121215.fb2 Blood Lust - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 69

Blood Lust - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 69

"There are eight floors underwater. A lot of territory to cover, but no body that I can find."

Smith's prim mouth compressed.

"I can't accept that."

"Sir, we'll keep looking if you order it, but I can assure you that every room has been searched. Twice."

Smith considered. "Step out of your wet suit."

"Sir?"

"I'm going in."

"Colonel, the environment down there is pretty hairy. Rotting beams. Floating wood. I wouldn't. At your age. I mean-"

"Step out of the suit now," Smith repeated.

Without a word. the diver handed Smith his flashlight as Smith helped him off with his oxygen tanks. Smith stripped to his gray boxer shorts and T-shirt. The suit was a snug fit. The tanks felt like booster rockets on Smith's spare frame.

Smith blew into the mouthpiece to clear it, and trying not to trip over his flippers, simply walked down the steps into the coldest, blackest water he could imagine.

He thumbed on the light. The water closed over his head. He could hear his own pounding heart, his labored, ragged breathing, and a faint gurgling. Nothing else. The world he knew was replaced by an alien environment that pressed its swirling cold fingers into his ribs. Steeling himself, he launched himself from the security of the steps.

There was a heart-stopping moment of disorientation. The floor and ceiling became indistinguishable.

Smith had done demolition work for the OSS during his war days. Long ago. His underwater craft came back to him. He pushed after the cone of light he held before him.

He swam the length of the ninth floor-actually the twentieth, counting down from the desert-going from room to room, his light probing. Fortunately, the Condome project had not reached the furnished state when it had been stopped. There were few floating objects to navigate around. Just wood flotsam and algaelike jetsam.

Other divers joined him, adding their lights to his. Not wanting to be distracted by their activity, Smith motioned for them to follow his lead.

The ninth floor proved disappointingly empty. He swam past the elevator door to the propped-open fire doors and enjoyed the eerie sensation of swimming down a long flight of stairs.

The next floor was devoid of even floating detritus. So was the floor beneath it.

Smith persisted. He glanced at his borrowed chronometer, then realized he had not asked the diver how much air remained in his tanks. Grimly he pressed on. He must be sure before he abandoned the search. Although the thought crossed his mind that if the Master of Sinanju truly lay in this watery realm, he had been here for nearly three months. Smith's heart sank. What did he expect to find? Perhaps only a corpse whose spirit demanded proper burial.

That and no more. Meanwhile, the world marched toward the Red Abyss of Kali. And if they went over the precipice, there might be more dead to bury than living. But since he was powerless to affect the situation otherwise, Harold Smith pushed on.

In the end, Dr. Harold W. Smith gave up only when he found himself gasping for oxygen. Frantically he reversed course and swam for the stairs. His heart pounded. His ears rang. Then his vision turned as red as the roaring in his ears.

Smith broke the surface gasping, his mouthpiece ejecting like a throat-caught bone.

"I'm sorry, Colonel," Lieutenant Latham said, leaning down to pull him up to a safe step.

"I had to see for myself," Smith said hollowly.

"Shall I call off the search?"

Smith coughed a dry rattling cough.

"Yes," he said quietly. His voice was charged with defeat.

Two engineers assisted Smith to the surface. His lungs labored. His breath came out in wheezes of agony. He carried his uniform and shoes.

"Maybe you'd better rest a few moments," one of the pair suggested.

"Yes, yes, of course," Smith gasped.

They all sat down on the steps, saying nothing. The divers continued on in their bare feet.

"Too bad the elevators aren't working," one grumbled to the other. "Save us the climb."

Smith, in the middle of a cough, looked up.

"Elevators?" he gasped.

"The're not working," Lieutenant Latham told Smith. "We might be able to jury-rig a stretcher if you don't think you can manage-"

Smith grasped his arm. "Elevators," he repeated hoarsely.

"Sir?"

"Did . . . anyone . . . check the elevators?" Smith wheezed out.

"I don't know." The lieutenant looked up. "Hey, Navy. The colonel wants to know if you checked the elevator shaft."

"Couldn't," a diver called back in the murk. "All the doors are frozen shut below the nineteenth floor.

"The cage," Smith croaked, "where is it?"

"We don't know. The unsubmerged section of the shaft is clear, so it must be down below."

Using the engineers for support, Smith clawed himself to a shaky standing position.

"We're going back down," he said grimly.

"Sir?" It was one of the divers.

"We must investigate that elevator."

They returned to the dry tenth floor in silence. Using pry bars, they separated the elevator doors. Smith looked in. He saw dancing water with rust specks floating on top less than four feet below. The cable disappeared into the murky soup.

"Check the cage," Smith ordered.

Lieutenant Latham gestured to the open doors. "You heard the man."

Without protest, but with a noticeable lack of enthusiasm, two of the divers donned their breathing equipment and climbed in. Slithering down the cable, they disappeared with barely a splash.