The Dark Somnium - "Sometimes It's Better To Leave The Survivors Behind"
Episode Date: September 14, 2023This Creepypasta scary story is from the creepypasta website, written by Hayden Dalby, make sure to check out the original story and support the author: "I'm stationed at a Secret Government Facility,... Sometimes it's better to leave the survivors behind"https://www.creepypasta.com/sometimes-its-better-to-leave-survivors-behind/ Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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They said it was nothing, a routine rescue op at a facility known as the Tantalus site.
But that quickly proved untrue, terribly, horrifically untrue.
The report said we'd be flying into the Boglan province of northern Afghanistan,
where rugged mountains cut through a remote and arid wilderness.
According to the dossier, we were responding to fragmented reports of a fallout of some sort of biological toxin
that made sarin and mustard gas look like helium.
Its official name was H.N.211.
The last contact was a month ago.
Whorls of air whipped at my face as I looked at the dossier.
The report flapped in my hand as our chopper tilted over the craggy hills,
which were rapidly turning into soaring, snow-touched mountains.
The Hindu Kush had been the perfect place for our military to build the testing facility.
Incredibly difficult terrain to navigate on land,
a tiny population, thousands of valleys, cliffs, and caves to conceal themselves in.
It seemed ideal.
I worked with an aeromedical evacuation unit.
We specialized in getting our wounded out of tight spots and treating life-threatening injuries
under the worst conditions.
Blood, bile, bullets, brains, bodies.
It was fair to say I could hold my own in high-pressure scenarios.
But something about this op unnerved me.
The photos of the facility we were heading to were ten years out of date, and they showed nothing
more than a giant steel door cut into the overhang of a steep cliff.
I could only wonder at the scale of the photos, the cost of building such a thing somewhere
as isolated as this.
The few photos showcasing the inside of the facility showed a cavern the size of a gymnasium
filled with tables, vehicles, and tents.
Across from me, Connors yelled out over the roar of the rotors.
His voice was further muffled by the plastic shield of his white hazmat suit.
You see the last picture?
I turned the report to the last page,
bypassing photos of sterile labs, rows of tents,
and smiling scientists and soldiers at their various stations,
and ended on a grainy, black and white image of a perfectly square hole cut directly into the stone.
It sat at the end of a narrow tunnel and thick steel bars covered it.
A sign on one side bore the familiar black and yellow warning,
signs of toxic chemicals.
No information accompanied the photo.
I felt my unease grow.
Connors yelled again.
You hear what sort of shit they were making in there?
I heard its effects were modeled after radiation poisoning.
He shook his head.
Makes you wonder what they tested it on.
I couldn't give him an answer.
I thought about a man I'd rescued after a nuclear plant had been attacked.
His entire body had been covered in layers of blistering, red, and sea.
skin that came off in patches. His flesh was eaten away by lesions and boils, bone visible in
the craters where his body degenerated on a cellular level. A slow, pointedly awful way to go.
Our supervising officer finally ended him with a bullet to the head. Imagineing our military
developing something like that for warfare twisted my guts. What exactly were we walking into?
Our chopper landed in front of the base an hour later.
What few trees grew at this altitude whipped around in a frenzy as the pilot landed us.
I hopped out and stared in awe at the steel door we'd seen in the photos.
It measured 50 feet in height and was wide enough to drive two tanks through side by side.
Years of exposure to the elements had turned its silver sheen to a ruby brown.
Our commanding officer, a serious-looking woman named Keyes, clambered out of the chopper and addressed the 12 members of our squad.
Intel says the last report from this base clocked in a month ago.
All it said was, we're done.
Then they went silent.
We aren't sure whether they mean they're done with their project or something else.
But we've been tasked with going in to check.
Given their silence, we're anticipating a potential hazardous fallout from somewhere in the
the mountain. Our orders are to observe, report, and treat any potential survivors. Got it?
Everyone nodded. We were used to this by now. Sometimes our operations had us climbing through towns
and villages littered with bodies, many in conditions that defied nature. This proved no different.
Keyes approached the door and opened a rested metal cabinet that contained a simple keypad.
She input the complex code our superiors had given us.
us and the doors crept open for the first time in a month. The grinding metal gears and hinges
reminded me of a giant taking its first breath after eons of slumber. Little by little,
the sunlight poured into the depths beyond, and we got our first glimpse of the tantalus sight.
My eyes adjusted to the darkness beyond, and immediately my throat closed up. Connors took a step back,
his hand going to the gun at his hip. Within the recesses of the mountain sat the central cavern
an operating center of the Tantalus site.
Rows of testing labs, comm sites, tables with equipment, tents, barracks, and vehicles filled the
impressive space.
But it looked like someone had bombarded it with a round of mortars.
I could only imagine its original state from the pictures in the report.
Now it all lay in heaps of shattered glass, twisted metal, and scorched wood.
But what made Conner's step back was the volume of blood and remains populating the decimated lab.
Bodies hung limply from tables, limbs were strewn about like litter, the smell and taste
were utterly horrendous, a miasma of rotting meat coupled with the strangely sweet chemical
afterburn.
Across the room, I spotted the torso of a man, sitting keeled over one of the Humveys.
Its head smashed against the steering wheel, as though whoever it belonged to had been trying
to escape and gotten ripped apart in the process.
the inside of the giant metal door were gouges of blood where people had clawed to get out.
Some of the bodies nearby bore fingers worn down to the bone.
Keys led the way forward.
My boots squelched in the leftover remains and stuck fast to the floor as congealed pools of blood
sucked greedily at my boots.
Twenty feet or so to my right lay the body of a female scientist who looked strangely
intact amidst all the carnage.
Her face was contorted in a terrified screen.
but her arms and legs were still attached.
It was only when Connors accidentally bumped a rolling chair supporting her upper body
that her lab coat folded open to reveal the cavity of her hollowed out chest and stomach.
Her face slid away from her skull and a perfectly de-gloved human face landed with a wet splat
at my toes, not a scratch on it.
Who would take the time to do that?
A hundred feet in and we came to the back of the main cavern, where the massive room narrowed,
room narrowed abruptly into a tunnel, perhaps ten feet high and twenty wide.
It stretched deeper into the mountain where I knew a natural system of caves resided.
The smell of meat grew stronger and I could taste the metallic sting of blood on my lips.
Near the entrance of the tunnel sat a pile of limbs, organs, and bones.
Beside them, several peeled skins were stretched between wall fixtures like animal hides.
I shivered at the unsettling display of brutality.
and care. But by far, the worst thing we encountered was the trail of blood, staining the floor
of the tunnel. Obviously, something had stockpiled the meat and skin near the entrance with some
level of intelligence. Then this red, ragged trail showed where it systematically dragged its
fodder deeper into the mountain. I looked at my companions, wondering if any of them might suggest
we do the smart thing and get the hell out of there, but no one did. Keys reminded us of our
mission, and though she looked pale with fear, we had our orders. Search, secure, stabilize.
Remember, if anyone finds survivors, we bring them back to the chopper at all costs. Our
superiors need to know what happened here, whether it's salvageable or...
She swallowed hard.
Whether it needs to be destroyed.
Destroy it, I thought. Let them rain fire and brimstone down on this place.
but I nodded with everyone else.
Now, I need two of you to scout ahead.
