Chapter Nineteen
Ryan found that he'd drawn the powerful
SIG-Sauer, holding it cocked and ready in his right hand. He'd
automatically dropped the staff and drawn the blaster, without
thinking for a moment what a futile gesture that was.
There was some kind of massive disturbance in the water, sounding
about a dozen yards out from him, a noise that could only mean
Krysty was fighting for her life against the saurian that had taken
her. The fight would only have one ending as the great reptile
rolled her under the frothing mud and rolled again and again,
possibly tearing off an arm at the shoulder, or severing her trunk
at the waist.
Ryan stood there in total darkness, knuckles white on the butt of
the useless handblaster.
"I'm coming, lover!" he shouted at the top of his voice, hearing
flatness and desolation all about him, aware of his
isolation.
He bolstered the blaster and drew the eighteen-inch steel panga,
feeling the familiar weight and balance, which gave him a momentary
sense of comfort.
He held his breath, closed his eye and hurled himself away to the
left, half diving, half falling in a noisy belly flop into the
blood-warm soup of the lagoon.
Some of it went up his nose and some into his half-open mouth,
making him cough and splutter, while desperately trying to hang on
to his sense of direction, working out that the noise was coming
from ahead and a little to his right.
"No, Ryan, don't!" Krysty's voice was shrill with mortal terror,
ringing out across the swamp, rising above the piggish grunting and
snuffling of the gator.
"I'm coming, lover." Ryan's head was thrown back, his neck
straining, the sinews in his throat as taut as bowstrings. He
kicked hard with both legs, unable to feel any bottom under his
boots, trying to steer himself toward Krysty's voice. -
But it was uncommonly difficult.
"Keep away!" Krysty screamed. "You can't do"
The words were drowned in an eruption of bubbling and thrashing
water.
The blade held tight in his right hand, Ryan slipped into a fluid
sidestroke that moved him more easily across the treacherous
swamp.
The noise had sounded close, less than twenty feet. He should have
reached the place by now.
He gasped, swallowing a couple of mouthfuls of the brackish mud,
feeling something brush against his leg, something vast and
immeasurably powerful.
Just for a moment Ryan had a mental picture of the great white
shark that he'd once encountered. The dead black eyes had stared
incuriously at him, as though they were weighing his immortal
soul.
He kicked sideways, toward the movement, feeling the turbulent
currents left behind by the monster's passing. Both of Ryan's hands
were outstretched, and it was the left that made the first contact
with the gator.
The thick scales scraped past him, giving him a clue of the
creature's size and the direction it was taking. A short, muscular
leg kicked out at Ryan as if the saurian sensed his presence close
by.
Now that he'd finally made contact, all of Ryan's fears left him.
The blindness no longer mattered. In the filthy, impenetrable deeps
of the swamp, it was to be a battle decided only by touch, not by
sight.
He wrapped his arms around the beast's powerful tail, acting like
an anchor, slowing the mutie reptile, making it obvious that the
creature had an enemy.
It was like a roller-coaster ride through hell.
One moment Ryan's head was out of the water and he was sucking in a
frantic breath. The next second he was dragged deep in the midnight
labyrinth, pulled through a knotted maze of mangrove roots, moving
so fast he could hardly breathe.
He was knocked and bruised, but he still clung to the gator's tail,
managing to wrap his legs around it, acting as a drogue anchor,
slowing the beast a little.
Ryan knew that it could be only a matter of seconds before the
reptile got tired of this annoying encumbrance and turned some of
its small brain toward removing him. The hope was that the
distraction would give Krysty a chance, however slight, of making
her own escape from the scissoring jaws.
Suddenly he was above water, though there wasn't a flicker of
change in his utter blackness. But he could breathe for a moment.
And hear.
"For Gaia's sake, let go and swim left, lover. Land there. Fifty
yards. Go, for me."
"Talk later," he managed to gasp. The words were cut off as the
gator dived deep again, going so far down that Ryan felt his ears
popping with the pressure and the consistency of the muddy water
changed to watery mud.
Now he sensed that the creature was moving more slowly, as though
it were trying to figure out the problem and find some way of
dealing with it. With an enormous effort Ryan managed to haul
himself a little higher up the tail, until his arms were around the
belly of the beast, barely spanning its huge size.
Something brushed his shoulder, and he guessed that it was one of
Krysty's feet, kicking out jerkily, at least telling him that she
was still alive and fighting.
