“You got family, Truman?” Hadley asked without looking up from his screen. He was sweating, leaning closer to the computer than ever, eyes alight with text and numbers and whatever else he was absorbing.
“Yeah… ” the soldier said.
“Kids get through that tunnel alive, you won’t anymore.” Hadley didn’t even glance up. Sitterson nodded at the screen-the Rambler sliding around a curve, headlamps lighting the trees, wheels spinning-and decided to give Truman three seconds.
At the count of one he’d stepped aside and hit the panel to open the door.
“Good choice,” Sitterson said, and he started to run.
Demolition was one level down, and the staircase was at the end of this corridor, past the dog-leg and past Chem. He reckoned thirty seconds. He wasn’t as young or as fit as he used to be, but he ran faster than he had in years, ignoring the pains in his toes and shins, the burning of his lungs, the thumping of his heart.
“Make a hole!” he shouted at a couple of guards milling outside Chem. “Fucking
In his earpiece Hadley’s voice was shrill.
“I can’t override! It’s asking me to run a systems diagnostic!”
“By the time that’s finished,
“Good luck, Buddy.” Sitterson smiled and ran faster, skidding around the dog-leg, pushing between two strolling workers and barreling through the swing-doors leading into the stairwell. He slid down the handrails, quick but cautious-a broken ankle now would mean the end of everything-and then back out into the corridor below. First door to the right was Sustenance, and when he drew level with the door to Demolition he kicked it open and ran inside.
There was a guard standing to the left, hand on the butt of his gun. Sitterson glared at him and rushed by.
A second to scan the Demolition control room and he knew where the problem was. One large control panel was dark-power off-and from beneath came sparks and flashes. A man and a woman were working the panel, the man flicking a switch back and forth as if persistence could lure electricity back to him, the woman running diagnostic on a wired-up laptop.
“It’s not the breakers!” the man said, glancing up as he saw Sitterson approach.
“Fuck is going on in here?”
“We don’t know!” the guy whined. “Electrical said there was a glitch up top, one of the creatures?”
“The tunnel should have been blown hours ago!” Sitterson said.
The woman glanced up at him-pretty, terrified- and said, “We never got the order!”
“You need me to tell you to wipe your ass?” He shoved the man aside, glanced down at the laptop screen. She was stuck on the fucking
“We’re fried inside,” she said, a quaver to her voice. “We need a clean connection to the detonator-” Sitterson snorted, dropped to the floor and crawled beneath the unit. If they needed a clean connection then why were they fucking around with switches and trying to run a fucking diagnostic! She was stuck on the password, for fuck’s sake! He closed his eyes and breathed deeply, trying to chill, shedding the fearful anger and shifting focus to what needed doing and what
After two seconds he opened his eyes again and pulled half a dozen quick-release bolts. Plastic covering fell away and a mass of wires and circuits was revealed.
“Okay, I need you to tell me exactly what went down first and how long after the other systems followed. And hand me a voltmeter.”
“Systems Tech is trying a reboot on the-” the guy started, but Sitterson cut in.
“We don’t have time. Talk me through.”
As the guy talked, Sitterson started checking boards until he found the one that had fried. He noted the number and shouted up for a replacement. It took thirty seconds for the woman to drop one in his hand, and another thirty before he’d replaced it with wire clips.
Something hummed, and he saw some of the surface indicators lighting up through the guts of the panel above him.
“We good?” he asked.
“No, that’s just local,” the woman said. “It’s not linked.
“Shit!”
“Lin’s here,” Hadley said through his earpiece.