The column of dark oily smoke was rising high above the absurdist metalwork cube of the Longreach as J2 brought the nose of the chopper around, giving Dave a clear view forward through the Plexiglas windshield. His heart seemed to stop for a second. Everything, all his organs, seemed stunned into paralysis before spasming back into life at double speed. Malevolent blooms of bright orange fire fed the dark tower of smoke as it climbed away from the platform, but within a second or two of the initial shock Hooper frowned at the … wrongness of the scene. The seat of the blaze appeared to be down in the living quarters and hadn’t spread from there. The critical areas around the drill works were still clear for now. So was the helipad.
“Two minutes, Dave. I’m wheels down and gone in thirty. Jonty says they got wounded. Lotsa wounded. Gonna cross-deck ’em to Thunder Horse.”
“Okay,” Hooper replied, giving her only half his attention while he leaned forward and studied the fire. It was bad. It was always gonna be bad on a rig, but it wasn’t the hellstorm he’d been expecting.
“There’s more, Dave,” Juliette said as a secondary explosion blew out a cabin on the southern side of the platform. Dave watched as flaming debris fluttered down toward the deep blue water churning around the pylons. “I’ll patch ’em through,” the pilot shouted. “Put your damn cans back on, would you? And your harness.”
“Sorry,” he said, still distracted and not bothering with his safety belt. He wanted to get as far forward as he could to get a better look at the unfolding disaster. He did fit the headphones back over his ears, however, even though the short cord kept him tethered in the rear of the cabin. The intercom crackled and popped just before he heard the guttural South African accent of the day shift supervisor, Jonty Ballieue, through the static. He sounded panicky, almost hysterical, and that frightened Hooper a lot more than the fire. Ballieue was one of the hardest men he’d ever met.
“… attack … fighting them … coming up from the pylo …”
“Jonty. D’you read me? It’s Hoop. I’m less than a minute out. You’re breaking up, man. What the fuck is going on down there?”
“… ooper?… acking us.… We need …”
But the interference washed any sense out of the few words that broke through.
“Dave?”
It was J2, jumping in on his channel, sounding even more worried than before.
“I got the navy on my case now, man. They’re telling me we’re in restricted airspace. They’re warning us off, telling me not to land. Talking about terrorists or some garbage.”
“Bullshit!” he said in amazement. “Are they fucking crazy? Why is it restricted to us? We gotta get casualties off. I have to get down there and get to work. Where the fuck are terrorists gonna come from out here? What’d they hijack a submarine or something? Look down there, J2. There’s nothing there. Fireboats haven’t even made it out yet.”
“Get me down, Juliette,” he said, talking over the top of her objections. “You put me down and get the wounded to Thunder Horse and you’ll be back at the depot before that navy asshole you’re talking to has even tied a slipknot in his little pecker to stop from wetting his pants.”
She opened her mouth to try one more time, but Hooper cut her off with another harsh bark.
“Do it.”
The helicopter pilot tugged at the bill of her Era baseball cap, as though saluting him. She pushed forward on the stick and took them in.
Juliette threw them into a tight corkscrew descent that crushed him into his seat, where the broken spring speared into his butt like the shrimp fork of an angry little vengeance demon. The pressure on his back and neck cranked up the misery of his hangover, turning the dial to 11 on the Spinal Tap amp. Dave Hooper ignored it, along with the urgent need to dry wretch again and the feeling of having his eyes gouged out by the pressure of high-speed deceleration. He gritted his teeth, which were still slimy from the night before, and tried to pick out as much detail from the hellish scene as he could.
It was almost impossible. Rig monkeys and fire teams ran everywhere. Secondary explosions shook the lower levels of the structure as thick black clouds of smoke poured into the sky. He caught the briefest glimpse of a rainbow formed in the mist drifting off a water jet before the skids slammed down on the helipad, sending a painful jolt up his backbone.
The chopper doors flew back as evac teams wrenched the handles and wrestled wounded men into the cabin. Dave was about to start shouting directions, imposing some sense of order on the scene, when he was struck dumb by the sight of a couple of Vince Martinelli’s second shift guys trying to scramble in over the top of the casualties. They looked terrified, with huge white eyes bugging out of oil-stained faces. But they didn’t appear to be injured in any way. Dave shouted at them to get the hell back, but the pounding of the chopper blades, the roar of explosions, and the hoarse shouts and screams of a dozen other men drowned him out.
He tried to push the first of the interlopers out of his way and was surprised when the man suddenly flew sideways, the victim of a stiff arm jab by Martinelli himself, who followed up with a series of vicious rabbit punches to the neck of the second man. Vince wasn’t fucking around, either. He really hammered the guy, forcing Dave to jump down and grab his fist as it was cocked for another strike.
