The Machine

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The Machine Page 29

by Tom Aston


  ‘But I only need get the cylinder itself out of there?’

  ‘Yes. The rest won’t fit in the cage in any case. Not without disassembly.’

  ‘The cage? That’s like an elevator car that goes up the shaft.’

  ‘It’s a cage,’ said, Semyonov, sounding as if he were hyperventilating. ‘It’s built for the Machine, so it’s twenty-two inches diameter, a cylinder, and shorter than you are. Maybe uncomfortable. You’ll travel down in the cage, about ten to fifteen minutes. The Machine fits snugly inside the cage and you can send it back to the surface while you wait at the bottom.’ Semyonov paused for breath. ‘You’ll have to do it all in two stages. Go down there. Initiate the powerdown, and move the Machine to the cage, then bring it up. Best if Carslake works with you.’

  Stone made some notes, then turned to go.

  ‘One more thing,’ said Semyonov. ‘In operation, that thing uses a superconductor in a coil inside the cylinder. It creates a magnetic field. Very powerful. There must be no steel or iron on you. It will rip a screwdriver or a wrench from your clothes. Even a phone or a credit card in your pocket will mean you’re dragged toward the Machine. ’

  Stone couldn’t wait for the daybreak, though he wouldn’t see anything of it down below ground. He’d already seen far more than he cared for of underground living. In any case, if they waited much longer Semyonov wouldn’t be around to commune with his Machine, and unburden it of its treasure trove of technology. Semyonov had changed, even in the weeks since he saw him at the Crabflower Club in Hong Kong. Back then, only two weeks ago, he’d seemed like a high-powered artificial intelligence. Quick, sharp, unknowable. Flourishing his fountain pens in both hands. Now he was more like a clapped out steam engine, panting out its days below ground. The change, of course, was superficial. Semyonov had been dying for some time. That was what this was all about. He knew he was dying last week, last month, last year. That was the real significance of the Machine. He knew he was brilliant, Semyonov. But by his mid-twenties he also knew he would die young. Semyonov had become obsessed by legacy. He built his Machine to change the world. He wanted to be remembered like Newton or Galileo. The Machine was his legacy, his monument. That’s what the words had meant when Sphinx-like, Semyonov wrote them for Stone on the table back at the Crabflower Club. exegi monumentum aere perennius. I have created a monument more lasting than bronze.

  They were the words of a Roman, called Horace, two thousand years before. Horace had been right. His achievement had lasted. Semyonov wanted to be right too. The Machine would be his monument.

  Behind that fixed expression and the wheezing speech, Semyonov was a young man. Just twenty-nine, dreaming of cancer cures, rocket engines and cars that ran on water. Except that if he died, anything the Machine had produced would be buried with him in his own impenetrable programming code. All that would remain would be an assortment of technologies and Robert Oyang’s money-grubbing schemes.

  That was why the Chinese had left the Machine in place. If they took it, they would have nothing more than a shiny, supercooled black trashcan filled with rather expensive gallium arsenide wafer. And Semyonov would be just another human, who despite all his brains and his money would have lived a life which was nasty, painful and short. He’d be forgotten within a year.

  Chapter 67 — 3:34am 14 April — Garze Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan, China

  Like a dream, but not a dream. Some people dream like it’s real. Others know they are in a dream, and a small number even become other people in a dream. They travel, feel they are floating, and appear in the dreams of other people. They speak to them, commune. A very intimate experience.

  He’d heard all this, but never experienced it. It was like a dream, but not a dream. She was there, right there with him, in the dark. A soft, sensual touch of her hands on his bare shoulder, her fingers sliding over his neck and throat. Her fingers caressing the neck, by the pulsing veins and arteries. Could she tell that he dreamed about her, just by touching, by feeling his pulsing neck?

  It had to be her, didn’t it? The one who came in the night, the one who’d filled his nighttime thoughts since he’d first seen her. The Chinese girl. The wry, cheeky, arrogant bitch who tormented him. She made him angry, frustrated. Tied him in knots. He ignored her, tried to keep it “normal”. But at night, he couldn’t get her out of his head. That was it, she was in his head, the Fox Girl, the supernatural woman, the seductive, animal spirit. You can’t relate to a fox. Its face doesn’t change. Its eyes don’t move. It hasn’t got the facial muscles. It just is. Beautiful, elegant, impenetrable.

