Behemoth Read Online Free

Behemoth
Book: Behemoth Read Online Free
Author: Peter Watts
Pages:
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grips his towbar one-handed. His other hooks around the chest of a black rag doll, life-size, a thin contrail of ink swirling in the wake of its passage.
    Lubin crosses to starboard. The contrail flushes crimson in his squidlight.
    Erickson, Clarke realizes. Out on the seabed, a dozen familiar cues of posture and motion distinguish one person from another; rifters only look alike when they’re dead. It’s not a good sign that she’s had to fall back on Erickson’s shoulder tag for an ID.
    Something’s ripped his diveskin from crotch to armpit; something’s ripped him, underneath it. It looks bad. Mammalian flesh clamps tight in ice water, peripheral blood vessels squeeze down to conserve heat. A surface cut wouldn’t bleed at five degrees C. Whatever got Erickson, got him deep.
    Grace Nolan’s on the lead squid. Lubin takes up position just behind and to the side, a human breakwater to reduce the drag clawing at Erickson and Yeager. Clarke follows his lead. Erickson’s vocoder tic-tic-tic s with pain or static.
    â€œWhat happened?” Lubin buzzes.
    â€œNot sure.” Nolan keeps her face forward, intent on navigation. “We were checking out an ancillary seep over by the lake. Gene wandered around an outcropping and we found him like this a few minutes later. Maybe he got careless under an overhang, something tipped over on him.”
    Clarke turns her head sideways for a better view; the muscles in her neck tighten against the added drag. Erickson’s flesh, exposed through the tear in his diveskin, is fish-belly white. It looks like gashed, bleeding plastic. His capped eyes look even deader than the flesh beneath his ’skin. He gibbers. His vocoder cobbles nonsense syllables together as best it can.
    An airborne voice takes the channel. “Okay, we’re standing by at Four.”
    The abyss ahead begins to brighten: smudges of blue-gray light emerge from the darkness, their vertices hinting at some sprawled structure in the haze behind. The squids cross a power conduit snaking along the basalt; its blinking telltales fade to black on either side. The lights ahead intensify, expand to diffuse haloes suffusing jumbled Euclidean silhouettes.
    Atlantis resolves before them.
    A couple of rifters wait at Airlock Four, chaperoned by a pair of corpses lumbering about in the preshmesh armor that drybacks wear when they venture outside. Nolan cuts power to the squids. Erickson raves weakly in the ensuing silence as the convoy coasts to rest. The corpses take custody, maneuver the casualty toward the open hatch. Nolan starts after them.
    One of the corpses blocks her with a gauntleted forearm. “Just Erickson.”
    â€œWhat are you talking about?” Nolan buzzes.
    â€œMedbay’s crowded enough as it is. You want him to live, give us room to work.”
    â€œLike we’re going to trust his life to you lot? Fuck that.” Most of the rifters have long since had their fill of revenge by now, grown almost indifferent to their own grudges. Not Grace Nolan. Five years gone and still the hatred sucks at her tit like some angry, insatiable infant.
    The corpse shakes his head behind the faceplate. “Look, you have to—”
    â€œNo sweat,” Clarke cuts in. “We can watch on the monitor.”
    Nolan, countermanded, looks at Clarke. Clarke ignores her. “Go on,” she buzzes at the corpses. “Get him inside.”
    The airlock swallows them.
    The rifters exchange looks. Yeager rolls his shoulders as if just released from the rack. The airlock gurgles behind him.
    â€œThat wasn’t a collapsed outcropping,” Lubin buzzes.
    Clarke knows. She’s seen the injuries that result from rock slides, the simple collision of stones and flesh. Bruises. Crushed bones. Blunt force trauma.
    Whatever did this, slashed .
    â€œI don’t know,” she says. “Maybe we shouldn’t jump to conclusions.”
    Lubin’s eyes
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