Authors: Joe Ducie
âRig's heating system,' Tommy said. âHot water, air conditioning, water treatment and de-sal.' He pointed to the boilers and tanks, all of them rumbling and tumbling. Subtle vibrations echoed through the steel walkway. âWe need to clean the filters in the heating duct there.'
âWe?'
âYou, Drake.' Tommy pointed him up a ladder alongside one of the wide silver vents. âUp you go, remove that panel there, hop inside and replace the dirty filter with this clean one.' The Tubes crew leader reached into a cardboard box at the base of the ladder and removed a rectangular piece of plastic, crisscrossed with metal mesh.
âThe heating on? I don't want to get fried.'
Tommy slapped his forehead. âWhat was I thinking? Damn, son, you'd think it was my first day on the job.' He stepped over to a panel of dials, levers and buttons. He made a few adjustments to the dials and the sound of air rushing through the vents overhead became a low hum. âTwo and a half years I've been doing this, Drake. Now get up there. You've got five minutes before the heating automatically cycles back up. Warden don't like to be cold.'
Drake tucked the new filter under his arm and began to climb the ladder. The vent was only about three metres above his head, but carrying the filter made the climb difficult.
âSo the eastern platform heats the whole Rig, huh?' he asked Tommy as he fiddled with the sliding panel on the vent.
âThat's right. If we don't keep this running then we'll freeze in January when the cold really sets in.'
The whole Rig â¦
Drake thought, as he slid the panel loose and crawled up into the vent. A burst of balmy air hit him in the face and warmed him through.
That means it's all connected.
Those silver vents running under the clear corridors between platforms ⦠they were air ducts, all leading back to the eastern platform.
Learn something new every day.
With all the muck and grime still clinging to him from the pipework, changing the filter proved to be a lesson in patience. The vent was caked in dust and fluff, but he managed to swap the old filter for the new. Drake cursed as unlatching the screen caused a plume of dust to explode outwards into his face. The dust stuck to him like he'd been tarred and feathered.
Tommy smirked as he came down the ladder. âMerry Christmas.'
Drake tossed the old filter at his head.
New Year's passed with as much fanfare as Christmas, and Drake was awake to see it as his tracker crossed over from
2359
to
0000
on December 31st.
âHappy New Year,' Tristan muttered in the darkness from his bottom bunk. â2026. I think I'll go travelling. Take a gap year away from this place. Yup, sounds good.'
The first few weeks of January were bitterly cold. Cool arctic winds covered the pipes and outer layers of the Rig in frost. Tubes became an almost fulltime job, and two extra crews were assembled from the inmates to de-ice and thaw the critical systems. Once again, the trained engineers and technicians journeyed down from the warmth of the control tower to supervise.
During free time on January 15th, Drake sat idle in one of the chairs in the common room overlooking, as all the outer rooms did, the vast and empty ocean. Today was his two-month anniversary. He had spent exactly eight weeks on the Rig, and had come no closer to figuring out how not to spend the next two hundred and fifty-two weeks here. He had long since given up on trying to pick the lock on his tracker. However the device was held together, it wasn't with a tumbler or any normal lock.
Perhaps if I break my thumb I could slip it off ⦠No, I'd never get it over the wrist.
Overhead, the flat-screen TVs drilled into the walls churned through Alliance-approved programming. â
Join Crystal Force â Enhance, Explore, Excel â and make a difference today!'
Or the always popular:
âAlliance Systems â safeguarding the future of corrections across the world. Providing humane rehabilitative facilities, the Alliance is committed to global safety.'
âDrake, fancy a game of pool?' Mario asked.
Drake gave him a brief grin. âThink I'm off to bed, actually, mate. Storm's rolling in â Tubes'll be a mess by tomorrow.'
âSuit yourself. Want me to come read you a bedtime story?'
Drake considered, then shook his head. âSod you and your story.'
Mario flipped him off and darted away. âGreg! Game of pool?'