Go as far into the compound as you can.
I want to get a comprehensive report on the rest of the facility while the rest of us search the main areas.
And give a heads up for the rest of the team if we find whatever caused all this.
I added silently.
To my surprise, Conner stepped forward.
I'll go.
He said, his expression resolute.
I didn't doubt his courage for a minute.
but he'd looked pretty unsteady when we first came in.
Without thinking, I stepped forward.
Me too.
Keyes looked immensely relieved that she didn't have to pick.
Thank you, gentlemen.
You'll search for half an hour, then report back to me.
Got it?
We both nodded.
Ahead of us, the tunnel marched on for what felt like in eternity.
The blood made it resemble the throat of some giant monster.
I looked at Connors.
Ready?
He lifted a severed hand and getting him.
me a thumbs up. I shook my head. Gallo's humor struck at strange times.
Let's go. We continued into the darkness. The vast bulk of the Tantilus site consisted of a long
tunnel winding its way into the depths of the Hindu Kush like a spine, and smaller tunnels
would branch off at regular intervals like ribs. We encountered fewer remains down here. It looked
as though the main bloodbath took place in the facility center.
From time to time we spotted another body.
Usually it had been slashed or bashed into a pulp, but they were all stripped of their vitals
with the same brutish intelligence.
Crusted trails of blood led out of these smaller intersections and joined a carpet of red, brown
sludge winding through the main tunnel.
Eventually, we reached the final offshoot.
The tunnels had grown narrower back here, maybe half a mile from the main cavern.
The remains also thickened once again, and that scent cloyed my nose stronger than ever.
Giving a nod to Connors, I rounded the corner.
Rodding remains hung from every visible surface.
Brown stains rusted the stone walls.
Before me loomed a small opening in the concrete, perhaps five feet by five feet.
The steel bars across it had been bashed inward.
I approached cautiously.
The light of my flashlight danced around.
that black opening. The darkness beyond ate every speck of light that touched it. I came up to its
edge and slowly peered inside. My beam flickered weakly into a space that positively reeked with the
overwhelming stench. It clung to me, burned me, and squirmed its way at my nose and down my throat
like fumes of jet fuel. My heart hammered on and on. Something reflected the light of the
beam. Two eyes stared back at me through the darkness.
Linked once, then disappeared.
Anyone down there?
Connors called to me from the main tunnel.
No.
I sat as I turned around to leave.
No survivors down here.
Conners knew the moment I turned back to face him that I was lying.
Bullshit, man.
What did you see?
I held his gaze for a moment.
Eyes, human ones.
He grimaced.
He was about to say something else,
but we were interrupted by a scrabbling sound coming from inside.
the stone opening. It reminded me oddly of my dog's claws scrambling on our polished wood floor
back home. A dark shape flitted across the opening.
Shit.
Connor said, his hand going to a sidearm.
We gotta go.
The scrabbling grew louder and a chittering, clicking sound echoed out of the hole.
A hand, slender jointed and covered in weeping sores, clutched the edge of the opening.
Run!
I whispered.
Together we took off at a dead sprint.
The chittering turned into a feral squeal like a hog bellowing a threat to a predator.
We heard the skittering grow louder and then the bone-chilling sound of something wady slapping
the concrete floor in rapid succession.
Neither of us dared to look back.
Connor was ten feet ahead of me, his boots kicking up flecks of bone and blood in my face.
Whatever was chasing us didn't sound like something on two feet.
I could hear its limbs hitting the ground and frenzied intervals.
like a child running upstairs on all fours.
Its chittering cut away for ragged breathing as it chased after us, and that awful smell
of rotting meat tainted with a chemical afterburn assaulted my sinuses yet again.
We bolted through the tunnel toward the main facility center and were intercepted by Keyes
and another man named Sheaf, a hundred feet from the entrance.
Sheaf held an M4A1 rifle to his cheek and had the barrel aimed in our direction.
In here, both of you!
Keyes shouted, she ordered sheaf to fire the moment we ducked out of the way.
The man pulled the trigger twice, and the shots briefly deafened me in close quarters.
I heard a loud squeal further up the hall, followed by the sound of retreating footsteps.
Hopefully whatever that thing was got the message.
As Keyes hustled us further down the hallway, a ringing subsided in my ears.
For a ridiculous moment, I worried about potentially getting tinnitus.
Then I shook my head.
Of all the things to worry about, a ringing in my ears was nothing.
It was certainly far better than whatever fate had been suffered by the poor bastards sitting
a little further down the hallway.
His skull had been shorn off at the mouth, and oddly, his tongue and teeth were missing.
Carefully, I stepped over him and followed keys through a large metal door, which sheaf quickly
shut behind him.
I spent a minute regaining my heartbeat.
Connors did the same, as we slowly recover.
discovered, we debriefed keys on what we'd seen.
Connors did most of the talking, though he left out the part where I'd initially lied.
After what we'd went through, I think he understood on some level why one might feel compelled
to deny the existence of that thing.
Once I had my heart rate more or less back to normal, I looked around the room we'd
been herded into.
It was a lab, an unusually clean room for what we'd seen beyond that metal door.
It was lined with white tiling and filled with shone.
tiny metal tables, which held various canisters, tubes, and electrical equipment.
While Schiff sat on a low chair by the door to check his weapon,
Keyes went over to another table near the back of the room, where the rest of our team stood.
They were all crowded around something I couldn't make out.
As I approached, I briefly nodded to Bronson and Sykes.
Bronson was a slim, slightly older man, with sandy blonde hair,
flecked in gray in stubble permanently shadowing his chin.
Sykes was a slender woman who came up to my shoulder.
Her dark hair was pulled back into a bun the accented a young, serious face.
The two of them stood beside Larson, the final member of our team.
He had a reedy build, fiery red hair, and thick framed glasses.
Long, slender hands that reminded me of the ones reaching through the gratefully worked
their way over something on the table, something I instantly regretted looking at as soon
as I joined them.
They stood over another man dressed in a lab coat who was laid back on the table.
I was surprised to see he was still alive, albeit unconscious.
At least I prayed he was unconscious.
Larson had rolled the man's right pant leg up to the thigh.
The back of his calf, from his knee to his Achilles' tendon, was nothing but gangrenous flesh
eaten away to the bone.
It looked like something had taken a large, oval-shaped bite out of his leg and left the rest
to fester into oblivion.
I watched as Larson carefully sliced away the infected bits, cleaned the exposed muscle and tissue with a nausea-inducing medicine, and then wrapped the entire thing up in a clean bandage.
Out of all of us, he had the most experience with serious wounds in the field.
He wrapped the man's leg up tight and ordered Bronson and Sykes to make a pair of crutches for the scientist.
As they did that, Connors joined us, and Larson explained how they'd found him.
We were doing a more detailed sweep of the tunnels and we heard some of the tunnels and we heard some.
something clattered down the hallway.
We saw this guy limped toward this lab like a bat out of hell.
Made pretty good time for someone with only half his leg.
He shook his head.
Oh.
I tried telling him we were friendly, but that didn't do much.
He screamed and fought us before we were able to sedate him.
Larson leaned back in his chair, right as Bronson and Sykes returned with makeshift crutches,
made from chair legs and lengths of wire.
I want to amputate it.
But these operating conditions aren't exactly ideal.