The gator jerked convulsively, wriggling its whole body from side
to side, trying to flick off the irritating parasite that was
checking its progress and get back to its underwater den, where it
could examine its fine prey at its leisure.
From rapid movement it went to stillness, giving Ryan the half
chance that he'd been hoping for during the battle.
He braced himself with his left arm, trying to get a purchase on
the raised spine of the saurian, readying the panga in his right
hand, probing with it to make sure the point was settled against
the soft underbelly of the creature.
He lunged, feeling the liquid gush out over his hand and
wrist.
Simultaneously the beast bucked against the stabbing pain in its
guts, almost breaking Ryan's hold and throwing him helplessly
off.
But he had been ready for its reaction, gripping again with both
arms.
The gator started to roll, over and over, making Ryan feel sick and
dizzy. But he clung on tight, wondering how Krysty was managing.
Once or twice he sensed that he was out in the air again, and he
fought for a small breath.
Unable to throw him off, the giant mutie creature changed its
tactics.
Suddenly, racked with the pain in its belly, it decided to head for
its den. It opened its jaws and spit out the troublesome prey that
it had been looking forward to devouring, brushing the woman out of
its way with a flick of the gigantic tail.
It powered its way across the swamp, knowing that it could deal
with any enemy once it reached its comfortable hole, burrowed out
beneath the bank of the bayou.
Ryan held his breath, face pressed to the flank of the gator as it
raged through the soupy water. Once there was a painful blow on his
right shoulder from a gnarled root of one of the ancient mangrove
trees, and he nearly let the panga slip from paralyzed fingers. But
he pinned it against himself until the feeling seeped back and he
was able to hold it once more.
He was dragged through a narrow tunnel that squeezed in on both
sides, while the gator's short, powerful legs scrabbled and kicked
to get it through the slimy walls.
There was air, but not the fresh, humid air of the outer swamp.
This was fetid and stale, stinking of rotting meat and fish. The
odor of putrefaction was so strong that Ryan almost puked. He could
feel soft, rotting branches brushing against him, creaking and
cracking under the weight of the mighty saurian.
He had not a scintilla of doubt where he was.
This was the lair of the beast, the place where either he or the
gator would die.
THREE HUNDRED YARDS AWAY, Krysty stood on the edge of the swamp,
ankle deep in mud. She was soaking wet, clothes torn, streaked with
the dark slime of the bayou. In her right hand was the empty Smith
amp; Wesson 640, pointing to the dirt. Her fiery hair was dull,
matted to her skull, like a cap of spun copper. Her vivid emerald
eyes were wide with shock, her face as pale as Sierra snow. A vivid
patch of bright blood was smeared across her forehead.
Her lips were moving slowly as she talked to herself. But you would
have needed to be very close to catch a single whispered
word.
"Great Gaia and all the Earth powers, help Ryan. Spare him for his
courage. Mother Sonja, wherever you are, aid him to survive against
the monster. Don't let him die to let me live. Couldn't bear that.
Rather die myself if he's really gone. Please, oh please, oh
please"
Standing alone in the fading light, Krysty began to cry
helplessly.
RYAN LET GO of the gator's body, easing himself away, reaching up
with his left hand to try to gauge something of the proportions of
the den. He was standing waist deep in the water. The roof of mud
was less than four feet above him, and one end seemed to be filled
with a nest of branches and rotting bones.
He could hear the reptile breathing, heavy and harsh, close by,
making the piggish snuffling that he'd heard as it had grabbed
Krysty.
"You there, lover?" he said cautiously.
His voice was flat and dead.
"Lover?"
There was no answer.
Krysty had either escaped before they plunged deep into the bayou,
or she was lying within reach of him.
Unconscious? Dead?
It crossed his mind to risk using the SIG-Sauer. The immersion in
water shouldn't have affected the sturdy mechanism. It wasn't like
one of the fragile cap-and-ball pistols that were still found
around Deathlands.
But there was an overwhelming risk that he would only wound the
creature, driving it into a maddened rage. Standing there, blind,
Ryan knew he would have absolutely no chance at all.
No. It had to be the panga and it had to be the closest of
contact.
The thrust with the needle-sharp point of the eighteen-inch blade
had been shrewdly struck. He knew that, had felt it drive deep,
grating between ribs, into the intestines. For all Ryan knew, it
could have been a mortal wound and the gator would be lying there,
life ebbing.