The walk down four tiers from the common room was as dull as ever. The scent of the Rig, old crude oil and salt, could never be completely masked by the air-conditioning system or the cleaning crews. No, that was a smell that had seeped into the Rig's bones, as surely as weary resignation was seeping into Drake's. If he didn't get off this platform soon, he was sure he'd go mad.
As mad as Tristan's last cellmate
. Drake hadn't seen Tristan since breakfast. He'd been called away by Hall to the control tower â Warden Storm wanted to see him. Nothing good could come of that, Drake had thought at the time.
Five years is too long â¦
Drake entered 36C and washed his face in the sink. Places like this, in Drake's experience, hurt the people they claimed to help. They were more harm than good. Kids who made mistakes, who were forced into crime by trial or circumstance, were served justice from the courts, sentenced away, and all but forgotten about. The Rig, and places like it, screwed people up. Sure, the violent and disturbed people needed help, to be restrained from harming themselves and others, but at what point did justice become vengeance? As far as Drake was concerned, the Alliance â and the -governments across the world that supported the Alliance â had long since crossed that line.
Lost in his thoughts, Drake didn't hear Tristan shuffle into their cell until he sank down onto his bed and muttered, âAnother year.'
Drake spat out a mouthful of toothpaste. âEh?'
âThey put another year on my sentence, for swiping Brand's baton.' He heaved a massive sigh, and whispered, âI'm back at the start â¦'
Drake finished brushing his teeth in silence, not quite knowing what to say. Tristan had only done what he'd done to protect Drake â to save his life. Grey would've stuck him for sure with his strange glowing knife if Tristan hadn't acted. What had Brand said?
There was no knife, Mr Drake
.
He felt guilty for what had happened to Tristan, but it wasn't his problem, and what could he do about it, in the end?
Take him with you when you escape
, whispered a small voice in the back of his mind. Drake shook his head. He didn't have an escape plan, not even the fuzzy outline of one, and he'd learnt well at Cedarwood not to make friends.
âSorry,' he said, climbing up onto the top bunk. âThat's rough.'
âS'not your fault,' Tristan muttered, half his face squished into his pillow.
As Drake slipped into bed he thought he'd never heard so much defeat in one voice. He bit his lip, lying in silence for a long moment, and then sighed. âI never said thanks, did I? For what you did.'
âI'd ask you to buy me a Twix or something from the vending machines, but ⦠what's your score now?'
Drake glanced at his tracker.
$-995
. âClosing in on the full thousand. I'll have it by the morning.' He tapped the tracker against the wall. âYou know, these things really are pretty damn secure.'
âNot as secure as you think â¦' Tristan muttered.
âSay what?'
Tristan was quiet for a long moment and then Drake heard him take a deep breath. âYou asked what I did to get here? Why I'm a “special case”, like you?'
Drake sat up. âYes?'
âI ⦠I did something, and a lot of people got hurt. Some died.'
âWhat did you â?'
âYou've seen me in lessons, right. How I use the pen and paper and don't actually touch the computer.'
âYeah.'
âThat's because I'm not allowed to touch a computer again.' Tristan sniffed. âWell, not for the next five years, according to the judge who threw me to the Alliance down in Perth. Don't think they care about the lessons anyway.'
Drake agreed. He was sure there was more to the Rig than he and Tristan knew about. He was certain some of the inmates were in on the secret â Alan Grey, and his gang â and he was certain that it was dangerous. Very dangerous. He thought of Irene.
I'll be waiting. On every fifth day at midnight.
âSomething strange is going on in this place, mate.'
âYou only just getting that, huh?' Tristan laughed bitterly.
Their trackers beeped as one, marking half nine and lights out. The automatic steel cell door slid across, locking them inside for another night. The overhead light flickered and died, leaving nothing but flashing lights outside the window, along the outside of the platform, casting the dancing shadows along the wall in the cell blood-red.
âWhy aren't you allowed to touch a computer?'
