Tim Curran - Dead Sea
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- Название:Dead Sea
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George swallowed, but there was no spit in his mouth. “Saks… Jesus, you’re still alive.”
Maybe that was the wrong thing to say, but there was probably no right thing to say. Not now. Saks was insane and there was no getting around that. He was sick and wounded and insane. And if that wasn’t bad enough, he had a shotgun in his hands. The barrel was rusty, but it looked like it wasn’t that rusty.
A gun? Saks had a gun? Of course he had a gun, George knew. Guns find people like Saks and people like Saks always find guns. Same way rich men always find money and poor ones never get a break. Saks probably found it on the ship somewhere. The really crazy thing was that Saks was still alive. Gutshot like that, he should have been dead or dying at the very least, curled up somewhere like a road-struck dog. But that blood on his shirt was old. He didn’t seem to be bleeding anymore.
How could that be?
He took it right in the belly, George thought. I saw it. He took it right in the fucking belly.
Cushing and Elizabeth were standing there now.
It was hard to say what was on their faces. They didn’t seem really surprised, just unhappy. Both of them were probably beyond the point where anything in this damn place could really surprise them.
“Why did you run off?” Cushing asked him. “Why did you hide from us when we looked for you? We were just trying to help you, Saks.”
Saks laughed or wheezed… he did something, made some sort of rattling, choking sound that might have been mirth. Might have been, but wasn’t. His right eye, the wide one, was simply blank and scary looking. “Is that what you wanted to do, Cushing? Is that it? You sure you just didn’t want to finish what Menhaus started?”
“C’mon, Saks, you know me better than that.”
George was staring without meaning to, way you might stare at a mad dog knowing it was certainly the wrong thing to do. But… but Saks’s neck was covered in something. Where those weird sores had been the other day, the ones Saks was always scratching, there was some kind of spreading, tumorous growth. It looked pink and furry like moss might look on Mars. Something made of tiny, wiry hairs.
Cilia, George thought, like on an ameba.
And there was something under his shirt, something bulging and obscene-looking. Something that did not belong. Whatever it was, it was moving.
“Where’s Menhaus?” Saks said in a low, grating voice. “I wanna see the fucker who killed me.”
And that’s what he said. Like maybe he had died, but came back just to fuck up this little party they were planning. George didn’t know what had happened to him, but it didn’t take a real jump of logic to connect Fabrini’s story of Saks eating that discolored salt pork from the Cyclops and the sudden outbreak of sores on his body and what was happening now. It was an easy path to follow.
“So what do you dipfucks got in mind here?” Saks wanted to know. “Are you planning on sacrificing the old man to your Fog-Devil, George? Is that it?”
“No, we-”
“Nice work there, George, nice-looking bomb you’ve got there. You would’ve made one hell of a terrorist. Let’s see here… if I pull that cord you got rigged up, in about… what? Sixty seconds, maybe, we all go up? Something like that?”
George felt a trickle of sweat slide down the back of his neck. “Saks,” he said. “We… we rigged that to kill the thing…”
“Menhaus!” Saks cried out. “You don’t show your ass in the next ten seconds, I’m gonna have to start killing people! You hear me?” He leveled the shotgun at Cushing. “I’ll start with Cushing… you hear me? You hear me, you slimy little fuck?”
“No,” Elizabeth said, stepping in-between the shotgun and Cushing. “No, that’s enough. No more killing. I can’t bear any more killing.”
Saks chuckled. “Does blood offend you, honey?”
“Yes.”
George didn’t believe that, but it sounded good. Sounded real good and looking into those sad green eyes of hers you could almost believe it. But it wasn’t true. Elizabeth wasn’t a cold-blooded killer or anything, but she was a survivor. That was for sure. Part of her was very callous and when necessary, she had a mean streak a mile wide.
“Okay, here’s how it works,” Saks said. “Menhaus don’t show… and I don’t think he’s gonna show… I kill your snatch, Cushing, then I kill you. What do you think, George? You got a problem with that?”
Greenberg just sat there on the deck, looking old and used up, maybe not liking any of this but too far gone himself to do much about it.
“Menhaus! You think I’m fucking around, you think this is-”
And that’s about as far as he got. For something hit him in the back of the head and he pitched forward, dropping the shotgun. Cushing moved fast and kicked the gun away from Saks’s clutching fingers. There was a wrench laying on the deck. A pipe wrench. Saks was barely conscious.
Menhaus waltzed purposely out from around the aft cabin.
“Good shot,” George told him.
“Fucking guy’s like a tick,” Menhaus said. “Stepping on him ain’t enough, you got to burn him out.”
Saks moaned and George saw what he was going to do seconds before he did it. Saks was feigning here, pretending to be nearly unconscious. But he wasn’t. He was inching himself over toward the pull rope for the satchel fuses. He made it maybe an inch closer and George kicked him in the head. Punted him hard enough to make the game-winning field goal.
This time, Saks was out cold.
Menhaus, with no emotion, simply picked-up the wrench and went over to Saks and swung it with everything he had. There was a sickly wet and hollow popping sound. Menhaus hit him again with everything he had and then stood up, studying the gore and clotted hair on the end of the wrench. He tossed it aside with a shudder like he couldn’t believe what he’d just done.
Nobody said anything about it.
And Menhaus himself had absolutely no comment.
“You had better go,” Greenberg told them, clutching the Geiger Counter to him.
George put the end of the pull rope on his lap. “You know what to do,” he said. “But I’ll ask you one more time if you don’t want to come with us.”
Greenberg appreciated that they all seemed to care about him, that they did not make this decision to leave him easily. It was tough on them. So much inhumanity and death had been forced on them in this awful place, the idea of willingly sacrificing one of their number was unthinkable. Yet, they had to do it. Greenberg knew it and so did they.
But it didn’t make the parting any easier.
Even Elizabeth said, “Please, Mr. Greenberg, think about it.”
But he just shook his head. “You better go. There’s not much time. It’ll be dark in just over an hour, I’m guessing. Please, get moving.”
George looked at him one last time, mumbled a goodbye and Menhaus did the same. They did not look back.
“Mr. Greenberg, I-”
“On your way, Elizabeth,” he told her. “Your uncle and I were friends, you know. What I’m doing, I’m doing for you and for him and for all the others that thing has killed. And, yes, out of curiosity.”
Cushing led her away towards the boarding ladder.
And that was it.
That was the last anyone saw of Greenberg.
30
In the cigarette boat, the ship’s graveyard and its attendant weed were easy to transverse. There were a few scary moments in the fog when Menhaus slammed into an overturned hull and nearly pitched everyone overboard or when he nearly steered them into the side of a tanker, but other than that it went pretty smoothly.
In thirty minutes, they were free of the weed, moving at a good clip through one of the channels, cutting through the fog and keeping their fingers crossed. They had everything they needed and if they couldn’t find the vortex, then it would all end out in the Sea of Mists. Maybe through the offices of the local wildlife or maybe when Greenberg pulled the cord and let loose his anti-matter bomb, as he called it.
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