His team hustled inside.
The apes arrived at the second ammunition chamber a minute later.
The first few must have been recon troops—for the first time that day they were cautious, checking things out, as if suspecting a trap.
They saw Schofield and Mother clambering up the mountain of wooden crates, heading for a cat-walk near the ceiling—presumably to join the others up there, although they couldn’t be seen. The recon gorillas ducked back outside, to report back to the others.
Thirty seconds later, the onslaught came.
It was spectacular in its ferocity.
The ape army thundered into the ammo chamber in full assault mode.
Screaming and shrieking, moving fast and spreading out, they stormed the subterranean hall—not firing. The scouts had informed the others of the flammable contents of the hall. They’d have to do this without guns.
The ape army leapt onto the mountain of crates, coming after Schofield and Mother with a vengeance, coming to finish them off.
Schofield and Mother stayed at the peak of the crate mountain, each holding two MP-7 sub-machine guns and firing them with precision, aiming carefully to avoid hitting the ordnance all around them, taking down apes left, right and centre.
Gunfire clattering.
Apes screaming and falling.
Muzzle flashes.
Two against an army.
And the apes just kept coming, live ones just clambering over the dead ones, scaling the artificial mountain. For every rank of gorillas that Schofield and Mother mowed down, another two ranks stepped forward.
Soon the mountain of crates was crawling with hairy black shapes, all scrambling in a fury for the two defiant Marines at the summit.
‘Scarecrow . . . !’ Mother called.
‘Not yet! We have to wait till they’re all inside . . . !’
Then the last apes entered the great under-ground room, and Schofield called, ‘Now!’
As he yelled, the first gorillas reached the summit and clutched at his boots—only to be completely surprised when Schofield and Mother suddenly discarded their guns and leapt upward, grabbing a pair of chains hanging from the ceiling-mounted rail network and using them to swing across the length of the chamber, high above the army of apes swarming over the crate-mountain.
Schofield and Mother hit the western wall of the hall and unclipped clasps on their chains— causing the chains to unreel from the ceiling, lowering the two of them to the floor of the room right in front of the doorway leading back to the elevator shaft.
‘Marines! Now!’
It was then that the other three members of Schofield’s unit revealed themselves—from behind some crates near the entrance to the ammunition chamber. They all stepped back out through the heavy entry door, and raised their guns to fire back in through the gap.
And suddenly the trap became clear.
The entire gorilla army was now inside the one enclosed space, swarming all over the most combustible mountain in history.
And with Schofield and Mother now down and safe, Bigfoot, Astro and Sanchez aimed their guns at the base of the mountain of crates.
‘Fire!’ Schofield commanded.
They squeezed their triggers.
But then, from completely out of nowhere, a voice called: ‘Captain Schofield! Don’t!’
Schofield snapped up. ‘Marines! Hold that order! Do not fire!’
The voice—it was a man’s voice—was desperate and pleading. It echoed out from ancient loudspeakers positioned around the great concrete room and inside the elevator shaft.
By this time the apes had started descending the mountain of crates, coming back down after Schofield and Mother, but then the voice addressed them:
‘Troops! Desist and stand down!’
Immediately, the apes stopped where they stood, sitting down on their haunches in total and absolute obedience.
What had moments before been a frenzied blood-hungry army of apes was now a perfectly-behaved crowd of three hundred silent mountain gorillas.
And then suddenly people appeared behind Schofield’s team, moving slowly and calmly, stepping down from the ladder in the elevator shaft: seven men in lab-coats, one officer in uniform, and covering them, a team of Delta commandos: the same ten-man team led by Hugh ‘Flash’ Gordon that had parachuted in with Schofield’s unit earlier that day.
Among the scientists in the lab-coats, Schofield recognised Zak Pennebaker, the ‘desperate’ scientist he’d met earlier.
He also recognised the officer in uniform, which happened to be the khaki day uniform of the United States Marine Corps. He was Captain William ‘Buccaneer’ Broyles, aka the Buck.
