Authors: Sam Enthoven
Lauren's lips formed into a small pout. âI do not ask for your surrender,' she said. âAll I ask, for now, is a truce.' She leaned forward until her lips were next to Jasmine's ear. âDon't you want to know what's really happening here, and who is behind it all? Hmm?'
Wrenching her mind back into focus, Jasmine tried to calm down. When Lauren's face came back into sight, she was smiling again.
âThat's better,' she said. âOh, that's
much
better.' Then: âLet's go.'
The overhead lights flicked off again, but Jasmine found that she was already turning. Her hand reached out, found the door handle easily in the pulsing dark, and pulled.
Jasmine walked out â but Jasmine herself had nothing to do with any of it. She was aware of every movement: she was aware of the air around her and the way it moved
across her skin. But the movements themselves did not come from her. She was being controlled.
âThere,' said the voice from behind her, âyou're becoming accustomed to it already. But . . . Oh. Yes, of course.'
Jasmine had caught sight of Ben.
A part of her had been hoping desperately that he might have escaped somehow â that he might still be free, hiding in the building somewhere, figuring out a way to rescue everyone. Instead he was standing at the bottom of the stairs, with a crawler clamped to his neck. He stood there with his back to her â ignoring her. His hands, by his sides, were clenched into fists. Jasmine felt a soft pang of despair.
âI sent Samantha to join the battle upstairs,' said Lauren's mouth. âI left Ben here on guard. Forget him. He can't help you; nobody can. Now let me show you why.'
Then Jasmine was walking again. As she passed Ben she wanted to keep looking at him, but her head wouldn't turn. She and Lauren were going towards the door she'd noticed earlier â the one that said THE PIT.
Lauren held it open for her, then followed her through.
âWe have to do something,' said Robert.
He and Josh were standing in the monitor room. Between
them they'd at last got the hang of the console. They'd had trouble keeping Ben and the girls in sight in the fog of the foyer, but had found them again in time to witness what had happened. They had seen Lauren put the crawler on Ben. They had seen where Lauren and Jasmine had gone.
âCome on,' said Robert, when Josh didn't reply. âI'm sick of waiting. Let's you and me go and
do
something, for a change.'
Josh turned and raised an eyebrow. âRobert,' he asked, âare you having some sort of episode? When we first came up here, you were crying like a baby. Now, what? You're an action hero?'
âNo,' said Robert. âAll I'm saying isâ'
âYes, I heard what you're saying.' Josh's lip curled in disdain. He pointed at the screens. âRobert, the
army's
down there â people with guns. But here you are, suddenly getting the urge to ride in and save the day.
You
, Robert. Wow, if this wasn't so pathetic I'd be laughing.'
âCoward,' said Robert.
Josh frowned. âExcuse me?'
Robert's face was red with emotion. âYou heard. Lauren may have tricked Ben and Samantha and Jasmine, but at least they
tried
. All you do is sit there waiting to be rescued and telling people what to do.' He shook his head. âAnd I used to think you were so great. Well, see you.'
He turned and set off.
âRobert . . .' said Josh, following him into the security room. âRobert, your arm's broken. What exactly do you think you're going to do? You won't even get out of that door! Robert, come back!'
With his good right hand Robert opened it, revealing the empty passage beyond.
âThe sentries are gone,' he told Josh, âyou
knob
.' He nodded at the unconscious body of Lisa. âStay here with her.'
With that, he left.
Josh stood there for a moment. He looked down at Lisa. Then:
âRobert?' he called. âRobert! Wait for me!'
Jasmine passed through another set of doors and entered a dimly lit room. Rising to her right were twelve rows of empty seats. A metal frame holding a lighting rig hung from the ceiling.
The Pit was a theatre. It wasn't anything like as big and impressive as the one upstairs, nor was it supposed to be: this was a studio theatre, used for smaller-scale, more intimate productions.
âThere's a story about this place and how it got its name,'
said Lauren's mouth. âThey say the Barbican was built on one of London's
plague pits
â a mass grave for victims of the Black Death.'