  He felt Ying Ning’s fingers move across his chest, a light grazing round his neck, his throat. Then her fingers were gone. Nothing. The wraith of the fox had gone.

  Then a shock, a sting. All the way around, from his nape and right round across his windpipe. He jerked, bolt-upright. Grabbed at his neck, then relaxed. It was a dream. But there it was again. Splitting, cutting, stinging. Right into his neck. He grabbed, but there was nothing there. It was behind him, whatever it was, was behind him, pulling and tightening. Blood streamed down his chest. All over his hands, he could feel it. His head was going to explode. Tightening — a wire, a ligature, something. Coming from behind him. His eyes were bulging in the blackness. He screamed, but it was silent. Like shouting in a dream, when no one can hear. Like opening your eyes in a dream, but you can’t see a thing. His eyes are wide open, bulging. His tongue is right out of his mouth. Scream. But no one hears. It’s black, completely dark. And it’s getting darker.

  Chapter 68 — 6:54am 14 April — Garze Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan, China

  The sun rose blood-red over the trees at the crater rim. To the West the mountains of Tibet stood out burnt orange above the dark foothills.

  The idea of a stroll above ground in the spoil heaps of toxic waste had not exactly appealed to Virginia, but Stone knew the reality would be different, and dragged her up there. He’d seen these mountains before, and tasted the air. He took her up there at first light. No time to waste in any case, looking at Semyonov. Carslake was still asleep.

  Above ground, everything seemed better. Virginia’s mane of hair flowed again in the cool breeze. There were goose bumps on her arms in the chill, and a warm smile glowing in her eyes. Maybe she wasn’t all artifice. She done it all for a reason, even if that reason was guilt. It must have killed Semyonov at sixteen, when she disappeared out of his life. As it must kill Virginia to see him now.

  After the night in Lin Biao’s Chamber of Secrets, Stone felt a small wave of ecstasy flood through him. Impossibly clear mountain air, and the vision of the virgin forest against the deep blue sky of the Tibetan daybreak. Stone inhaled lustily and walked to the steel tower which held the winding gear at the head of the shaft. He thought again of Semyonov, his lungs scrabbling for oxygen in the damp pit below them.

  ‘You should get Semyonov brought out here,’ he shouted to Virginia. 'It would do him good.' The fresh air was all the sweeter for knowing he was about to go nearly a kilometre underground, down a hole not much wider than his shoulders.

  The winding gear was pretty simple. Up. Down. And a speed regulator. Some Chinese guys were on hand, and they showed Virginia how to use the gear, but Semyonov insisted they had to it themselves. He didn’t want the Chinese trying anything the minute he’d brought the Machine out of the mine. After the briefing, the engineers were packed off in a truck, and driven out beyond the fence. Stone and Virginia were on their own.

  Where the hell was Carslake?

  Stone opened the door to the steel cage. He had on a white overall and a hardhat with a flashlight. The cage was a cylinder about 170 centimetres tall. Made to fit the Machine. It was pointed at either end with cones, and painted with the ShinComm logo. Twenty-two inches seems a lot, but inside it was less, and when your knees are bent and your neck is crooked to fit inside, it feels pretty small. The ride down would feel like a long fifteen minutes in the pitch dark.

  ‘Steven
says he’ll supervise by the phone link,’ called Virginia.

  ‘Sure,’ Stone smiled at her. To encourage her. She was looking more nervous than he was. And for once, he was nervous. ‘Let’s get on with it,’ he shouted back. ‘And get that lazy bastard Carslake out of bed when I’m down there.

  ‘He’s not going to like it,’ she said.

  ‘No. He’s going to love it!’

  Stone slammed the steel cage door shut on himself and rattled to check it was secure. There was a hum on of electric motors above him in the winding tower, and Stone slipped smoothly down into the Death Hole.

  Chapter 69 — 7:44am 14 April — Garze Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan, China

  ‘ He’s going to love it!’ Stone repeated to himself.

  Bravado. Ridiculous bravado. Stone started slipping away into the Death Hole, wondering if Virginia had guessed what was bothering him, or even if she had noticed.

