Adrift (Book 1)

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Adrift (Book 1) Page 14

by K. R. Griffiths


  So you've decided, then. They are attackers.

  Vega cast the thought aside, and slipped the pistol from the holster as the chopper hovered directly over the centre of the park. Being in the marines had long ago taught him to expect the worst. Hell, that was practically lesson number fucking one.

  Any minute now, he thought, I'm going to see men rappelling down.

  He lifted the pistol, sighting it, all thoughts of panicking the passengers forgotten.

  And then the helicopter released its cargo.

  And the screaming started.

  *

  Edgar led his brothers into the night air, breathless from pounding up more than a dozen flights of stairs, just as the chopper moved directly over the park.

  It was, he thought, perfect timing, though the word perfect seemed like a bad fit for the situation.

  Nothing on the Oceanus was perfect. None of it brought Edgar the satisfaction he had expected.

  He had done his duty; fulfilled his destiny, and somehow it just left a hollow ache in his stomach.

  Edgar's duty had cost him his youngest brother, and almost certainly the trust of the two brothers that remained. He didn't doubt that Herb would have said it had also cost him his soul.

  He watched the helicopter drop its payload onto the centre of the park, and dark thoughts gathered in his mind as the screaming began. He brushed them away. Only one thing mattered.

   Get to the extraction point.

  20

  It dropped with a crash that sounded like the walls of Hell collapsing, and the screams that followed were pure horror and pain; a far cry from the jeering hoots of surprise that Vega had heard when the lights went out.

  This was the screaming that, in a different life, he had heard from wounded marines; from dying marines. The terrible noise that humans made when they understood that death had sunk its claws into them and had no plans to let go.

  The helicopter had not dropped a team of armed men into the midst of the passengers.

  Instead, as Vega watched in stunned astonishment, the vehicle dropped what looked like a large shipping container. A heavy steel box which smashed into and partway through the deck, crushing several of the passengers that stood directly below it.

  Some would be dead, Vega thought, and felt oddly detached from the notion. Clearly, some were also alive and injured, judging by the anguished howls of agony: he could well imagine the arms and legs pinned beneath the container; limbs turned instantly into sliced ham.

  The night air filled with the screams of those that were close enough to see the devastation wrought by the dropped container, but still Vega stood rooted to the spot, the gun in his hand forgotten.

  He'd seen plenty of combat; plenty of frantic firefights, and the presence of death had lost the power to stun him a long time ago. What held Vega in stasis was utter confusion. He could make no sense of what was happening in front of him.

  His mind made several passes at possible scenarios: terrorism, pirates, hijackers. None of it seemed to tally.

  He broke out of his paralysis only when he saw the chopper move to the left, soaring above his head, to hover over the small sports court on the top deck.

  It paused there for a moment, and Vega squinted, just about able to make out a ladder tumbling down from the belly of the vehicle, and a dark figure beginning to climb. And then another. Another. Three small silhouettes, climbing quickly toward the waiting chopper.

  The other men that Ledger had mentioned. The ones that had set off the EMP.

  They were getting away.

  With a roar, Vega raised the pistol and opened fire.

  *

  The rope ladder was hard enough to hold onto; blown chaotically by the wind that was kicking up further with each passing moment as the storm above intensified. The bullets made the task of clinging to the wildly swinging rope all the more difficult.

  Edgar was so focused on the climb and on resisting the howling wind that it took him a moment to realise that the cracking noise he heard below was gunfire.

  He almost lost his grip entirely when the bullet tore through his right thigh, and he bellowed as white-hot agony erupted. It took all of his concentration to loop an elbow over the next rung and cling on.

  He had almost made it as far as the waiting chopper when the blast of the gun reached his ears, a microsecond after the flesh of his leg parted to allow the hot metal through. Dropping from the ladder back to the deck would almost certainly result in serious injury, and maybe even death. With both of his brothers also on the ladder below him, Edgar falling might mean all the Rennicks losing their grip.

  He gritted his teeth, biting back on the pain, and for a moment it felt like his mind was shorting out.

  When his senses cleared, he stared down at the park furiously, and saw another muzzle flash.

  This bullet passed close to his head; close enough that he heard—and maybe even felt—the air rippling as it passed.

  The Oceanus had an extremely modest supply of firearms, which were kept in a locked weapons cupboard in the security suite, with the staff fully expecting that they would never need to use them. Edgar had no idea how anybody would have had time to respond to the blackout; time to retrieve the firearms, but it didn't matter. Someone down there had put two and two together and decided a gun was necessary, and now they were shooting. Even worse, they were shooting accurately.

  Another crack, and Edgar heard an explosive shriek from the ladder below him. He looked down, and saw Seb falling, and the gaping hole that had been torn in his brother's chest.

  For a long, terrible moment, Edgar's eyes connected with Seb's as he fell. Seb looked confused, like he wanted desperately to ask Ed what was happening, right up until the moment that the deck met his torso and answered all questions with brutal finality.

