko shrugs. “It’s done for. No place for remorse. It was not human anymore, just pure evil turned into brawn and claws.”

Tarasov frowns.

He was not supposed to know what I think.

“Check your ammo, Sergeant.”

“Only two mags left.”

“Keep your pistol ready… just in case.”

“It won’t be necessary. We won’t get much further.” Zlenko’s words sound pessimistic but there is a strange, detached resolve in his voice.

“We will, Sergeant.”

Zlenko doesn’t reply. He checks the corpses. “Civilians mostly… technicians, I believe.”

So these were the excavators.

Tarasov moves to take a closer look at them, to find a map or something else that might be useful, but as he looks back at the mutant one last time, the light of his headlamp is reflected by something metallic. He turns the corpse over. Fastened on a metal chain like a dog-tag, a note hangs from its neck in a small plastic case.

Psychological test subject Number 3. Origin: Ghorband area. Personal notes: Vasilyev. Species: homo sapiens. Nature of test: {voluntary} — involuntary. Exposure time: 12 hours (estimated).

“You know, Viktor… actually, I am relieved that we don’t have to rescue these scientists.”

“I disagree. We came to rescue them. We have orders. And I will not go beyond or ignore my orders.”

The major frowns. He looks at the sergeant’s heavy body armor and, for a moment, is tempted to reload his rifle with armor-piercing ammunition once more.

Not Viktor. Not him. Please.

Before they go on, Tarasov looks around the cavern. Heavy rocks and debris still lie on the ground where they had entered, and the walls of the cavern are smoother than in the tunnels. He can even see the faint traces of stone ornaments on the walls, and closer examination even reveals faded paintings. Parts of human figures are still visible, but their faces have been scratched away and huge bullet holes have otherwise rendered their remains unrecognizable. The tunnel continues as a row of stairs, leading deeper into the darkness.

“Have you realized we didn’t stumble into Skinner’s corpse?” Tarasov inquires. “Maybe that tough bastard is still alive and lurking about somewhere here.”

“Yeah. Maybe,” Zlenko replies, again with an insubordinate shrug.

After a few meters, the tunnel broadens. The stairs are broken, and a narrow wooden plank runs through. Zlenko moves straight forward. He is barely half a meter away from the ruined steps when Tarasov sees a little hole in the ground, like those he had seen at Hellgate.

“Zlenko! Stop,” he screams, but is too late. Columns of burning steam thrust from the ground, filling the tunnel with noxious fumes and flames. He grasps the sergeant’s shoulder and yanks him back to safety.

“A Geyser! Watch your damned step!”

The anomaly burns for a minute before extinguishing itself as quickly as it had appeared. Zlenko’s suit is badly burnt and Tarasov can see seared flesh through the torn leggings. He quickly takes a roll of bandages and is about to apply it on the sergeant’s wounds when Zlenko shakes him off.

“It’s nothing,” he says calmly and stands up. “Let’s move.”

“You have burns all over your legs,” Tarasov shouts at him.

“Stop being such a father figure.”

He watches Zlenko move on with determined steps. Cursing himself, he runs to catch up with the sergeant. Tarasov can barely halt himself when he finally reaches Zlenko. Under the arched tunnel ceiling, his faintly outlined silhouette stands still against inky darkness.

Another yawning chasm opens before them. One ramshackle rope bridge stretches out from where Zlenko stands, its other end invisible in the gloom beyond.

“I suppose you want to take point, Major.”

The sergeant’s words strike home like an order and Tarasov bites his lip. Deep inside him, all his instincts scream Danger.

He steps onto the bridge. The ancient ropes creak as the shaky bridge accommodates his weight. The chasm below could be ten or ten thousand meters deep, but soon the other side appears, where an elaborately carved stone arch leads into another tunnel.

“You can follow… it’s safe,” he shouts back to Zlenko the from the middle of the rope bridge. When he has almost reached the other side, he repeats, “Viktor, you can—”

“I will not.”

With his weapon ready but his finger off the trigger, Tarasov slowly turns back towards his last remaining comrade.

“Come again?”

“I said I will not. I can not follow you any longer.”

Tarasov’s eyes glaze over with fear as he looks back at him. The sergeant has removed his helmet and, where the face of a young, carefree man once was, the deadly features of a killer now appear. The light of Tarasov’s headlamp reflects in his eyes as a fiery red tone.

“Viktor,” Tarasov desperately shouts, “you are still under my command, for God’s sake!”