Sykes eyed us carefully.
What happened down at the other end of the tunnel?
We heard you guys running and something chittering then Chief's gun going off.
I shook my head.
I don't know what it was, but it was fast and nasty.
What did it look like?
We didn't get a good look at it, but Chief shot at it.
We all looked at the big man.
His square jaw and crew cut would have made him at home in any combat unit.
It was human.
Naked, real skinny, lots of wounds and cuts all over its body.
Didn't seem much more than that before I fired.
How many of them were there?
Bronson asked.
Not sure.
We only saw one, but...
There's no way.
Only one of these things could kill an entire base.
We let that little revelation sink in.
Suddenly, I wanted very badly to get the hell out of there.
But Keyes wanted more information out of our friend.
What exactly happened here?
there might be more survivors deeper in the tunnels.
I selfishly hoped there weren't.
In the meantime, we remained locked behind that door.
Apparently, it was sturdy enough to keep our new scientist's friends safe.
We waited for a little while for the sedative to wear off.
It took maybe 20 minutes.
When the scientist eventually stirred, Larson had Schiff and Connors hold him down, so he couldn't hurt himself.
The scientist opened his eyes slowly, regarded us, and immediately began thrashing.
No!
He howled, arching his back against the table and thrashing so hard, Scheefe almost
lost his grip.
You won't take any more of me, you bastards!
Let me go or kill me!
Hey!
Hey!
Keyes shouted.
She grabbed the man by his shoulders and looked him square in the eyes.
You're not in any danger, okay?
We're part of the medical Evac unit.
We just found you and fixed your leg up.
We're going to get you out of here, all right?
The scientists seemed to calm down a little.
He nodded slowly, and Schief and Connors relaxed their grip.
He tried sitting up and cried out when his leg clipped the table.
Larson immediately reached around to support his shoulders while Sykes caught his leg and
helped him swing it into a sitting position.
I instinctively offered him my canteen, which he accepted gratefully.
He drained nearly half of it before taking another breath, wiping his mouth with a stained sleeve.
He handed it back to me, saying,
Thanks.
Sure thing.
Key is leaned in.
Sir, could you tell me your name?
Ketterman.
Dr. Joseph Ketterman.
Doctor, would you be willing to tell us what happened here?
What happened to those people out there?
What did all this?
Ketterman gazed back at her.
His eyes pale as cold slate.
For a moment, I swore I saw guilt cross his face,
but it was quickly replaced by resignation.
Give me a moment.
Oh, I feel as though I just returned from the dead.
We nodded, and Bronson offered him a cigarette.
Ketterman smoked it in two greedy puffs, down some more water,
massaged his thigh muscle, and finally took a deep breath.
We messed up, monumentally.
More specifically, we created something monstrous,
a weapon, a biological toxin in a gaseous form,
designed to degenerate a subject's body on a cellular level.
It would lead to massive organ failure, eat through skin and sinew, and break one's body down
at its most basic levels.
The skin reddens with irritation, then blackens, the immune system fails, and then the
subject would easily rot from within like a pumpkin.
We meant for it to be an instrument of war, something so ungodly, so horrific, that it would induce
obedience to degenerations of whoever we were fighting at the time.
He swallowed hard.
Our test subjects started small.
Rodents, felines, canines, that sort of thing.
All of them succumbed to the effects in a matter of minutes.
We'd cut their bodies open and they'd be filled with tumors.
Their bones broke apart like glass and their veins slithered out of the incisions.
We knew the gas was affected because our subjects never stopped squealing from the pain.
And we administered painkillers, believe me.
They had no effect.
Six months of trials showed complete success with our animal subjects
So our commanding officer flew in to review our progress
He was quite proud
When he left he
Ketterman paused to gulp some more water
He ordered us to begin human trials
We asked where we might get those
And he mentioned that we had plenty of prisoners captured in the surrounding areas
We could use them
My inside squirmed at the way Ketterman recounted all of this
so matter of fact, no emotion in his voice.
We all watched him with rapt attention hanging onto his every word.
We discovered that using the gas on humans had an unintended side effect.
The cellular degeneration eroded their brains and turned them into progressive versions of themselves.
They quickly lost the ability to speak, controlled basic impulses, and recognize one another.
But their instincts didn't devolve completely.
They retained a primal intelligence, similar to early hominids.
They could understand their pain and what they were being used for,
processed their bodies slowly shutting down.
The worst thing, oh, is what they did to compensate for it.
We had a pair of prisoners, a mother and a son.
The son was maybe 17 years old.
I don't recall when they came from,
but we tested the gas on the two of them together.
Their bodies began to break down in minutes.
The mother first, then the son.
They degenerated quickly and struggled to recognize one another
as their skin broke out into
monstrous hives. The son was clawing at his abdomen. He managed to rip through his skin and
pull his entrails out. They were blackened and calcified. We watched him disembowl himself while his
mother tried to help him. She kept trying to cover up his wound with her hands, but it did nothing.
Then her son turned on his mother. He attacked her and beat her to death. He started tearing at her
her body, removed her organs, and tried sliding them back into his own.
Eventually, he collapsed at the 15-minute mark.
I swear we checked his vitals to make sure he was dead before we sent someone in to clean up the
bodies.
But when our man grabbed the sun, he lunged at him and bit him in the neck, tore his throat clean
out.
Then he ran for the door, leaped on the guard coming in to help, and killed him too.
No one was prepared for how ferociously he attacked.
He ran down the tunnel, looking for something.
Eventually, he came to one of the rooms where we stored the gas canisters.
I hadn't realized he'd been smart enough to take the guard's key card before he killed them.
He took some of the canisters out and threw them down the tunnel.
More guards were there by this point, and they started shooting at him.
Bullets met canisters and...
Ketterman mimicked an explosion with his hands.
The gas was dispersed through the main tunnel into the central room.
Dozens of innocent men and women choked, convulsed and collapsed where they stood.
I only managed to avoid them because I was locked away in here.
Gas couldn't penetrate my lab.
But everyone else attacked one another, ripped each other apart limb from limb.
The sun was their ringleader.
The scariest part was how smart they were.
He stopped them from doing too much damage to the bodies.
I believe he was trying to harvest their organs to supplement the effects of the gas.
He rubbed his chin.
The main door was locked down from within.
Manual override in case a leak just like this one transpired.
I messed my leg up trying to fix it, but one of those bastards caught hold of me before I could get back in.
I've been waiting for your team to come for weeks.
And now here we are.
I regarded Ketterman in silence.
He looked eager to get out of there, and I couldn't blame him.
Are you positive there were no other survivors?
Just me.
Good.
Keyes drew her pistol, leveled it at Ketterman's head, and shot him.
Everyone jumped back.
A spray of blood erupted from the back of the scientist's skull as he flopped back on the table.
Jesus!
Connors yelled, holding his hands over his ears.
What the hell are you doing?
I rubbed my ears, the tinnitus clanged against my eardrums like a train whistle.
Keyes calmly slid her pistol back into its holster.
You think I'm going to let an evil motherfucker like that back into the world?
Larson muttered.
I thought we were meant to be a passive rescue force.
He eyed his handiwork, which now meant nothing.
There's nothing passive about this Larson.
Keyes laid a hand on his shoulder.
