Authors: Brian Williams
âGoddamn it.' The President's head was in his hands, his face hidden. âHow am I going to tell your Prime Minister's wife and kids about this? They're staying at Camp David. What the hell am I going to tell them?' he said to no one in particular. Then he looked sharply up at Parry. âWhat about your asset, Commander ⦠your mole in the Stikes' ranks? Why did you have no forewarning of this?'
âSir,' Bob cut in. âThat information's not for dissimilation.'
Chester shot a glance at Parry who was grimacing. He appeared extremely uncomfortable.
âWe're way beyond any such niceties now,' the President snapped at Bob. Then he shook his head. âWe'll get back to you, gentlemen,' he said.
Chester was left with the image of the President making a rapid cutting motion across his throat as he turned towards Bob, then the screens simply shut down.
âYou poor old thing, you look done in. They are a handful, aren't they?' Mrs Burrows said, stroking Colly's head. Stretched out on her side as the kittens suckled hungrily, the cat was exhausted, but she still made the effort to purr loudly.
As someone entered the room, Colly looked up, and her purring became more subdued. âIt's all right, girl,' Mrs Burrows said, trying to reassure her. Like all Hunters she was extremely protective of her young, hissing and growling at anyone who came near, although Mrs Burrows had proved to be the exception to this.
âI'll be glad when I've got my kitchen back,' the First Officer grumbled, stepping over the toys the kittens had left scattered across the floor. It was an age-old tradition for Colonists to help out when a Hunter had a new litter, as it was quite an undertaking to care for and clean up after the lively offspring. Numerous gifts of food and old blankets had been left by the front door, but another favourite gift was the cloth toys people made for the kittens to play with. With their cotton-thread whiskers and shiny bead eyes, these generally resembled the different varieties of rats the cats would be expected to hunt in adult life.
The First Officer sat down, then groaned with the effort as he leant forward to scoop up a toy that had caught his eye. This was no rat, but a little man dressed in black with a white face, and in its hand it had a tiny cloth book with the letter
C
embroidered on it. âHa, a Styx, and he's even holding the
Book of Catastrophes! Someone's got a sense of humour,' the First Officer said with a chuckle. âIf they'd caught anyone doing this, it would have merited Banishment or even death by hanging.'
Mrs Burrows turned towards the First Officer. âOh, it's a Styx, is it? I thought that was meant to be you, love,' she said, raising an eyebrow.
The First Officer chuckled, then stopped himself as he wondered if she had been joking or not. Although Mrs Burrows' sight was heavily impaired, most of the time her incredibly developed olfactory sense more than compensated as she went about the Colony, helping the First Officer to run things. But every so often he was reminded that she could hardly see at all.
âNo, I'm pretty sure it's meant to be a White Neck,' he said. He jiggled it around by one of its chewed legs. All of a sudden one of the kittens, who'd noticed what he was doing, made a lunge for it. âWhoops!' the First Officer exclaimed as it was snatched from his hand and the kitten shot under the table with its trophy. âNearly lost a couple of fingers there!'
Colly wasn't purring any longer, but was making a low growling sound as she stared gimlet-eyed at the First Officer.
âAnd tell that bloody Hunter I'm no threat to her babies, will you?' the First Officer said. âAfter all, she was
my
Hunter, once upon a time.'
Mrs Burrows laughed. âShe doesn't mean it. And she'll be your Hunter again the moment her hormone levels are back to normal.'
The kitten emerged from under the table and jumped up so that both of its forepaws rested on the First Officer's thigh. It may have been less than two months old, but it was already
larger than any Topsoil domestic cat.
With a shake of its head, the Hunter kitten dropped the Styx rag doll in the First Officer's lap. âWell, will you look at this? I think I've made a friend here. He wants to play.'
âOh, that one,' Mrs Burrows exhaled. âHe's the biggest and greediest of them all. Just like Bartleby.'
âHe's the spitting image of his old man too. So maybe that's what we should call him â Bartleby, in memory of his pa,' the First Officer suggested, as he sent the rag doll flying to the other end of the kitchen for the kitten to fetch. Colly growled again, even louder this time. âBut I don't think his mother wants to let him go, though.'
There was a heavy silence in the room until Mrs Burrows spoke. âTalking about letting go, the more I think about it ⦠I should never have let Will go off on that mission. What sort of mother am I?' She didn't give the First Officer time to answer as she added, âHe's been gone for such a long time now, and I have a terrible feeling something must have happened to him.'
The First Officer gave a nod, but then gestured towards the ceiling. âBut everything's falling apart up there. He might have got back and be lying low somewhere ⦠somewhere safe. After all, Drake and the others were with him. They would have looked out for him, and maybe none of them can get messages through to us because of the lockdown.'
Under Mrs Burrows' and the First Officer's direction, the Colony had shut itself off from the surface because the scale of the problems Topsoil were so great, and there was the constant nagging fear that the Styx might eventually focus their attention on the Colony again and re-establish their rule. There had been lockdowns in the past, but these had been imposed
by the Styx, the most recent when Will had escaped with Cal after failing to spring Chester from the Hold. But this new lockdown wasn't to punish the people of the Colony but to protect them. And the good news was that other than going without their consignments of fresh fruit, they were almost self-sufficient again when it came to feeding themselves. The replanted pennybun fields were beginning to produce harvests, and the livestock breeding programme was also well under way.
