Текст книги "The Judas Strain"
Автор книги: James Rollins
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Текущая страница: 16 (всего у книги 30 страниц)
Monk lunged forward, grabbed the man’s belt, and hauled him straight out the door.
“Time to go check on your brother.”
This time there wasn’t even a scream.
Monk returned, wiping his hands clean. “So, who’s ready to go?”
The next few moments were a rush.
Lisa ran to the cabin’s door and threw the security bolt while Monk helped free the last of Susan’s leads and wires – EKG, EEG, Doppler pulse – unchaining her from the medical equipment.
Lisa slipped off her sweater and helped Susan don it, along with climbing into an extra pair of scrub pants. Though unsteady on her feet, Susan proved stronger of limb than Lisa had expected from her after five weeks of catatonia.
Maybe it was adrenaline, maybe something else.
Either way they were soon out on the balcony and into the storm. A sling bounced at the end of a rope. Monk caught it and glanced over to Susan, surprise making him pause. “Mind telling me why your friend’s glowing in the dark?”
Shying away, Susan tried to pull the sweater farther over her arm. Lisa had already demonstrated the effect earlier to Susan, by turning off the bedroom lights briefly.
Lisa waved Monk to the rope. “We’ll talk about it later.”
Monk frowned, but he clambered up, proving the strength of his upper body and the grip of his prosthetic hand.
Lisa helped Susan into the sling. “Can you hold on okay?” she asked the woman.
“I’ll have to.” Susan shivered violently.
After a bit of maneuvering, Monk and Ryder began hauling her skyward, using a ship’s post as a brace.
Lisa waited, pacing a bit.
A loud knock reached her, freezing her in place.
It came from the cabin.
She stepped to the threshold. An angry shout greeted her.
Dr. Devesh Patanjali.
He must have tried to use his key card and discovered it was privacy locked. More pounding.
Lisa backed up, leaned out over the rail, and stared up.
Susan’s feet kicked. She was being helped over the rail.
Lisa pulled out her pistol from her belt and yelled up. “Hurry! Someone’s coming!”
The wind and thunder ate her words.
A splintering crack erupted from the cabin. They were breaking inside. A rifle shot followed. Loud as a cannon blast. Startling her.
A shout echoed down to her from above.
Monk at least had heard the gunfire.
The sling dropped at her shoulder, tossed, not lowered. It banged into her. She ignored it, rushed forward to the open balcony door, grabbed the inside drape, and swept it fully closed. She slid the door shut, too.
Let them discover the empty room.
The ruse might not last long, but it could buy her an extra few seconds. She dove back around, snatched the sling, and squirmed into it. A sudden gust of wind caused it to strike her hand, knocking her pistol from her grip.
The weapon flew off into the darkness.
Damn it…
Frantic, she cinched the sling, climbed up onto the balcony rail, and kicked out.
She felt the sling jerk under her arms as the men hauled her up.
She swung back toward the balcony, just as the drape was ripped open. Lightning flashed overhead. She saw Devesh’s face widen in surprise, uncomprehending at the view of her swinging toward him.
He fell back.
In his place, Surina appeared in a dressing gown, her long black hair loose. She shoved the door open while her other arm snaked back and grabbed the cane from Devesh.
Lisa reached the end of the arc of her swing. She kicked at the woman, but Monk and Ryder had hauled her up, shortening her rope enough that the tip of her boot whished through open air.
The sling swung away again.
Surina followed, out onto the balcony, her hair whipped into a furious swirl by the wind. She grabbed Devesh’s cane in both hands, twisted it, and whipped it wide. A sheath of polished white wood flew back into the cabin, revealing the length of steel blade hidden in the cane.
Surina flew to the balcony rail.
Lightning lit the sky, turning the sword into blue fire.
Weaponless, Lisa swung back toward the woman waiting with the blade.
8:46 P.M.
