Zodiac Station (18 page)

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Authors: Tom Harper

BOOK: Zodiac Station
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In a fury, I thumped my frozen hand against the coal car. The metal rang: a low, mournful noise like a funeral bell. This would be my coffin. Frozen in the dry air, I wouldn’t rot: I’d stay preserved for centuries, maybe until global warming made coal mining economical again and some future miner got the shock of his life when he dumped the first shovelful of coal in the bucket.

I pounded on the steel. I kicked and thumped. The coal car swayed. Eastman was almost behind the barracks now. When he vanished, that would be that. The angels could sing, and Francis Quam would write an empty note to my daughter in Dublin.

They say low frequencies can travel for miles. I don’t know how far my banging went, but it was far enough. Eastman heard. He turned, and this time – glory be – he looked up. I waved a limp arm at him, saw him start to run. I slumped down in the car.

Shock, cold, adrenalin, terror – I had it all. I could hardly hold on for him to climb the ladder. At last his face appeared over my steel horizon.

‘What the hell are you doing in there?’

Twenty

Kennedy

Eastman stood where the monster had been a few minutes before, so close we could almost touch. But those last two metres were a problem. I couldn’t jump back to the pylon – the coal car wasn’t a stable platform, even if I’d had the strength – and the idea of me swinging along the cable like a monkey was laughable, if I’d been in the mood for humour.

Quam liked to say that in a place like the Arctic, procedure will save your life. Ever so pompous, but it’s true. Procedure says that any party in the field has to carry a survival pack, and in that pack there’ll be a thirty-metre length of nylon rope. Eastman fetched the pack and found the rope.

‘Can you tie it round yourself?’

I shook my head. I hadn’t stopped shaking since he got there. He frowned.

‘OK.’

He tied a carabiner to the rope end, so I could clip it around me without having to knot it, and tossed it to me. He looped the rope over the steel hawser, wrapped a couple of turns around one of the wooden posts, and lowered me to the ground. Not gentle, but I was in no state to care. I almost kissed the ground when I landed.

He dragged me to the nearest building and found a room where the walls were tolerably intact. It wasn’t any warmer than outside, but he shoved me into the bivvy bag and got the MSR stove going. We didn’t speak. For now, the priority was survival. The blood coming back in my hands made me cry out in pain: they’d look pretty ugly in a week or so. At least I had feeling.

Eastman warmed some chocolate between his hands for me, and chipped icicles off the building outside. While they melted, he made me a cup of sweet tea with water from our Thermos. The heat from the cup sent tremors through my hands; when I sipped it, I thought my teeth would explode. I forced it down.

‘You picked one hell of a time to play hide and go seek,’ Eastman said.

I told him everything that had happened. I didn’t think he’d believe me – with a cup of tea in my hand, I hardly believed it myself – but he never challenged me. I was grateful for that. If anything, he seemed slightly distracted. He kept glancing at the door. Perhaps he was worried the gunman would come back. I certainly was. Each time the ice popped and cracked in the pot, I imagined a heavy footstep on the stairs, that faceless man approaching through the rotten building.

‘DAR-X wear yellow jackets,’ Eastman said when I’d finished.

‘I thought of that too.’

‘You didn’t recognise him? From when we visited Echo Bay?’

‘There wasn’t much to go on.’

The water had finally melted and boiled. He made me another cup of tea, then poured the remainder into two of the dehydrated meal packs.

‘I called Jensen. He was heading back to Zodiac. He has to refuel, then he’ll come right out. Should be a couple of hours.’

I lay back in the bivvy bag. A blissful glow had started warming through me. If I closed my eyes I saw euphoric white light.

Don’t go to sleep
, I warned myself. The gunman was still out there. So, for that matter, was the bear. I forced my eyes open.

Across the room, Eastman was giving me a crooked look.

‘What?’

‘There’s another option, of course.’

‘Another option for what?’

‘There’s how many people on this island? A couple dozen, maybe thirty if you count the students? That guy who just tried to kill you, he’s still around. Do you want to go back to Zodiac, wait until he finds us again?’

Extraordinary question. ‘I want to go back to Zodiac so I can get away from him.’

‘Or do we try and get him where we know he’s at?’ Eastman leaned forward, a predatory set to his jaw.


Get him
?’ I repeated. ‘I’m not John Wayne.’