The leader of the lab-coated crowd stepped forward. He was an older man, with a mane of flowing white hair, an aged crinkled face, and dazzling blue eyes. He oozed authority.
‘Captain Schofield,’ he said in a deep voice. ‘Thank you for your quick response to my plea. My name is Dr Malcolm Knox, scientific consultant to the President, head of the Special Warfare Division at DARPA and overall commander of Project Stormtrooper.’
Knox walked out among the apes—they continued to sit obediently, although they did rock from side to side, fidgeting impatiently. But they did not attack him. Schofield noticed a silver disc on Knox’s ID badge—it was exactly the same as the one Pennebaker had been wearing earlier and, Schofield saw, was still wearing now.
Standing with the apes at his back, Knox turned to Schofield and his dirty, blood-covered team.
‘Congratulations. You have won this mission, Captain Schofield,’ he said.
Schofield said nothing.
‘I said, you won,’ Knox said. ‘I commend you on an incredible effort. Indeed, yours was the only team to survive.’
Still Schofield remained silent.
Knox stammered. ‘You really, er, should all be proud—’
‘This was a goddamned test,’ Schofield said in a low voice, his tone deadly.
‘Yes . . . yes, it was,’ Knox said, slightly unnerved. ‘The final test of a new technology—’
Schofield said, ‘You pitted your new army against three companies of Marines, and you beat them. But then the higher-ups said you had to beat Special Forces, didn’t they?’
Knox nodded. ‘This is correct.’
‘So you had us parachuted in here, with the SEALs and the Airborne. You used us as live bait. You used us as human guinea pigs for a test—’
‘This gorilla force could save thousands of American lives in future conflicts,’ Knox said. ‘You, Captain Schofield, are sworn to defend the American people and your fellow soldiers. You were doing exactly that, only in an indirect way.’
‘In an indirect way . . .’ Schofield growled. ‘I’ve lost five good men here today, Dr Knox. Not to mention the other Marines, SEALs and Airbornes who also died here in your little experiment. These men had families. They were prepared to die for their country fighting its enemies, not its latest fucking weapon.’
‘Sometimes a few must be lost for the greater good, Captain,’ Knox said. ‘This is bigger than you. This is the future of warfare for our country.’
‘But your apes lost in the end. We had them in the cross-hairs and were about to fire the kill-shot.’
‘Yes, you did. You most certainly did,’ Knox said. ‘Your participation in this exercise was requested for precisely that reason: your adaptability and unpredictability. The apes needed such an adversary.
‘As it stands, however, the gorillas beat every-body but you, and your victory, it must be said, was based in large part on a few longshots, in particular a level of knowledge that 99 per cent of our enemies simply will not have: submarine docking doors in carriers and an unusually high level of knowledge of World War II Japanese tunnel systems. No, based on the results of this test, Project Stormtrooper will most certainly go live, and it will save many lives over the years to come.’
Knox started walking around the hall, checking the apes. ‘No
w, if you don’t mind, we have a lot of follow-up to do and a whole lot of paperwork. An extraction plane has been called from Okinawa to come and take you home. It should be here in a few hours.’
‘Paperwork . . .’ Schofield said. ‘Men have died and you have paperwork. You guys are something else. Hey, hold it. I have another question.’
Knox stopped.
Schofield nodded at Flash Gordon and the Delta team arrayed around him. ‘Why were they brought here at all, if they just stayed with you?’
Knox grinned. ‘They were brought in for my DARPA team’s protection. Just in case you did happen to survive and got angry with us.’
Knox resumed his casual appraisal of his apes.
Schofield said, ‘I should have offed your army when I had the chance.’
‘No, you shouldn’t have, Captain. What you should do is walk away and be proud of yourself. You have done future generations of American farmboys a great service. They will not need to die on the front lines ever again. Also, be proud that my apes defeated every other force they faced, but you beat them. Go home.’