Helplessly Jasmine followed Lauren across the performance space, through a gap in a blackout curtain and into the Pit Theatre's backstage area. Jasmine passed some painted wooden boards and a pile of steel scaffolding poles â theatrical scenery of some kind, apparently abandoned in mid-construction. In the far wall, flanked by two open, plain, black doors with signs on them saying WARNING: AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY, she saw a tunnel.
âElements of that story are true,' said the voice. âThe Barbican Centre is built over a pit. The pit was dug at the time of the Great Plague â the epidemic that ended in sixteen sixty-six. As to what the pit really contains, however . . . well, you're about to find out.' Lauren's body stood to one side of the tunnel entrance, and gestured. âAfter you.'
The tunnel was a twenty-metre-long downward-sloping tube of bare, grey Barbican concrete. The air coming up from it was cold and damp and smelled of sewage. The tunnel did not seem to Jasmine like a good place to be. But her reluctance made no difference: her legs began to plod down it just the same.
âSixteen sixty-six,' the voice behind her repeated. âThe Great Fire of London. If even Lauren here knows the date
all British schoolchildren must do, one imagines. But what you don't know is that the fire was started
deliberately
.'
The tunnel's slope was too steep to walk down comfortably: with each step Jasmine's toes pressed hard against the ends of her school shoes, and her ankles and calves quickly began to ache. While she waited to arrive wherever her stolen body was taking her, Jasmine thought about Lauren. Had there been some clue, some giveaway word that Jasmine could have picked up on earlier? Perhaps.
But
, Jasmine wondered bleakly,
how could she have known?
To Jasmine, Lauren had always just been Samantha's pet â sucking up to Samantha in return for the protection of being with her. Jasmine had never felt any wish to get to know Lauren well enough to have noticed anything different about her tonight. Neither, it seemed, had Samantha.
âThe city's owners, the Corporation of London, started the blaze to flush me out,' the voice went on. âImagine it: a whole city on fire for three days! I never could have guessed they would go to such lengths. But it worked. Here, under what is now called the Barbican Estate, is the northernmost point the fire reached. They had destroyed my hiding places, forced me out into the open. This was where they caught me.'
Jasmine had reached the end of the tunnel. To her right lay a massive round steel door of the kind used in bank vaults: presumably there to seal off the tunnel when closed,
the door now lay open, flush with the wall. To Jasmine's left was a domed chamber.
It looked like a shallow, upside-down bowl. It wasn't especially high â perhaps five metres at the dome's highest point â but it was very wide, something like thirty metres in diameter. The walls, the ceiling and some of the floor were constructed entirely of pinkish red brick. The bricks looked old: they were worn, bulged outward by subsidence in some places, blackened with mould in others. But the chamber also featured some incongruous-looking modern touches. On the other side of the chamber Jasmine saw another round steel door, also standing open. A ring of chrome-sided light globes were bolted onto the wall, together with what looked like PA speakers and several types of camera, all angled inward.
In the centre of the room, taking up a good two-thirds of the floor space, was a wide circle of reinforced glass. Lauren walked out into the chamber until she was standing at the glass circle's edge.
â
This
is what gave the theatre its name,' said Lauren's mouth. âThis is the pit where the Corporation held me prisoner for almost three hundred and fifty years.
This
is where they insulted my person, with fire and steel and . . . devices. But no more. Tonight I leave this place behind for good.' Lauren pointed past Jasmine. âPress that button, please.'
Jasmine turned, and found herself looking at a wall-mounted plastic box with a large red button in its centre. Her thumb pushed the button almost before she herself had seen it.
âNow wait there,' said the voice behind her, over the rising whine of machinery.
Jasmine did as she was told. She didn't have any choice. All she could do was stand there, looking at the wall, listening.
For ten slow seconds the sound of the machine continued; to Jasmine, it felt longer. Then, with an echoing hiss, it fell silent.
Jasmine waited.