Look, I'm not sure who's in charge of this place, but judging by what Mangalai Jr. just told us,
it created something worse than we could ever imagine.
We're getting the hell out of here and bringing this place down behind us.
Got it?
Larson met her gaze for a moment, then nodded.
She looked at the rest of us, Bronson, Sykes, Schief, Connors, and me.
We looked from her to the limp body of Ketterman, then Connors nodded slowly.
Whatever the hell was in that tunnel wasn't human.
If it's some emaciated demon spawn or something, it needs to die.
He shouldered his gun.
So let's get the hell out of here.
I found myself nodding again.
We could bring back some real firepower.
Keep these things trapped here, then bring the mountain down on them.
More than anything, I wanted to get out.
Schiff went to open the door, but stopped a moment before he unlocked it.
We froze and strained our ears.
Beyond the metal door, we heard a skittering sound.
Multiple skittering sounds.
Chitters and chuffs, like wild boars communicating with one another, filtered into the lab.
We listened as the creature scooted into the facility center
and realized what they were doing a moment before it happened.
My heart pulsed as the grinding of the doors closing rumbled the mountain.
The creatures knew how to shut the door.
Most likely from observing one of the staff members trying to open it up during the initial outbreak,
and Ketterman had just so very helpfully pointed out that the way to open it from within was busted.
We were trapped.
Horror settled over our group like a fog.
I felt blood rushed past my years.
Locked in an isolation zone, only a few people knew where we were.
Four, three feet of steel and rock shutting us off from the rest of the world, no other potential
ways out.
And a pack of intelligent, feral humanoids, painfully aware of our presence here.
Well, what do we do now?
Bronson asked softly.
Everyone started sharing their opinions all at once, the fight, call for help, bed down,
the usual.
Keyes eventually got control of things.
Her cropped blonde hair gleamed in the flickering light of the lab.
A slow drip of Ketterman's blood oozing onto the floor punctuated the silence.
Let's go over what we know and take it from there.
Now, Ketterman told us he was injured trying to fix the controls that opened the door,
which means that not only is there a way to open the thing from inside,
but they're close enough to this lab for an injured, middle-aged man to stagger back to
with those things on his heels.
Beyond that, we know these creatures can be hurt.
The one chief shot at retreated immediately.
We also know we can still get a comm signal out, weakened or not,
because Dr. Shitbag was patching through requests for help to us.
She pointed toward the door.
I say we go out there quietly, weapons primed, and head for the control center.
We'll find the door controls and have a team work on fixing that,
while another two work on comms.
The rest will provide cover.
Any questions?
No one said a word.
Good. Sheaf, Sykes, you two will work on the door. Larson and I will work on the comms.
She nodded to Bronson, Connors, and myself.
You three will stand guard.
She had Sheaf hand his rifle over to me. Not everyone in our unit came to arm to the gills.
We had three rifles between us, the rest had pistols, and all of us carried standard army knives.
This was the first time I ever regretted not having a heavier-duty gun.
Sheaf's M4A1 felt heavy in my hands, but the weight was reassuring.
I checked to ensure a round was already chambered and the safety on before doing the same with my pistol.
I also loosened my knife and it scabbard.
You can never be too careful.
Also, no firing indiscriminately.
Two round taps only.
Oh, and try to keep in mind that we're in a place where almost every surface is stone, metal, or concrete.
So physics is not our friend.
be mindful of ricochets.
Another obstacle to add to our growing list.
Together, we waited and listened.
We could hear the creatures skittering around the compound, squealing and clicking at one another.
I began to realize the sounds were less random than they seemed, a form of communication
these things created to replicate their voices.
Did the gas rot their vocal cords away?
It seemed likely.
For some reason, that saddened me more than scared me.
Unwilling human experiments suffering a dark hell in the bowels of some remote mountain facility,
their bodies shutting down on them like cancerous tumors.
No one deserved that.
I shook my head and returned to the present.
Beyond the door, we heard the creatures recede into the darkness back to their layer.
Keyes made us wait for 15 minutes to pass in perfect silence before she cracked open the door
and had Conner's stock forward a pace or two with his gun.
I followed right after him.
Then the others with their pistols drawn and Bronson in the back to cover our tail.
Remember, as quiet as possible.
As one, we crept out into the main tunnel, guns bristling in both directions, and made our way towards the center.
Immediately I could feel a difference in the air, a staleness that came with a lack of airflow through the mountain.
The smell of human remains and chemically tainted flesh were more prevalent.
I squeezed the handgrip on sheep's weapon so tight it whitened my knuckles.
Double taps to preserve ammo, Keyes had said.
The cool metal of the rifle rubbed against my cheek as I imagined firing at one of those things.
As we trek toward the front, I gently nudge sheaf.
How hard was it to hit that thing?
I asked softly.
Hard.
It was fast and agile and ugly as hell, but it ain't invincible.
I nodded.
Might sound silly.
He added as we closed in on the facility center.
But just imagine you're back home.
plugging cans with the 22.
Relax.
Aim, squeeze, fire.
That's how I was when your ass came booking you back up here like your nuts were on fire.
Copy that.
I said with a quiet laugh.
After a moment, I did as he recommended and relaxed my stance and grip.
My hands stopped shaking and my heart rate slowed.
Behind me, Sykes called out quietly.
Found it.
I didn't turn to see what she'd found.
Connors and I kept our barrels.
trained on the graveyard of lab equipment and bodies in the main cavern, roving for the
slightest movement. We let sheaf tap us and tug us back into the glass-winded room, elevated
five feet above the cave floor. Within, a bank of dusty controls, computers, and other equipment
sat cracked and stained in blood. A hand severed at the elbow still clung to one of the monitors,
the flesh blackened around the tips. Larson carefully removed it before Schiff and Sykes set to work
figuring out where the controls for the door were.
Larson and Keys headed for the battered radio station 10 feet further down.
I took point by the door, with Connors beside me, and Branson situated himself beside a shattered
window between our two groups.
At first, things went surprisingly well.
Larson and Keyes had the most success.
They managed to open up the radio and patch things up enough to comb the waves for signal.
The low whine of static seemed deafening to me, but I suppose the risk was worth.
it. Sheaf and Sykes faced a more difficult situation. The controls for the entrance
were simple enough, but the lever designed to open and close the massive door was jammed by a
bloody shin bone. I wondered if it had been rammed in there on purpose. It looked as though someone,
probably Ketterman, had hacked away at it. Splinters of meat and gristle glistened amid the gears,
so keys and Sykes carefully work the matter-free with their knife. Sheaf oversaw the electronics,
Despite the damage to the surrounding equipment, the controls had clearly been built to withstand
the corrosive environment of a cave.
Blood matted most surfaces, but underneath, the damage was mostly superficial.
What worried Keyes the most was the potential of wrecking the lever's inner controls even further,
as the shin bone got removed.
Sykes seemed potentially aware of this, as she continued to slice away slivers of it in microscopic
amounts.
and I remained completely focused on our surroundings.
He kept his sight on the tunnel and the stairs leading up to the control room.
I swept the depths of the control center.
I did my best to keep Sheaf's advice in mind.
Bronson stood by the shattered window, equally alert while Keyes rotated the radio dial
through different stations.
A sudden crackle got everyone's attention as she broke through to the outside world.
It sounded so good to hear someone else's voice in here that I almost laughed.
