C h a p t e r E i g h t
Shimmers in the Water
The gun was heavy. Too heavy. It was pulling me down, much too quickly, much too far. How could I stop this? I could use my arms-- but I needed my arms! Could I drop the gun? Would I really need it again? I know using the gun was the last thing I ever wanted to do, but I grown somewhat attached to it… I couldn’t drop it… I
wouldn’t drop it.
My air was running out quickly, and looking down, I see nothing. All the lights are above me; I had sunk much too far. Where was the bottom? As far as I could see, the water went on forever in all directions.
Panic strikes my heart and lungs. I try to shout but only succeed in ridding my lungs of all precious air. I’m wilding thrashing my legs, the gun still clutched to my arms.
What was that?
I had just looked down. There’s something there. I barely saw it, it was quick… very quick. I squint even harder through the water, completely ignoring my lungs, which feel like they are being ripped into shreds, and completely ignoring the fact I’m falling further and further. There seem to be lights further down; against the walls near the bottom… very faint… is that the bottom? Perhaps it’s just the middle…
There it is again! What is it? This time it was more to the right. I could barely see it; I would guess it is very far away.
A glimmer! Slick, winding, but gone!
I spin in the water, but I’m still falling further. My eyes begin to droop… was that it again? Is it getting closer? Further away?
I struggle to stay awake, but my body is starved of oxygen. My hands begin to loose grip on the gun. In front of me, a white form appears. It looks like a mudokon… it’s moving though – definitely moving. Trying to speak? I want to see it properly, but my brain is even beginning to lose hold. Was that what I had seen before?
Can’t be. No.
From above, I barely register that hands have seized my shoulders. I feel the gun being prised from my highly loose grip, and I’m going up. Was this what I saw? I’m not moving fast, and that was very fast…
My eyes finally close.
They open. Where I am? I breath quickly, lungs screaming in new pain – I’m above water! I’m breathing! Tom? That’s Tom? Of course it is…
‘Guy, Guy, Guy, Guy…’ Tom says, ‘What were you doing?’
‘I was… I was sinking,’ I manage to say, spluttering out water.
We are still in the water, but by the edge so I don’t need to tread water. Looking over, I see it is the same edge we jumped from; we still need to make the long swim.
‘Why’d you get rid of my gun?’ I ask.
‘It was drowning you. We don’t need it.’
‘Yes we do!’
‘We’ll see… Why didn’t you drop it? Were you going to die for it?’
‘I saw something… deep in the water. I got distracted. Did you see anything?’
‘…No I didn’t. Tell me, Guy, before we go any further, where exactly are we going right now?’
‘Over the other side of this pool. As I’ve said, we’re going to find out what happened to Ian.’
‘Any starting points?’ he asks.
‘Well, remember that guy called Apell? Course you do.’ I add, after his look of disgust. ‘Anyway, I thought we’d go and talk to him. Every time I’ve seen him, he’s always seemed to know what was going on around here.’
‘I always got the impression he wasn’t on our side, but if you’re sure… Anyway, you seem to be okay now. Well, at least you’re breathing. Let’s swim across.’
We push off from the metallic wall and into the water. Once more, when in action, I am reminded of the sheer coldness of the water, of the massive aches throughout my body, of the pain still searing my battered lungs.
I wasn’t enjoying this swim.
I see it again; just a glimmer of black on black in the water – almost invisible. I continue to wonder what it is as we near the quarter-way mark.
‘What the-?’ I hear Tom say next to me, as, directly in front of us, an enormous toothed head bursts out of the water. “Was this what I saw?” I strangely have time to think, as a large wave pushes me many metres back. I try to look, but by the time my vision is clear, the water is calm again.
‘What was that?!’ says Tom to the side of me.
‘It’s what I saw!’
We go someway underwater for some sign of the monster, but we can find none. I think I catch another glimpse of a white-ish figure, but that’s impossible.
We decide to try swimming across again, and this time we get quite a bit further than before.
I’m once again feeling the aches all over my body when I hear a sound. It’s low, rumbling, and roar-like. And it’s coming from below the water.