“Jesus, Vince, knock it off. You’re gonna kill him.”
“Sorry, boss,” yelled the shift supervisor, who looked on the edge of panic himself, “but I figured this might happen when you showed up. Some of these fucking idiots even tried to throw themselves over the side to get away from the things. Got at least one life pod away as well.”
“Away from what?” Dave yelled as Martinelli threw the other man to the side of the helipad like a bag of dirty laundry. He waved his thanks at J2 as he left the helicopter behind, but she was too busy prepping to un-ass the area to pay him much heed. Martinelli grabbed his boss by the elbow and led him through the chaos on the pad. There were bodies everywhere. Burned, mangled, horribly disfigured. And at least a dozen walking wounded waiting for their turn to be evacuated. Everyone looked frightened, which was only to be expected, but what Dave didn’t expect was the crazed, almost animalistic terror that seemed to be driving some of them.
They had trained for this. He had trained them for this. They shouldn’t be losing their shit.
“You gotta come, Dave, this way, quickly,” Martinelli insisted, all but dragging him along by the arm. “Fucking things are down this way.”
Heat from the fires came at them in waves, tightening the exposed skin on Hooper’s hands and face, making him wonder how long any of them could hope to survive on this gigantic ticking time bomb. He saw three kitchen hands, still wearing their stained greasy chef’s whites, fighting one another to get to the chopper.
“What the hell,” he muttered to himself as the men screamed and raged in frustration and something else, something more elemental, when the aircraft spooled up its engines and lifted off before they had a chance to board.
“This way, down this way,” Martinelli repeated. “Come on, Dave. I don’t know how long Marty and the others can hold them back.”
They cleared the area around the helipad just as the down blast of the rotors tried to push them off their feet. Dave followed the shift supervisor around the corner into a slightly sheltered corridor between two prefab huts. He put the brakes on, almost stumbling to his knees as Martinelli continued forward, dragging him along.
“Vince,” he shouted. “Would you slow the fuck up and tell me what’s happening? J2 said the navy was talking about terrorists. But I don’t see ISIS around, do you?”
Martinelli didn’t look happy to be stopping, but he looked even more unhappy at the question, as though Dave were crazy for even asking it.
“The fuck did anyone say anything about ragheads? This ain’t that. It’s worse. You gotta see for yourself, Dave. These things, these fucking animals, they just come out of the water. Up the fucking pylons or something.”
The space between the prefabs was narrow, and someone slammed heavily into Hooper’s shoulder, pushing him into a pole as they ran past, mindlessly fleeing a danger they couldn’t hope to escape. It stunned him, and he felt an electric tingle of pins and needles run down from his shoulder to his fingertips.
They were on a drill rig. In the middle of the Gulf. Where the hell did they think they were going? Sure as shit weren’t going to their emergency stations, that was a goddamn given.
Dave stood back against the wall of the small prefabricated building unit that housed the flight operations center for the rig. He flicked the pins and needles out of his fingertips, or tried to, anyway.
“What, Vince? What things came up the pylons? You’re not making any sense, man.”
Martinelli’s face dropped.
“They didn’t tell you? Jesus, I asked them to tell you. You’re going to think I’m fucking crazy.”
“Try me,” Dave said.
“Monsters,” Vince Martinelli said without hesitation. “There are monsters on the rig, Dave.”
One heartbeat. Then two. Dave Hooper did not move, did not speak. It was possible he didn’t breathe, either. He looked into Vince Martinelli’s eyes and down into the soul of a man who was telling him the truth. Or at least the truth as he understood it. As men rushed and crowded past them, mostly headed for the helipad, Dave stared at Martinelli and saw staring back the frightened father of four young children. In his eyes, bloodshot and gaping out from a face blackened by smoke and soot, he saw very little fear of the very real danger of dying in a small supernova as the Longreach went up. Instead he thought he saw a creeping horror of something worse.
“Vince,” he said as quietly and calmly as he could while still being heard above the crashing din and chaos. “Tell me as quickly and as simply as you can.”
“We don’t have time, Dave. We need …”
“I need to know, Vince,” Dave said in a steady voice but with great force. “If I’m going to fight a fire, I need to know what sort of fire. If I’m going to fight … things—” He had to force himself to say it. “—I need to know … fuck, what sort of things. Or at least what they’re doing.”
“They’re eating people, Dave. For fuck’s sake, there’s no time for this.”