Keyes maintained her composure as she spoke, though the relief on her face was evident.
We can hear you, Corporal Lansing.
This is Captain Keyes Jameson, with the 112-era medical unit out of Camp Hartwell Marine Base.
We were tasked with securing the Tantalus site.
Coordinates are three, three, point.
She listed off the coordinates and then spent the next few minutes bouncing back and forth with the man on the other line.
We weren't sure how much information went through, but just the idea that someone
beyond our initial context knew about us, sent a wave of relief through my body.
I was still smiling when Bronson had his throat ripped out.
The creature must have been waiting in the shadows of the ceiling above us.
It attacked so quickly that Bronson didn't even have time to scream.
He still had his gun leveled toward the broken window when a pair of greasy, gangly arms
sliced out of the gloom, wrapped their claws around his neck and face,
and yanked him over the control bank with an incredible amount of force.
Bronson's gun went off, firing bullets indiscriminately as two fingers sank into the flesh under his
chin and exploded out of his mouth. Blood and teeth poured onto the equipment array while the creature
used his lower jaw to drag him forward into the cavern. I caught a fleeting, horrid glimpse of the
thing's face. It reminded me of cadavers we'd operated on when we removed the skin from the muscle
to study facial anatomy. Only this thing's face was covered in weeping yellow sores, blackened
flesh and pitted fissures.
Strands of hair clung to its scalp and dangled in front of bugged out eyes.
It lacked lips and a nose, bearing a ragged hole in place of both, and its teeth were reed thin,
the color of rotted blood.
Those teeth sank into Bronson's face as he was yanked onto the cavern floor below,
his screams coming out in pitiful gargles.
Without thinking, I ran and threw myself through the window after them and came crashing
down on the humanoid's legs.
It screamed and ripped its jaw away from Bronson's face, taking most of his cheek and ear with it.
I tried squeezing off a shot from my rifle, but couldn't make enough room.
Instead, I ripped my knife out of my belt and plunged it blindly into the thing's chest and stomach.
The blade drove like a nail through rotted wood.
The creature screamed and scrabbled under me, cutting at my fatigues with its ragged claws.
Flesh sloughed off its body, falling away around the knife, and I kept cutting.
I barely registered the needle-sharp talons raking across my body.
Shallow groove sliced into my arms, chest, and abdomen.
Blood saturated my hands as I shoved them into the creature's guts,
letting fury propel me as I disemboweled its rotting insides.
The creature let out a horrendous wail and bashed my head back against the concrete.
I couldn't register the pain, too much adrenaline.
My eyesight went fuzzy, entrails squelched in my hands,
blood seeped out of places it shouldn't, and the stench of death swirled out of a thing's awful mouth.
A gunshot.
Then another.
The creature's face caved in on itself as high-powered bullets ripped its head apart.
Blackened tissue and pieces of skull oozed down onto my face and into my mouth.
A taste of expired meat seeped between my gums.
I coughed and spat and shoved the thing off me.
Hand slid under my armpits and hauled me up.
Conner supported me while Sheaf grabbed Bronson's limp body and slung it over one shoulder.
Keys grabbed my gun and ordered us to get back to the lab.
We were about to head out before I yelled for them to stop, lurched back around, raised my boot,
and brought it down squarely on the creature's head, crushing into a mass of black and red pulp.
Rotten hell, you bloodthirsty son of a bitch!
I stomped again.
I didn't want it coming back.
This was insurance.
Come on!
Connors hauled me back the way we came.
Keyes shouted some more.
Bronson stained sheaf's shoulder with dark blood.
Larson and Sykes became our lookouts.
From the bows of the facility came a swelling wail as if in answer to the one given by the creature I'd killed.
The tunnel came alive with sounds of chitters and squeals as we lugged ourselves back into the lab.
Only when Sykes slammed the door did I finally feel the adrenaline abate.
Sheaf dumped Bronson on one of the lab tables.
and Connors lowered me into a chair.
Larson tried to inspect me, but I waved him to Bronson.
Him first, man.
A strange look crossed over Larson's face, a mixture of sadness and guilt.
Bronson's dead.
He said it matter-factly.
I shook my head, my vision sloshing in my skull.
Like hell he is.
Check his pulse.
Starch's wounds.
Do something.
Larson lowered himself to my eye level and slowly tilted my head to where Bronson lay.
Even in my frenzied state, I could see he was gone.
Most of his throat and lower face were gone.
A gaping hole was all that was left, stained with slimy remains.
My eyes tracked over him to the next table, and something chilled my bones.
Where the hell, Scatterman?
Where the hell is he?
I repeated.
The table where the lifeless corp had laid was now empty, save for a circle of blood at one end.
Everyone went back on high alert as the lab was searched, but no trace of his body was found.
Then sheaf pointed to a thin, almost invisible trail of blood leading from the table to the door of the lab.
Those things took him.
It wasn't a question.
They took him while we were figuring out the controls.
Oh, Jesus.
Shit.
I grunted, then hissed when Larson peeled away my fatigues to reveal a long laceration down my right bystand.
I said, "'I screw you two!'
Hey now.
He leveled his spectacles at me, like a disappointed father.
"'No cursing out, your doctor.'
I watched as his nimble fingers began probing my flesh around the various cuts I'd received
from the creature, two on my right arm, one down my jaw along the neck and collarbone,
and two more over my sternum.
None were too deep, but they did burn like a bitch.
Larson had to pour a stinging chemical all over them, which led to another round of curses.
Then he closed them with a binding agent that would allow the wounds to stretch and flex without too much risk of splitting open.
As he worked on me, Keyes, Sykes, and Sheaf stood vigil over Bronson.
They cleaned the blood from his neck and face, cut away any residual filth from his clothes, and closed his eyes.
Keyes looked guilty when she ordered the non-personneles to be rationed out.
His tags and personal effects were zipped away to be returned to his family when we got out of here.
After what felt like an appropriate amount of time, Keyes had Conners drape a large sheet over his body.
I know how hard this is for all of you.
We're not a combat unit.
We're a rescue team.
But sometimes shit goes sideways and we have to adapt.
Bronson was an excellent member of our team.
We're going to get out of here no matter what happens, okay?
The rest of us nodded, even as the bigger question.
The questions linger above our heads like a mounting storm.
Did our message make it out?
In the meantime, Keyes assumed the role of the Delegator.
She had us strip ourselves of our MREs, weapons, tools, and medical supplies.
The point of this, she said, was to get an idea of how long we might last down here if rescue
took a while to come.
Judging by our rations and water, we could stretch things for three days, and perhaps four.
Weapons-wise, we still had most of our ammo, save for the car.
clip Bronson sprayed when he got grabbed.
Larson kept himself busy by tending to my wounds more often than necessary, but I let him do
whatever he needed, because I think taking care of someone kept his mind off Bronson, and,
to some extent, Ketterman.
Evil as the man was, Larson had still taken a vow to care for anyone to the best of his ability.
Personally, I felt for him, but also knew killing the scientist had been the right thing.
I felt similarly about crushing the skull of that creature.
In the heat of the moment, it felt so incredibly vindicating to slaughter Bronson's killer,
but now I could only imagine the mother and son from that experiment.
They didn't ask for any of this.
