July 22nd - In the Air

Ten minutes later they were in a chopper. Suzie sat beside him, still holding his hand, a fact that seemed to amuse the coastguard Captain.

“Just hold on tight,” he shouted. “We’re heading back out to where we picked you up yesterday to see what we can see. It’ll take the best part of an hour, so get as comfortable as you can.”

They were left to their own devices. At first, Noble tried to make conversation with Suzie, but the noise inside the chopper was deafening, like being inside a tumble-dryer full of ball bearings. After five minutes of shouting at each other, yet still failing to understand more than half of what was said, they gave up. Suzie started reading more of the papers from her briefcase, while Noble closed his eyes and tried to rest.

His mind raced. It felt like he’d taken a lurch into the Twilight Zone, ever since his first encounter with the black tar on the blades of the Zodiac propeller. Now he was at the centre of an emergency that had something to do with an Antarctic Expedition long before he was born. And how that was connected to a polluted stretch of ocean was still a mystery to him. But Suzie was on the case. He know from long experience that once she got her teeth into something she would never let go until she was good and ready.

He tried to trick his mind, thinking about beer, and the latest Test match cricket. But sleep wasn’t going to come. He kept seeing the same image in his mind, of the thing swallowing the Skipper, and the old man’s meat being stripped from the bone. He was almost grateful when Suzie nudged him hard in the ribs.

“You need to read this,” she shouted.

She still had more of the papers in her hand. She handed him a sheaf of maybe ten sheets. As he read, he was once more dragged back to wartime Scotland.

Over the next few weeks I came to understand the detail and scope of what Rankin hoped to achieve… and my part in it. The tarry material did indeed prove adept at recombining existing biological materials into things rich and strange. And it did so at a prodigious rate. Rankin had me trying to force it into combination with various forms of plant-life. We had a spectacular disaster when we introduced the tarry material to pond algae, which left a thick green scum covering the whole interior of the lab that had to be removed with bleach and blowtorches. Still, Rankin refused to be depressed.

“We are getting there,” he said, even though I had no real idea of the required destination—not yet.

I began to get an idea what he was looking for when we set the substance to work on some seaweed. It took a particular liking to Ascophylum Nodosum, one of the bladderworts common along this coastline. It seemed like a marriage made in heaven. Although contained in a tall sealed jar, the weed-tar combination filled all the available space within minutes and was soon a seething mass of crawling vegetation, frantically trying to escape. Rankin clapped me heartily on the back, phoned the MOD and returned to break open the whisky. We sat on the harbour wall smoking and drinking and after a few drams, his tongue finally loosened.

“They approached me last year,” he said. “They are frightened of the power of the German fleet and wanted some way of locking them in port and making them vulnerable to attack.” He took a long drag of smoke before continuing. “By coincidence, I had been talking that very day about the Shoggoth material. I put two and two together, the Brass came up with the cash, and here we are. We have done it, Ballantine. All we have to do is introduce a scrap of the new stuff to the waters around the Hun’s anchorages and they will be clogged up in no time. The perfect defensive weapon.”

I could see several flaws in this plan, but kept my mouth shut… I did not want to cut off the only supply of whisky I’d had in weeks. So far, he had not noticed that I was managing to get twice as much of it inside me as he was… I wanted to keep it that way.

I regretted it the next morning, of course… I always do. And, I regretted it twice as much when I walked into the lab to be confronted by two Admirals of the Fleet and a Secretary of State. Luckily, Rankin wanted to showboat, so I hung at the back and let him get on with it.

He gave them the spiel about the Antarctic Expedition and the Shoggoth material, but even in my hung-over state I could see that they were seriously under-whelmed. They perked up slightly when he started the experiment proper. He used an even larger jar this time, one near six feet tall. The tar combined with the weed and surged, filling the space in seconds, fronds flapping and slapping against the glass in frenzy.

The Brass sat in stony silence.

“That’s it?” the Secretary finally said. “All this time and effort and you give us some bloody, energetic seaweed?”