  Stone closed his eyes to shut out the blackness, and the rattling of the cage against the tube of hard rock. Ten minutes to the bottom. Maybe fifteen. Up to now, there’d been only one Death Hole in Stone’s life. He would be thinking of it all the way down as he dropped into the hole. He would be thinking of the real Death Hole.

  Kalai Kumza, March 2002, Balkh Province, Afghanistan. When the Al-Qaeda Arabs and Chechens were still around in Afghanistan. Before the Americans started bombing in earnest. Before they took control. Four hundred Taliban and Al-Qaeda gave themselves up to the Uzbek forces of General Dostum of the Northern Alliance. Dostum later said it was a trick to capture the fort of Kalai Kumza from the inside. The Taliban prisoners smuggled guns and grenades under their ragged clothes, and once inside the fort, they revolted. Against the two hundred Uzbeks and twelve NATO Special Forces. The Americans wore military fleeces and fatigues — Stone and the others in his squad were in plain clothes. Running shoes and HK machine guns.

  The Uzbeks said it was the white faces which did it. It was the Red Cross workers whose insignia and white faces inflamed the Taliban — or so the story went. Not Special Forces, who were looking as rough as the Taliban by now. Stone knew it would have kicked off anyway. Why else smuggle grenades in?

  A CIA interrogator was dead already. Twenty Uzbeks dead. Dozens of Taliban and Al-Qaeda were down. It was a suicide job. They knew they were going to die. The Uzbek tanks were waiting outside. The Americans would start with the gunships within minutes. No civilians here to worry about — they were all Taliban and therefore bad guys. Dostum and the Allies would wipe out the lot.

  Stone forced the Red Cross guys to climb out over the walls, practically at gunpoint. Twenty metres high, but scalable. Then word came there were US and Brit interrogators stuck in cellars of the fort. Trapped with the bodies of twenty more Uzbeks and Taliban after a grenade blast. Stone and Hooper went down to bring them out. Another stupid thing Hooper had agreed to. That guy needed to choose his friends better. Thirty-four steps below ground.

  Stone’s cage rattled downwards. Strangely muffled, like there was no echo at all. Like he was sealed in the middle of the earth, where sound and light don’t exist anymore, where his own existence had become entirely theoretical. Theoretically possible to be in that cage. But a very foolish place to find yourself.

  Like the place he’d found himself when Hooper had risked his neck to go with him. Thirty-four steps below Kalai Kumza. Stone killed seven Taliban who’d been occupying steps twenty-nine to thirty-four at the bottom, the last two with face shots as they turned back up the steps. The first took it in the upper lip and the second directly in the right eye. Their heads exploded like coconuts filled with raw meat, all shell and blood and weird white stuff. A CIA guy in the chamber below, an ex-Marine, had been holding them off with an empty pistol. A fine effort. He’d used every round in every weapon he could find. When they got to him, he wanted to run right out up the steps. Stone knew better. The C130’s were already outside, pouring fire from their.50 calibre Gatling guns into the Taliban in the compound. The B52’s would be overhead soon. It would be an extinction-level event if they went up those steps. Thirty-four steps down, below many metres of mud baked two centuries ago. They might have a chance. Just might. But it was a very foolish place to find yourself.

  Stone, Hooper and the three Americans were dragged from the wreckage fourteen hours after the B52 strike. Stone had thought he was dead, and had plenty of time to dwell on the fact. Hope, despair, panic, delusion, hallucination. Pain. Pain was the least of it. Pain lasts only so long, and Stone had long ago learnt to deal with pain.

  The claustrophobia hadn’t started straightaway for Stone. It had come with the dreams of being stuck under the mud and clay. Dreams, recurring for years, again and again. Dreams can be really bad for you.

  Now he was heading down another hole, much deeper this time. In a tin cage he could barely squeeze into. The rattling began to slow. There was a faint glow, a centimetre of light around the edges of the cage. This was it. The cage flopped slowly out from the ceiling of a low tunnel, not quite high enough to stand up in.

  Chapter 70 — 8:06am 14 April — Garze Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan, China

  Sheeee-Hshawww.

  Sheeee-Hshawww.