The gas corrupted them beyond all human recognition,
destabilizing their minds until they were only driven by the most primal urges.
They were forced to skitter through the facility as cannibalistic byproducts of our newest weapon,
to either subside on the gutted flesh of those they'd once been, or to suffer death by devolving
into a living husk of their former selves.
Not much of a choice.
I watched as Larson's hands swept over angry ridges in my flesh.
It's a messed up situation, I said gently.
He grunted.
In the harsh light, his coppery hair looked like blood.
Thank you for fixing me up.
I wish I'd been quicker to get to Bronson.
I could have done more.
A hollow cord caught in my throat.
Larson stopped massaging my wounds and looked me square in the eye.
Then he pinched one of my guts.
Ah, what the hell you're doing, asshole?
He smiled and released.
Just making sure you aren't turning into a self-pitying twat.
Ronson was not your fault and you did more than anyone else to try and save him.
So every time you say something stupid, I'm going to pinch one of your cuts.
I was trying to be heartfelt.
You were trying to wallow in your grief.
Cut it out.
I glared at him.
You're one miserable prick.
You know that?
Larson straightened himself up proudly.
I do, as a matter of fact.
Fine.
Despite my best efforts, I couldn't help smiling.
I hope we get out of here.
If you keep mourning on and on, probably not.
You know what?
I think the creature nicked one of the arteries high up on my thigh.
Why don't you pull down my pants so you can get on your knees and kiss my hairy white ass?
Everyone?
Key's voice cut through the lab.
Could you gather around?
She got us all circled around the table that held our weapons, food, and other supplies.
From here on out, we're going to be going on half-rations.
Obviously, it's not ideal.
But what we have will only be good for three to four days.
In the interim, we'll keep an air out for that door and for the creatures.
There's really not much else to do.
Keep yourself fit.
Play card games, talk, sleep, everything you've been taught to do to avoid letting your mind wonder.
Any questions?
No one said anything for a moment.
Then Sykes raised her hand.
What happens if we hit that three to four day mark and no one's come?
Keyes lifted one of the pistols lying on the table.
Then we arm her up and raid the canteen.
The next several days proved difficult to put it mildly, with no natural light to mark
the passage of time, we depended mostly on our watches and internal clocks. But adrenaline,
fear, and the admittedly unpleasant aroma of Bronson's corpse beginning to rot made it hard.
We employed every trick in the book to alleviate our boredom, slept, played cards,
tried mind games, discussed our past and plans for the future, taught one another knife
tricks, and exchanged advice about working in the field. My wounds closed nicely, the flesh beginning
to bind into neat lines.
There would always be scars, but Larson said there were no signs of infection.
But in the end, no one could ignore the edge of anxiety creeping into the lab, weaving its
way into every conversation, game, and thought we attempted to distract ourselves with.
We were trapped, somewhere cold, dangerous, and remote.
Creatures stronger than us prowled the darkness, waiting us out.
The days ticked by on my watch, slow as molasses.
and far too quickly at the same time.
Our rations dwindled and thinned.
We lost valuable weight, and Keyes finally called it in the morning of the fourth day.
We haven't heard anything.
I'm not going to draw this out with some grandiose speech.
This is survival and those things out there can go to hell.
We need food and water.
She pointed at Larson and me to come with her.
Sheaf, Connors, and Sykes would stay back to watch over Bronson's body,
and also to ensure none of the creatures snuck in for another ambush.
No one argued.
This time I armed myself with my pistol and knife and left the rifles to Larson and Keys.
I figured they'd serve me better in close quarters, given how fast those bastards are.
We took a moment to gear up.
Then, after giving the others a brief nod, we slid back out into the sprawling tunnels of the Tantalus site.
I kept my ears pricked and my pistol in front of me.
Keyes and Larson took point in rear.
I came up the middle.
Crusted blood and dried entrails crunched softly underfoot as we entered the murky gloom of a devastated center.
I tried not to look at the blood staining the window of the comm station.
Keys led the way to the canteen, which sat 30 feet from the tunnel entrance.
She ducked into a long tent lined with low wooden benches.
A metal table near the front marked where food would be served, and she immediately swept around it.
towards the kitchen in the back.
Within the confines of the tent, Keyes risked a little light to illuminate the tiny area.
Jackpot!
She whispered as her beam fell upon shelf after shelf of non-perishable goods, cans, dried meats,
sacks of sugar and flour, powdered milk.
She grinned at us.
We'll fill her packs with as much as we can carry, then hightil it back.
Got it?
We all nodded.
Keyes was reaching up to grab a can when she looked over my shoulder and went pale.
Down!
The word was a rushed whisper as she grabbed me and Larson and yanked us to the ground.
We all went prone in the shadows of the serving tables.
The scent was putrid, rotting meat invaded my nostril, and all the hairs stiffened along my neck.
One of the humanoids appeared at the entrance to the canteen.
Its withered body glistened wetly in the dim light.
The thing was swiveling its head from side to side, teeth chattering as it searched.
Flex of mucus bubbled from the pits around its nose as it tested the air.
I realized then that these things were blind, what tactical advantages that afforded them
at the moment I didn't know.
I could only focus on the way the thing crawled and swayed around like a giant spider,
sensing its surrounding and clutching the table beneath it with impossibly long fingers.
It remained crouched where it was for a moment.
My gaze drifted down to Larson, who stared back at me full of dread.
He held my gaze for a long moment, then looked down at something beneath us.
I looked down and my heart skipped.
One of the cans we'd stuffed in our packs teetered precariously, threatening to drop onto the ground.
I slowly reached down, moving as carefully as I could manage.
The can tumbled, and the creature leapt from the table to the ground mere feet from us.
Its feet dug into the stone floor.
Goey, tar-like saliva dripped from its mouth and landed inches from Larson's face.
He flinched, and the can tumbled onto the floor with the clang.
The creature squealed with rage and lunged at him.
I raised my pistol and fired.
My bullet caught it square in the jaw, splintering its teeth like rotted planks.
The second came a moment later and struck it in the neck, where a fountain of thick blood oozed out.
But the creature still managed to land a powerful swipe that dug deep into Larson's shoulder
and sliced down to his spine.
The man screamed while Keyes scrambled to her feet and fired more shots at the creature
until it went down in a jerking heap.
Larson bucked and gargled blood, but we had no time to help him as three more humanoids
crash their way through the roof of the canteen tent and launched themselves at us.
One went for keys, two at me and Larson, just my luck.
I fired indiscriminately at the closest one, cutting through its slimy organs.
One shattered its shoulder blade and it spun off balance, but it still landed a brutal swipe
to my side.
Fortunately, it only caught me with its forearm rather than its claws, or else my guts
would have been splashing over a still bucking Larson.
The other creature came at me full force and rammed its spindly shoulders square into my sternum,
launching me across the kitchen and into the wall of food.
I groaned and slid to the floor as cans rained down around me.
Keyes screamed bloody murder as she tore at her attacker with her knife.
She raked her blade over its skull, throat, and back like a deranged leopard,
opening up deep, seeping gashes everywhere.
I almost felt sorry for the creature until I saw it hiss and sink its,
claws into her shoulder, puncturing her upper arm. She screamed and stuck her knife into its ear
all the way up to the hilt. The human would release her just in time for me to refocus on the one
who rammed me into the pantry. It approached slowly and sniffed around. I realized the clanging
of the cans had obscured my specific whereabouts. It took another step forward and found Larson.