There was a sudden great
rasp
, as if something large, heavy and wet was being dragged across the floor. This was followed by a snort, then a low crooning sound that was somewhere between a wheeze and a moan.
With no control over where her eyes went, Jasmine focused on her other senses. As well as the sewage smell she'd noticed earlier there was now a sudden extra noxious tang in the air â raw chicken, bad armpits, or some unholy mixture of the two.
Raaaaasp
â that sound again, then the same deep, wheezing, booming moan of effort. Both were louder this time, and Jasmine sensed a definite increase in the smell's potency.
Jasmine knew what was happening: something was coming
up behind her â something big. She did not enjoy waiting for whatever it was to come into view. If she'd had any choice in the matter, she would be running. But she couldn't even shiver. She had to stand there as the sounds got closer, powerless to do anything but wait and see whether the truth behind the sounds was as horrifying as what they did to her imagination.
RAAAAASP
. The smell was even stronger now â almost unbearable. The moan, when it came, was close enough for Jasmine to feel a warm exhalation on her back.
âThere,' said the voice, from what felt like just beside her ear. â
Now
you may look on me.'
When Jasmine turned, the first thing she saw was the all-too-familiar figure of Lauren. But there was something strange about her. Was Lauren . . . taller? She was looking down at Jasmine and grinning â a wild, cruel grin that showed all her teeth. Jasmine's eyes travelled downward, and that was when she noticed that Lauren was
up off the ground
. Her feet were dangling in the air, her legs swinging gently.
Then Jasmine saw why.
Oh. My. God.
Jasmine's first impression was of a sort of hulking boulder shape, perhaps three metres across. But instead of rock, this thing was made of flesh. It was milky white in colour. Rings of grey muscle striped its rubbery sides. On the bit nearest to Jasmine was a primitive tube of a mouth from which projected
a thick, dirty-grey, glistening tongue. The tongue had attached itself to Lauren's back somehow: it was this that was holding Lauren in the air.
Lauren's eyes seemed to glow as they stared down at Jasmine. Her arms lifted from her sides. Her terrible grin widened.
âBehold,' said her mouth, âyour Queen.'
Protect the Queen
, said Ben's brain. Then again:
Protect the Queen
.
He was standing guard at the bottom of the stairs. This was his place â his line in the sand. He would allow no one to pass him. If anyone tried, he would stop them. Ben would fight â fight until he was dead if he had to â and he wouldn't die easily. He would fight until his last breath, until the last drop of blood left his body. He was protecting the Queen. And the Queen, to Ben, was everything.
The Queen's hand was upon him, laid gently on the back of his neck. She was there on the inside of Ben's head too, behind every thought. She was with him, cold and calm and ageless â watching through his eyes, keeping his thoughts straight, smoothing away anything that was complicated. For that, he loved her.
Ben loved how easy everything felt, now that the Queen
was with him. It was simple: where there had been fear, now there was certainty. Where there had been doubt, now there was clarity â freedom. Ben felt so light, so full of energy, that he thought he might actually lift off into the air. He stood there at his post at the bottom of the stairs, absolutely and utterly still, and the deliberateness of that lack of movement was like a charge of electricity building up in his chest. His blood seemed to crackle and fizz in his veins. Protect the Queen. Fight for the Queen. There was nothing else he wanted.
And now
, he thought, instantly spotting the shadow that moved on the wall at the top of the stairs,
here comes my chance . . .
The shadow loomed larger, became a full-sized silhouette, then a face was poking around the corner on the landing. The face was earnest and worried, round and a bit pudgy. It was also familiar.
âBen?' said the face. âBen? Can you hear me? It's me . . . Robert.'
Ben didn't attack. Ben said nothing â just stayed still, watching.
Robert took a cautious step down the stairs towards him.
âBen,' he said, pointing at him with his good arm, âI know you've been bitten. You've got one of those things on you. I can see its . . . what do you call them â legs? They're right there on the sides of your neck.'
He was still walking down the stairs. He was only about six steps away from Ben now.