Eastman picked up his rifle and squinted down the sight. ‘We’ll be ready for him.’

‘And what makes you so sure he’ll come back?’

A bright white grin. Wolfish, you might say, if wolves had access to modern orthodontics.

‘Because you’re still alive.’

And that seemed like a fine reason to go home. Quit while I was ahead. It’s a thin line you walk in the Arctic at the best of times, and I’d very nearly gone over the edge. I needed food, warmth and rest. Then there was the matter of my patients, Anderson and Trond, who needed my care back at base.

But I’d spent days blundering around, and it had nearly killed me. The figure on the cableway terrified me, true, but running away wouldn’t cure that. The only way to escape – really, truly escape – was to get answers.

Eastman called Jensen on the satphone and said we were spending the night. ‘Tell Quam we’ve got high winds at Vitangelsk. We’ll let you know when it’s safe.’

I heard Jensen’s surprise through the speaker. It must have been a calm day at Zodiac.

‘Just tell him,’ Eastman said, and rang off.

‘Do you trust Jensen?’ I asked.

‘What do you mean?’

I hesitated. I’d spoken without thinking – but now that I had, I wanted to go on. I was too tired for games. And Eastman had saved my life.

‘Someone at Zodiac’s been leaking information to the oil companies,’ I began. ‘Whoever it is, I think that person killed Hagger – either because he was in on it, or because he found out.’

It was the first time I’d mentioned the possibility of Hagger’s murder to him. He didn’t look shocked, not even surprised. He must have been thinking along the same lines.

‘Are you sure?’

‘Hagger was moonlighting for DAR-X,’ I went on. ‘They were up here the day he died, and then they kindly helped bring in his body.’

‘So they were in the same place. Why would they go for Hagger?’

‘You know, it’s not oil they’re drilling at Echo Bay. It’s something called methane …’ I stumbled over the word ‘… clathrate. So bad, it’ll make oil and gas look like eco fuels.’

‘Who told you that?’

I decided to leave Fridge out of it. ‘Hagger found out. I don’t know who else knows. It might be a secret worth keeping.’

Eastman took a silver hip flask out of his coat. ‘JD. You want some?’

I demurred. He took a long swig. ‘If you’re right – and it sounds kind of crazy to me – then Hagger must have been acting alone. He was the only one of our guys up this end of the island that day.’

‘He wasn’t.’ I sat up in the bivvy bag and leaned forward. ‘Ash was, too. Jensen dropped him off right here in Vitangelsk.’

For the first time, I sensed he might be taking me seriously. ‘Jensen kept that quiet.’

‘Ash warned him he’d get in trouble if he told.’

Eastman put away the flask and picked up the rifle. Working quickly, hardly looking, he unclipped the magazine and ejected the cartridges.

‘You think the guy on the cableway could have been Ash?’

I’d wondered. ‘He seemed too big. It was hard to get a good look.’

‘Maybe we’ll get a better view tonight.’ Eastman reloaded the magazine, pressing the bullets down one by one with his thumb. He snapped it back into the rifle and chambered a round.

‘I’ll keep watch. You get some rest.’

As well as the rifle, he kept a flare pistol strapped to his thigh – a snub black thing that looked like a child’s toy. He loaded a flare into the pistol but left it broken open. He put it on the floor next to me.

‘For you. Just in case.’

I didn’t sleep well. My hands ached like an old lady’s; even in the bivvy bag, I couldn’t stop shivering. With my eyes open, the room seemed dark and dim; when I closed them, the night seemed far too bright. Every creak in the building had my imagination working overtime. And every time I started to drift off, the man in the yellow parka reared up in my mind’s eye like a bear, killing my dreams before they began.

But I must have fallen asleep – or I wouldn’t have woken up. Eastman was shaking my arm. The first thing I saw was the rifle on his shoulder.

I glanced at my watch: 4 a.m.

‘What is it?’

‘Come and see.’

I’d slept fully clothed. I pulled on my boots and gloves, and followed Eastman out the door. Even that close to the twenty-four-hour day, some primitive part of my circadian clock picked out the signs of morning: the empty streets, the dewy silence.

I was fooling myself. A ghost town’s streets are always empty, and there hasn’t been dew on Utgard for about ten million years. In the distance, I heard a faint drone like a buzzing fly.