  Another crack.

  Another.

  Edgar grunted, hauling himself up with his three uninjured limbs as quickly as possible, opening his mouth to roar that the chopper needed to get the hell out of there, but the words proved unnecessary.

  He saw a hole punched into the flank of the chopper, still several feet above him, and then the world began to tilt and sway crazily as the pilot decided that the VIPs he had been instructed to pick up weren't that important after all.

  The chopper began to veer away from the Oceanus sharply, and Edgar heard a distant scream below him and knew that Phil, too, had lost his grip on the ladder; knew it even before looking. When Edgar did look down he saw his brother’s broken body splayed across a row of sun recliners. It almost looked as if he was peaceful down there, just stretching out and relaxing.

  Except for the fact that one of his legs was extended at an impossible angle, pulled up behind his back.

  Phil wasn’t moving.

  Another brother lost.

  A storm of fury erupted in Edgar's mind, and he wrapped himself around the rope ladder as tightly as possible, trying desperately to maintain his grip.

  Two more tiny insignificant pings, sharp and metallic, told Edgar that the chopper had been hit again, and he had a moment to hope that the pilot wouldn't respond with panic before the helicopter leapt up into the night like a wounded animal, tearing the ladder from his grasp, and all that was left for Edgar was rage.

  And falling.

  *

  Vega felt a certain grim satisfaction as he emptied the entire clip at the departing chopper. He doubted the last few rounds had come anywhere close to the target as it soared crazily away from the Oceanus, but enough of the bullets had done damage. Two of the men trying to escape the ship had definitely fallen from the ladder, and Vega thought he had hit the third.

  Not bad.

  He squeezed the trigger until it clicked apologetically at the retreating chopper and then returned the pistol to its holster. There was more ammunition back in the weapons locker, but even if there hadn't been, Vega would have kept the gun. He always rolled his eyes at those dumb action movies in which actors emptied
their weapons and then tossed them aside as if they were suddenly useless.

  Guns were never useless. Even an empty pistol carried a certain sort of power. It wasn't the type of thing that you separated yourself from willingly; not when there was trouble in the air.

  And there was trouble. A whole fucking heap of it.

  What did they just drop on the ship?

  Vega turned away from the departing chopper and focused his gaze on the centre of the park. Several small flames, which he presumed came from cigarette lighters just like the one he had taken from Ledger, illuminated the area near the small pond.

  The area that held the strange container and the screaming.

  Vega jogged toward the lights, stumbling into several panicked bodies in the darkness. Many of the people in the park were fleeing blindly, and Vega figured that was probably as much to do with him shooting as the bizarre appearance of the helicopter.

  "Security," he barked as the crowds around the shipping container began to thicken. "Let me through."

  Some of the mass of bodies parted for him, but as he neared the devastation at the centre of the park, he found he had to push his way through.

  He did so unapologetically, barging onlookers aside until he stood inside the feeble glow cast by a dozen lighters.

  There was blood everywhere.

  Vega guessed that more than a handful of people had been killed outright when the container dropped like an anvil on top of them. He saw several others pinned in the wreckage. The container was heavy enough to have punched halfway through the deck, and the middle of the park looked like a warzone. Some of those pinned were screaming in horror as they surveyed what had become of their limbs; others just stared numbly. Some looked unconscious, or had possibly already succumbed to massive blood loss.

  "Back," Vega shouted. "Security, get back!"

  The words had little effect on those who he presumed were related to the injured and the dead, but the crowd around the container—mostly people trying to help, he guessed, though he wasn't sure what could be done without serious medical intervention—retreated a few steps.

  "Are there any doctors here?" he yelled, and saw a woman and a man nodding, ashen-faced. They were already tending to the injured, and Vega left them to it. He had no medical experience, and there was only one thing on his mind, far more important than injuries.

  The container.

  He stepped over the prone bodies carefully, walking around the huge box until he located the doors. They looked securely shut, and almost unremarkable, aside from one small addition. Something that Vega thought didn't belong on such a container at all.

  He pulled Ledger's lighter from his pocket and lit it, leaning closer to the object.

  It looked like a locking mechanism placed across the heavy steel doors, but Vega saw immediately that it was no ordinary lock.

  A tiny array of lights blinked on the device, below a featureless panel.

  He felt around it with his fingers until he found a catch, and he flicked it aside.

  The panel fell open to reveal a digital display.

  Vega stared at it for a second in shock, but his gut had already recognised the device for what it was, and his stomach lurched painfully.

  The display read 01.17.

  01.16.

  01.15.

  A timer. Counting down.

  Just over a minute remaining.

  Oh, shit.

  Vega turned away and screamed at the gathering of people behind him.

  "Run!"

  Vega felt the people in the park backing away slowly, though the injured and their loved ones remained. There was no way to get them to move, and so he didn't even try. Still, at least some seemed to have heeded his warning, and he felt the darkness at his back emptying a little. Yet they moved slowly, tranquilised by their confusion. Very few were running.