  Stone put on the hat and now the breathing mask. He felt like a diver in an underground river, walking carefully along the tunnel. There were telephone points every hundred metres or so, and one by the shaft so he could speak to Virginia. With so many heavy metals around Semyonov had advised the breathing gear, but the air looked clear. The tunnel was dimly lit by strip lights, and held up by steel pit props. It wasn’t quite high enough for him to walk upright, but not far off. Not as bad as he’d expected. He walked up an incline. This was it, he could sense it. There was something ahead. He could even hear it.

  Stone pulled down the mask for a moment to listen. An electric humming, a low buzzing, like a large transformer. He walked up a little further. He was now maybe four hundred metres from the shaft where he’d come down from the surface. Up here the pit props were made of wood.

  Round a left hand bend. The buzzing was louder, and there was an eerie glow of blue light in the tunnel, about thirty metres off, brighter than the strip lights. Wispy clouds of fog hung in the dead, dank air, the blue light glowing through them. So this was it — Semyonov’s masterwork. The alien intelligence, shrouded in mysterious blue clouds. Stone walked up slowly and felt the chill as he entered the cloud. He thought it might be dry ice. More like the vapour of liquid nitrogen from the chiller Semyonov had told him about, stingingly cold on the exposed skin of his face. He wafted at it, and it dissipated. Cold as death, but ultimately harmless. It was just condensation from the intense cold of the liquid nitrogen in the cooling unit. Perhaps it was leaking. He made towards the blue light through the mist.

  Thump! What the hell? Something flew past his head, into the cloud. Stone turned, crouching into the wall, a soldier looking instinctively for cover. There was nothing there. No sound. Nothing to be seen. Only a man-sized tunnel where he’d walked through the still, dead cloud of the mist. He wasn’t dreaming though, he’d heard that dull thump as it flew past and hit something. Someone had thrown a rock, or maybe a clod of earth from behind him, but it had flown past and landed harmlessly. What the hell was it? He turned again and edged further into the cloud.

  What had he expected? Some malign black tube, whose blue lights flickered as it talked to him in staccato English? It was a black cylinder, granite-like, standing upright on a concrete plinth, almost reaching to the top of the tunnel. Blue halogen lamps lit it from four sides. The electrical and cooling plant were behind it in a tunnel, just as Semyonov described, and beyond it a huge yellow-black warning sign in Chinese, as big as Stone himself.

  FEI QING WU JIN

  Stone loved the way they put in the Roman letters. As if it would help anyone, Chinese or not. The first bit was something like Strictly No Entry. The symbol for radioactivity said the rest. Huge power lines lay in coils behind the sign, then snaked
away to the reactor somewhere beyond in the darkness of the tunnels.

  Hope they’ve done their risk assessment.

  The really strange bit was that the black cylinder, squatting there on the concrete plinth, was not clear of obstruction, clean and looking well kept. It was surrounded by debris, covered with rock and dirt, stuck to its sides.

  Stone could hazard a guess here. The rocks contained a large percentage of iron. He was in a tunnel, actually bored within an ancient meteorite. There was a large percentage of iron in the meteor, iron being the commonest element in the universe aside from hydrogen itself. Space is full of the stuff. Stone stepped up and tried to pull away one of the shards of rock stuck to the side of the cylinder. It was stuck fast, held tight by the superconducting magnets. He’d seen one of these things once, in a lab at university. They’ll rip a credit card out of your pocket and send it flying across the room. The cylinder had dragged in loose rocks from many metres around. One had just gone whistling past his head. It was another reason to power the thing down to hibernation. Impossible to move it otherwise. Certainly impossible to get it in the cage.

  Stone stumbled around, wafting the mist aside. It wasn’t a concrete plinth the Machine was sitting on, but a large flat truck. The Machine, the powerpack and the cooler were all on the flat truck, as Semyonov had described. The powerdown controls were on the large square slab of batteries nearby, according to Semyonov. They were there to smooth the power supply and protect from outages. They’d been humming constantly. He found them easily enough, but the powerdown controls were harder to find.

  Wuuuuurg. Wuuuuurg. A noise behind him. Loud. Like an alarm, an urgent klaxon behind in the tunnel. Stone went back, half running, half walking. What on earth was going on? He made it through the mist, waving his arms like a lunatic.

 

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