Tristan sighed. âBecause last time I did eight people died. God, eight people
died
.' He moaned and Drake heard him shuffling around. âIt wasn't like I meant to do it, but it happened, and that's why I'm a special case, Drake. Most of the kids in here, they ⦠they did mean to do what they did. To kill or ⦠or worse, I guess. They knew what they were doing. Mine was an accident.'
Drake said nothing. Tristan was working his way towards whatever he wanted to say, moving in slow circles around the truth.
âMy dad's a software engineer. He's pretty good with computers, and I used to watch him all the time growing up. He'd teach me things. By the time I was five I knew three coding languages, and was working on my fourth. My dad was good with them, but I was a natural. I could do anything online, anything. They used to call it hacking, once upon a time. Now it falls under the International Cyber Terrorism Act.'
âCall what hacking?'
âI was one of the best by the time I was twelve. Diving in and out of networks â civilian, military, it didn't matter. I was ⦠I've thought about it a lot, since coming here. I was too clever. That's what happened, in the end, I was too clever and I didn't see all the people I was affecting. All I saw was the display, you know. Lines of code, numbers on a screen, moving information back and forth like it was a game.'
Drake kept silent, which Tristan took as invitation to continue.
âBy the time I was thirteen, I'd figured out that people were willing to pay for access to the networks, or to have those networks destroyed, modified, unlocked and dispersed ⦠Everything is connected these days, Drake. I mean everything. I could hack into NATO using one of the consoles behind the counter at Burger King.'
âReally?'
Tristan chuckled grimly. âNo, not really, but you get the idea. I was good.'
âSo what happened?'
âLike I said, I didn't see the people, you know. Just the screen. I ⦠I shut down the power grid for all of Perth one night. A million people in the dark. Sounded cool, you know, and I wanted to see if I could do it. They still use the old CERCO systems down there â¦'
Drake didn't know what that was, but from the tone of Tristan's voice he imagined it was something outdated. âSo you switched off the lights?'
âAll of Perth, in the dark, in the middle of summer, where the heat often forces power cuts anyway. The generator at Princess Margaret Hospital couldn't handle it, and blew. Eight patients there died, and a whole load more got a lot worse.' Drake could almost feel the wave of despair from the bunk below. âOne of the patients was only nine years old â¦'
âDamn, mate,' Drake said. âI ⦠I don't know what to say. So they caught you and threw you in here?'
âThey didn't catch me. Like I said, I was good. One of the best for my age, even. No way they could have found me.' There was pride in Tristan's voice, but also regret. âI turned myself in.'
Silence reigned in the small cell for a few minutes. Drake could hear Tristan shuffling around.
âI don't want to talk about it any more, Will.' Tristan sighed, and Drake was thankful for the dark, because he thought he heard tears in that sigh. Last thing he needed was the awkwardness that would follow seeing Tristan cry. âLet's just say I deserve to be here and leave it at that.'
Thinking of how isolated the Rig was from the real world, of Tubes and the heavy-handed tactics of the guards, particularly Brand, and of that line between justice and vengeance, Drake said, âI don't think anyone deserves to be here, mate.'
âYeah,' Tristan said. âMaybe not.'
Something Tristan had said a few minutes ago clicked over in Drake's mind.
Not as secure as you think â¦
âTristan, do you know how to get the trackers off?'
Nothing save silence from the bottom bunk. After a minute, Drake turned to face the wall, thinking Tristan was done talking for the night. Then a moment later a tiny, almost inaudible word floated up from below.
âYes â¦'
Drake tried, in the weeks following Tristan's revelation, to enlist his help in removing the tracker, but his cellmate wouldn't budge. His reluctance irked Drake, who didn't like to rely on anyone for anything, but despite his best efforts he had failed to come up with a way of removing it himself, short of cutting off his hand. Despite his frustration, Drake needed Tristan. But Tristan seemed resigned to a fate that saw them both spending the next five years on the Rig.