In a flash it had its claws in his back, peeling his uniform and flesh away to reveal the stark
nakedness of his muscles and ribs. Larson screamed again, and the creature bared its teeth,
giving me time to grab a can and hurl it with as much force as I could muster. A metal and bone rang
through the tent. A large gouge opened in the creature's face, its nose and teeth pulping into a mash
of slimy tissue. The creature wailed and stumbled back, clutching its face. I rose and hurled another
can at it, and another and another, each one punched into its emaciated body like meteors
stabbing into a new planet. They tore craters in its guts, face, and chest. I took one final
bloodied can and brought it crashing down on the thing's head, darting its brain with a sickening
squelch. The thing flopped on the ground and lay silent. Wheeling around, I caught a glimpse of the
one keys had stabbed in the ear, making swipes at her. She grabbed its ear and the hilt of her knife
and rammed her knee into the point of its chin.
Its face exploded like a rotting pumpkin.
We stared, panting at each other, caught in the overwhelming fervor of the brief but bloody battle.
A dark shape moved in the corner of my eye.
I whirled around to see the one-eyed shot lunging toward me, injured but still very much alive.
Larson's knife punched into its neck in a perfectly timed throw.
He swooned from his position on his knees.
The creature collapsed, wailing on the ground, where it thrashed.
until Keyes' boots found its head.
As she ensured the others were all well and truly dead,
I knelt over Larson to look at his wounds.
It was painfully evident he wouldn't be making it,
but he didn't need to know.
Instead, I simply held him
and muttered thank you for everything he'd done
until he drifted away.
Eventually, Keyes put her hand on my shoulder
and began to say something,
but a scream ripped through the cavern
from the direction of the lab.
A heartbeat later, we were sprinting to,
Down the hall, we heard footsteps coming toward us from the direction of the creature's
layer and raised our guns, but it was only Connors.
He looked wild.
Part of his scalp hung bleeding against the side of his face and his fatigues were stained
in blood and slime.
I was relieved that he wasn't seriously injured, but the expression on his face stopped me cold.
Sikes!
They dragged Sikes into that hole.
Shit!
Where's sheaf?
Keyes demanded, trying to get things in order as best she
could. The question might have seemed callous, but it was the only way we could figure things
out without wasting time. Connors managed to grow even paler. He's... I don't know, man. He's in a bad way.
Without another word, he led us to the lab where Schiff sat on one of the tables. At first,
I thought he was dead. His barrel-shaped chest had been bisected diagonally by a creature, and his
guts spilled out into his lap. A giant, purcelled.
purpling bruise colored his flesh around his temple, and his body was lacerated with deep,
agonizing cuts.
Around his feet lay the pulverized remains of at least three more creatures.
Then he sucked a breath in through his nose and lifted his head towards us.
I could see his lungs expand and contract through his ragged fatigues.
His voice was nothing more than a whisper.
Keyes knelt beside him.
She didn't bother with bandages or reassurances.
He was gone, and she saved his last month.
moments for his final words.
As he passed her his personal things,
Connors told me what had happened in brief, shaky breaths.
A couple of minutes after we were ambushed out in the canteen,
someone started pounding on the lab door.
There were cries to be led in,
and Sykes thought it had to be one of us since the creatures couldn't talk.
But when she opened the door, she found Ketterman.
He was this thing, man.
Naked like the others, but not as rotten.
His face was peeled off and he was laughing
Things were wriggling in his skin
He had this awful smirk when Sykes opened the door and smacked her aside
Another one of those things knocked the shit out of me
And I was out for like a minute
When I woke back up
Three of these things were dead
Sykes wrestling with the other one
And Sheaf was fighting with that Kettaman thing
He shook his head
And Ketamon swiped his hand
across Sheaf's chest
and opened them up from hip to shoulder
like it was nothing
he grabbed Sykes by the hair
and dragged her out of here
I tried to run after him
but one of them tackled me
and gave him enough time to take her back in that place
Connors was close to hyperventilating
at this point I pulled him
into a bear hug
Larson's gone too
Shit
Yeah
We let go of each other
Just as Sheaf released a sigh
He tilted to
One side and slumped across the bench.
Keyes added his possessions to Larson's.
Her jaw was set in a hard line and the muscles along her neck flexed with fury.
Lifting Sheaf's rifle in her hands, she looked back at us.
I'm going after Sykes.
We both nodded without hesitation.
We didn't know if rescue would come or not, just that we might be able to rescue our friend
and grind Ketterman into a bloody pulp.
That was enough.
When we arrived at the hole at the end of the tunnel, I know that we'd be able to rescue.
No longer found it terrifying.
The rusted bars went inward like jagged teeth, exhaling a rotting stench that I didn't
even register anymore.
Flicking on our flashlights and headlamps, Keyes stepped into the darkness first, then
Connors, then me.
Darkness consumed us as we slid into the den of monsters.
We stepped into the nest that was like stepping into the throat of a giant, dormant monster.
The air was hot with meat-tainted breath.
I turned my light through the engulfing gloom of the cavern.
I couldn't see anything move, but skittering sounds echoed off the walls.
We kept ourselves lightly packed near the center of the cave.
Behind us, the great glowed like a doorway to another dimension.
It shrank with each step we took.
Sikes!
Connors whispered over the metal of his rifle.
Keyes nudged him and shook her head.
I understood what she was thinking.
We needed to find her silently.
Moving as one, we crept to work.
the rear of the cavern, easily the size as the one at the front of the facility.
My light revealed strange structures tucked against the walls.
We drew closer, and my throat filled with bile.
They were small, lean-toes, simple structures normally made from stretched canvases and wood
supports, but these huts had been bound with bone gut for the supports and flayed human
skin for the canvas.
All different shapes, crested with blood, sliced and broken in some places.
I was almost grateful when I heard Sykes moaned from somewhere deeper in the cavern.
Beside me, I could feel Conner's tensing, ready to run to her, but I caught him this time.
Ketterman, I mouthed silently.
We already knew he could vocalize human sounds, what was stopping him from mimicking Sykes, groaning to bait us into a trap.
Forward, together.
Keyes whispered.
It was a good plan.
We covered our angles well, and our lights gave us at least twenty-year.
feet of visibility.
Then Ketterman started taunting us.
You make her.
He sang.
Well, saying wasn't exactly the right word.
It was more of a hiss punctuated by wet giggles, like someone fighting for air.
She screamed.
I should just slice her open now.
Sykes gave a choking gasp of pain.
I gripped Conner's arm iron tight.
We couldn't lose him right now.
I'm gonna kill him.
Connors growled through his teeth.
Ketterman's voice pierced my ears again.
So many dead.
Sykes will be soon.
You failed.
Failed.
Like Connors, Keyes stiffened but held strong.
We could hear Sykes labored breathing from somewhere beyond our lights.
The cavern grew narrower towards the rear.
For a flicker of a moment, I thought I detected something moving in the shadows.
"'Steue die in the dark cut open like a pig!'
It was my turn to tremble.
Ketterman's words cut me to the bone.
Something about his voice drudged up my worst memories, my guiltiest fears.
I wanted to rush at him through the darkness and bash his brains in.
