That's RBDMing even for you!
Oh, it gets worse.
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Session 15 (July 21, 2008)
Chapter 52
The darkness receded by degrees, accompanied by waves of pain. Vasily blinked, and realized that he was lying face-down, the heavy weight of debris pressing down against his legs and back. For a moment he felt a twinge of panic at being trapped here, crushed under the weight of the collapsed ceiling, but when he stirred, the material fell away and he could move.
The room was dark; the emergency lights either weren’t working or had been dislodged by the partial collapse. There was a dim glow that Vasily recognized as Catalina’s xPhone, its screen turned up to maximum brightness. Vasily could just make out the pale skin of her face in that glow.
“Mike?” A voice came, from a pile of wreckage where the table had been moments before. “Mike? Speak to me!”
“Doc?” Vasily asked, as he staggered to his feet. “Everyone okay?”
James was already crouched over Moshe, checking the scientist’s pulse. As the Israeli groaned, he got up—more than a bit unsteady himself—and made his way toward the fallen guard. As he moved around the table, which had been crushed by a fallen beam, he saw Mike, with Derek, the other guard, crouched over him.
“Where is Nemot,” Catalina said, groaning as she looked around. Jane was digging through her gear, and finally located a small LED lamp, which she switched on, scanning the room with its beam. The partial collapse of the ceiling had been worst around the table; the area near the door to the outer corridor was mostly clear, with just some ceiling panels scattered around the floor with the odd metal fitting here and there. Bits of wiring and piping jutted from the ceiling, and in the kitchenette area two beams stabbed down almost to the floor, like claws.
“We under attack?” Vasily asked. “Surely base sensors pick it up…”
“I don’t know,” Derek said, rising to his feet as James checked the fallen guard. “I’d better check. You all wait here.” But before he could move to the door, James shook his head. “He’s gone.”
“We all go together,” Vasily said. He took his laser pistol out of its holster at his hip, checked the connector to the power unit snuggled in the small of his back, and activated it. The hum as the weapon powered seemed ominously loud. The others checked their pistols as well. Jane was the only one of them who had a heavier weapon, the more compact laser rifle that Grace’s technicians had upgraded earlier. She unfolded the weapon and charged it up as they made their way to the door.
The outer corridor was as dark as the lounge had been. Dust floated in the air, sparkling in the light of Jane’s lamp. The corridor seemed more or less intact, at least until they came to the elevator. The doors had bent outward, as if kicked from the other side by a giant, and they could see the rubble that choked the shaft.
“Another way up?” Vasily asked.
“There’s an access ladder,” the guard said. “We can get to it through the storeroom.” He started back toward it, but Catalina held up a hand. “Where is Nemot?”
“I don’t know,” the guard said. “Maybe he went into the one of the other rooms?”
They searched, quickly, but the rest of the base was deserted. “Maybe he went up topside,” the guard said. “We’d better join him before the rest of this place collapses.”
They started after him, but Catalina paused, tugging on Vasily’s sleeve. “Nemot gets a call, he leaves, and now…?”
“One thing at a time,” Vasily said. “First we get out.”
The guard took them to the storeroom, which was cluttered with crates marked in French, and showed them the panel that opened onto a maintenance crawlspace. The ladder was there as well, and the shaft appeared to be clear, ascending into the darkness as far as Jane’s light extended. The guard started to step forward, but Vasily cut in front of him, making his way up the shaft. The others followed behind.
The shaft ascended a good sixty feet before depositing them in a small antechamber. A hatch, dangling slightly ajar, provided access to the elevator shaft, but one look told them that the shaft had completely collapsed. Jane shone the light upward, but saw only a tangle of broken beams and rubble. The guard directed them to another hatch that he got open with some difficulty, revealing a narrow staircase leading up.
“This leads up to the back of the house,” the guard said. Vasily started up, but they didn’t get very far before they came to another collapse, with sheets of metal crumpled at the top of the stairs. They could just make out a faint glimmer of light through the tangle of metal, obscured by thick eddies of smoke and dust that filtered through the wreckage.
“Aw, man,” Derek said, as he got a look at the wreckage over Vasily’s shoulder.
“We could use our lasers, cut our way out,” Jane said.
“If you can make a hole, I might squeeze through,” Catalina said.
Vasily nodded. “Then we make hole.” He shifted back enough to let Jane and Moshe come forward beside him on the stairs. The three of them lifted their lasers, and started carefully cutting through the metal barrier. The three beams tore through the heavy metal, and a large piece fell away, clattering loudly on the stairs. “Careful now,” Vasily said. “Do not want it to collapse more.”
They continued working, cutting away a large enough swath to let someone squeeze through. Vasily came forward and carefully pulled free a large piece of metal, and Catalina slipped forward, ducking low to squeeze through the gap. She wiggled forward through the opening, and quickly vanished. “Looks like the cellar of that cottage,” she said. “There’s a lot of debris, looks like the entire place has collapsed.”
Vasily grunted as he pushed against the metal, trying to widen the opening further. “You go, Derek,” he said. “Then Moshe and Jane.”
The others moved into the opening, one after the other. They could hear Catalina on the far side, helping those get through.
Moshe staggered to his feet as he escaped the narrow tunnel—it was quite claustrophobic—and was helped clear by Derek. Catalina remained crouched by the opening, encouraging the next person through. He could hear Jane grunting as she slid forward through the tight passage, and shivered.
“Is there a way out?” the scientist asked. From what he could see, the cellar was a total loss, with beams and wreckage crowding down upon them from above. The light they’d seen earlier filtered through cracks in the debris, but none of them looked large enough to accommodate a sparrow, let alone any of them.
“The stairs were over here,” the guard replied. He ducked under a low beam, and disappeared. “Hey! I can see daylight!”
Moshe glanced back and saw Catalina helping Jane. The bulky power pack of the rifle was giving her some trouble in the cramped space, so she slid out of it and pushed it forward to Catalina before crawling after. “Wait up!” he said, moving forward after the guard.
Derek was already on the stairs, grunting as he pushed at a heavy steel door, set almost horizontal like a hatchway, at the top. Moshe moved to help him, and together the two were able to get it clear, something heavy on the other side scraping as it slid away. The two men staggered forward, into daylight. The smoke was thicker here, and as Moshe looked around, his first thought was that he’d stumbled into a warzone. The cottage was a burning wreckage, and the ground for a wide radius was scorched black. The APC that had brought them had been flung aside, and now rested on its back against a nearby hill.
But he didn’t have a chance for a second thought, as a bright flash shot past him, striking Derek solidly in the back. The guard was flung forward and fell hard onto the ground. Moshe was frozen, standing there staring at the body, for what seemed like forever, but was barely a second. He started to reach for his laser, to open his mouth to shout a warning, but before he could complete either action a plasma bolt struck him in the back of the head.