In the first week of February, Tommy cornered Drake after work in Tubes and handed him an old, faded jumpsuit.
Drake held the suit up and raised an eyebrow. The number 10 was scrawled crudely on the back in black spray paint. Ruby-red stains also dotted the collar, the sleeves, and â well, most of the suit. Drake didn't like to think what those stains might be.
âWhat's all this then, Tommy?'
Tommy stroked his beard and grinned. As of two nights ago, he was officially eighteen and one of the Rig's adult inmates. Drake almost envied the two years he had left on his sentence. âYou ever heard of rigball, William?'
âDon't call me that, and no, no I haven't.'
âWell, you're our crew's new rigball wingman. Congratulations.'
Mario punched the air and applauded. Greg and Neil, as always, glared and smirked.
âNo, thanks,' Drake said and tossed the suit back at Tommy.
Tommy's smile faded. âWe need a sixth since Anderson was sent home, and you're it, Drake. We all saw you fight your first day here. You can look after yourself, which is what rigball is all â'
âNo means no, mate.' Drake ran a hand back through his hair. He could do that now â his fuzzy dark brown hair was fast becoming a mop. Last time he'd had hair this long was years ago.
âDid we mention,' Mario said casually, âthat we're one of only two teams in the league? And that the other is captained by none other than Alan Grey, your best mate?'
Drake considered, then nodded. âIs that so?'
Tommy pushed the jumpsuit jersey into Drake's chest. âYou play, or you're on crap tubes until you do.'
âThe winter league starts up in a fortnight,' Greg growled, stroking the scraggly mess on his chin that he thought passed for a beard. âWe get to practise Wednesdays and Fridays during free time, on the field up on top of the centre platform.'
Drake recalled seeing the âfield' during his excursion to the infirmary. He had seen tiered seating surrounding a concrete slab, with two worn nets at either end. Hard to call something so devoid of plant life a field, but then here they all were on an oil rig being called a prison.
âWhat are the rules?' Drake asked, turning the jumpsuit over in his hands.
âYou ever played lacrosse?' Mario asked.
âYears ago during PE at school. The one with the sticks and the ball?'
âThat's the one. Well, rigball is just like lacrosse, only more â¦
electrifying
.' Mario snorted and Tommy slapped him upside his head.
âThe racquets are magnetised, so is the ball. When we're in control, going to score, we have to pass the ball between three of our racquets before a goal can be made. The other side can intercept, steal possession.' Tommy waved his hand back and forth and chuckled. âBody checking is not only allowed, but encouraged. That's where you come in, Drake. None of these pansies would dare touch Grey out on the field, but we figure you've got nothing to lose.'
Drake actually laughed. âHe's going to kill me anyway, huh? Might as well make myself useful before then.'
Tommy grinned and clapped him on the shoulder. âNow you're being a team player.'
Drake glanced at the wicked scar tissue that stretched in a thin line across his arm from Grey's knife attack. A little payback was more than deserved, and if he could do it without any headaches from the guards â¦
He slung the jersey over his shoulder. âPractice tomorrow night, then?'
The next night a cool snap to the air had Drake shivering in his jumpsuit, bouncing on his toes, as Tommy and the lads handed out old, battered bicycle helmets from a large wooden trunk, along with shin and elbow pads, and a thin chest plate. Drake and Mario had just hauled the trunk up five tiers of cells and across platforms, with the help of a large boy Drake had never met before named Emir. He was from Turkey, the team's goalkeeper, and spoke no English.
The sweat running down Drake's back threatened to freeze now, as he watched his breath mist on the air, under a cloudless sky scattered with roughly ten billion stars.