A hand slithered under my arm and squeezed my bicep.
Connors held my gaze and nodded toward the darkest part of the cavern.
I squinted.
Someone was there, a tall, gangly figure standing over another kneeling one.
Sykes screamed.
Connors rushed at him.
Keyes and I followed, not even bothering to shout.
We came upon a horrific scene.
Ketterman stood in front of another skin hut with Syke's skull clasped in his inhumanly long claws.
His fingertips burrowed into her temple and lines of blood leaked down the sides of her face like melting candlewax.
His tallowed flesh looked almost transatlose.
parent, rotting organs pressed against the sides of his abdomen, oozing blackened blood as they
struggled to function. Sores the size of my hand crusted his face, neck, chest, and torso. Malice
burned in his lidless eyes, which were pointed straight at Keyes. His lips peeled back in a cruel
smile as he sank his claws deeper into Sykes' skull. Connors lifted his gun, but Keyes stopped him.
On the other side of Ketterman lurked more creatures. They tilted the
Their head as they tried to pinpoint where we stood.
Unresponsible for my personal head.
You know what these things did?
He slid his long fingers around the neat bullet hole in his forehead.
Then he pushed inside it.
Withdrew a sliver of brain matter pulped with maggots and ate it.
Sykes looked glassy-eyed as she hung from his grasping hand.
They cut me open.
He trailed a finger down the side of his face.
Then they sprayed me with that infernal gap.
He spat tar-colored bile on the ground.
Keyes tilted her head ever so slightly.
It's no more than you deserve, you monster.
Ketterman bared his disgusting teeth.
Connors charged at him.
One of the creatures leapt on him, sinking its teeth into the nape of his neck and tearing out a bloody chunk of flesh.
Connors collapsed.
Keyes and I yelled, and Ketterman laughed up to the moment Sykes rammed a sharpened femur into his ragged groin.
Hell unleashed itself.
Sheaf's words came back at me as two creatures launched themselves my way.
Relax, breathe, squeeze, fire.
I did so, but I kept squeezing him.
The bullets exploded out in an incredible rate, ripping through both monsters.
They screamed and collapsed on the ground next to a gaping conner's, whose neck gurgled blood down his shoulder and face.
He still didn't hesitate in taking out his knife and stabbing the creature closest to him over and over again.
Keyes was half a moment slower than me getting her weapon up.
She dumped half her magazine into the third monster, but got taken out by the fourth.
The two of them rolled away with her knife flashing as it dove into the thing's scabby back
and its teeth mashed to her chest and shoulders.
Sykes had managed to roll away from Ketterman, whose seething, strangled outline collapsed
against the wall, fingers scrambling at the bone shard stabbed into it.
I took steps towards him when fire lanced my calf.
The creature Connors hadn't stabbed sank its teeth into my leg, opening up flesh and muscle.
Roaring in pain, I tried crushing its head with a well-armed stomp, but it lashed out and
knocked me off balance, pulling me to the floor and wrapping its hands around my hips to drag
itself toward my neck.
I thrashed for all I was worth.
The grip these creatures possessed was otherworldly.
It crushed my thighs between its arms, and I scrambled for my knife, but found it had gone flying
towards Sykes in the melee.
The creature dragged itself closer, those claws digging like molten pincers into my ribs.
Saliva flecked its jagged teeth and a wave of nauseating hot breath washed over me.
Out of sheer desperation, I made a fist and rammed it down the creature's throat.
Decaying flesh engulfed my knuckles and wrist up to the elbow, and the creature choked.
Squeezing my eyes closed, I twisted my arm and wrenched upward, ripping the monster's head away from its neck and a gout of blackened blood.
Free once more, I rolled to my knees and immediately vomited.
Nearby, Keyes continued wrestling with her humanoid, though it was now bleeding from multiple
mortal wounds.
Across from me, Ketterman finally wrenched the bone free and turned towards Sykes, who was crawling
toward the knife.
He stalked after her.
The bone shard gripped in his long claws.
He raised it above his head when something slammed into him from the side.
The Connors had somehow lumbered to his feet and tackled the edge of the end.
ex-scientist into the skin hut. The structure collapsed under them, and my best friend started
bashing Ketterman's face in with his bare fists. Keterman didn't stand a chance. His body, weakened
from everything it had gone through, collapsed like paper mache under Conner's fists. His face caved in,
his teeth disintegrated, and his eyes burst when the bleeding man atop him gouged his sockets.
Conner's tore the doctor's head in two, and he went still. The bloodied atop the creature,
before collapsing on his back.
Behind me, Conners yelled and drove her knife deep into the point of the final humanoid's chin.
A moment later, it was silent.
I staggered to my feet and limped over to help Sykes up.
She looked battered, but not broken.
The same could not be said for Connors.
His breath came in ragged, watery gasps.
Each one flecked the deep wound in his neck with bubbles of blood.
He grinned up at me and we clasped a gore-soaked hands one final time.
Sykes knelt beside him and smiled shakily.
Safe?
He whispered.
She nodded.
Connor smiled, finally content.
I watched as his eyes settled on the darkness above where they became unfocused.
He was gone.
Kea's watched respectfully.
She cradled her injured arm and winced when she helped Sykes to her feet.
Both of them pulled me up and the three of us surveyed the carnage.
We were alive, wounded to various degrees.
agrees, but alive. We spent the next hour constructing a litter for Connors to drag his body
out of that place. If there was one thing we could do for him, it was that. I almost cried
when we dragged ourselves back to the hole. The light shining through it felt almost blinding.
It took a long time to get Connors back up to the main center. Our wounds slowed us down considerably.
The bite in my leg had bled quite a bit before Keyes wrapped it up in a tight bandage.
I was worried about potential infection, but that would have to wait.
Presently, we made sure to bring everyone out into the cavern where they could be laid to rest side by side.
We owed them that much.
As we worked, another worry aided us would help be coming.
Keys checked the radio again, but found it smashed to bits, most likely ketamine's work while we were holed up in the lab.
She shrugged and looked at Sykes and me.
It's out of our hands now.
So we waited.
We treated one another's wounds as best we could.
Akees had to cut away a considerable amount of loose flesh from my calf and clean it out.
The ligaments in her right shoulder were permanently injured, and we had to set it after discovering it had been dislocated.
Sykes experienced trouble with blurry vision in her right eye from where Ketterman had cut her with the claw.
She also had nerve damage in her right hand from where the bone shard cut into some tendons.
We also displayed plenty of minor cuts and bruises that we fixed up with our duster.
windling supplies. All in all, we were a sorry bunch of bastards, bloodied, broken, fear shifting
around in our guts like broken glass, but there was nothing left to do now. I ate cans of cold
soup, slept on a strained cot, and made small talk with keys and sikes when they were in the
mood. The bodies of our comrades lay cold under sheets in a neat row near the doors. If rescue
did come, we wanted them to be the first ones to enjoy it. Time became shapeless in
that cavern. Then one day, or night for all I knew, I awoke to a faint rumbling. I staggered out
of my cot, finding Sykes and keys already on their feet, looking equally confused.
We stared at the doors as they begin to vibrate and grind inwards. We eyed one another breathlessly.
Rust shivered off the cold metal doors, lab equipment trembled around us, and...
A beautiful ray of winter light spilled over my face.