Vince Martinelli was a man pulled in every direction. Like the guys he had beaten off the chopper, like the kitchen hands Hooper had seen just a minute ago, he needed to get the hell away. As far away and as quickly as possible. But his shifting shoulders, his darted glances down the corridor or toward the nearest stairwell, the way he kept bouncing on the balls of his feet, all spoke of the need to get moving again, the way they had been going, toward the problem.
Toward the monsters, Dave thought, trying not to let incredulity run wild all over his face.
It was possible, likely even, that Vince and the others thought they had seen “monsters” when in fact the navy might be right. Might be there were attackers dressed in scuba gear and … what, fright masks or something? Hooper dismissed the idea as soon as he had it. That was bullshit. Worse than Vince’s monster story. He could imagine some crazy Greenpeace cocksuckers sneaking out here and scaling the rig to hang a banner or something, but a bunch of beardy fucking sand maggots like bin Laden and all of them? Forget that shit. Never gonna happen.
He gripped the shift supervisor by the bicep. His own large calloused hands didn’t reach even halfway around Martinelli’s upper arm. But he gave him a little push toward the stairwell. They were at least on the move again.
“You can tell me on the way, then. Where are we headed?”
“Down to the first crew quarters,” Vince said, letting go of the tension that had been holding him unnaturally upright just before.
“And what are they doing down there?” Dave asked. “These things.”
He couldn’t say the word “monster” without feeling like an idiot.
Martinelli seemed to pick up speed with every step, but he faltered momentarily, looking back over his shoulder to answer. He looked guilty.
“They’re tearing shit up, Dave,” he said. He came to a complete stop again. “And eating people.”
Not Greenpeace, then, Hooper thought. Vegetarian soft cocks, the lot of them.
He had to bite down on a crazed snort of laughter. Eating people? If he hadn’t seen the madness and horror on the helipad, he’d have bet Vince was punking him. They were in a narrow walkway between a couple of the prefab huts and were being jostled on all sides. Rig workers shouted and cried out around them, a mob scene, heavy steel-capped boots pounding on the ironwork. Martinelli gave him that same look, a furtive sort of guilty glance, before moving off again, drawing Hooper along in his considerable wake.
As they forced their way against the human tide rushing up from the lower levels, he tried to shake off his sense of disbelief. He was about to ask Vince if he had really said these things were eating people, but he shut his mouth as three men stumbled by. He recognized a couple of drill monkeys, Lam and Ibarra, holding up the third man, who looked like something had taken a huge chunk out of his left shoulder. Dave couldn’t place him for a second. The stranger’s face was ashen white, and his high-visibility coveralls were painted in blood. With a start, he realized it was Pena, the new hydrologist. Last thing Dave had done before going on leave, he’d briefed Pena in, giving him the tour of the rig and all the emergency assembly points. He looked very different now. It wasn’t the worst injury Hooper had ever seen on a rig, but he couldn’t help noticing that the man had no burn marks on him. When people got hurt on oil rigs, in Dave’s experience anyway, they got crushed and they got burned. He threw a quick glance back over his shoulder as the men struggled past him.
That poor bastard did look like something had taken a bite out of him, and his bright yellow vest was scored with bloodied slash marks.
Acid and bile boiled away in Dave Hooper’s stomach, and his head seemed to be gripped in a tightening iron band. They hurried down three flights of steel steps and flew around one corner and then another into the densely packed grid of prefabricated living capsules that constituted the crew quarters. The smell of burning synthetics reached them just before the first tendrils of oily smoke. The crowds had thinned out, but their progress was now slowed by smoke and flame. The power had failed completely down here, and at times the two men were forced to inch along through darkness. Martinelli seemed to find it all but impossible to push himself forward.
“Come on, Vince,” Hooper said. “I think I can hear the guys.”
And he thought that just maybe, he could. Faint voices, shouting and screaming somewhere up ahead, the words lost in the roar of sirens, explosions, and the mad metallic clangor of a gigantic man-made structure that was violently coming apart.
Hooper found himself taking the lead, encouraging his friend to keep up with him, to stay in contact in the darkened, increasingly claustrophobic passages. Here and there light leaked in from the outside world or small fires threw an eldritch glow on scenes of mayhem and slaughter. Dave swallowed hard as his throat locked up at the sight of a severed arm and a long, bloody smear leading away around a corner into the main lounge.
Martinelli had come to a complete stop. Dave bumped into him, but the man seemed to have put down roots. A small shove failed to move him, and he pushed back against another, harder push, even reversing a few steps. Dave was stunned. Vince was straight up one of the most courageous men he’d ever met. Over the years he’d seen him run headlong into enough lethally dangerous situations to pull some poor bastard to safety to know that the shift boss was swinging a heavy pair of cast iron testicles. But it seemed there was no way he was getting any closer to what lay at the end of that blood trail. He’d started moaning and trembling like a kid at the door of the dentist for a root canal. It was like, hell, that wasn’t even Vince standing there, just a tangle of fear and horror that had taken his shape.