Monk had not waited. With the first rifle blast, he knew Lisa needed more direct help, so he left the big Aussie to haul her on his own.
Monk rappelled out on a rope. The other end was tied to a life preserver, jammed between two posts of the ship’s rail. His prosthetic hand clenched the rope with the strength of a steel clamp. His other hand pointed his pistol.
He leaped out far enough to see Lisa swinging back toward a woman with a sword. He aimed his pistol and fired.
A gust of wind threw off his aim.
The round tore a chunk out of the balcony’s wooden railing.
But it was enough to ward off the swordswoman. She fell back with a smooth twist of her body.
Ryder bellowed as he hauled hard on Lisa’s line.
At the same time, with strength born of adrenaline and terror, Lisa pulled herself up by her arms. She now stood in the sling, rather than hanging. She was above the balcony opening now. She hit the hull hard and bounced away.
Ryder yanked her another three feet up.
Monk emptied the remainder of his clip, another three rounds, discouraging anyone’s approach. That should keep everyone back.
He was wrong.
The swordswoman appeared again and leaped to the top of the rail, like a gymnast mounting a balance beam – then she leaped straight up, sword pointed high.
Lisa screamed.
8:47 P.M.
The blade slid past her boot heel, sliced through her jeans, and bit deep into her left calf.
Then the sword fell away, succumbing to gravity.
Lisa stared between her toes. Surina landed on the balcony deck and stepped deftly away. She didn’t even glance back up.
Ryder drew Lisa higher yet again.
Out of reach.
Lisa lost sight of the balcony, pulled beyond the curve of the hull. Hugging the rope, she trembled and shook. Blood poured down her leg and into her boot.
She spotted Monk to one side climbing back up to the railing.
Moments later, someone grabbed her shoulders and dragged her bodily over the rail. She fell to the deck, still shaking. Ryder appeared, unwrapping a head scarf that had fallen around his neck.
“This is going to hurt,” he said, but it sounded far away.
He took the scarf, wrapped it around her burning calf, then swiftly tugged it tight. Pain bloomed through her, earning a strangled gasp from her. But the agony broke through the threatening shock.
Sound returned from out of the hollow well down which it had fallen.
Ryder helped her stand. “We have to go. They’ll be up here any bloody moment.”
She nodded. “Fine…go…yes.”
It wasn’t Shakespeare, but Ryder understood. He shouldered her up while Monk helped Susan. They were all drenched.
They set off toward the stern of the boat.
“Where…?” she asked, hobbling as fast as she could.
“We’ll never make my boat,” Ryder answered. “They’ll have the stairs and elevators covered.”
Confirming this, an alarm began to wail, sounding deep in the ship, then exploding out to the decks.
Monk pointed over the rail and down. “The public tender dock,” he said. “An hour ago, when I checked for any guards at your private launch, I spotted one of the pirates’ blue speedboats tethered down there, unmanned and abandoned.”
“The tender dock lies just as many decks down.”
Monk drew them in a limping group to the midship rail. He leaned out. “Not if we take a more direct route.”
He pointed down.
Lisa craned over. She could just make out the protruding end of the tender dock. A speedboat with an outboard motor was moored there. It must have been used to shuttle pirates between their small village and the ship.
It seemed unguarded.
“We jump?” Susan asked, dismayed.
Monk nodded. “Can you swim?”
Susan nodded. “I’m a marine biologist.”
Lisa balked. They were a good fifty feet above the water. Shouts echoed in the direction of the bow. Monk glanced at Lisa’s leg, then up to her face.
She nodded. No other choice.
“We’ll have to go as a group,” Monk said. “One big splash will draw less attention than four.”
They climbed over and held themselves steady on the rail.
Monk leaned farthest out. “Ready.”
Nods all around.
Lisa’s stomach churned, her leg throbbed. Pain made her see stars in the dark water, brief flashes of electric streaks.
Monk counted down, and they all leaped.