‘This is not right. It shouldn’t be done this way,’ Schofield said.
‘What you think, Captain, is unimportant and irrelevant. You are not paid to think about such weighty issues. Better brains than yours have pondered these issues. You are paid to fight and to die, and you have successfully done half of that today. Farewell, Captain,’ Knox waved Schofield away. ‘Specialist Gordon and Captain Broyles will escort you and your men out.’
As he said this, Knox threw Flash Gordon and the Buck a look—unseen by Schofield—that said: they are not to leave this place alive.
Gordon nodded. So did the Buck.
The Delta team swooped in on Schofield’s five men, surrounding them perhaps a little more tightly than they needed to. Gordon indicated the door. ‘Captain . . . if you will.’
Schofield entered the elevator shaft, followed by his team.
Throughout all this, the apes sat silently, swaying slightly from side to side, as if their lust for blood was being suppressed only by the chips in their heads.
Schofield stepped out into the elevator shaft, stood at its base, where he saw the huge circular safe-like door set into the wall. He headed for the ladder—
—when suddenly his Delta escorts released the safeties on their guns and aimed them at him and his Marines.
‘Hold it right there, Scarecrow,’ Gordon said.
‘Oh, you cocksuckers . . .’ Mother said.
‘Buck?’ Bigfoot asked in surprise.
‘Buck, how can you do this?’ Sanchez said, too, turning to his former commander.
Buck Broyles just shrugged. ‘Sorry, boys. But you aren’t my responsibility anymore.’
‘You son of a bitch . . .’ Sanchez breathed.
During this exchange between the men, Schofield assessed his options and quickly found that there was nothing available. This time they were well and truly screwed.
But then as he gazed at his ring of captors, he noticed that every single one of them wore a silver disc clipped to his lapel.
The silver discs, Schofield thought. That was it . . .
And suddenly things began to make sense.
That was how you stayed safe from the apes. If you wore a silver disc, the apes couldn’t attack you. The discs were somehow connected to the microchips in the apes’ heads, probably by some kind of digital radio signal —
A digital radio signal. Schofield sighed inwardly. Like the binary beep signal Mother had picked up earlier. That was how the Buck had been remotely commanding the apes: with digital signals sent directly to the chips in their brains.
The silver discs probably worked the same way—which was how Pennebaker had been able to enter the fray before to give Schofield information without having to fear the apes.
‘Mother,’ Schofield whispered as he raised his hands above his head. ‘Still got your AXS-9 there?’
‘Yeah?’
‘Jam radios, all channels, now.’
Mother was also in the process of raising her hands—when suddenly she snapped her right hand down and hit a switch on the AXS-9 spectrum analyser on her webbing, the switch marked: SIGNAL JAM: ALL CH.
The Delta man beside her swung his gun around, but he never fired.
Because right then another very loud sound seized his attention.
The sound of the apes awakening.
The effect of what Mother had done was invisible, but if one could have seen the radio spectrum it would have looked like this: a radiating wave of energy had fanned out from Mother’s jamming pack, moving outward from her in a circular motion, like expanding ripples in a pond, hitting every wave-emitting device in the area, and turning each device’s signal into garbled static.
The result: the silver discs on the ID badges of Knox, the DARPA scientists, the Buck and the Delta team all instantly became useless.
From his position in the elevator shaft, Schofield saw what happened next in a kind of hyper-real slow motion.
He saw Knox in the ammo chamber with the army of deadly apes looming above him; saw the three apes nearest to Knox suddenly leap down at him, jaws bared, arms extended, slamming into him, throwing him to the ground, where they fired into him with their M-4s at point-blank range.
In the face of their gunfire, Dr Malcolm Knox was turned into a bloody mess, his body exploding in a million bullet holes. Grotesquely, the apes kept firing into him long after he was dead.
Complete pandemonium followed . . .
