Тесс Герритсен – Gravity (страница 2)
The Galápagos Rift
.30 Degrees South, 90.30 Degrees West
He was gliding on the edge of the abyss.
Below him yawned the watery blackness of a frigid underworld, where the sun had never penetrated, where the only light was the fleeting spark of a bioluminescent creature. Lying prone in the form-fitting body pan of
Gliding through that soft rain of debris, he guided
A startling sight suddenly loomed into view. It was like coming across an underwater grove of charred tree trunks. The objects were blacksmoker chimneys, twenty-foot tubes formed by dissolved minerals swirling out of cracks in the earth’s crust. With the joysticks, he maneuvered
‘I’ve reached the hydrothermal vent,’ he said. ‘Moving at two knots, smoker chimneys to port side.’
‘How’s she handling?’ Helen’s voice crackled through his earpiece.
‘Beautifully. I want one of these babies for my own.’
She laughed. ‘Be prepared to write a very big check, Steve. You spot the nodule field yet? It should be dead ahead.’
Ahearn was silent for a moment as he peered through the watery murk. A moment later he said, ‘I see them.’
The manganese nodules looked like lumps of coal scattered across the ocean floor. Strangely, almost bizarrely, smooth, formed by minerals solidifying around stones or grains of sand, they were a highly prized source of titanium and other precious metals. But he ignored the nodules. He was in search of a prize far more valuable.
‘I’m heading down into the canyon,’ he said.
With the joysticks he steered
‘Eleven hundred meters,’ he counted off. ‘Eleven fifty…’
‘Watch your clearance. It’s a narrow rift. You monitoring water temperature?’
‘It’s starting to rise. Up to fifty-five degrees now.’
‘Still a ways from the vent. You’ll be in hot water in another two thousand meters.’
A shadow suddenly swooped right past Ahearn’s face. He flinched, inadvertently jerking the joystick, sending the craft rolling to starboard. The hard jolt of the sub against the canyon wall sent a clanging shock wave through the hull.
‘Jesus!’
‘Status?’ said Helen. ‘Steve, what’s your status?’
He was hyperventilating, his heart slamming in panic against the body pan.
‘Steve, talk to me!’
Cold sweat soaked his body. He finally managed to speak. ‘I got startled—collided with the canyon wall—’
‘Is there any damage?’
He looked out the dome. ‘I can’t tell. I think I bumped against the cliff with the forward sonar unit.’
‘Can you still maneuver?’
He tried the joysticks, nudging the craft to port. ‘Yes. Yes.’ He released a deep breath. ‘I think I’m okay. Something swam right past my dome. Got me rattled.’
‘Something?’
‘It went by so fast! Just this streak—like a snake whipping by.’
‘Did it look like a fish’s head on an eel’s body?’
‘Yes. Yes, that’s what I saw.’
‘Then it was an eelpout.
Cerberus, thought Ahearn with a shudder. The three-headed dog guarding the gates of hell.
‘It’s attracted to the heat and sulfur,’ said Helen. ‘You’ll see more of them as you get closer to the vent.’
Two thousand meters. Three thousand.
What if he had damaged the hull?
Four thousand meters, the crushing pressure of water increasing linearly as he descended. The water was blacker now, colored by plumes of sulfur from the vent below. The wing lights scarcely penetrated that thick mineral suspension. Blinded by the swirls of sediment, he maneuvered out of the sulfur-tinged water, and his visibility improved. He was descending to one side of the hydrothermal vent, out of the plume of magma-heated water, yet the external temperature continued to climb.
One hundred twenty degrees Fahrenheit.
Another streak of movement slashed across his field of vision. This time he managed to maintain his grip on the controls. He saw more eelpouts, like fat snakes hanging head down as though suspended in space. The water spewing from the vent below was rich in heated hydrogen sulfide, a chemical that was toxic and incompatible with life. But even in these black and poisonous waters, life had managed to bloom, in shapes fantastic and beautiful. Attached to the canyon wall were swaying
Even with the air-conditioning unit running, he was starting to feel the heat.
Six thousand meters. Water temperature one hundred eighty degrees. In the plume itself, heated by boiling magma, the temperatures would be over five hundred degrees. That life could exist even here, in utter darkness, in these poisonous and superheated waters, seemed miraculous.
‘I’m at six thousand sixty,’ he said. ‘I don’t see it.’
In his earphone, Helen’s voice was faint and crackling. ‘There’s a shelf jutting out from the wall. You should see it at around six thousand eighty meters.’
‘I’m looking.’
‘Slow your descent. It’ll come up quickly.’
‘Six thousand seventy, still looking. It’s like pea soup down here. Maybe I’m at the wrong position.’
‘…sonar readings…collapsing above you!’ Her frantic message was lost in static.
‘I didn’t copy that. Repeat.’
‘The canyon wall is giving way! There’s debris falling toward you.
The loud
His head jerked, his jaw slamming into the body pan. He felt himself tilting sideways, heard the sickening groan of metal as the starboard wing scraped over jutting rocks. The sub kept rolling, sediment swirling past the dome in a disorienting cloud.
He hit the emergency-weight-drop lever and fumbled with the joysticks, directing the sub to ascend.
No response.
He paused, his heart pounding as he struggled to maintain control over his rising panic. Why wasn’t he moving? Why was the sub not responding? He forced himself to scan the two digital display units. Battery power intact. AC unit still functioning. Depth gauge reading, six thousand eighty-two meters.