  He thought about running himself, but found his feet locked in place. The confusion had him in its clutches, too, he supposed. The need to know just what the hell was happening on his boat.

  The first thought that crossed his mind when he saw the timer ticking down was bomb, but with each passing second he suspected that could not be the case. The men that had attacked the Oceanus had already smuggled a bomb aboard somehow, and the intention when they set it off hadn't been to destroy the ship, but to ready it for the arrival of the container.

  There would be little point in going through all the work of disabling the Oceanus just to have a chopper drop a bomb on top of it. They could have done that at any time.

  No, the container was something else, and Vega needed to see what it was; felt his mind tugged toward the object almost of its own volition.

  His instincts raged at him to flee, but curiosity had a say in matters. Vega began to move backwards, but very slowly, creeping away from the container inch by inch, keeping his eyes trained on the blinking lights. On the countdown.

  He pulled out the empty pistol, and raised it. If there were armed men in that container, confronting them with a weapon drawn might at least make them pause.

  But there weren't armed men. Of course there weren't. If it had been men inside, they would have been injured in the fall. Whatever was inside that container, it wasn't men. Wasn't a bomb, either.

  He tried to judge how long he had been standing there, trying to work through the problem in his mind. Forty seconds? Sixty?

  He had no idea.

  Until the locking device on the container doors bleeped loudly and fell away, landing on the ruined park with a soft thud.

  A couple of the injured people around the container yelped in fright, but Vega didn't hear them. He focused only on the doors, sighting them at the barrel of the empty gun, waiting for them to...

  The doors swung open, and for a moment all Vega could see was the dark space inside the container; too dark to make out anything. Empty?

  No, not quite, he thought. Movement.

  Another bolt of lightning scorched the sky, and for a moment the park, the container and the ruined bodies around and underneath it were brilliantly lit, almost as though God wanted Vega to see, and to understand.

  He saw.

  21

  Herb awoke in darkness to an insistent pain in his lower back that felt like someone had driven a serrated knife between his bones, and was trying to pry out his intervertebral discs one by one.

  He drew in a sharp breath, and the pain simply worsened.

  Shallow breaths, he thought bleakly. Gradually, the pain began to ease up a little.

  "Ed?" he croaked.

  There was no response, but Herb knew he wasn't alone in the darkness. He could feel the presence of others there with him; more than one. He heard their breathing and felt faces pointed in his direction.

  "Ed," a man's voice said finally. "Is that one of your terrorist buddies?"

  Herb squeezed his eyes shut as the terrible truth hit him, and the memories returned. Before he had lost consciousness, the man he had tried to catch—the man that Herb had foolishly thought he could save—had been dragging him along the floor, and each inch travelled had felt like his legs were trying to separate from his spine.

  Not Ed, he thought miserably.

  Edgar was gone. He had to be. The fucker had done exactly as Herb had always feared he would: he'd abandoned his brother—his own damned flesh and blood—in pursuit of his beloved duty.

  Their father was an expert manipulator, and had been brainwashing his own children since they took their first breath. Only Herb had been able to see it.

  Still, Herb had hoped that if they ever reached the moment of truth, Edgar might come to his senses. Herb held out little hope for Phil or Seb; those two were like brainless automatons. They did as they were told and no more, but Herb knew that there was a sharp mind inside Edgar's head, and he had hoped right up to the last moment that Ed would turn away from the dark path their father had set them on.

  Yet Edgar hadn't even waited for Herb to return before setting the EMP o
ff. And now Herb was gripped by pain, and trapped on the dark ship with a bunch of people that thought him a terrorist.

  His sense of betrayal was monumental, but there was no time to focus on it. How long had he been unconscious? How long would his father wait before sending the chopper across to the Oceanus?

  If Herb was the only son missing, he doubted that his father would wait at all. What better way to rid himself of the troublesome one, the only one that ever answered back? The only one that questioned whether there might be Another Way, and whether the Rennick family calling was actually a family curse.

  I should have run, Herb thought sadly. He had wanted to run for years; had wanted to put the Rennick family and all the crazy bullshit that went with being a part of it behind him and never turn back. In the weeks leading up to the boarding of the Oceanus, he had thought about running constantly, just packing a bag and getting the fuck out.

  In the end, Herb hadn't been able to turn his back on his brothers. Some part of him had still believed, right up until the last moment, that the Rennick boys might escape from their duty and have some sort of a life beyond the Oceanus.

  He could never abandon his family.

  Ironic.

  "I'm not a terrorist," he said glumly. "Or at least, I’m not what you think of as a terrorist. There's no word for what I am."

  "And what is that?"

  Herb ignored the question.

  "How long has it been since the lights went out?" he asked.

  His answer was the muffled crack of gunfire, and an eruption of screams. The air in the dark conference room sizzled with tension.

 

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