. . . as the rest of the ape army leapt down from the mountain of crates looking for blood.
Different people reacted in different ways.
The DARPA scientists in the chamber spun, eyes wide with horror.
In the elevator shaft, the Delta team also turned, shocked, Gordon and the Buck among them.
Schofield, however, was already moving, calling, ‘Marines, two hands! Now!’
As for the apes, well, they went apeshit.
Freed from the grip of the silver discs, they launched themselves at the DARPA scientists in the ammo chamber, crashtackling them to the floor, clubbing them with the butts of their guns, tearing them apart—as if all their lives they had been waiting to attack their makers.
Screams and cries rang out.
Zak Pennebaker ran for the door to the eleva-tor shaft, crying, ‘Buck! Do something!’, before he himself was crashtackled from behind and assailed by six, then eight, then twelve apes.
He disappeared under their bodies, arms flailing, screaming in terror, before he was completely overwhelmed by the hairy black monsters.
*
In the elevator shaft, Flash Gordon and his team of Delta scumbags were caught totally by surprise.
Gordon whirled back to face Schofield, bringing his pistol back round—
—only to see both of Schofield’s Desert Eagle pistols aimed directly at his own nose.
‘Surprise,’ Schofield said.
Blam!
Schofield fired.
The apes were now rushing for the door, all three hundred of them, angry and deadly, heading for the elevator shaft.
While they did so, Schofield’s Marines did battle with the Delta force surrounding them.
It was a short battle.
For Schofield’s men had obeyed Schofield’s shouted order—‘Marines, two hands!’—so that by now they all held guns in both their hands: an MP-7 in one and a pistol in the other.
The five Marines whipped up two guns each— and suddenly they’d evened the odds against the ten-man Delta squad encircling them.
The Marines fired as one, spraying bullets outward, dropping the distracted Delta squad around them.
Six of the Delta men were killed instantly by head-shots. The other four went down, wounded but not killed.
The only bad guy left standing was the Buck, mouth open, gun held limply at his side, frozen in shock at the unfolding mayhem around him: the apes were completely out of control;
Knox and his scientists were dead; and Schofield’s men had just nailed their Delta captors.
A call from Schofield roused him.
‘Marines! Up the ladder! Now!’
As his Marines climbed skyward, Schofield grabbed the ladder last of all, shoving past the immobile Buck.
After he was ten feet up, Schofield aimed his pistol at a lever on the big round safe-like door set into the wall of the elevator shaft.
‘History lesson for you, Buck,’ Schofield said. ‘Happy swimming.’
Blam.
Schofield fired, hitting the lever with a spray of sparks.
And at which point all hell really broke loose.
The lever snapped downward, into the RELEASE position.
And the big ten-foot-wide circular door was instantly flung open, swinging inward with incredible force, force that came from the weight of ocean water that had been pressing against it from the other side.
This door was one of the floodgates that the Japanese had used in 1943 to flood the tunnels of Hell Island. A door that backed onto the Pacific Ocean itself.
A shocking blast of seawater came rushing in through the circular doorway, slamming into the Buck, lifting him off his feet and hurling him like a rag doll against the opposite wall of the elevator shaft, the force so strong that his skull cracked when it hit the concrete.
The roar of the ocean flooding into the elevator shaft was absolutely deafening. It looked like the spray from a giant fireman’s hose, a ten-foot-wide spray of super-powerful inrushing water.
And one more thing.
The layout of the subterranean ammunition chamber meant that the incoming water flooded into Chamber No. 2, where the three hundred apes now stood, trapped.
The apes scrambled across the chamber, wading waist-deep against the powerful waves of whitewater pouring into it.
The water level rose fast—the apes continued howling, struggling against it—but it only took a few seconds for it to hit the upper frame of the doorway to the chamber, sealing off the chamber completely, cutting off the sounds of the three hundred madly-scrambling apes.
And while they could swim short distances, the apes could not swim underwater.
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