Arms flailing for balance, Lisa plunged feet first. She had done some cliff-diving in the past. Still, when she struck the water it was like landing on hard-packed dirt. The blow impacted her entire frame. Her knees buckled – then the sea gave way. She shot deep into the warm water. After the chill of the rain and wind, the lake felt like a welcoming bath.
Her momentum slowed, braking further with her arms out.
Then she was rising. She kicked and stroked back to the surface, breaking through with a gasp. All around, rain pebbled the water. Winds spat in contrary gusts.
Treading water, Lisa spotted the three others. Monk was already headed to the boat.
Ryder helped Susan. He glanced over to Lisa.
She waved him to the boat.
Her boots and sodden clothes made it harder, but she kept pace.
Monk reached the speedboat first and hauled himself up and into it like a beaching seal. He stayed low and surveyed the tender dock.
No shouts arose.
The ship still rang with alarms. Everyone was probably still heading to the upper deck, where the fugitives had last been spotted.
Ryder reached the boat next with Susan.
As Monk helped them aboard, Lisa closed the distance.
She was almost to the boat when—
– something struck her leg, bumping it hard.
Startled, she floundered a bit. She searched the dark waters. Something brushed against her hip. It left a tracery of green fire in the water, flashing, then gone.
Hands grabbed her shoulders.
She almost cried out. She had not known she had reached the boat. Ryder hauled her up and over the edge.
Lisa sprawled across the floor. Abandoned tools pinched her backside. She smelled oil in her hair. But she didn’t move. She breathed deeply, slowing her heart.
The engine behind her suddenly gave a watery growl. Ryder yanked off the mooring lines. Monk edged the boat away from the dock. He went slow at first, keeping their noise to a minimum.
Lisa sat up and glanced back to the dock.
A shape stepped out of the ship and onto the planks of the tender dock. Even with his face shadowed, Lisa pictured his tattoos. Rakao. The Maori leader had not been fooled. He knew there were only so many ways off this ship.
“Go!” Lisa shouted. “Full throttle, Monk!”
The engine shook, coughed a bit of water, then roared.
As Lisa stared, Rakao lifted his arm. She remembered his giant horse pistol.
“Down!” she yelled. “Everyone down!”
Muzzle fire flashed. The metal side of the boat rang from a glancing shot. The boat’s speed kicked up, churning a thick wake.
Rakao fired again, but even he must have realized it was wasted. He already had a radio to his lips.
Monk sped away from the cruise ship.
Lisa noted another speedboat appear from around the stern of the cruise ship, still some distance off. It must be returning from the beachside village. It suddenly sped faster, aiming for the tender dock.
Rakao must have summoned it, preparing to give chase.
But they had a good lead.
That is, until the engine choked with a loud clank and an oily gout of smoke. The speedboat shuddered and slowed. Lisa sat higher, twisting around. She stared down at the tools she had sprawled atop. The oily towel crumpled in the back.
The boat had notbeen waiting to ferry passengers between boat and village – it was being repaired.
The engine’s smoking grew worse. Its roar became a putter.
Ryder swore, climbed past her, and opened the hatch on the engine.
More smoke poured out.
Ryder scowled. “This little tinny’s gone tits up.”
Back at the cruise ship, Rakao leaped from the dock to the speedboat. It took off after them.
“We have no choice,” Monk said, turning the wheel as they weakly limped along. The engine sputtered a bit more speed. “We’ll have to make for shore. Hope for the best.”
Lisa stared at the beach, then back toward Rakao’s boat.
It would still be a close call.
Monk cajoled as much horsepower as he could. The dark forest rose before them. At least it looked dense enough to hide them.
A half minute later, the engine finally died completely.
“Swim for it!” Ryder said.
The beach was not far. Less than fifty yards.
“Abandon ship,” Monk agreed. “And haul ass.”
Once again, they all leaped into the lake. Lisa kicked off her boots and followed. Rakao’s boat roared toward them.