Rankin gave them the same line he’d given me the night before, about clogging up harbours and stifling the Jerry fleet. The Secretary sighed theatrically.

“Look Rankin, the reason we got you for this job was because we expected something flamboyant, something that would show our people that we are ahead of the game compared to Hitler’s scientists. But this just won’t do. They throw the Doodlebug at us and what do we do in reply? Send them some fucking, lively seaweed? No. This just won’t do at all.”

Rankin was a driven man after that. He would be found in the lab, alternately shouting at the Shoggoth material, and muttering under his breath.

“Flamboyant? I’ll show them flamboyant.”

I first guessed his intent when he had me procure some material from the Botanical Gardens in Glasgow. Venus fly trap, mostly, but also three different types of pitcher plant and a particularly sticky sundew that was both rare and expensive. I also heard from a colleague that he had requested several jellyfish be tracked down… the more poisonous the better. I tried to get a look at what he was working on, but by that time he had locked the lab down to all but himself. The rest of us were reduced to bit-players and spent most of our time in the mess hall drinking beer and playing cribbage… although in my case, I did not join in the card games.

It was nearly two weeks before we were summonsed for a demonstration. There were no Brass present this time… Rankin wanted to be sure of his flamboyance first.

He had made some drastic changes in the lab. A large glass tank took up full fifty per cent of the area. In the centre of the tank sat a metal box. A chain was attached to its lid and led, via a winch, to a pulley next to Rankin. On the far side of the glass tank, a small pony munched contentedly on a pile of hay. Suddenly, I wanted to be back in the mess, cradling a pint of lukewarm beer, or back in the postgraduate club at the university getting beat at chess.

Anywhere but here.

Several others shuffled nervously. Indeed, there might even have been a revolt… if Rankin had given us time to think about it. But before we could stop him, he yanked on his end of the chain.

The metal box opened.

The pony pricked its ears. That was all it had time for. Thrashing tentacles came out of the box. They waved in the air, as if tasting it, and sought out the pony, like snakes zeroing in on prey. They struck as one, wrapping themselves in long strands around the pony’s flanks. The beast started to whinny and tried to pull away. One of the tentacles tore off from the animal, taking a long strip of flesh with it. The other tentacles merely tightened and pulled harder.

Something climbed out of the metal box; an amorphous mass of thrashing fronds that might once have been seaweed. It opened in two halves, spreading wide like bat-wings. The tentacles pulled the pony across the tank. Foam bubbled at the pony’s mouth, its tongue lolling, red and steaming. But it was still alive as the thing took it into its folds, still alive as the carpet of vegetation wrapped itself around the body and squeezed. We all heard the bones crack. As if from a far distance, there was a piteous whinny.

Someone behind me threw up and I smelled beer and cigarettes.

“For pity’s sake, Rankin. Do something,” I shouted.

He turned and smiled.

He yanked on another chain and a rain of what looked like water came from a series of pipes above the tank. The vegetation started to smoke and curl and once more I smelled the tang of vinegar as the hydrochloric acid turned everything to oily sludge.

“How was that?” Rankin asked. “Flamboyant enough, do you think?”

I spent that night getting roaring drunk in the mess. I wasn’t the only one.

In the morning we started preparing for the field test.

Noble looked up to see Suzie staring back at him.

“It gets worse,” she shouted, waving the remaining papers at him. He moved to take them, but at that same moment, the Captain came through from the cockpit.

“Five minutes,” he shouted above the din. “Saddle up.”

They’d agreed as they were getting suited up that Noble would be the one to go down if there were any samples to be taken. Now he was starting to regret the burst of machismo that had led him to volunteer so readily. Suzie and the Captain strapped him into the harness.

“Are you sure you don’t want to go down instead?” he asked Suzie with a smile. “I’m sure you would find something fascinating.”

She tightened the strap around his groin, making him wince, and bringing a laugh from her.

“Up in London, you’d have to pay for this service. Now stop whining and be a good boy.”