Not daring to put my head under, I look through the surface. Bursting from the depths shoots the exact same head as before, directly underneath me. I have no time to move.
It launches perfectly vertical, screaming a deep, rib shaking, howl. Before I’m aware of it, I’ve been thrown way up in the air. The head is beneath me, snapping its massive jaws and roaring in frustration. Why haven’t I fallen into its quite open mouth?
I simply continue to rise as the monster below me does, but then, as the water from its mouth splashes around me, I think I see another white figure. It’s just on the side of the beast… but I can’t see properly, the thrashing of the creature keeps obscuring my vision.
Strangely, I find myself calm and utterly terrified at the exact same time, but yet again, before I know it, the monster has crashed back into the water and disappeared from sight.
But where’s Tom?
I look around, trying to calm myself. It couldn’t have eaten him, was he in the air with me? He wasn’t on the water anywhere. Panic yet again begins to grip as I take a deep breath, and dunk under the water.
There he is! I see Tom not far down below me. The monster is nowhere in sight, so I begin to trying to swim down to him.
It seems my perspective was skewed – he is actually past the lights and seems to be falling. His mouth is open.
‘
Tom!’ I bellow, but words are designed for air, and in water they gargle, they are nothing.
I swim faster and faster, until I reach him. In the depths below, I catch sight of the monster – a shimmer of black against black. It’s circling below us menacingly.
I grab Tom’s arm. His face is stricken, drawn. There’s something wrong but we have no time! My air is running out fast and I’m almost certain Tom’s is gone. I pull upwards, but he doesn’t rise. He keeps falling.
Why? There must be some cause. I look around, but it is very dark. Why would we be sinking?
Then I see it. Attached to his foot was a hand, part of an arm – ghostly white, much whiter than any of Tom’s newly pale skin. I pull harder, and the hand in turn pulls harder. How can an arm pull things? It’s not possible. Squinting through the darkness, as before, I realise the arm in part of a white mudokon. I can’t see him properly …but he looks extraordinarily injured.
I pull harder, and catch a glimpse of the black creature below again. It was much closer.
With no warning, it shoots through the water like a bullet, coming in from the side. Its massive jaws lock ahold of the white mudokon …the white ghost, and keeps on swimming past, as I scramble upwards wildly in fear.
I understand that we are going upwards again, and look down. I see that the ‘head’ is not just a head, but part of a large, very long creature. But then it is invisible to us. The creature, whatever it was, had taken the white mudokon ghost with it.
I take a deep breath of air as we hit the surface, and hear Tom do the same. I had purposely been heading towards our destination side of the pool; it was only a few strokes away.
‘Ah! Ah! Get it off of me!’ cries Tom. I look, and see him flailing in the water, still as pale as he was below!
‘What? What’s up?’
‘Get it off!’
His legs fly into the air in his panic, and on his foot I see the hand and arm of the mudokon below the water. The monster had merely ripped the body away from the arm.
I take hold of Tom’s leg as his head goes under water, and begin pulling at the fingers. They’re cold, slimy and incredibly thin. I look away, repulsed by what is happening.
After a few moments, the hand comes loose and Tom’s head breaks the surface once more. Taking hold of the disgusting arm, I throw it back towards the other side, where it floats on the surface.
‘What was that?!’ says Tom.
I can’t get the awful slimy feel off my hands, and I can see some of the bone through the white skin of the arm. There’s no blood.
‘Let’s go,’ I mutter, trying to get the horrid feeling away from my hands.
The climb up on the metallic shore is surprisingly easy. As we stand, I notice Tom is shaking, once more uncontrollably, and he is still unnaturally white. For some reason, I am quite steady.
‘Are you alright?’ I ask tentatively.
Tom simply nods, teeth chattering, and points over yonder.
On this side of the water, there was an Information Kiosk and two doors.
“
Zulag Twenty-Eight” was written on one door, whilst the other had “
Out of Bounds” scrawled across it’s locked surface.
‘We don’t want to stay in the zulags, if we can help it,’ says Tom through still chattering teeth.
He’s right, we move towards the Out of Bounds area, hoping to reach a destination of use soon…