The field atop the centre platform had been fitted with a few more features since Drake had last seen it on his way to the infirmary. That building was all quiet, save for a few lights shining between the blinds. He wondered if Irene was in there, and thought it more likely she was in whatever passed for the girls' common room on the northern platform. Fresh white paint marked the borders of the field â a football pitch made of stone â and at either end stood a goal about the size of an ice-hockey net. Strung above the hockey nets was a board of circular lights, three in a row, that looked like it had been nicked from a traffic intersection. A separate raised box of seating, with a shaded tin roof, stood behind the far net. A simple scoreboard hung from the roof of the box seating.
âWhat are the lights above the nets for?' Drake asked.
âThat's so we can see how many passes we've made. Remember, three before we can score, and it resets if we lose possession,' Mario said. He hefted a long, thin racquet from the trunk and tossed it at Drake.
Drake caught it and his eyes widened at the weight. The handle was wooden, reinforced with strips of thin steel and wrapped with what looked like gauze bandages. There was a small button embedded in the handle about halfway along its length. At the top an oval-shaped plate was ringed with an array of small metal lumps, interconnected with wires that ran into the handle, and backed against a net of hard, stretched leather.
âSwitch it on like this.' Mario flicked a switch at the base of the racquet and a tiny blue light lit up the plate.
âWait â' Tommy cried.
Half a dozen racquets were thrown from the trunk as something exploded from within and flew through the air. Drake only had time to gasp before a heavy metal sphere, about the size of a tennis ball, smashed into his racquet and tore it from his arm. The racquet landed with a dull clunk, handle sticking straight up and humming softly.
Emir, the large Turkish goalkeeper, grunted harsh laughter.
âBlimey,' Drake said, as Tommy gave Mario yet another slap. He hefted his racquet back up, with the ball in the net. It was heavy, but manageable if he was expecting the ball. He gave the racquet a practice toss, but the ball was well and truly stuck to the magnetised net.
As the other lads picked up their racquets from the mess Mario had caused, Tommy explained a few more of the rules. âIf you've got possession, as you do now, then you've got to pass within three seconds or we'll be penalised. Understood? Better to lose possession than hold it too long, because that gives the other team time to organise their field.'
âHow do I â' Drake lifted the racquet over his shoulder and swung with all his might. The ball remained stuck to the net. ââ toss it?'
Mario snorted. âThought a guy your age would've figured that out by now.'
Greg and Neil laughed as Tommy pointed to the small black button on the handle of the racquet. âSwing just like you did then, and hit that button when you've got the aim right. Let's do a practice one.'
Tommy jogged across the hard, concrete field, about a dozen metres away. He switched his racquet on and, under starlight and the pale, poor lights blinking along the top of the platform, gestured at Drake.
With a shrug, Drake took a lunge forwards and hurled the rigball as hard as he could. The racquet swung over his head and, at the top of the arc â
when you've got the aim right
â he pressed the button in the handle.
The ball
flew
from his net, straight for Tommy, and snapped back as if on a tight elastic band. For the second time, the force of the impact pulled the racquet from Drake's hands.
âYou're supposed to keep the net demagnetised until the ball's properly away,' Mario said, tutting and shaking his head. âKeep the button pressed a good second or two after you've hurled it.'
âRight.'
Of course
. Drake lined up another shot and this time the ball flew true, if a little wide, as Tommy had to take a staggering step to the side, into his racquet. It struck Tommy's net with a loud chime.
âIf the scoreboard was switched on, you'd see a light in one of those traffic lights,' Neil said, pointing to the goals at either end of the field.
âYeah, I get it.' Drake flexed his arm. He'd need a bit more practice, if he didn't want to wrench his shoulder from its socket.
Neil scoffed. âSure, you get it. Let's see how well you do when Grey's thugs are throwing that thing at your head and smashing you into the ground.'
Drake exhaled a cloud of misty, warm air into the cool night and picked up his helmet. âI'll be right, mate. I've got a bicycle hat.'
Later that night, just before lights out, Drake stumbled into 36C covered in welts and bruises and cursing the sport of rigball. He hadn't stayed cold for long, up on the centre platform. No, no. Tommy had seen to that. After an hour and a half of running drills and tossing a heavy metal ball at each other as hard and fast as they could, Drake had been ready to strip down to his boxer shorts. All the rules of rigball, possibly the most dangerous sport he had ever played, fumbled around in his head.