The Captain opened the chopper door. A blast of warm air came in at a rush. Noble sidled over to the door and hung out, looking down at the churning sea. At first, all he could see was water being thrown up by the downward blast from the rotors.

Maybe it has gone.

The first tendril that rose lazily out of the water put paid to that idea. Noble was glad he’d arranged to have a long knife secured in a sheath at his thigh—he had a feeling he might need it. Suzie attached a glass sample jar to a hook on his belt. She accompanied it with a kiss on the cheek.

“Be careful,” she shouted.

He didn’t have to be told twice. He swung out into space, blowing a kiss back at Suzie in the doorway even as the winch started taking him down. He swung slightly, buffeted by the downdraft, but this wasn’t his first time on the end of the tether. He maintained his body position and held it still until he was four feet above the water. He looked back at the chopper and gave an okay sign with thumb and forefinger, then opened the glass jar in readiness for a sample.

He had just got the jar open when the first dark tendril came up out of the choppy water and made a reach for his ankle. It wasn’t a serious attempt—not like those he’d seen back on the research vessel.

It’s almost as if it doesn’t know I’m here… as if it doesn’t expect me to be here.

He kept a close eye on the water, waiting for a sign of movement. He didn’t have to wait long. A lazy, black tendril came slowly out of the water; thin as a pencil at the end that rose up towards him and flaring to almost the thickness of Noble’s thigh at the point where it broke the surface. He swung himself around in the harness so that he was nearly hanging upside down and tried to calm his rising panic as the snake-like appendage reached ever closer.

Slowly, with no sudden movements, he released the knife from its sheath and just the weight of it in his hand eased his fright.

He waited until it was inches from his nose then, with one smooth cut, lopped nearly a foot off the end of the tentacle and let it fall in a curl into the glass jar. He flipped the lid and closed the jar securely before turning in the harness, jerking his thumb upwards.

Suzie was at the door, staring down at him. She had a smile on her face… one that quickly turned to horror as her gaze shifted to a point to his left. The winch started up, but he had taken too long… a tentacle, thicker and broader at the base than the last, came out of the water like a cobra on the attack, latching itself onto his ankle. The water surged and roiled. Something black and huge started to rise under the surface.

Pull me up. For pity’s sake—pull me up!

The winch squealed as the tentacle pulled and tugged, tightening every second. Noble once again turned and twisted, slashing out with the knife, raising wet welts across the surface of the tendril. That only made it grip all the tighter to his ankle.

Pull me up! What’s the problem here? But he knew exactly what the problem was. The thing is too strong. It’ll take down the chopper.

Above him, he heard the noise of the chopper get louder as the pilot pushed it to its limit. Slowly, but gaining speed, he started to rise up. The tentacle didn’t let go. The sea parted below and a dark mass rose up, coming along with the tendril to which it was attached. It looked like nothing more than a vast hairy carpet, a mass of snake-like tentacles thrashing and waving in frenzy as an area the size of a small house tried to drag itself up towards him.

The pain in his leg was excruciating. He kept slashing with the knife, as frantic as the tentacles that reached for him. Finally, when the tendril was little more than a torn mess of tissue, it fell away from him, back into the foaming sea where the whole thing sank with barely a splash.

The winch started to pull him back into the chopper, but he scarcely noticed. The pain was throwing him into shock and he was no longer sure if what he saw was real or a dream induced by the searing heat of pain.

Right at the far point of the chopper’s turn he caught a glimpse of something glinting in the sun. Far away, almost on the horizon and shimmering in the heat, stood what looked like a city of glass… or plastic? Massive towers and turrets rose high above the sea, and gargantuan black shapes slumped through cavernous streets. He remembered something that Suzie had said earlier.

The Shoggoths were made. Made as builders.

He blinked and the image had gone, taken out of view by the completion of the chopper’s turn. The winch pulled him up to the chopper doorway. The last thing he saw before darkness took him away for a long time was Suzie, staring at his leg, tears pouring down her face.

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