Only after she hit the water did she remember something bumping her earlier, her momentary panic. But right now Rakao scared her more. Having been diving all her life, Lisa had been bumped by her fair share of inquisitive sharks.
Rakao was definitely scarier.
She kicked for shore.
Glancing behind her, she noted strange flashes in the water.
Emerald, ruby, sapphire.
Scintillations, like fire underwater.
They streaked through the water, aiming for their group.
Lisa suddenly knew what had bumped her, what sped toward them, a pack of hunters, communicating with flashes of light, a predatory Morse code.
“Swim!” she screamed.
She paddled faster.
They wouldn’t make it.
It follows the scent trail of blood in the water. Lateral fins undulate and glide. Muscles pump water through its mantle and out its rigid rear funnel, jetting its six-foot bulk through the water. It clenches its eight arms into a tight point, a sleek muscular arrow. Its two longest tentacles flash with brilliance at their tips. Streaks of luminescence shiver in stripes along its flanks.
Guiding the pack.
Large globular eyes read the messages of its brethren.
Some sweep wide, others go deep.
The blood scent grows richer.
Lisa kicked and paddled in clean strokes.
Panic would only slow her.
The beach spread ahead, a silvery strand between the black water and dark jungle. It was a finish line she intended to cross.
Rakao’s boat growled behind her.
But the Maori pirate was not who she was racing.
Streaks of watery fire jetted toward her.
Drawn by her sliced calf.
Blood.
Four yards ahead, Monk and Ryder slogged out of the water, dragging Susan between them. Lisa kicked harder.
“Monk!”
With one final muscular squeeze, it sweeps toward the churn of water. It unfurls its arms, billowing them wide. Two longer tentacles shoot out, snaking through the water, blistering with yellow lights, lined by suckers barbed with chitinous hooks.
9:05 P.M.
Monk heard his name called out.
Lisa paddled toward shore, looking frantic.
Only three yards away.
Behind her the pirate boat skimmed at full throttle right toward their group. Rain poured from the open sky, dimpling the lake. Beneath the surface, winking flashes of fire, like tracer rounds in the night, shot toward Lisa.
Monk remembered the stories of this lagoon.
Told by a toothless local.
Demons of the deep.
He leaped back into the water. The shore fell away steeply. In two steps he was waist-deep. “Lisa!”
She glanced to him, eyes meeting.
Then suddenly she jerked to a stop, snagged.
Her eyes widened. “Go—”
Monk lunged for her, arms out. “Your hand!”
Too late.
A flurry of tentacles exploded from the water, enveloping her. With neck-breaking speed, Lisa was twisted and slammed below, swamped away. The monster rolled briefly into view, sleek and fringed with small lateral wings, rippling with thin bands of electric flashes. A large black eye stared back, then vanished away.
One sleeved arm broke the surface, already two yards farther out. Then with impossible speed, it ripped through the water, a fish on a zipping line. The limb snapped back into the deep.
Lisa…
Monk took another step, preparing to dive.
But blasts of gunfire shattered through his shock. Rounds peppered the water, driving him back, out of the water, to the sand.
“Here!” Ryder yelled.
More shots coughed up divots of sand. Rifle fire cracked.
He had no choice.
Monk stumbled back, into Ryder’s grip, into the dark forest.
Lisa…
LISA STRUGGLED TO hold her breath, tangled within constricting arms.
Giant hooks bit into flesh, made painless by panic.
She kicked and writhed.
Eyes open.
Trailing flashes of light shot through the darkness.
This was how she would die.
9:06 P.M.
Monk allowed himself to be pulled farther into the jungle. He had no choice. There was nothing he could do.
Through a break in the foliage, he stared back toward the black water.
The pirates’ boat had slowed near the beach. Rifles bristled toward shore, searching. But Rakao stood braced in the bow, a dark silhouette with long spear in hand.
