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I didn’t see anything that looked like what we wanted. A computer, I guess I was looking for. I listened out — a machine like that needs power — but I didn’t hear anything electric. Now we were in, I couldn’t even see where the cable we’d followed from the antenna came through.

I went further in, carefully, stepping on the cross-beams where I could see them through the cracks in the planks. A couple inches of snow had blown in through the front, though it didn’t reach this far back. Neither did much light. I almost caught myself on a pointed iron hook someone had left hanging from the roof on a chain.

I was just past the big wheel when Malick spoke behind me, sharp and cold.

‘Don’t take another step.’

What a fucking idiot I was. I’d believed him. I’d let him bring me into a dark corner, no fuss, where no one would find me for five hundred years. I hated myself. I threw up my hands. Like that was going to save me.

‘There’s a hole right in front of you,’ said Malick. ‘You nearly fell in.’

I nearly fell in anyways. That spike of terror flipped, the bottom dropped out of me and I almost collapsed. He’d only been trying to warn me. I hated myself all over again.

I could see it now, four sides sloping down to darkness. A giant hopper head — where they tipped out the coal, I guess. God knows where I’d have landed if I’d have fallen in it. A black hole.

Except it wasn’t. You probably know, in physics nothing escapes from a black hole. But something got out of this one. A black cable that came up the side and ran over the edge, dodging between the warped floorboards as it headed towards the centre of the room.

‘I got it,’ I said, forgetting that thirty seconds ago I thought he was going to kill me. I followed it back, sweeping aside drifted snow, until I reached the motor. The cable disappeared somewhere inside.

Malick came over. We both stared, trying to find the line in the rusted machinery. ‘It sure as hell isn’t connected to that.’

We’d forgotten the rifle. Malick didn’t point it at me, and I didn’t think about getting it off of him. All we wanted was an answer.

‘It’s gotta go somewhere,’ Malick said, frustrated. He knelt down and peered through the tangled metal. ‘I should get my flashlight. It’s back at the snowmobile.’

I didn’t answer. My eyes ran over it, every nook and cranny. The cable had to come out somewhere. Unless we’d missed something. My eyes drifted upwards.

And then I got it.

‘I know where it goes,’ I said.

Malick gave me a quick look. ‘You see it?’

‘No.’ Without explaining, I ran to the end of the room and looked out the opening. The clouds raced in and the wind pushed me back; even so, the snow dazzled me after the darkness. I dropped my sunglasses on to my nose.

I didn’t really need them. I knew what was there without having to look.

A row of wooden towers, marching across the side of the mountain towards the mine.

And strung between them, a cable.

Twenty-seven

Eastman

Of all the places you think you’ll hear a cellphone, an abandoned coal plant on a frozen island at the end of the world is probably the last. For a moment, I thought the ringing must be the bell for the start of a shift, that a dead-eyed crew of Soviet miners would file through the door, pickaxes on their shoulders and lamps glowing over their faces.

Malick unzipped his coat and took out his Iridium phone.

‘Yeah?’ He listened. ‘I’ll get back right away.’

He pulled the phone away to hang up, then remembered something.

‘Wednesday afternoon,’ he said into the phone, ‘when we were packing up. Everyone was there, right? No one off base?’

I didn’t hear the answer.

‘No one unaccounted for?’

He listened, nodded a couple of times, grunted and hung up.

‘That was my crew chief. I checked, and he had eyes on every one of our guys Wednesday afternoon. Whoever chased your doc, it wasn’t us.’

He zipped the phone back into his pocket. ‘Now I gotta head out.’

A quarter-hour earlier, he had a gun at my back. Now, I didn’t want him to leave.

‘What about the mine?’

‘Gotta get back before the storm hits. As soon as it’s over, chopper’s coming to fly us home.’

‘We have to find out—’

‘Not my problem. If there’s some Russians in there, or some Nazis who didn’t hear the war ended, or a bunch of extraterrestrials trying to phone home, that’s your deal. Although,’ he added, looking at the sky, ‘don’t take too long.’

We walked down the steps and back towards the snowmobiles in the main square. The buildings around us looked deader than ever.

‘You ever hear of an outfit called Luxor Life Sciences?’ Malick said suddenly.

Meant nothing to me.

‘They came here a couple years back, just when we set up Echo Bay. A guy and a girl. He was called Richie, don’t remember her name, but she had a great pair of tits. Scientists, both of them, looking for a place to build a gene bank.’

I didn’t hear him right. ‘A what?’

‘Somewhere to keep DNA. So that when the whole world looks like this’ — he waved at the skeleton buildings around us — ‘and there’s only eight survivors, and humanity’s family tree looks like a twig, we can spice up the mix some. That, or make us some new cows and horses, like Jurassic Park.’

‘Like that’s going to happen.’

‘Right. And if it does, we’ll be too busy chewing sticks and wiping our asses with our hands to think about sailing to Utgard for takeout DNA. But they had some money for it, so they came to check us out. All you need for a gene bank, turns out, is someplace dry and cold and no neighbours to look in when you’re not home.’

‘Say, a mine on an Arctic island?’

‘They came up and down this valley a bunch of times. Must have been at Mine Eight, too.’

‘Luxor Life Sciences,’ I repeated, making a mental note of it. ‘They ever do anything with it?’

‘Poured some concrete, brought in some equipment. Then they never came back. Guess they found somewhere else to keep their goop.’

‘Anyone at Zodiac help them?’

‘Don’t know. DNA, all that biology stuff. That would’ve been Hagger, right?’

‘Right.’

We’d reached the snowmobiles. Malick strapped on his helmet and started the engine.

‘You’ve still got my gun,’ I said.

He slipped it off his shoulder and looked at it, as if he’d forgotten. He thought for a moment, then handed it back to me.

‘Guess you just might need it.’

I waited after he’d gone, trying to process everything that had happened in the last hour. I knew I didn’t have long. From up on the hillside, you could see all the way down the valley, right to the sea ice. Black clouds bigged up the horizon, and the wind was getting nasty. I wondered if I should go back now.

I couldn’t. If I turned around, I could see the cable stretched across the mountainside, past that cave where we’d found all those cans of food, right the way to where the valley ended.

No wonder the guy in the yellow parka had got antsy when Kennedy started sniffing around the cable towers.

I started up the snowmobile. The slope was too steep to follow the cableway: I had to drive right down into the valley, then back up the other side. The mountain peak hid the mine, but I aimed for where the towers pointed. Up and up, the engine fighting the slope, until I came around a corner into a little valley. The towers were so close now I could touch them as I drove by; the noise echoed back off the valley walls like gunfire. And at the top of the valley, perched on the mountain face like some Blofeld secret hideout, was the mine.

I guess no one became a Soviet miner for the life expectancy. I guess they didn’t have much choice. Uncle Joe said, ‘Get in the hole,’ and they said, ‘How low do we go?’ Maybe it made a nice change from Siberia, I don’t know. But even with all that, the mine didn’t look like the sort of place you’d want to come to risk your life. The whole thing was built of wood, bleached planks peeling away like even the buildings wanted out. The sheds were built one on top of the other, with chutes and tunnels connecting them Rube Goldberg-style, running down from the mine to the cableway. No murals on the walls here to pep up the workers, just big metal letters on the front building: MINE 8. I guess that was all they needed to know.