Three passes to a goal ⦠The keeper doesn't get a racquet, just catcher's mitts ⦠No, checking above the shoulder is a foul â¦
Tristan chuckled when he saw him, lying on his bunk and reading his tech magazines purchased from the vending machines in the common room. Drake was sure Tristan was the only one on the Rig that bothered with those magazines.
I guess if he can't touch a computer, he can at least read about them
.
âI can't believe you signed up for rigball,' he said. âI've been here for two seasons of it, and do you know how many bones have been broken?'
âNo â¦'
âI don't think the infirmary does either. There's a reason they built the field next to the doctor's office, you know.'
Drake chuckled and went over to the sink. He found it a touch too painful and didn't bother to wash. The climb up the ladder into his bunk was the Rig's worst torture yet, but he sighed with relief once he was up on his paper-thin mattress and cardboard pillow. The trackers beeped over
2130
a moment later, and the solid steel cell door slid closed, sealing them in yet another night.
âIf I die in my sleep,' Drake groaned, watching the orange lights from outside play along the wall, âbury me at sea, would you?'
âSure thing.'
Staring at his tracker, as the minutes ticked by towards ten o'clock, Drake cursed the device and tried, once again, to pull it from his wrist. He attempted to weasel his fingers under the edge of the tracker, between his skin and the hard shell, but it was clamped on too tight. He smacked it hard against the bed frame, but that barely scratched the finish of the device.
âThese things,' he muttered, âare really well made. What say you get this thing off me now, Tristan?'
âYou know I can't touch them, Will,' Tristan said, a note of honest regret in his voice. âBesides, what if I do get it off? What's your next move? The guards are all over this place, half the doors between platforms are sealed and need swipe cards, and let's mention the security cameras, shall we?'
âWe shall not.'
âI just don't see it, you know.' Tristan paused. âI mean, say you get through all that â and you won't â what next? There's a hundred miles of ocean, at least, between the Rig and the mainland.'
Drake thought of Tubes, of the vast array of vents and wide conduits that interconnected the diamond-shaped platforms of the Rig. âI've been secretly whittling a canoe out of soap, elbow grease, unicorn tears and a teaspoon of shenanigans. Almost ready to set sail, if only I could get this damn tracker off.'
âCan I see the canoe?'
âYou can, yes, if you use your imagination.'
Tristan chuckled and then fell silent.
Drake held his breath. He could almost hear Tristan's mind working, weighing up whether or not to help him.
âI ⦠I could do it,' he said finally. âBut what if you got hurt?' The last was barely a whisper, and Drake knew Tristan was thinking of the people he had hurt last time he'd messed with computers.
âI'm already getting hurt, mate, and â¦' He paused, wondering just what to say. Drake needed to escape â for reasons more important to him than anything in his life. âLook, you'll just have to trust me, but if you don't help me, if I can't escape ⦠then someone
is
going to get hurt. Maybe ⦠maybe even die.'
Tristan sighed. He was quiet again for a few minutes, shuffling around in his bunk. Drake heard him sit up, as the orange lights danced on the walls, playing with the shadows like the tide washing in and out.
âI'll try,' he said. âI'll give it a shot, I guess. But you have to understand that it may not work, okay?'
Drake swallowed hard and felt a flutter of excitement rise up from his stomach and into his throat. He shivered as goosebumps rippled up and down his arms. âThanks.'
âGive me a week or so. I'll need to gather a few things, then explain to you how hard this is going to be.'
âHow you gonna do it?'
âYou can't just hit it with a hammer, okay? Although I'm sure you've considered it. Best that'll do is shatter your wrist. I'm going to have to think about it and ⦠Look, just leave it for now, Will. I said I'll do it, I just need time.'