Biting down on the anger that flared in the wake of his frustration—did he have to do everything?—Dave edged around the terrified giant. He could still hear cries of pain and fear somewhere ahead of them, but here, deep down in the living quarters, the shrieking din was muffled by alarms and the roar of a nearby blaze. He could feel the air being sucked toward the conflagration and the heat radiating back at him.
“You all right, Vince?” Dave asked as he moved in front of his coworker.
But Vince was a long way from being all right. He kept shaking his head and trying to force himself forward, but he just couldn’t do it. He appeared to be stranded at a point exactly midway between his need to help out and his fear of whatever was coming.
“… eating them …” he mumbled, and then stared at Dave as if he couldn’t believe what he had just said.
No sense wasting time with him, Hooper thought. Whatever he’d seen when he was last down here had put the zap on his head. Dave gathered up what he thought of as his considerable reserves of patience. It really was like talking to a kid.
“Okay, then. Don’t worry, buddy, I got it. Go fetch me some stretcher bearers. We’re gonna need them. I think I can hear some of the guys up ahead. Injured. Go on. Can you at least do that for me?”
When Martinelli did nothing, Dave Hooper frowned and shook his head. The guy was … what … paralyzed or something. Dave decided he had to abandon him and carry on alone.
He edged cautiously down the hallway, careful not to step in the glistening trail of blood. He told himself he simply didn’t want to slip, but he also knew it was more visceral than that. Disgust and fear warding him off. Trying to make him stop, just like Martinelli. The heat grew no more intense, but he found it harder to breathe. The fire was consuming all the oxygen.
He jumped as the steel-capped toe of his boot kicked a crowbar. It was matted with blood and hair. He bent to pick it up, some ancient, deeply buried instinct making him reach for a weapon. A club. Anything. He could hear noises just ahead, around the corner in the crew lounge. A wet, crunching sound. Shudders ran up his arms and around his neck as he recognized what it was. Chewing and grunting.
Like Martinelli he suddenly found it difficult to move forward, but unlike the shift boss he found some reserve, somewhere, and forced himself to push one foot in front of the other, forgetting about the crowbar as he drew closer to the turn in the corridor that opened up onto the crew lounge. Light flickered from within, but it was a cold blue light, not the shifting orange-red glow of flames.
His eyes were dark-adapted now, and in the gloom he began to pick out more details. Blood splatter. Torn clothes. A work boot with a foot sticking out of it, hacked off abruptly about halfway up the shin. The bone looked impossibly white to him, the jagged end of it sharp, like a broken branch. Hooper’s gorge rose in his throat, but he had nothing left to throw up. He gagged and then he spit, or tried to. His mouth was dry and sticky. An object leaning up against the wall drew his eye. He experienced a moment of recognition before understanding.
A splitting maul.
Marty Grbac’s splitting maul. It lay at an odd angle against the wall, just before the corner, as though dropped there and forgotten. An oversized, inappropriate piece of equipment for an oil rig but one that Marty carried with him everywhere. A souvenir of his first time in Alaska, he said. And a lucky charm. It had saved his ass once, and he wouldn’t give it up. The splitting maul looked like a cross between a sledgehammer and a woodcutter’s ax, because that was exactly what it was. A long straight shaft of polished hickory carrying a twelve-pound head with a blunt fist-size hammer on one side and a broad, slightly convex chopping wedge on the other. Sometimes called block busters, they are better suited than a conventional ax for splitting heavy logs and blocks of wood. The extra weight delivers a more powerful blow, and the greater width of the axlike head prevents the maul from getting stuck in the wood grain. Along with a giant novelty foam hand signed by Sammy Sosa, it was Grbac’s most prized possession.
Hooper picked it up, surprised by how heavy the thing was. You’d need the shoulders of a bull, like Marty, to swing this thing, and on a rig you’d rarely have the space. It belonged in a forest, a cleared forest with a whole heap of logs lying around waiting to be split for the fire.
He looked back over his shoulder at Martinelli, who was crying with the effort of forcing himself forward, his eyes pleading with Dave to forgive him. Tear tracks stood out on his filthy face. The man was such a perfect picture of misery that Dave found himself feeling more sorry for him than pissed off at him.
“Be cool, Vince,” he said, hefting the heavy tool. It made him feel better for some reason. “Go get help.”
He turned away from Vince Martinelli, breathed in a draft of the thin, scorched air, and stepped around the corner into the crew lounge.