"Come on," he breathed, bracing himself for a flurry of movement
from the mutie saurian. But it was still. The water lapped around
Ryan.
He took a careful half step forward, feeling with his combat boots
for as solid a footing as he could find. Both hands were stretched
out in front of him as he inched toward the noise of breathing, a
noise that grew markedly faster and louder as the man moved across
the subterranean den.
"Where the fuck are you, bastard?"
The water was growing a little more shallow. Ryan felt something
brush the top of his head and winced, reaching up to find that the
ceiling was becoming lower, as well.
The attack came without warning.
The power and size of the creature was unbelievable, throwing Ryan
back off his feet, nearly knocking the panga from his hand. The
jaws, fully six feet long, snapped at him, gripping across his
upper chest, crushing his lungs so that breathing became instantly
impossible.
But it was the murderous accuracy of the gator that gave Ryan his
chance. Now he knew precisely where it was, and his blindness was
no longer a handicap.
He had the free use of his right arm, and he brought the panga
around and forced it between the jaws, feeling teeth splinter and
snap. He turned his wrist, so that the keen edge of the steel
sliced at the inside of the monster's jaws and tongue.
The grip relaxed for a moment and there was a loud exhalation of
breath, almost like a shriek. The gator backed off, hurt by the
panga, but Ryan wasn't going to let the creature get
away.
He followed it through the foaming water, churned up by the gator's
rage and pain.
As he advanced, Ryan swung the panga, twice feeling the satisfying
jar run up his arm as it struck solidly home on flesh and
gristle.
His left hand touched the gator on the foreleg, enabling him to
work out precisely where the beast was lying. He threw himself on
it, one arm clamping around the murderous jaws, holding them shut.
Despite the straining efforts of the reptile to open its jaws and
savage him, Ryan held fast.
It was a piece of lore that he'd learned from Trader. Even the
biggest of saurians was helpless once you closed its jaws and held
them shut. They were incredibly powerful when it came to their
snapping shut on anyone, but surprisingly feeble when it came to
trying to open them.
Trader had told Ryan that at least a dozen years ago, and he'd
remembered it.
And it was true.
Pinning the beast down, Ryan was free to use the panga against its
throat and underbelly, where the scales were much thinner. He used
all of his strength, gasping out with the effort of each stabbing
blow.
"Die fucker die fuckin' die."
The gator wriggled harder, its legs kicking out great chunks of the
muddy walls of its lair. It bounced Ryan against the ceiling,
almost crushing him. But he held his grip and continued to hack at
the creature. It felt like it was going to try to dive out under
the water to the open bayou, but seemed to change its mind at the
last moment.
The mutie's movements seemed to be getting slower and less
violent.
Ryan continued to stab, thrust and hack away with the razored
panga, digging deeper and deeper at the gator's innards, up beyond
the wrist with each savage blow, feeling the soft twists and loops
of intestines spilling into the water and coiling around him, aware
of the most vile smell, deafened by the muffled roaring of the
beast.
He became aware that he was using the blade on a corpse. The gator
had become still, its muscles relaxed, fouling the water in its
passing, floating at his side like a great sodden tree
trunk.
Ryan leaned away from it, fighting for breath in the noxious air,
struggling to hold off the sudden onset of panic at being trapped
in this cramped underwater den with the body of the mutie saurian
for company.
He fumbled for the sheath at his hip and put away the panga,
avoiding cutting his fingers on it, feeling automatically to check
that the SIG-Sauer P-226 was still safely bolstered on the opposite
side.
As he leaned back against the sloping wall of the den, as far away
from the swaying corpse of the gator as he could get, Ryan felt a
growing wave of claustrophobia sweeping over his mind. He had an
awareness that he was buried somewhere deep beneath the earth, in a
pit that was three parts filled with the brackish swamp water, with
no way of knowing how to get outand no way at all of letting
Krystyif she was still aliveknow where he was. As far as she knew,
the gator had taken him and he was gone forever, to be trapped,
blind and alone.
"Fireblast," Ryan whispered, voice gentle and controlled. "Fucking
fireblast." He could hardly hear himself. The only sound, apart
from the soft whispering of the water, was the pounding blood in
his skull.
He rubbed mud from his head, fingers inches from his eye. "Can't
even see the hand in front of my face," he said, almost managing
something like a laugh.
Almost.
It was totally black and silent.
Silent as the grave.