We tramped over the crisp snow to the edge of town. The noise got louder. On my left, the pylons marched away across the ridge. Down the slope, the sun gleamed off a lone snowmobile racing up the valley from the south.

We crouched behind the snow that had drifted against the barracks. Eastman handed me his binoculars and pointed. ‘Is that the guy?’

Through the binoculars, the snowmobile jumped into focus. I could even read the manufacturer’s name: Polaris, the same as we used at Zodiac. A hunched figure in a red suit straddled it, though the glare on his visor hid his face.

‘He looks too small,’ I said. But fear grows in memory. Perhaps I’d misremembered him.

Eastman took a turn with the binoculars. ‘He’s hammering that thing.’

We ducked lower. I expected the snowmobile to turn towards Vitangelsk – there was nowhere else to go – but instead it carried straight on, to the end of the valley and up towards the ridge. The engine whined as it fought the steep slope.

Eastman lay flat on the snow bank. I lay beside him, and watched the snowmobile crawl on up. It swerved this way and that, either to avoid obstacles I couldn’t see, or perhaps because the driver was looking for something.

Eastman gave me the binoculars again. I needed a moment to pick out the snowmobile; when I did, it had stopped, just below the line of the cableway.

The driver got off, walking in that stiff, bandy-legged way you do when you’ve been riding a snowmobile for hours. He must have come from Zodiac. The snowmobile suit, the machine, the rifle on his back – they were all standard-issue equipment.

Could it be the man from yesterday? Why would he have gone back, got a snowmobile, changed his clothes? But who else would come here at this time of morning?

He lifted off his helmet and put it on the seat. He had his back to me, and his balaclava hid his hair. I waited for him to turn around.

‘Can you see who it is?’ Eastman reached for the glasses, but I kept hold of them. I had to know.

And then the man disappeared. One moment he was a bright red blot against the snowfield. The next, he’d vanished.

Even with the naked eye, Eastman could see he’d gone.

‘Did he see us?’

I shrugged. ‘He must have gone behind a rock. Or down a gully.’ I scanned the hillside with the binoculars. All I saw was snow, and the abandoned snowmobile.

‘If we can’t see him …’ Eastman climbed over the snow bank and started galloping across the hillside. After a moment, and checking I had the flare gun in my pocket, I followed.

At that altitude, the wind had scoured most of the snow off the rocks, but the slope made it heavy going. After a hundred yards, I was puffing; after two hundred, the cold air rasping my lungs made me want to vomit. In the clear air, I could see the snowmobile pin sharp, but it never seemed to get any closer.

Eastman got there first. I caught him up a minute or so later. He pointed to the Zodiac number stencilled on the snowmobile’s cowling.

‘Definitely one of ours.’

Footprints led away towards a rocky overhang. Orange-brown marks discoloured the snow like a rash. It could have been lichen – there are types that grow in snow and spread like stains – but these weren’t like that. They looked like blood.

Under the overhang, a dark hole opened in the mountainside. Sunk in a hollow, angled away from Vitangelsk, invisible until you were virtually in it. Snow had collected by the entrance, and I could see footsteps leading in, as well as the corrugations of an old snowmobile track. And more of the stains, thicker and bloodier than before.

Eastman aimed the rifle at the cave. I cocked the flare gun.

‘Who’s there?’ Eastman shouted. I hoped he was as confident as he sounded.

Silence. Then a shuffling noise from inside the cave, the clatter of stones. I had a vision of some primal monster woken from sleep, Yeats’s rough beast slouching towards Bethlehem. Or maybe nothing so fanciful. Bears live in caves, after all.

A figure appeared in the blue light around the entrance. He looked shorter than the man who’d chased me up the pylon. I couldn’t see a gun, but I wasn’t taking any chances. I gripped the flare pistol tighter.

He pulled off his balaclava and rubbed his eyes. He stepped into daylight, arms half-raised in a bemused way, as if he couldn’t believe there was really a gun pointing at him. With his red suit, black boots, white beard and pot belly, he looked like nothing so much as Father Christmas.

The pistol shook in my hand.

‘Ash?’

Twenty-one

Kennedy

Ash sat on a rock and rubbed snow out of his beard. If it surprised him to have two colleagues pointing guns at him at four in the morning, here on the upper edge of nowhere, he kept it to himself. Perhaps he expected it.

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