âYou see â he'll turn up here one day soon. Everything will be just fine,' the First Officer tried to reassure Mrs Burrows. As the kitten reappeared with the toy and jumped up again with its paws on his leg, the First Officer rubbed the skin on its broad head. The kitten let out an appreciative mew. In an instant, Colly was up, her back arched.
âI think you'd better leave Bartleby kitten alone before she goes for you,' Mrs Burrows advised.
âRighty ho,' the First Officer said with a sigh, getting up slowly from his chair with both palms in the air as if he was surrendering. âFar be it for me to rock the boat. It's only my house and my kitchâ'
âSomething's very wrong,' Mrs Burrows burst out, snapping her head around to look at the bare wall. âSomething just happened!'
âWhat â with the wall?' the First Officer asked.
Mrs Burrows' eyes had rotated upwards so that only the whites were showing. âWater â so much you wouldn't believe ⦠and it's heading our way.'
âWhere ⦠how far away?' the First Officer asked urgently.
Mrs Burrows shuddered, her eyes righting themselves. âFar side of the Colony ⦠that direction.' She pointed at the wall.
The First Officer was already rushing towards the door. âIt must be coming through the Labyrynth!' he shouted. âThere must be a cave-in somewhere.' He paused in the doorway, Bartleby kitten watching him curiously. âMy God â if it's the Labyrynth, maybe the breach is in the Eternal City! Remember what Eddie told Drake about a fracture in the roof? Maybe it's that?'
Once in the street outside, Mrs Burrows and the First Officer collared the first person they came across to raise the alarm. Well into her seventies and showing no sign that she was going to stop doing the job she'd held for half a century, Ruby Withers was carrying her stepladder as she went about dusting the glowing orbs at the very top of the streetlamps. The First Officer quickly told her to go to the nearest temple and raise the alarm by ringing the bell.
Ruby caught on quickly. Every Colonist lived with three principal fears: the Discovery (when Topsoilers would learn of the city and invade it), a major fire, and lastly being caught in floodwaters.
Within minutes, the single bell ringing in the nearest temple led to a second sounding in a neighbouring area, and then another, until there was ringing and shouting coming from all over the Colony.
At first there was confusion amongst the people because there was no apparent danger, and even the First Officer allowed himself the hope that Mrs Burrows had been mistaken and that it was a false alarm. But as they came to the edge of the South Cavern, water was already gushing down the track in the middle of the steep tunnel leading up to the Quarter.
âIt's started,' Mrs Burrows said.
The First Officer lumbered quickly up the sharply inclined tunnel and into the first passage that branched off from it. Right at the end of this was a heavy iron door, one of the many that led into the Labyrynth from the Colony. It had been welded shut, and although there was a small trickle of water at its base, there was no sign that anything was amiss.
Not until the First Officer cleaned the glass inspection port in the door and tried to shine his lantern through.
âOh, no,' he said.
Mrs Burrows didn't need to be told that he'd seen the water level rising rapidly on the other side. Her supersense was warning her that all the portals to the Labyrynth were increasingly coming under pressure as thousands of gallons of water poured through its tunnels.
More Colonists were turning up every second. Even the new Governors were mucking in; the First Officer saw Cleaver using his not inconsiderable bulk to haul a cart laden with stone blocks as Squeaky and Gappy Mulligan pushed from behind.
Although many of the skilled artisans â the stonemasons, engineers and other specialists that maintained the Colony's caverns and utilities â had been whisked away by the Styx for their breeding programme, those who were left quickly mobilised. And the carts of stone and equipment drawn from the Colony's building yards kept coming.
With the knowledge that a full-scale breach would lead to their underground city being swamped by thousands of gallons of water, and very likely make it uninhabitable, the Colonists laboured tirelessly to reinforce and shore up the portals into the Labyrynth by constructing reinforcing walls
across them. And where the portals were judged to be strong enough to withstand the weight of water, the Colonists hammered caulking into the joints around the edges of the metal doors in an attempt to stem any seepage.
Mrs Burrows was on hand to give as much information as she was able, although it was becoming more difficult for her as the huge volume of water completely filled the Labyrynth network, stopping her olfactory probes from penetrating into it.
And it was the best part of twenty-four hours before the Colonists took a break from their efforts. Tired, soaked and covered in dirt, they all gathered on the main track, where the flow of water continued but didn't seem to be getting any worse.
âThat much water can't come from anywhere else but the Thames, can it?' Mrs Burrows asked the First Officer.
âI'm afraid that's right,' he answered. âThey blew the canopy over the Eternal City. Exactly as Drake said they might, one day.'
Mrs Burrows shook her head. âBut if they've gone that far, what else are the Styx doing? We have to find out what's happening Topsoil,' she said. âThey might need our help.'
âI don't know â¦' the First Officer said, placing his hefty boot on one of the small streams of water, and watching it find a new course in the damp dirt. âWe've got troubles enough of our own here. Last thing we want is to open up a portal and have the White Necks swoop in on us again.'