With a heave, the Maori hunter drove the length of steel into the lake.
Arcs of blue lightning sizzled outward from where it struck, brilliant in the darkness, lighting up the night and the depths of the lagoon. Waters hissed with a bubble of steam around the spear’s shaft.
What was he doing?
Barely conscious, lisa gasped the last of her trapped air. A painful shock clenched through her. The squid’s embrace locked harder, experiencing the same agony, possibly even more sensitive.
Then its arms released her with a final savage twist.
Seawater burned into her nose.
Her eyes open, she saw the creature streak down into the dark depths, an arrow of emerald fire. Others followed.
Buoyancy floated her up.
Then hands grabbed her, pulled by her hair.
They were too slow.
Lisa choked in water, mouth opening and closing like a fish, as darkness swallowed her away.
9:07 P.M.
From the shelter of a boulder and heavy jungle, Monk watched as Lisa was hauled from the water by her hair. Limp and boneless. Her head lolled back at an impossible angle.
Rakao tossed aside his spear.
“Some sort of cattle prod,” Ryder said. “Shocked the ink right out of the wankers.”
Rakao bent Lisa over the rail and pushed on her back. A wash of seawater splashed from nose and mouth.
One arm lifted and swatted at him.
Alive.
The pirate hauled her around and dumped her to the floor. He stared toward the jungle, then higher up the cliffs. Lightning crackled in a shattering display across the roof of the island. Winds gusted up with a whip of rain, sheeting over the lagoon.
Rakao lifted an arm and made a circling motion.
The speedboat swung around with a surge of wake, then sped back out, trailing a rooster tail of water. They were returning to the ship.
Taking Lisa with them.
But at least she was alive.
“Why are they leaving?” Susan mumbled.
Monk glanced over. In the darkness of the forest, the woman’s face and hands shone with a whispery glow, barely noticeable, but there. Like moonlight through thick clouds.
“Not like there’s exactly anywhere we can go,” Ryder said bitterly. “By morning, they’ll be hunting us.”
Monk pointed deeper into the forest. “Then we’d better get going.”
With Susan at his side, Monk headed into the higher jungle. He glanced one last time back to the lagoon. “What were those things?”
“Predatory squid,” Susan mumbled with some authority. “Some bioluminescent squids hunt in packs. Humboldt squids in the Pacific have attacked and killed people, swarming out of the deep. But larger specimens also exist. Like Taningia danae. The isolated lagoon here must be home to such a subspecies. Rising to feed. At night, when their luminescent communication and coordination work best.”
Monk remembered a story from one of the pirates, about the island, of witches and demons in the water. Here must be the source of the story. He also remembered another story of the island.
He craned up toward the jagged cliffs, framed against the dark sky. Heard past the rumble of thunder, drums pounded.
Cannibals.
“What now?” Ryder asked.
Monk led the way. “Time to meet the neighbors…see what’s cookin’.”
9:12 P.M.
Supported on the tender dock, Lisa hung from the arms of one of the pirates. She was too weak to fight, too tired to care. Sodden to bone, bleeding from a score of lacerations, she awaited her fate.
Rakao was in midargument with Devesh.
In Malay.
Beyond her comprehension.
But Lisa suspected the fight was about the tattooed pirate not pursuing Susan Tunis into the jungle. Lisa understood only one word.
Kanibals.
Behind the men a robed Surina stood at the entrance to the boat, out of the rain, arms folded, back straight, patient. Her eyes were fixed on Lisa. Not cold – that implied some emotion. Surina’s eyes were a total void.
Finally, Devesh turned and pointed an arm at Lisa. He spoke in English as a courtesy to their captive. “Shoot her. Now.”
Lisa straightened in the pirate’s arms. She coughed her voice to a hoarse mumble.
She offered the Guild scientist the only thing she could.
To save her life.
“Devesh,” she said firmly. “The Judas Strain. I know what the virus is doing.”